Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

Home > Other > Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith > Page 12
Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Page 12

by Matthew W. Stover


  Ah, Grievous thought. In all the excitement, he had entirely forgotten about Lieutenant Commander Needa and Integrity.

  The other pilot—the one who wasn’t shrieking and slapping at the flames on his uniform until his own hands caught fire— leaned as far away from his screaming partner as his crash web­bing would allow and shouted, “General, that shot destroyed the last of the aft control cells! The ship is deorbiting! We’re going to burn!”

  “Very well,” Grievous said calmly. “Stay on course.” Now it no longer mattered whether his bodyguards could overpower the Jedi or not: they would all burn together.

  He tapped his jaw sensor to the control frequency for the es­cape pods; one coded order ensured that his personal pod would be waiting for him with engines hot and systems checks com­plete.

  When he looked back to the fight, all he could see of IG-102 was one arm, the saber-cut joint still white hot. Skywalker was pursuing two super battle droids that had Palpatine by the arms. While Skywalker dismantled the droids with swift cuts, Kenobi was in the process of doing the same to IG-101—the MagnaGuard was hopping on its one remaining leg, whirling its electrostaff with its one remaining arm, and screeching some improbable threat regarding its staff and Kenobi’s body cavities—and after Kenobi cut off the arm, 101 went hopping after him, still screech­ing. The droid actually managed to land one glancing kick before the Jedi casually severed its other leg, after which 101’s limbless torso continued to writhe on the deck, howling.

  With both MagnaGuards down, all eight destroyers opened up, dual cannons erupting gouts of galvened particle beams. The two Jedi leapt together to screen the Chancellor, and before Grievous could command the destroyers to cease fire, the Jedi had deflected enough of the bolts to blow apart three-quarters of the remaining super battle droids and send the survivors scurry­ing for cover beside what was left of the cringing Neimoidians.

  The destroyers began to close in, hosing down the Jedi with heavy fire, advancing step by step, cannons against lightsabers; the Jedi caught every blast and sent them back against the de­stroyers’ shields that flared in spherical haloes as they absorbed the reflected bolts. The destroyers might very well have prevailed over the Jedi, except for one unexpected difficulty— Gravity shear.

  All eight of them suddenly seemed, inexplicably, to leap into the air, followed by Skywalker, and Palpatine, and chairs and pieces of MagnaGuards and everything else on the bridge that was not bolted to the deck, except for Kenobi, who managed to grab a control console and now was hanging by one hand, upside down, still effortlessly deflecting blaster bolts.

  The surviving Neimoidian pilot was screaming orders for the droids to magnetize, then started howling that the ship was breaking up, and managed to make so much annoying noise that Grievous smashed his skull out of simple irritation. Then he looked around and realized he’d just killed the last of his crew: all the bridge crew he hadn’t slain personally had sucked up the bulk of the random blaster ricochets.

  Grievous shook the pilot’s brains off his fist. Disgusting crea­tures, Neimoidians.

  The invisible plane of altered gravity passed over the bio-droid general without effect—his talons of magnetized duranium kept him right where he was—and as one of the MagnaGuards’ electrostaffs fell past him, his invisibly fast hand snatched it from the air. When another plane of gravity shear swept through the bridge, droids, Chancellor, and Jedi all fell back to the floor.

  Though the droideka, also known as the destroyer droid, was the most powerful infantry combat droid in general production, it had one major design flaw. The energy shield that was so ef­fective in stopping blasters, slugs, shrapnel, and even lightsabers was precisely tuned to englobe the droid in a standing position; if the droid was no longer standing—say, if it was knocked down, or thrown into a wall—the shield generator could not distinguish a floor or a wall from a weapon, and would keep ramping up power to disintegrate this perceived threat until the generator shorted itself out.

  Between falling to the ceiling, bouncing off it, and falling back to the floor, the sum total output of all the shield generators of Squad Eight was, currently, one large cloud of black smoke.

  It was impossible to say which one of them opened fire on the Jedi, and it didn’t matter; inside of two seconds, eight droidekas had become eight piles of smoking scrap, and two Jedi, entirely unscathed, walked out of the smoke side by side. Without a word, they parted to bracket the general. Grievous clicked the electrostaffs power setting to overload; it spat lightning around him as he lifted it to combat ready. “I am sorry I don’t have time to fight you—it would have been an interesting match—but I have an appointment with an escape pod.

  And you ...”

  He pointed at the transparisteel view wall and triggered his own concealed cable-gun, not unlike the one that fancy as­tromech of theirs had; the cable shot out and its grappling claw buried itself in one of the panel supports.

  “You,” he said, “have appointments with death.” The Jedi leapt, and Grievous hurled the overloading electrostaff—but not at the Jedi. He threw it at a window.

  One of the transparisteel panels of the view wall had cracked under a glancing hit from a starfighter’s cannon; when the spark­ing electrostaff hit it squarely and exploded like a proton grenade, the whole panel blew out into space.

  A hurricane roared to life, raging through the bridge, seizing Neimoidian corpses and pieces of droids and wreckage and hurl­ing them out through the gap along with a white fountain of flash-frozen air. Grievous sprang straight up into the instant hur­ricane, narrowly avoiding the two Jedi, whose leaps had become frantic tumbles as they tried to avoid being sucked through along with him. Grievous, though, had no need to breathe, nor had he any fear of his body fluids boiling in the vacuum—the pressur­ized synthflesh that enclosed the living parts within his droid exoskeleton saw to that—so he simply rode the storm right out into space until he reached the end of the cable and it snapped tight and swung him whipping back toward Invisible Hand’s hull.

  He cast off the cable. His hands and feet of magnetized du­ranium let him scramble along the hull without difficulty, the light-spidered curve of Coruscant’s nightside whirling around him. He clambered over to the external locks of the bridge es­cape pods and punched in a command code. Looking back over his shoulder, he experienced a certain chilly satisfaction as he

  watched empty escape pods blast free of the Hand’s bridge and streak away.

  All of them.

  Well: all but one.

  No trick of the Force would spring Kenobi and Skywalker out of this one. It was a shame he didn’t have a spy probe handy to leave on the bridge; he would have enjoyed watching the Re­public’s greatest heroes burn.

  The ion streaks of the escape pods spiraled through the bat­tle that still flashed and flared silently in the void, pursued by starfighters and armed retrieval ships. Grievous nodded to him­self; that should occupy them long enough for his command pod to make the run to his escape ship.

  As he entered his customized pod, he reflected that he was, for the first time in his career, violating orders: though he was under strict orders to leave the Chancellor unharmed, Palpatine was about to die alongside his precious Jedi.

  Then Grievous shrugged, and sighed. What more could he have done? There was a war on, after all.

  He was sure Lord Sidious would forgive him.

  On the bridge, a blast shield had closed over the destroyed transparisteel window, and every last surviving combat-model droid had been cut to pieces even before the atmosphere had had a chance to stabilize.

  But there was a more serious problem.

  The bucking of the ship had become continuous. White-hot sparks outside streamed backward past the view wall windows. Those sparks, according to the three different kinds of alarms that were all screaming through the bridge at once, were what was left of the ablative shielding on the nose of the disabled cruiser.

  Anakin stared grimly down at a console
readout. “All the escape pods are gone. Not one left on the whole ship.” He looked cape at Obi-Wan. “We’re trapped.”

  Obi-Wan appeared more interested than actually concerned. “Well. Here’s a chance to display your legendary piloting skills, my young friend. You can fly this cruiser, can’t you?”

  “Flying’s no problem. The trick is landing, which, ah...” Anakin gave a slightly shaky laugh. “Which, you know, this cruiser is not exactly designed to do. Even when it’s in one

  piece.”

  Obi-Wan looked unimpressed. “And so?”

  Anakin unsnapped the crash webbing that held the pilot’s corpse and pulled the body from its chair. “And so you’d better strap in,” he said, settling into the chair, his fingers sliding over the unfamiliar controls.

  The cruiser bounced even harder, and its attitude began to skew as a new klaxon joined the blare of the other alarms. “That wasn’t me!” Anakin jerked his hands away from the board. “I haven’t even done anything yet!”

  “It certainly wasn’t.” Palpatine’s voice was unnaturally calm. “It seems someone is shooting at us.”

  “Wonderful,” Anakin muttered. “Could this day get any bet­ter?”

  “Perhaps we can talk with them.” Obi-Wan moved over to the comm station and began working the screen. “Let them know we’ve captured the ship.”

  “All right, take the comm,” Anakin said. He pointed at the copilot’s station. “Artoo: second chair. Chancellor?”

  “Yes?”

  “Strap in. Now. We’re going in hot.” Anakin grimaced at the scraps of burning hull flashing past the view wall. “In more ways than one.”

  The vast space battle that had ripped and battered Coruscant space all this long, long day, finally began to flicker out.

  The shimmering canopy of ion trails and turbolaser bursts was fading into streaks of ships achieving jump as the Sepa­ratist strike force fled in full retreat. The light of Coruscant’s distant star splintered through iridescent clouds of gas crystals that were the remains of starfighters, and of pilots. Damaged cruisers limped toward spaceyards, passing shattered hulks that hung dead in the infinite day that is interplanetary space. Prize crews took command of surrendered ships, imprisoning the living among their crews and affixing restraining bolts to the droids.

  The dayside surface of the capital planet was shrouded in smoke from a million fires touched off by meteorite impacts of ship fragments; far too many had fallen to be tracked and de­stroyed by the planet’s surface-defense umbrella. The nightside’s sheet of artificial lights faded behind the red-white glow from craters of burning steel; each impact left a caldera of unimagin­able death. In the skies of Coruscant now, the important vessels were no longer warships, but were instead the fire-suppression and rescue craft that crisscrossed the planet.

  Now one last fragmentary ship screamed into the atmo­sphere, coming in too fast, too steep, pieces breaking off to spread apart and stream their own contrails of superheated vapor; banks of turbolasers on the surface-defense towers isolated their signature, and starfighters whipped onto interception courses to thin out whatever fragments the SD towers might miss, and far above, beyond the atmosphere, on the bridge of RSS Integrity, Lieutenant Commander Lorth Needa spoke urgently to a knee-high blue ghost scanned into existence by the phased-array lasers in a holocomm: an alien in Jedi robes, with bulging eyes set in a wrinkled face and long, pointed, oddly flexible ears.

  “You have to stand down the surface-defense system, sir! It’s General Kenobi!” Needa insisted. “His code verifies, Skywalker is with him—and they have Chancellor Palpatine!”

  “Heard and understood this is,” the Jedi responded calmly.

  “Tell me what they require.”

  Needa glanced down at the boil of hull plating that was burning off the falling cruiser, and even as he looked, the ship broke in half at the hangar deck; the rear half tumbled, explod­ing in sections, but whoever was flying the front half must have been one of the greatest pilots Needa had ever even heard of: the front half wobbled and slewed but somehow righted itself using nothing but a bank of thrusters and its atmospheric drag fins.

  “First, a flight of fireships,” Needa said, more calmly now. “If they don’t get the burnoff under control, there won’t be enough hull left to make the surface. And a hardened docking platform, the strongest available; they won’t be able to set it down. This won’t be a landing, it will be a controlled crash. Repeat: a con­trolled crash.”

  “Heard and understood this is,” the hologrammic Jedi re­peated. “Crossload their transponder signature.” When this was done, the Jedi nodded grave approval. “Thank you, Lieutenant Commander. Valiant service for the Republic you have done today—and the gratitude of the Jedi Order you have earned. Yoda out.”

  On the bridge of Integrity, Lorth Needa now could only stand, and watch, hands clasped behind his back. Military disci­pline kept him expressionless, but pale bands began at his knuck­les and spread whiteness nearly to his wrists.

  Every bone in his body ached with helplessness. Because he knew: that fragment of a ship was a death trap. No one could land such a hulk, not even Skywalker. Each second that passed before its final breakup and burn was a miracle in it­self, a testament to the gifts of a pilot who was justly legendary— but when each second is a miracle, how many of them can be strung together in a row?

  Lorth Needa was not religious, nor was he a philosopher or metaphysician; he knew of the Force only by reputation, but nonetheless now he found himself asking the Force, in his heart that when the fiery end came for the men in that scrap of a ship it might as least come quickly.

  His eyes stung. The irony of it burned the back of his throat The Home Fleet had fought brilliantly, and the Jedi had done their superhuman part; against all odds, the Republic had won the day.

  Yet this battle had been fought to save Supreme Chancellor Palpatine.

  They had won the battle, but now, as Needa stood watching helplessly, he couldn’t help feeling that they were about to lose the war.

  This is Anakin Skywalker’s masterpiece:

  Many people say he is the best star pilot in the galaxy, but that’s merely talk, born of the constant HoloNet references to his unmatched string of kills in starfighter combat. Blowing up vulture droids and tri-fighters is simply a matter of superior re­flexes and trust in the Force; he has spent so many hours in the cockpit that he wears a Jedi starfighter like clothes. It’s his own body, with thrusters for legs and cannons for fists.

  What he is doing right now transcends mere flying the way Jedi combat transcends a schoolyard scuffle.

  He sits in a blood-spattered, blaster-chopped chair behind a console he’s never seen before, a console with controls designed for alien fingers. The ship he’s in is not only bucking like a mad­dened dewback through brutal coils of clear-air turbulence, it’s on fire and breaking up like a comet ripping apart as it crashes into a gas giant. He has only seconds to learn how to maneuver an alien craft that not only has no aft control cells, but has no aft at all.

  This is, put simply, impossible. It can’t be done.

  He’s going to do it anyway.

  Because he is Anakin Skywalker, and he doesn’t believe in impossible.

  He extends his hands and for one long, long moment he merely strokes controls, feeling their shape under his fingers, lis­tening to the shivers his soft touch brings to each remaining con­trol surface of the disintegrating ship, allowing their resonances to join inside his head until they resolve into harmony like a Fer­roan joy-harp virtuoso checking the tuning of his instrument.

  And at the same time, he draws power from the Force. He gathers perception, and luck, and sucks into himself the instinc­tive, preconscious what-will-happen-in-the-next-ten-seconds intui­tion that has always been the core of his talent. And then he begins.

  On the downbeat, atmospheric drag fins deploy; as he tweaks their angles and cycles them in and out to slow the ship’s descent without burning
them off altogether, their contrabass roar takes on a punctuated rhythm like a heart that skips an occasional beat. The forward attitude thrusters, damaged in the ship-to-ship bat­tle, now fire in random directions, but he can feel where they’re raking him and he strokes them in sequence, making their song the theme of his impromptu concerto.

  And the true inspiration, the sparkling grace note of genius that brings his masterpiece to life, is the soprano counterpoint: a syncopated sequence of exterior hatches in the outer hull sliding open and closed and open again, subtly altering the aerodynam­ics of the ship to give it just exactly the amount of sideslip or lift or yaw to bring the huge half cruiser into the approach cone of a pinpoint target an eighth of the planet away.

  It is the Force that makes this possible, and more than the Force. Anakin has no interest in serene acceptance of what the Force will bring. Not here. Not now. Not with the lives of Palpatine and Obi-Wan at stake. It’s just the opposite: he seizes upon the Force with a stark refusal to fail.

  He will land this ship.

  He will save his friends.

  Between his will and the will of the Force, there is no contest

  =PART TWO=

  SEDUCTION

  The dark is generous, and it is patient.

  It is the dark that seeds cruelty into justice, that drips contempt into compassion, that poisons love with grains of doubt.

  The dark can be patient, because the slightest drop of rain will cause those seeds to sprout.

  The rain will come, and the seeds will sprout, for the dark is the soil in which they grow, and it is the clouds above them, and it waits behind the star that gives them light.

  The dark’s patience is infinite.

  Eventually, even stars burn out.

  =8=

  FAULT LINES

 

‹ Prev