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Tales From Jabba's Palace

Page 25

by Kevin J. Anderson


  An hour out, the sail barge drew to a stop. Everyone grew still, and

  Max let his song fade unfinished.

  All the window shutters opened and Jabba's dais floated forward.

  "Victims of the almighty Sarlacc, His Excellency hopes that you will die

  honorably," the gold translator droid said through the sail barge's

  speaker system.

  "But should any of you wish to beg for mercy, the great Jabba the Hutt

  will now listen to your pleas."

  Max strained to see what was going on outside, but there were too many

  people crowded around the windows and he couldn't see. From the murmurs

  around him, though, he got the general idea of what was going on. It

  seemed the prisoners had refused to beg, insulting Jabba horribly in the

  process.

  Jabba only laughed. After all, Max thought, it wasn't as if the

  prisoners could do anything. And he knew from long experience that

  Jabba didn't often give in to begging or pleading. He liked watching

  people die and never showed any mercy.

  "Move him into position," Jabba said.

  Max hopped up, straining to see, but couldn't get more than glimpses.

  "Put him in!" Jabba commanded.

  A murmur came from everyone at the viewports, then suddenly people cried

  out in alarm. Max heard blaster fire and a hum like nothing he'd ever

  heard before, an almost electric sound that seemed to grow louder and

  softer in time to the blaster shots.

  Jabba howled in outrage. The window shutters closed and most of the

  Gamorrean guards on board headed for the top deck. Something had

  clearly gone wrong, Max thought. He looked at Sy.

  "What should we do?" he asked.

  "Nothing!" she said. "It's not our problem. We're just the band."

  "But--"

  "Do you want to get in trouble with Jabba?" she demanded.

  Max looked around and finally spotted Jabba at the other end of the

  observation cabin. "No, no, now Jabba was shouting, gesturing with his

  two tiny arms.

  Nobody seemed to be paying any attention to him.

  Suddenly Princess Leia leaped to action. She smashed the sail barge's

  environment controls with her chains. The lights failed; a dusky

  near-darkness dropped over the passenger cabin. Max blinked and let his

  eyes adapt to the darkness. Princess Leia, he saw, had looped her chain

  around Jabba's neck and was pulling with all her strength, bracing her

  legs against his huge back.

  He looked around. She shouldn't be doing that.

  Where were the guards? He took a step toward Jabba, wondering if he

  should try to help, but Sy put a hand on his arm.

  "She's killing him!" he said.

  "Let her," Sy said softly. "Our contract's with Jabba. We'll be free

  once he's dead."

  "But it's murder!"

  "He's doomed anyway," she said. "Too many people are out to get him."

  Max felt torn up inside. His first boss. His first contract.

  All that food for life. How could he give up security so easily?

  Jabba suddenly lolled forward, his tongue protruding.

  His eyes were flat and glassy. Dead. So much for decisions, Max

  thought. He'd waited too long.

  But perhaps they could get a gig with Princess Leia.

  She was, after all, a princess. Even if she didn't eat well, she must

  certainly pay well enough---his needs were modest. Just six or seven

  meals a day, and snacks to keep him happy.

  "Princess," he called. "Is there anything we can do to help?"

  She was holding her chain out to one of the droids --the little R2

  unit who had been serving drinks earlier. The droid cut through the

  chains easily.

  "Let's get out of here," she said.

  "Probably not a bad idea," Sy Snootles said in his ear.

  Max hesitated. "What about our equipment?"

  "We can always come back for it." Sy ran to the opposite side of the

  observation cabin, the one facing away from the Sarlacc, and pushed open

  a shutter.

  Outside, Max could see one of the sail barge's huge steering vanes.

  "Come on, Droopy," Sy called. "Time to go!"

  Droopy followed. Max hesitated a second, gazing back at his organ, then

  followed. Sounds of battle still came from outside. He didn't want to

  get caught in any fighting, especially if someone tried to storm the

  observation cabin to get to Jabba.

  A huge explosion suddenly rocked the barge. Sy almost fell out the

  window as the sail barge shifted.

  More sounds of blaster fire came from the top deck.

  "Quickly!" Sy called. "Jump!"

  "Are you crazy?" Max demanded.

  Droopy jumped without a second's hesitation.

  "Come on, Max," Sy said. "It's not that far, and you can slide down the

  steering vane most of the way.

  There's sand below. It'll help break your fall."

  Turning, she jumped.

  Max pushed open the shutter and looked down. It seemed like an awfully

  long way. He hesitated. Droopy helped Sy up. They both looked unhurt.

  "Jump!" Sy Snoodles called. "Max--jump!"

  Something exploded behind Max, and the force of the blast was like a

  shove in Max's back. He flew out the viewport, over Sy and Droopy, and

  hit the sand flat on his back.

  The fall stunned him. His' hands and face stung, and a ringing sound

  filled his ears. He was distantly aware of someone picking him up and

  carrying him away from the sail barge, which seemed to be .burning.

  He raised his head just in time to see the barge explode in a huge

  orange fireball.

  So much for their first gig, he thought. So much for their instruments.

  So much for his great contract.

  "Where are we going?" he managed to ask. He looked over at Sy.

  She had a little comlink out.

  "We have a new gig," she said. "Working for the Lady Valarian."

  "No," Droopy said.

  "What?" Sy demanded. "For what she's paying, we can get new

  instruments."

  "I'm going into the desert," Droopy said slowly.

  "There are brothers out there."

  "You mean Kitonaks?" Max asked.

  "Yes," Droopy said. "They are near. I hear them."

  Max listened as hard as he could, and sure enough as the ringing in his

  ears and nose faded, he heard a distant wail like Kitonak pipes.

  But how could there be Kitonaks on Tatooine?

  "It's probably just the wind," he said. "That sound can't be Kitonaks.

  What would they be doing out here?"

  "Living," Droopy said. He set Max down, turned, and walked across the

  dunes without another word.

  "Well," Sy said. "I guess that makes us a duo."

  "The Max Rebo Duo," Max said. He smiled. "It has a nice ring."

  "This time," Sy said, "things are going to be different.

  I'm going to negotiate the contracts."

  "Okay," Max said. "As long as there's plenty of food."

  "Or plenty of money to buy food," she said.

  "Agreed!" He stuck out his hand. "Partners?"

  "Partners," she agreed. Then she activated her comlink. "Lady Valarian

  wants us there," she said.

  "Send a landspeeder to pick us up. Who? Me and my partner, of course."

  Then she laughed. "Tonight? It's a little soon, but if you can get the

  instruments, we can
be ready."

  "And food," Max said. "Don't forget the food."

  "And food," she added. "We'll need plenty of that." Of the Day's

  Annoyances: Bib Fortuna's Tale

  by M. Shayne Bell

  I will rollJabba off his throne on the day of my coup, Bib Fortuna

  thought as he walked from Jabba's throne room to plot with the B'omarr

  monks. My guards will pull him onto the grille over the rancor pit. I

  will let him lie therefor a moment to watch the rancor raging below him,

  to hear its roars, to know that when I open the trapdoor to let him

  fall, the rancor will eat him, and to know, finally, that I will inherit

  his fortune and criminal organization and he cannot stop me!

  Fortuna walked quickly down the sandy stairs spiraling in shadow to the

  dungeons below. Behind the stones of this stairwell lies the chute

  Jabba will slide down to the rancor pit, Fortuna thought. Jabba will

  watch my hand hover over the button that opens the trapdoor and know he

  is about to die. Fortuna smiled. He touched the stones and imagined

  the steep chute behind them. He had calculated the dimensions of

  Jabba's bloated body and concluded that, if doused in grease, Jabba

  could still slide down the chute. Jabba's dousing in grease would be

  wonderfully ignominious: Fortuna imagined the kitchen staff rushing up

  from the kitchens with pots of hot grease, their joy as they threw it on

  Jabba, their pleasure at ultimate revenge for their sons and daughters

  Jabba had used as tasters and for their colleagues thrown to the rancor

  when a dish failed. Fortuna had ordered Porcellus, the chief cook, and

  his staff to save grease in old pots: they did not know why, but they

  would soon.

  It would be a happy day.

  Fortuna walked past the prisoners' dark cells. Some cells were quiet.

  Moans came from others. The sound of sobbing from one.

  Fortuna took stock of them all and the prisoners in them: I will set

  this prisoner free, Fortuna thought. This one I will execute. These

  others I will sell into slavery. Fortuna intended his justice to be

  swift and final.

  The passageway wound on and became quieter, and suddenly the floor was

  free of sand. It had been swept clean. The monks lived past that

  point. Fortuna stopped, took off his sandals, and beat them against the

  stone wall to knock the sand out of them: a sign of respect for the

  monks. He would not bring more of the filth of Jabba's occupation of

  their palace into the places where they lived. How the filth of the

  parts of the palace out of their control must distress them!

  Fortuna swore he would let the monks clean the palace thoroughly, once,

  before he drove them out forever, before they could turn against him. He

  pulled on his sandals and walked on.

  Fewer and fewer-candles, guttering in their niches, lighted the

  passageway. The shadows deepened. At times Fortuna walked in complete

  darkness, but he never hesitated. He walked straight ahead with

  confidence.

  He knew this passageway. He had come here many times to learn the

  secrets of the monks and to plot with them. But the lower levels were

  cool, and Fortuna pulled his cloak tighter around him.

  A shadow moved down the passageway ahead. Metal scraped against bare

  stone. Fortuna stopped and analyzed the darkness around him: his

  intuition sensed no danger. But he heard movement again, in the

  darkness, coming toward him. He drew his blaster and crouched back

  against the wall as the shadow of a giant spider as tall as Fortuna

  loomed up. The spider itself crawled out of the shadows and scrabbled

  past Fortuna. Fortuna relaxed, barely, but kept the blaster in his

  hand: just a brain walker, he told himself, a machine shaped like a

  spider that carried an enlightened monk's disembodied brain in a jar

  attached to the underbelly. Harmless. But even so he hated it.

  Brain walkers unsettled him. He watched lights at the base of the brain

  jar blink in calm greens and blues, as if part of a fluorescent bauble

  on a vain man-sized spider. Perhaps it meant to join Jabba at his

  dinner.

  They would do that: the brains talked through speakers on the jar in

  foolish attempts to instruct Jabba about the nature of the universe and

  promote his enlightenment.

  It always amused Jabba and his dinner guests.

  Fortuna remembered the first time he had seen a brain walker. He had

  not thought it amusing then. As Jabba's new majordomo, Fortuna had been

  hungry to learn everything about the palace--its main corridors, its

  secret corridors and rooms, its dungeons, its people and their routines.

  One evening he accompanied the kitchen staff on their rounds feeding

  prisoners. Just as they reached the first cell, a monstrous spider

  stumbled into them, upsetting a soup pot and splashing hot soup on

  Fortuna's robes. Fortuna fired his blaster and hit the brain jar and

  the spider's Underbelly. The jar exploded, and the brain flopped onto

  the sandy passageway. The spider short-circuited with pops and shooting

  sparks.

  Only then had Fortuna realized that the spider was a machine.

  No one spoke, not the cooks or the guards or the prisoners standing in

  the open doorway of their cell.

  The spider unnerved them, too. Monks rushed up to collect the brain,

  and one explained that when a monk became enlightened, other monks

  trained as surgeons cut out his brain and placed it in a maintenance jar

  filled with a nutrient-rich solution. From there, the brain

  contemplated the cosmos, freed from the body's distractions.

  Fortuna gagged at the thought. He hurried back toward Jabba's throne

  room, stained robes and all, to advise Jabba to order the monks

  exterminated. Their ways were intolerable. It astonished him that two

  distinct cultures lived in the palace, anyway: Jabba's criminal

  organization, and these monks. For generations, criminals had occupied

  parts of the monastery the monks had built, turning it into a palace,

  taking all the best rooms, using more and more of its space. It was

  time to take it all.

  But suddenly Fortuna had stopped. He was angry that any monks were left

  here at all. How must they feel about the presence of Jabba and his

  minions in their palace? Surely they were discontented.

  Fortuna believed he could turn their discontent to his advantage: side

  with them in their complaints, pretend to learn from them, guide them

  into open plotting to rid the palace of Jabba, mold them into an

  unsuspected force he could call on when the day came for him to seize

  control.

  How well his plan had worked! The monks were now trained and equipped

  to take the palace. There were hundreds of monks still in bodies--and

  hundreds of others in brain jars and walkers: enough to quickly

  overpower unsuspecting guards. And Fortuna had learned from the monks.

  He did not have to pretend that. They had much to teach.

  He learned how to intuitively sense the plots swirling aroundJabba, the

  petty thieveries planned, the twisted physical cravings.

  They taught him his life's work had been fatedand he took their

&
nbsp; teachings even further: he believed the universe had made it possible

  for him to acquire the power and wealth necessary to conquer Ryloth, his

  homeworld, to mold his people, the Twi'leks, into the kinds of subjects

  the Empire valued: bounty hunters, mercenaries, spies--not merely exotic

  slaves--and save what he could of them. By "chance," Fortuna controlled

  Nat Secura, the last descendant of a great Twi'lek house. Nat was vital

  to his plan: the people would rally to Nat (and Fortuna's indirect

  leadership) when it came time to conquer Ryloth.

  The Twi'leks would remember what Fortuna had done for them forever.

  The names of his ancestors would be honored again.

  He would be honored.

  But there was work ahead, and he must be ready for it. The time for

  happy imaginings was past. He called up safeguards in his mind that hid

  his darkest thoughts and hurried on.

  Only one monk waited for him in the council chamber, and he was not

  sitting in meditation. He paced the floor. "Master Fortuna," he said.

 

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