Star Wars - The New Rebellion

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Star Wars - The New Rebellion Page 41

by Kristine Kathryn Rusch


  “I would, sir, if I thought you still had control, but I daresay you're in for a spot of trouble."

  The gladiator droid swiveled his head. His henchmen, the ones who had gone to investigate, were being crushed against the wall, their guns still trapped in their stomachs, as hundreds of astromech units rolled past.

  "R2!" 3PO yelled.

  "Send for backup," the gladiator droid said to the droid nearest him. "And hurry. The rest of you—fire!"

  Laser cannons went off, and shots reverberated all over the corridor. Droid screams filled the air. Smoke rose as components burned. But the little astromech droids continued moving forward.

  "R2!" 3PO screamed. He could no longer see R2 in the sudden haze of smoke. "R2-D2, where are you?"

  "One more word," the lead gladiator droid said, "and I will use this scrambler."

  3PO had had quite enough of threats. "No, you won't!" he said, and wrenched himself backward as the gladiator droid fired the scrambler. Its shot hit the other gladiator droid holding 3PO. That droid screamed and glowed neon green, a beacon in the haze. 3PO's right arm was free. He yanked his left loose and disappeared into the fog.

  Shots ricocheted around him. The gladiator droids flared like flames in the smoke. 3PO shoved several from behind, making them lose their balance and fall forward.

  "R2!" he continued to yell as he headed in the direction where he had last seen the astromech droids. "R2!" Eeeeooo-whit!

  The whistle came from his left, from a corridor that matched the one he had just come through. It might be a trap, or it might be R2.

  He hurried into that corridor, arms raised. The gladiator droids were still shooting into smoke that seemed horribly unnatural. No matter how many astromech droids got shot, there wouldn't be that much smoke. Unless...

  Unless something was burning.

  "Oh, dear," 3PO muttered. "Oh, dear. Why is it that everything always gets worse?"

  More blaster shots ricocheted around him. The air was full of smoke and screams, but the screams no longer came from astromech droids. The screams came from gladiator droids being hit by ricochets.

  Eeeeooo-whit!

  3PO made it into the corridor, and there R2 was waiting for him. The little droid immediately began rocking and beeping. His clawed arm came out and pulled 3PO in deeper as the door behind them slammed closed.

  The smoke cleared instantly. It hadn't been smoke at all, but hundreds of astromech droids emitting some kind of foggy chemical.

  "R2, I've been looking for you," 3PO said. "Master Cole thought we were going to go together. You shouldn't go off on your own like that. It isn't—"

  R2 gave him a raspberry, swiveled, and started up the corridor behind all the other astromech droids.

  "You can't leave now," 3PO said. "They're going to kill Master Cole."

  R2 stopped and beeped an inquiry.

  "Why, he had to cover that little escape of yours. There were signs, you know, warning that droids couldn't leave a ship. And then you go off on your own. He thought you actually had a plan. He sent me after you, hoping that some good would come of it. I can see now that our concern was misguided."

  R2 blatted at him, and continued forward.

  3PO followed. "Ungrateful? Ungrateful? How can you call me ungrateful?"

  R2 bleebled and continued forward. The other astromech droids swarmed ahead like a sea of mechanicals.

  "I don't think Master Cole can wait, R2. I daresay he's in a difficult patch. If you're not going to help him, I will." 3PO turned on one foot and started down a side corridor.

  R2 whistled at him, not the friendly whistle from before, but a summons. 3PO ignored him.

  Then R2 blatted, and 3PO stopped.

  "Good point," he said more to himself than R2. "I really don't want to face the Red Terror alone."

  3PO scurried back to the original corridor. R2 and his astromech friends had already moved far ahead. 3PO glanced over his shoulder. So far, no Red Terror. But there was no telling whether or not they'd make it through that door.

  "Wait for me!" he shouted. "Wait! For! Me!"

  FORTY-NINE

  Luke backed away from Kueller's lightsaber. So far, Kueller wasn't really swinging it, but he was holding it steady before him, his black robes flowing backward in the wind. His body was slender, almost too slender, and in that—in that only—could Luke see the beginnings of the disintegration the dark side caused.

  Twilight was falling. The light that had seemed so bright when he came out of the tunnel now seemed dim and shadowy. Only the blade of Kueller's lightsaber gave off any light at all.

  Luke didn't have far to back. If he went too far, he would hit the wall of the tower he had escaped from. Then he got a flash, a mental picture, so clear that it looked like a holo:

  Around the tower was a narrow alleyway that led to the tower's main door. The door's frame had collapsed, and in the mouth of the opening—

  Kueller swung his blade at Luke, smashing the mental image. Luke leaped aside. He wasn't certain if he should go for his blasters. That would only give Kueller a target. The blasters were no match for a lightsaber.

  "Give up, Skywalker," Kueller said. "You lack the strength to defeat me. I will kill you this time. And then I will slaughter your sister."

  Leia! She had her lightsaber. Luke extended his hand, and Kueller brought his blade down at it. Luke dodged as Leia's lightsaber sailed in the air toward him, landing neatly in his fingers.

  Immediately he ignited the blade and its reassuring hum echoed in the growing darkness.

  "Ah," Kueller said. "So you have chosen to fight me. Careful, Master Skywalker. If you do so with the wrong attitude, you might join my side."

  "I've fought better than you, Kueller," Luke said. The light-saber felt odd in his hand. "And won."

  "Years ago, Skywalker. You've become complacent." Kueller slashed at Luke. Luke parried, the electric clash of blades ringing in the night air.

  Then Kueller whirled and blocked several bursts of blaster fire. Leia peeked out of the bay doors.

  "Leave him alone, Kueller. It's me you want!" she yelled.

  His death mask glowed from an internal light. It made his smile even more sinister than usual. "Actually, President, I want your entire family. Without them, there are no true Jedi."

  Luke inched closer. His blade was still out, still humming. He wanted Kueller to fight him, not Leia. Leia wasn't ready yet. "Actually, Kueller, there are dozens of Jedi now."

  "But not Jedi Masters, Skywalker."

  "There are more than you imagine," Luke said, thinking of Callista. She would provide quite a battle against Kueller, even without the Force.

  Kueller turned to Luke, and Leia fired again. Without even looking at her, Kueller blocked the blaster shots. The shots flew harmlessly to the sides. Then her blaster rose in the air, and exploded a few feet above her head.

  "Use another of those, President, and it will explode in your hand."

  "You like explosions, don't you, Kueller?" she said. Luke suppressed a smile. She was trying to distract him so Luke could attack. But it wasn't that easy. Kueller had pushed Luke far enough that Luke's feelings were confused. He wasn't certain if he was going after Kueller out of anger or hatred, instead of in defense. That would only make Kueller stronger.

  He seemed to be stronger anyway, giving credence to Luke's theory.

  "Small explosions, President," Kueller said, his blade still locked with Luke's. "Large ones destroy wealth."

  Leia stepped out of the bay. She was unarmed. "Even if you kill us, Kueller, you won't get the rest of us. The explosives you put in the droids won't work. We shut the droids off."

  "Did you, now?" Kueller's tone was mocking. Luke could feel the physical pressure Kueller was putting on the blade. They were locked in a battle of wills, their strength holding the blades together in a haze of light. "You managed to tell all the developed planets about the droids, President? Because if you didn't, then I will still get enough strength f
rom one single order to defeat you all."

  A chill ran through Luke. All those lives. All those billions of lives. They meant nothing more to Kueller than a breath of air, a surge of adrenaline, a swallow of food. Anger flowed through Luke, deep and fine and rich. He had created this monster. Luke, through his arrogance, had given Kueller all the tools he needed to destroy the entire galaxy. If Luke hadn't taught all his students about the dark side, if he hadn't warned them repeatedly and in detail about the quick and easy path, then Kueller would still be Dolph, not this hateful being who wore a death mask proudly and dealt in lives as a smuggler dealt in stolen goods.

  Kueller turned toward Luke and grinned. His lightsaber broke free from the enmeshment and whooshed near Luke. Luke jumped aside, pain shivering through his back, and down his arms.

  Kueller had suddenly gotten stronger.

  "Kueller!" Leia shouted. She held another blaster. He turned his attention to her, and Luke thrust his blade toward Kueller's side, drawing blood before Kueller swirled away.

  Easy blood. The lightsaber moved with a sureness Luke had never felt before.

  Leia's blaster was turning red. She tossed it aside before it exploded, and rolled in the opposite direction.

  Kueller had turned back to Luke, thrusting, parrying, thrusting, their sabers locked in a battle as loud and spark-filled as Luke's battle with Vader. Kueller's breath hissed through the mask, but it wasn't Vader's stentorian breathing that it imitated.

  It was the Emperor's greedy gasping.

  Luke staggered under Kueller's next blow, and barely managed to roll aside. His ankle kept buckling under him, but he forced himself to put weight on it. They had moved into the alleyway Luke had seen in that strange moment of vision. Stones littered the ground all around them, and the light only came through a small opening on either end. Luke could no longer see Leia.

  Use your aggressive feelings, boy! Let the hate flow through you.

  Kueller struck at him, his blow shattering a nearby rock. He was stronger. Much stronger. And his strength seemed to be increasing. Luke's arms were growing tired battling the power of Kueller's blade.

  Then Kueller laughed, a gurgling, familiar laugh. The Emperor's laugh, the unamused choking of a slave to the dark side.

  Fueled by hatred, anger, and fear.

  Luke was making him stronger. Luke's response, his hatred, his own self-loathing at creating this thing, this student who had become a horror, was making the thing even stronger.

  Kueller slammed his blade against Luke's, and the sparks lit the area all around them. Luke parried. Parried again. And again. He was trapped in a cycle of hatred and anger. If he fought, Kueller got stronger, and if he attacked, Kueller got stronger still.

  Luke glanced at the mouth of the alley.

  No Leia.

  He was alone with this thing he had created. The rogue student. The Vader to his Ben.

  Vader.

  Ben.

  Luke grinned. He suddenly knew what he had to do to break free.

  Wedge watched as the Falcon disappeared over Almania. The space yacht, identified as the Wild Karrde, had come into the fray, firing all laser cannons, on the side of the New Republic. Wedge wasn't sure who owned the yacht, and at the moment, he didn't care. He was losing this battle. He could use all the help he could get.

  His ship had sustained massive damage. There were fires on several decks. Somehow the command center had avoided the worst of it.

  There were no more A- and B-wings to deploy and the TIE fighters seemed to have multiplied. General Ceousa's ship seemed to have lost all weapons systems, and was floating in space.

  The Tatooine had exploded. The death screams had been hideous.

  Wedge had come up against more firepower, but never this fierce determination, this desire to win at any cost. It was almost as if Kueller's soldiers didn't care if they lived or died, only that they won in the process. He had no idea what kind of creature could create a response like that. Not Thrawn, nor Daala, nor the Emperor had ever aroused such mindless devotion. It was almost as if the ships were being piloted by droids.

  Wedge glanced at the hunched droid near the console. Luke's odd message had warned them to shut off all droids. "Sela," he said. "I want that droid disassembled now!"

  "But sir, we can't spare the personnel!"

  "We can spare it all right, and more if we have to." The secret lay in the droids. He would find it as he fought.

  The TIE fighters circled the Wild Karrde like flies over spoiled meat. The Karrde was blasting them, exploding fighter after fighter, but the others kept coming. The Star Destroyers were closing in on General Ceousa.

  If Wedge were a droid, he would follow a set battle plan, and not give up until the end was achieved. No creativity, no deviation, no care for the losses.

  The mistake had been his. He was following a set battle plan when everything had erupted in his face.

  "Ginbotham, I want you to shoot at the Wild Karrde."

  "Sir?" Ginbotham said as if he hadn't heard the order correctly.

  "Shoot the Wild Karrde. Miss, but make it clear you're aiming for the space yacht. Then whirl this bird around and do the same to the Calamari, General Ceousa's ship."

  "Our ships, sir?"

  "Yes, our ships, soldier," Wedge said. He grabbed on to the railing, wishing he could send the other commanders the insight he had just received. They would simply have to react to it.

  The first shot went out, and went low, narrowly missing both the Wild Karrde and the TIE fighter below it.

  "Keep going," Wedge said.

  Shots streaked red across the blackness of space, missing both the Wild Karrde and the TIE fighters, but not by much.

  "We're getting a message from the Wild Karrde, sir."

  "Let's hear it," Wedge said, bracing himself because he knew what it would be.

  "What are you doing? I'm trying to help you, you stupid fool!" The voice was male and angry. Very angry.

  "Response, sir?"

  Wedge moved away from the communications controls. "Shoot at General Ceousa's ship."

  "What? Sir, have you gone mad?"

  Wedge turned to the offending officer. "Whether I'm mad or not is none of your concern. I'm your commander. You do as I say."

  "But, sir, the new rules established by Admiral Ackbar state—"

  "That you can force me to step down if you can prove I'm unfit. They also state that simply because the commander gives orders you disagree with does not mean the commander is unfit. Fire now, or I'll have you all relieved."

  The Hig turned back to his screen, and shots went off at the Star Cruiser, narrowly missing, as before. A TIE fighter got nicked in the ricochet and fell, twisting, away from the Tatooine.

  "Wedge? Wedge?" General Ceousa's voice came over the communicator. "Wedge, are you still there?"

  "Present and accounted for, General."

  "You're firing at the Calamari."

  "Sorry, General, just doing my duty."

  "Wedge, are you all right?"

  "Fire again, soldier, and this time aim at both ships." Wedge had clasped his hands behind his back, trying to hide his glee. It was working. The TIE fighters had actually stopped firing on the Wild Karrde and on the Calamari. It was the Star Destroyers that concerned him more.

  The shots went out on all sides, hitting two TIE fighters and bouncing off the Wild Karrde's deflector shields.

  "I told you not to hit the ships," Wedge said.

  "Sorry, sir," Ginbotham said. "Precision shooting is for A-wings."

  "Missing a target the size of a moon shouldn't be difficult, Ginbotham."

  "Yes, sir."

  "Fire again."

  "Wedge!" Ceousa's voice echoed over the speakers. "Wedge!"

  "I'm here, General. Forgive me, but President Organa Solo put me in charge of this mission."

  "I'm well aware of that, Wedge, but you're firing on our people."

  "Am I, General? Am I really?" Wedge ran a hand ove
r his throat, severing all communications. That was all the hint he would give Ceousa. Either the general trusted him or he didn't. It didn't matter. The next few moments would decide everything.

  The Star Destroyers came closer.

  "I have them in range, sir," Ginbotham said.

  "I have the targets set up for the Star Destroyers, sir. If you'll allow me to—"

  "No, soldier. I want you to fire on both the Wild Karrde and the Calamari again."

  "Sir—"

  "And this time, when you miss, take out a TIE fighter on one of the ricochets. They're beginning to look like they want to fight again."

  "Yes, sir." Ginbotham seemed subdued. The shots went out. Wedge watched, clutching his hands together. The first shot hit a TIE fighter's solar panel, ricocheted off, and hit another fighter. The Wild Karrde swerved away, and headed toward the Calamari.

  At that moment, the Star Destroyers started for Wedge. The TIE fighters continued to trail the Wild Karrde and Calamari.

  "We can't defeat two Star Destroyers on our own," Sela said.

  "I know," Wedge said. He hoped they wouldn't have to.

  FIFTY

  Almania looked deserted. Han emerged from the Falcon with his blaster in one hand, and the ysalamiri in the other. He hated the things. They reminded him of Corellian grass snakes, except they were big, they were furry, and they had claws.

  No one had told him about the claws.

  They also weighed a lot. Their nutrient cages, made with frames of pipes to support and nourish the creatures, weighed even more. Mara had kept her distance. Both Han and Chewie had agreed to allow her to stay far behind them—far enough so that she wasn't caught in the ysalamiri's anti-Force bubble.

  But Han wished she were closer. He should have known better than to rely on her Force abilities when she had been so close to ysalamiri. Obviously she had been wrong. Leia couldn't be nearby. This place was deserted.

  He had landed the Falcon in a wide plaza. Around him were towers, most of them partially destroyed. Rubble everywhere. No bodies, though. For that he was grateful.

  Then he heard rocks tumble beside him. He and Chewbacca whirled at the same time. The ysalamiri cages swung out and back, nearly making Han lose his balance.

 

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