Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina

Home > Science > Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina > Page 35
Star Wars - Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina Page 35

by Kevin J. Anderson


  "Consider the banthas of the dunefields. They quail not; neither

  do they sting. They are the holiest of beasts ..."

  Oh, boy. This guy was the real item. BoShek was glad he hadn't

  tried to fake the monastery religion, although the preacher didn't

  seem too thrilled to be hearing a competing doctrine, either.

  Well, it couldn't be helped; BoShek was committed now.

  The other preacher resumed his spiel too, offering to heal

  anyone who tossed him money.

  BoShek gladly let them drown him out, babbling on about the

  Force merely to keep up his cover. He could sense the cops behind

  him, three of them sweeping blast rifles around the observation

  deck. He closed his eyes and wished for a miracle, wished that

  they would just turn around and march back down the ramp and go

  away.

  A high-pitched Jawa voice chittered angrily from below. The

  unmistakable crack of blaster fire made BoShek nearly leap out the

  window, but he realized just in time that the shooting had come

  from outside, too. He leaned out and peered around the curve of

  the hull, and could just see the Jawa lying in a smoking heap on

  the ground. The patrol squad of white-armored stormtroopers stood

  in the middle of the square, waving their blast rifles around

  menacingly, but no one else fired.

  The cops behind BoShek rushed back down the ramp to

  investigate. BoShek leaned against the window frame for support,

  his legs suddenly weak. Whatever the Jawa had done, its noisy

  death had distracted the cops long enough for him to escape.

  He turned to go, only to meet a gold-ringed fist with his face.

  He staggered back and landed hard on the floor. "Mock us, will

  you?" the preacher snarled at him, aiming a kick at his ribs that

  BoShek barely dodged.

  The other preachers quickly joined the first in kicking and

  hitting him. "Here's for trying to make people laugh at us!" one

  of them said as he nearly wrenched BoShek's arm from its socket.

  "And here's for leading the militia up here," another said.

  BoShek scrambled to his feet, trying to explain. "No, wait, I

  didn't mean to - " But they weren't interested in excuses. Under

  continual pummeling, he covered his head and dived for the ramp,

  rolled halfway down it, and came up running. He thought the preach

  ers would leave it at that, but two of them chased him right out

  of the wreck and out into the plaza, where the police, gathered

  around the Jawa's corpse, turned to see what this new commotion

  was.

  "That's him!" the cop he'd knocked down shouted, and he snapped

  off a blaster shot that just missed BoShek's head, blowing a rusty

  attitude jet off the side of the wreck instead. BoShek leaped over

  the jet and dashed around the curve of the hull; then when he had

  its bulk between him and his pursuers, he sprinted straight down

  the street toward the thickest crowd he could see the buyers and

  sellers in front of the Jawa trading center.

  The preachers were still hot on his tail, which was the only

  thing that kept him from getting a blaster bolt in the back. The

  police were evidently reluctant to shoot a bona fide religious

  leader, even by accident, probably fearing the trouble their

  followers would cause in retribution.

  Taking advantage of their hesitation, BoShek ran past the

  traders and on down the street toward the used-landspeeder lot. He

  thought briefly of dodging through the speeders and trying to lose

  his pursuers that way, but as he drew closer he saw the triangular-

  headed Arconan dealer gloating over a deal he had just made, and

  he realized his salvation was at hand.

  Running up to the speeder the Arconan had bought -a battered XP-

  38A with two engines on the side and a third up on a fin in

  back-he tossed a fistful of credits at the surprised alien, then

  leaped into the driver's seat and shouted over his shoulder, "I'm

  taking it for a test drive!"

  "No, wait! What do you think you're-" the Arconan wailed, but

  BoShek didn't stick around to argue. The engines were still

  running; he jammed the accelerator on full and zoomed away, nearly

  running over a cylindrical droid before he swerved the speeder

  farther out into the street.

  The cops took a couple of wild shots at him, but the energy

  bolts only succeeded in making the people in the street dive for

  cover. BoShek zoomed down the clear avenue, took the corner at the

  end of the block at full speed, and continued on.

  Two blocks farther, he slowed for another corner, then

  proceeded at a more normal speed to the next corner, where he

  turned again and tried to blend into what little vehicle traffic

  there was. His zigzag course was leading him in a loop around

  Docking Bay 94. Good. The jumbled streets dead-ending at the bay

  would keep the police busy for a long time, if they even bothered

  to look for him anymore.

  He was thinking about ditching the speeder and heading back to

  the monastery when he turned another corner and found himself

  gliding toward a patrol of four stormtroopers who stood blocking

  the street. One of the troopers raised a hand with his palm out,

  indicating that BoShek should stop.

  They didn't have their rifles drawn, which meant they were

  probably just stopping everyone on the street for questioning.

  Even so, there was no way BoShek could get past them or turn

  around and flee before they could unsling their blasters and take

  him out. He forced himself to let up on the accelerator and drift

  to a stop before the troopers, all the while frantically trying to

  think of a way out of this latest predicament.

  "What's your business here?" the patrol leader asked him. His

  voice was distorted by the full battle helmet he wore, and the

  bubble lenses of his visor kept BoShek from seeing where he was

  looking.

  "I'm, uh, just headed down to the cantina," BoShek told him.

  "I see. Is this your landspeeder?"

  "I'm test-driving it," BoShek said.

  "A likely story. Let's see your-" The stormtrooper's words were

  drowned out by the roar of a ship taking off under full thrust.

  BoShek winced at the blast as the ship cleared the rooftops, then

  did a double take when he recognized its outline. It was the

  Millennium Falcon.

  Looks like the old mart must have made it, he thought. Too bad,

  in a way; he could have used a little bit of his luck right now.

  But it wasn't luck, was it? The guy knew about the Force, and

  by the way he talked and the way he handled a lightsaber, he was a

  master at it. He'd probably used its power to manipulate his way

  past all the obstacles. A little roadblock like this would hardly

  make him sweat.

  Well, BoShek was sweating plenty. The stormtroopers had all

  turned to watch the ship blast free, but

  they would be bringing their attention back to him soon enough.

  Go check out the docking bay, BoShek thought at them. Go bother

  somebody else. Whatever, just let me go.

  What had the old man told him about the
Force? "Beware the dark

  side," he'd said. "Only the pure of heart can ever hope to wield

  the Force's power with any success." And he'd told BoShek he'd,

  have to resolve his role here on the edge of society before he

  could continue his journey.

  Great. Stealing the landspeeder had probably nixed whatever

  chance he'd ever had at using the Force.

  But he hadn't actually stolen it, now had he? He'd tossed the

  Arconan who'd bought it at least fifty credits, and while it was

  true that he'd only been hoping to keep the landspeeder dealer

  from raising the alarm for a few minutes, he could still take it

  back.

  All right, he thought, directing his thoughts out into the

  vastness of space where he imagined the Force accumulated. I'll

  take the speeder back just as soon as I get free, and I'll quit

  running hot ships for smugglers and I'll clean up the rest of my

  act, as long as you get me out of this mess.

  He didn't really expect it to work. The Force wasn't some

  judgmental god deciding a person's fate; like the old man had

  implied, the Force just was. It didn't care what BoShek promised.

  The power to manipulate it came from within, and BoShek wasn't

  foolish enough to believe he had reached internal harmony in the

  last few seconds. But maybe, just maybe, he had changed enough to

  make a difference.

  He concentrated all his effort on the stormtroopers, willing

  them to let him go, and he was almost sure he felt something, a

  twinge of awareness directed toward them. An answering sensation

  came back, as if they too possessed some rudiments of the Force,

  or had once been exposed to it. They seemed to feel his touch; all

  four of them turned in unison to regard the land-speeder again.

  BoShek could hardly breathe. Fog your brains, he thought at

  them. Forget I'm here.

  "How long have you had these droids?" the storm-trooper captain

  asked.

  "Huh?" BoShek turned his head toward the passenger seat,

  wondering how he could have missed seeing a droid there, but save

  for himself the speeder was empty

  "I-" he said, but the trooper cut him off.

  "Let me see your identification."

  Here we go, BoShek thought. He reached slowly for his belt,

  wondering if he could grab his blaster and take out all four

  troopers, but the captain's next words stopped him cold.

  "We don't need to see his identification," he said to the

  others. "These aren't the droids we're looking for."

  Bewildered, BoShek could only say, "That's . . . uh, that's

  good."

  "You can go about your business," the trooper said. He waved

  his arms in dismissal. "Move along."

  BoShek's field of vision was shot full of tracers from the

  sudden rush of relief. He had to take a deep breath to keep from

  fainting, but he managed to urge the landspeeder forward and

  around the corner before he pulled it to a stop and collapsed back

  against the seat.

  He had no idea what had just happened, except for one thing

  The Force was real, and he had somehow manipulated the

  stormtroopers with it.

  But not without a price. He imagined the old man, probably half

  a light-year away by now, still watching over him somehow, waiting

  to see if he would follow through on his promise.

  Would he? It was hardly a question. BoShek had been given a

  glimpse of something vast, something at once wonderful and

  terrifying. Beware the dark side, the old man had told him, and

  BoShek knew the warning was sincere. He could use this newfound

  power of his for good or for evil, but once he made the choice,

  there would be no. going back. He was standing at a crossroads,

  and whatever decision he made now would affect the rest of his

  life.

  Smiling for the first time in what seemed like hours, he

  started the landspeeder and began driving it back to its rightful

  owner.

  Doctor Death The Tale of Dr. Evazan and Ponda Baba

  by Kenneth C. Flint

  The odd scraping sound could be heard even above the distant

  rumble of thunder.

  One of the two figures seated at the dining table twisted

  around, cocking its head to listen.

  "What's that?" a gruff voice demanded. "Rover, go check!"

  Something shifted in a shadowed corner. A mass slid forward

  with a wet, sucking sound, coming into the light. It was a

  gelatinous form, a mucuslike mass of

  greasily shining bile-green that humped and slithered itself

  over the floor as a ring of slender, bulb-tipped stalks wavered

  atop the rounded mass. It oozed on across the width of the long

  dining room toward one of the arched window openings in the far

  wall.

  "I wouldn't have believed a Meduza could be trained at all,"

  the second figure at the table remarked with some surprise.

  The first man turned back to the guest seated across the dining

  table from him. "On the contrary, Senator. It's quite easy to

  train. One of the most malleable species I've found, in fact. I

  wish there were more like it."

  The man's face was obscured by a massive scar disfiguring the

  right side, leaving the right eye a slit in the sagging flesh and

  flattening out the nose, giving him a piggish look.

  "I can unfortunately imagine what things you wish for, Dr.

  Evazan," the Aqualish senator replied with a shudder of revulsion.

  Generally humanoid, he had walruslike features, with large, liquid

  black eyes and thick, incurving tusks. Short bristling whiskers

  lined die stubby snout that was split by a wide, thin mouth.

  The senator lifted a hand to clutch the glass before him. The

  hand was finlike, fingerless, but with an opposable thumb. It

  marked him as a member of the more prominent of the two Aqualish

  races, and thus belonging to their ruling classes. He drank deeply

  of the dark green Andoan ale within the glass as he watched Rover

  nervously.

  The gelatinous creature had by now reached one of the window

  openings. Heaving itself into a higher peak, it poised a moment,

  its bulbed stalks jerking about as if sniffing the air.

  Beyond die opening, the vast sea of the water planet of Ando

  stretched away to a gray-black horizon. In the boiling storm

  clouds that hung there, spectacular lightning flickered and flared

  to light the towering thunderheads.

  The deep boom of thunder rolled across the gale-churned waves

  to rebound from die sheer stone walls of the spired casde perched

  high upon the cliffs. Hundreds of meters below the casde window,

  fists of massive waves slammed themselves against the base of the

  rocky isle, splaying to white fingers that grabbed futilely

  upward.

  The full magnificence of the wild scene was somewhat obscured

  by a shimmering scrim of light created by the energy shield that

  formed a screen across each opening.

  The bloblike creature sank back down. Its pod-tipped stalks

  turned toward Evazan at once and waved to him, as if in urgent

  signal.

  Dr. Evazan cocked the remaining
eyebrow above his left eye. His

  half-blasted face expressed no other sign of emotion.

  "You might just want to drop down under the table now," he told

  his guest in a quite matter-of-fact voice.

  The Aqualish senator stared in astonishment as one of Evazan's

  hands appeared from under the table clutching a blaster pistol.

  The other hand lifted to punch one button on a small tabletop

  console, and then a second.

  All the lights went out.

  Simultaneously a sizzling sound came from beyond the windows,

  and the energy screens of diree openings were punctured inward as

  three forms dived through them from outside.

  The senator gave a shrill honk of terror and dived beneath the

  thick tabletop.

  The three forms hit the floor, rolled, and came in-stantly to

  their feet. A flicker of distant lightning illuminated three

  humanoid shapes as they lifted blaster rifles to fire.

  Evazan was already rolling from his chair toward the shelter of

  a conform lounge. He fired as he went, his bolt striking one of

  the diree forms squarely.

  The attacker let out a grunt of pain as he staggered and went

  down. The other two dived for cover. Bolts from opposing weapons

  crisscrossed the dark room, cracking into stone walls and ripping

  through furnishings.

  One of the attackers was so intent on hitting Evazan, he was

  not aware of something creeping up-not until a liquid sound made

  him whip about just as Rover lunged.

  The intruder had no chance for defense as the Meduza's stalks

  all shot forward, touching their pod ends to the other's face and

  chest. Each pod flared brightly, and the victim's form stiffened,

  shuddering as if an electric shock coursed through it, then

  collapsed.

  Evazan's twisted mouth lifted in a grotesque smile. "Good boy,

  Rover," he muttered. But the smile vanished as he looked toward

  the room's door, adding in an irked tone, "But where in hell are

  you, Ponda?"

  He moved out from his cover, crawling about the dark room,

  angling for a shot at the last foe. As Evazan lifted up to take

  aim at the last place he had seen the other, that final invader

  drew a bead on the doctor's shadowy form.

  The door of the room burst inward and a new figure plunged

  through. A quick, well-aimed blaster bolt skewered Evazan's

  attacker, barely saving the doctor from a fatal shot.

  The last body thudded to the floor. Evazan climbed to his feet,

 

‹ Prev