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Star Wars®: Dark Nest III: The Swarm War

Page 17

by Troy Denning


  Then Jaina saw a Chiss vape charge fly astray when the soldier who had thrown it was hit by a line of shatter gun pellets. Responding more by instinct than by plan, she reached out for the vape charge in the Force. Her control at such a distance was almost nonexistent, so she simply nudged it toward the nearest relay pylon and watched in surprise as the distant speck struck the post—then dropped to the ground and simply lay there.

  Jaina cursed under her breath, then lowered her electrobinoculars. “The rodder didn’t thumb the—”

  A brilliant detonation dot appeared through the smoke, and a sudden jolt of surprise shot through the Force. Jaina raised the electrobinoculars again, then cleared a viewing hole through the smoke and was astonished to see that the relay pylon had disappeared after all. Killiks were pouring through the gap in the perimeter shield, enveloping a company of Chiss defenders and fanning outward in an unstoppable tide.

  The Colony had broken the enemy line. Now the Chiss would have to evacuate.

  FIFTEEN

  The vastness of the Megador’s Hangar 51 rumbled with activity as a small army of technicians, droids, and support personnel rushed to ready the entire wing of Jedi StealthXs for combat. The StealthXs were temperamental craft with specialized equipment, so even simple tasks like fueling and arming required twice as much work and made three times as much noise as the same work on a standard starfighter. And the systems checks caused a cacophony in their own right, as furious bleeps and tweets flew back and forth between the StealthXs’ security-conscious astromechs and the Megador’s self-important diagnostic droids.

  As a result, Jacen could not overhear what Luke and Mara were saying to Saba and to his parents at the Falcon’s boarding ramp. But he doubted it was a problem. They were all holding hands and embracing, and he could feel their concern and warm feelings in the Force.

  Probably, Luke had just called Jacen over to say good-bye before his parents departed on their mission against the Chiss. Jacen would have liked to save them the trip—to make them see that the Chiss would keep attacking the Killiks whether Luke’s crazy scheme worked or not. But he did not dare.

  Lowbacca and Tesar’s accusations had left him in a tenuous position with Luke and Mara, and Jacen could not risk aggravating the situation by openly opposing Luke’s plan. Everything depended on the Chiss winning this war, and he had to remain in a position to make certain they did.

  Jacen reached the foot of the Falcon’s boarding ramp and stopped, waiting his turn to embrace his parents and wish them a good journey. Despite his father’s graying hair and the crow’s-feet creeping out from the corners of his mother’s eyes, he did not think of them as old. They were just experienced—vastly experienced.

  They had been going on missions like this together for over thirty years—since long before he and Jaina had been born—and Jacen was just beginning to truly understand the sacrifices they had made, the risks they had taken. How often had they faced dilemmas like the one he faced now, had to choose between a terrible evil and an absolute one? How many secrets like Allana had they kept hidden—how many were they still hiding?

  The time had come for Jacen and his peers to take up the beacon his parents and their friends had been carrying all these years—not to push aside the previous generation, but to carry the burden themselves and allow the old heroes a well-deserved rest. He knew he and his fellows were ready; a group of Jedi had not been as carefully selected and prepared since the days of the Old Republic. But when Jacen looked at his parents and recalled how they had changed the galaxy, he found himself wondering whether he and his generation were worthy.

  Sometimes, given their secure childhoods and formal training, he even wondered whether the new Jedi were too soft. Compared with the filthy, overcrowded freighter that his father had called home as a boy, or the dusty Tatooine moisture farm that had shaped his uncle Luke’s early life, the Jedi academy on Yavin 4 had been luxurious. Even his mother, raised in the Royal Palace of Alderaan, had understood true danger as a child, with the deadly gaze of Palpatine always turned her family’s way.

  “Jacen?”

  Jacen felt his father’s eyes on him and realized everyone was looking in his direction.

  “You here?” Han asked. “You’re not having another of your visions, are you?”

  “No, just…” He was surprised to find a lump in his throat. “…just thinking.”

  “Well, stop it,” Han ordered. “You’re scaring me.”

  Jacen forced a smile. “Sorry. I wouldn’t want that.” He turned to his mother. “You can’t talk him out of this?”

  Leia must have sensed something despite his defenses, because she ignored the joke and said, “Is there a reason I should?”

  Jacen rolled his eyes, but silently cursed his mother’s perceptiveness. “It was a joke, Mom.” He spread his arms and wrapped her in a tight hug so she would not be able to examine his face too closely. “I just came to wish you a safe trip.”

  He released her and turned to embrace his father. “Good…” Had Jacen realized he was going to have such a hard time concealing his emotions, he would have found an excuse to be busy doing something else when his parents departed. “…bye, Dad.”

  “Take it easy, kid. We’re coming back.” Han suddenly stiffened, then pulled back and eyed Jacen nervously. “Aren’t we? You haven’t seen something—”

  “You’re coming back, Dad—I’m certain of it,” Jacen said. “Just be careful, okay? Raynar isn’t going to believe you—and it won’t help that you’re telling the truth.”

  “Is that what you’re worried about?” Han sounded relieved. “Look, kid, we’ve been over this about a—”

  “We’ll be fine, Jacen,” Leia interrupted, finally warming to him and squeezing his hand. “This is the only way to make the Chiss understand how difficult it would be to win a war against the Killiks.”

  Saba stepped up behind Leia, looming over her the way Chewbacca used to loom over Han. “Everything will be fine, Jacen. Your mother is a powerful Jedi—az strong in her way as you are in yourz.”

  Jacen nodded. “I know that.” He leaned down and kissed Leia on the cheek. “May the Force be with you, Mom.”

  “And with you, too, Jacen,” Leia said. “We’re not the ones who’ll be attacking Gorog’s nest ship.”

  Han’s face suddenly fell. “That’s not what you’re worried about—is it?” he asked. “Did you see—”

  “I didn’t see anything, Dad,” Jacen said. “Really.” He shooed his father up the ramp. “Go on. I’ll meet you when this is over.”

  Han studied him for a moment, then finally nodded. “I’ll hold you to that, kid. Don’t let me down.”

  He took Leia’s hand and started up the ramp.

  Saba remained behind, one slit-pupiled eye fixed on Jacen, and began to siss in amusement. “You are alwayz full of surprisez, Jacen Solo.” She started up the ramp. “Alwayz so full of surprisez.”

  Jacen had to fight down a moment of panic. He knew that Ben found the Barabel Master frightening, and he was beginning to understand why—she was just so hard to read.

  Before starting up the ramp after Saba and the others, C-3PO paused in front of Jacen and tapped him lightly on the shoulder. “Pardon me, Master Jacen. But did whatever you saw have anything to do with me?”

  Before Jacen could answer, Han’s voice sounded from the top of the boarding ramp. “Threepio! If you’re still on that ramp in three seconds, you’ll be riding to Tenupe cargo-clamped to the hull!”

  “Threats are hardly necessary, Captain Solo!” C-3PO clumped up the ramp after Saba and the others, his golden hands paddling the air. “I’m coming, I’m coming!”

  Jacen smiled and waved a last farewell to his parents, then retreated to safe distance and watched with Luke and Mara as the boarding ramp retracted and the Falcon slipped out of the hangar. The ship hung below the Megador for a moment, a mere teardrop of white durasteel framed by the hangar’s huge mouth, then spun toward the Star Destroye
r’s stern and streaked off deeper into the Unknown Regions.

  Luke’s hand suddenly clasped Jacen by the shoulder, and Jacen barely stopped himself from cringing. He could not afford to show any hint of surprise…or guilt.

  “I’ll bet it seems like they’ve been doing that your whole life, doesn’t it?” Luke asked fondly.

  “It does,” Jacen said, nodding. “And I couldn’t be prouder.”

  “No?” Mara slipped a hand through his other arm. “Well, neither could they.”

  “Uh, thanks.” Jacen felt the lump forming in his throat again and swallowed it into submission. “Maybe I ought to get back to my fighter. Neufie has been giving those diagnostic droids—”

  “In a minute,” Luke said. “First, I’d like you to come with us.”

  “Sure.” Jacen’s heart began to pound so hard he had to use a Jedi calming exercise to quiet it. “Where?”

  “Ghent is ready to show us the rest of Artoo’s secret files,” Mara said. “But he still hasn’t finished duplicating the omnigate, so this may be the only time anyone gets to see the holos of your grandparents. Luke and I thought you’d like to be there.”

  “You did?” Jacen said, almost allowing his relief to show. “I mean, yes—of course!”

  “It’s okay—I’m nervous, too.” Luke laughed uneasily, then added, “Scared, even.”

  “Well, I’m not.”

  Mara’s tone was a little too light. The Skywalkers joked openly about Alema Rar’s insinuation that Mara might have played a role in the death of Padmé Amidala, but Jacen knew how hurt his aunt had been by the whole incident.

  The question had to be answered—and it had to be answered before the Jedi attacked the Gorog nest ship. Luke could not face Lomi Plo otherwise. She would find any trace of doubt—especially that doubt—and use it to veil herself completely.

  That was one of the reasons Jacen believed he ought to be the one to confront Lomi Plo. He had no doubts—of any kind. Vergere had scorched them out of him in a crucible of pain.

  They found Ghent in a small briefing salon that overlooked Hangar 51, sitting on the floor beside R2-D2, surrounded by the usual litter of tools, circuits, and snack wrappers. The lanky slicer was peering through an access panel with his magnispecs flipped down, manipulating a micrograbber in each hand and muttering to himself in a high-pitched, staccato manner that sounded alarmingly like machine code. Afraid to cause a mishap by startling him, they stopped just inside the door and waited for him to remove his hands from inside the droid’s casing.

  “What are you standing there for?” Ghent asked without looking away from his work. “You won’t see anything from the door.”

  “Sorry.” Luke led the way forward. “Are you ready?”

  “Don’t I look ready?” Ghent asked. “All I have to do is snap the omnigate back in place.”

  “Oh,” Luke said. “When I saw all the circuits—”

  “Standard maintenance,” Ghent interrupted. “No wonder this droid acts up. Some of those circuits haven’t been cleaned in twenty standard years. They had carbon molecules stacked a hundred moles high.”

  As they drew closer, Jacen realized the slicer must have been working on R2-D2 for a couple of days straight—at least it smelled that way. In any case, Ghent had clearly not found time for a decent sanisteam lately. They stopped several paces away and watched as he snapped a circuit board back in place.

  “All set.” He rocked back on his heels, then looked up and said, “I don’t think you should do this, you know.”

  “You told us already,” Mara said.

  Ghent’s brow rose. “I did?”

  “Several times,” Luke said.

  “Oh.” Ghent ran a hand over his tattooed head, then said, “It’s just that I’ve almost got the omnigate figured out. Another three weeks—no more than six, really—and I’d have it for sure. Then you could look at these files anytime you liked.”

  “We don’t have six weeks.” Luke checked his chrono. “We’re due to launch in six hours.”

  Ghent’s eyes widened. “That soon? I thought we had three days!”

  “It has been three days,” Mara said patiently.

  Ghent looked around him in a daze, then said, “I guess he was in worse shape than I thought.”

  “Ghent, we really need to see that holo now,” Mara pressed gently. “A lot depends on it.”

  “Yeah, I know,” Ghent said. “But I don’t think you understand. That’s the Intellex Four designer’s original back door. If we fry it before we’ve copied it, we’re destroying a whole sub-era of computer history.”

  “Ghent, it’s really important,” Luke said.

  The slicer sighed, then flipped R2-D2’s primary circuit breaker without saying anything more.

  The droid came to life with a startled bleep, then swiveled his dome around, carefully studying the stacks of tools and discarded circuit boards around him. After a moment, he began to roll back and forth on his treads, extending various utility arms and whistling in approval.

  Then R2-D2’s photoreceptor swung past Ghent’s face. He gave a startled buzz, then looked at Luke and began to back away.

  “Artoo, stop it!” Luke ordered. “Come back here. We need to see what happened to my mother after my father came back from Mustafar.”

  R2-D2 tweeted an explanation in machine code. Jacen was not really surprised when Ghent translated it.

  “He says Anakin Skywalker didn’t come back.”

  “He didn’t?” Luke frowned. “What happened?”

  R2-D2 remained silent for a moment, then abruptly blurted out an explanation.

  “Padmé went to see your father,” Ghent reported.

  “Then show us that,” Luke said to R2-D2. “And no tricks. I need to see this.”

  R2-D2 whistled doubtfully.

  “He says—”

  “Artoo, just do it,” Luke interrupted. “We’re going into combat soon, and you need time to calibrate yourself with the StealthX.”

  The droid trilled an excited question.

  “If Ghent thinks you’re up to it,” Luke said. “And if you don’t keep stalling.”

  R2-D2 tipped forward and activated his holoprojector. The image of a green starfighter appeared on a landing platform on some distant world that could not be identified from the image. A young man in a dark robe appeared, running into the image from the direction of the starfighter. As he drew closer, it grew apparent that he was Anakin Skywalker. He appeared tired and grimy, as though he had just come from battle. That fit what he had told Padmé in the last holo that Jacen and the Skywalkers had seen together: that he was going to Mustafar to end the war.

  “Padmé, I saw your ship,” Anakin said.

  Padmé appeared, entering the image from the opposite direction, and they embraced.

  “Anakin!” Her back was to the holocam, but it was clear that she was trembling.

  “It’s all right, you’re safe now.” Anakin looked down into her eyes. “What are you doing out here?”

  “I was so worried about you!” Padmé’s voice was somewhat muffled, since she was still facing away from the holocam. “Obi-Wan told me terrible things.”

  Anakin’s face clouded with anger. “Obi-Wan was with you?”

  “He said you’ve turned to the dark side,” Padmé continued, avoiding a direct answer. “That you killed younglings.”

  “Obi-Wan is trying to turn you against me,” Anakin said darkly.

  Padmé shook her head. “He cares about us.”

  “Us?”

  “He knows.” Padmé paused a moment, then said, “He wants to help you.”

  “And you.” Anakin’s voice was full of jealousy now. “Don’t lie to me, Padmé. I have become more powerful than any Jedi dreamed of, and I’ve done it for you…to protect you.”

  “I don’t want your power.” Padmé pulled away from him. “I don’t want your protection.”

  Anakin drew her back to him. “Is Obi-Wan going to protect you?” he d
emanded. “He can’t…he can’t help you. He’s not strong enough.”

  Padmé’s head fell, and she was silent for a long time.

  Perhaps R2-D2 had attuned his communications routines to Luke’s moods over the years, because he seemed to sense the dread in Luke’s presence as clearly as Jacen did. The droid took advantage of the long silence to whistle a long, worried-sounding question.

  “He’s afraid this is going to overload your circuits,” Ghent reported. “And I know we’re stressing his. Do you hear that warble in his interrogative pitch?”

  “Keep going.” Luke’s tone grew a little softer. “It’s all right, Artoo. I’m fine.”

  Jacen nodded his approval. There was an irrational and dangerous edge in Anakin’s voice, and Jacen understood why R2-D2 had been so reluctant to show these holos to Luke. But pain was only dangerous when it was feared—that had been one of Vergere’s first lessons. Luke needed to see the end of the holo. He needed to embrace the pain.

  After a moment, Padme raised her head again in the holo.

  “Anakin, all I want is your love.”

  “Love won’t save you,” Anakin snarled. “Only my new powers can do that.”

  “At what cost?” Padmé demanded. “You’re a good person. Don’t do this.”

  “I won’t lose you the way I lost my mother.” Anakin’s face belonged to someone else now, someone angry and frightened and selfish.

  Padmé did not seem to see the change—or, if she did, she remained determined to bring the other Anakin back again. She reached for him.

  “Come away with me,” she said. “Help me raise our child. Leave everything else behind while we still can.”

  Anakin shook his head. “Don’t you see? We don’t have to run away anymore. I have brought peace to the Republic. I am more powerful than the Chancellor. I can overthrow him, and together you and I can rule the galaxy…make things the way we want them to be.”

  “I don’t believe what I’m hearing!” Padmé backed away, stumbling as though she had been struck.

  Luke sighed audibly, clearly dismayed at the arrogance that had led his father down the dark path of the oppressor. But Jacen found himself responding to his grandfather far more sympathetically, almost with admiration. Anakin Skywalker had understood his own strength, and—at one time, at least—he had tried to use that strength to bring peace. Vergere would have approved. Power unused was power wasted, and whatever had happened to him later, Anakin Skywalker had at least attempted to use his for a good end.

 

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