Star Wars - I, Jedi

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Star Wars - I, Jedi Page 49

by I, Jedi (by Michael A Stackpole)

I ignited my lightsaber and cored a circle in the ceiling above me, then shoved it out of the way as Luke pushed me all the way up through it. Taking a step forward, I brought the blaster carbine up and lashed the stream of blue energy darts back and forth over the crowd of armor-shelled warriors clogging the corridor's end. Their armor deflected some shots and ablated to lessen the power of others-reducing them from stunning to something that just dazed the soldiers, but I had such clean shots at them that they were at my mercy.

  Elegos came up through the hole next and blazed away with his blaster. His blue bolts struck befuddled targets, enveloping them in a collapsing sphere of blue that dropped them easily. Trapped as they were, they were not really a fighting force, just targets waiting to be shot. I scythed my fire over them and together finished them off.

  Ooryl came up the stairs, but Mirax and Luke took the quicker route to the corridor. Mirax took the blaster back from me, appropriated a powerpack from Ooryl and kissed him on the cheek. She turned and pointed back away from the stairs. "Along here there's a corridor that goes over to the main build-ing. Landing pad's on the top."

  Luke led the way. "Need to be careful. The stormtroopers we can pick out with the Force, but the Jensaarai, they're more difficult."

  "Difficult, that's an understatement." Mirax tossed the blaster's old powerpack aside and jammed the new one home. "Their leader, this woman they call the Saarai-kaar, somehow thinks holding me is preventing her family from being de-stroyed. When she spoke to me, when she fed me-and I know I was sleeping for a long time between meals-she would speak in past and present and future. She said a Halcyon was her doom or destiny, but wouldn't go into details. It was confusing, but I never thought she was insane."

  Luke shook his head. "She probably didn't understand it any better than you did, or than Keiran-Corran-did when he lost contact with you. He didn't have the mental framework in place to make it make sense."

  "I'm still not sure I do."

  "No, but neither do the Jensaarai." Luke frowned. "They have training, but it's skewed and things have been added. It's not an independent Force tradition like the Dathomiri witches, but it's unlike anything else I know of." He shrugged. "That's not saying much."

  "You!" The shouted words came angry, though the speakers in the comm unit at the hallway juncture couldn't quite produce all the outrage they were meant to convey. I glanced to my left and saw a hologram of Tavira standing there, just shy of life-size, her hands on her hips. "You were the Jedi at Courkrus."

  I nodded. "At your service." Shifting my lightsaber to my left hand, I gestured with my right to Luke and Mirax. "I'd like to introduce Luke Skywalker, Jedi Master, and Mirax Terrik and... but, wait, we're on our way up to see you. Introduc-tions are so much nicer in person." "How dare you!"

  "Oh, I dare." I pointed to the sky. "New Republic will be here in no time. The days of the Invidious are over." "Never!"

  I laughed. "By the way, the month's not up, but the answer is no."

  "Arrgghhh! When I get my hands on you..."

  "In your dreams, deary." Mirax shot the comm unit. "Em-pire's been dead for years, and still she relies on those limping Imperial threats. `When I get my hands on you/' Get with the times, woman.... "

  "I like your Mirax a whole bunch, Corran." Luke smiled.

  "And you're right, she and Mara should never meet."

  We picked up the pace, racing into the main building and began working our way up. The staircase that wound around the inside of the building's tall atrium had a thick enough balus-trade to provide some cover, of which we took advantage as did those individuals trying to stop us. Blaster bolts, red and blue, whined and streaked, ricocheted and smoked as they burned into white marble pillars or black wall tiles. The stairs' gradual slope meant they wound around endlessly, it seemed, but was not sufficient to slow us down that much. They didn't have landings per se, so no easy points to defend, and our opponents had to put up with one unbelievably annoying problem: two of their targets bore these archaic weapons and were swatting blaster bolts out of the air. Luke was even able to redirect his at our enemies, knocking them down or making them break cover long enough for Ooryl, Elegos or Mirax to shoot them from a flanking position.

  As we climbed toward the building's upper reaches, we felt a tremor course through it. "A shuttle's going up."

  Elegos frowned. "Tavira must be running."

  Ooryl and I exchanged glances. "That, or someone else is off carrying orders for her." I tried to push my senses to see if I could find Tavira in the shuttle or still in the building above us, but I got nothing. "Something is blocking me."

  Luke nodded. "Me, too. The Jensaarai."

  "Must be."

  We pushed on, clearing the last length of corridor, then topped several steps that opened onto the foyer of a grand chamber. This has been the Imperial Governor's audience chamber and clearly designed to impress. While the space itself was square in construction the inner design was circular, from the arrangements of the twisted basalt pillars holding up the ceiling, to the designs worked into both the floor and ceiling. At the far side, opposite our stairs, another set of stairs led up to an observation deck where transparisteel made up the walls. Through the viewports we could see the gas giant, its ring, and a bright light heading outbound.

  Halfway up those stairs, on a broad landing, sat a massive red granite desk and built into the front of it a cushioned chair made of the same stone. I found it easy to imagine the governor working at the desk, then moving around forward to sit in judg-ment over any issues brought before him. Elevated and impe-rial, he would have ruled as the sole, unopposable authority on Susevfi. All around the room, almost like courtiers waiting for a ruling, odd bits of fine furnishings, casks of credits, small chests of jewels and stacks of antiquities added a crude but opulent display of conspicuous wealth that smacked of Tavira.

  Yet, all this, which I took in with a glance, faded to insignifi-cance compared to the six creatures standing in the open cen-tral part of the floor. One, a woman wearing a grey cloak, with streaks of matching grey in her long brown hair, stood in the center. A mask hid her face, but unlike the others, it had not been fashioned after an animal, but instead showed a young woman, beautiful and smiling. The fire flashing in the blue eyes behind the mask, however, suggested the tall woman was any-thing but smiling underneath.

  Arrayed behind her in an arc, five of the Jensaarai waited in their grey cloaks, their hoods up. The light flashing down from recessed glow panels above cast long shadows over their masks, but I caught details reptilian, insectoid and mammalian. The rightmost figure I had seen on the Invidious bridge with Tavira. The others, who were generally smaller, radiated little hints of anxiety.

  The central figure raised her right arm and pointed a light-saber toward me. The gold blade shot out, but stopped well shy of crossing the five meters that separated us. "Finally you have come. The Halcyon. To destroy us." Her eyes focused beyond me. "The rest of you are free to go. You have done your part in bringing him here."

  I frowned. "You kidnapped Mirax to get me here? You could have given me directions and this could have been over much faster."

  Ooryl rested a hand on my shoulder. "It was not here that was important, but when."

  "The choice of futures is made in the moment the future you desire is born." She let her cloak slip off, revealing her armored form. The armor, like the mask, had been styled after a beauti-ful woman and while alluring, was nonetheless deadly. She in-clined her head toward me and struck a guard I found hauntingly familiar. She grasped the hilt daggerlike in her left hand, with her right hand riding on the pommel, pointing the blade toward the floor. "Now is the time."

  Luke took a half-step forward and reached my side. "Wait, I am Luke Skywalker. There is no need for further violence here."

  "The Skywalker. Your intervention here was not unantici-pared." She jerked her head. "My students will entertain you, then I will destroy you, too, that they may live."

  The five
people backing her moved to the left, letting their cloaks fall to the floor. Each brought out a lightsaber and set themselves.

  "Saarai-kaar of the Jensaarai, do not do this." Luke waved a hand at her students. "I do not want to kill them."

  "Then that would be a problem for you, Skywalker." She nodded at me. "Come, Halcyon, destroy or be destroyed, there is no alternative at this juncture in time."

  I lit my lightsaber as she drove toward me and blocked her first sweeping blow low and to the right. I anticipated the wrist-twist that allowed her to rake her gold blade back across where I had been. I ducked beneath her cut, then slashed at her legs, but she danced above my blade. What she didn't expect was my remaining low, pivoting on my left hand. As she landed, I swept my legs through her legs, clicking her ankles together and top-pling her.

  I sprang up to press my attack, but she never hit the ground. She turned her fall into a languid backward somersault. The second she touched down, she drove at me again, feinting left and right. I backed away, moving to parry. When her blow finally came in on my left, I caught it on the forte of my blade and brought it up and over in a big circular parry. As I did so I slid forward so we stood shoulder to shoulder for a second. I cranked my left elbow up into her facemask, driving her back, then batted away a quick slash.

  Off to my left, Luke moved through the Jensaarai with such ease and skill that I realized the only help he'd needed from me back on Courkrus the night we'd faced their brethren was for me to hold his cloak. A quick parry with his lightsaber and then a push with the Force and two of them went down hard. An-other parry and the application of the lightsaber's dark end to a head dropped another to the floor. A telekinetic tug on a mask blinded one, while he fought another to a standstill, their blades arcing and screaming as they met.

  The Saarai-kaar came at me with cold fury, her blade held in the style of the Anzati who slew my grandfather. She aimed a cut across my middle that I danced back from, then she slashed it down toward my trailing leg. The gold blade sliced through my robe and roasted a layer or two of skin off the top of my right thigh, but did no serious damage. I pivoted on that foot and arced my left foot around to catch her in the flank, pitching her across the room to where she crashed against a duraplast chest full of coins.

  She clawed a handful of them back in mv direction and I realized a second too late what she was really doing. With a telekinetic push she accelerated them at me. I got my lightsaber up and deflected most of them, but two thudded against my chest and one skipped off my forehead, opening up a cut above my right eye.

  "Enough of this." I opened myself fully to the Force and felt it flow through me. I came in at her, beat her blade aside and planted a front kick against her armored belly. She bounced back a step, but then slashed down and in at me as she quickly advanced. I parried her hard and to the right, then shifted my wrists and came up through a slash that should have cut right through her bracer and taken her left hand off.

  I felt a jolt run through my lightsaber, numbing my hands as the blade flickered and died. She recoiled, clutching at her smoking armor, her own lightsaber going out as it fell from her hand. Snarling, she nodded sharply at me, and I heard a rus-tling. One of her students' discarded cloaks wrapped itself around my ankles and dumped me unceremoniously on my back. I blacked out for a second, then saw the Saarai-kaar standing over me, her golden blade raised for an overhand blow that would split my head in two.

  Without conscious thought, I reacted through the Force. Into her brain I projected an image of Nikkos Tyris lying there in my place.

  She hesitated. "Master?"

  Mirax's stunbolt hit the Saarai-kaar square in the chest and dropped her out of my sight. I kicked my feet free of the cloak and sat up. Mirax slid down by my side, her blaster carbine still pointed at the armored woman's form. She pumped another shot into her, making the body twitch. "Nice shooting."

  Mirax smiled. "Thanks. Tried to shoot her earlier, but wasn't able to concentrate enough to hit her. Then things became clear."

  "Right, right at the same time I broke her concentration by planting a picture in her mind. I linked her fighting style to that of my grandfather's killer, gave her his image and she hesi-tated." I rolled up to one knee and kissed Mirax full on the lips. "Thanks for the rescue."

  "My pleasure." She stroked a hand through my hair. "By the way, you can keep the chin fur, but change the color."

  Luke came over and knelt next to the Saarai-kam: He worked her mask off revealing a face somewhat seamed from age and exposure, but clearly it was just an older version of what the mask had shown. Luke touched her forehead and nodded slightly. "She'll be fine. What happened to your blade?"

  "I don't know." I picked it up and hit the button. The blade sprang to life again with no shock and no sputtering. "I felt a lot of feedback. Something in the armor shorted it? Cortosis ore maybe?"

  Mirax picked up the mask. "Spun cortosis fibers in this? Not much of that stuff around-which is fine because it's fairly use-less. Still, pretty in ornamentation like this."

  "We have a problem." Elegos looked down at us from the governor's desk. He punched a button and a hologram ap-peared above a built in holoprojector plate on the desk. It re-solved itself into a tactical shot of the system around the gas giant. "I've fed the system data from our ship into the projector here. I show the Invidious leaving the ring and it's headed this way."

  I shook my head. "Tavira doesn't like losing, and she'll strafe us to get rid of us. Yumfla's done."

  Suddenly several more ships appeared in the image, slicing in toward Susevfi, between the Invidiotts' attack course and the planet. "I have ships identified as the Backstab and the Er-rant l/enture entering the system. They are deploying fighters: clutches and X-wings."

  Luke looked at me. "X-wings?"

  Elegos nodded. "From the Errant Venture. Invidious is de-ploying clutches and coming about to engage Errant I/entttre. They should close to range in five minutes."

  Mirax shook her head. "We can't let them do that."

  Elegos' head came up. "Both ships are evenly matched. They are both Impelial-class Star Destroyers."

  I snarled and stood. "Yeah, but Booster's ship doesn't have more than a token array of guns. Can you open up a comm line to the lientigre? Mirax, you can talk your father into running."

  "Leaving us here to be lit up by Tavira? Not likely." She shivered. "She'll vape the l/enture, then vape us."

  Luke looked at me. "Try to call Tavira. Maybe we can make a deal with her."

  "A deal with her? No way." I shook my head. "If I know her at all, there's just no way we can convince her.... "I stopped and bounced the heel of my hand off my forehead. "Sithspawn, I'm so stupid." "What?"

  I winked at Mirax and ran toward the stairs to the observa-tion deck. "Don't worry, I've got it. i'll take care of it. I'll move her right out of here."

  "Move her?" The Jedi Master's voice came cool and even.

  "Do you want help?" "No."

  "Do you need help?"

  "Nope." I smiled at him. "Remember, `size matters not.' And telekinesis is not the only way to move the Invidious."

  I gathered the Force inside of me and projected my aware-ness out into a cone that sought the white dagger stabbing down from the ring. I found it with ease, just teeming with life and fear, anger and arrogance. I worked my way through it until I found a place where arrogance and anger and outrage all seemed to collect, then I pushed my way into Tavira's mind and flowed into the place where her fears and confidence dwelt.

  I listened to her weapons-officers calling out ranges and pre-paring firing orders. I pushed a bit of doubt into her mind. It was impossible, wasn't it, that ttle New Republic would send so small a.force after her? Hadn't Jenos said a task force was on its way? He had sounded confident in a time when he should have known no confidence at all. He had worked with us and against us, learning our secrets. He knew how we operated and he com-municated all that to the New Republic.

  I let her list
en to her people a bit more and latched on to the unease she was feeling with how simple her victory would be. We used the Jensaarai to hide our ship, but the New Republic, the), would make more use of their Jedi. They sent two after us on the grotrod, to.ffee the prisoner, but what about their other Jedi? Wilere are they? What are the5, doing? Would they dare operate against me without them?

  In an instant she knew the New Republic saw her as such a threat that they would stop at nothing to catch her, which meant they would use the Jedi against her. Not only that, but they would use the Jedi to trap her by reversing the methods she had used to elude the New Republic. I let her feel that if she sharpened her mind, she could pierce the veil of deception the Jedi were casting over her and her crew. She concentrated and pushed, accomplishing nothing really. but I rewarded her for it.

  The holographic representation of the Errant Venture evapo-rated to be replaced by a bigger ship, a much bigger ship: a Super Star Destroyer that would eat up her hnpstar Deuce as easily as the Invidious had destroyed the Harmzmo,. I fed to her every image I'd had burned into my memory of the Lusankya, Isard's old SSD, and channeled in a good dose of fear.

 

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