“You’re taking too long, guys,” came
Captain Needa’s voice over the com speaker.
“I’m getting in the mood to kill a General.”
The occupants of the hangar bay cast
helpless looks at each other. This had
been going on for hours now, the occasional flurry of activity interspersed
with long periods of nothing, and punctuated by Needa’s sarcastic
comments. As soon as Needa had
barricaded himself in the Lambda Shuttle, Commander Ogden had re-opened
the doors to the rest of the base.
Everyone who’d been working in the hangar had been evacuated, and now
the bay was populated by Ogden in his control booth, two security teams, and a
squadron of ground troops. And a few
random interested persons, which category currently included Wedge Antilles and
General Calrissian. Everyone except for
Ogden was in a fairly defensible position, behind a large pile of supply crates
and repair equipment. The pile was low
enough for them to keep an eye on the shuttle, but also high and solid enough
to provide good cover – at least long enough for them to evacuate – if Needa
decided to fire on them.
“He’s right,” Lando Calrissian sighed
now. “This is getting stupid. If we could think of anything to do, we’d
have done it by now.”
Wedge basically agreed with him, but
he said, in the probably vain hope of keeping up morale, “yeah, but he doesn’t
know that. For all he knows, we’ve
delayed this long just to throw him off his guard.”
Calrissian snorted. “Don’t we wish.”
Wedge decided against getting into a
debate with Calrissian, and cast an uneasy glance over at Security Captain
Faren, who was still there despite various superior officers’ suggestions that
he should go off-duty. Wedge didn’t
like the look of him right now, he looked way too much like someone who’s
decided that life isn’t worth living.
It was a look that Wedge had seen before, usually right before the
person who looked like that did something suicidal. He wouldn’t be at all surprised if Faren decided to charge the
shuttle singlehanded, in hopes that Captain Needa would mow him down with a
laser cannon. He couldn’t really blame
Faren for wanting to stay here, though.
If it was one of Wedge’s fellow pilots that Needa had killed, Wedge
wouldn’t want to go back to his quarters and brood about it either.
Meanwhile Captain Needa was putting in
his two-credits’ worth again. “You
know, I’m beginning to wonder if you people want Madine back,” remarked
the Captain’s familiar disembodied voice.
“If I didn’t hate him so much, I’d almost feel sorry for him.”
One of the ground troops commented to
no one in particular, “that guy is really starting to annoy me.”
“That’s his plan,” grumbled General
Calrissian. “Figures if he keeps this
up long enough, we’ll either make some stupid mistake, or get so sick of him
that we let him go out of sheer self-preservation.”
Wedge was manoeuvring his way around
various soldiers, over to where Captain Faren leaned against a large orange
packing crate, staring at nothing. When
he reached the security captain’s side, Wedge tentatively touched the man’s
shoulder and asked, “how are you doing?”
Faren looked at Wedge blankly for a
moment, then something resembling a smile touched his face. “I’ve been better,” said Faren. His gaze got distant again, and he asked,
“do you know what I told her, when she asked what Captain Needa was like?” From the tortured note in his voice, Wedge
had no trouble figuring out that “her” referred to Commander Narita. “I told her that he was fair,” said
Faren. “That he never hurt anyone who
didn’t deserve it.”
Wedge couldn’t think of one damned
thing to say. The ex-Imperial’s face
twisted into an expression that suggested he was about to break down in
sobs. “Oh, gods,” Faren whispered.
“Look,” Wedge said quietly, “are you
sure you don’t want to get out of here …?”
Faren shook his head, managing to
exert some control over his expression.
“I’ve been watching this show too long,” he said. “Can’t miss the final episode.”
The swoosh of an opening door caused
both of them to look toward the hangar’s entryway. A grim-faced Mon Mothma stepped into the room, followed by
General Rieekan. Wedge wondered if they
were allowing too many of their big brass to be drawn to one place. At least General Dodonna wasn’t here, so
he’d survive if Captain Needa decided to be a true servant of the Empire and
wipe out the Rebellion’s leaders by exploding the hangar.
Rieekan walked over to the troops,
while Mon Mothma went to join Commander Ogden in the control booth. A moment later they heard Mothma’s voice
over the com, “Captain Needa. Is there
any way we can convince you to come out of there?”
Needa allowed a moment’s pause, then
said, “no, Ma’am, sorry. Can’t think of
anything.”
“If I give you my word you won’t be
harmed – ”
“I’d still have to stand trial,
right?” Needa asked.
“Yes.
You would.”
“Nope, sorry. Doesn’t sound like much of a deal.”
A slight edge to Mon Mothma’s voice
was the only sign that the Captain’s laid-back style was starting to get to
her. “Captain, the Alliance’s justice
system is more forgiving than the Empire’s -- ”
“Yeah, so you keep
reminding us. So I’d just be facing
life imprisonment instead of death or the spice mines. I hope you’ll forgive me when I say it’s not
a very attractive option.”
“Captain -- ”
Needa cut through whatever she’d been
about to say. “Hey, Commander
Ogden. What about opening the launch
doors?”
“I’m sorry, Captain,” said Ogden, “I
don’t think that would be a good idea.”
“Gee, why not? You were all set to open them for Commander
Antilles’ little unauthorised rescue mission.”
Wonderful, thought Wedge. Thanks for sharing that with everybody.
“So, I can’t talk you into opening
them, hunh?” When nobody answered him,
Needa continued cheerfully, “well, okay.
Anybody got any fun ideas for how to kill Madine? I mean, I shouldn’t just blast him, that’s
too easy.”
“Needa, don’t be a fool,” cut in
General Rieekan. Wedge glanced over at
him and saw that the General was holding a com-unit that must be linked to the Lambda
shuttle. “You know if you kill him,
your insurance is gone.”
Needa snapped back, for once sounding
close to losing his temper, “well he doesn’t seem to be doing me very damn much
good alive.” A moment later, with his
good humour apparently restored, Needa went on. “Aww, come on. Someone
must have some good ideas. One hundred
and one ways to kill a General.
Nobody’s got anything to contribute?”
He gave an exaggerated sigh.
“Oh, well. Guess I’ll just have
to use my imagination.”
In the silence that followed, Captain
Needa started whistling the Imperial March.
Then one of the ground troops yelped
to General Rieekan, “sir! He’s powering
up the shuttle’s blaster cannons!”
He wasn’t only powering them, Wedge
realised as too many people started shouting orders at once, he was swivelling
them up to face the clear plastisteel ceiling.
Since Ogden wouldn’t open the launch
doors, Needa was just going to blast his way through.
Wedge yelled, hoping at least a few
people could hear him, “everyone get to cover!
Move!”
Not that there was much cover to get
to. If that ceiling went, it was going
to shower the whole bay with potentially lethal plastisteel slivers. A few of the troops were scattering toward
the door, but most simply crouched where they were, behind the crates, trusting
to fate that they wouldn’t get ceiling slivers through their skulls.
Wedge heard General Rieekan yelling
wildly, “my Gods, fire on his guns -- ”, but by then it was too late. The shuttle’s blaster cannons jerked and
spat out their bolts of flame.
One round of shots from the outside
wouldn’t have done in that ceiling, but it wasn’t so heavily reinforced on the
inside. The ceiling shattered in an
amazing burst of sound.
Wedge lunged for the scanty shelter of
a slightly overhanging crate lid, pulling Captain Faren down with him. As he threw his arms up to protect his head
and neck, he saw a jagged, triangular shard land a couple of inches from his
right foot.
Wedge wondered if he’d been wounded
without realising it, or if someone nearby was bleeding on him, since there
seemed to be liquid dripping on him from somewhere. Then he realised. It
wasn’t blood. It was the famous Omean
rain.
Leia stared up into Emperor
Palpatine’s smile.
Her mutilated wrist
hurt like nothing she’d ever felt. But
she could ignore that, or at least, work through it. What she couldn’t ignore was Palpatine’s glowing amber eyes.
Fight him! her mind screamed at
her. Don’t let him get to you, don’t
let him stop you, don’t listen to him, fight! But his voice was in her mind as well, and she just crouched
there as if she thought that by holding very still she could stop him from
seeing her.
“A nice touch, don’t you think?”
Palpatine was musing, and Leia wasn’t sure if he was speaking the words or just
thinking them. “Cutting off the hand, I
mean. A nice little experience for your
whole family to share. It’s a real pity
you don’t have any time left for family bonding.”
Leia fought to focus on something
else. Somewhere off to the left she
could feel her father’s emotions, like a warm, comforting fire. His stubborn fury seemed to beat against the
fear that Palpatine was calling up in her, driving the fear back. In that instant she knew that nothing would
ever make her father give up, not until he was broken into so many separate
atoms. She clutched on to the familiar
anger and swore that she would not give up either.
Perhaps there was some way she could
help Vader. She cast out her thoughts
toward him, struggling to tear down the wall that held him back from the Force.
Then the warmth of her father’s
presence faded, and she felt Palpatine’s fingers digging into her mind.
“It really is a shame, you know, my
dear,” sighed the Emperor. “I was
looking forward to working with you, to continuing your training. But I can’t be putting down a revolt every week
or two, now can I? That’s no way to run
an empire.”
Leia spat out, “what would you know
about how to run an empire?”
Palpatine ignored her. “So you see, I’ve come up with a plan. A very fine plan, if I do say so
myself. Beautiful in its simplicity.”
She felt a jolt in the Force and for a
moment thought that her father was there with her, his presence as dark and
huge and powerful as ever. Then that
feeling was replaced by a distant whisper of frustrated rage, and she knew that
he hadn’t broken through. Not quite.
“The thing is,” said Palpatine, “why
should I put myself through this? All
these sordid power struggles with you ungrateful young people, just so I can
find the perfect apprentice. You, and
Luke … are you really worth the pain of seeing you betray me, time after time?”
Leia hoped that he was reading her
mind, and could see just exactly what she thought of his pain.
“And then I realised,” the monologue
went on, “that I was going about it all wrong.
There’s no point in trying to teach adults – I use the term loosely for
the two of you. No, what I need are
children. Your children, in fact.”
“Brilliant plan, Palpatine,” snarled
Leia. “You can’t have them without me.”
“Oh, but I can.
Of course, it will be best for them if I keep your body alive until
they’re born. But I’ve really no use
for your mind.”
He’s just playing with you,
Leia told herself. Don’t be afraid
of him, don’t --
“Which just makes everything that much more satisfying,”
Palpatine murmured. “There’s nothing
quite so beautiful, Leia, as being there in a being’s mind as, thought by
thought, it’s destroyed. It really is a
pity you won’t get to try it yourself.”
Don’t listen to him! Her mind screamed. Don’t, don’t --
“Goodbye, Leia,” said Emperor
Palpatine.
She was suddenly somewhere else. She blinked several times in the sunlight
before she recognised her surroundings.
Wonderingly, Leia got to her feet.
She was in the Palace Gardens on
Alderaan.
No, no I’m not, she thought
desperately. I’m not here. It’s him, he’s doing this, don’t believe it –
But it was so real.
The familiar soft warmth of the air on her skin, the sweet, tangy scent
of the flowers that she hadn’t smelled since – since Alderaan was
destroyed. She scuffed one of her feet
and felt the moist soil give way as her foot dug into it.
She looked down at her feet, and
stared.
She was wearing white boots. White, not the black that she knew she was
wearing.
She had both her hands. She clutched at her right wrist and found
the skin smooth, unbroken, without even a scar.
Reluctantly her gaze travelled up her
body. White boots, long white dress – a
dress that she’d thrown in the trash as soon as she reached her quarters in the
base on Yavin IV, after the destruction of the Death Star. She reached up to her hair, and found it in
the twin coiled buns that she also hadn’t worn since that time, because the
hairstyle reminded her of the worst day of her life.
Angrily she tore at the hairdo,
yanking her hair free from its confining pins.
As she shook her hair loose over her back, dragging her fingers through
it and scattering hairpins into the grass, she thought, it’s not real, I’m
not here, I’m not. I’m not on Alderaan
and it’s not five years ago.
Five years ago. Her head jolted up and she stared into the
sky.
It was there. The dark grey moon with the grid pattern
marking its surface, that she’d seen in the sky over Alderaan in one of her own
visions.
The Death Star.
Don’t believe it. You’re not here and neither is the Death
Star.
She should ignore it. Just sit down right here, close her eyes,
and think of something else. Maybe she
should try to focus on her father, make another attempt to help him break
through to the Force. If she just
ignored Palpatine’s charming little re-enactment, it would go away.
But what if it didn’t?
Unreasoning terror shot through
her. She wanted to run for the nearest
of the Palace launch bays, grab the first available ship, and get the hell off
of this planet that was about to die.
Don’t be a fool. None of this is real. And even if it was that day, five years ago,
she knew that she wasn’t on the planet.
She was up there, on the Death Star, with Grand Moff Tarkin sneering at
her. After all, if she wasn’t there,
then Alderaan wouldn’t be destroyed at all, would it? Tarkin had only destroyed the planet as a demonstration for her,
to show her that she couldn’t defy his authority. If she wasn’t on the Death Star with him, there was no point in
destroying Alderaan – was there?
And how do you know that? Maybe Tarkin would blow up the planet
anyway, just for the fun of it. And
maybe she was up there, and was here at the same time. If Palpatine had somehow sent her back
through time, it was her self from five years later that was standing
here. The newly outlawed Princess was
up there on the Death Star after all, about to see everything she cared about
destroyed.
Don’t! It’s only Palpatine, you can’t listen to him, you can’t let him
win --
Before she realised that she had made
up her mind, she was running.
Pebbles of crushed opal scattered as she raced along the
jewel-gravelled walkway. Her mind kept
warring with itself, insisting that none of this was real while at the same
time surging with panic – and with hope.
She didn’t know how long she had, how long the Death Star had been in
orbit before it fired. But maybe, just
maybe there was time to evacuate some of the population, save some of her
people before everything turned into space dust …
It’s not real!
But oh, Gods, if it is …
She passed a few startled-looking
people, some of whom she recognised.
Several gardeners, and further along the path a young noblewoman and her
beau, whose names were lost somewhere in Leia’s memory. The noblewoman called out some question to
her, which Leia ignored as she ran on.
Around the corner from the young
couple, she fell, one knee scraping painfully into the gravel. As she scrambled to her feet again, she bit
her lip at the pain. It wasn’t much by
itself, but it was another hint that maybe, after all, all of this was real.
Or not, she told herself
angrily. Palpatine’s the strongest
Force user in the galaxy, if he can do this to your mind, he can damned sure
make it seem real!
But she couldn’t just stand here, waiting to learn if it
was real or not.
The guard at the garden door stepped
forward to say something, then thought better of it when he saw the look on the
Princess’ face. She raced past him into
the familiar pale, airy corridors, and started at a breakneck pace up the
stairs.
It might theoretically be faster to
take the lift, but the delay that would be necessitated by getting to the
nearest lift entrance was more than she could stand. So she just kept running.
She clutched at her right wrist, once more trying to break through the
illusion – if illusion was what it was.
She tried not to feel the hand, to feel instead the aching charred stump
that ought to be there.
It didn’t work. If this was Palpatine’s illusion, it was
still very, very real.
She made it up one flight of stairs,
then another, and another. Then she
left the staircase, and the leather of her boot soles thudded softly against
the floor of the corridor as she ran toward Bail Organa’s office.
The guards outside that door also knew
better than to challenge her, and didn’t even try. As soon as the circular door started spiralling open, she leaped
through – and found herself face to face with her father who’d been dead for
five years.
Prince Bail was standing by his desk,
and had been speaking urgently into the desk com-unit. When he looked up and saw Leia, he brought
his hand down on the disconnect panel, staring at his daughter in
confusion. “Leia! You’re back? What -- ?”
She sobbed out “Daddy!”, and flung
herself into his arms.
Everything was as she remembered. The feel of his arms around her, the slight
hint of a paunch that she and Keeiara had always teased him about, the faint
citrusy smell of the Palace Laundry’s detergent that she smelled on his uniform
jacket. Bail Organa pressed her to him
tightly, then tried again. “Leia, what
in the world? How did you get
here? The last we heard was the
distress call from your ship -- ”
Leia pulled back enough to look up
into his face. “There’s no time to
explain. We’ve got to evacuate, get as
many people off the planet as we can.”
“What?”
“That space station up there. You’ve seen it? It’s the Death Star.
Grand Moff Tarkin’s on board, and Lord Vader. They’re going to blow up Alderaan, as a warning to the
Rebellion. I don’t know how much time
we’ve got, you’ve got to give the order to evacuate the planet --”
“Leia, for gods’ sakes! How can you know all this?”
Open-minded man though Bail Organa
was, she really didn’t think he was ready for the explanation. She said hurriedly, “I was held prisoner on
the station and escaped. Please, Daddy,
I’ve seen the station plans, I know what they’re capable of. That superlaser can destroy this entire
planet, we’ve got to evacuate now -- ”
The Prince frowned and shook his
head. “I can’t just give an order like
that. It would cause planet-wide panic
-- ”
“You’d rather everyone died?”
Bail began in a reasonable tone that
he clearly hoped would calm his daughter.
“They haven’t even contacted us.
I know Tarkin. If he planned on
destroying us he’d never miss the chance of calling up first, to gloat at me.”
“What’s the point of gloating at
someone who’s about to be dead? He can
gloat all he likes after we’ve been pulverised!”
“Leia, you know I can’t order an
evacuation without some tangible proof -- ”
“Fine. If you won’t evacuate, then send up the fleet. Capital Ships to distract them, and a team
of one-man fighters. If a fighter can
get its torpedoes into one of the exhaust ports, the station can be destroyed.”
Prince Bail looked shocked. “We can’t just attack the Empire’s newest
space station! It’d be an act of war!”
It was all an illusion. It had to be.
But if it were reality, then Bail
Organa would have been just as hard to convince as he was being now.
Leia screamed. “Daddy, please! We’re all going to die!”
Mon Mothma gazed at the desolation,
and scowled.
She’d thought that she and Commander
Ogden were in the riskiest position, standing in the control booth rather than
sheltering behind cargo crates like all the others. It turned out that the two of them had been the safest. The booth’s windows had shielded them from
the plastisteel slivers that rained down on everyone else.
She walked out onto the launching bay
floor, shattered plastisteel crunching beneath her feet. Cold rain plopped dismally onto her. All around her she saw people, the ground
troops and the security teams, struggling up off the floor and trying to
restore some kind of order. Several
were bleeding. Several more did not
rise from the floor. She saw one of the
ground troops, a young man who she was ashamed to realise that she did not
recognise, lying motionless with a long shard of plastisteel sticking out of
his neck. Another, a woman, was yelling
something and trying to pull a chunk of it out of her side, while one of her
comrades, kneeling beside her, hit her hands away and yelled at her not to
touch it.
General Rieekan heaved himself up from behind one of the
packing crates, still clutching the portable com-unit in his hand. Mothma saw him cast an aggrieved glance at
the rain-filled sky and reach up to shove damp strands of hair away from his
eyes. Then he spoke into the com-link,
“Needa, damn it, don’t try this. The
squadrons and the Star Destroyers out there are alerted to the situation. They’ll shoot you down before you even get
out of orbit.”
Needa’s voice came back flatly, “so
much for General Madine.”
I have to do something, was the
unwelcome thought in Mon Mothma’s mind.
I’m supposed to be in charge of this mess, I can’t just stand
here. What in the hell can I do?
Would it really be so terrible if they
let him go? At least that way they’d be
making an effort to secure Madine’s safety.
And the Alliance wasn’t supposed to pursue vengeance, the way the Empire
would. If they let Needa go free,
wouldn’t that be consistent with the principles of the Rebellion?
But the Alliance wasn’t supposed to
wantonly court defeat, either. All the
worlds and all the individuals who trusted them could suffer if Needa, with the
information he might possess, made it back to the Empire.
What did he know? How badly could his information hurt? If all he knew were their immediate plans of
upcoming campaigns, they were safe enough.
They could simply discard those plans and start anew. But if he’d been preparing for this day, and
stockpiling information on their defences so he could buy his way back into
Imperial favour …
It all boiled down to the question of
why he had done this. Was he a genuine
loyal Imperial? Or had he just seen a
chance to make some money, and to strike a blow at Lord Vader?
Mon Mothma strode toward Rieekan and
his com-unit. As she walked by she
noticed Wedge Antilles, leaning against one of the packing crates and reaching
down to help a dazed-looking Captain Faren get to his feet.
General Calrissian was limping toward
Rieekan from the other side, blood soaking the bottom half of his left trouser
leg. Mothma and Calrissian reached
Rieekan at about the same time, and Mothma cast a questioning look at
Calrissian. He smiled faintly and made
an “after you” gesture.
Mothma met Rieekan’s angry, frustrated
gaze and held out her hand for the com.
“Let me talk to him, Derrath,” she said.
He handed her the link, whispering
“what are you going to do?”
Instead of answering him, she said
urgently, “Captain Needa, please listen to me.
We don’t want either of you dead.
Return Madine to us safely, and we will give you safe-conduct to leave
our territory. We won’t pursue you.”
General Rieekan hissed, “what?”
But there was no response from Needa,
and Mon Mothma suddenly realised why.
She stared at the com-unit. “He’s closed his link,” she murmured, not
quite believing it was true.
Then she heard someone’s stunned voice
gasp out, “oh, Firelord. Oh, my Gods.”
All around her people were staring at
the Lambda shuttle. She gazed at
it with the rest, trying to understand what had put such horror on everyone’s
faces.
The pattern of lights appearing near
the shuttle’s rear thrusters should mean something to her. It clearly meant something to everybody
else.
Then she thought, no. It can’t mean that.
Lando Calrissian said what
everyone was thinking. “My Gods. He’s powering the hyperdrive.”
General Rieekan wheeled in the
direction of Commander Ogden, still in his control booth. Rieekan yelled desperately, “get his com
link back open!”
“I’m trying, sir,” Ogden’s voice came
back. “He’s got it well and truly
jammed!”
He can’t mean to do this,
Mothma’s mind insisted. He wouldn’t
do it. Would he?
The wings were moving into their
flight position, and more sets of lights appeared. The shuttle was prepping for take-off.
He’s bluffing us. He has to be.
He couldn’t really plan to go into
Hyperspace from right here in the hangar.
Mon Mothma didn’t actually know of any case in which that had been
done. But she was fairly certain she
knew what the result would be.
If the shuttle went into hyperdrive
from its present position, the resultant explosion would most likely tear a
chunk out of the planet. It would
certainly vaporise most – or all – of the Rebel base.
It was also almost guaranteed to
destroy the shuttle and its occupants.
But maybe at this point, Needa didn’t care about that.
She supposed the shuttle might
make it safely into Hyperspace before the cataclysm caught up with it. But she doubted that Needa would be counting
on it. If he really meant to do this,
then he must have decided he was dead no matter what. If he did survive, that was just an unexpected bonus.
And the majority of the New Alliance
forces would be dead.
“Will that do what I think it will?”
she asked of no one in particular.
“Old terrorist trick,” came a ragged
voice at her right. She turned and saw
Security Captain Faren standing beside her.
“Destroyed a couple of our ships before we started taking more
precautions. They’d pose as smugglers,
get arrested, and then go into Hyperspace in the Star Destroyer’s hangar.”
No doubt Captain Needa was familiar with that particular
technique. But, damn it, could he
really mean to kill so many thousands of his own men? Could he mean to kill Admiral Piett?
General Rieekan insisted, “he’s got to
be bluffing.”
But if he wasn’t?
Mothma raised the com-unit and keyed
in the codes that would relay her message to all the ships outside the
base. “This is Mon Mothma to all
vessels. You are to allow Captain
Needa’s shuttle to leave this system.
Repeat, the shuttle is to leave without incident. Do not fire. Do not attack and do not pursue.”
Now please, please, she prayed,
let Captain Needa have been monitoring that transmission.
The Lambda shuttle rose
gracefully from the hangar bay floor.
The hyperdrive lights still cast their cold, bright glow.
Mon Mothma glanced at the men around
her: Rieekan, Calrissian, Commander Antilles, Captain Faren. Their faces all showed the same tense,
waiting hopelessness.
There was nothing they could do. There wasn’t even any point in ordering an
evacuation. By the time they had
finished giving the order, there would be no one alive to obey it.
The shuttle soared through the
shattered plastisteel ceiling. And
vanished.
A collective intake of breath
followed.
And nothing else. No explosion. Nothing.
Distantly, Mothma heard Wedge Antilles
say, “the cloaking device. He switched
on the cloaking device.”
Her knees nearly buckled. Only a lifetime spent in the public eye kept
her on her feet.
The com-unit spluttered into
life. A voice emerged, “this is Captain
Ifar of the Mircalla. We had a
blip on our sensors, might have been a cloaked ship. It’s gone now. He’s left
the system.”
General Rieekan sank down on a packing
crate. “Fuck,” he spat out. As far as Mon Mothma could remember, it was
the first time she had heard him use that word. “The bastard was bluffing after all.”
“Maybe not,” Calrissian said
ruefully. “Who knows what he’d have
done if Mon Mothma hadn’t sent that message.”
He looked down at his leg, to where a shard of plastisteel jutted from
the back of his thigh, just above the knee.
“Damn,” he said, in a tone of surprise.
“That hurts.”
Captain Faren whispered, “it’s over.”
“Not for Madine, it isn’t,” snapped
Rieekan.
Mon Mothma gazed up at the ruined
ceiling, into the rain. She thought,
I have to get to Piett. She had to
tell him what had happened here before he heard too many wild stories. Not that many stories could be wilder than
the truth.
And they had to see to their
wounded. And get this mess
repaired. And contact their allies and
ask them to be on the lookout for a kidnapped Rebel general.
She spoke into the com. “We need a medical team in Hangar One. All ground construction crews, report to
Hangar One at once.” She turned to
Commander Antilles. “Commander, we’ll
need to get these ships and equipment out of here while the repairs are going
on. Will you take charge of that?”
“Of course, Ma’am,” he said. She wasn’t sure how to interpret the
awkward, hesitant look on his face. Then
she remembered about his aborted rescue mission.
Oh, damn. They still had to decide – again – what, if anything, they could
do to rescue Lord Vader and the others.
But Captain Faren had been right.
For this moment, at least, one chapter
of the story was over.
I’m going to lose her.
The thought tore at Vader, as he
clenched his fists in useless fury.
He smashed one of those fists into the
cold, thick nothingness around him. As
before, the motion of his hand was arrested in mid-air.
One small rational portion of his mind
still saw everything in the room. It
saw Emperor Palpatine, standing casually a few metres away from Leia, Vader’s
retracted lightsaber held loosely in his right hand. Saw Leia, still crouched on the floor and clutching at her
severed right wrist.
But the rest of Vader’s mind saw only
his daughter’s terrified face. Her
face, and the images it conjured up.
He saw her disbelieving eyes and
parted lips as the exploding Alderaan, on the viewscreen, bathed her face in
sickly yellow light. He saw the icy
hatred in her eyes when he stepped into the conference room on the Rebel
flagship, to propose the New Alliance.
He saw her glorious smile and the love – gods, yes, love – in her
eyes just moments ago, when she had come to his rescue.
I love you, Leia. I will not lose you.
She seemed to be staring at the
Emperor. But somehow Vader knew that
she did not see him.
What was she seeing? What horrors were appearing before her eyes?
I should know. I must know.
Guiding his way with something beyond
conscious thought, he threw his mind into darkness. Darkness broken only by her face, and her huge, terror–stricken
eyes.
Leia. I love you. I love you.
Something broke.
His mind jolted. It was as if the bonds that had held him had
shrivelled into nothing. He felt like
himself again, and the sudden sensation of freedom was nearly intoxicating. But he didn’t have time to revel in it. He wondered if he had fully regained his
link to the Force, but he couldn’t stop long enough to find out.
From somewhere deep in his mind, he
heard Leia’s voice. And he followed.
He was standing in a sunlit room. He saw the pale gleaming stone of the walls,
the cluttered desk, and the familiar, slightly overweight man in the uniform of
the Royal House of Alderaan. But above
all, he saw her, her hair flowing loose over her back, in that white dress
she’d been wearing when he captured her flagship, five years before.
She clutched at the chest of Prince Bail Organa, and she
screamed, “Daddy, please, listen to me!”
Anger surged at him as he thought, she
shouldn’t call him that. She should be
saying that to me.
But her desperation and terror washed
over him in the wake of her words. The
emotions pounded through him as strongly as if they were his own. He took a step toward her. He wasn’t sure, but he thought he heard
himself say her name.
Bail Organa turned, and saw him. And yelled, “what are you doing in my
house?”
For a moment Vader simply stared.
Leia still had her hand on the
Prince’s chest, but she was gazing at Darth.
The sudden puzzlement he felt from her was mirrored in her eyes.
Slowly the terror in her aura started
to ebb. And Vader began to wonder what
the hell was going on.
No doubt this Prince Bail was an
illusion, but it was still damnably odd standing face to face with him. Though, Vader told himself, if
there’s anyone who should be used to encounters with dead men, it’s me.
He was startled to discover how clear
his memories of Organa were, now that he was confronted by their visual
embodiment.
He remembered the man’s eternal
stuffiness, that had made him seem middle-aged by the time he turned
twenty. Not for nothing had Bail been a
friend of Obi Wan Kenobi.
He remembered Bail’s grating
superiority, as if being born into royalty was his personal accomplishment.
And he remembered the prince’s habit
of yelling at the top of his lungs, every time he found himself in conversation
with Darth Vader.
In the last couple of years of Bail’s
life, Vader had taken to timing him, to see how long Prince Bail could last
through one of their conversations before he started shouting. On occasion Darth had sought out Bail
deliberately, for the sheer entertainment value of watching him lose his regal
cool.
This Bail Organa was almost certainly
illusion. But he behaved like the
genuine article.
“How dare you come into our home
unannounced? While your friend Tarkin
sits up there making threats? If you
have something to say to me, Vader, you should be man enough to say it without
your damned Death Star backing you up!”
Ah.
Now he knew.
He had a pretty good idea that if he
turned and looked out the window, he would see the first Death Star, gleaming
in the sunlit sky of Alderaan.
Tarkin. The Death Star. Leia’s
white dress.
And Leia’s world, just minutes – or
seconds – away from being destroyed.
“All right, damn you, say something!”
Bail shouted. “Your Master didn’t send
you all this way just to stand here looking sinister!”
No, he didn’t. He didn’t send me here. And while I stand here figuring out what to
do, Leia could die.
Leia was still staring at Vader, and
he could sense her emotions, as confusing a jumble as his own. He sensed fear, and despair, and hope, and
he was afraid to speculate on which of her emotions might be caused by his
presence here.
He tore his gaze away from Leia’s, and
addressed the illusion of Bail Organa.
“Your Highness, we don’t have time for this. I must speak with the Princess.”
Bail no longer shouted, but his voice
quivered with hatred. “You’ll do
nothing of the sort.” The prince turned
to his adoptive daughter, calming his face and voice with visible effort. “Leia, please leave. Whatever Lord Vader has to say can be said
to me.”
“No,” Vader said quietly. “I’m afraid it cannot.”
“Daddy, please,” whispered Leia, her
dark eyes fixed on Prince Bail in a way that made Vader realise she must be
trying to memorise his face. “I need to
speak with him.”
“You don’t have to do this,” Bail
insisted.
“Yes,” she said. “I do.”
She stepped away from Bail Organa,
toward Vader. Together they walked a
few metres more, toward the window.
Leia kept her gaze averted from the window, but Vader looked, and saw
the distant, dark orb of the Death Star.
He did not want to see it. It made him think too much of the thousands
of men who had served on that station.
The men who he had failed.
For a moment he felt the same alluring
temptation that Leia must be feeling.
The temptation to hope, to believe that the past could be changed. If he could get to the Death Star now, in
time to stop Alderaan’s destruction – then perhaps it would be easier for Leia
to accept him. And perhaps the Battle
of Yavin could be stopped as well.
Those 1,187,000 men under his command might live to see their families
again. Instead of becoming the glorious
martyrs of the Empire.
Leia touched his arm. “I thought -- ” she began, then she bit her
lip and looked down. She whispered, “I
wanted to think I could save them.”
“Them” as in Alderaan, Vader had to
remind himself. Not the men on the
Death Star.
Her beautiful face was turned up to
him again. He saw tears shimmering in
her eyes. “I wanted to believe it – I
wanted to so much -- ”
“Leia.” He was damned if he knew how to say this. But he had to say it anyway. “I can’t expect you to forgive me. For Alderaan. If I could stop it from happening, now, I would. Maybe that just makes it worse. But I need you to know. I am sorry.
For everything I’ve done to hurt you.”
“You don’t have to be,” she
murmured. “I’m just the same as you
are.”
He thought, I’d forgotten what it
feels like. To love someone so much
that it hurts. “No,” he told her,
“you’re not. But it’s sweet of you to
say it.”
Her gaze flickered down for another
moment, then returned to rest steadily on him.
“I can’t save them,” she said.
“Can I?”
“No.”
He closed his hand around hers.
“No more than I can save my men who died at Yavin.” A faint echo of all the fury and hatred that
he felt for Emperor Palpatine – for the years of disasters and insanity and the
lives that should not have been lost -- whispered through his mind. He thought he felt Leia’s own hatred, rising
to join with his. He said, “we can
still avenge them. All of them.”
His heart jolted with love at her
fierce little smile as she answered, “yes.”
“That’s enough, Vader.” He heard Bail Organa’s voice, and he
sighed. “Leia, get away from him,” the
Prince persisted. “I won’t let him hurt
you.” Vader wondered if this was
Palpatine’s way of getting involved, to try and trap Leia in her vision once
more. Or perhaps it was just the way
that Organa would act, if he were alive.
Leia squeezed Vader’s hand, and turned
to face her other father. “I -- ” she
began, then helplessly stopped.
“Leia, what is it? What’s happened?”
She glanced back at Vader, with a look
of apology. He touched her mind with
the thought, “it’s all right.”
She smiled at him, then let go of his
hand. And walked to Bail Organa.
Bail reached out and put his hands on
her arms, clutching her as if he never had to let go. “Leia, tell me. Let me
help. Please.”
She lifted one hand and brushed it
across his cheek. “I’m sorry,” she
whispered. “I’m so sorry.”
Vader watched, and forced himself not
to be angry at this man who had died, and would never hold her again.
Then the Prince and his palace and the
sunlight vanished.
Something smashed into Vader. It took him a second to realise that it was
he, in fact, who had fallen to the floor.
His body must have been fighting, all this time, against the power that
restrained it. Now that he had broken
through, his own momentum smacked him into the star marble floor of the
Imperial Great Hall.
He leapt to his feet.
Leia, he saw, was on her feet as
well. Luke’s green lightsaber arced
through the air and into the grasp of her one remaining hand.
“Well, Your Majesty?” she
taunted. “Don’t you have anything witty
to say?”
Palpatine snarled, a sound like ice
slicing through bone. His thoughts
activated the lightsaber in his grasp, and he hurled the crimson blade at Leia.
Again the green blade met the
red. As they touched, Vader saw his
lightsaber explode. It ignited the air
in front of Leia with a wall of red fire.
Vader’s mechanised breathing jolted in
a startled gasp.
He had never seen a lightsaber
exploded by the Force. Over the years
he had seen a couple of them demolished by blaster fire, and he had seen one
self-destruct and kill the trainee Jedi who’d been constructing it. But this –
The red flame leapt at Leia. Tendrils of it sprang from the wall of fire,
snaking around the saber in Leia’s hand.
Gleaming serpents of red light struck at her, twining about her
arms. She swung Luke’s lightsaber. Some of the red tendrils retreated into the
wall, but there were still others, circling her hand.
Vader thought, I have to get to her. And as he thought it, he was there.
They stood side by side. Vader reached out and joined his grasp to
Leia’s, his hand closing around the lightsaber hilt below hers.
Vader did not take his gaze from the
fire and the face of the Emperor beyond.
But he could feel Leia’s welcoming smile.
He felt her strength blending with
his. Then the glowing green blade of
Luke’s lightsaber seemed to shudder.
The light broke away from the cohesion of the blade, first in tiny
slivers, then in a sheet of flame.
The lightsaber’s hilt trembled in
Vader’s hand.
“Leia!” he shouted suddenly, “let go!”
She released the hilt at the same
instant he did. The hilt exploded,
vanishing in gleaming hail. And the
green fire spread, clinging to the red and pressing it back.
“So,” Palpatine hissed. “My servant has learned new tricks.”
Vader grated mockingly, “only trying
to live up to my Master.”
Palpatine’s voice was soft, and as
bitter as acid. “You will never learn
enough. My friend.”
He saw Palpatine’s face tighten in
concentration, and saw the distant glow in his yellow eyes.
The red flames leapt again, striking
through the green. Vader felt them
burning him, and he felt more. He felt
the control stick of his c-wing, slippery with blood, sliding loose from his
hand. Felt his slowly wakening horror
as he saw the top floor of a building rush up to meet him. As he realised that when he hit, his
c-wing’s power core was going to explode.
Beside him, he heard Leia scream,
“Han! No! No!”
He felt the c-wing hit. An impossible weight smashed into him from
behind, and fire closed around him. And
he heard Palpatine laugh.
And Vader thought, no, my
Master. Not this time.
From somewhere he heard
another voice. The voice of Senator
Diam Palpatine, twenty-five years ago, crying out, “dammit, Anakin, don’t do
this to me! Don’t make me lose the best
friend I’ve got.”
And Diam’s voice, again, asking, “don’t you want to see them fall? Don’t you want to be the one who pushed them
over the edge?”
This time it’s you, Diam,
thought Vader. I am going to see you
fall. We began this together, my
friend. Now it’s going to end.
Something closed around Vader’s
mechanical right hand. A presence
touched his mind, and he realised that Leia, at his side, had taken his hand in
hers.
The crimson flames still burned at his
mind, as he flung all his consciousness toward the Emperor’s yellow eyes.
Chapter 19
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