Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina

Home > Science > Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina > Page 28
Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina Page 28

by Kevin J. Anderson


  Reegesk began discreetly displaying the items he was willing to

  trade. Het Nkik showed a mild interest in the stormtrooper helmet,

  but when Reegesk brought out the bantha horn carved in the shape

  of a Tusken battle talisman, Het Nkik's excitement was un

  mistakable. Reegesk, quickly searching his memory for anything he

  knew about such objects, managed to remember something of

  interest. The Sand People, he explained, believed a battle

  talisman brought them the physical strength of a bantha in battle

  and gave them the courage to face death, if need be. Het Nkik

  asked to hold the talisman, turning it over and over in his hands,

  uttering exclamations in a dialect Reegesk did not recognize.

  Reegesk hid. a triumphant smile. This would be almost too easy.

  It was unusual for a Jawa to show so much enthusiasm for an item

  being traded, since it might skew the bartering to indicate that

  the item had value to him. Reegesk closed in to begin the negotia

  tion. "The talisman is indeed of great value. The exchange must

  measure up to its worth."

  Het Nkik's reverent expression turned to one of chagrin. "I

  have little with me today that is suitable for this exchange."

  Reegesk's heart began to beat rapidly as he smelled his chances

  improving. The Jawa definitely wanted to make a trade. Reegesk

  slyly lowered his eyes to indicate the blaster that Het Nkik held

  in his lap, hidden by the table. "The rime for opportunity is

  always now."

  The Jawa's hands clutched convulsively at the weapon, and for a

  moment he seemed at a loss. "I cannot meet such a high price," he

  answered carefully, ". . . today." His eyes did not meet

  Reegesk's. He negotiated for awhile longer before finally agreeing

  to an amount far higher than Reegesk had expected to get.

  "You know that I am a skilled trader," Het Nkik said. "Here are

  a few credits to show my good faith. If you will give me until

  morning, I will meet your price."

  Success! But could the Jawa be trusted? Reegesk ordered himself

  to use caution. "Then I will bring you the talisman tomorrow

  morning," he said in a calm voice. He did not want to give away

  his own impatience, and he hoped the Jawa could not smell it.

  But the Jawa was firm. "No. I must have the battle talisman

  today." Het Nkik's voice grew agitated as he spoke. "I will pay

  the rest in the morning, but I cannot wait until tomorrow." He

  stopped, as if searching for a way to convince Reegesk of his

  serious intentions. At last he said, "If you wait until morning, I

  will let you have the use of this blaster."

  Reegesk could feel his eyes light with intensity at the very

  thought of having such a fine weapon.

  Het Nkik's eyes burned into Reegesk's as he nodded to the

  weapon he held beneath the table. "Yes, I will let you hold it and

  use it. I am not afraid to arm a Ranat. Let me leave with the

  talisman today, and you will have what you need by morning."

  Unable to pull away from the fervor of the Jawa's glowing gaze,

  Reegesk reached out one paw to touch the weapon. Did he dare take

  a risk on the honor of this Jawa? Always pay close attention

  during a trade, he reminded himself. Finally, he came to a

  decision.

  At that moment, a commotion broke out across the cantina from

  them. Light and sparks filled the air, along with the sharp smell

  of singed flesh. When the air finally cleared, Reegesk was able to

  make out the form of Greedo the bounty hunter slumped over an

  otherwise deserted, table.

  Dead? Yes, definitely dead. This was indeed a lucky day for

  Reegesk. He felt a surge of excitement and his whiskers quivered

  with glee. "Yes. I accept the trade," he said to the Jawa, who was

  still staring at the scene across the room. "Keep the talisman for

  now. Bring me the price we agreed on by morning."

  Het Nkik suddenly turned his attention back to Reegesk. Without

  a word, he pulled the blaster away from Reegesk's paw and stalked

  away.

  "Both traders received the better bargain this day," Reegesk

  called after Het Nkik, but the Jawa did not seem to hear him.

  Reegesk smiled as he watched Het Nkik walk with such confidence

  toward the entrance of the cantina. He was pleased to have made

  such a fair deal. The Jawa threw challenging glances around the

  room as he left with the DL-44 concealed beneath his cloak, one

  hand fingering the precious battle talisman.

  Reegesk emptied the remaining brew from his cup and stood to

  leave, inhaling deeply. The smell of the scorched Rodian bounty

  hunter still hung in the air. Very satisfactory, he thought with a

  contented sigh.

  Moments later, he stepped back out of the cantina into the

  parched streets of Mos Eisley. Reegesk patted the pocket inside

  his cloak that held the power pack.he had slipped from Het Nkik's

  blaster. They had both gotten the trade they wanted today. He had

  paid very close attention.

  And now Reegesk had the perfect power supply for the Ranat

  tribe's new 'vaporator.

  When the Desert Wind Turns The Stormtrooper's Tale

  by Doug Season

  It took Davin Felth all of thirty seconds on the military

  training planet Carida to decide that serving in the Emperor's

  armed forces was not as romantic as he had thought.

  Davin hoisted his deep blue duffel bag containing his worldly

  possessions onto his back and queued up with the rest of the

  hundred and twenty other recruits. They filled the Gamma-class

  shuttle's narrow steel corridor. Davin was nearly overwhelmed by

  the diverse cut of clothes, colors, and unusual smells that wafted

  from the youths. Nervous chatter ran up and down the line of

  eighteen-year-olds, most of whom were away from home for the very

  first time. A blast of noise reverberated through the shuttle and

  the door to the outside sighed open.

  Fresh air tumbled in, untouched by atmospheric scrubbers

  present on the ship; unfiltered light splashed against t he

  gleaming deck, reflecting down the hallway, and for a glorious

  thirty seconds it seemed that all the hype and rumors about

  Carida, the planet used by the Emperor's own guard as a training

  base for his military, were suddenly magnified. This must be the

  most exciting place for a ship of eager eighteen-year-olds to

  begin their new lives.

  And then the shouting started.

  It was as if a bomb had exploded amidst the nervous group of

  draftees. Chaos, yelling, confusion, and a hundred thousand

  demands were suddenly thrust upon Davin from all directions.

  Officers in olive-gray uniforms or white stormtrooper armor

  swarmed all over them; the recruits stood at attention, rigidly

  trying to emulate statues as the officers moved to within milli

  meters of their faces, screaming demands.

  Bavin's only thought was to try and survive, to get out of this

  mess alive - he couldn't think, and every time he tried to answer

  a question that was screamed at him, someone else would thrust

  their face next to his and
demand something else.

  Davin started yelling, not caring what he said, or whom he was

  speaking to, but only reacting, attempting to look as though he

  were busy answering someone else's question. He raised his voice

  and shouted at the top of his lungs - and the ploy seemed to work.

  With all the confusion that surrounded him, with a storm-trooper

  major screaming in his face to try and disorient him, he succeeded

  in diverting attention from himself. But this was only the

  beginning of six months of hellish training that would mold Davin

  into one of the Emperor's own elite troops.

  After what seemed hours, Davin and the rest of the recruits

  were led running down a pathway to the barracks. A huge

  prehistoric-looking man waved them to stand at one side of the

  passageway. The recruits scampered in fear. They lined up against

  the wall and snapped to attention. The burly man threw them sup

  plies generic dark uniforms, helmets, socks, underwear,

  handkerchiefs, emergency equipment, medpac kit, survival gear, and

  personal-cleansing equipment.

  Davin accepted the supplies, but was too afraid to ask what he

  should do with them. One small voice, attached to a man who

  towered over the rest of the recruits like a solarflower grown in

  rich Gamorrean dirt, said meekly, "I ... I can't take this

  anymore!"

  Instantly, Imperial uniformed bodies swarmed over the man. A

  voice shouted, "You people-over here! Move it!"

  Bending backward under his load of supplies, Davin staggered to

  join a line of recruits who looked like piles of crawling military

  storehouses. The group was led away, shown to their bunks. Davin

  deposited his blue duffel bag and armload of material on a cot.

  Two other recruits shared the room with him. Davin grinned tiredly

  and introduced himself. "Hi, I'm Davin Felth."

  The first man shook his hand firmly. "Geoff f Tuhns.'' He took

  a quick look around the corner and held out a bag of greasy-

  looking food. "Want a bite?"

  Davin glanced in the bag and felt his stomach flip. "No,

  thanks."

  Tall, big-boned, and sporting a head of flaming red hair, Geoff

  did not look as if he could ever fit inside stormtrooper armor.

  Looking once more around the corner, he sighed and stuffed a

  handful of food in his mouth. "If you brought any food, you'd

  better eat it now. I managed to hide this from them," he said,

  "but they threatened punishment if they caught me with any more

  food."

  "Mychael Ologat," said the second man. "What do you think of

  all this?" As small as Geoff was tall, Mychael looked as though he

  could fit in Davin's duffel bag; but his muscles rippled

  underneath his taut skin.

  Davin was still shell-shocked from the reception getting off

  the Gamma-class shuttle. They hadn't been on the military training

  planet for more than an hour, but with all the supplies he had

  been issued and the amount of ground they had covered, at Davin's

  normal pace it would have taken over a week to get these same

  things done. He shook his head. "They told me the military would

  change my life, but this is- crazy. I expected to get some time to

  look around."

  "Don't count on it," said Geoff, speaking around a mouthful of

  food. "We've been here since yesterday, and from what I've heard,

  this is only the welcoming committee. The really tough stuff comes

  later."

  Mychael's eyes grew wide. He stood facing the door, and he

  managed to blurt out, "Uh-oh - here comes trouble."

  Geoff dropped the bag of munchies and tried to kick it

  underneath his bed, but he slipped and the bag slid to the center

  of the room.

  Davin turned to see one of the largest men he had ever seen in

  his life standing just outside the door. Dressed in antigrav

  shoes, black shorts, a white skin-shirt, and wearing the ominous

  white helmet of an Imperial stormtrooper, the man looked like a

  massive pillar. He pointed at the bag of food. His voice had a

  tinny sound as it came over the speakers implanted in the side of

  the battle helmet.

  "Your caloric intake is strictly regulated - whose contraband

  food is that?"

  Davin heard Geoff gulp; from what he'd said, he couldn't afford

  to get caught. But no one had told him it was contraband! He spoke

  up. "It's mine."

  The stormtrooper turned to face Davin. "You are new here."

  "That's right."

  "The correct response is 'yes, sir.' You will learn - or you

  will fail. Consider that your only warning." He smashed the bag

  with his foot, then turned to include the other two. "You sand

  slime have two minutes to change into your physical training gear

  and get out here with the rest of your squad-or your butt is mine.

  Now move!"

  The three Imperial recruits scrambled over each other as

  clothing flew across the room.

  "Thanks, Davin," Geoff gasped out as he struggled into a

  coverall.

  Davin could only grunt as he hopped on one foot; he attempted

  to pull on thigh-high running boots. Despite the hectic pace, the

  next two minutes were Davin's last chance to relax during the six

  months of training.

  Fifteen pounds lighter but immeasurably stronger, Davin

  adjusted to the breakneck training routine. The recruits spent

  less than five hours a night in their room, falling exhausted to

  sleep after day upon day of relentless training physical fitness

  runs, daily expeditions via suborbital transport to the southern

  ice fields for winter training, a week-long expedition to the bar

  ren Forgofshar Desert for survival training, a three-day battle

  against nature in the equatorial rain forest . . . Davin soon lost

  track of the days.

  He and his roommates soon learned to get up before their "wake-

  up call" came in the morning, when their Imperial stormtrooper

  sergeant would kick open their door and blast his sonic whistle.

  Davin would wake up a good half hour before reveille. He and the

  others would scurry about the small dorm room, cleaning and

  dressing, only to hop beneath their sheets for the early-morning

  wake-up ritual-they had seen what happened to the other recruits

  when they were caught out of their bunks before reveille.

  Running out into the hallway, Davin would snap to attention,

  waiting to hear what the expedition of the day would entail. He

  never knew where he might be sent.

  It was the morning Davin was in place in the hallway nearly

  thirty seconds before the others that changed his life. It didn't

  start out with a fanfare, simply "Davin, drive your butt over to

  the AT-AT detachment at the end of the hall. The rest of you

  sandworms fall in for inspection!"

  As the rest of his squad stood at attention, Geoff punched him

  in the side and whispered, "Good luck, hotshot - we're going to

  miss you!"

  Davin didn't have time to answer, as the Imperial trooper in

  charge of the AT-AT detachment was already yelling for Davin to

  hurry up. "Twenty mo
re seconds and we'll drop you off in a reactor

  core!"

  Davin joined the group of recruits at the end of the hall; he

  recognized several of his classmates as those who had consistently

  finished near the top of the class with him. They exchanged

  glances with one another, but they were much too sharp to speak

  and bring down the wrath of their drill instructor.

  Lining up, they were marched out of the dorm area to the parade

  field. Glass and syngranite buildings soared above their heads;

  the parade field was surrounded by ultramodern buildings. Dozens

  of robot observer eyes hovered overhead, keeping watch over the

  military base. Situated in the middle of the circle of classroom

  buildings, a sleek executive transport ship squatted on the grass,

  its door open for boarding. The recruits were hurried in as the

  all-clear signal alerted the pilot for takeoff.

  As Davin settled into his seat, a holo appeared in the middle

  of the aisle. Tall and gaunt with sunken eyes, the holographic

  image of the man was dressed in the tight black uniform of a

  ground commander. The image spoke with forcefulness.

  "I am Colonel Veers, commander of the Emperor's AT-AT forces.

  You trooper candidates have been selected for your ability to

  learn quickly and put the requirements of the mission over your

  personal needs. No matter how superior our space forces may be, it

  is the brilliance of the ground troops, ferreting out the enemy

  from their dug-in encampments, that will win this conflict. The

  ground forces are the true backbone needed for a total victory-and

  you have been selected to man the flagship of the ground troops

  the All Terrain Armored Transport, the A T-AT!"

  Colonel Veers's image was replaced by a four-legged metal

  behemoth, lumbering across rugged terrain. It moved in mere

  seconds distances that would have taken men on foot an hour to

  traverse. Twin blaster cannons fired laser pulses from the

  vehicle's metallic head; two uniformed crewmen could be seen in

  the command module in the AT-AT's head. The recruits in the

  executive transport drew in their breath in a collective gasp at

  the sight.

  Colonel Veers's voice continued. "You will undergo six weeks of

  intensive training in the virtual reality simulators before being

  allowed in the AT-AT even as an observer. If you pass the

 

‹ Prev