Book Read Free

Dark Apprentice

Page 17

by Kevin J. Anderson


  The seatree fronds formed a tangled forest around them, filled with

  thousands of strangely shaped blob-fish, crustaceans, and tentacled things;

  most were small, but others cast large shadows as they drifted among the

  fronds, feeding on the air-filled fruit bladders that kept the dense weed

  afloat.

  "When Ackbar was younger, he had a small dwelling here in the wild

  seatree thickets," Cilghal said. "The fish noticed his return, and though

  they

  have short memories, they passed the word from creature to creature until it

  reached the mollusk knowledge bank."

  Leia's arms and legs ached as she continued the long swim, though the

  wonderful clinging mesh suit seemed to revitalize her muscles. "All I want

  is

  to talk to him."

  Ahead she saw a spherical dwelling made of plasteel covered with algae

  and draping weed that had grown up from the spray clinging to its hull.

  Large

  valves of water-recirculation equipment, desalination devi ces, and round

  viewports dotted the open spaces on the curved walls; a bare deck looked

  clean

  and bright, as if recently scrubbed. A white utility submersible, ovoid with

  a

  mass of articulated working arms, had been lashed to the side of the deck.

  Leia treaded water on the surface in the pelting rain and the whipping

  wind, still breathing through the symbiote. Cilghal tugged her arm,

  motioning

  for her to go down. "The entrance will be below," she said.

  They stroked down through the water. Thick seatree trunks anchored the

  dwelling module in place, rocking it from side to side. Traps and nets

  dangled

  beneath the water; some held tiny green fish that could easily swim through

  the open mesh. From inside, shafts of illumination struck down into the

  depths

  like watery spears.

  On the bottom of the hull they found an opening like a wide mouth.

  Cilghal went first through the containment field, and Leia followed,

  brushing

  her shoulders against the metal lip. When her head plunged through into the

  dim interior, she stripped off the symbiote, shook herself, and looked into

  Ackbar's cluttered home.

  He stood up in alarm from a bench made of pitted flowstone, speechless as

  Cilghal and Leia eased themselves out of the water. Leia dripped for a

  moment,

  until the wondrous mesh suit absorbed and dissipated the water in its

  microthin layers.

  Leia sighed with relief to see Ackbar, but she sensed his sudden

  discomfort at her presence--and something more. All her well-rehearsed

  speeches drained away like so much seawater splashing to the floor. They

  stood

  silently staring at each other for a long moment. Finally Leia recovered

  enough to speak. "Admiral Ackbar, I'm glad we've found you."

  "Leia," Ackbar said. He held his hands in front of him, then withdrew

  them as if completely at a loss. He turned to Cilghal. "Ambassador, I

  believe

  we have met twice before?"

  "It was an honor both times, Admiral," Cilghal said.

  "Please," he said, "just call me Ackbar. I no longer hold that rank."

  His dwelling was like a large, solid bubble with extruded knobs for

  sitting, pedestals for tables, and cubbyholes for storage. Possessions lay

  strewn about, though the back of the room was neatly organized, cleaned,

  polished, as if he had methodically begun repairing and organizing the chaos

  one square meter at a time.

  Ackbar gestured toward the warmly lit galley area where delicious-

  smelling food bubbled over a heater. "Would you join me? I would not insult

  a

  potential Jedi by asking how you found me--but I would like to know what has

  brought you all the way from Coruscant."

  Later they sat finishing bowls of simple but delicious fish stew. Leia

  chewed on the tender meat, swallowed another mouthful, and licked her lips

  to

  taste the burning sweet tingle of Calamarian spices.

  She had spent the meal trying to work up her courage, but Ackbar finally

  addressed the question himself. "Leia, you have not yet said why you are

  here.

  "

  Leia drew a deep breath, then sat up straight. "To speak with you,

  Admira--ah--Ackbar. And to ask you the same question. Why are you here?"

  Ackbar seemed to deliberately misunderstand her. "This is my home."

  Frustrated, Leia was not ready to give up yet. "I know this is your

  homeworld, but there are many others who need you. The New Republic--was

  Ackbar stood and turned away, gathering the empty stew bowls. "My own

  people also need me. There has been much destruction. Many deaths..." Leia

  wondered if he referred to the Imperial attacks on Calamari, or his own

  crash

  at the Cathedral of Winds.

  "Mon Mothma is dying," Leia said abruptly before she could change her

  mind. Cilghal sat up in the most sudden reaction Leia had yet seen from the

  calm ambassador.

  Ackbar heaved his weary eyes to look at her. He set the stew bowls down.

  "How can you be certain of this?"

  "It's a wasting disease that's tearing her apart," Leia answered. "The

  medical droids and the experts can't find anything wrong with her. She looks

  bad. You saw her before you left us. Mon Mothma was covering the worst with

  extensive makeup to hide how ill she really is.

  "We need you back, Admiral." Leia used his rank on purpose. She leaned on

  Ackbar's small table and stared at him, her dark eyes pleading.

  "I'm sorry, Leia," Ackbar said, shaking his head. He indicated the newly

  refurbished workroom and his equipment. "I have important work to do here.

  My

  planet was badly damaged during the Imperial attacks, and there have been

  many

  tectonic disturbances. I've taken it upon myself to find out if our planet's

  crust has become unstable. I need to gather more data. My people could be in

  danger. No more lives will be lost because of me."

  Cilghal turned her head from side to side, watching the debate but saying

  nothing.

  "Admiral, you can't just let the New Republic fall apart because of your

  guilty conscience," Leia said. "Many lives across the galaxy are at stake."

  But Ackbar moved about uneasily, as if trying to shut out Leia's words.

  "There is so much work to do, I cannot delay another moment. I was just

  preparing to set some new seismic sensors." He shuffled toward a shelf

  filled

  with packaged electronic equipment. "Please, leave me in peace."

  Leia stood up quickly. "We'll help you set out your sensors, Admiral."

  Ackbar hesitated, as if lonely but afraid to have their company. He

  turned to meet Leia's eyes, then Cilghal's. "Yes, I would be honored to have

  your assistance. My submersible can carry the three of us." He blinked his

  large, sad eyes. "I enjoy your company--even though your requests are most

  difficult."

  Strapped into one of the seats in the cramped utility sub, Leia watched

  as water sloshed around the upper ports. The sea swallowed the craft, and

  they

  descended into the isolated seatree
forest until the ocean around them

  looked

  like panels of dark-green smoked glass. Leia watched in awe as Ackbar picked

  a

  course through thick ropy strands and wide pillars.

  Underwater, the seaflowers blossomed in shimmering reds and blues to

  attract darting creatures that flitted in and out of the fronds. As one of

  the

  small fish came too close to a brilliant flower, the petals suddenly

  contracted like a fist, snatching its prey and swallowing it whole.

  "I have only begun deploying my seismic network," Ackbar said, as if to

  divert the conversation. "I've set up the baseline grid beneath my dwelling,

  but I need to extend into the seatree forest to get higher-resolution

  soundings."

  Cilghal said, "I am pleased with the important work you are doing for our

  planet, Admiral." Leia was amused at how the ambassador

  continued--whichether

  consciously or unconsciously--to use his military title.

  "It is necessary to do important things with your life," Ackbar said,

  then said no more, walling himself off with silence. Behind them, stowed

  seismic equipment rattled beside the empty nets and sea-harvest baskets.

  Leia cleared her throat and spoke, keeping her voice gentle. "Ackbar... I

  understand how you must feel. I was there too, remember?"

  "You are kind, Leia. But you do not understand how I feel. were you

  piloting the B-wing that crashed? Are you responsible for hundreds of

  deaths?"

  He shook his head sadly. "Do you hear their voices in your dreams each

  night,

  calling out to you?"

  Ackbar switched on the sub's depth lights, and a bright cone-shaped beam

  sliced through the water. The funnel of illumination glanced off colorful

  fish

  and strips of seaweed.

  Leia spoke more from intuition than from knowledge. "You can't hide on

  Calamari forever."

  Ackbar still would not look at her. "I am not hiding. I have my work.

  Important work."

  They drifted toward the silty ocean bottom near one of the gnarled

  seatree boles. Rounded hummocks of dark rock thrust out from the milky sand.

  A

  coating of algae smoothed every surface, making the sea floor appear soft

  and

  soothing. Ackbar hunched forward to stare through the murk, searching for a

  stable place to implant another seismic sensor.

  "Important work, perhaps," Leia said, "but not your work. Many

  Calamarians would gladly help with that research, Admiral. Are you equipped

  to

  handle such a task by yourself? Remember that old proverb you used to quote

  when I complained about all those senseless Council meetings? "Many eyes see

  what one alone cannot." Wouldn't it be best to share your concerns with a

  team

  of specialists?"

  Cilghal interrupted, leaning forward to indicate some curved half-buried

  sections of metal, like the ribbed shell of some sort of escape pod. "What's

  that?"

  The edges had corroded, and tracings of algae grew in the protected

  crevices. "Perhaps a wrecked ship," Ackbar said.

  Cilghal nodded. "We fought back when the Imperials tried to enslave us.

  Many of their ships lie beneath our waters."

  Ackbar inserted his hands into the waldo control gloves for the automated

  metallic claws that extended from the front of the small sub. The sharp

  jerky

  motions reminded Leia of the vicious krakana monster near the mollusk

  knowledge bank.

  "If that wreckage has been stable here for years," Ackbar said, "this is

  a good place to deploy another set of sensors."

  Watching the external metal arms, Leia saw Ackbar remove a canister from

  the external storage bin on the submersible. Ackbar lowered the craft until

  plumes of pale sand drifted up from the disturbance like a slow-motion

  Tatooine dust storm. The nimble robotic claws positioned the cy linder

  upright

  in the soft silt.

  Reversing propellers, Ackbar lifted them away. Craning his neck so he

  could see better through the front viewport, Ackbar pushed the ACTIVATE

  button. With a vibrating thump that Leia could feel through the sub's hull,

  the seismic canister detonated its tiny explosive. A long rod plunged deep

  into the ocean floor while spraying out a web of secondary detectors

  symmetrically around the core like a shooting star.

  "Now we'll send a test signal," Ackbar said. With a whirr he lifted the

  sub through the densely tangled seatree forest, moving slowly enough so the

  fronds could be nudged out of the way, slithering over the rounded hull.

  Leia fidgeted, swallowing numerous phrases that sounded flat to her.

  "Admiral, you know better than anyone on this world how important it is to

  have the right leadership, to have everyone working toward a common goal.

  You

  helped lead a band of Rebels from a hundred different planets, turned them

  into a united fleet that was able to defeat the Empire, and you guided them

  as

  they formed a new government."

  Ackbar let the sub drift and turned to meet her gaze. She continued

  rapidly, hoping to cut off any arguments. "At least come with me to

  Coruscant

  and talk to Mon Mothma. We've been part of the same team for many years, you

  and I. You won't stand by and watch the New Republic fall apart."

  Ackbar sighed and gripped his controls. Seatree branches flapped against

  the viewing windows. "It seems you know me better than I had thought. I--was

  A pinging alarm beeped from the control panel. Ackbar reacted smoothly

  and swiftly, slowing the sub. He peered into his widely set stereoscopic

  sensor displays. "This is interesting," he said.

  "What is it?" Leia said.

  "Another large metallic mass tangled in the weeds right above us."

  "Maybe it's part of that crashed ship," Cilghal said.

  "If something fell into the seatree forest, it could have been swallowed

  up for eternity," Ackbar said. He eased the sub ahead.

  As Leia saw the outline of a large multilegged thing wrapped with

  seatrees and overgrown with algae, she thought it was some kind of alien

  life-

  form. Then she recognized the squashed elliptical head, the segmented body

  core trailing jointed mechanical arms, its nonreflective black surface.

  She had seen something like this on the ice planet Hoth, when Han Solo

  and Chewbacca had stumbled upon the Imperial probe droid. "Admiral--was Leia

  said.

  "I see it. Arakyd Viper Series Probot. The Empire dispatched thousands to

  all corners of the galaxy to hunt down Rebel bases."

  "It must have landed years ago on Calamari," Cilghal said. "The wreckage

  we found below was its landing pod."

  Ackbar nodded. "But when the probe droid tried to rise to the surface, it

  tangled in the seaweed. It must have shut down." He nudged the sub closer,

  shining his depth light on the outer surface.

  But when the beam struck the probot's rounded head, its entire bank of

  round eyes blinked to life.

  "It's been activated!" Leia said. She could hear the high-pitched

  vibrating hum of powerful generators as t
he probe droid began to move again.

  The head swiveled and directed its own glowing beam at the sub.

  Ackbar pushed the propellers into reverse; but before the sub could move

  away, the probot launched out with its spiderlike claws. Mechanical arms

  latched on to one of the sub's rounded fins. The head of the probe droid

  rotated slowly, trying to bring its built-in blaster cannons to bear, but

  the

  seatree fronds tangled its joints.

  Ackbar threw all the sub's power into pulling away and succeeded only in

  yanking the probe droid along with him, tearing it free of ancient strands

  of

  weed.

  Ackbar dug his flippers into the wide gloves that controlled his sub's

  articulated arms. He brought up two of the segmented mechanical tools,

  wrestling with the probe droid's gripping black claws.

  Through the speakers of the comm unit, a sudden static-filled burst of

  subspace gibberish blasted out from the probe droid in some kind of powerful

  coded signal. The long chain of data shouted toward space even as the deadly

  probot wrestled with Ackbar's sub.

  The black droid finally succeeded in rotating its head, bending its laser

  cannons toward the sub.

  Ackbar fired the lateral jets, wrenching them and the probe droid

  sideways as a volley of vicious laser blasts screamed past them, plowing a

  tunnel of sudden steam through the water. He tugged at the waldos and

  brought

  another of his equipment arms to bear, a small cutting laser.

  Its tip heated to incandescent red-white as he slashed through the probe

  droid's gripping metal claw, severing the plasteel and breaking them free.

  Ackbar pulled the sub away and brought the cutting laser to bear again just

  as

  the probe droid turned to fire a second time.

  Leia knew it was hopeless. They couldn't get away, and the cutting laser

  would do nothing against the far-superior weapons of the probot. And unlike

  Luke, she had not mastered Jedi skills enough to mount even a feeble

  defense.

  But Ackbar, still looking cool and in control, fired two blasts from the

  cutting laser at the head of the probe droid, attempting to blind its

  optical

  sensors. The feeble beams struck--

  The probot detonated in an unexpected explosion. Bright concentric waves

  of light hurled the sub back, tumbling it end over end. They were thrown

  backward; Leia felt the chair's restraints automatically tighten round her.

 

‹ Prev