Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina

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Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina Page 8

by Kevin J. Anderson


  Greedo, he thought.

  "Ukle nyuma cheskopokuta klees ka tlanko ya oska." That's the

  idea. I've been looking forward to this for a long time.

  "Yes, I'll bet you have."

  With a tremendous explosion of light and noise Solo's blaster

  propelled a bolt of energy through the wooden table. When the

  smoke cleared there was very little left of Greedo.

  "Sorry about the mess," said Solo, flipping the bartender a

  coin.

  Spurch Warhog Goa met with the two Rodians on Docking Bay 86,

  as he made ready to board his ship, the Nova Viper.

  The tall one, Thuku, handed Goa a chest of newly minted Rodian

  coinage, pure gold, each coin embossed with the image of Navik the

  Red.

  "The Rodians thank you, Goa. We would have killed him

  ourselves, but we can't let it be known we are hunting our own

  kind."

  "His clan are all sentenced to die," said Neesh, making a

  snorting noise with his green snout.

  Goa picked up one of the coins and watched it glint in the

  bright-hot Tatooine sun. "Yeah . . . but tell ya the truth, boys,

  this is one bounty I ain't too proud of. Least I didn't have to

  kill him myself. I knew Solo would take care of that."

  Hammertong The Tale of the "Tonnika Sisters'

  by Timothy Zahn

  "It's a dilemma, really, that's what it is," Dr. Kellering said

  in that precise Imperial Prime University voice of his that went

  so well with his young, upper-class-pampered face. And so poorly

  with the decidedly low-class tapcafe he and the two women were

  sitting in. "On the one hand there's the whole question of secu

  rity," Kellering continued. "Especially with all the Rebel

  activity in this sector. And I can assure you that Dr. Eloy and I

  aren't the only persons within the project who are concerned about

  it."

  His forehead wrinkled in upper-class-pampered perplexity. "But

  on the other hand, Captain Drome is extremely hot-tempered in

  regard to what he considers his personal territory. If he knew I

  was even talking about this matter outside the compound, he'd be

  terribly angry. Especially with people like - well, like you."

  Seated across the table from Kellering, Shada D'ukal took a sip

  from her cup, the wine carrying with it a hint of remembered

  bitterness and shame. Like most girls growing up on their war-

  devastated world, the Mistryl shadow guards had been the focus of

  all her hopes. They had been the last heroes of her people, the

  enigmatic cult of warrior women still fighting to force justice

  for her world from uncaring, even hostile, officials of the

  Empire. She had begun her training as soon as they would take her,

  studying and working and sweating her way against the odds until,

  at last, she had been deemed worthy to be called a Mistryl.

  Assigned to a team, she had headed out on her first mission.

  Only to learn that the Mistryl were no longer the valiant

  warriors of legend.

  They were mercenaries. Nothing more than mercenaries. Hiring

  out to useless, insipid people like Kellering.

  She sipped at her wine again, listening with half an ear as

  Kellering prattled on, letting the memories fade. Now, a year and

  seven missions later, the shame had faded to a dull ache in the

  back of her mind. Someday, she hoped, it would be gone altogether.

  Beside Shada, Team Prime Manda D'ulin lifted a hand, finally

  putting an end to Kellering' s ramblings. "We understand your

  problem, Dr. Kellering," she said. "May I suggest that you've

  already made your decision. Otherwise the three of us wouldn't be

  sitting here."

  "Yes, of course." Kellering sighed. "I suppose I'm still - but

  that's foolish. The Mistryl may be somewhat - but still, you

  certainly come highly recommended. When my cousin was telling me

  about you, he said you had-"

  "The mission, Doctor," Manda interrupted again. "Tell us about

  the mission."

  "Yes. Of course." Kellering took a deep breath, his eyes

  darting around the crowded tapcafe as if wondering which of the

  humans or aliens at the other tables out there might be Imperial

  spies. Or maybe he was just wondering what he was doing outside

  his pampered little academic world. Consorting with mercenaries.

  "I'm connected to a research project called Hammertong," he said,

  his voice so low now that Shada could barely hear it over the

  background noise. "My superior, Dr. Eloy, is senior scientist of

  the group. A couple of weeks ago the Emperor's representative to

  the project informed us that we were all going to be moved to some

  new location. We're to leave in three days."

  "And you don't think Captain Drome is handling security

  properly?" Manda asked.

  Kellering shrugged uncomfortably. "Dr. Eloy doesn't. The two of

  them have had several arguments about it."

  "So what exactly do you want from us?"

  "I suppose-well, I really don't know," Kellering confessed,

  throwing hooded looks back and forth between the two women. "I

  suppose I thought we could talk to Captain Drome about you

  bringing in some people to help guard us en route . . ." He

  trailed off, apparently finally noticing the expression on Manda's

  face.

  "Let me explain something about the Mistryl, Dr. Kellering,"

  she said, her voice still polite but with an edge of chromed

  mullinine to it. ' 'Your cousin probably told you we were just

  your standard group of fringe mercenaries. We're not. He probably

  told you we sell our services to the highest bidder, no questions

  or ethics involved. We don't. The Mistryl are the warriors of a

  forgotten cause; and if we hire ourselves out as temporary

  security to people like you, it's because our world and our people

  require money to survive. We will not work with Imperial forces.

  Ever."

  Strong words. But that was all they were. There was a great

  deal of simmering hatred toward the Empire among the Mistryl,

  anger for their suspected complicity during the war and for their

  complete indifference since then. But with the remnant of their

  people living on the edge of survival, the simple cold truth was

  that the Mistryl couldn't afford to turn down anything but the

  most odious of offers from the most odious of people. Manda could

  sound as high-minded as she wanted to, but in the end she and the

  team would accept Kellering's job.

  And as she had seven times before, Shada would do her best to

  help them fulfill the contract. Because the other simple cold

  truth was that she had nowhere else to go.

  But of course, Kellering didn't know that; and from the look on

  his face, Manda might have just dropped a large building on him.

  "Oh, no," he breathed. "Please. We need you. Look, we're not

  really with the Empire-we're funded by them, but we're actually a

  completely independent research group."

  "I see," Manda murmured, frowning thoughtfully. Making a show

  of the decision-making process, probably in hopes of stifling any

  protest on Kellering's part when she fina
lly named her price. With

  an Imperial-funded project, that price was likely to be high.

  It was. "All right," Manda said at last. "We can bypass your

  Captain Drome entirely and run you a forward screen net that

  should flash out the sort of ambushes the Rebel Alliance likes to

  stage these days. You said three days till departure; that'll give

  us time to bring a few other teams in. We should be able to field

  a minimum of ten ships in the screen, plus a two ship aft guard in

  case the Rebels try something cute." She lifted her eyebrows

  slightly. "The fee will be thirty thousand."

  Kellering's eyes bulged. "Thirty thousand?" He gulped.

  "You got it," Manda said. "Take it or don't."

  Shada watched Kellering's face as it went through the run of

  shock, nervousness, and discomfiture. But as Manda had pointed

  out, if he hadn't already made his decision they wouldn't be here.

  "All right," he sighed. "All right. Dr. Eloy can cut you a credit

  when we meet with him this afternoon."

  Manda shot Shada a quick glance. "You want us to meet with Dr.

  Eloy?"

  "Of course." Kellering seemed surprised by the question. "He's

  the one most worried about security."

  "Yes, but . . . where would we meet him? Here?"

  "No, at the compound," Kellering said. "He almost never leaves

  there. Don't worry, I can get you in."

  "What about Drome?" Manda asked. "You said yourself he was

  pretty touchy on the subject of outsiders."

  "Captain Drome isn't in charge of the project," Kellering said

  with precise firmness. "Dr. Eloy is."

  "Such details seldom bother Imperial military officers," Manda

  countered. "If he catches us there-"

  "He won't," Kellering assured her. "He won't even know you're

  there. Besides, you need to see how the Hammertong's been loaded

  aboard the ship if you're going to know how to properly protect

  it."

  Manda didn't look happy, but she nodded nevertheless. "All

  right," she said, her hand curling.into a subtle signal as she did

  so. "I have a couple of matters to attend to here first, but after

  that I'll be happy to come with you. Shada can go offplanet in my

  place and get the rest of the team assembled."

  "Understood." Shada nodded. The team didn't need any

  assembling, of course-all six of them were right here in this

  tapcafe, with their two disguised fighters, the Skyclaw and

  Mirage, parked in separate docking bays across town. But it was as

  good an excuse as any for Shada to disappear from sight. Backups,

  after all, weren't supposed to be seen.

  "Good," Manda said briskly. "Have the others here in Gorno by

  nightfall. In the meantime-" She gestured Kellering toward the

  door. "We'll go deal with a couple of details, and then go meet

  your Dr. Eloy."

  "They're approaching the gate," Pav D'armon's voice murmured

  from one of the two comlinks fastened to Shada's collar. "Two

  guards visible, but I see movement in the gatehouse behind the

  fence. Could be as many as six or seven more in there."

  "Copy," Shada acknowledged, stroking a finger restlessly across

  the side of her sniper's blaster rifle and wishing Pav wouldn't

  get so chatty on the air. Mistryl comlinks were heavily encrypted,

  but that wouldn't stop the Imperials from pinpointing the

  transmissions if they took it into their heads to do so. And this

  close to a major base, that was a distinct possibility.

  The base. Lifting her eyes from the section of road winding

  through the hills below-the road Manda and Kellering would be

  traversing in a few minutes if they made it through the gate-Shada

  studied the waves of rolling hills that stretched into the

  distance beyond the innocuous security fence cutting across her

  view. It certainly looked like the agricultural test ground the

  signs on the fence claimed it to be, not at all like the weapons-

  bristling popular image of an Imperial military research base. But

  its strategic location, within fifty kilometers of the Gorno

  spaceport and four major technical supply and transport centers,

  made its true identity obvious.

  Perhaps too obvious. Perhaps that was why they were moving

  everyone out. She wondered how they would handle it subtly with

  freighters, or blatantly with Imperial Star Destroyers. Kellering

  had implied this Hammertong thing had already been loaded for

  transport; a look at the ship they were using should give Manda a

  clue as to how they were going to go about it. That would affect

  how their screen net would be put together-

  "They're through," Pav reported. "Gate's closing. They're

  headed your way."

  "Copy," Shada said, frowning. There was something in Pav's

  voice . . . "Trouble?"

  "I don't know," Pav said slowly. "It all looks okay. But

  there's something here that feels wrong, somehow."

  Shada tightened her grip on her blaster rifle. Pav might be a

  chattercase on the com, but she hadn't survived long enough to

  become Manda's team second without good combat instincts. "What do

  you mean?"

  "I'm not sure," Pav said. "They got through just a little bit

  too quick-"

  And abruptly, Pav's voice dissolved into an earsplit-ting

  shriek of jamming static.

  With a curse, Shada ripped the comlink from her collar with her

  left hand, throwing it as far away from her as she could. So much

  for Kellering's naive assurances of safety. In the split of a hair

  the thing had suddenly gone sour . . . and Manda and Pav were

  right in the middle of it.

  With Shada herself about to come in a close third. Beyond the

  fence, from over the next line of hills, the gleaming white

  figures of a dozen stormtroopers on speeder bikes had suddenly

  appeared. Headed her way.

  Shada cursed again, lining up her blaster rifle with her right

  hand as she groped for the switch on her backup comlink with her

  left. If they were lucky, they'd have a minute before the

  Imperials found that frequency and locked it down, too. She

  located the switch, flicked it on-

  "-trap-repeat, a trap," Pav was saying, her voice tight.

  "They've got Manda-she's down. Probably. And they're coming for

  me."

  "Pav, it's Shada," Shada cut in, squinting through the sight

  and squeezing off a shot. The lead storm-trooper's speeder bike

  exploded into a shower of sparks, pitching him to the ground and

  nearly doing the same to the two on either side of him. "I can be

  there to back you up in two minutes."

  "Negative," Pav said. The tension in her voice was gone,

  leaving a sad sort of resignation that sent a cold chill up

  Shada's neck. "They're already too close. I'll do what I can to

  keep them busy - you and Karoly had better get back to the ships

  and get out of here. Good luck, and good - "

  There was a brief crinkle of sound, and then silence.

  Ahead, the speeder bikes had shifted into evasive maneuvers.

  Shada fired four rapid shots, catching another of the

  stormtroopers with the third of them. "Karoly?"
she called toward

  her comlink. "Karoly? Are you there?"

  "They're gone, Shada," Karoly D'ulin said, her voice almost

  unrecognizable. "They're gone. The storm-troopers - "

  "Snap out of it," Shada snarled, keying the Viper grenade

  launcher attached to her blaster rifle barrel. The recoil kicked

  the gun hard into her shoulder as the slender cylinder blasted out

  toward the approaching stormtroopers. "Can you get to your

  speeder?"

  There was a short pause, and Shada could imagine Karoly's

  earnest face as she pulled herself together. "Yes," she said. "Are

  we retreating?"

  "Not a chance," Shada said through gritted teeth, getting

  halfway to her feet and heading at a crouch toward the bushes

  where her speeder bike was hidden. "We're heading in. Get moving."

  The approaching stormtroopers, finally presented with a target,

  opened fire -

  Just as the grenade hit the ground ten meters in front of them,

  exploding into a billowing cloud of green smoke.

  "We're going in?" Karoly echoed in disbelief. "Shada-"

  "I'm clear." Shada cut her off, slinging the rifle over her

  shoulder and kicking the speeder bike to life. Over the roar of

  the engine she could hear the thuds of her erstwhile attackers

  falling out of the sky as the specially formulated smoke burned

  into the speeder bikes' power connectors. "Call Cai and Sileen -

  tell them to bring the ships in for backup."

  "But where are we going?"

  Shada swung the speeder bike around. Manda and Pav were gone,

  and she knew that eventually the pain of that loss would catch up

  with her. But for right now, she had only enough room for a single

  emotion.

  Rage.

  "We're going to teach the Imperials a lesson," she told Karoly.

  Kicking the throttle to full power, she jumped the fence, curved

  around the edge of the green cloud, and headed in.

  It was a little over ten kilometers from the outer fence to the

  main base area, and for the first eight of them Shada flew low

  over the rolling hills and wondered where in blazes the vaunted

  Imperial defenses were. Either they hadn't thrown this ambush

  together until Kellering's ground car pulled up at the gate, or

  else they'd assumed their quarry would run for it and had

  concentrated their forces out beyond the fence.

  Or else they were concentrating on Karoly. Blinking against the

 

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