by Greg Keyes
But you got us here. Thank you. Then he felt it go.
He looked out through the viewport at a forested landscape,
"Well," he told the others, "we seem to be here. I suggest we see if the
hatch will open, and find out just what we came all this way for."
PART THREE
TRANSFIGURATION
NINETEEN
"No, not again," Han snapped as the Falcon dropped suddenly from
hyperspace. "This is really starting to get old." How many times was he going
to get pulled out by Yuuzhan Vong interdictor analogs? There weren't even
supposed to be any Vong here.
He threw the ship into a series of evasive maneuvers.
"Okay, where are you scar-faced clowns?" he growled.
"It's not Yuuzhan Vong," Leia said. "Look."
He did look, and had to resist the temptation to rub his eyes. For there,
silhouetted against the bright stars of the Core, was an Imperial interdictor.
He noticed the comm was buzzing for attention. "Put 'em on," Han managed.
A moment later, a terse voice filtered into the cockpit. "Unidentified
vessel, this is Captain Mynar Devis of the Imperial cruiser Wrack. Identify
yourself immediately."
"Some things don't change," Leia murmured.
"Easy, honey. I think it's kind of romantic. Takes me back. Anyway, it
has to be part of Pellaeon's bunch." He keyed to answer. "Wrack, this is
Millennium Falcon. Looks like you're a little lost. The Imperial Remnant is
about twenty parsecs from here. Do you mind telling me whose or-ders you're
under?" There was a gravid pause. Then the voice returned.
"Captain Solo, I presume. You're every bit as insolent as I'd heard."
"Now, listen..." Han began, but the captain cut him off.
"And it's a great pleasure to meet you." Devis suddenly sounded very
young. "I thought I recognized Millennium Falcon from the holos, but I
couldn't be positive. How can I be of service?"
"Ah..." For a rare moment, Han was speechless. "Well, nice to meet you,
too," he said. Not exactly what he'd been expecting, even with the recent
alliance. He had a fan in the Empire? "But I suppose I still need an answer to
my question before we continue this little love fest."
"Of course, sir. I'm here under orders from Grand Ad-miral Pellaeon."
"In connection with Operation Trinity?"
"Yes. I-ah-wasn't informed you were involved, sir."
"I just got drafted. In fact, I'm on the way to meet with the Grand
Admiral. What are you guys doing, watching the back door?"
"Excuse me? I-o h, I see. Yes, sir. The Grand Admiral placed interdictors
on all the major routes leading to the fleet's location."
"Smart," Han said. "Someone comes along and you yank them out of
hyperspace and send a warning to the fleet. Dan-gerous position. What happens
if a whole Yuuzhan Vong flotilla jumps in here?"
"We're to delay any forces that arrive here as long as we can, then jump.
Unfortunately, our mission has been impacted by some sort of trouble with the
local HoloNet relay. We can't get a message through to Grand Admiral Pellaeon.
"
"It's not just the local relay," Han informed him. "The whole thing's
going down. Some sort of new Vong weapon, we think. Communication has been
lost between the fleets-that's why we're here. Have you sent any couriers?"
"Yes, Captain Solo. We had an incident not long after we lost
communication. We sent a courier to report it and re-ceive orders."
"Incident? What sort of incident?"
"We pulled a ship out of hyperspace. We gave pursuit, but it launched
some sort of weapon that disabled our for-ward gravity-well generator."
"Vong?"
"I don't know. What sensor readings we got made it as organic, but it
didn't match any known profiles of Yuuzhan Vong ships."
"That's no surprise," Han said. "Every time you turn around, they've
grown something new."
"Their escape vector didn't put it going anywhere near the fleets, but it
must have reported us. The courier returned and told us to hold our position."
"That's good," Han told Leia. "That means Pellaeon hasn't pulled out of
the whole thing. He's still waiting on word from Wedge."
"Which we don't have," Leia said.
"Right. To get that, we'd have to go to Bilbringi."
"Which is not what our orders were," Leia reminded him.
"True," Han said. "And I'm such a stickler for orders..."
He opened the channel again. "Captain Devis, could you do me a favor and
send another courier? "
"Yes, of course."
"Thanks. Tell the Grand Admiral we're going to see what's going on with
Alpha. As soon as we know something, we'll report back directly to him."
"Yes, sir. Captain Solo?"
"Yes?"
"If Alpha is fighting without backup, things may be pretty hot there. May
I send an escort with you? I could spare a few TIE defenders."
"I don't..."
"Han," Leia said. "He's right. And if we get stuck, one of the TIEs might
be able to slip out with a report."
Han nodded reluctantly. "As long as they don't get in my way," he said.
He opened the channel. "Thanks-the help is appreciated."
"It's easily given. I've been following your career since I was five
years old, sir."
"Well, let's hope there's plenty more for you to follow," Han replied.
"I'll see to it," Devis said.
A few moments later, three TIE defenders came streaking their way.
"Hi, fellows," Han told them. "I'm sending jump coordinates. Try to keep
up with us."
"We'll do our best, sir," the flight leader replied. Han wrinkled his
brow. "Devis?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Since when does the captain of an interdictor trade down for a
starfighter?"
"Since interdiction duty is boring, sir. I'll sort it out with the Grand
Admiral later. Easier to beg forgiveness than to ask permission, as they say."
"Okay," Han said. "Looks like the interdiction field is down. Let's go do
this."
TWENTY
A shock ran through Nen Yim as she stepped onto the leaf-littered soil of
Zonama Sekot. It went from her toes to the tips of her tendril headdress and
left her gaping. She remembered the first time she had set foot on a real
planet of stone and soil and biosphere-it had been the moon of Yavin 4, just
before her elevation to adept. She had been filled with wonder, fasci-nation,
and trepidation. To appearances, Zonama Sekot was not much different from
Yavin-vegetation towered in a high canopy above her, and strange sounds of
insects and animals created a steady drone. And yet-yet it was dif-ferent.
Yavin 4 had been utterly alien to everything she had ever known, and even
Yuuzhan'tar, now bioformed with plants and animals from the lost homeworld,
felt wrong,
But this place felt right, as even the worldship she had grown up on
never had. It was as if a piece of her had been cut off and, until it was
replaced, she hadn't even known to miss it.
She realized her mouth was open and closed it. She glanced at her
companions, all of whom had come out of the ruined Sekotan ship by now. Harrar
and the Prophet looked stunned, as she must. The two Jeedai looke
d curious,
but the planet clearly hadn't had the impact on them that it had on her. Of
course, she found human faces difficult to read, despite their similarity in
structure.
She tried to shake the feeling off so she could observe ob-jectively.
Could there be some sort of pollen in the air, some microbe that affected
Yuuzhan Vong but not humans? Possibly. Something that lulled the thinking mind
and created feelings of belonging. Such drugs had been used on the worldships
in the deeps of space to keep the population from going mad in the long dark.
"I must begin immediately," she said.
"This is the place," the Prophet asserted. Oddly enough, he sounded
surprised. Harrar said nothing, but the look he shot the Prophet could only
have been described as respect. Suddenly annoyed, Nen Yim went back into the
ship to get some of her tools. After a moment, she realized Yu'shaa was
following her.
"What do you want?" she asked.
"I would like to assist you."
"I need no assistance from-" She didn't finish.
The Prophet pulled himself up before her. "A Shamed One?" he said. "Come,
Nen Yim. You are a thinker, and, I think, a heretic of a sort. Can't you see
past my disfigure-ments and understand that you and I are here for the same
purpose?"
A hot, unfamiliar feeling passed through her, and her ten-drils twitched
in consternation.
"Very well," she said. "This ship is no longer suitable to function as a
laboratory. I wish to move my apparati out-side and contrive some sort of
shelter. You may help with that, if you wish."
"You will not regret this, Master Yim."
She nodded, and continued toward the back of the ship. It bothered her,
speaking with a Shamed One, but she knew it should not.
Corran wiped the sweat from his brow. "After this," he said, "our next
priority is to find Luke." He sliced his lightsaber through the base of
another sapling and added it to the pile. Nearby, Tahiri did the same.
"There. That ought to be enough for the frame."
"I don't know about you, but the planet is still interfering with my
senses. How do we find Master Skywalker without the Force?" Tahiri asked.
"It's a big planet. We can't just start walking and hope to run into him."
"No, but this place is supposed to be inhabited-by Fer-roans, if I
understand correctly, and they ought to be able to help us get in contact with
the others."
"I haven't seen any signs of civilization," Tahiri said.
"Neither have I," Corran admitted. "But tomorrow I'll start looking. Just
short searches, and maybe I can talk Harrar and the Prophet into going with
me."
"What about me?" Tahiri asked. "What do I do?"
"I want you to keep an eye on the shaper. You know her better than I do.
What I don't want is any of them left to their own devices for too long."
"Okay," Tahiri replied.
Corran slung the poles over his shoulder and started back toward the
clearing near the ship where Nen Yim was de-positing a variety of weird biots.
"What have you done?" Harrar asked when he saw them. His tone was dense
with reproach.
"Nen Yim said she needed a shelter," Corran explained.
"The ship is pretty twisted up and probably won't be very pleasant when
its organic components start to deteriorate, so that means building a hut.
These will furnish the frame."
"You killed living things to build a shelter? We're to stay indeadlife?"
"Unless you brougjit the means to grow your own, yes. I don't know abojit
yd*u, but I don't want to sleep in the rain. Unless you have a better idea."
"I...consider," the priest pleaded. "We came to this place following the
legends of a living planet, a planet like no other. If these legends are true,
is it best we begin by killing things? What if the planet is angered?"
"I never thought I would hear a Yuuzhan Vong say any-thing remotely like
that," Corran said. "You guys started this war by wiping out not just a few
saplings but entire ecosystems. Remember Belkadan? Remember Ithor?"
"Yes," Harrar said, stonily. He seemed to want to say more, but he
didn't.
Corran glanced at the saplings. "Unfortunately," he con-fessed, "you're
right, I wasn't thinking. Which means, I suppose, we need to find some sort of
natural shelter. A cave, maybe, or a rock shelter. There might be some in the
high ground to the east of here. Would you care to accom-pany me, Harrar?"
"I would," the priest said. "And-thank you for consid-ering my words."
"What about you, Yu'shaa?" Corran asked, hopefully.
"I'm about to go on a collecting expedition," Nen Yim said. "He will
accompany me."
"That sounds neat," Tahiri said. "Can I go?" Aces, kid, Corran thought.
The shaper shrugged noncommittally.
Tahiri shared a quick mental smile with Corran. He was amazed at how
quickly she had turned a misstep into an op-portunity, solving their immediate
problems rather neatly. He wished she could deal with social situations as
conveniently. Nom Anor watched Nen Yim move among canelike plants, stroking
them with her shaper's hand and occasionally recording cryptic entries in a
portable qahsa. The Jedi brat sat on a log some distance away, pretending not
to be interested, but she was watching them, nonetheless.
The shaper had been "collecting" for hours, but so far as Nom Anor could
see, she hadn't collected anything. She had examined trees, shrubs, moss,
fungi, and arthropods with singular intensity. She hadn't shared anything of
what she was thinking, though the expressions that flitted across her usually
impassive face indicated that she found much to think about.
One thing had come clear, though-Shimrra was right to fear this planet.
He had seen the faces of his Yuuzhan Vong companions, knew they felt the same
affinity for this world that he did. When he'd made his prophecy, he'd been
min-ing a few scraps of intelligence and some very old-and strongly forbidden-
legends. He hadn't believed it himself, of course. He'd been trying to give
his followers a ray of hope in otherwise dark times. Give them something
specific to fight for-a homeworld, and redemption.
Now he had to revise all of that. Zonama Sekot was real, and it seemed
not at all impossible that it could be the planet of legend.
Of course, in the legends it was taboo. The legends for-bade even
entering the galaxy where such a planet was found. What did that mean? Had the
Yuuzhan Vong battled with Zonama Sekot in the past, and lost? Had Shimrra
known about the planet's presence here even before the in-vasion began? There
had been rumors that Quoreal had balked at invading. Then Quoreal was dead,
and Shimrra ascended to the throne. Had the Supreme Overlord gone against
prophecy, against the gods themselves?
Or was the legend somehow wrong? Zonama Sekot certainly did not feel
taboo. It didn't matter. This was his moment. With his prophecy proven true,
more and more Shamed Ones would flock to him. His army would grow,
unstoppable, until Shimrra fell, and Nom Anor rose...
Yes. Rose to govern not the glorious Yuuzhan Vong, but a state of Shame
d
Ones.
Ah, well. Better than death, and better than nothing.
A gasp from Nen Yim cut short his reverie. He looked and saw her bent
over yet another plant, one that consisted of long filamentlike fronds. Or
perhaps it wasn't a plant, for the fronds seemed to be moving of their own
accord.
"What is it? "he asked.
"A lim tree," she murmured. She looked stunned. "Or a very close
relative."
Nom Anor had never heard of a lim tree. Before he could ask what one was,
and why she seemed so surprised, she turned to him, her eyes nearly ferocious.
"Do you truly believe this is the planet of your prophecy?"
"Of course," Nom Anor replied. "Why else would I risk the perils involved
in finding it?"
"From whence came this prophecy?" she demanded.
"From a vision I had-of this world, shining like a beacon, like a new
star in the skies of Yuuzhan'tar."
"In the skies of Yuuzhan'tar?"
"That was my vision," he said. "But prophecy is not al-ways literal. We
are in the sky of Yuuzhan'tar, though at such a vast distance that even the
star this planet orbits is probably unseen. I believe it meant that Zonama
Sekot was here, in the stars, waiting only for us to find it and be worthy of
it. And so we have."
"And you believe it will redeem the Shamed Ones?"
"Yes. But not just the Shamed Ones. Once they are re-deemed, all of us
are."
"But this vision," she persisted. "Where did it come from?"
"I do not know the true source of my visions," Nom Anor said carefully.
"Only that they are always true. Per-haps the gods send them. Perhaps this
planet itself sent them. What does it matter?"
"Because that is a lim tree," she said.
"I do not understand you."
"The lim tree was a plant of the homeworld. It has long been extinct
except as a code in the Qang qahsa. I grew one for myself, to adorn my
apartment at Shimrra's court."
"And now you find one here. Curious."
"No, not curious, impossible."
He waited for her to explain further.
"These other things," she said, "these plants and crea-tures around us,
they share much with our own biota at the cellular and molecular level. That
is one thing I came here to confirm-the Sekotan ship might have been a fluke,
a false similarity that arose from similar engineering. But this life you see