Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina

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Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina Page 11

by Kevin J. Anderson


  cantina lobby. "Quick."

  Karoly followed her gaze, and Shada felt her stiffen. Striding

  down the steps toward the bar, heavy weapons held at the ready,

  were a pair of stormtroopers. Who clearly weren't here for a

  drink.

  "I wonder if there's a back door out of here," Karoly murmured.

  "I don't know," Shada said, running a finger along her slender

  wineglass as the Imperials summoned the bartender over. Thrown

  against the face of a storm-trooper helmet, it ought to slow him

  down long enough for her to slide her knife blade into a critical

  junction ...

  The bartender pointed somewhere behind them. Shada frowned,

  then understood. "They must be asking about the Jedi Knight," she

  said, turning to look at the booth. A knot of aliens brushed past,

  momentarily blocking her view. They continued on -

  The old Jedi was gone. So was the kid. The storm-troopers

  stepped up to the booth, eyed Solo and the Wookiee a moment, then

  moved on. For a moment, as they looked around, their armored masks

  seemed to pause on Shada and Karoly. But they said nothing, and

  continued on their way toward the rear of the cantina.

  Karoly nudged her. "Now's our chance," she said. "Let's go talk

  to him."

  Shada turned back. Solo and the Wookiee had left the booth now,

  Solo heading for the lobby while the Wookiee went in the direction

  the stormtroopers had gone. Probably where the back door was,

  which would explain how the Jedi and the kid had disappeared.

  "Right," Shada agreed, taking one last sip from her glass and

  putting it back on the bar. She turned again -

  To find that Solo was no longer walking toward the lobby. He

  was, instead, backing into a booth at the wrong end of a blaster

  held by a dirty-looking Rodian. "Uh-oh," Shada said. "Friend of

  his?"

  "Doubt it," Karoly said, palming the scanner. "Hang on ... his

  name's Greedo. He's a bounty hunter."

  For a long moment Shada stared at the quietly tense discussion

  in the booth, trying to decide what to do. Taking action would

  jeopardize her cover as Brea Tonnika, and certainly there was no

  shortage of smugglers in the cantina. But there was something

  about the way Solo carried himself that she liked. Or maybe the

  fact that he'd been talking widi the Jedi Knight . . .

  "I'm going to take him," she told Karoly. "G et ready to back me

  up."

  She reached for her knife; but before she could draw it, Solo

  solved the problem on his own. From the booth came a flash of

  muffled blaster fire, and the Rodian slumped over onto the table.

  Warily, Solo slid out of the booth, bolstered his blaster, and

  continued on toward the lobby, flipping a coin to the bartender as

  he passed.

  Karoly let out a'breath. "Good thing we weren't interested in

  Greedo. This isn't a very healthy place to hang around."

  "No kidding," Shada said. "Let's go catch Solo before he gets

  away."

  And then, from behind her, a sweaty hand closed on her wrist.

  "Well, well, well," a voice said. "What have we here?"

  Shada turned. The sweaty hand belonged to a sweaty Imperial

  colonel, his uniform streaked with sandy dust, a maliciously

  pleased look on his face. Behind him were the two stormtroopers

  who'd come through earlier. "Brea and Senni Tonnika, I do

  believe," the colonel went on. "How nice of you to drop back into

  sight again. You can't imagine how brokenhearted Grand Mqff Argon

  has been since your departure. I'm sure he'll be pleased to see

  you again." He lifted an eyebrow. "As well as the twenty-five

  thousand you stole from him."

  Smiling sardonically, he gestured to the storm-troopers. "Take

  them away."

  The police station cell was cooler than the cantina had been,

  but that was about all it had going for it. Small, sparsely

  furnished, streaked with Tatooine's ubiquitous sand, it had all

  the charm of a used transport crate.

  "Did you catch when they'd be moving us out?" Karoly asked,

  leaning against a wall and gazing dolefully at the door.

  "Didn't sound as if it would be anytime soon," Shada said. "The

  colonel said something about finishing up the search before

  getting us transferred to his ship."

  Karoly's lip twitched. Clearly, she was also appreciating the

  irony here The Imperials' search had already ended, only

  they.didn't know it.

  Or maybe they did know it. Maybe the colonel was just playing

  along with the masquerade while he sent out for the proper

  interrogation equipment.

  Shada looked around the room. A single bunk, a reading lamp

  fastened to the wall over one end, primitive refresher facilities,

  a barred door, and a one-way observation window opposite it.

  Limited resources, and no privacy to use them.

  Which left only their combat training. And the possibility that

  the Imperials still didn't know they were dealing with Mistryl. "I

  just hope they feed us before then," she commented to Karoly. "I'm

  starving."

  Karoly's eyebrow twitched. "So am I," she said, looking around.

  "Maybe I should beat on the bars and see if I can get someone's

  attention."

  "Go ahead," Shada said, stretching out on the bunk and letting

  her hand rest idly on the reading lamp above her head, examining

  it with her fingertips. It was fastened to the wall over the bunk,

  but a little work with her belt buckle ought to get it off. Behind

  it would be power cables . , . "On second thought, you might want

  to try that mirror instead," she said to Karoly, nodding back at

  the spy window. "Someone's probably watching it."

  "Okay," Karoly said. She stepped over to the window and pressed

  her face against it, blocking the view into the cell. "Hey! Anyone

  there?"

  Quickly, Shada pulled off her buckle and got to work as Karoly

  kept up the noise. She got one of the three fasteners loosened;

  did the second; started on the third-

  "Shut up the noise!" someone snapped.

  Shada paused, palming the buckle, as a man in a faded uniform

  appeared at the door. "We're hungry," she complained.

  "Too bad," he growled. "The meals come in two hours. Now shut

  up or I'll have you strapped down and muzzled."

  "Two hours'?" Shada repeated. "We'll never make it that long.

  Can't you get us something to tide us over?"

  "Please?" Karoly added, smiling encouragingly.

  The guard's lip twisted; and he was just opening his mouth for

  what would probably have been a memorable comeback when a young

  man in civilian clothing stepped into view. "Problems, Happer?''

  "Always," the other growled. "I thought you were off till

  tonight."

  "I am," the younger man said, peering thoughtfully at Shada and

  Karoly. "Heard you were drowning in prisoners; figured I'd come in

  and take a look. Who do we have here?"

  "Brea and Senni Tonnika." Happer threw a glower at the two

  women. "Very special prisoners of Colonel Parq. And none of our

  business, if you ask me. If the Imperials want t
o lock up half of

  Mos Eisley, the least they could do is provide their own holding

  tanks."

  "And do their own ID checks?"

  "Don't remind me." Happer grunted. "I've got fifteen of them

  running right now, with about thirty more in the hopper." He

  glared again at the prisoners. "Look, Riij, do me a favor, will

  you? Go down to Stores and pull a couple of ration bars for these

  two. I've got to go down to the check room - the sifter's been

  needing a lot of babysitting today, and those stormtroopers are

  starting to get snotty."

  "I'll handle it," Riij assured him. "Have fun."

  Happer grunted again and disappeared down the corridor. "So,"

  Riij said, gazing at them again. "Brea and Senni. Which is which?"

  "I'm Brea," Shada said carefully. There was something about the

  way he was looking at her that she didn't at all care for.

  "Ah," he said. "I'm Riij - Riij Winward. You know, I could have

  sworn I heard you two had gotten on a transport heading out toward

  Jabba the Hurt's three hours ago."

  Shada's heart seemed to seize up inside her. The Tonnika

  sisters were here? On Tatooine? "We came back," she said through

  suddenly dry lips. "I guess we shouldn't have."

  "I guess not." Riij paused. "I heard something else interesting

  too, just after this big Imperial droid search came down all over

  Mos Eisley a couple of days ago. It seems the Empire's also put

  out an urgent search-and-detain order for a stolen Strike

  Cruiser."

  "A Strike Cruiser?" Shada repeated, putting as much scorn as

  she could into her voice. "Oh, I'm sure. People steal Strike

  Cruisers all the time."

  "Yeah, I thought that sounded pretty strange myself," Riij

  agreed. "So I went over and talked to a pal of mine at the control

  tower to see if that was even possible. You know what he told me?"

  "I'm dying to hear."

  "He said he'd picked up something sneaking in toward the Dune

  Sea an hour or so before that Star Destroyer showed up and all

  these Imperials dropped in on us. Something just about the size of

  a Strike Cruiser." Riij lifted his eyebrows. "Interesting,

  wouldn't you agree?"

  "Tremendously," Shada said, fighting to keep her sudden dread

  out of her voice. So they had spotted the Strike Cruiser, after

  all. And Cai was in big trouble. "Were the Imperials pleased to

  hear this?"

  "Actually, he hasn't told them yet," Riij said, eyeing her

  closely. "He was going off duty at the time and didn't feel like

  holding a question session with a bunch of stormtroopers. 'Course,

  once they came down in force and took over the tower, he was even

  less inclined to remember stuff like that. That happens on

  Tatooine."

  "I see," Shada murmured. They were still in trouble, but at

  least they still had a little breathing space. "You'll forgive me

  if lost Imperial property isn't high on my list at the moment. We

  have more pressing problems of our own."

  "I'm sure you do," Riij said solemnly. "Number one being how to

  get out of here before Happer finds out you aren't Brea and Senni

  Tonnika."

  Shada felt herself tense up again. She'd suspected he knew, but

  had been hoping fervently that she was wrong. "That's ridiculous."

  "It's all right," Riij said. "The microphones in this cell

  haven't worked in three months. I popped out the circuit fuse a

  few minutes ago too, just to make sure."

  Shada glanced at Karoly. She looked as puzzled as Shada felt.

  "All right," she said, looking back at Riij. "Fine. Let's cut

  through the smoke here and tell us what you want."

  Riij seemed to brace himself. "I'll let you out," he said. "In

  exchange for some of whatever's in that Strike Cruiser,"

  Shada frowned at him. "What are you doing, running a smuggling

  service on the side?"

  "Not smuggling." He shook his head. "Information. To certain

  interested parties."

  "What parties?"

  "It's not important." Riij smiled faintly. "On Tatooine, one

  normally doesn't ask that question."

  "Yes, well, we're new here," Shada countered, thinking hard.

  This could be an Imperial trick, she knew a way to get her and

  Karoly to tell them where they'd hidden the Hammertong. But

  somehow that seemed a little too subtle for people who owned

  interrogator droids and normally had no compunction about using

  them. "All right," she said. "But only if you can find us a

  freighter that can handle something three by five meters."

  Riij frowned. "Three by-?"

  "Hey, Riij!" Happer's voice called from down the corridor.

  "Gotta go-something big brewing over at Docking Bay 97. The

  Imperials have called the whole duty force in to run backup. Can

  you watch things here a while?"

  "Sure, no problem," Riij assured him.

  "Thanks."

  Happer ran off, his footsteps cut off by the boom of a closing

  security door. "Well?" Shada prompted.

  "I can get a freighter," Riij said, forehead wrinkled in

  thought. "The problem's going to be getting it fast enough.

  There's a sandstorm sweeping in across that part of the Dune Sea-a

  big one. It'll hit in a couple of hours, and there's a good chance

  it'll bury you r ship for good."

  "Then we haven't got much time, have we?" Shada said. "Get us

  out of here, and let's go."

  The wind was already picking up across the sand dunes as Riij

  set the transport ship awkwardly down at the edge of the makeshift

  tunnel leading to the Strike Cruiser. "How long have we got?"

  Shada asked, shouting to be heard over the wind as the three of

  them half walked, half slid their way down the sand to the hatch

  way.

  "Not long," Riij called back. "Half an hour. Maybe less."

  Shada nodded back, keying the panel open and stepping inside.

  On the deck just inside the hatchway lay the segment of the

  Hammertong they'd removed, its loadlifters still attached. Across

  the huge empty room Deefour was warbling to himself as he poked

  around the rest of the huge cylinder, searching for any last-

  minute bits of data he could add to his extensive technical

  readout of the device. There was no sign of Cai. "Cai?" Shada

  called. "Da mala ci tri sor kehai."

  "Sha ma ti," Cai replied, emerging from hiding behind one of

  the support struts and bolstering her blaster. "I was starting to

  think you weren't going to make it back in time."

  "We may not have," Shada said grimly. "We've got another

  sandstorm breathing down our necks. There's a transport

  outside-you and Karoly get that Hammertong segment aboard."

  "Right," Cai said. "Karoly? Grab the lifts on that end."

  Together they got the Hammertong segment off the floor and out

  the hatchway as Shada went forward to the Strike Cruiser's

  cockpit. As it had before, the flying sand was interfering with

  the sensors, and she had to adjust the fine-tuning several times

  before she was able to get a good view. As far as she could tell,

  there were no longer any Star Destroyers over Tatooine. They
must

  have assumed their escaped prisoners had already made it

  offplanet. Keying off, she headed back to where Riij was crouched

  beside the end of the Hammertong cylinder, his face pressed close

  to one of the openings. "So there it is," she said. "What do you

  think?"

  He looked up at her, his face pasty-white. "Do you know what

  you have here?" he whispered. "Do you have any idea?"

  "Not really," she said warily. "Do you?"

  "Look here," he said, pointing to a plate. "See? 'D.S. Mark

  Two. Module Seven, Prototype B. Eloy/ Lemelisk.' "

  "I see it," Shada said. "What does it mean?"

  Riij straightened up. "It means this is part of the prototype

  superlaser for the Death Star."

  Shada stared at him, a shiver running up her back. "What's a

  Death Star?"

  "The Emperor's latest grab for power. Like nothing you've ever

  seen." Riij looked back along the Ham-mertong's length. "And we've

  got a piece here of its main weapon."

  "A piece?" Shada frowned, following his gaze. A solid two

  hundred meters of laser- "You mean this isn't all of it?"

  "I don't think so," Riij said. "Module Seven, remember?" He

  looked at Shada sharply. "I've got to have that piece you cut off.

  It's absolutely vital."

  "Forget it," Shada said. "If this really is a weapon, my people

  can find a better use for it than you can."

  "We'll pay you anything you want."

  "I said forget it," Shada said again, brushing past him. Cai

  was going to need help-

  And abruptly, she was spun back around by a hand on her arm.

  Reflexively, she reached up to break his

  grip-

  She froze, staring at the blaster that had appeared from

  nowhere in Riij's hand. "Is this how you keep your bargains?" she

  demanded.

  "You have to let us have it," he said, his voice low. "Please.

  We need to know everything we can about the Death Star."

  "Why?"

  He swallowed hard. "Because we're likely to be its first

  target."

  Shada stared at him. Tatooine was going to be the first target?

  Ridiculous.

  And then, suddenly, it fell into place. "You're with the Rebel

  Alliance, aren't you?"

  He nodded. "Yes."

  Shada focused on the blaster in his hand. "And this thing is

  important enough to you to kill me in cold blood?"

  He took a deep breath, let it out in a hissing sigh. "No," he

  conceded. "Not really."

 

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