Star Wars - Tales Of The Bounty Hunters

Home > Other > Star Wars - Tales Of The Bounty Hunters > Page 11
Star Wars - Tales Of The Bounty Hunters Page 11

by Tales of the Bounty Hunters (edited by Kevin J Anderson)


  By the time Dengar reached the Punishing One in launch bay twelve, Boba Fett was checking his own ship, a Kuat Systems Firespraycla&s vehicle renowned for its speed and firepower. He was circling, as if to see if someone had tampered with it. He stepped close, and a warning alarm blared. Dengar saw that Boba Fett was indeed paranoid, setting alarms on his own ship to make certain that no one approached it.

  Dengar rushed into his much bulkier and more mundane ship, checked the systems quickly. The Im-perials had depolarized the controls, reversing the ion-ization damage. He blasted off, headed toward the asteroid field. He could hear the Imperial comm chat-ter. The Star Destroyer had already lost Han Solo and was scrambling fighters to search for him. Solo's last maneuver had been to strafe the Star Destroyer. Then he'd gone off the scopes.

  Dengar figured Solo must have gone back into the asteroid field. Perhaps Solo had shut down systems for a bit, so that his own ship seemed no more than an aster-oid, but as Dengar sped into the asteroid field himself, he saw that even Solo wasn't crazy enough to risk such a maneuver. Rocks the size of his ship hurtled toward him, and these weren't the soft carbonaceous chon-drites that his weapons might punch a hole through- these were nickel-iron rocks that could smash him to pieces.

  Dengar was forced to keep his concussion shields at maximum power, dodging those asteroids that he could, blasting those that he couldn't.

  Some of the asteroids were the size of a small moon. All of the metal in the sky fouled communications, jammed sensors.

  Dengar began dropping sensor beacons onto the larger rocks, hoping that they'd be able to relay any sign of movement. Fortunately, he had hundreds of such beacons on board. He let his sensors sweep across the frequencies, listening to the Imperials chatter as they prepared to depart the Hoth system.

  Sweat was running down Dengar's face, and after only a couple of hours in the asteroid belt, his nerves were frayed. The Imperial fleet jumped to hyperspace, and Dengar kept up his work. He blocked out all sound, all thought, and simply tried to negotiate the asteroid field, content in the hunt.

  Then, several minutes later, perhaps as much as half an hour-one of his beacons flared to life, reporting movement. The departing ship was not broadcasting any transponder signal, and it was limping away at sub-light speed.

  Dengar recorded its trajectory. He was well out of Solo's sensor range, and he wanted to stay that way, but he immediately began edging out of the asteroid field.

  When he neared the edge of the field, his remote sensors suddenly picked up something else, something strange. A large meteor, or perhaps an ion storm, seemed to be trailing Solo's ship, just out of the Falcon's sensor range.

  Instinctively Dengar knew that it was another ship. A tightbeam transmission suddenly hit him, and an image of Boba Fett appeared on Dengar's monitors. Boba Fett's face was hidden beneath his battered armor.

  "Sorry to do this, friend, but Solo is my trophy!" Boba Fett said, then there was the squeal of a binary code transmission.

  Immediately, Dengar suspected that it was an arming code, but the bomb on his ship exploded before he could do anything. A muffled thud sounded from the engine room, followed by a flash. Dengar ducked as flames billowed over the ceiling, then the automatic fire extinguishers belched to life.

  Dengar jumped from the command console, ran to the rear of his ship, and grabbed a manual extin-guisher. He opened the door to the engine bay and found that his sublight engines lay in a charred heap of slag.

  The bomb had been expertly configured and care-fully set to do some major damage-but only to neu-tralize the ship, not destroy it.

  Still, it would take him days to remove the fused parts, dump them, and put in replacements-if he had the necessary parts in stock. By then, Han Solo would be forever gone.

  Dengar hung his head, and his mind was just numb. He didn't know where to begin. After some consider-ation, he went to his command console, checked the trajectory of Han Solo's ship. He'd left a particle vapor trail that could be followed for several hours, or days, if he was lucky.

  He looked out into the blackness of space, where Boba Fett was chasing Han Solo. "Go ahead and blow me up," Dengar muttered. "But someday, you'll find out why they call me Payback."

  Dengar got up from his console, and set to work.

  Sometime later, Dengar's ship glided between the deli-cate Tibanna gas clouds of Bespin, past smooth moun-tains the colors of rose and peach, toward the setting sun.

  Cloud City lay straight ahead, its rust-colored towers shining dully. He circled the upper gambling casinos, and over the comm he asked the port authorities for permission to land at the nearest repair facility, then sent a false registry for his craft, not wanting to alert anyone to his presence.

  He spotted the Millennium Falcon below him on a landing pad. His heart began racing.

  The port authorities directed him to the proper landing field, and he touched ground, then slipped quietly into Cloud City.

  Once inside its corridors, the dockmaster ap-proached his ship. "I've got problems with my sublight drive and with my communications system. I'll give you a hundred extra credits if the job is finished in two hours."

  "Yes, sir," the dockmaster said, signaling his work crew to move the ship into an empty berth.

  Dengar stepped into the gleaming corridors of Cloud City, made his way to the upper gambling cham-bers, where most of the city's real business was con-ducted.

  If Han Solo was still here, Dengar imagined that he would find it hard to ignore die luxurious dining halls and exalted atmosphere of die casinos.

  The main casino was an enormous affair with thou-sands of guests from hundreds of worlds. Imperial offi-cials, smugglers, wealthy business persons, holovid celebrities-all of them were gathered here to pursue their mutual passions.

  A band played in the main hall-giant orange-skinned Turans with base nose flutes, electric harps, and soft percussion drums were playing an insistent, exhilarating tune that somehow stirred Dengar deeply.

  A troupe of dancers was on stage, swirling madly- small men and women of yellow skin, wearing golden strips of cloth on their arms and legs. At their center was a beautiful young woman with blue skin and dark blue hair. He recognized her-the Aruzan dancer, Manaroo.

  She whirled across die floor, gazing intendy into the eyes of her audience-peoples of many species, who sat at dieir dining and gambling tables. In her hands she had colored stones that glowed brightly, like the moons of Aruza, and she juggled and threw them in intricate patterns that drew the eye.

  There was nothing frantic in her dance. Instead it was peaceful, mesmerizing, like the flow of waves across some empty beach, or like the movement of birds across the sky. For a moment she seemed to not be like a woman at all, but more like a force of nature. Irresist-ible, self-contained, like a sun that holds die worlds around it in sway.

  Everyone focused on her, and Dengar found himself fumbling to a table, where he ordered dinner and a pleasant wine.

  The band struck up a new tune, and a repulsorlift field was generated before them. Inside the field, glass gems were shooting up through a pump, so that the gems swirled in the air under the lights like some magic fountain of violet, green, and gold. Two of the dancers leapt into the field, tumbling weightlessly in dance.

  With her dance finished, Manaroo came to Dengar's table, sat beside him.

  "I should have known I'd find you in a place like this, out where the Imperials don't pay much atten-tion," Dengar said.

  Manaroo, who had just performed so flawlessly, looked down at her hands folded in her lap, and there was a tenseness in her voice. "I needed to get away from the Empire," she said. "Only now, they're here. They caught that man you were looking for-Han Solo. I heard it from one of the security guards."

  Dengar found himself a bit surprised. Sometimes it seemed that those who had not ingested mnemiotic drugs were. well, stupid. "You remembered Solo's name? After all this time?"

  "I wanted to help you find him," Manaroo
said. "I wanted to repay you. I've been looking for him, too." This surprised Dengar even more, seeing how one small deed of kindness almost paid off big. "But I didn't find out he was here until after they caught him. I heard about it from a security guard. Now the Empire has promised to turn Han Solo over to another bounty hunter who followed him here, a man named Boba Fett."

  "Do you know where Boba Fett is?"

  The dancer shook her head.

  Dengar considered. "A man like Boba Fett doesn't like to leave his quarry. He'll want to get Solo safely stored on his ship, and then he'll be off."

  Dengar was tempted to bushwhack Boba Fett and steal his prize, but the fact was that over the past couple of days, his anger had eased. True, Boba Fett had bombed Dengar's ship, but he'd done it in such a way as to leave Dengar alive with the probability of making it to safety. It was a nice gesture, and an unnecessary one.

  So Dengar wanted to return the favor. True, he wanted to steal Han Solo-since if not for Boba Fett, Dengar would have made the capture-but he also wanted to leave Boba Fett in something approximating an ambulatory state. Managing both tasks simultane-ously would take some doing.

  "So what will you do?" Manaroo asked.

  "If the Imperials haven't released Han Solo to Boba Fett," Dengar considered, "then it means they're still questioning him. It may be a few days before they're done with him."

  A waiter came, and Dengar let Manaroo order din-ner on his tab. Afterward he settled back, regarding her closely. She seemed nervous still, apologetic, as if she'd failed him, when in reality she'd surprised him with her persistence. To top it off, ferreting sensitive informa-tion from a security guard might not have been easy for her. He suddenly wondered about the possibility of recruiting her as a partner.

  "Did you enjoy my dance?" she said.

  "You were very good. In fact, I've never seen anyone as good," Dengar said. "How did you learn to dance like that?"

  "It's easy," Manaroo said. "On Aruza, we use our cybernetic links to share our feelings. We're tech-empaths. When I dance, I know what pleases my watch-ers, and so I practice those moves they love best."

  "But you can't give yourself to them fully," Dengar said.

  "Why do you say that?"

  Dengar struggled for the words. "Because, when you danced, I wished that you were dancing for me alone. I assume that every man must feel that way about you."

  Manaroo smiled, looked up into his eyes. Her own eyes were so rich, so black, that he could see the glow globes that hovered near the ceiling reflecting in them. "You're right. I always dance for my audience as if all that I did were to please them, but inside, I dance only for myself."

  She surprised him by reaching out to take his broad hand, and he was embarrassed. His hands were so large, so powerful, that he felt as if they were paws, and he were some huge, alien animal beside her.

  "You seem to be doing well here," Dengar said.

  "Do I?" she whispered, and once again Dengar was surprised at how rough and husky her voice could be. "I'm not. I'm terribly alone. I've never felt so. empty."

  "How can that be?" Dengar asked. "I'm sure that there are many men who would seek you out."

  "Of course, there are many men who want me," Manaroo said, "but few are willing to share themselves with me fully. I feel that we are all strangers, encased in our shells." She squeezed Dengar's hands tightly, des-perately. "On my world, when two people love each other, they share more than their bodies. They do more than take pleasure with each other. They bond with the Attanni, sharing their thoughts and emotions completely, sharing their memories and their knowl-edge. All of the subterfuges between them are stripped away, and they become one person. On Aruza I was bonded to three good friends, but now."

  Dengar found his heart beating more rapidly, for he could see the hunger in her, the need for this, and he knew she wanted it from him. "I'm afraid that you won't find people here who are willing to bond with you that way. Our thoughts and emotions are frighten-ing things, and so we conceal them, hoping that poten-tial lovers will never uncover our weaknesses."

  "But you have no emotions to conceal. You told me on your ship that you have no emotions, that the capac-ity was cut out of you by the Empire."

  Dengar indeed remembered having told her, one night as they ate in his stateroom. Manaroo had seemed curious about the concept, seemed to feel that it would be like sleeping, a comfortable emptiness. But Dengar did not see it that way. Instead, it was an incon-venience. He sometimes did not know if his words or actions would offend or annoy others. Indeed, his soli-tary life was not something that he'd sought. He lived alone on his ship because few others could endure his presence, his demanding ways. He'd told her this.

  "I sense few emotions," Dengar said. "Rage, hope, one other." She looked at him quizzically, as if de-manding to know what other emotion held him sway, but he shrugged her question aside. "That is all the Empire left me. But what of my memories? What of my deeds? I suspect that you would find them. mon-strous."

  She searched his face for a long moment. "Bonding with you would make me more like you. Perhaps I need that to survive, here in your world."

  Dengar considered, looked away out the window to the billowing Tibanna gas clouds. Bonding with him would teach her much that no one should know. It would open her to all of the pain and madness he'd lived through since the Empire first began molding him into an assassin. "I would rather spare you that."

  They ate a leisurely dinner, made Smalltalk, and Manaroo excused herself, went backstage.

  Dengar sat alone and wondered. With Solo captured, would Vader come after him? Dengar doubted it. The Dark Lord of the Sith had his own political agenda, men to command, an Empire to run. Dengar was al-most beneath his notice. But Dengar didn't want to cross paths with him again.

  Over the loudspeakers, the city administrator, Lando Calrissian, announced that Imperial troops were taking over the station, and suggested that all personnel evac-uate immediately.

  Around Dengar, the gamblers and citizenry of Cloud City broke into an uproar. People began running for exits.

  Dengar finished his drink, stood, and noted to the empty air, "It seems that everywhere I go lately, people are evacuating."

  Stormtroopers appeared at one door on the mezza-nine above him. Someone, perhaps an undercover se-curity guard or a patron of the casino, pulled a heavy blaster, and a firefight erupted.

  Dengar glanced out the window. Boba Fett's ship was arcing off through the clouds, and Dengar knew intu-itively that the bounty hunter would not have left with-out his prey.

  He cursed under his breath, watching the tail fire of Boba Fett's ship. It seemed that that was all he ever saw of Han Solo.

  The firefight at the far end of the room was becom-ing rather heated, and smoke now filled the air.

  Dengar sighed, looked at his chronometer. The port authorities may have had time to fix his ship, but he doubted it. The new engines were probably laid in, but he doubted that all of the electronic connections were made. He got up, stretched, decided to go search for Manaroo.

  He rushed through a curtain of shimmering lights, found himself in a corridor that led to a larger room.

  In it, two stormtroopers stood guard over half a dozen performers who sat on the floor, hands clasped over their heads. Manaroo was with them.

  Dengar called to the stormtroopers, "Excuse me, gentleman, but the dancer is coming with me."

  The stormtroopers swiveled their heavy blasters toward Dengar, and one shouted, "Put your hands on your head."

  Dengar watched them for a half a second, then took one step to his left, pulled his blaster, and killed both men.

  "Make me," he said, as they dropped to the ground.

  Manaroo sat on the floor, mouth wide in shock. Den-gar went to her, took her hand, and pulled her to her feet. The other performers scurried off without any urging.

  "Let's get out of here while we still can," Dengar grunted.

  "Where to?" she stammered.


  "Tatooine," Dengar said. "Boba Fett is taking Han Solo to Tatooine."

  Fortunately, when Dengar reached the repair docks, his ship was already out of the repair bay and sat gleam-ing on the launch field. The dockmaster had gone be-yond repairing the ship, and had actually cleaned the exterior, filling the micrometeor pits and applying a fresh coat of protective paint. Too bad no one was here to collect for the repairs.

  Unfortunately, half a dozen stormtroopers sat at the launch pad beside a light cannon. Dengar and Manaroo were hiding in a repair hangar, behind an old freighter. The sounds of fighting and explosions ech-oed all around Cloud City.

  Dengar watched the stormtroopers all positioned in a tight knot, and grumbled to himself, "This is what grenades are for." These must have been fresh troops, lacking basic training.

 

‹ Prev