Star Wars: The Last Command

Home > Science > Star Wars: The Last Command > Page 35
Star Wars: The Last Command Page 35

by Timothy Zahn


  “He announces the arrival of the strangers,” Threepio said precisely. “Presumably, that refers to us. He fears, however, that we will bring danger and trouble again to his people.”

  Beside Han, Chewbacca rumbled a sarcastic comment. “No, they’re not much for small talk,” Han agreed. “Not much for diplomacy, either.”

  “We bring hope to your people,” the chief Noghri countered. “If you let us pass, we will free you from the domination of the Empire.”

  Threepio translated, the melodious Myneyrshi words still coming out prissy, in Han’s opinion. One of the lumpy Psadans made a chopping gesture and said something that sounded like a faint and distant scream with consonants scattered around in it. “He says that the Psadan people have long memories,” Threepio translated. “Apparently, deliverers have come before but nothing has ever changed.”

  “Welcome to the real world,” Han muttered.

  Luke threw a look at him over his shoulder. “Ask him to explain, Threepio,” he told the droid.

  Threepio complied, quiet-screaming back at the Psadan and then throwing in a Myneyrshi translation, too, just to show he could do it. The Psadan’s answer went on for several minutes, and Han’s ears were starting to hurt by the time he was done.

  “Well,” Threepio said, tilting his head and settling into the professor mode Han had always hated. “There are many details—but I will pass those by for now,” he added hastily, probably at a look from one of the Noghri. “The humans who came as colonists were the first invaders. They drove the native peoples from some of their lands, and were stopped only when their lightning bows and metal birds—those are their terms, of course—began to fail. Much later came the Empire, who as we know built into the forbidden mountain. They enslaved many of the native peoples to help on the project and drove others from their lands. After the builders left came someone who called himself the Guardian, and he, too, sought control over the native peoples. Finally, the one who called himself the Jedi Master came, and in a battle that lit up the sky he defeated the Guardian. For a time the native peoples thought they might be freed, but the Jedi Master brought humans and native peoples to himself and forced them to live together beneath the shadow of the forbidden mountain. Finally, the Empire has returned.” Threepio tilted his head back again. “As you can see, Master Luke, we are merely the last in a long line of invaders.”

  “Except that we’re not invaders,” Luke said. “We’re here to free them from the rule of the Empire.”

  “I understand that, Master Luke—”

  “I know you do,” Luke interrupted the droid. “Tell them that.”

  “Oh. Yes. Of course.”

  He started into his translation. “You ask me, I don’t think they’ve had it all that bad,” Han muttered to Chewbacca. “The Empire took whole planets away from some people.”

  “Primitives always have this reaction to visitors,” Mara said. “They usually have long memories, too.”

  “Yeah. Maybe. You suppose that Jedi Master they were talking about was your pal C’baoth?”

  “Who else?” Mara said grimly. “This must be where Thrawn found him.”

  Han felt his stomach tighten. “You think he’s here now?”

  “I don’t sense anything,” Mara said slowly. “Doesn’t mean he can’t come back.”

  The head Myneyrsh was talking again. Han let his gaze drift around the clearing. Were there other Myneyrshi and Psadans out there keeping an eye on the big debate? Luke hadn’t said anything about backups, but they’d have to be crazy not to have them somewhere nearby.

  Unless Ekhrikhor’s pals had already taken care of them. If this didn’t work, it could turn out to be handy having the Noghri around.

  The Myneyrsh finished its speech. “I’m sorry, Master Luke,” Threepio apologized; “They say they have no reason to assume we are any different than all those they have already spoken of.”

  “I understand their fears,” Luke nodded. “Ask them how we can prove our good intentions.”

  Threepio started to translate; and as he did so, a hard Wookiee elbow jabbed into Han’s shoulder. “What?” Han asked.

  Chewbacca nodded toward his left, his bowcaster already up and tracking. Han followed the movement with his eyes—“Uh-oh.”

  “What is it?” Mara demanded.

  Han opened his mouth; then, suddenly, there wasn’t time to tell her. The wiry predator Chewbacca had spotted slinking through the tree branches had stopped slinking and was coiling itself to spring at the discussion group. “Look out!” he snapped instead, bringing his blaster up.

  Chewbacca was faster. With a Wookiee hunter’s roar, he fired, the bowcaster bolt slicing the predator nearly in half. It fell off its perch, crunching into the dead leaves, and lay still.

  And over by the log, the whole group of Myneyrshi snarled.

  “Watch it, Chewie,” Han warned, shifting his aim toward the aliens.

  “That might have been a mistake,” Mara said tensely. “You’re not supposed to fire weapons at a truce conference.”

  “You’re not supposed to let the conference get eaten, either,” Han retorted. Beside the Myneyrshi, the five Psadans had started to shake, and he hoped Ekhrikhor’s pals had the rest of the area covered. “Threepio—tell them.”

  “Certainly, Captain Solo,” Threepio said, sounding about as nervous as Han felt. “Mulansaar—”

  The head Myneyrsh cut him off with a chopping motion of its two left arms. “You!” he warbled in passable Basic, jabbing all four hands at Han. “He have lightning bow?”

  Han frowned at him. Of course Chewbacca had a weapon—so did all the rest of them. He glanced up at the Wookiee … and suddenly he understood. “Yes, he has,” he told the Myneyrsh, lowering his blaster. “He’s our friend. We don’t keep slaves like the Empire did.”

  Threepio started into his translation, but the Myneyrsh was already jabbering away to his friends. “Nice work,” Mara murmured. “I hadn’t thought of that. But you’re right—the last Wookiees they saw here would have been Imperial slaves.”

  Han nodded. “Let’s hope it makes a difference.”

  The discussion ran on for a few more minutes, mostly between the Myneyrshi and the Psadans. Threepio tried for a while to keep up a running translation, but it quickly degenerated into not much more than a reporting of the highlights. The Myneyrshi, apparently, were starting to think this was their chance to get rid of the oppression of first the Empire and then the Jedi Master himself. The Psadans didn’t like the Imperials any more than the Myneyrshi, but the thought of facing up to C’baoth was making them skittish.

  “We aren’t asking you to fight alongside us,” Luke told them when he was finally able to get their attention back. “Our battle is our own, and we will handle it ourselves. All we ask is your permission to travel through your territory to the forbidden mountain and your assurance that you won’t betray us to the Empire.”

  Threepio did his double translation, and Han braced himself for another argument. But there wasn’t one. The head Myneyrsh raised his upper hands again, and with his lower hands picked up the bleached clawbird and offered it to Luke. “I believe he is offering you safe conduct, Master Luke,” Threepio said helpfully. “Though I could be wrong—their dialect has survived relatively intact, but gestures and movements are often—”

  “Tell him thank you,” Luke said, nodding as he accepted the clawbird. “Tell him we accept their hospitality. And that they won’t be sorry they helped us.”

  “General Covell?” the militarily precise voice came over the intercom from the shuttle cockpit. “We should be on the surface in just a few more minutes.”

  “Acknowledged,” Covell said. He keyed the intercom off and turned to the shuttle’s only other passenger. “We’re almost there,” he said.

  “Yes, I heard,” C’baoth said, his amusement echoing through his voice. And through Covell’s mind. “Tell me, General Covell, are we at the end of our voyage or at the beginning?”


  “The beginning, of course,” Covell told him. “The voyage we have set upon will have no end.”

  “And what of Grand Admiral Thrawn?”

  Covell felt a frown crease his forehead. He hadn’t heard this question before, at least not said this particular way. But even as he hesitated, the answer came soothingly into his thoughts. As all answers did now. “It’s the beginning of Grand Admiral Thrawn’s ending,” he said.

  C’baoth laughed softly, the amusement rippling pleasantly through Covell’s mind. Covell thought about asking what was funny, but it was easier and far more agreeable to just sit back and enjoy the laughter. And anyway, he knew perfectly well what it was that was funny.

  “You do, don’t you,” C’baoth agreed, shaking his head. “Ah, General, General. It’s so very ironic, isn’t it? From the very beginning—from that very first meeting in my city—Grand Admiral Thrawn has had the answer within his grasp. And yet even now he is as far from understanding as he was then.”

  “Is it about power, Master C’baoth?” Covell asked. This was a familiar topic, and even without the prompting in his mind he would have remembered his lines.

  “It is indeed, General Covell,” C’baoth said gravely. “I told him at the very beginning that true power didn’t lie in the conquering of distant worlds. Or in battles and war and the crushing of faceless rebellions.”

  He smiled, his eyes glittering brightly in Covell’s mind. “No, General Covell,” he said softly. “This—this—is true power. Holding another’s life in the palm of your hand. Having the power to choose his path, and his thoughts, and his feelings. To rule his life, and decree his death.” Slowly, theatrically, C’baoth held out his hand, palm upward. “To command his soul.”

  “Something not even the Emperor ever understood,” Covell reminded him.

  Another ripple of pleasure rolled through Covell’s mind. It was so satisfying to see the Master enjoying his game. “Not even the Emperor,” C’baoth agreed, his eyes and thoughts drifting far away. “He, like the Grand Admiral, saw power only as how far outside himself he could reach. And it destroyed him, as I could have told him it would. For if he’d truly commanded Vader …” He shook his head. “In many ways he was a fool. But perhaps it was not his destiny to be otherwise. Perhaps it was the will of the universe that I, and I alone, would understand. For only I have both the strength and the will to grasp hold of this power. The first … but not the last.”

  Covell nodded, swallowing against a dry throat. It was not pleasant when C’baoth left him like this, even for a little bit. Especially not when there was this strange loneliness along with it …

  But of course, the Master knew that. “Do you ache with my loneliness, General Covell?” he said, warming Covell’s mind with another smile. “Yes, of course you do. But be patient. The time is coming when we shall be many. And when that time is here, we will never be lonely again. Observe.”

  He felt the distant sense as he did all others now: filtered and focused and structured through the Master’s perfect mind. “You see, I was right,” C’baoth said, reaching out to examine that sense. “They are here. Skywalker and Jade both.” He smiled at Covell. “They will be the first, General Covell—the first of our many. For they will come to me, and when I have shown to them the true power, they will understand and will join us.” His eyes drifted away again. “Jade will be first, I think,” he added thoughtfully. “Skywalker has resisted once, and will resist again; but the key to his soul is even now waiting for me in the mountain below. But Jade is another matter. I have seen her in my meditations—have seen her coming to me and kneeling at my feet. She will be mine, and Skywalker will follow. One way or another.”

  He smiled, again. Covell smiled back, pleased at the Master’s own pleasure and by the thought of others who would be there to warm his mind.

  And then, without any warning, it all went dark. Not loneliness, not the way it had been. But a sort of emptiness …

  By and by, he felt his head being roughly lifted by his chin. C’baoth was there, in a way, staring into his eyes. “General Covell!” the Master’s voice thundered. Thundered strangely, too. Covell could hear it, but it wasn’t really there. Not like it should have been. “Can you hear me?”

  “I can hear you,” Covell said. His own voice sounded strange, too. He looked past C’baoth’s face, to the interesting pattern of lines on the shuttle bulkhead.

  He felt himself being shaken. “Look at me!” C’baoth demanded.

  Covell did so. That was odd, too, because he could see the Master but he wasn’t really there. “Are you still there?”

  The Master’s face changed. Something—was it called a smile?—came across it. “Yes, General, I am here,” the distant voice said. “I no longer touch your mind, but I am still your Master. You will continue to obey me.”

  Obey. An odd concept, Covell thought. Not like simply doing what was natural. “Obey?”

  “You will do as I tell you,” C’baoth said. “I will give you things to say, and you will repeat every word.”

  “All right,” Covell said. “If I do that, will you come back?”

  “I will,” the Master promised. “Despite Grand Admiral Thrawn’s treachery. With your obedience—with you doing what I tell you—we will together destroy his betrayal of us. And then we will never be apart again.”

  “The emptiness will be gone?”

  “Yes. But only if you do what I say.”

  The other men came a little later. The Master stayed at his side the whole time, and he said all the words the Master told him to say. They all went somewhere, and then the men left, and the Master left, too.

  He stared off across the place they’d left him in, watching the patterns of lines and listening to the emptiness all around him. Eventually, he fell asleep.

  A strange sort of birdcall warbled off in the distance, and instantly the background crackle of insects and scuttling animals ceased. But apparently there was no immediate danger, and a minute later the nighttime sounds and activity resumed. Shifting her position against her chosen tree trunk, Mara eased her aching back muscles and wished this whole thing was over.

  “There is no need for you to stay awake,” a soft Noghri voice said at her shoulder. “We will guard.”

  “Thanks,” Mara said shortly. “If it’s all the same to you, I’ll do my job.”

  The Noghri was silent a moment. “You still do not trust us, do you?”

  Actually, she hadn’t thought all that much about it one way or the other. “Skywalker trusts you,” she said. “Isn’t that good enough?”

  “It is not approval we seek,” the Noghri told her. “Only the chance to repay our debt.”

  She shrugged. They’d protected the camp, they’d tackled the always tricky job of first contact with the Myneyrshi and Psadans, and now here they were protecting the camp again. “If it’s a debt to the New Republic, I’d say you’re doing a pretty good job of it,” she conceded. “You finally figured out Thrawn and the Empire had been stringing you along?”

  There was a quiet click, like needle teeth coming together. “You knew about that?”

  “I heard rumors,” Mara said, recognizing how potentially dangerous this ground was but not really caring. “More like jokes, really. I never knew how much of it was true.”

  “Most likely all of it,” the Noghri said calmly. “Yes. I can see how our lives and deaths could be amusing to our enslavers. We will convince them otherwise.”

  No white-hot rage, no fanatical hatred. Just a simple, icy determination. About as dangerous as you could get. “How are you going to do that?” she asked.

  “When the time is right the Noghri will turn upon their enslavers. Some on Imperial worlds, some on transporting ships. And five groups will come here.”

  Mara frowned. “You knew about Wayland?”

  “Not until you led us here,” the other said. “But we know now. We have sent the location to those waiting at Coruscant. By now they will have passed
the word on to others.”

  Mara snorted quietly. “You have a lot of confidence in us, don’t you?”

  “Our missions complement each other,” the Noghri assured her, his gravelly mewing somehow sounding grimmer. “You have set for yourselves the task of destroying the cloning facility. With the help of the son of Vader we do not doubt you will succeed. For ourselves, the Noghri have chosen the task of eliminating every last reminder of the Emperor’s presence on Wayland.”

  Probably the last relics of the Emperor’s presence anywhere. Mara turned that idea over in her mind, wondering why it didn’t seem to grieve or anger her. Probably she was just tired. “Sounds like a big project,” she said instead. “Who is this son of Vader you’re expecting to show up and help us?”

  There was a brief silence. “The son of Vader is already with you,” the Noghri said, sounding puzzled. “You serve him, as do we.”

  Mara stared at him through the darkness … and suddenly her heart seemed to freeze in her chest. “You mean … Skywalker?”

  “You did not know?”

  Mara turned away from him, staring down at the sleeping form no more than a meter away from her feet, a horrible numbness flooding through her. Suddenly, finally, after all these years, the last elusive piece had fallen into place. The Emperor didn’t want her to kill Skywalker for his own sake. It was, instead, one final act of vengeance against his father.

  YOU WILL KILL LUKE SKYWALKER.

  And in the space of a few heartbeats everything Mara had believed about herself—her hatred, her mission, her entire life—had turned from certainty to confusion.

  YOU WILL KILL LUKE SKYWALKER. YOU WILL KILL LUKE SKYWALKER. YOU WILL KILL LUKE SKYWALKER.

  “No,” she muttered at the voice through clenched teeth. “Not like that. My decision. My reasons.”

  But the voice continued unabated. Perhaps it was her resistance and defiance fueling it now, or perhaps the deeper power in the Force that Skywalker had given her over the past few days had made her more receptive to it.

 

‹ Prev