Crossfire

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Crossfire Page 3

by Terry Bisson


  "Isn't it ironic that one small boy should be the only one who knows such a

  great secret?"

  Prax didn't answer, of course. Boba wasn't sure what the "great

  secret" was that he was supposed to know about. But the Count's remark gave

  him an idea that he hoped just might save his life.

  "What makes you think I'm the only one who knows?"

  The Count raised his eyebrow - the most surprise Boba could imagine

  the Count betraying. "What do you mean?"

  "Just what I said," said Boba. He tried to keep his voice calm, cool,

  Jango Fett-style. "I have already told someone else."

  He had the Count's attention now... barely. "May I inquire who?" the

  older man asked.

  "That's my secret," Boba bluffed. "And she knows who to tell if

  anything happens to me."

  "She?" Boba could hear a slight undertow of uncertainty. "Might you be

  insinuating the bounty hunter Aurra Sing?"

  Boba was making it up as he went along. "I do mean Aurra Sing," he

  said.

  "Young fool. Are you threatening me?"

  "No, sir. I simply want what is mine. My freedom - and my father's

  credits."

  "Freedom? Credits?" The Count's eyes blazed like cold fire. "I do not

  bargain with children. Especially those who are a nuisance."

  I went too far! Boba realized. His last chance was lost.

  "Cydon Prax, you know what to do with him."

  Boba knew it was useless to resist. He closed his eyes as Cydon Prax

  picked him up. Boba dropped his helmet as his arms were pinned. His

  father's voice came to him. If you must die, do so with valor. That is what

  Jango Fett had done, fighting to the last moment.

  The memory inspired Boba. He was done with pleading and pretending.

  Whatever was coming, he would face it with the courage of the son of Jango

  Fett.

  Suddenly the Count raised his hand. For the first time, Boba saw

  genuine concern cross his face. "What is it, sir?" Prax asked.

  "The Jedi have found us," the Count answered. Boba strained to hear

  something beyond the silence of the room. How did the Count know?

  "Finish him off, then join me," the Count said tersely as his hand

  seemed to instinctively find the curved lightsaber handle that glistened

  beneath his cloak.

  BAR-R000M! An explosion shook the floor.

  Quickly picking up a holopad from his desk, the Count left the room.

  As if on cue, a second explosion rocked the room. This one was closer.

  Small rocks started to fall from the ceiling.

  Cydon Prax hesitated for a moment and his grip on Boba loosened just a

  little as he looked after his master. Boba saw his chance. He kicked out

  with all his strength against the nearest wall. Prax was propelled

  backward, into the desk. Boba's elbows slammed into him as they landed.

  "You little..."

  Prax's words were lost in a series of explosions outside. The floor

  pitched up like the deck of a ship being tossed by a giant wave. The door

  cracked and fell to the ground. The sound of blaster fire and confused

  voices filled the air.

  Boba lunged and twisted free from Prax's grip. He scooped up his

  battle helmet from the floor where he had dropped it. And then he did what

  his father had taught him to do whenever he was in a bad situation he

  didn't expect to get any better.

  He ran.

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  The once dim corridor was filled with light, and no wonder!

  The Count's underground hideout had been blown wide open. Large parts

  of the roof were missing, and Boba was standing on, top of a pile of

  smoking rubble.

  He looked up. The filthy Sky of Raxus Prime was even filthier than

  usual. It was filled with explosions, blossoming like deadly flowers.

  The noise was deafening. A battle was raging. Blaster fire screamed

  past. The Count's automatic defense system was firing into the air rapid-

  fire lasers filling the already smoky air with bursts and clouds of

  brightly colored smoke.

  Through the clouds, Boba saw the approaching gunships. They bore the

  eight-spoked insignia of the Republic. The Count had been right - it was a

  Jedi-led attack! Republic assault ships were unloading clone troopers in

  their gleaming white battle armor. They fanned out in impressive military

  order through the slag heaps, smashing the Count's defenses.

  My brothers! Boba thought scornfully. His father had helped create the

  clone troopers; the Kaminoans had used his dad's genetic material to make

  millions of them. So why were they fighting on the side of the hated Jedi -

  again?

  Battle droids followed what Boba instantly recognized as GAT tanks,

  closing in on the clone troopers from behind - until a Jedi on a speeder-

  bike streaked over the horizon, mowing them down with deadly laser fire.

  And here came what looked like a new kind of tank, its telltale red

  markings signifying it belonged to the Jedi, lurching through the same

  slimy ponds that Boba had survived.

  Jedi gunships were closing in on the ruins that surrounded the crane

  tower and the pit. One gunship dodged a missile's streak; another was hit

  and spiraled down to crash unseen over the horizon.

  Yes! Boba watched, fascinated. He hated both sides - the Jedi and the

  Count. But he loved the action.

  It was chaos, and it was just the diversion he needed to help him

  escape. He looked down and saw his reflection in a puddle. His face was

  streaked with dirt again, but he was grinning from ear to ear.

  Anything was better than being the Count's prisoner. He was free!

  Boba heard a noise behind him and turned just in time to see a huge

  starship rise from the other end of the Count's hideout.

  It was the Count, making his escape. Boba wondered if he had managed

  to rescue the dark treasure that he had come to Raxus Prime to find.

  Two Jedi starfighters raced over the horizon, zeroing in on the

  Count's starship. The pursued and pursuers both vanished into the thick

  clouds.

  KABOOM!

  KABOOM!

  Even though the Count had fled, his defense system was still working.

  It would keep firing until his slave droids were dead and the lasers ran

  out of energy. Boba kept his head down as he crawled through the rubble,

  looking for an opening that would lead back down into the hallways of the

  abandoned hideout where he had to go to get his father's book.

  Wearing his helmet for protection, Boba crawled through a smashed

  opening in a wall. The hallways were choked with smoke and rubble. The

  dust, the explosions, the noise, made everything difficult to see.

  As he grasped his way through the abandoned corridor, Boba found that

  he felt very little fear. He had escaped the worst fate imaginable, and now

  he felt like a new man, or at least a new boy. What could happen to him

  worse than what he had escaped?

  He saw a familiar-looking door. His room!

  There was his bed, turned on its side by an explosion. But where was

  the flight bag that had been under it?

  Frantically, Boba dug in the rubble with his hands until he felt the

  familiar curve of a handle. He pulled, harder and ha
rder, until it came

  free.

  Safe! He threw the helmet into the bag and sealed it. With the

  troopers around, it was best to keep Jango Fett's mask out of sight.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Boba crawled toward the Open air - and found himself face-to-face with

  a squadron of clone troopers bursting through the wreckage. As soon as they

  saw Boba, they leveled their blasters at him.

  "Come with us," the trooper said, extending a white-gloved hand.

  Boba wondered if the trooper knew who he was. The trooper soon

  answered that question with his next words:

  "Are you one of the orphans?"

  "Uh, sure," Boba replied. He was an orphan, after all.

  "Name of missing or deceased parents." "Oh, uh - Teff," said Boba

  "Orphan Teff, age, please?"

  "Ten."

  "Under guidelines," said the clone trooper. "Follow me for food and

  shelter."

  Food and shelter? That didn't sound so bad. Boba didn't trust the

  Jedi, but this clone trooper was not a Jedi, even though he was probably

  working for them.

  "Sure thing," said Boba, picking up his flight bag and noticing the

  trooper's number - CT-4/ 619.

  Explosions still rocked the building. Even though the Count had

  escaped, the battle raged on. The Count's slave droids were continuing the

  fight - and Boba was now caught in the crossfire.

  The clone troopers paid little attention to the explosions as they

  lifted their blasters to repel the super battle droids. For a split second,

  Boba felt an echo of the past - the clone troopers' movements were almost

  exactly the same as Jango Fett's. The way they held their blaster rifles.

  The way their heads turned to take in the full scope of the battle. The

  fierce stealth of their steps. He trained them as well as he trained me.

  No, better.

  Boba knew he had to snap out of these thoughts. The battle droids were

  pushing forward against the troopers' ranks, relentlessly firing their

  blasters. They had been programmed to kill or be destroyed. There would be

  no surrender, no retreat.

  They aimed their fire at the troopers and at the top of the rubble's

  entrance. Boba dashed out into the open just as the doorway began to cave

  in. The troopers inside died without a sound. The air was suddenly choked

  with dust. The other troopers did not look back.

  An eruption of blaster fire landed at Boba's feet. A close call. A

  trooper at his side was knocked off his feet, crashing into the rubble. The

  droids, too, were being torn apart by the shooting. A bloodbath - without

  the blood.

  There was nowhere for Boba to hide. No way to get out of this.

  He picked up a fallen trooper's blaster and chose a side. The clones

  were his only chance of getting off the planet. He had to help them win.

  Boba had never fought in a battle before. Whenever he'd held a

  blaster, his father had been at his side. Watching. Checking. Instructing.

  Boba looked again at the troopers, the echo of his father. He raised

  his rifle like they raised theirs. He aimed at the controls of one of the

  battle droids. Without hesitation, he fired. The droid exploded into parts.

  Another trooper fell - there were only four left with Boba. He could

  hear the sound of other battles close by. Who is winning? CT-4/619 leaped -

  with Jango Fett's dexterity - toward a fallen excavation rig. Boba

  understood at once - protection. As the second and third troopers ran for

  cover, Boba kept in their shadow. The fourth trooper followed and was cut

  down by a rapid barrage of blaster fire. His mask went flying as he hit the

  ground. Boba knew if he looked he would see his father's face, replicated

  once more in death. He did not look back.

  Instead he positioned himself at CT-4/619's side, aiming his blaster

  rifle as the troopers made their last stand. One battle droid down. Then

  another. Still, it wasn't enough. There were at least a dozen left.

  CT-4/619 did not falter. He did not look at Boba. He did not say a

  word. He kept his focus. He kept his aim. Boba knew this concentration

  well.

  Boba fired again. A miss. The droid returned his fire, tearing a hole

  into the excavation rig - the only protection left.

  Two more droids down. But the remaining droids were not deterred. They

  turned all their fire onto the third trooper the next time he moved into

  blasting position. He didn't have a chance.

  This is it, Boba thought. There's no other way out.

  Out of the corner of his eye, he could see another form approaching.

  Not a clone. Not a droid. A female Bothan, bearded and small. Wearing the

  robes of a Jedi.

  With one sharp, quick movement, the Jedi activated her lightsaber and

  began to repel the droids' fire. As the droids turned their attack on her,

  Boba and the two remaining clone troopers had an open shot.

  The droids began to fall. The Jedi expertly destroyed them with their

  own fire. The remaining clones rallied with cold precision. And Boba did

  his part. He was not as experienced or as focused as his clone brothers.

  But he had a desire to survive that they couldn't match.

  The firing from the droids slowed... then stopped. There were none

  left. Boba looked over to see the Jedi's reaction - but she was already

  gone. Off to the next skirmish in order to complete this invasion.

  Eventually, the laser cannons fell silent. Some of the gunships left

  the perimeter, their mission complete. A few more circled, the remains of

  the attack force. Jedi and clone troopers combed the ground for survivors -

  and prisoners. CT-4/619 led Boba forward. There was no time to stop and

  mourn for the dead. There were no congratulations, no expressions of

  relief. Just the task at hand - getting back to the ship, finishing the

  mission.

  They walked across the smoking rubble toward a sleek gunship idling in

  the swirling, stinking mists. Boba followed resolutely. Even though he was

  walking into the hands of the Jedi, it was worth it to be walking out of

  the grasp of Raxus Prime. CT-4/619 took away Boba's blaster rifle as he

  walked on board the gunship - but luckily he was allowed to keep his bag.

  Boba followed the trooper into the pilot area. The trooper got into the

  pilot's seat and Boba sat in another seat.

  "Not for seating," said the trooper. "For my partner, CT-5/501.

  Detainees sit on the floor. We'll wait here for the others."

  Boba wasn't about to protest. He sat on his flight bag while the

  trooper powered up the vehicle.

  Where's the food? Boba wondered. He suddenly realized how cold and

  hungry and tired he was.

  The gunship seemed awfully comfortable, even on the durasteel floor.

  He could still hear the last gasp of explosions and commands being given

  over the gunship's comm unit, but for some strange reason, he felt safe. He

  knew he had survived.

  "Impossible!"

  Boba opened his eyes. Had he dozed off?

  There was a face on the viewscreen. Angry, violet eyes peered out from

  under long ash-blond hair and over a cream-colored beard that had been

  braided into points. But it wasn't the face that bothered Bo
ba, or even the

  harsh, demanding voice.

  It was the uniform.

  Even though this Jedi had just saved Boba's life, she was still the

  enemy. Boba knew he had to remember that.

  "Impossible!" the Jedi said again. "There are no humanoid orphans on

  Raxus Prime, only Jawas. The planet is nothing but a toxic dump."

  "Nevertheless, General Glynn-Beti," said CT-4/619. "I rescued one and

  brought him into the gunship, as per intructions."

  "Bring him up and stick him with the others, then. We will check on

  him just like the rest."

  Boba tried not to show the emotion in his face. The troopers were easy

  enough to fool; or perhaps they didn't care. But the Jedi would see through

  his deception. They were looking for him; he had almost been apprehended on

  Coruscant. He was starting to think it was better to stay on Raxus Prime,

  foul as it was.

  But wait! Boba's new wisdom took over. The Jedi thought he was a war

  orphan. He would be put with other orphans, as she had said. If he kept his

  mouth shut, he would get food, shelter - and transportation to another

  planet, where he could begin the search for Aurra Sing and Slave I.

 

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