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Dark Apprentice

Page 25

by Kevin J. Anderson


  For now he had to get away to ponder and sort through the conflicting

  thoughts in his mind.

  He opened up the satchel to look at the black cape. A pair of small,

  lightning-fast rodents dashed out from their nest in his garment and

  vanished

  like hot liquid through a chink in the stone wall.

  Alarmed, Kyp lost control of his anger for an instant and let fly a

  searing blast of power that followed the two rodents down their narrow

  tunnels

  and incinerated them as they ran. Blackened bones tumbled forward with the

  momentum, then slumped to dust in the stone tunnel.

  Paying no more heed to the distraction, Kyp pulled out the flowing cape,

  holding it in front of him. Its embedded reflective threads sparkled as if

  with hidden power. Kyp wrapped it around himself and gathered a few of his

  other possessions.

  He had to go far away. He had to think. He had to be strong.

  Later that evening, when Artoo sounded all the alarms, Luke awoke

  instantly. He sprinted down the corridors to the outside the landing area.

  Mara Jade ran beside him, already alert, as if she had a good idea of what

  might be happening.

  Luke's eyes adjusted rapidly to the star-strewn sky, which was fuzzy and

  pale in the south with skyshine from the gas giant Yavin. Mara and Luke

  stood

  outside the half-open hangar doors as they watched her Z-95 Headhunter rise

  from the landing grid with all its running lights darkened.

  "He's stealing my ship!" Mara Jade shouted. The Headhunter's sublight

  engines kicked in, burning white-hot behind the craft as it shot into the

  sky.

  Luke shook his head in disbelief and realized that he had unconsciously

  extended one hand, beckoning for Kyp Durron to return.

  The small ship became a white streak of light that grew smaller and

  smaller as it reached orbit, then set out among the stars.

  Luke felt a devastating emptiness, knowing that he had lost another of

  his Jedi students forever.

  Every flagstone gleamed. Every Imperial column had been scrubbed white.

  Every colorful banner representing the Empire's most loyal worlds hung

  absolutely straight, displayed without a wrinkle. Everything was in order at

  the main citadel of the Imperial Military Academy on Carida.

  Ambassador Furgan nodded. Just the way he liked it.

  Three hundred crack stormtroopers stood at attention in the echoing hall,

  motionless in perfect ranks. Their white armor glistened like polished bone.

  They were identical, intensively trained, precise military machines. These

  stormtroopers were the best of the best in the academy. Only the top

  Imperial

  recruits even began stormtrooper training, and these three hundred had

  excelled in every way.

  Ambassador Furgan moved toward the podium to address them. The smell of

  oils and waxes on the synthetic wood seemed potent in the otherwise

  sterilized

  air. Furgan drew himself up, trying to look larger than his stocky stature

  allowed. The white helmets turned in unison to track him with their black

  goggles.

  "Imperial troops," he said, "you have been chosen to lead the most

  important mission since the fall of our beloved Emperor. You have endured

  hardship and passed many tests during your training. I have chosen you as

  the

  elite, the best trainees remaining on Carida."

  They did not stir, did not congratulate each other. They remained like

  ranks of statues--which itself attested to the thoroughness of their

  training.

  Since receiving the long-awaited coordinates of the secret planet Anoth,

  Furgan had plotted this operation with extreme caution. He had studied the

  personnel data of thousands of his best troops. He had analyzed the records

  of

  their training exercises mock combat in the harsh ice caps of Carida;

  prolonged sieges out in the baked and waterless deserts; jungle survival

  tours

  through dense and uncharted rain forests filled with primitive predators,

  carnivorous plants, and poisonous insects.

  Furgan had culled the names of those stormtroopers who had shown the most

  stamina, the most initiative, the greatest success, coupled with the

  strongest

  willingness to follow every order.

  He was proud of his assault force.

  "We have obtained secret information regarding the location of a certain

  baby. A child with enormous potential for using the Force." He paused,

  expecting to hear them groan, but the stormtroopers made no sound.

  "This child is the son of Leia Organa Solo, the New Republic's Minister

  of State. If we were to apprehend this child, it would deal an enormous

  psychological blow to the Rebellion--but beyond that, this boy is the

  grandson

  of Darth Vader."

  There, finally, he thought he heard a rustle of superstitious fear or

  awe.

  "This child could be extremely valuable to the rebirth of the Empire. A

  child such as this, raised properly and trained properly, could become a

  worthy successor to the Emperor Palatine."

  Furgan kept talking, faster now as he felt the excitement within him. He

  was more than just an ambassador; he planned to go along on this assault

  himself. He would not expose himself to any part of the attack, of course,

  but

  he would be there to snatch the young child named Anakin.

  "Your unit leaders will provide you with specific assignments. This

  expedition is currently being provisioned. We have secured transports to

  take

  you to the secret location of this world."

  Furgan allowed himself a broad grin with his thick purplish lips. "It is

  also my pleasure to announce that this assault will mark the first combat

  use

  of our new Mountain Terrain Armored Transports on which you have been

  training

  these past months. That is all. Hail to the Emperor!"

  The thunderous response of filtered stormtrooper voices came back at him,

  rocking the hall. "Hail to the Emperor!"

  Furgan slipped behind the hanging purple curtains into a walkway that led

  down empty glow-lit corridors toward his secure office. Inside his chambers

  he

  closed the blast-proof door and sealed it with a cipher lock. He brushed

  aside

  models and plans of the deadly new MT-AT attack vehicles. He felt immensely

  pleased with himself and eager for the assault to start.

  Sitting on Carida during the years of turmoil, Furgan had been upset with

  all the squabbling Imperial commanders since the Emperor's death. Many of

  the

  warlords in the Core Systems were extremely powerful, yet they spent their

  time wrestling for dominance among the remnants of the Imperial fleet rather

  than fighting against their real enemy, the Rebellion.

  Grand Admiral Thrawn had seemed their greatest hope, but he had been

  defeated; and a year later even the resurrected Emperor had been defeated.

  The

  power vacuum of leadership left the Imperial forces with no leadership, no

  goal, battling only for their own advancement.

  Even this surprise n
ew threat by renegade Admiral Daala disturbed Furgan.

  At least Daala was putting her Star Destroyers to an appropriate use,

  attacking Rebel worlds and creating as much havoc as possible. But Daala had

  no overriding plan, no strategy that would bring her ultimate success. She

  was

  simply a juggernaut, striking target after target for the satisfaction of

  causing pain.

  Furgan had discovered to his surprise that Daala herself had been trained

  on Carida. Digging through old records, he had uncovered many disciplinary

  actions taken against her, reprimands in her file. Even then she had been a

  maverick, performing admirably but refusing to learn her place, insisting

  that

  she deserved promotions instead of others. Furgan had no record of her

  advancement to admiral, but Moff Tarkin had transferred her to his personal

  staff after one of his brief inspection tours. Furgan had no other

  information

  about Daala since that time.

  It angered him that this admiral continued her attacks on the Rebellion

  without even attempting to get in touch with Carida. Perhaps Daala

  considered

  herself a vigilante, but the Empire needed its soldiers to fight as parts of

  an immense whole. The Empire did not need vigilantes.

  Furgan had tried to contact some of the other battling Imperial

  commanders to get capital ships for his assault on Anoth. The Emperor and

  Grand Admiral Thrawn and other depredations had already taken most of the

  ships available to Carida. On the military training planet, Furgan had

  access

  to some of the most sophisticated weaponry and soldiers in the entire

  galaxy--

  but because of the perpetual squabbles between the Imperial Army and the

  spacefaring Imperial Navy, he had no place to go with his troops. This left

  Furgan in a position of being on the most heavily armed--but useless--planet

  still loyal to the Empire.

  Furgan absently played with one of the articulated models of the MT-AT

  fighting vehicle. It would be fascinating to see the marvelous new machine

  in

  operation. Even with the death of the Emperor, his loyalty to the Empire and

  the New Order had never been shaken, not even slightly.

  Furgan kept doing his best to strike vital blows against the New

  Republic, one way or another. He was pleased to watch indirect reports that

  gave him evidence of the inexorable progress of Mon Mothma's "mysterious

  illness." She would be dead before long.

  And as soon as Furgan had the grandson of Darth Vader in his possession,

  all those still loyal to the Empire would have to listen to him.

  When Wedge Antilles wasn't looking, Qwi Xux stole a glance at the

  coordinates displayed on his navigation panel. Sitting in the co-pilot's

  seat

  of the disguised personal space yacht, Qwi used her nimble fingers to tap

  the

  coordinates into the navicomputer, requesting a full display.

  Wedge looked away from the starfield and caught what she was doing. "Hey!

  " he said, then grinned sheepishly as he lowered his gaze. "This was

  supposed

  to be a surprise."

  Qwi laughed, a cascade of short musical tones. "I just wanted to know the

  name of the planet." She frowned as the display came up. "Ithor? Never heard

  of it."

  Wedge chuckled and reached over to squeeze her slender shoulder. She felt

  the warmth of his touch linger for several moments after he removed his

  hand.

  "Qwi, you've never heard of most places in the galaxy. You spent your entire

  life cooped up in Maw Installation."

  "Is Ithor a nice place?" she asked.

  He sighed. "It's beautiful. A pristine natural world covered with forests

  and jungles, rivers and waterfalls. We'll be incognito, and you won't have

  to

  worry about anybody knowing who you are."

  Qwi looked around at the metal-edged control panels of the space yacht,

  at the synthetic fabric of the seats that felt so smooth and soft. She

  smelled

  the recirculated air. Qwi had lived for years inside a completely enclosed

  environment; she knew nothing about plants and animals and other life-forms.

  She hoped it would be fascinating.

  "Are you sure we'll be safe?" she asked, swallowing hard. Her greatest

  nightmare was that some Imperial spy might recapture her and haul her back

  to

  the black-hole research lab where they would tear the weapons knowledge out

  of

  her head, no matter how much she resisted.

  "Yes," Wedge said after a long pause. "Ithor is an isolated paradise.

  It's a world where many young couples"--he paused, then swallowed as if

  embarrassed by the word he had just spoken--"uh, tourists go for vacations.

  Many people come and go, and the Ithorians welcome everyone.

  "The Empire blockaded this world during the Rebellion, causing some

  damage as a show of force. But after one of the Ithorians gave the Empire

  access to the agricultural and cloning information they wanted, Ithor was

  basically left alone."

  Wedge looked out at the starfield where the brilliant sun of the Ithorian

  system gleamed a whitish blue. He increased the thrust from the sublight

  engines and vectored them toward a bright green planet veined with blue and

  swathed with white clouds.

  "Just pretend we're on vacation," Wedge said. "We'll be tourists, and

  I'll show you what you've been missing. I can't think of a better place to

  start."

  "I really look forward to it." Qwi smiled warmly at him.

  Wedge blushed, then seemed to concentrate furiously on the relatively

  simple task of entering a low orbit.

  Qwi placed her pale-blue fingers against the side viewport as she stared

  at the lush vistas below. She had never seen such exotic scenery before, so

  different from the sterile white-walled rooms in Maw Installation.

  Below her, between the treetops of a tropical paradise, broad rivers

  furled with white rapids as the current flowed over broken rocks. The space

  yacht soared above broad meadows splattered with brilliant colors, blooming

  flowers in red and yellow, blue and purple. The sheer vibrancy of the

  growing

  things dazzled her eyes.

  They passed over a chain of oval lakes that glittered and reflected the

  sunlight, like the string of jewels on the necklace Wedge had given her as a

  gift a few days earlier. Overhead the sky was a muted lavender.

  "Beautiful," she said.

  "Told you so," Wedge agreed, giving her a half smile. "You can trust me."

  She looked at him, then blinked her indigo eyes. "Yes, Wedge, I trust

  you."

  He cleared his throat and turned away quickly, pointing out the front

  viewport. "The Ithorians allow no damage to their environment," he said as

  if

  reading a data summary. "In fact, they consider it sacrilege even to set

  foot

  on the ground of their mother jungle."

  "Then how do they live?" Qwi asked.

  "Look," Wedge said.

  As they soared above the treetops, Qwi made out a strange shape coming

  over the horizon, rapidly growing larger as they approa
ched. "Is that a

  city?"

  she said.

  "More than just a city," Wedge said, "an entire enclosed environment. The

  Ithorians call it the Tafanda Bay."

  The enormous disk-shaped construction swelled to fill their front

  viewport, looking larger and larger--and larger, like a fat coin greater in

  diameter than the entire Maw Installation. Though the city appeared to be

  made

  of plasteel, it also seemed at least partially alive.

  A chaos of platforms, flight decks, transmission antennas, and roving

  machinery studded the hull of the Ithorian floating city--but the exposed

  surfaces were covered with hanging moss; large trees grew out of special

  pockets on the side walls, rising to the sky and looking thicker and greener

  than the metallic towers.

  On the top flat surface of the disk, greenhouse domes sparkled like a

  thousand eyes in the sun. Qwi could see through the transparent domes to

  dense

  botanical gardens in carefully manicured rows. Small ships flitted like

  gnats

  about the landing ports and shipping bays.

  Underneath the Tafanda Bay, banks of diffused repulsorlift engines kept

  the entire city hovering over the treetops, casting an elliptical shadow

  over

  the leafy surface. The Ithorian city slowly drifted along a wandering course

  with no destination in particular, without touching the sacred ground.

  Wedge keyed in his request for landing coordinates and was answered by an

  odd echoing voice that Qwi thought sounded like someone speaking through a

  long, empty tube. After a moment the comm system crackled again with the

  voice--or was it another one? - - changing the coordinates.

  "Excuse us for the oversight, sir. A special representative will meet you

  at the landing bay. We hope you enjoy your stay here on our homeworld."

  Wedge looked suspiciously at the comm unit. "Why would they be giving us

  special treatment?" he said to Qwi. "Nobody is supposed to know who we

  really

  are."

  Qwi looked around, and suddenly the cockpit of the space yacht seemed

  smaller. "Do you think we're in danger? Should we turn around and find some

  other place to go?"

  Wedge looked as if that was indeed what he wanted to do. "No, it's all

  right," he said bravely. "I can protect you. Don't worry."

  They landed on the pad indicated, and Wedge extended the passenger ramp.

  He climbed down the gangway first and reached up to take Qwi by the hand,

 

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