The Cestus Deception

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The Cestus Deception Page 28

by Steven Barnes

After all, the initial strategy may have gone awry, but their secondary

  plans had gone swimmingly. If the Jedi regretted the loss of

  life, the rejuvenated forces of Desert Wind felt that they had finally

  struck a telling blow against the Five Families.

  After six of those raids, Sirty's communications skills combined

  with Doolb Snoil's phenomenal mind for research, tapping into

  ChikatLik's holovid network to extract a vital and telling piece of

  data: droid production had dropped by more than 30 percent. If they

  could but maintain the current pace of action, the Five Families and

  the government would be forced to the bargaining table, where all

  desires could be met.

  And while Obi-Wan wasn't nearly so certain that their current

  course would indeed take them to the desired land of plenty, there

  had been much violent action, many hairbreadth escapes, and three

  lost comrades to honor. Tensions were building to a killing point, and

  a bit of celebration would do them good.

  So the revel had been building for hours, guards posted at the cave

  mouth. While alert status remained high, Desert Wind's heightened

  appetites were simultaneously slaked with food, drink, games, bragging

  and boasting, and dancing.

  Resta Shug Hai spent most of her time by herself, sipping mead, a

  drink that had similar effects on human and Cestian. Since the very

  first days of training she had been an outsider, the lone X'Ting

  among human recruits. The barrier had gone both ways: after a lifetime

  of fighting for her land and identity, there was little love lost for

  the offworlders. Even as the troops began to enjoy victories, and the

  normal camaraderie bound them all together more tightly, she had

  remained somewhat apart. But she finally stepped forward, swaying

  slightly as if her tongue had been loosened by the mead. "I sing

  song," she said.

  Doolb Snoil happily clapped his chubby hands together, cheering

  her on.

  "X'Ting songs like Thak Val Zsing's history lessons," she explained.

  "Every clan have own song. Tell people's story. When song

  die, people die. Resta last to know her clan song."

  And she sang it. Obi-Wan didn't speak the language, but he didn't

  need to. He understood the emotions behind the alien words. And if

  emotion held true, the song spoke of courage, and toil, of love and

  hope and dreams.

  What struck Obi-Wan most was her evident pride and courage. If

  Resta and G'Mai Duris were typical of their people, the X'Ting were

  incredibly strong folk. Despite the plagues, despite their lands being

  stolen from under them, despite no external evidence at all, they

  dreamed on.

  When she finished, the rock walls rang with applause.

  Jangotat made his rounds of the outer caves, taking a few moments

  to speak to each of his brothers, all of whom declined intoxicants.

  Then he checked in with the recruits who were taking guard positions

  among the rocks or monitoring the scanners. No matter how

  well hidden they believed themselves to be, it was inevitable that

  eventually their lair would be discovered. Still, considering that the

  mountains themselves could shield them from enemy bombardment,

  it would take hours for enemy troops to ascend the slopes under fire,

  and all rear exits were either well guarded or sealed off.

  In the world of field operations, this was about as secure as life

  could get.

  Making his third rounds, a sense of ease descended over Jangotat.

  General Kenobi's initial plot had failed, but this new operation

  seemed to be working fine: breaking energy lines, crippling water

  plants, and looting payrolls for their growing war chest. The local

  troops had performed well under pressure.

  Unknown enemies had doomed their initial ruse. Jangotat now

  considered the entire world of diplomatic subterfuge unfit for a soldier,

  or, he now believed, those strange and fascinating creatures

  called Jedi. Odd. He thought of the Jedi not merely with respect, but

  with the sort of fraternalism ordinarily reserved for members of the

  GAR. In the unchanging order of things they were high above him,

  but were fighters, leaders extraordinaire. The most recent adventure

  proved that perfection eluded them, as it did all beings. Even diving

  into the scalding water had been only a temporary, if intense, pain. A

  liberal application of synthflesh from their first-aid kits had covered

  wounds and reduced redness and swelling in a few hours.

  Most important, they had won.

  Jangotat found himself entering a state of contentment rarely experienced

  by one of his station. He was fulfilling his primary function,

  enjoying an opportunity to learn from two superlative teachers.

  There were other .. . interesting factors as well.

  He cast about, hoping to find Sheeka Tull, but did not. Doubtless

  she was ferrying in another load of supplies. The thought gave him a

  warm feeling.

  In the last moments before he lost his honor, old Thak Val Zsing

  was thankful and content. For years he had struggled to bring advantage

  to his people, and those hard times had taken their toll even before

  the last few disastrous years, when betrayals and murderously

  ruthless security reprisals had reduced Desert Wind to a shadow of

  its former strength.

  But despite his early reservations, it looked as if the Jedi were actually

  the answer to his prayers; perhaps his grandchildren would not

  have to eat the dust for as many long, painful years as had Val Zsing

  before them.

  He had watched the revelry, noted with sober approval that the

  two Jedi maintained a slight and leaderly aloofness from the proceedings,

  polite but not intrusive.

  These Jedi were responsible and respectful. Strange, all of 'em.

  The human, the clones, the Nautolan . . . and that Vippit was the

  strangest. All fluttery fear when the retrieval team found his capsule,

  but as soon as they'd brought the mollusk into camp, he'd instantly

  found work coordinating intelligence. Sharp as a laser scalpel, that

  one.

  In the final analysis, Thak Val Zsing had lost leadership of Desert

  Wind, but was winning the war. Not a bad trade. Not a bad final

  chapter in the long, strange life of a murderer's great-grandson, a history

  teacher turned miner and anarchist leader.

  So Thak Val Zsing found himself a fine bottle of Chandrilan

  brandy and wandered back to one of the rear caves to enjoy it—

  a taste of a homeworld he might never see again. There were only

  two things that Thak Val Zsing enjoyed: fighting and drinking.

  The bottle was three-quarters empty when he momentarily blacked

  out, leaning back against the cave wall to watch the stalactites spin.

  And spin they did, in a happy blur that made him cry out in pleasure

  as finished the bottle. He was down to the dregs, sliding down a

  warm dark tunnel toward blissful slumber, when he heard a cracking

  sound. Another. Then the ground beneath him began to heave.

  He looked at it curiously, finding it amusing. Distantly, the tinkle

 
; and burr of dance music echoed through the caves. Although he

  could not hear the happy voices, Val Zsing knew that they were

  there. He could feel it: after an uncertain start, with the Jedi attempting

  to pull off some kind of elaborate con operation, the plan

  was back on track, with the program of harassment and sabotage that

  Desert Wind had begun so long ago. And now it would succeed.

  He was basking in that thought when the cracking sound came

  again. Thak Val Zsing rolled over onto his hard round belly so that

  the cave was right-side up again, and blinked his bleary eyes.

  A rock rolled to the side, revealing a fissure in the ground. Perhaps

  it was one of the myriad micro-tunnels running through every bit of

  these mountains. Most were too small for a human, so there was no

  need to be concerned about the safety. What was this, then, some

  kind of volcanic activity? Perhaps a burrowing male chitlik... ?

  And then the first shadowed, amorphous shape emerged.

  The four plastidroids and their JK companions had traveled a hundred

  kilometers at an average rate of just under ten kilometers per

  hour. It had taken them half a day to reach their target. Tirelessly

  they crawled through the dusty tunnels, edging toward their prey.

  The droids did not always travel in a straight line: when tunnels

  branched, some of them took alternate paths, either burrowing or

  climbing back to maintain a rough sense of direction. When they

  reached an obstacle that they could not easily push or burrow through,

  they backed up and went around. When the sensors at their surface

  detected the sounds of music, they began to converge, all of the fractally

  mapped alternative pathways canceled. Machines could not sigh

  with relief, but one prone to fancy might have attributed a certain eagerness

  to the manner in which they seemed to accelerate as they

  emerged from the cave floor.

  The plastoid infiltration droid pushed its way through, melting

  and crushing rock as it went. Then a second, third, and fourth followed

  it.

  After them appeared the JKs, until all hunched quivering in that

  empty cave—empty save for a single intoxicated human who watched

  dazedly, assuming that the drink that dulled his pain had also clouded

  his sight with hallucinations.

  The four plastidroids looked like a gigantic protozoans, studded

  with shadowy mechanical puzzle pieces in place of nuclei or organelles.

  Once reaching the desired destination, magnetically encoded

  pieces suspended within each bag wormed their way toward each

  other and began snapping together. Slowly, as the lengths of metal

  and plastine found each other, the newly formed limbs created nightmarish

  silhouettes beneath the transluscent skins, stretching them.

  The JKs seemed to watch as the four bags of plastine and metal

  heaved and quivered. In turn, each was distorted by the assembling

  metallic pieces within it, until there stood not four amorphous shapes

  but four fully formed infiltrator droids, treaded monstrosities as tall

  as three humans with heavy armored bodies and long, flexible necks.

  Thak Val Zsing watched, not understanding what he was seeing,

  laughing at the hallucination's oddness. Intoxication had caused

  stranger visions in the past, but not many. It was all terribly amusing.

  He continued to chuckle until the first infiltrator machine was almost

  completely formed. Its outline, suddenly and horribly familiar,

  began to resemble that of a killer droid that had shattered a mining

  union strike five years earlier.

  That outline burned its way through the chemical fog, the realization

  that death had just, impossibly, oozed up from the very ground

  below him. He stood and staggered back against the wall. Then a

  moment came when he realized that he was wrong, that what he saw

  was no hallucination at all, but something real and appalling.

  There are defining moments in a being's life, moments when actions

  are taken—or not taken. Once done, certain things cannot be

  undone. Thak Val Zsing was drunk, so perhaps he could be excused.

  He was also old, and the veteran of more Desert Wind raids than he

  could count. Perhaps life gave every person a specific allotment of

  nerve, and when that allotment was expended, there was simply no

  more.

  Until the end of his days, Thak Val Zsing struggled to explain, to

  himself if not others, why he did nothing except crawl back beneath

  a shelf of rock. And there he trembled, sobbing his fear and misery.

  And did not raise the alarm that would have turned the murder

  machines' attention to him.

  It is a choice no one should have to make: to save life, at the cost of

  the soul.

  As the JKs waited patiently, lubricant drained from the plastine

  skins still tightly stretched over the now fully assembled bodies of the

  infiltrators. One at a time, the skins stretched around the metal

  frames, then ruptured, like birth membranes rupturing around metal

  infants.

  The JKs sniffed the air like living things, as if hungry to fulfill their

  function.

  And in their mechanical way, perhaps they were.

  54

  Kit Fisto leaned back against the uneven rock wall, his tentacles

  twitching in sympathetic rhythm with the music. Although his face

  did not change, he was amused to find himself responding to these

  primitive melodies. Like most Jedi, Kit had been raised not on his

  homeworld, but in the halls of the Temple. However, to amuse himself,

  he had made a study of Glee Anselm's customs, becoming especially

  fond of its music. On Glee Anselm, no one would be gauche

  enough to play songs with less than three different rhythms, and far

  more complex melodies than this. Still, there was something attractive

  about it, and he finally raised a hand and said: "Hold! I would

  join you."

  The musicians paused, surprised that the normally taciturn Nautolan

  had spoken, let alone that he wished to participate. Nervously,

  they offered the various instruments at their disposal. Kit scanned

  them, before choosing one that combined string and wind. "This will

  suffice."

  He noted that Obi-Wan and Doolb Snoil were watching and decided

  to make a special effort. Obi-Wan had proven himself one of

  the ablest warriors of Kit Fisto's experience. And while some might

  have considered it an unworthy urge, he wished to impress his companion

  with his native music.

  So, taking the instrument in hand, he began to blow and strum simultaneously,

  each action reinforcing the other. It took him a few

  moments to find his way, and despite his extreme dexterity there

  were notes that he could not hit, chords that he could not play. It

  mattered not. As had his forebears, Kit had mastered the art of performing

  music underwater, and although he was comfortable in the

  air, sound took on a different character when transmitted through

  the thinner medium. Adjustments had to be made, and his nimble

  mind and fingers made them within moments. As his tones grew

  smoother and more pleasuring
, the other musicians began to accompany

  him on string and wind instruments. Then voices crooned in

  wordless song, in a fashion that almost made him homesick. Despite

  the aridity of their world, these Cestians were a good lot.

  Then came the ultimate compliment: some of the more daring attendees

  rose and actually began to dance. At first they had difficulty

  finding the beat and rhythm. With Nautolan music it was more important

  to listen to the pauses between notes than to the notes themselves,

  which were sustained in irregular bits. They seemed to find

  their groove, and were beginning to really enjoy themselves. Snoil's

  long, fleshy neck traced the beat in the air, his eyestalks keeping

  counterpoint.

  Then Kit stiffened, his dark eyes narrowing before his conscious

  mind comprehended the threat.

  The rough cavern floor trembled, as if sections of the mountain

  had wrenched their way free and now crawled toward them in the

  darkness.

  A bearded miner from the Clandes region sprinted out of the back

  caves. "We're invaded!" came a scream. Then a light flashed, and the

  miner hit the ground like a bag of smoking rags, no longer screaming

  at all.

  "What in space is that?" Skot OnSon yelled, shoulder-length

  blond hair flagging.

  "This shouldn't be possible," Fisto said, surprise momentarily fixing

  him in his tracks.

  Something appeared in the passageway leading to the back caves.

  Its neck was serpentine but mechanical, supporting a head that was

  both weapon and sensory probe. The body it was attached to was as

  tall as two humans at the shoulder, but composed of more individual

  pieces than he would have thought possible for something of its size,

  almost as if it were constructed from baubles found in a child's toy

  chest. It rolled on treads. A thin sheaf of plastine was stretched about

  the frame, and his mind searched frantically, some part of him sure

  he already knew what this thing was.

  Whirring around its feet were one . . . two . . . three . . . four of the

  golden JK droids.

  "Run!" Skot cried. That single word accomplished what the appearance

  of horror had not: spurred them into action.

  Revelers fled toward the exit. The general chaos spoiled the sight

  lines for targeting, made the soldiers of Desert Wind fear to fire for

  risk of hitting their own people. The infiltration droid's blaster fired

 

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