Chapter Thirteen
Moff Nevoy stood on
the balcony of the Great Hall and watched as visitors trooped around Lord
Vader's display case like a procession of nelgri harvest bugs.
Only, harvest bugs
were industrious and purposeful and useful, and Nevoy had always liked
them. He'd always found it disgusting
when people stepped on the bugs or tried to eradicate their nests, as if the
solemn-faced little insects had no value simply because they weren't
human. The procession of tourists,
however, was far less appealing to Nevoy than the bugs. All right, yes, he knew, most of them felt
compelled to be here. They had to know
that not turning up to see the traitor on display would reflect badly on them,
might even endanger their jobs or bring them to the attention of Imperial
Intelligence. So of course he couldn't
blame them. But the sight still gave
him a sour feeling.
Through all of
this, since Vader had first been installed in his case, Nevoy had tried to
avoid looking at the Dark Lord's face.
That was silly, he told himself now.
It wasn't as if one glimpse of Vader's visage was going to turn him into
carbonite. He was too far away from the
display at the moment to see much detail, but an added attraction of
Palpatine's delightful exhibition was that a mini holocam mounted at one end of
the case's ceiling relayed a vid of Vader's exposed face to the screens
suspended at all four corners of the Hall.
Nevoy looked up at one of those screens now, and forced himself to keep
his gaze steadily on the image.
Darth Vader has
blue eyes.
He didn't know why,
but he'd certainly never expected that.
He frowned as he thought that there was some slight difference between
the two eyes. He wasn't sure what, at
first. Were they different in
colour? Was one larger than the
other? No ... the left eye had a
marginally duller lustre than the right, and he suddenly recognised it as a
prosthetic eye.
Nevoy wondered, as
most of the visitors to the exhibition must have done at some point or other,
what in the Hells had happened to Vader.
A prosthetic eye and various mechanical limbs -- at least according to
the occasional vague comments Dr. Hayashida made on the subject -- Gods knew
what wrong with his lungs, and then there were the massive scars on his head
and face. And the tiny, misshapen lumps
of flesh which were all that was left of his ears. And the lack of eyebrows.
Well, the near lack, anyhow.
Half of the right eyebrow was still there, a bizarre little relic of
normality left stranded among the scars.
The abbreviated eyebrow was dark brown, and Nevoy felt a twinge of deja
vu as he looked at it.
Was there anything
that Vader's half eyebrow should remind him of? He couldn't recall any encounters with half-eyebrowed men.
While Nevoy was
still trying to remember, a voice at his shoulder said, "sir?"
He turned to see
Lieutenant La Salle, of the palace guard.
"Yes, Lieutenant?" Nevoy asked.
"Sir, there's
a courier from Nova Messenger Service waiting in your office. Apparently your signature is required for
the delivery of a registered letter."
"A registered
letter? If it's palace business, it
shouldn't require my signature."
"Apparently
it's a personal letter, sir."
Nevoy frowned. If it was a personal letter, it ought to
have come to his house. And why send a
letter anyway, instead of communicating by link? Registered letters were usually only for things like tax
inquiries or a summons to appear in the law courts. He didn't think that this was likely to be either of those. Nevoy sighed impatiently, then said,
"all right, Lieutenant, thank you," and started toward the door.
A registered
letter. He supposed it could be from
Marida. Ah, there was an idea: the last
time he'd talked with Marida she'd told him that Nina was just learning to
write. Maybe Marida had sent him some
impressive sample of his eldest grandchild's handwriting. Though why, in the Gods' names, she should
send it by registered post, was anybody's guess. Even maternal affection shouldn't make a five-year-old's
scribblings seem that precious! Then
again, Marida had never had the slightest wisp of a concept of how to spend her
credits wisely. Not that it mattered
much any more, he supposed, considering who she'd married. As Vice President of Uni Droid, Kan Komak
shouldn't find it a strain to support his wife's expensive whims.
Or maybe it was
from Rosmarin, instead, though he still didn't see why she'd send it to the
palace. Sending it by registered post
could have been to ensure that no one but him got their hands on it; Rose
sometimes asked him if he could exert any influence to help clients she was
working with, or to track down evidence which might support their case. A few times he'd been able to help, although
he had a gloomy feeling that by doing so he'd suddenly find himself committing
some obscure form of treason against the Empire. Rose always insisted that just because she was a lawyer who
usually worked for non-human clients, it didn't mean she wasn't a loyal
citizen, but privately Nevoy had his doubts.
Not that he would ever accuse her of being disloyal, but still, some of
her stories about cases she'd been involved in gave him nightmares.
Honestly. One daughter who got rid of credits like she
was allergic to them, and another who perpetually hovered on the edge of
sedition. Ah, the joys of being a
father.
Shit. Maybe the registered letter was to say that
Rosmarin had been arrested.
No, don't be stupid. If that had happened, he would have got a
frantic call from his son-in-law.
Unless Elbin had been arrested too ... no, stop it now. He told himself firmly, it's probably
some crap advertising ploy, sending things registered post so the poor suckers
who get them will think they're important.
"You may have already won one million credits, all you have to do
to find out is visit our lovely new real estate on the edge of the scenic
Dantooine mining district".
He reached his
office and stepped inside. Waiting in
front of his desk, with a patient look on her face, was a slim young woman in
the blue pseudo-military uniform and cap of the Nova Messenger Service. He noticed that her hair was blue as well,
or at least in some lights it seemed to be, although when she moved her head it
suddenly looked as if it were black instead.
Her skin was a warm reddish brown colour, almost purple. Nevoy's secretarial droid, which had been
standing to the right of the desk and casting the equivalent of a wary look at
the messenger, made a relieved-sounding whirr at Nevoy's arrival and retired to
the edge of the room, beside the filing cabinet, where it switched itself off.
"I'm Moff Nevoy,"
Nevoy announced, thinking that something seemed vaguely familiar about the
girl, and then wondering if he was going to have deja vu about
everything today. First Darth Vader's
eyebrow, and now the blue-haired courier.
The girl was
holding a pad and a large square registered post envelope. Instead of handing him the envelope,
however, she simply smiled at him and said, "you don't need to sign for
it, actually, the envelope's empty. And
I'm not from the Nova Messenger Service."
Alarm jolted
through Nevoy, as he thought, my Gods, she's an assassin. He couldn't think why anyone would want to
assassinate him, but it was always one of the perils of being a prominent
official. He reached for his blaster,
although he knew that if she were any kind of decent assassin, he'd be dead
before he could draw.
The courier,
however, did not produce any concealed weapons, or explode him -- and herself
-- by detonating a bomb implanted in heer wrist, or take any of the other
actions he might have expected. Her
smile merely grew broader, and she said, "your message has been received,
sir. You can count on our help, at the
time you specified. The ground troops
should find their hands full. We also
have possession of General Solo's ship the Millennium Falcon, which we'd
like to deliver to you. Will it be
acceptable if the ship arrives at Landing Bay Four at 2200 tomorrow?"
Landing Bay Four
was the location of the Conquest, on which they planned to make their
escape. Nevoy wondered how the
mysterious "we" had known that the Conquest was to be their
getaway ship. And 2200 would,
hopefully, be half an hour after their proposed uprising had started. The timing should be about right. He hoped.
He said, "yes, it should be acceptable."
"All right
then, sir. We look forward to working
with you." The girl reached out
her hand to him and they shook hands, Nevoy feeling startled at the strength of
her grip. With a last impish smile, the
alleged courier withdrew her hand from his and then left the office, Nevoy
watching, slightly dazed, as the door whooshed open and then closed again
behind her.
Well, that was
weird, he thought. It was a damned
good thing that he was a trusted enough servant of the Emperor for his office
not to be bugged -- at least not the last time he checked. "We" had probably known that too,
and that was why they'd sent their representative here. Who might "we" be, he wondered. Friends or associates of Darth Vader, that
was all he knew. If they worked for
Vader, they could be anything. A secret
sect of Dark Jedi, maybe, or a band of blue-haired Amazon warriors.
No going back now,
anyway. They were going to have their
distraction, and the Millennium Falcon was going to turn up at the
Palace. If they didn't go ahead with
this palace revolt, it was going to look very stupid, and there'd be an
investigation, and they'd probably all end up getting arrested and executed
anyway. So they might as well go for
broke, and give the damned revolt everything they had.
He supposed he
ought to report to Princess Leia, at least let her know that the situation was
in hand. Although he shouldn't tell her
any details, in case Palpatine was in the habit of reading her mind. But at least if she knew that efforts were
being made to help Lord Vader, it might stop her from doing something reckless
on her own and possibly screwing up their plans.
Palpatine himself
had given Nevoy a good excuse to visit the Princess. He could be submitting some detail of the adoption arrangements
for her approval. What kind of
flowers would you like at the ceremony, Princess?
Nevoy left the
office and started along the corridors again, toward Palpatine's wing of the
Palace. He nodded at or exchanged
greetings with various Imperial Advisors and officers that he passed, all the
while thinking of how this very corridor might look tomorrow night. His mind created a vivid image of gangs of
the Palace Guard gunning each other down, and squads of stormtroopers racing
into the scene, and the drapes and the carpets being drenched with blood.
He thought, I
can't believe I'm planning to do this.
I've served the Empire since it came into existence, and for what? So I can turn around and try to bring it
down.
Gods, Ardella would
have a good laugh about that. He hoped
he would not encounter her in the Rebellion.
According to Rose, Ardella was pretty much retired, but it would be just
his luck if he turned up at the Rebel Base with Lord Vader and the rest of
their defectors, and ran smack into his ex-wife. Damn, how she would smirk.
She would never let him live it down, that it had taken him two decades
to discover that she'd been right all along.
He thought, Hells blast it, if she says "I told you so",
I'll murder her, that's all there is to it.
Nevoy had reached
the door to Leia Organa and Luke Skywalker's guest chambers. He rang the entry bell and waited. With no response. When significantly more time had passed than it had taken
Princess Leia to open the door before, he tried again.
Still nothing. He scowled at the closed door. Surely he'd seen a droid in the suite when
he was here last night? Even if neither
the Princess nor her mad young friend were in, the droid ought to answer the
door. He rang the bell one more time.
The droid could be
switched off, he supposed, though theoretically the sound of the entry bell
ought to activate it again. He wondered
if he ought to investigate further.
Probably not. The droid might be
faulty, but that didn't give him sufficient reason to go barging in if no one
else was home.
Then he heard a
metallic thump from the inside of the door.
All right, now that
he was going to investigate. He keyed
in the security over-ride, and the door slid open.
Immediately inside
the door, lay the droid, its feet waving frantically in the air. It must have been the droid running into the
door that he'd heard. What in the ...
? Nevoy stepped into the room, then
knelt, took hold of the cylindrical body and lifted the droid upright,
whereupon it instantly trundled forward and smashed itself into the wall next
to the door.
The droid backed up
and ran into Nevoy, then once more ploughed into the doorframe. Swearing and rubbing his leg where the droid
had bashed against it, Nevoy reached for the desperate little machine's power
switch and moved it onto standby. The
droid froze, still plastered against the doorframe.
Bizarre. Nevoy
flipped open the droid's control panel, and at least saw what the problem
was. Three of the wires inside the
panel had been cut, severing the connections that controlled the droid's motor
skills and its communications systems.
Cut with something not very sharp, it looked like, perhaps a butter
knife. Gods, the droid must certainly
have been switched off when that happened, or he hated to think of the squeals
of terror it would have emitted while the wires were sawed at.
Princess Leia and
Skywalker must be making an escape attempt, and had sabotaged the droid to stop
it from reporting them. He didn't
imagine they'd get very far, not with the palace as crawling with guards as it
was. Though since the Princess had the
Force, you never knew --
He heard another
thump.
It came from the
direction of one of the two bedchambers off the main room. Nevoy looked over and saw that the door to
the room was standing open. That was
strange, too. Usually the doors never
remained open, unless there'd been a power failure. He supposed maybe the droid had locked it open for some
reason. Simply because the droid was
fried, or had there been a purpose in it?
Perhaps the droid had been trying to draw attention to something in the
room?
He suddenly felt
cold. The droid had seemed awfully
eager to get out of here ...
Nevoy ran for the
open door.
In the doorway, he
froze.
Luke Skywalker hung
in front of the huge window, with Imperial City a sunlit backdrop behind
him. One of the thick golden cords that
usually held the curtains back was tied in a noose about his neck, the other
end tied to the curtain rail. The chair
that Skywalker must have stood on was overturned beneath his feet. Nevoy stared for a shocked instant at
Skywalker's writhing form, his twisted and reddened face, his hands tearing at
the noose, trying to wrench it away from his neck. One of Skywalker's feet thudded against the window, reproducing the
sound that had first drawn Nevoy's attention to the bedchamber.
Nevoy's mind seemed
to have gone blank, but he still managed to draw his blaster and fire it at the
cord above Skywalker's head.
He ran towards
Skywalker as the young man plummeted to the floor, and succeeded in somewhat
breaking the fall, though only by getting himself knocked over as Skywalker
collapsed on top of him. Awkwardly sat
on the floor while Luke Skywalker coughed and choked against his chest, Nevoy
struggled to get his arm out from under the collapsed Rebel so he could reach
his wrist com-link. This accomplished,
he summoned a medical team, received their promise of immediate attendance, and
then wondered what to do next.
There wasn't much
point in trying any first aid, he supposed; Skywalker was obviously alive, and
the medics should be here soon enough.
Clearly the Rebel hadn't managed to hang himself properly so it would
break his neck, though Nevoy reckoned he shouldn't be too scornful about
that. Most people didn't have much
practice in trying to hang themselves.
He wasn't sure he would have succeeded much better himself; after all it
was half a century or so since he'd learned how to tie knots in Scouts. He frowned bemusedly down at the blond head
of Luke Skywalker, which was just beneath Nevoy’s chin. Skywalker gave a convulsive cough, clutching
at Nevoy's jacket.
I really don't
believe this, Nevoy thought. Was my life
always this weird? I'm sure it must
have been more normal, once. Maybe I've
slipped into some parallel Weird Universe.
Luke Skywalker's
desperate coughing against him reminded him uncomfortably of the time that
Laram had nearly drowned in the next-door neighbours' swimming pool. He remembered the scene with painful
vividness, the beaming sunlight starting to dry the water on his skin while he
clutched his seven-year-old son to him, Laram hugging him back and coughing and
sobbing onto his shoulder.
Gods, thought Nevoy, Gods
-- this man killed my son, and I've jusst saved his life.
He heard the
swishing sound of the door to the main room, and yelled, "in here!"
Moments later Nevoy
was being relieved of his burden by two medics and a hovering medical droid,
who eased the Rebel onto a repulsorlift stretcher. Heaving himself to his feet and straightening his jacket, Nevoy
informed one of the medics, "I'll come with you, I'll have to ask him some
questions when he's able to speak."
"I don't think
he'll be doing much speaking for a while, sir, but you're welcome to
come."
Nevoy walked
alongside the stretcher as the medics manoeuvred Skywalker through the
hallways. The medical droid had
administered a mild tranquilliser to the patient, but he was still
conscious. Nevoy's thoughts as he
walked dwelled blackly on the possible consequences this might have for their
palace revolt. He hoped that Skywalker
was going to be able to bounce back from this quickly, or they'd have to carry
him to get him out of here. Although
maybe it was better that way; at least if he wasn't conscious he couldn't delay
the escape by insisting that they go back for his toys.
When Skywalker was
installed in a bed in the medical centre, Nevoy stood back, out of the way,
trying to massage the muscles in his shoulder where the falling Skywalker had
smashed into him.
"You want me
to take a look at that, sir?" one of the medics asked.
He winced. "Yes.
All right." After all, he
didn't want the revolt to get fucked up because he'd managed to sprain his
shoulder, either.
"Well, you've
got some pulled muscles here ... were you trying to catch him?"
"Yes." Though Gods know why, Nevoy thought, I
should have just walked off and left him to it.
"I'll give you
an injection for this, it shouldn't give you any trouble."
"What about
him?" Nevoy asked, nodding toward Skywalker's bed.
"He should be
fine," the man said. "He's
got a lot of bruises and there's some damage to his larynx, but it ought to be
repairable. And there's a fair amount of
muscle strain from the tension it put on his body. But, he's been very lucky."
"Yeah," Nevoy
muttered. He allowed the medic to pump
the injection into his shoulder, then walked over to the bed where Skywalker
lay. The medical droid hummed at the
other side of the bed, taking readings on the patient's condition.
Skywalker's
breathing seemed to be back to normal.
The young man blinked, then looked up confusedly at Nevoy.
"What ...
?" he croaked out. "How ...
?"
Nevoy said bluntly,
"you tried to hang yourself. I
stopped you."
Utter despair
washed over Skywalker's face. He closed
his eyes and grated, "oh, shit."
"Moff
Nevoy," came the tinny voice of the medical droid, "I will have to
ask you to leave. You are upsetting the
patient."
Luke Skywalker's
eyes snapped open. His voice was still
hoarse and raw, but he forced out the words, "Leia ... where is she? Did she see ... "
"She wasn't
there," Nevoy answered. "I
don't think she's been informed yet."
"She mustn't
know!" Skywalker's eyes were wild
as he reached out and grabbed at Nevoy's arm.
"Don't tell her, don't let her find out -- "
"She'll find
out you're in here," Nevoy said reasonably. "She's going to have to know."
"You can tell
her something else -- tell her I fell -- "
You did, Nevoy thought, onto
me. "Young man," he said,
beginning to lose patience with this, "you have bruises encircling your
neck. You don't tend to get that in a
fall." It was only then that he
realised that Skywalker was talking like an adult -- a hysterical adult, yes,
but an adult nonetheless. Maybe the
suicide attempt had snapped him out of whatever strange state he'd been in --
or else perhaps the attempt could be traced to the loss of that state? He'd certainly been peculiar enough when he
was playing with his colouring books, but he hadn't seemed suicidal.
Skywalker's blue
eyes burned with desperation. He tried
to clutch at the sleeve of Nevoy's jacket, but he seemed too weak to get much
of a grip on it. Nevoy, however, did
not pull away.
"Please,"
Skywalker whispered, and Nevoy leaned closer to hear him. "I ... left a message. On the computer in the guest quarters ...
please, delete it -- before Leia sees it.
Please ... Don't let her see ... "
Nevoy sighed. "All right," he said. "I'll delete it."
Skywalker closed
his eyes.
As he made his way
to the nearest lift and set it for the level of Palpatine's quarters, Nevoy
noticed the beginnings of one serious bitch of a headache starting to build
just above his eyes. Damnation, and it
wasn't even eleven in the morning yet.
What a day.
Why did these two
lunatics have to be here? It would be
relatively easy, he thought, to rescue Vader -- well, no, it wouldn't be easy,
but just for the sake of argument -- but Gods knew how they'd pull if off with
the demon Jedi Princess and her suicidal friend around to complicate things.
Nevoy rang the
guest quarters' entry bell again, then once more punched in the over-ride code
and made his way inside. The droid was
still standing frozen where it had been shoved out of the way beside the door. Quickly locating the computer on its gold
and marble table, Nevoy crossed to it and called up the messages.
There was only
one. Any messages left on the computer
were wiped after each guest had departed.
At least it hadn't taken long to find Skywalker's suicide note. Nevoy's hand hovered over the delete key,
then he stopped.
Hells, he thought. If I have to run around cleaning up after
you, you little bastard, I've at least got a right to know what this has been
about.
He shouldn't play
the message. It was personal, and
Skywalker wanted it destroyed.
Bugger that. He needed to know what was going on, so he
could factor it into their plans. More
to the point, he was curious. And Skywalker
owed him.
He activated the
message.
Luke Skywalker
appeared on the screen. He was wearing
the same black tunic and trousers that he'd been wearing when Nevoy found
him. His face was startlingly pale, but
its expression was calm and set, although there was a dangerous-looking gleam
in his eyes.
"Leia,"
he began, and then his glance flickered downward, as if he were ashamed.
"Leia,"
he said quietly, "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry. I know you'll be angry with me.
I just can't see any other way.
I've been thinking about it, all night, and I can't. I can't see any way out."
Skywalker's image
looked up, and managed a hint of a smile.
His gaze dropped again, as if he was imagining the Princess in front of
him, and couldn't bear to meet her eyes.
"At least," he said, "this way you'll be more free to act
on your own. You'll have a chance to
free our father, without having to worry about me."
Our father? Who the hells is our father?
Skywalker dragged
his gaze up once more to the eye level of any prospective viewer, and he forced
himself to hold it there. He swallowed
and said, keeping his voice steady, "I love you, Leia. Give my love to Han, too. And Chewie.
And ... " his voice faded out for a moment, then he hurried on, in
a softer tone, "and your children.
Tell them their uncle loves them."
There was a pause, while Skywalker looked steadily out of the image.
"I'm sorry, Leia. Please forgive
me. Goodbye." The message came to an end and froze.
Disgust with
himself for having watched the message warred in Nevoy's brain with total
confusion.
Father? Children?
Uncle? What?
Shaking his head,
he finally pressed the delete key, then he left the computer and slumped down
onto a crimson velvet covered sofa.
"Our
father". "Uncle". Well, the implications were obvious
enough. Unless they'd taken some sort
of oath of blood siblinghood -- which was possible, he supposed, since they had
been companions in battle -- then Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa were brother
and sister.
How in all the
Fifty hells did that happen? For
Gods' sakes, Leia Organa was from Alderaan, and Luke Skywalker, as most of the
galaxy had learned after he became famous as the man who destroyed the Death
Star, was from Tatooine. They were not
particularly close neighbours. And --
well, he couldn't imagine either Prince Bail or Keeiara Organa getting involved
with some farmer from the middle of nowhere.
Maybe it worked the
other way around? If Luke Skywalker and
the Princess were both the children of some impoverished Tatooine farmers, then
the Organas might have adopted one of them ... why only one, though? And why adopt them at all, instead of
sending aid to the farmers? And what
would have brought the farmers and the Alderaani royal family into contact in
the first place?
Hang on. Skywalker wanted the Princess to "free
our father".
What? Bail Organa was dead. And Nevoy was sure he remembered that Luke
Skywalker was an orphan.
He rubbed his hands
against his forehead. The headache had
arrived in full strength. He told
himself, that's what you get for watching other people's messages.
Our father. Free our father.
Who would Organa
and Skywalker be trying to free?
The memory came
into his mind of Princess Leia, just last night, begging him to help Darth
Vader. She'd said something along the
lines of, "I'll try to help him, but I don't know how to save them both. As long as Palpatine's got Luke --"
And Skywalker
thought that she'd have more chance to free their father, if he wasn't around
for her to worry about ...
No.
That's insane.
Darth Vader?
At least it would
explain why Princess Leia had been crying over him.
No. You've really lost it this time. Hey, though, at least when you're a traitor
to the Empire and you're out of a job, you can carve a new career for yourself
writing holo-soaps.
Darth Vader?
It made sense, he
supposed, in a mad sort of way. It
explained why Vader insisted that Skywalker and the Princess should be rescued
too -- and why he'd come back to Coruscant in the first place, if he'd been
trying to get them away from Palpatine.
And, for that matter, it could have had a lot to with why Vader joined
the Rebellion.
But it was still a
ridiculous concept. How would a couple
of junior Vaders have gotten onto the scene?
Especially junior Vaders from Alderaan and Tatooine?
What, had Darth
Vader been jaunting around siring children all over the galaxy?
Some sort of plan
for galactic domination, maybe?
Creating a new generation of Jedi out of his own children?
Oh, give it up,
Nevoy, he told himself. It still
sounds like the stuff of bad fiction.
Hells, what do you
know about Darth Vader? What does
anyone know? Maybe he has harems full
of mistresses. Maybe Keeiara Organa was
his secret lover, who knows? And one of the
women in his harem could have been from Tatooine, it sounded a lot more likely
than the galactic domination idea.
After all, even if it was some fiendish plot to spread his
offspring around the galaxy, he could surely have found some more appealing
place to sire a future Jedi than bloody Tatooine. What was it that Anakin Skywalker had said about the planet, that
it was the sort of place people come from but never go back to?
Nevoy's train of
thought ground to an abrupt halt.
Oh, thought Nevoy.
Oh, my Gods.
Anakin Skywalker.
Several hundred
thoughts seemed to tumble into his mind at once.
Anakin
Skywalker. No. That was impossible.
But, he thought, Anakin
Skywalker was tall. And had a deep
voice. And was a brilliant pilot. And was a friend of Palpatine.
And, damn it, he is
now a corpse, happily rotting away in the soil of Alma Serena.
Or, just possibly,
he's alive and on exhibition in the Great Hall, and scheduled for execution
next week ...
Five years ago,
when Luke Skywalker first murdered his way to celebrity, there had been plenty
of speculation as to whether he was related to the late Field Marshal Anakin
Skywalker. It had eventually emerged,
if Nevoy remembered correctly, that Luke Skywalker was Anakin Skywalker's
nephew.
But, just supposing
that he was Anakin's son instead ... and that Anakin Skywalker was Darth Vader
...
That is, without
any doubt, the stupidest idea I've ever heard.
But --
Nevoy's mouth
suddenly went dry, and he had the feeling that the blood had stopped flowing
through his veins.
He had visited
Field Marshal Skywalker in hospital, about a month before Skywalker's
death. He couldn't remember what they'd
talked about -- the New Forces, probably -- but he did remember how Anakin
Skywalker had looked.
His hair had been
burned off. And his ears. The doctors had started replacing some of
his skin, but there were still scars all over his face. One of his eyes -- blue eyes -- had been
destroyed, and he'd been given a prosthetic replacement.
His eyebrows had
been gone, too. Except for half of the
right eyebrow.
Nevoy remembered,
too, how much darker Anakin Skywalker's eyebrows had been than his blond hair.
One half of one
brown eyebrow.
Moff Nevoy got up,
walked to the guest chamber's liquor cabinet, and poured himself a very stiff
drink.
"Luke!"
Leia's senses
jolted back to reality. She had fallen
forward, with her hands pressed into Palpatine's black carpet, and she found
herself staring at the Emperor's robe-draped knees. Her ragged breathing sounded absurdly loud. Raw terror was still pulsing through her,
and she could feel an echo of the despair that she'd felt when she saw Luke
sitting over the abyss. Struggling to
force her breathing into something approaching its normal pattern, Leia sat up,
and looked into the Emperor's face.
Palpatine was
smiling at her blandly. The Emperor said, "first experiences of this kind
can be very draining. But you've done
well, my dear, I'm proud of you."
"Luke's
hurt," Leia said hoarsely.
"Is he? What a shame."
In a sudden burst
of fury Leia grabbed the Emperor by the collar of his robe, jumping to her feet
and dragging Palpatine up with her.
"What's happened to him?" she demanded, hardly recognising her
own voice.
Palpatine's
expression turned cold, and Leia gasped and jerked her hand away from his
collar. For a few seconds there was an
agonising burning in her hand, as if it had been frost-bitten and was just
struggling to life again. Then the
burning was gone.
"You should
not forget yourself, my young apprentice," Palpatine said in a mild tone. "You may rule this galaxy some day, but
I am the master now."
Silently cursing
herself, Leia tried to focus in on her connection to Luke. She tried to tune her senses to the guest
quarters that she and her brother shared, but somehow she knew that he wasn't
there. Where he was, was harder for her
to see. Fear shot through her
again. She thought, I should never
have left him alone. "Where is
he?" she asked Palpatine, hating herself for having to ask it.
"Why ask
me? Find him for yourself. Search your feelings, Leia. He's your brother, not mine."
Leia scowled at the
Emperor, but turned her attention away from him.
"Luke?"
she whispered.
At first she barely
recognised the presence that she sensed.
The aching misery and loss just didn't seem like it should belong to her
brother. But she could recognise the
feeling.
She had felt it
herself, that first day after Alderaan was destroyed.
Oh Gods, Luke, I'm
sorry. I shouldn't have left you. I thought you would be all right. I should have known.
She clung on to her
brother's pain, trusting it to lead her to him. Leia closed her eyes, shutting out her awareness of everything
except for Luke.
For a moment, she
saw him. He must be in some medical
facility, she realised, for there were monitors above the bed he was lying
on. He lay on his side, his left hand
pillowing his head, and she saw that he was crying. He didn't move at all, there wasn't even any expression on his
face. But tears were trailing down his
cheeks.
The image vanished,
and Leia's eyes snapped open. Palpatine
was watching her with a benign little smirk.
Leia's feelings of
guilt threatened to overwhelm her. She
had left Luke, and he had got hurt, while she was here with Palpatine pissing
about with the Force. Leia shuddered,
but made herself shut the feelings away.
She was not going to let Palpatine see her break down, ever again.
Eyeing the Emperor,
she wondered what would be the best way to play this. Should she do her haughty Princess routine, throwing her
metaphorical weight around, or should she be the helpless little girl, or the
dutiful apprentice? She decided for the
latter, and said, in the mildest voice she could manage, "my Master, I
think Luke's been taken to the Medical Centre.
Do I have your permission to visit him?"
"Of course, my
dear girl," said Palpatine.
"I would never try to keep you two apart." The Emperor walked to the com screen beside
the door to the chamber, and as he did so Leia's gaze was caught by the bizarre
sight of his hood rising seemingly on its own, settling over his head again to
hide the expanse of withered scalp.
Palpatine opened a
channel and a doctor Leia had not seen before appeared on the screen. "Dr. Kandinsky," Palpatine greeted
him, "what is the condition and location of Luke Skywalker?"
The round-faced man
looked understandably uncomfortable at being confronted by his Emperor, but he
kept his voice steady as he replied, "Mr. Skywalker is in Ward Seven, Your
Majesty. His condition is stable, we
don't have any worries about him. He
should be able to leave the medical centre this evening; we'd like to monitor
him for a bit longer, but as long as he's kept under supervision, there
shouldn't be any difficulty with allowing him to leave."
"Thank you,
Doctor," said the Emperor.
"Mr. Skywalker will shortly be receiving a visitor." As he closed the link, Palpatine turned back
to Leia. "There you are, my
dear. Ward Seven. I'll summon two of my guards to accompany
you."
"If you don't
mind," said Leia, still in her mild tone, "I'd like to go alone. May I?"
"Certainly,
dear. My Palace is yours. I'll inform my men that you have the freedom
of the Palace."
Leia bowed her head
in thanks to him, then turned and started for the door. The door opened smoothly in front of her,
and the two Imperial Guards outside, rather than trying to bar her way, merely
bowed as she passed them. She ignored
them and walked by, but the sight had made her feel strangely afraid.
Soon, she thought, that
could be ordinary. Everyone will
bow to me. Someday, she would even
get used to it. Leia Organa, heir to
Emperor Palpatine.
Gods. She should get out of here, soon, before she
forgot what she was fighting for. Or
more importantly, what she was fighting against.
In the lift, Leia
leaned against the wall, trying to regain her link to Luke. For another instant she thought she saw him,
and she called out to him in her mind, but he gave no sign of having heard her.
She stepped out of
the lift on the Medical Level, and almost ran into someone walking swiftly down
the hallway. The man in question
stepped back, apologising, and she recognised the red hair and beard and the
strained, tension-worn face of Moff Nevoy.
"Your
Highness," Nevoy said.
"You've been informed about Mr. Skywalker?"
Leia shook her
head. "I only know he's
here," she answered. "Can you
tell me what's happened to him?"
Nevoy's expression
became grim. He said flatly, "he
tried to commit suicide."
A wave of cold
filled Leia. She managed to whisper,
"how?"
"He hanged
himself. I found him before it was too
late."
For several moments
Leia was unable to speak. The impulses
to scream, or to cry, were equally strong in her, as, surprisingly, was the
impulse to kiss Nevoy in her gratitude.
Finally she just took one of his hands in hers and said, in a fierce
whisper, "thank you."
He frowned and then
nodded. There was embarrassment in
Nevoy's aura, and, Leia thought, some other emotion as well. Suddenly she realised, he's afraid of me!
The discovery made
her stare at him in wonder. Afraid, of
her. Now that she'd realised what
it was she was sensing, she could feel his emotions in more detail. Fear, yes, but it was a fear that he was
fighting against. She could sense his
determination to do what he had to, regardless.
She wondered if
Darth Vader had sensed the same emotions in her, when he questioned her on
board the first Death Star.
Leia noticed that
she was still holding Nevoy's hand, and let go. She glanced at the nearest location plaque on the wall, looking
for Ward Seven.
"Your
Highness?" said Nevoy.
"There's something else I wanted to discuss with you. I know this may not be the best time, but I
wanted to assure you that the matter we discussed last night is being seen
to."
She turned back to
him in confusion. "The matter ...
?"
"Your adoption
ceremony, Your Highness," Nevoy persisted stolidly. "And the other matter you brought to my
attention. You should know that
everything is in hand, I don't want you to worry about anything. It's under control."
"Oh,"
said Leia, softly. "Thank
you. Again. You'll be in touch again when there are more details to
discuss?"
"Of course,
Your Highness," he said.
She nodded, trying
to shove aside the feeling of hope that had leapt through her. She was afraid it must have screamed like a
siren through Emperor Palpatine's consciousness. She swallowed, and said, "can you tell me where Ward Seven
is?"
"This
way," said Nevoy, starting down the hallway again in the direction he'd
originally been headed. When they
reached the door, Nevoy hesitated, then said, "Your Highness -- one more
thing. Don't be too hard on him. He thought he was acting for the best."
Leia stared at
Nevoy again, but he was keeping his face blank, and now she couldn't read
anything from him. One more time she
nodded, silently, then she stepped into Ward Seven.
The doctor from
Palpatine's com screen bustled up to her, looking uncertain whether to be
obsequious or offended at being in the presence of a traitor. "Princess Leia," he said
awkwardly. "If you'll follow me,
please."
But Leia did not
need to follow the doctor. The pain she
felt from Luke was more than strong enough to lead her to him. She pushed past Dr. Kandinsky into the next
room, a ward of several medibeds separated from the entranceway by translucent
plastisteel screens.
When Luke saw her,
he sat up hastily, causing a squeal of protest to be emitted by a medical droid
further down the ward. Leia
hesitated. Luke's misery had become
blended with something else when he saw her: defiance, even resentment. Leia gazed at her brother, tears springing
to her eyes at the sight of his pallor, and the livid bruises around his neck.
"Luke,"
she said, her voice unsteady, "oh Luke, I'm so sorry."
Luke relented a
little, his resentment starting to fade.
"So am I," he muttered, looking away from her.
She walked to
Luke's bedside. She wanted to hold him,
but she didn't want to have to face it if he were to break away from her.
"Luke,
why?" she whispered.
"Why do you
think?" he asked angrily.
"What else do you think I could do? I'm holding you back, I know that. You can't do anything with me here. And I can't do anything.
I can't do anything any more!"
"That's not
true!"
"How do you
know?" Luke demanded, his gaze moving back to her bitterly. "You've got the Force. You've got everything."
Leia clenched her
fists. She was barely able to stop
herself from slapping him.
"Luke," she said, "I'm not going to fight with you. I need you too much, Luke, I can't lose
you. Not on top of everything
else." She sat down on the edge of
the bed, still careful not to touch him.
"Please, Luke. Don't
make me lose you too." Luke had
turned away from her again, but she thought she could sense him calming
slightly. She took a risk, and reached
out cautiously to put her hand on his.
Luke flinched, but
he didn't pull his hand away.
"Promise me?" whispered Leia.
"Promise me you won't try again?"
Luke said, "I
promise I won't try again -- today."
"Damn it,
Luke! Don't do this!"
He glanced at her
with a wounded expression, then sighed and stared dejectedly at some point on
the wall. "All right," he
said. "I won't try to kill myself."
Leia watched him
for a moment. She tightened her grip on
his hand. "I love you, Luke,"
she told him.
He nodded, and
didn't look at her. He said hoarsely,
"I love you too."
"How are you
doing?" Mon Mothma asked, as she sat down in the chair beside Admiral
Piett's bed.
"Great,"
murmured Piett, his voice still rather faint and sleepy-sounding. "Dr. Tomczyk's been summarising for me
the Child's First Guide to Ulcers."
Mon Mothma looked
up and smiled at Tomczyk, who was standing at the other side of the bed,
holding an electronic notepad and taking notes from the monitors above Piett's
head. Tomczyk smiled back at her. Mothma took Piett's hand which was lying
outside the covers, and started running one of her fingers along the back of
it. She asked, "so what did you
learn about ulcers in school today?"
Piett
grimaced. He accused, his voice starting
to fade out partway through the sentence but then gaining strength again,
"you're trying to turn me into one of those bores who can't shut up about
their illnesses."
"Gods
forbid!" Mon Mothma laughed.
"I really want to know."
Piett sighed,
looking up at the ceiling.
"Well," he said, "it seems that all the old wives' tales
about ulcers are wrong. Diet doesn't
make any difference -- except coffee and alcohol don't help. Surprise." He cast her an aggrieved look which made her laugh again. "And -- " this time a rueful smile
crept across his face " -- they're not caused by stress, either. Good thing.
Or I'd have had twenty ulcers."
Mon Mothma grinned
at him, wanting to kiss him right then and there. But the presence of Dr. Tomczyk made her feel too awkward to do
it. "The suspense will kill
me," she said. "What causes
them?"
"Ah,"
said Piett. "That would be ...
some thingy." He turned his head
to appeal for help from Dr. Tomczyk.
"Some bacteria whatsit?"
Tomczyk
nodded. "Helicobacter
pylori," he said obligingly.
"Spiral shaped bacterium that can live in the mucous lining of the
stomach. Basically, your immune system
responds to the infection by sending white cells to fight it, but they can't
get through the mucous lining, so they die, spill their destructive compounds
on the stomach lining, cause inflammation, and that's what leads to the
ulcer."
"Fascinating,
isn't it?" sighed Piett.
"Hmm,
yes," said Mon Mothma.
"Amazing." She smiled
teasingly at him. "So if it's not
caused by diet, you won't have to subsist on milk and boiled rice for the rest
of your days."
"That's a
relief," he agreed. "Even if
I'm doomed to spend my life in a prison cell, at least I can hope for a decent
meal now and then."
"You won't
spend your life in a prison cell," she told him. "Trust me."
Piett did not look
convinced. "You're going to break
me out of the detention wing so we can take off for a galaxy-wide life of
crime?"
"Well, I
would," she said lightly, "but I won't have to. Grigori ... please, don't worry. You have friends who believe in you. It will be all right."
Somewhere during
this conversation, Dr. Tomczyk had vanished into another room without either of
them noticing. Good man, thought
Mon Mothma. The most important
aspect of a good bedside manner is knowing when not to be at the bedside. She left the chair, and knelt on the floor
beside the bed, so her face was closer to Piett's. Meeting the gaze of his sombre grey eyes, she wondered, not for
the first time, how anyone could look so cute just by being worried.
Mon Mothma said
softly, "there's something else I ought to tell you. Has anyone told you about -- the situation
with Lord Vader?"
"The
situation?" he echoed, frowning.
"No."
Oh, Gods. She'd been going crazy arguing with herself
over whether she should tell him. The
coward in her wanted to avoid it at all costs, and had been insisting that it
was better for him not to know. It
would only upset him and maybe set back his recovery. But she knew, inescapably, that her cowardice was talking
shit. Piett was an adult, and one of
the leading officers of the Rebellion, he had a right to know what was going on
around him. And what was happening to
people he cared about. He would be
furious with her, she was sure, if he found out from someone else.
She started gently
stroking his hair with her left hand, and held on to his hand tighter with her
right. She said, "Lord Vader's
been captured by the Emperor. He's
being held prisoner, they've got him on display at the Imperial Palace on
Coruscant."
Piett fought to sit
up, and managed to prop himself up, leaning heavily on one elbow. "We're not going to just leave him --
" he began.
"No, no,"
Mon Mothma said, trying to sound soothing.
"We're not. A rescue
attempt's already underway. They'll
leave tonight." She knew she ought
to try to make him lie down again, but she didn't want to fight him on
this. He must be feeling helpless
enough anyway, it wouldn't help his state of mind if he thought that she didn't
even trust him to judge whether he was capable of sitting up or not.
The Admiral looked
disorientated, as if he was feeling dizzy, but he still said, "I ought to
go with them."
"Grigori,
no. It's a small operation. The officers assigned to it can handle it
... " she smiled regretfully, hoping that her next comment wouldn't piss
him off too badly, "and they really don't need an Admiral on painkillers
along for the ride."
Piett scowled. "I can stop taking the
painkillers," he said stubbornly.
"They don't
need you passing out in the middle of a battle, either. Please, Grigori," she went on. "Stay here and get rid of your
Heliobacter whatever. Lord Vader will
understand. He'd say the same
thing. He'd tell you to get your rest,
and get well."
Finally giving up,
Piett allowed himself to subside onto the bed, though he still looked
thoroughly disgruntled. "Medical
advice from Lord Vader," he muttered, frowning at the ceiling as if it
were an enemy. "That'd be the
day."
She squeezed his
hand. "You're not going to knock
Dr. Tomczyk out with his notepad, escape from the hospital, steal an x-wing,
and fly off to rescue Vader singlehanded, are you?"
His gaze dropped
back to her, and she was relieved to see a little grin light his face. "Well," he said, "that was my
plan. I guess I'll have to give it up,
now that you've figured it out."
She smiled at him,
then, freed by the absence of Dr. Tomczyk, she leaned down and tenderly touched
her lips to his. Mothma and Piett did
not immediately separate, and the kiss deepened, faster and stronger than
Mothma would have expected. She
thought, no matter how many painkillers our Admiral has in him, he still
knows how to kiss!
She broke the kiss,
reluctantly, and sat back. With a
shyness that took her by surprise, she murmured, "get well soon,
okay?"
Piett nodded. She thought that he looked a bit scared, but
he looked happy, too. She knew how he
felt.
"I've got to
go," she apologised. "I've
got another meeting to get to."
She almost said, "I love you." But that was something she didn't even want to think, let alone
say.
Hurrying through
the corridors moments later, Mon Mothma was informing herself in no uncertain
terms just how stupid she was.
Love! she thought. Simara,
what are you talking about? You've been
vaguely dating the man for a week, and you've slept with him once.
It's because he's
been ill, that's what it is. You've got
the nurse-falling-in-love-with-the-patient syndrome; everyone knows a little
vulnerability makes men more attractive.
Get ahold of
yourself, she ordered. He's a sweet,
lovely man, but that's all. It doesn't
mean the galaxy revolves around him.
She had, she knew,
been acting too much as if the galaxy revolved around him already. What in the gods' names had she been
thinking of, starting this ridiculous investigation attempt with Wedge Antilles
and his buddies? General Veers,
unnerving cold fish though he was, had been perfectly right.
Out of
consideration for her rank and her service record, the chief security officers
had refrained from telling her just how out of line they thought her actions
were, when she informed them of the transmissions that the two young pilots had
discovered. But it didn't take much
insight to know that, if she were anyone other than the Head of State and one
of the founders of the Rebel Alliance, Captain Faren and Commander Narita would
already have lodged a formal complaint and requested disciplinary action
against her.
She was really
going to have to watch her step. She
couldn't let herself fall into a trap like this again. She had to remember, these weren't the early
days of the Rebellion any more. She
couldn't do whatever she wanted to, just because she thought it was
right. She had a government to answer
to, and a large portion of the galaxy that depended upon them. If she went blithely around ignoring the
chain of command, sanctioning secret projects, building up her personal gang of
supporters, it wouldn't be long before people started comparing her to
Palpatine. And they would have every
right to do so.
Damn it! And all because she had the hots for one
worried-looking Admiral!
As she reached the
small conference room where her presence was required in two minutes' time,
gloom descended upon her. This meeting
was not going to be fun.
Faren and Narita
were already there. They both stood
politely when Mon Mothma entered the room.
She nodded at them, then the security officers and the Head of State
took their seats, Mothma asking, "do you have anything more on the
transmissions?" Narita and Faren
had claimed that their people had already discovered the first of the two
transmissions by the time Mon Mothma contacted them, and would soon have found
the second. Whether that was true, or
they were simply trying to save face, was not a question that she planned to
inquire into.
There was a quick,
shared glance between the oddly-matched pair of security officers, the
debonair, dark-haired ex-Imperial and the sweet-faced, petite blonde
Rebel. Evidently they had decided that
the Head of State would take their news better coming from a fellow long-term
Rebel, as Commander Narita turned to Mon Mothma and said, "Ma'am, both of the
transmissions match the pattern of the Chandrila Seven transmission. They were sent from the terminal in Admiral
Piett's office here on the base, using his account."
"I see,"
said Mon Mothma, somehow keeping her voice calm.
"Of
course," Narita continued, "we're aware this doesn't mean that the Admiral
is guilty. If someone else used his
account once, there's nothing to stop them using it three times, or more. You can be assured, we are investigating
every possibility." So you
stick to being Head of State, Ma'am, and keep the hell out of our investigation,
was the unspoken but obvious continuation to her statement.
Captain Faren
clearly did not think that leaving it unspoken was good enough. Leaning forward, he said, "we'd like
your assurance that your own investigation has been discontinued. Under the circumstances, you and your people
must have enough other matters to occupy your attention. It's a waste of resources to have two teams
working on the same job; I don't think we can afford that. Ma'am."
Mothma forced a
thin smile onto her face. "You do
have my assurance," she said.
"There is no longer any separate investigation. I hope," she went on smoothly,
"that you have no objections to my wishing to be kept updated on your
discoveries?"
Faren looked as if
he had any number of objections, but he managed to say stiffly, "of course
not, Ma'am." Commander Narita cast
him an irritated look, suggesting that all was not well in the working
relationship of the joint security chiefs.
"There is
another new development, Ma'am," Narita reported, ignoring the infuriated
glance that Faren turned on her when she mentioned it. "The Chandrila Seven message was not
the last message sent to Coruscant."
My Gods. What now? "When was the last message sent?" Mon Mothma asked.
"Just over two
hours after the delegation returned from Chandrila."
"And it was on
Piett's account again, from his office on the base?"
"That's
right."
Mon Mothma tried to
think back. When was the first time she
had seen Piett after their return to the base?
She asked, "was Piett back on the base at that time? Or was he still on the Executor?"
"We're looking
into that, Ma'am."
"Fine. Let me know when you have further
information."
Gods, she thought. Another message. About what?
The timing would
have been right, Mothma realised, for it to be a warning that Lord Vader was on
his way to Coruscant.
But if that was the
topic of the message, who would have known Vader's destination? Not
Piett, certainly. He had been on the Executor
when Vader's message arrived at the Chandrilan mining station. Theoretically, the only people who could
have known the contents of the message would be those who were in the Command
Centre with Mon Mothma when it arrived.
So who had been
there? It wasn't going to be easy to
remember. The station had been in an
uproar, as the search continued for Princess Leia and Commander Skywalker.
Of course, someone
on the Executor or, for that matter, the Mircalla, could
conceivably have intercepted the message.
So Piett wasn't off the hook yet.
And there was
something else to worry about.
What was to stop
their traitor from sending a message again?
Theoretically, they
wouldn't dare to, with their scapegoat incapacitated in the hospital. But
to foil the Rebels' attack on Coruscant, the traitor might just think that it
was worth the risk.
Mon Mothma
demanded, no longer caring if she offended the security duo, "what
precautions have we taken to stop any further messages from being sent?"
"All
communications are now being monitored," answered Faren. "If any message is sent to Coruscant,
it'll be intercepted. We'll know
immediately, and should be able to get a team to the spot before our traitor's
even left his terminal."
Mothma nodded,
thinking that ought to be good enough.
Always supposing, of course, that the traitor didn't send his message to
somewhere other than Coruscant.
Or that he hadn't
already sent it.
“Anakin Skywalker,
eh?” mused General Mulcahy. “That’s an
entertaining theory.”
Nevoy said, “I
don’t think it’s just a theory. Have
you seen Vader’s face?”
“I have not,”
Mulcahy replied, methodically continuing to mix the ingredients of his Egesammi
firedawn cocktail. “I don’t intend to.”
“I’ve seen it. The scars are the same as Anakin’s
were. Precisely. Even down to the reconstruction work they’d
started on his face before his condition worsened ...” Nevoy’s words slowed, as another connection
occurred to him. Up to now, he hadn’t
really considered the question of why Anakin Skywalker might have become
Darth Vader. “Or, when it officially
worsened. He probably never relapsed at
all. They must have faked his death. He and Palpatine might have been planning it
the whole time he was in the hospital … ”
”Why?” Mulcahy
inquired.
“I don’t know. Maybe ... as part of the campaign against
the Jedi. With Anakin dead, they could
blame the Jedi for it. You remember, there
was even talk that he might have been murdered, since he seemed to be
recovering, and then just relapsed like that, with no warning.”
Mulcahy nodded
thoughtfully. “Not forgetting,” he put
in, adding the last few drops of kriminsh to his drink, “that Darth Vader could
be a far more effective henchman than Anakin Skywalker. Anakin had all manner of baggage his enemies
could use against him. Vader didn’t
have any baggage at all.” Mulcahy put
down swizzle stick, and looked up at Nevoy.
“Are you going to tell the others?”
Nevoy shook his
head. “I don’t think so. It’s not our place to, is it? For all we know, he still wants it kept
secret. He hasn’t exactly been
broadcasting his identity.”
He watched while
Mulcahy took the lighter which Nevoy's household droid held out to him, and lit
the surface of his cocktail. With a
sigh, Nevoy dragged the conversation back to an earlier topic, which had proved
fruitless the first time he brought it up, and was almost certain to be just as
much wasted effort now.
"Xavier,” he
said, “I wish you'd reconsider."
"I know you
do," General Mulcahy said placidly.
"And you know that I won't."
Handing the lighter
back to C4T8, the General wafted the tall frosted glass under his nose,
appreciatively sniffing the flames.
Nevoy sourly wished that Mulcahy's moustache would catch fire. Maybe that'd put him in the hospital long
enough for the palace revolt to be over with by the time he got out. No, probably not. An incinerated moustache was hardly enough to stop General Xavier
Mulcahy, when he had his mind set on something.
"You don't
have to do this," Nevoy persisted, as the flames died out and Mulcahy took
a long, slow drink.
Mulcahy regarded
Nevoy keenly from under his vast eyebrows.
The General drawled, "now, what would a young whippersnapper like
you know about what I have to do?"
Nevoy briefly flung
his hands up, in a gesture of despair, then he slumped down onto the sofa,
scowling over at the old soldier in the green armchair. "I don't happen to think that getting
yourself slaughtered is going to help anyone."
"I'm
hurt. What makes you think I'm going to
get slaughtered?"
Calm, thought Nevoy.
Stay calm. "The fact," he
said, "that you're eighty-one years old, and that, through no fault of
your own, it's probable that your reflexes may have got a little slow."
Mulcahy
snorted. "I don't see anyone
trying to get you to stay out of it because you're overweight."
Nevoy sat up
abruptly. "Gods damn it! You just
live to annoy me, don't you?"
The General grinned
at him. "That's why I've got to
defect with the rest of you. You
wouldn't know what to do if I wasn't around to drive you insane."
"Oh,
no." Nevoy leaned forward and
buried his face in his hands.
"Look, Xavier," he said, not looking up. "I don't want you to get hurt."
"I know
that. I don't want you to get hurt
either. But I'm not trying to stop
you."
Nevoy reluctantly
took his hands away from his face and looked over at the General again. The fiendish grin had left Mulcahy's face
and he looked, for once, entirely serious.
"Osheen," Mulcahy said, "you're right, I'm eighty-one. I don't think it'll be much of a tragedy if
I get myself killed." A faint
smile appeared again as he added, "I never much liked the idea of dying in
bed, anyway."
"You wouldn't
die in bed," Nevoy muttered, "you'd die in an armchair."
"With a drink
and a game of solitaire, yes. What a
way to go. You'll forgive me if I
prefer a demise that's slightly more glamorous."
"Damn
you. You don't have to die. Someone's going to have to take over this
place, when Palpatine's out of the way.
Why shouldn't it be you? Stay
out of it till all the explosions are over, then you can step in and pull
everything out of chaos. If it's not
you, it's going to be at least six Imperial Advisors cutting each other's
throats over who gets the throne. And
Captain Aurbrac. And probably a few
crime bosses. And random members of
random royal families. And gods know
who else."
"If you're so
worried about that," Mulcahy asked sharply, "why don't you
stay?"
Nevoy looked down,
shaking his head. "I'm not ruler
material."
"Neither am
I," said General Mulcahy. "If
I was, we'd already be in the reign of Emperor Xavier I."
"But you could
do it," Nevoy insisted.
"You're respected in all the branches of the service, you'd be able
to bring all the different forces together -- even the Imperial Guards might be
willing to support you."
Mulcahy said dryly,
"only if they didn't know I'd been in on the planning stages of their
Master's assassination."
"So they don't
have to know. Isn't it at least worth a
try? You'd rather be in charge yourself
than let the Imperial Guards take over, wouldn't you? It's not going to be much good getting rid of Palpatine, if we
just get that sadist Aurbrac, instead."
"Now, now,
you're not being fair. I'm sure the Red
Idiots are very nice men."
"For gods' sakes!"
A discreet buzzing
announced the presence of someone at the front door. C4T8 departed to answer it.
The two men watched the droid leave, then Mulcahy said quietly,
"Osheen, there is no point in this.
We've been through it all already.
If Lord Vader wants to make a takeover attempt, that's one thing. If he doesn't, then there's no sense in any
of the rest of us trying. If we say
we're doing this for the Rebellion, proclaiming them as the legitimate
government, then the best thing we can do is just go to them, with as many men
and ships as we can scrape together.
Without Palpatine, Coruscant will be a fairly easy target, but it won't
help the situation if we stick around and add our men to the civil war. There's going to be enough killing without
us." He looked intently at
Nevoy. "You know that, you agreed
with it. Now stop talking crap and deal
with it, I'm coming with you."
Nevoy sighed. "All right, Xavier, listen. You want to come with us, that's fine. But you don't have to get involved in the
fighting. Just meet us on the
Conquest. Better yet, leave the
planet before the shooting starts.
You'll be a lot more useful to the Rebels alive than dead in the
Palace."
Mulcahy said,
"I'm not doing this to be useful to the Rebels." He raised one of his huge white eyebrows at
Nevoy. "You ought to
understand why I'm doing it."
"Tell
me," Nevoy said flatly.
"Why?"
"Having helped
to create our dear Emperor, I'd like a chance at destroying him."
The door opened, and
Captain Sandar of the Palace Guard barrelled into the room, wild-eyed and out
of breath. He announced, "we are
in some shit."
"What?"
asked Nevoy, standing up.
"Turn on the
news," Sandar panted. "It's
probably over by now, the cover-up machine's probably already at work. Turn it on, though, let's see. I've got most of it recorded, anyway. Today on Correllia, on Correllia
One. Put it on, quick."
Nevoy eyed Sandar
doubtfully, but nonetheless he located the holopad's remote and switched it on,
the holo image springing up out of its base that doubled as a coffee
table. When he switched it over to
Correllia One, all they got was a rotating, pale blue column with the channel's
logo, and the usual bland, inane music that served as a background when
channels were experiencing technical difficulties.
"So what's
happened?" Nevoy asked Captain Sandar, who had flopped onto the sofa.
"Take a
look," said Sandar, waving around a recording disk. "I always watch Today on Correllia
on my way home from work, or I wouldn't have seen it. I didn't get all of it, I had to hunt around for a disk, but most
of it should be here."
"You were
flying on autopilot, weren't you?" Nevoy demanded sharply.
"Yes,"
Sandar said, exasperated. "Just
watch this."
Nevoy took the disk
that Sandar held out to him, and inserted it into the holopad base. Out of the holopad appeared the main
newsroom of Correllia's branch of the Imperial News Service. A male newsreader of indeterminate age and
with a shock of strawberry blond hair was in mid-sentence, looking as if he
couldn't believe what he was reading.
"... from an
un-named source in the Rebel Alliance, claims that a Rebel attack will be
launched on Coruscant tonight, at approximately 2300 hours Coruscanti Standard
Time. The aim of the attack is to
rescue Darth Vader from the Imperial Palace.
A fleet of ten capital ships, consisting of five Star Destroyers and
five Mon Calamari cruisers, will attack Coruscant's perimeter defenses, while a
smaller strike force of cloaked Lamda shuttles attempts to reach the
Palace -- " the newsreader suddenly turned away and called to someone
outside the image, "hey, who cleared this? I didn't know about this.
Has Imperial Security seen it?
What -- "
The sound switched
off. For another twenty seconds or so
the image was still there, and other people hurried into the scene, in
apparently yelling discussion with the newsreader. Then the image vanished, replaced by the blue column and the
logo. A female voice said brightly,
"this channel is experiencing technical difficulties. We apologise for the inconvenience. Normal service will recommence as soon as
possible." The music started
tinkling aimlessly away to itself.
Nevoy turned off
the recording, and Correllia One's live broadcast reappeared. The logo and the music were gone, and they
were back in the newsroom, but with a different newsreader, a pretty,
dark-haired girl who was reporting the latest on some high-profile murder trial
on Correllia. An image of the outside
of the court building took the place of the newsroom, and General Mulcahy said,
"well, I guess that's that."
Nevoy switched off
the holo, feeling numb, then suddenly he exploded, "fifty fucking demons
in a landspeeder! I don't believe
this! What is it with the
Rebels? They just had to pick the most
inconvenient possible time for an attack!
I swear they go out of their way to screw things up for us!"
The gaze Mulcahy
cast at Nevoy suggested that he thought the younger man had finally gone out of
his mind. "Osheen, they're
rebels. Screwing things up for us is
their job."
"Ah. Yes.
Well. I guess we can't blame
them, after all we haven't exactly cleared our plans with them." He groaned.
"Damn it, though.
Now we'll be expected to bloody well triple security, it makes it that
much more likely that we'll get found out ... "
"Maybe
not," Captain Sandar said suddenly.
"Maybe it'll actually help.
It'll certainly give us a good reason to be at the palace tomorrow
night, we can say we're still on heightened alert, and any unusual troop
movements can be explained away as precautions against the Rebels."
"I
suppose," Nevoy admitted.
"We're probably expected back at the palace for a damned meeting
about this. Gods. Just when I was thinking I might have a
peaceful night in." He looked from
Sandar to Mulcahy. "What the Hells
is going on with the Rebels? How did
they let information like that leak?
They've never screwed up this badly before."
"They've got a
traitor, I suppose," Sandar said.
"But it doesn't make much sense.
Why leak the information to Correllia One? Why not just to Imperial Intelligence? Or the armed forces?"
"If it even
was a traitor," added Nevoy.
"It could be misinformation.
Get us all worked up about an attack tonight, and then attack next week
-- or tomorrow. Shit, that's all we
need, if they strike at the same time we do."
"At least
it'll provide one Hell of a distraction," General Mulcahy pointed out.
"Yes,"
Nevoy muttered, "if we can just convince them not to shoot at us."
C4T8 entered the
room. "Pardon me, sir. Colonel Wellaine is on the com link. He requests your presence and Captain
Sandar's at an urgent security meeting."
Nevoy cast an I
told you so look at his friends, then said, "shall we go, Captain? No rest for potential traitors."
"Have fun,
boys," said Mulcahy. "Don't
do anything I wouldn't do." He
reached for his glass once more.
"You lucky
bastard," Nevoy said to him.
"Gods, why didn't I retire?
No pension is worth this."
General Mulcahy
watched Nevoy and Sandar leave, then he took a long swig of his cocktail. When the glass was emptied, he carefully got
out of his chair, swearing at how long it took his limbs to obey the instructions
of his brain. His silent home awaited
him, with his droid and his liquor cabinet and his solitaire board.
Chapter 14
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