by John Whitman
 
   Star Wars
   Galaxy of Fear
   12
   The Hunger
   by John Whitman
   source : IRC
   uploaded: 13.II.2006
   PROLOGUE
   The bounty hunter stalked the corridors of the Super Star Destroyer.
   The walls of the enormous battleship gleamed. The floors had the shine
   of brand-new, recently polished durasteel. Starship officers and
   white-armored stormtroopers-the cream of the Imperial crop-hurried past.
   They walked with the arrogance of men who knew they were serving aboard the
   newest and largest of the Emperor's ships. This was the Super Star Destroyer
   Executor, flagship of the Imperial Fleet, and the command ship of the
   Emperor's most ruthless servant, Darth Vader.
   The bounty hunter couldn't have cared less.
   His face was hidden by a gray helmet. Otherwise, the Imperials would
   have seen the hard, disinterested expression on his face and the cold look
   of a killer in his eyes. He wasn't impressed by ships or uniforms. He only
   cared about one thing: the job.
   A set of massive doors hissed open, and the bounty hunter stepped
   inside a large, dark chamber. If the bounty hunter had had any emotions
   left, he might have felt afraid. But he'd left his feelings behind in bits
   and pieces, scattered among the bodies of countless victims on hundreds of
   worlds. So he didn't feel anything.
   A figure stepped out of the shadows. Tall. Covered in black armor. Face
   hidden behind a skull-like mask. Breath rasping like a death rattle.
   Darth Vader.
   The Dark Lord of the Sith acknowledged the bounty hunter's presence
   with a nod. "Boba Fett."
   "Lord Vader," the bounty hunter replied. Then he waited. He knew Vader
   would get right to the point.
   "I have an assignment for you," the Dark Lord said. "I have just put a
   large bounty on the heads of three individuals. Two human children and a
   male Shi'ido."
   The bounty hunter's helmet dipped forward slightly. "I've never hunted
   a Shi'ido before. But human children-that doesn't sound interesting. Or
   profitable."
   "Fifty thousand credits for each of the two children. Alive. One
   hundred thousand for the Shi'ido. Alive. Seventy-five thousand dead."
   Boba Fett paused. "Then it's profitable. But still not interesting."
   Vader held up one gloved hand. "These three have eluded capture several
   times. There is more to them than meets the eye."
   The bounty hunter said, "I have another job. I'm hunting for a killer
   named Malloc. It pays more. A lot more."
   Vader closed one gloved hand into a fist. "Consider this job a
   diversion until you find him." It was more of an order than a suggestion.
   Boba Fett weighed his options. He didn't want the job. He didn't need
   the credits. But even he did not ignore the wishes of Darth Vader. Finally,
   the bounty hunter said, "Done."
   Vader handed him a datadisk. Without another word, Boba Fett turned to
   leave. The moment he did, he forgot about his reluctance. He forgot that
   Vader had just threatened him into accepting the task. He forgot about
   everything but the job.
   He wouldn't stop until he'd finished it.
   CHAPTER 1
   "Don't move, or I'll shoot the boy," said the greasy-haired human,
   pointing his blaster at Zak.
   Zak Arranda's eyes widened, but the blaster-wielding human wasn't
   looking at him. The killer had his eyes fixed on Zak's uncle Hoole. He
   didn't bother to look at Zak or at Zak's sister, Tash, who stood next to
   him.
   They stood in a dark alley in the grimy spaceport of Nar Shaddaa. The
   man, grinning at them through a mouthful of broken teeth, had practically
   melted out of the shadows the moment they turned off the main street and
   into the alley.
   "What is the meaning of this?" Hoole demanded in a calm, cool voice.
   "You have no right to threaten us."
   "This gives me all the right I need," the man said, brandishing his
   weapon. "That and my bounty hunter's license. And you three have a price on
   your head I couldn't resist."
   "A bounty hunter?" Tash said, surprised.
   Beside her, Zak was stunned. He knew that he and his sister and their
   uncle Hoole were wanted by the Empire. They'd been on the run for months,
   ever since they'd stumbled upon a horrifying Imperial science experiment and
   helped to destroy it. He knew the Empire wanted to arrest them. But he'd had
   no idea the Imperials wanted them badly enough to put a price on their
   heads.
   That meant not only that they were wanted by every Imperial agent in
   the galaxy but also that there could be dozens, maybe even hundreds, of
   bounty hunters tracking them as well. Any bounty hunter who captured them
   and turned them over to the Empire would receive a fortune in credits.
   Zak saw Hoole pretend to be confused. "I do not know what you are
   talking about. You must be mistaken."
   "I don't think so," the bounty hunter laughed. He recited facts as
   though reading off a datapad. "Two human children. A girl named Tash
   Arranda, blond, about thirteen standard years. Her brother, a boy named Zak
   Arranda, about twelve, dark hair. Traveling in the company of a Shi'ido."
   The bounty hunter continued to glare at Hoole as he said, "Never seen a
   Shi'ido before. You look almost human, except for that gray skin." The
   killer snarled. "But I done my homework. I know you Shi'idos can change
   shape. So you twitch one muscle and I'll use the boy's head for target
   practice."
   Zak looked at Uncle Hoole's face. What the bounty hunter said was
   true-Hoole could change shape. But even Hoole wasn't fast enough to stop the
   killer from firing his blaster. Zak saw a look of frustration pass across
   his uncle's face.
   Looks like we came to the wrong place, Zak thought. Again.
   Nar Shaddaa was a spaceport moon orbiting the planet Nal Hutta.
   Buildings rose dozens of kilometers into the sky and were connected by
   bridges, decks, and balconies that crisscrossed like streets suspended in
   midair. The walkways of Nar Shaddaa were filled with grime, graffiti, and
   shady-looking characters. Most of them looked tough enough to scare the
   wrappings off a Tusken Raider.
   Zak, Tash, and Uncle Hoole had flown to Nar Shaddaa in their ship, the
   Shroud, several days earlier. They needed to resupply the ship, and while
   Nar Shaddaa wasn't the most wholesome place in the galaxy, it suited their
   needs. Nar Shaddaa was known for its smugglers, gangsters, and bounty
   hunters. The spaceport was dangerous, and although the Empire had a garrison
   here, the local Imperials did little to keep the streets safe.
   Which was exactly why Hoole and the Arrandas had come.
   Since the Imperials never bothered to patrol the streets of Nar
   Shaddaa, it was a safe enough stop for two humans and a Shi'ido wanted by
   the Empire.
   Or so they'd thought.
   As though he we
re reading Zak's thoughts, the bounty hunter said, "I
   bet you figured you'd be safe from the Empire here on Nar Shaddaa. Figured
   maybe the Imperials wouldn't look around this black hole of a spaceport.
   Well, you were wrong. There are plenty of bounty hunters that'd love to turn
   you in. Lucky for me, I spotted you first."
   "Whatever the bounty is," Hoole said, "we will pay you double if you
   let us go."
   The bounty hunter laughed. "You ain't got those kinds of credits.
   Besides, word in the space lanes is that some of the biggest bounty hunters
   in the galaxy are after you three. Hauling you in before any of them could
   send my reputation into lightspeed."
   As the bounty hunter and Hoole spoke, Zak noticed how quiet Tash was.
   She'd hardly said a word, and she hadn't moved a muscle since the bounty
   hunter appeared. Glancing at her out of the corner of his eye, Zak saw that
   his sister had focused her gaze on the bounty hunter's blaster. A calm look
   had fallen across her face. For an instant-a fraction of a second-Zak felt
   something like a warm breeze pass through him. He knew what she was doing.
   Tash was calling on the Force.
   "Please put the blaster down," Hoole said. "I don't want the children
   to get hurt. I promise I won't cause you any problems."
   "Oh, I know you won't," the bounty hunter said with another
   jagged-toothed smile. "You're worth almost as much dead as alive. And since
   I get the feeling you'd jump me first chance you got, I figure I'll just
   shoot you now and save myself a load of trouble."
   With a snap of the wrist, the bounty hunter turned the blaster from Zak
   to Hoole. Zak felt the warm breeze turn into a blasting wind.
   Just as the bounty hunter pulled the trigger, the arm holding the
   blaster jerked upward, and the blaster bolt sizzled over Hoole's shoulder.
   Before Zak could move a muscle, the Shi'ido had shape-shifted into the
   bulky, snout-nosed form of a Gamorrean and pummeled the bounty hunter into
   unconsciousness with a few powerful blows. By the time Zak had taken two
   steps, Hoole had shifted back into his own shape and was tucking the bounty
   hunter's blaster into the folds of his robe.
   "Tash," the Shi'ido said calmly, "I assume you caused that shot to
   miss?"
   Tash nodded. "Yes. I'm starting to get the hang of the Force, I think.
   I still can't do much, but . . ."
   Hoole nodded. "Your power is becoming most impressive."
   Tash shrugged. "You did the real work."
   Zak frowned, suddenly aware that he hadn't done anything to help.
   "We must get back to the Shroud," Hoole said. "Nar Shaddaa is obviously
   not going to be as safe as we had hoped. In fact, if that bounty hunter is
   telling the truth, then Nar Shaddaa is one of the most dangerous places in
   the galaxy for us to be."
   "But every place is dangerous," Zak said wearily. "Everywhere we've
   gone, the Empire has found us."
   It felt to him as though they'd been on the run forever. In fact,
   they'd only been with Uncle Hoole for a little over a year. Almost twelve
   standard months ago, the Empire had destroyed Tash and Zak's home planet of
   Alderaan, killing their mother and father and all their friends in one
   terrible blow. Zak and Tash had survived only because they'd been offplanet
   at the time. Hoole, their uncle by marriage, was their only living relative.
   So they'd gone to live with him. And they'd hardly had a moment to catch
   their breath since.
   "There's got to be someplace safe we can go," Tash said.
   "No place I've ever heard of," Zak grumbled. Hoole raised an eyebrow.
   "An interesting idea."
   "What do you mean?" asked Zak.
   "A place that no one has ever heard of," the Shi'ido said thoughtfully.
   "We should find a planet that has not been charted. That would be safe from
   the Empire."
   Zak shook his head. "But if it's a planet no one's ever charted, how
   are we going to find it?"
   Hoole led them out of the alley. "There is a way. As you both know, my
   anthropology work has taken me to many different planets. Whenever an
   exploration party has discovered a new planet, they send data to our
   research facility on the planet Koaan. Sometimes, it takes months for this
   data to be studied. And since the Empire took over . . ."
   Zak snorted. "I'll bet since the Empire took over, things have slowed
   down even more."
   "Precisely," Hoole said. "The data banks at the research facility are
   filled with planets that have been located but never studied or colonized."
   Tash's eyes lit up. "You're saying we could use the information stored
   on Koaan to find a planet that no one else has bothered to study, a planet
   that hasn't made it onto the official charts."
   "Precisely," Hoole said again. "We shall go to Koaan."
   They had been lucky to escape the first bounty hunter, and their luck
   held out as they hurried through the streets of Nar Shaddaa. If they did
   pass any other bounty hunters, the killers didn't recognize them. The three
   fugitives reached the Shroud with no trouble.
   A few minutes later they received clearance to depart, and the starship
   roared out of the atmosphere and into space.
   "Once we reach Koaan," Hoole said when they were all seated in the
   ship's cockpit, "we must find Deevee. I am sure he will be able to help us."
   "Deevee!" Tash said with a laugh. "We haven't seen that droid in ages!"
   D-V9, or Deevee for short, had been Hoole's servant droid, and had
   accompanied Hoole and the Arrandas on several of their adventures. However,
   after being severely damaged by stormtroopers on the planet Kiva, he had
   retired to a quieter life as a research assistant on Koaan.
   "Deevee is still doing work at the Galactic Research Academy," Hoole
   said. "I am sure he will have access to the-"
   An alarm bleeped softly on the control board. Hoole studied the
   scanners and frowned.
   "What is it?" Zak asked.
   "There is a ship behind us," Hoole said. "It left Nar Shaddaa just as
   we did, and it seems to be following us."
   "An Imperial ship?" Tash asked tensely.
   Zak looked at the scanner, which gave a general outline of the ship
   behind them. "Doesn't look like it. It's too small. And-this is
   weird-according to the scanners, there are no life-forms aboard."
   "Then how can it be following us?" Tash wondered.
   "I do not know," the Shi'ido said. "However, it makes little
   difference. We are ready to make the jump to hyperspace. No one will be able
   to follow us then."
   With a few quick motions, Hoole entered the proper commands, and the
   Shroud lurched forward. The stars turned into white streaks as the ship
   thundered into hyperspace.
   "There," Hoole said, getting out of the pilot's seat. "We are safe. The
   coordinates are set and Koaan is not far from here. Let's go to the lounge
   and get something to eat."
   Zak and Tash followed their uncle into the central room of the Shroud.
   It was a small common room with several seats where they ate their meals and
   where Tash and Zak played hologames.
   As they entered the room, the door to a small stora
ge closet slid open
   and an armored figure stepped out. Tash, Zak, and Hoole recognized him
   instantly. They'd met him before.
   It was Boba Fett.
   CHAPTER 2
   The bounty hunter moved smoothly and efficiently, with incredible
   speed. Before they could blink, a thick cable lashed out from a device on
   Fett's wrist and wrapped itself around Hoole, pinning his arms to his sides.
   In the same motion, Fett brought his other hand up. A flash of light
   blinded Zak and Tash, and Zak felt his arms and legs go limp. As he hit the
   floor, Zak thought he was dying. Then he realized that he could still see-he
   just couldn't move.
   Boba Fett had hit him with some kind of stun bolt.
   The bolt must have missed Tash, because she was still on her feet. She
   jumped behind a lounge chair as Fett fired again. The stun bolt sputtered
   against the seat and vanished.
   By that time Hoole had recovered from his initial shock. The Shi'ido
   started to quiver, and shape-shifted into a creature that looked like a
   serpent with a collar of bright feathers. The serpent slithered away, and