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Star Wars - The Bounty Hunter Wars - The Mandalorian Armor

Page 6

by K. W. Jeter


  the accountant. Posondum had made the grievous error of

  shifting allegiances, changing jobs in an industry where

  loyalty was prized-and disloyalty punished. Worse, the

  accountant had been keeping the financial records for a

  chain of illicit skefta dens in the Outer Rim Territories

  that were controlled by a Huttese syndicate. Hutts tended

  to view their employees as possessions-one of the reasons

  that Boba Fett had always kept a freelancer's independent

  relationship with his frequent client Jabba. The

  accountant Posondum hadn't been so smart; he'd been even

  stupider when he'd gone over to his former employers'

  competition with a cortical data-splint loaded with the

  Hutts' odds-rigging systems and gray-market transfer

  shuffles. Hutts were even more secretive than possessive;

  Boba Fett had sometimes wondered if they grew so huge by

  greedily ingesting everything that came into reach of

  their little hands and huge mouths, and letting nothing

  go. Not even one frightened accountant with a computer-

  enhanced brain full of numbers.

  "Why don't you just kill me now?" Posondum hunkered

  on the floor of the cage, his back against its bars. He'd

  tasted the tray and pushed it away in disgust. "You'd do

  a quicker job of it than the Hutts

  will."

  "Likely so." He felt no pity for the man, who'd

  brought his troubles upon himself. You hang out with

  Hutts, he thought, you'd better be careful not to get

  rolled over on. "But as I said. I do what I get paid for.

  No more, no less."

  "You'd do anything for credits, wouldn't you?" Boba

  Fett could see his own reflection, doubled in the small

  mirrors of the accountant's resentfully burning eyes. The

  image he saw was of a full helmet, battered and

  discolored, yet completely functional; his face was

  concealed by the narrow, T-shaped visor. His combat gear

  bristled with armaments, from shin to wrist; the tapered

  nose of a directional rocket protruded from behind one

  shoulder. A walking arsenal, a humanoid figure built out

  of machines. The lethal kind.

  The reflected image nodded slowly. "That's right,"

  said Boba Fett. "I do the things I'm good at, and for

  which I get paid the best." He glanced down at the data

  readout. "It's nothing personal."

  "Then we could make a deal." Posondum looked up

  hopefully at his captor. "Couldn't we?" "What kind of

  deal?" "What do you think?" The accountant stood up I and

  gripped the bars nearest to Fett. "You like getting

  paid-I know the kind of outrageous fees you charge for

  your services-and I like remaining alive. I'm probably as

  fond of that as you are of credits." Boba Fett let his

  masked gaze rest upon the other's sweating face. "You

  should have considered how precious your life is to you

  before you incurred the wrath of the Hutts. It's a little

  late for regrets now.

  "But it's not too late for you to make some credits.

  More credits than the Hutts can pay you." Posondum

  pressed his face into the bars, as though he could

  somehow squeeze out between them through the sheer force

  of his desperation. "You let me go and I'll make it worth

  your while."

  "I doubt it," said Fett coldly. "The Hutts pay

  excellent bounties. That's why I like taking on their

  jobs."

  "And why do you think they want to get me back so

  badly?" Posondum's knuckles turned white and bloodless as

  his fists tightened. "Just for the old ledgers I've got

  stowed away inside my head? Or just so the competition

  won't find out a few little trade secrets?"

  "It's not my business as to why my clients desire

  certain things. Things such as yourself." A small in

  dicator light pulsed on his wrist-mounted data readout;

  he'd have to return to the Slave I's controls soon. "I'm

  just pleased that they do want them. And that they'll

  pay."

  "Just like I will." Posondum lowered his voice,

  though there was no one to overhear. "I took more than

  information when I left the Hutts. I took credits-a lot

  of 'em."

  "That was foolish of you." Fett knew how tight the

  Huttese were with credits; it was a characteristic of

  their species. There had been times when he'd needed to

  take extreme measures to get paid for the completion of a

  job, even when the terms had been agreed upon beforehand.

  So to steal from a Hutt, and to think that one could get

  away with it, was the height of idiocy.

  "Maybe so-but there was so much of it. And I thought

  I could get away, that I could hide. And my new bosses

  would protect me. . . ."

  "They did the best they could." Boba Fett shrugged.

  "It just wasn't good enough. It never is, when I'm

  involved."

  "Look, I'll give you the credits. All of them."

  Posondum trembled with the fervor of his plea. "Every

  credit I stole from the Hurts-it's all yours. Just let me

  go."

  "And just where are these credits?"

  Posondum drew back from the cage's bars.

  "They're hidden."

  "I could very easily find out the location." Fett

  kept his voice as level and emotionless as before. "The

  extracting of useful information is a specialty

  of mine."

  "It's memory-encrypted," said the accountant. I

  "Below the conscious level. And with a trauma sen-sor

  implanted." He pointed to a small scar just above his

  left ear. "You try to dig the info out of me, it'll trip

  and wipe the cortical segment clean. Then nobody will

  ever find where I put the credits."

  "There's ways around those things." Boba Fett had

  seen them before. "Bypasses and shunts-they're not

  pleasant. But they work." He supposed the Hutts were

  already preparing a deep neurosurgical dissection room

  for Posondum upon his return. "It doesn't matter to me,

  though. Since I'm not making a deal with you, anyway."

  "But why not?" The accountant had reached one of his

  skinny arms through the bars, trying to grab hold of Boba

  Fett's sleeve. "It's a fortune-it's more than the Hutts

  have offered you-"

  "It very well might be." He had stepped away from the

  cage, back to the unadorned and functional metal treads

  that would return him to the Slave I's cockpit. "You

  might be as good a thief as you are a number cruncher.

  And if you're going to steal even one credit from a Hutt,

  you might as well steal a billion. The consequences are

  the same. But even if you do have that kind of credits

  hidden away, I'm not interested in them. Or not

  interested enough. I have my reputation to think of."

  "Your . . ." Posondum gaped at him in amazement and

  dismay. "Your what?"

  "The Hutts and all my other clients-they pay me the

  kind of bounties they do because of one thing. I deliver.

  Once I've caught my prey, nothing stops me from bringing

  it in. Nothing. If I take
on a job, I complete it. And

  everyone in the galaxy knows that."

  "But . . . but I've heard of other bounty hunters ...

  who'll cut a deal. . . ."

  "Other bounty hunters may conduct their business as

  they please." Fett barely managed to keep from his voice

  the contempt with which he held the so-called Bounty

  Hunters Guild's members. That kind of shortsighted greed

  was one of the reasons he had no desire to associate

  himself with the Guild. "They have their standards . . .

  and I have mine." One of his gloved hands grasped the

  ladder's side rail; he looked back over his shoulder at

  the cage. "And I've got the merchandise, and they don't.

  There's a connection."

  Posondum's knees visibly weakened, his hands sliding

  down the bars as he sank limply toward the cage's floor.

  Whatever glint of hope had been in his face was now

  extinguished.

  "I suggest you go ahead and eat." Boba Fett nodded

  his helmet toward the tray and its congealed contents.

  "You'll need to keep up your strength."

  He didn't wait for an answer. He climbed up from the

  ship's holding pens and back toward its waiting controls.

  5

  "Here he comes." Lookout had spotted the approaching

  ship. That was its job. "I can see him."

  "Of course you can," said Kud'ar Mub'at. "That's a

  good node." With the tip of one multijointed, chitinous

  leg, the assembler stroked the little semicreature's

  head. The exterior-observation node was one of the more

  simpleminded subassem-blies scurrying about the web.

  Kud'ar Mub'at had let just about enough cerebral tissue

  develop inside so that it could focus its immense light-

  gathering lens on the surrounding stars and anything that

  moved among them. "Tell Calculator just what you saw."

  The necessary data zapped along the web's tangled

  neurons. Another subassembly, with useless vestigial legs

  and a softly fragile shell encasing its specific-function

  cortex, mulled over what it had received, converting raw

  visuals to useful numbers. "Thyip thyoud arrive . . ."

  Calculator's tiny lisping mouth moved beneath the

  wobbling lump of neural matter. "In leth thyan thuh-ree

  thtandard time part-th."

  "I know who it is!" Identifier scrambled up onto

  Kud'ar Mub'at's shoulder-if arachnoids could be said to

  have shoulders-and excitedly chattered into its earhole.

  The little database subassembly had listened in to what

  Lookout had told Calculator. "I know, I know! It's the

  Slave I! Positive identification made-"

  "Of course it is." With another leg, Kud'ar Mub'at

  plucked Identifier from its body-the childlike

  subassemblies would swarm all over it, if it let them-and

  set the node down on one of the web's structural strands.

  "Now just settle down, little one."

  "Boba Fett must be aboard!" Identifier, with its own

  miniature versions of its parent's stiff-spined legs,

  skittered back and forth on the taut silken fiber. "Boba

  Fett!" The subassembly had no particular liking for the

  bounty hunter; it just got excited over any visitors to

  the web. "It's Boba Fett's ship!"

  Kud'ar Mub'at sighed wearily, someplace deep inside

  his near-spherical abdomen. His own mannerisms were slow

  and somewhat languid, or as much so as the latter term

  could be applied to a chitin-encased arachnoid. The

  constant chatter of Identifier ^nnoyed him on occasion.

  Perhaps, mused Kud'ar Mub'at, I should reabsorb that

  node. And design and develop another one. A quieter one.

  But right now the problem wasn't so much that of raw

  materials- Kud'ar Mub'at could always extrude more subas

  sembly fiber-as of time. Time lag, to be precise; even a

  node as relatively uncomplicated as that took hundreds of

  time units to develop to an operational standard. With as

  much business as Kud'ar Mub'at was handling right now, it

  couldn't afford to be without a functioning identifier.

  Maybe later, thought the assembler as it hung

  suspended in a nexus of the web's thicker strands. When

  this business with Boba Fett is over. Kud'ar Mub'at

  figured that its credit accounts would be fat enough

  then, so that it could afford to take a little time off.

  It would have to talk to Balancesheet about that.

  "Go tell Docker and the Handler twins." Kud'ar Mub'at

  gave the little chore to Identifier, rather than just

  plugging back into the web's communication neurons. "Tell

  them to get ready for company."

  The little subassembly jumped and scurried away, down

  the dark, fibrous corridors to the web's distant landing

  snare. That'll keep it out of my leg hairs for a while,

  thought Kud'ar Mub'at. It gently moved Lookout aside and

  applied one of its own compound eyes to the view hole,

  scanning the stars for any visible indication of his

  enemy and business associate.

  He'd long ago decided that this was the worst part of

  the job. I'd rather hang out with the Hutts, thought Boba

  Fett. And that was saying something Huttese palaces,

  like the one Jabba the Hutt kept on Tatooine, were

  sinkholes of gratuitous depravity. Every time he'd been

  in one, either delivering a captive or collecting a

  bounty in person, he'd felt as though he had been

  slogging through a sewer filled with the galaxy's offal

  and waste. The careless ease with which someone like

  Jabba could dispose of an underling-Boba Fett had heard

  of the pet rancor creature that Jabba kept beneath his

  palace, but hadn't yet seen it-always irritated him. Why

  kill when there was no profit involved? A waste of time,

  credits, and flesh. But even a Hutt's palace was more to

  Fett's liking than Kud'ar Mub'at's web.

  The tapering cylinder floated in the Slave I's

  viewport, gradually growing closer. It didn't even look

  like a constructed artifact, as much as it resembled some

  accidental conglomeration of glue and wire, strung

  together with a Corellian scavenge rat's idiot thrift. As

  Fett's ship approached, and Kud'ar Mub'at's web blotted

  out more of the stars in the viewport, various bits of

  machinery could be seen, sharper-edged than the clotted

  fibers in which they were embedded. Boba Fett had been

  dealing with the arachnoid assembler long enough to know

  that it couldn't resist a bargain, no matter what kind of

  worthless junk was involved; portions of the web were a

  museum of defunct interstellar transports and other dead

  castoffs. Even Jawas pursued their trade in junk and used

  droids as a way of turning a profit; Kud'ar Mub'at

  apparently just liked accumulating stuff, incorporating

  it into the space-drifting home the assembler had spun

  out from its own guts.

  Though it wasn't all just junk, Boba Fett knew; that

  was merely what Kud'ar Mub'at let show on the surface of

  the web, perhaps as a matter of protective camouflage.

  Not everyone had done as well
in their encounters with

  the assembler as he had; the few times that Fett had

  actually gone into the web, he'd spotted some not

  inconsiderable treasures, bits and pieces that the less

  fortunate had been obliged to leave behind, to discharge

  their debts to Kud'ar Mub'at. It would probably be better

  to leave one's skin behind than try to cheat the spidery

  entity.

  Faint greenish lights showed in a rough circle,

  indicating the docking section of the web. One of Kud'ar

  Mub'at's subassemblies-Signaler was what it was called,

  if Fett remembered correctly-was a phosphorescent

  herpetoid node, long enough to encircle one end of the

  web with its glowing, snakelike form. Kud'ar Mub'at had

  let enough intelligence develop in the node so that it

  could blink out a simple directional landing pattern for

  any ship making a rendezvous with the web. Another group

  of subassemblies, arrayed just inside the pulsing circle,

  were devoid of even that much brainpower; they could

  sense the proximity of a spacecraft and, like the ten

  tacles of a Threndrian snareflower, grab hold and bring

  it in tight and secure to the web's entry port. Boba Fett

  loathed the idiot appendages, with their flexing vacuum-

  resistant scales like rust-pitted armor plate. He'd told

  Kud'ar Mub'at before, that if he ever found any scraps

  from the tentacles still clinging to the Slave I after

  he'd left the web, he'd turn around and pluck the nodes

  one by one from the web with a short-range tractor beam.

  That'd be a painful process for Kud'ar Mub'at; every

  piece of the living web was connected to the assembler by

  a skein of neurofibers.

  He cut the Slave I's approach engines, leaving the

  craft with enough momentum to keep it on a slow and

  steady course toward the web's dock. Inside the ring of

  light, the tips of the grappling nodes had already begun

  to ease into position as the subassemblies woke from

  their dreaming half sleep.

  "Ah, my dear Fett." A high-pitched voice greeted him

  as he clambered down from the docking port into the

  narrow confines of the web's interior. "How truly a

  delight it is to see you once more. After how horribly

  such a long time it has been-"

  "Stow it." Boba Fett looked up and saw by the top of

  his helmet one of Kud'ar Mub'at's mobile vocal

  appendages, a subassembly that was little more than a

  rudimentary mouth tethered by a glistening cord. This one

 

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