rogId content=Word.Document>
Chapter Two
"This is
insanity!" protested General Crix Madine.
Admiral Ackbar
sighed. "You've said that already,
General."
"I know I
have!" Madine raged.
"It'll be
fine, General," put in Lando Calrissian, with a confidence he most
definitely did not feel. "We've
got their shuttle monitored every step of the way. We'll know the second they try anything. All the Fighter squadrons are standing
by. There's no way they're gonna take
us by surprise."
Princess Leia
turned toward them from the panel where she'd been studying the readings on the
approaching Imperial shuttle.
"We're reading only three life-forms aboard," she said,
keeping her voice emotionless.
"There,
General, you see -- " Ackbar began.
"That doesn't
mean anything!" snapped Madine.
"He could have that ship crammed with assassin droids! We're inviting him in so he can wipe out our
senior officers at a single stroke!"
"I don't think
he needs assassin droids for that," Han Solo snorted. "I mean, he does have the Death Star
and twenty Star Destroyers."
Madine whirled away from Han abruptly, and Han felt a moment’s
disappointment that the movement hadn’t dislodged the General’s toupee.
"Even Darth
Vader would think twice about landing on an enemy ship if he intended
treachery,” pointed out Mon Mothma, Chief of State of the Rebel Alliance, her
pale face looking more gaunt than usual from the tension of the past day. "Even with a shuttle full of
assassin droids, he'd still be putting himself too much at risk."
"Hunh,"
grunted Madine, sullenly unconvinced.
"Admiral,"
called one of Ackbar's Mon Calamari officers, "the shuttle is approaching
the landing bay. They're requesting
clearance to dock."
The leaders of the
Rebel Alliance looked unhappily at each other.
At the far edge of the huge view port which dominated the bridge of the
Mon Calamari cruiser, they could see the three-winged Imperial Shuttle,
dropping gracefully out of sight as it headed toward their docking bay.
A great sigh
shuddered through Admiral Ackbar's body.
"Grant them clearance," he said. While Madine groaned theatrically and the others exercised
remarkable restraint in not telling him to shut up, Ackbar took up a hand-held
comlink, opening a channel to the officer who would have the dubious honour of
welcoming Darth Vader on board the Rebel flagship.
"Lieutenant
Toran, are your men ready?"
"Ready,
sir."
"Remember, you
are to make no hostile moves unless attacked.
This is a peace meeting.
You are sure your men understand that?"
"I'm sure, sir."
Ackbar sighed
again. Poor Lieutenant Toran. This was at least the fifth time Ackbar had
repeated the same orders to her.
"Very good," Ackbar said.
He closed the link and said to his companions, "shall we proceed to
the conference chamber?"
No one looked
pleased at the prospect, but they nodded.
Ackbar led the party from the bridge, followed by Mon Mothma, Lando,
Madine, Leia and Han. Madine was
scowling furiously. Han held back
slightly, touching Leia's hand and whispering, "if Madine says anything
more about assassin droids, Vader won't need to kill him. I'll blast him myself."
"I don't
know," muttered Leia, "he's a pain all right, but I can't say I blame
him. I think I agree with him."
"What, that
Vader's taking his assassin droids out for a killing spree?"
"No, not about
the assassin droids," she said impatiently. "I just -- I don't know." She smiled palely up at him.
"I've got a bad feeling about this."
"Who
doesn't?" Han asked.
In the conference
chamber, most of which was taken up by an elongated oval table, the six Rebel
leaders waited. Mon Mothma, pristine in
her white robes, sat at one far end of the table, with Ackbar at her right and
Madine at her left. Lando took the
chair next to Ackbar, and sat, absently drumming his fingers on the table until
he realised what he was doing and stopped.
Leia sat down next to Madine, who managed to remove the scowl from his
face long enough to smile at her. Han
remained standing behind the chair at Leia's other side. He had an appalling urge to start chewing
his fingernails, and jammed his hands into his pockets instead.
Then the door
swished open, and Han's stomach did an alarming somersault. He didn't dare to look at the others, but
was sure they felt exactly as he did.
Two Rebel soldiers
stepped through the door, positioning themselves at either side and standing at
attention. They were followed into the
room by the slim, black-clad Luke Skywalker, and Han heard Leia give a little
gasp of relief. Luke cast Leia and Han
an apologetic grimace which was probably meant to be a smile, then he bowed his
head to Mon Mothma and the others.
After a brief hesitation, he took his place standing behind one of the
chairs at the other end of the table.
Next into the chamber was a thin-faced, nervous-looking man in Imperial
uniform, who also bowed slightly to the Rebel leaders. Like Luke, he stood behind one of the far
chairs, leaving one chair ominously empty between them.
The intended
occupant of the third chair strode into the room. The door whooshed shut behind him.
It was a good thing
they had all received strict orders not to bring any weapons, or Han would have
reached for his blaster and fired, peace conference or no peace
conference. Not that he thought it
would have done him any good. He'd
tried shooting Darth Vader before.
Vader paused just
inside the conference chamber. One of
the two guards, standing only inches away from Vader, began to sweat, but the
Dark Lord was paying no attention to him.
He was looking instead at Princess Leia. Slowly, with the appearance of perfect calm, Leia stood, staring
back at the Lord of the Sith. She was
standing so close to Han that their sides touched, and Han could feel her
shivering.
In the few seconds
before anyone spoke, realisations tumbled over each other into Vader’s mind.
Gazing at Leia, he
thought, why didn't I notice before how beautiful she is?
Well, he had
known she was attractive, in a vague sort of way, but he'd never paid much
attention to her. Just an irritating
little brat playing at politics, and too short for his tastes, anyway. But now ... now she was his irritating
little brat. And she wasn't just
playing at politics any more, she was a brilliant stateswoman with a glorious
career ahead of her. And she was
gorgeous. Although, he admitted,
I suppose I'm biased in my opinions.
Leia was clearly
intending to stand on her regal dignity. Her head was held high, her chin
stubbornly set, her lips clamped together.
Only her eyes seemed alive, and they threw out sparks of defiance. She was not as calm as she looked, of
course. Vader could see her fists
trembling slightly, and he could feel the tightly controlled fear and anger
that enveloped her.
Then he realised,
with an abrupt jump in his own stress level, that the expression on her face
was precisely the look his late wife used to get when steeling herself
for some conflict with him.
Leia's features, he
decided as he studied her, were not that similar to Shura's, although her hair
and eyes, he thought now, were much the same.
But with that look on her face, she seemed almost identical.
I am a fool, not to
have seen it before.
Of course, one does
not generally expect that a political opponent whom one is persecuting will
turn out to be the daughter one never knew existed.
"Lord
Vader," Leia greeted him coldly, her voice as taut as the aspect of her
face.
"Princess
Leia," Vader responded. And he
thought, has any other man had such a poor start at getting to know his
children? How does one build a
trusting relationship when one has destroyed one's daughter's planet -- well,
stood by and let the planet be destroyed, anyhow, which I’m sure she thinks is
bad enough -- and had her submitted to a mind-probe? Not to mention, of course, torturing the man
she loves and turning him over to a bounty hunter, trying to kill her brother,
etc., but let's not go into that.
Belatedly, Mon
Mothma stood and inclined her head civilly to Vader. "Lord Vader," she said. "Thank you for coming.
Please, have a seat."
"Thank
you. I thank you all for agreeing to
meet with me."
Vader crossed to
the seat left open for him. Standing
with his hands on the back of the chair, he said, "you know Commander
Skywalker, of course. May I present
Admiral Grigori Piett, my second-in-command."
Assorted Rebel
leaders nodded to Piett, then Vader and his two companions took their
seats. Mon Mothma introduced her own
companions. "General Lando
Calrissian, Admiral Ackbar, General Crix Madine, Princess Leia Organa, General
Han Solo. And I am Mon Mothma."
She sat as well, followed a moment later by Leia, and then by Han, who
sat glowering belligerently at Vader.
"Luke,"
Vader said, "you are better placed than the rest of us to understand both
sides in this meeting. Perhaps you
could begin by explaining what has brought us here."
Luke
swallowed. He'd known Vader was going
to ask him that, they'd discussed it, but he still felt incapable of explaining
anything. He felt like a traitor, too,
with his friends turning those hostile stares on him. He desperately wished he were sitting on the other side of the
room.
He nodded. "I know what's happening must be hard
to accept, for all of us," he said.
Damn, that sounded inadequate! Just
stick to the facts, Luke, he thought, before you make more of a fool of
yourself than you already have.
"Yesterday," he said, "I was taken prisoner and brought
before the Emperor, on the Death Star.
The Emperor had a proposition for me.
He wanted me to join him."
Luke caught a doubtful glance from Han, and realised with embarrassment
that Han must be thinking something along the lines of, "yeah right, like
the Emperor really needs to join forces with the farm boy from
Tatooine." Forging on, Luke
explained, "he knew of my training with the Force, and thought that with
further development of my powers, I could be useful to him. I refused to join him, and --" and
how do I describe what happened next? "He
began shooting me with lightning bolts" doesn't quite get
across the intensity of the experience!
" -- and he decided that I was expendable. He began to torture me. He would have killed me. Lord Vader intervened." Luke saw his friends casting surprised looks
at Vader, but he hurried on. "Lord
Vader and the Emperor fought.
Unfortunately the Emperor escaped.
We believe that he teleported out of the throne room, into his shuttle,
and fled the Death Star. It was then
that Lord Vader contacted you, requesting a cease-fire." Luke turned to his father, thinking, please,
let that be all the speaking I have to do today!
Vader took
over. "Luke is not telling quite
all that happened. I may have saved his
life, but in our fight with the Emperor, he also saved mine." There was a pause, while the Dark Lord
seemed to collect his thoughts.
"The events of
yesterday forced me to face concerns that I had held for some time. You all know," he said, steadily,
"that I have served the Emperor for many years. Some of you may see me as
the face of the Empire. But in recent
years, I have begun to feel the same doubts as many of you have felt since the
Empire's foundation. The Emperor's
sanity is toppling. His megalomania has taken him too far, and your Rebellion is
the natural response to his lunacy. The
Empire will perish, with the Alliance destroying it from without and degeneracy
dismantling it from within. This second
Death Star is only the most obvious symptom of the Emperor's inability to face
reality."
Vader gazed at each
of the representatives of the Rebellion in turn. "To you," he said, "the Empire must seem only a
vast, faceless horde, which flings opponents at you as swiftly as you can kill
them. I have seen other facets of the
Empire. I have seen the devastation
caused by your heroic exploits, but worse, I have seen the demoralisation that
is inevitable in a conscript army, in which proper training and support systems
are neglected in a mad scramble to build bigger weapons, terrorise more star
systems, and convince the galaxy that the Empire is invincible -- when, in
fact, it is steadily collapsing."
Mon Mothma said,
"it has taken you long enough to face these doubts of yours, Lord
Vader."
"Yes," he
said, seemingly unoffended by her interjection, "it has. Power is never easy to give up. So long as I was not suffering, it was a
simple matter to ignore those who were.
But yesterday I had to make a choice.
Now I cannot turn back. The
Emperor will not forgive me, nor would I wish him to. I must either become a fugitive from his vengeance, or I must
take a stand against him."
He paused again.
"I wish to join you," he said.
"I realise this will not be easy.
You will not wish to welcome the enemy into your midst, and my presence
among you may seem more trouble than it is worth. But I assure you, it is worth the trouble. I do not come into this bargain
alone." He turned to Piett. "Admiral Piett," he said politely,
"if you please."
Piett stood,
without making any sudden moves that might distress the armed guards at the
door, and removed from his breast pocket two recording disks. He crossed to the other end of the table,
handing one of the disks to Mon Mothma.
"Ma'am," Piett said.
"These are the specifications and crew manifests of the Imperial
ships stationed at Endor, and this," he handed her the second disk,
"is the petition of the officers who wish to join the Rebel
Alliance." Piett was conscious of
all the Rebels gaping at him, and he certainly didn't blame them; everyone
involved in this was going to be doing a lot of open-mouthed staring for a long
time to come.
He continued, as if
six people weren't staring at him in shock, "twenty Star Destroyers were
sent to Endor. Two were destroyed in
the battle yesterday. There are still eighteen,
which will become the property of the Rebellion if you accept Lord Vader's
proposals. With the Star Destroyers, of
course, comes all of their weaponry and fighter complement, along with each
Destroyer's assault troop vehicles and other craft. You'll find these detailed in the first of those
disks." He looked at Vader, who
nodded, and Piett returned to his seat.
"What are
your proposals, Lord Vader?" asked Admiral Ackbar.
"I wish to
join you," Vader repeated, "and I will place myself under your
command. As you will see from the
second disk, the commanding officers of sixteen of our Star Destroyers wish to
accompany me. I do not propose to
compel anyone to switch sides. You have
no need for reluctant followers. All
officers and men must choose freely, and the first of my demands is that those
who do not wish to join the Alliance be given safe conduct out of this
system. The Star Destroyers will remain
at your disposal, but I believe we can spare enough transport ships for those
who do not choose to join us. My second
demand" -- Vader had noticed that Madine winced in annoyance when he used
the word "demand", so he took particular pleasure in using it again
-- "is that all those who do join tthe Alliance be granted equal
opportunity within your ranks. I realise
it will take some time to integrate our forces; that is unavoidable. But the attempt must be made. Above all, none of those who join you are to
be prosecuted for actions which took place when they served the Empire. If we are to work together, we must put the
past behind us, impossible though that may now seem."
Leia put in
sweetly, a hint of danger lurking in her tone, "this freedom from
prosecution is to extend to you as well, Lord Vader?"
"Naturally,"
he said. "It would be expecting
too much of the most idealistic man to ask that he give his all for a
government which will then put him on trial.
I am not the most idealistic man.
But when I say I will do something, I do it. I say that I will serve the Alliance faithfully and
honourably."
Leia's eyebrows
leapt up her forehead.
"Honourably," she echoed, in an ironic whisper.
Mon Mothma said,
"thank you for your proposals, Lord Vader. We will consider them carefully.
You understand that this is not a decision we can take lightly. As valued as your assistance would be, there
may be others on whom we rely who would desert us when it became known that you
were among our ranks."
Leia asked, her
voice still soft with that dangerous sweetness, "how does a Rebellion
which claims to champion the rights of all sentient beings justify its alliance
with a tyrant and murderer?"
Admiral Ackbar
shifted uneasily in his chair. Mon
Mothma closed her eyes briefly, and Han began, "uh, Leia ...", only
to be silenced by a glare from the Princess.
Vader's gaze
focused solely on Leia. "I have
killed many," he said. "I do
not deny my actions or defend them. I
do, however, object to being accused by those who have committed the same
actions. Admiral Piett," he asked
casually, "I wonder if you recall how many letters of condolence you have
written to the families of stormtroopers killed by Princess Leia?"
This was not
exactly a fair question. Vader knew
full well that the letters of condolence were written automatically, in a
standard format, as soon as the casualty reports came in, with a
computer-generated version of Piett's signature added to the end of them. Perversely, Vader's question made Piett feel
guilty, wishing that he'd composed every letter personally. If I had, though, I'd have had time for
nothing else. Blushing, and angry
with himself for doing so, Piett said brusquely, "I don't remember the
exact numbers, My Lord. It was, of
course, always impossible to be sure which troopers were killed by the Princess
and which by her companions."
Fair question or
not, it had the desired effect.
Princess Leia blushed deeply, and looked quickly away from Vader. Tears welled up in her eyes.
In the
uncomfortable silence, it was General Madine who jumped to her defence. "Your analogy is false and unjust, Lord
Vader," he snapped. "Princess
Leia is no murderer. It was war."
"Yes,"
said Vader. "It was. But there need no longer be war between
us."
"Lord
Vader," said Lando Calrissian, cutting off the growth of another uneasy
pause, "please don't be offended at what I'm going to say. But, frankly, how can we trust you? Some of us have had dealings with you
before. Your traps have always been
well thought out. How do we know this
isn't another of them?"
"What do you
perceive I am trying to lure you into?" Vader inquired.
"If we accept
you and your fleet, you could destroy us easily. Wait till we lead you to our headquarters, then wipe it out and
the Rebellion with it."
"Calrissian's
right," Madine said, predictably.
"You may place
your own crews on board the Star Destroyers," Vader said, as calm as
ever. "Your concern is reasonable,
but if there is enough integration of our fleets, the risk of such a betrayal
would be minimised."
"Lord
Vader," came the guttural tones of Admiral Ackbar, "I think we must
have other similar concerns. Even if we
were not at immediate risk of attack, how could we know that you and your men
were not spying upon us? It would be
very simple for each of our moves to be betrayed to the Emperor."
"You are
correct, Admiral. The only way to prove
our loyalty is to try us. When we have
fought at your side against the Emperor, perhaps then you may begin to trust
us. But let me say this. Once you have accepted our allegiance, it
would be in none of our interests to see the Emperor retain power. Palpatine is not a reasonable man. He is not easy on those he sees as traitors,
even if they subsequently assist him.
Every man who leaves the Imperial forces to join you faces torture and
execution if he falls back into the Emperor's hands."
"Yes,"
said Leia, "unless this was planned by the Emperor all along. Why should you suddenly care for oppressed
worlds and butchered stormtroopers?
Your change of heart is very convenient. Convenient and not quite
believable, unless you're acting under Palpatine's orders."
"Leia,"
began Luke, "you don't understand -- "
"It is a valid
point," said Mon Mothma, cutting across Luke's protest. "I am sorry, Lord Vader, but I don’t
see how we can take the risk of trusting you.
Too many lives depend on our decision."
Rather than
answering directly, Vader turned and looked at Luke. Luke hesitated, then nodded firmly. This also they had discussed.
It was time for the final argument. Leia, thought Luke, I'm sorry. But someday you'll forgive me, and forgive him too.
"I will not
betray the Rebellion," Vader said quietly, turning back to the
Rebels. "I cannot. You ask me to explain my change of
heart. There is an explanation, and it
means that even if you reject me today, I will not raise my hand against the
Alliance again."
Now what? wondered
Piett. This was an aspect of Vader's
plan that hadn't been discussed with him.
Piett thought, if he doesn't go into politics, maybe Vader could
become an actor. That honest,
strong voice, with a hint of emotion trembling at the edges of it, was almost
irresistibly convincing. It certainly
didn't sound like Darth Vader.
Darth Vader said,
"Luke Skywalker is my son."
Admiral Piett felt
his jaw drop once again. Across the
table, Admiral Ackbar, Mon Mothma and General Madine jumped to their feet, with
startled exclamations. General Calrissian,
Princess Leia and General Solo remained seated, all three looking very grim.
Vader continued,
"I did not know of his existence until the Battle of Yavin. When I did learn who he was, my hope was
originally to bring him into the service of the Emperor. I tried to convince him to join the
Empire. I failed. As I formulated my arguments to Luke, their
weaknesses became more and more clear to me.
I had nothing to offer him. The
Empire offered nothing. Then,
yesterday, I had to choose between my Emperor and my son."
A touch of bitter
amusement entered his voice. "You
may not think me an ideal parent. Very
well, I am not. I am not even a 'good'
man, and discovering fatherhood will probably not bring out any lurking
goodness from within me. But it was my
own child dying before me. I could not
let him die."
No one spoke. There was no sound, except for the steady
wheeze of Vader's mechanized breathing.
It was Vader, at
last, who spoke again.
"No parents
want their children to be ashamed of them," he said, "still less to
hate them. Your best guarantee of my
loyalty is here. I want my family back. I want the chance to be part of their lives,
and not as an enemy. If I betray you, I
lose that chance forever. That will not
happen."
Vader turned to his
son and held one black-gloved hand to Luke.
Luke, without hesitation this time, clasped his father's hand. He was looking at Leia as he did so, and as
his grasp tightened on Vader's hand, Luke saw tears escape from his sister's
eyes.
Admiral Piett was
beginning to see why no one had made peace with the Rebels before. It involved too much talking.
This was the fifth
meeting he had attended that day, in his new and rather peculiar-feeling role as
Lord Vader’s sidekick. Vader and Piett
were standing in the briefing room off the bridge of the Executor,
staring down at the blueprints and readouts on the holographic projection table
while various old and new colleagues presented reports, questions and
complaints. One Rebel Captain, a podgy,
sandy-haired man with a nose like a Thalaxian slug, was saying, "but,
wouldn't it be wiser to keep the Death Star operational? It would give us a great advantage ...
"
Standing across the
briefing table from him, the leader of the x-wing squadron that had been
assigned to the Executor snapped, "after all we've gone through to
destroy that thing? You want us to keep
it?"
Vader queried,
"what exactly would you have us do with the Death Star, Captain? Turn it into a holiday resort?"
The Captain looked
taken aback, obviously trying to decide whether or not Darth Vader was capable
of making a joke. "Uh, I just
meant, with all the technology that's gone into it, surely it could be useful
to us -- "
"There are
crews of technicians engaged in removing those parts that are recyclable and
easily portable," Piett put in, telling the Captain something he should
have known already.
Vader added,
smoothly baiting the Rebel Captain, "I'm surprised that you would think of
keeping the Death Star in use, Captain.
I should have thought it was a symbol of the Empire with which the
Rebellion would not wish to be identified." While the confused Captain
struggled to think of something to say, Vader went on, "Lieutenant, what
is the status of the crew transfers?"
Before the
Lieutenant he had addressed could answer, Vader suddenly held up one hand. His stance had become alert and tense, as he
seemed to listen to something none of the others could hear. "Something is wrong," he murmured,
almost to himself, then without warning he turned and strode from the briefing
room.
The officers who
remained around the projection table looked at each other helplessly. Someone gave a nervous laugh, which made
Piett wish that he could do Vader's strangling trick. The x-wing commander stared in the direction Vader had gone, then
asked Piett, "does he always do that?"
His designation as
Vader's second-in-command meant that the Rebels were constantly turning to
Piett as a Darth Vader expert. For the
sake of the new alliance, he had thus far managed to restrain himself from
telling them any horror stories.
"No," said Piett, "he usually doesn't walk out on
meetings." Of course, he
added silently, he usually doesn't have meetings, he just strangles
people. But I don't really think you
want me to share that with you just now.
"Well,"
said the Rebel Captain who’d suggested retaining the Death Star, his voice
conveying disdain for Lord Vader and his eccentric habits, "shall we
continue our meeting? We can fill His
Lordship in on any decisions if he deigns to rejoin us."
"No,"
Piett said flatly. "If Vader's
worried about something, we should be too."
He turned from the
table and followed Vader onto the bridge.
Out of curiosity, the others trailed after him.
Vader was standing
behind two crewmen who were seated at a tracking screen. The crewmen were moving swiftly, calling up
a rapid series of readings and projections, and seemed on the brink of panic --
as was only natural with Darth Vader looming over them.
The object they
were monitoring was the Death Star.
And, as he crossed to stand beside Vader, Piett realised exactly what
the problem was. "They're powering
up their hyperdrive," Piett whispered.
"Yes,"
said Vader, his dark tone implying a great deal of suffering for whoever was
responsible. "Attempt to contact
them," he ordered one of the crewmen.
The crewman
obeyed. "They're jamming our
transmission, My Lord," he reported hoarsely.
From another of the
bridge's control panels, a crewmember called, "Lord Vader, message coming
in for you from Admiral Ackbar. I'm
routing it to your position."
Seconds later, the monitor at the top left corner of the tracking screen
lit up, and Ackbar's orange, bulging-eyed visage appeared. Piett wondered if he was getting better at
reading Mon Calamari facial expressions, or if it was just a logical assumption
to think that the Admiral was looking stressed.
"Lord
Vader! The Death Star's engines --
"
"I know. It should take them another six to seven
minutes to prepare their hyperdrive generator."
"Do you know
who's behind this -- ?"
"Whoever it
is, it is our responsibility to stop them."
"We don't have
the time to launch an assault -- "
"Nor would we
wish to wipe out your technicians aboard," Vader reminded him. "Be calm, Admiral, they will not get
far. I will ensure that we can track
them; I suggest you move the fleet away before they jump into hyperspace."
Switching to
another channel in the middle of a splutter from Ackbar, Vader stated,
"Hangar Twelve, this is Darth Vader.
Prepare a TIE-bomber for immediate launch." He began striding
toward the lift. As he passed the Rebel
x-wing commander, Vader said to him, "you're with me. Can your squadron be launched immediately?"
"Uh -- yes, My
Lord." They'd only arrived on the Executor
half an hour before.
"See to
it. Start launch procedures and summon
the pilots to meet us at the launching bay."
Paling visibly, the
shortish, dark-haired man froze for a moment, then he rapidly sent the required
messages. He cut off the transmission
as one of his pilots started squawking out a demand for explanation. Luckily, most of the squadron were probably
with their ships already, still grumblingly seeing to their x-wings' instalment
in hangars that had been designed for TIE-fighters. Well, now they'd just have to un-install them. Guess we're getting this alliance off to
an action-packed start! he thought.
He hurried to catch up with Vader.
The Dark Lord
directed the lift to take them to the launch bay. "Commander Antilles, isn't it?" he then asked his
companion.
Wedge Antilles
gulped. "That's right, My
Lord." He must have one hell of
a memory, Wedge thought. We were
only introduced once, and he must have met three hundred people today. At least.
"You were at
the Battle of Yavin. In Luke's
squadron, I believe."
"Uh, yes,
that's right." And you nearly
shot me down. What happy memories we
could share together.
"I am going to
attach a homing beacon to the Death Star," Vader informed him. "Unfortunately, our missile-mounted
beacons must be launched at very close range.
Unless you have more long-range models --?"
"No, My Lord,
sorry." Actually, we don't have
any missile-mounted homing beacons at all.
"Very
well. I will launch the beacon from one
of our bombers; I count on your squadron to provide back-up."
When they reached
the launching bay, the scene was predictably chaotic. Vader headed straight for his waiting bomber, while Wedge was
surrounded by loudly protesting pilots.
"Don't ask any
questions!" Wedge yelled.
"The Death Star's going into Hyperspace in five minutes; we've got
to attach a homing beacon. Lord Vader's
going to launch the beacon, we're going to cover him. That's all; into your ships now!"
Most of the pilots,
used to acting on very short notice, scattered toward their x-wings. One held back, asking, "er, sir, are
the Death Star's weapons operational?"
"We'll find
out, won't we?" snapped Wedge.
As Wedge scrambled
into the pilot's seat, powered up the fighter and gave a distracted response to
his astromech droid's burble of greeting, he heard over the comlink the voice
of Darth Vader. Unbelievably, Vader
seemed to be in conversation with the idiot pilot who'd asked about the Death Star's
weapons.
Vader was saying
dryly, "the Superlaser should be unable to target vessels this small,
unless you sit still for it. Which I
trust you will not."
Another of the
x-wing pilots chimed in, "great, so that just leaves a few thousand
turbolasers and cannons."
"Ten thousand
turbolaser batteries, and two thousand five hundred each of laser and ion
cannons," Vader told him helpfully.
"Although you may have taken out a few in your recent attack."
Nice of him to
mention that, thought Wedge.
"Okay," Wedge broke in on the conversation, "so let's
take out a few more!"
The vast door of
the launch bay stood open before them.
Vader's TIE-bomber was already rising toward it, probably a lot faster
than safety specs encouraged. This
is certainly the most sketchily-planned assault in history, Wedge thought,
as he followed Vader out of the bay, with the other x-wings taking off all
around him. He'd just have to rely on
his men's experience and instincts, and hope it pulled them through this. Well, hopefully they wouldn't use their
instincts too much, he amended that thought. Instinct, for instance, would tell them to shoot down the bomber
ahead of them.
Wedge eyed the
bomber with interest as he zoomed along after it. It was a clumsy-looking thing, twice as broad as the usual
TIE-fighters, with apparently two cockpits -- one, he guessed, for housing its
various missiles. Vader sure wasn't
flying it clumsily, though. And damn,
it was fast! Too fast. They weren't going to be giving Vader much
cover if he completely out-ran them.
Wedge thought, with sudden excitement, hey, when we get back I could
have a look inside that thing! He
was beginning to see a whole new dimension to this crazy alliance. So what if they all had to argue a lot and
sit through innumerable meetings. The
entire Imperial Fleet -- well, okay, most of it -- was suddenly theirs. No more scrounging for equipment, no more
constructing ships out of spare parts that didn't go together. He saw an entrancing vista of Star
Destroyers and bombers and AT-AT Walkers
-- they ought to do something with the Walkers, he thought, to
distinguish them from those that still belonged to the Empire. Paint big smiles on their snouts, maybe, or
moustaches. And the Star
Destroyers. Maybe they should paint
"fuck off, Palpatine" along the tops of them.
Of course, he and
his x-wing were going to be painted all over the Death Star if he didn't start
paying attention to what he was doing.
He felt a familiar sinking in his stomach as he eyed their rapidly
approaching target. Every time he
attacked this thing -- and he seemed to be doing so on a regular basis -- he
realised that he'd blocked out of his mind just how huge a monstrosity
it actually was. This one was even
bigger than the one they'd fought at Yavin, apparently, but Wedge couldn't
tell; he just always looked at it and thought big, and then, oh shit,
we are dead.
So far, the Death
Star didn't seem to be reacting to their approach; maybe they were too small to
bother with.
That, of course,
was wishful thinking. Just as the
thought passed through Wedge's mind, a turbolaser battery sprang into life and
spat out flame at Vader's bomber.
The bomber swerved,
then sprang away vertically to avoid a shot from one of the two thousand five
hundred laser cannons. Vader continued
a dizzying course, twisting away from countless shots that seemed to pass only
inches from him, and occasionally taking the trouble to fire back.
Wedge was inside
the Death Star's range now. He went in
firing, targeting an ion cannon and grinning as it disappeared in a very
satisfactory explosion. Wedge swooped
after Vader's bomber, following a similar swerving course, and firing randomly
at the batteries and cannons that they passed.
How close does Vader need to get? He wondered. I know
he said this missile was short-range, but really! He's just showing off now, isn't he?
For an instant
Wedge really thought Vader was going to collide with the Death Star. At the last possible second the bomber
veered away again.
Wedge heard Vader's
voice through his comlink. "Got
it!" At that moment the Dark Lord sounded very human, hardly menacing at
all. Wedge was about to yell back congratulations, when Vader's voice came more
urgently, "pull back! It's jumping
into Hyperspace. Pull back!"
Wedge obeyed. His x-wing lurched away from the Death Star,
the astromech droid protesting wildly in a series of electronic squeals. And then something hit them. At first it felt like the x-wing was being
shoved by a gigantic hand. Then the
force changed direction and the hand reached out and grabbed them, pulling them
back. The x-wing shuddered. Wedge was convinced it was going to break
apart. Or else I'm going to explode
first, Wedge thought, as an agonising pressure built up inside his skull.
And the hand let
go.
The x-wing
spiralled into an out-of-control dive, and Wedge struggled to bring it back on
course. That can't have been good
for the Endor Moon's ecosystems, Wedge realised distractedly, having
something that big go into Hyperspace from orbit. They're probably having tidal waves and earthquakes and
Firelord knows what else.
Back in control,
Wedge was hit by nausea and a fit of the shivers. Right, that's it, he thought. I'm retiring, right now.
Never setting one foot into space again.
"Are you still
with us, Commander?"
It almost didn't
feel weird any more to realise that the voice coming through his comlink
belonged to Darth Vader.
"Yeah,"
Wedge gasped out. "You in one
piece?"
"Just,"
Vader replied. "I believe your
squadron has come through intact.
Impressive flying, I congratulate you."
"Yeah. You too!" As he piloted his x-wing back toward the Star Destroyer Executor,
Wedge realised there was a huge, stupid grin on his face. The Dark Lord of the Sith had complimented
his squadron! Now there was
something to write home about.
And he was
definitely going to convince the Dark Lord to let him have a look at the
innards of that TIE-bomber.
"There! You see!
I told you he'd come back!"
"Yeah, yeah,
okay, kid, you told us."
"And you said
he was trying to run away with the Death Star," Luke said scornfully.
"Okay, okay,
you don't have to sound so smug about it." But, reflected Han, Luke did have a right to feel smug,
and who could blame him? That was
Luke's father who'd just pulled off the craziest bit of piloting that Han had
ever seen performed by anyone but Han himself.
The kid had every right to feel proud of him. Although, Han thought, it must be pretty tough trying to decide
whether to feel proud or to feel suicidally depressed that his father was Darth
Vader.
They were in the
circular briefing room below the bridge of the Mon Calamari flagship. The holograph table had been linked to pick
up the images on the main viewscreen, and they had been anxiously following
Vader and Red Squadron's race to the Death Star. Actually, Luke, Han and Admiral Ackbar had been following it. Leia had been sitting on one of the benches
that circled the briefing room's perimeter, chewing at her thumbnails and
refusing to meet anyone's gaze. She now
managed a very pallid smile for Luke's benefit, then went back to scowling at
the floor.
"Admiral,"
one of Ackbar's officers informed him, handing Ackbar a readout pad, "the Executor
has sent us the co-ordinates of the Death Star's location. They must have come out of Hyperspace almost
as soon as they went in."
Ackbar opened a
channel to the Executor.
"Admiral Piett," Ackbar greeted the now familiar face that
appeared on the screen. "You're
reading that the Death Star has come out of Hyperspace?"
"That's
right. We think the Death Star must be
damaged. They should never have
attempted the jump to Hyperspace with the station only half complete. We plan to follow them in the Executor;
if you approve, of course. If you could
perhaps send one or two cruisers to accompany us ...?"
"Very
well. I'll notify the Hope and
the Shador to join you."
Ending the transmission, Ackbar said wearily, "don't start,
Princess. You and General Madine will
tell me it's a trap, that the Death Star and the Executor will turn on
our ships and destroy them. I will take
full responsibility, but I don't care to argue about this again."
"I wasn't
going to say anything," Leia said flatly.
Han looked at her with worry.
Ever since the peace meeting with Vader, Leia had seemed to close out
the rest of the galaxy, emerging occasionally to make some cynical comment or
suggest that Vader was betraying them, then disappearing back into her sullen contemplation. It wasn't the Leia they knew at all, and Han
didn't like it. Leia could certainly be
a bitch, but at least you knew where you stood when she was screaming at you. This depression, Han didn't know how to deal
with.
On the Rebel
cruiser Shador, Captain Bailey received his orders and wished that he
could stop the palms of his hands from sweating. The Shador had only barely avoided being annihilated by
the Death Star's Superlaser in the battle two days ago, when the Liberty
was destroyed. Bailey had no desire to
give the Superlaser another shot. He
looked grimly at Commander Luxar, the Imperial who'd been assigned as his new
second-in-command. They'd been getting
along fairly well, and had shared a very enjoyable dinner last night, at which
they had both drunk too much while reminiscing about student life at the
Academy. Bailey had left before
graduation to join the Rebellion, while Luxar had gone straight from graduation
to a post on the Emperor's flagship, but they found that their Academy
experiences had been much the same.
This still did not stop Bailey from worrying that his new friend Luxar
might be about to blast him in the back.
"The Executor
has sent us these jump co-ordinates," reported Luxar. He handed over the figures so that Bailey
could assure himself the treacherous Imperials weren't trying to make them jump
into a planet, or straight into the Death Star.
Bailey studied the
figures, and glanced over the work of the crewmen who were entering in the
hyperdrive calculations. "Thank
you. Inform the Executor we are
ready to jump on their mark."
The order
came. Bailey watched the forward
viewscreen as the stars melted into the familiar gleaming trails of
Hyperspace. The jump was ludicrously
short. Almost immediately, they were
back in normal space, and staring at a scene of devastation which emerged on
their screen.
"Will you look
at that," Luxar breathed in awe.
"That piece of junk was supposed to save the Empire?"
The Death Star was
falling apart before their eyes.
The unfinished
sections of the station had obviously been unable to withstand the pressures of
Hyperspace. One half of the huge globe
was literally crumbling away, massive chunks of the hull and the station's
metal skeleton tearing loose with ponderous slowness and then drifting lazily
into space. Bailey hoped there had not
been anyone in those sections of the Death Star. It was a concept he did not want to think about.
The bridge of the Executor
was also peopled by men who were staring at the disintegrating Death
Star. A re-assigned Rebel officer
wondered aloud, "what idiot thought he could take that thing into
Hyperspace?"
"Jerjerrod,"
came the angry voice of Darth Vader, almost in a whisper.
"I beg your
pardon, My Lord?" asked Piett, standing next to him.
"Jerjerrod,"
said Vader. "That is the idiot in
question."
"Lord
Vader!" a crewman yelped.
"They're targeting and powering up the Superlaser!"
Vader made no
reply. He seemed to have tuned them out
again. Nervously Piett said, "take
evasive action," hoping that Vader would not be aggrieved with him for
daring to give an order. It was, after
all, the obvious order to give.
"There is no
danger," Vader told Piett in a now remarkably calm, conversational
tone. "He has merely made another
mistake."
The Executor
soared into a rapidly altered course.
The cannon well of the Superlaser was suddenly ablaze with light, as the
eight beams came together in the laser's central crystal.
The Superlaser fired. And the well surrounding it started to
collapse.
The blast shot
wildly away, far from the Executor and its two companions. A few isolated cheers were heard on the
bridge of the Executor, but most of the crew were watching in
overwhelmed silence. The devastation
was spreading, as if the Death Star were being devoured by some invisible
monster. Vast chunks of the station
broke loose as the monster began to munch on the Superlaser's well.
"Attempt to
contact them," Vader ordered, a sardonic note to his voice. "Ask if they require assistance."
Almost immediately,
the Death Star responded. A
dishevelled, wild-eyed officer appeared on the screen, his hair soaking with
blood that then trickled down one side of his face. "Lord Vader!" he gasped. "Thank the gods!"
If Vader found it
amusing that an officer was pleased to hear from him for once, he did not
comment. "Captain Faren," he
replied, and only then did Piett recognise in this battered figure the normally
dapper young Chief of Station Security.
"What is your situation?"
"Massive hull
breaches in the eastern hemisphere.
We've got the western hemisphere sealed off, but I don't know how long
it will hold. Can you spare any
transports? There's still a lot of crew
on board -- "
"We will see
to it immediately, Captain. If you can
guarantee that the transports will not be fired upon ... "
"Already taken
care of sir," Faren reported, bitter satisfaction on his face. "Commander Jerjerrod seized control of
the Command Centre. He'd sealed it off
and we didn't have time to break through, but we've now flooded the Command
Centre with sion gas. He and his
renegades should be out cold. I --
" the Security Captain seemed suddenly to remember he was talking to Darth
Vader. "I apologise that we
weren't in time to stop him from firing the Superlaser ... "
"Think nothing
of it, Captain," said Vader.
"The transports will arrive at Hangar Bays Four through Six. My shuttle will dock at Bay Four, I will see
you there shortly."
"Yes, My
Lord," Faren answered, clearly wondering how long he would survive past
Vader's arrival.
As Vader's shuttle
settled onto the deck of Hangar Bay Four, Faren and twelve stormtroopers
hurried toward it. They had barely time
to salute before Vader was striding past them, and they had to scurry along in
his wake.
"Your report,
Captain," Vader commanded.
"What has been happening on this station?" His voice expressed disdain, as if the
occurrences on the station were barely worth his attention.
Faren said angrily,
"as you know, My Lord, Commander Jerjerrod was in charge of the station's
evacuation. He freed the Emperor's
guards when they were being moved from their holding cell to a transport, and
together they seized the Command Centre.
They're the ones who took us into Hyperspace. Some of my men were killed in the guards' escape," he
added. From Faren's tone, it seemed
that the Security Captain would cheerfully disembowel Jerjerrod and the
Imperial guards with his bare hands.
Vader was in full
agreement with that sentiment. "I
believe," he said, "that Commander Jerjerrod has outlived his
usefulness."
They reached the
entrance to the Command Centre, where a team of stormtroopers were engaged in
slicing though the reinforced doors with a high definition blaster cannon. Conveniently, the door's sealing gave way
just as Vader approached. The door had
barely finished sliding open before Vader stepped through it.
By now the sion gas
had dissipated. Six of the
crimson-robed Imperial guards were still sprawled on the floor or at various
command posts, while two guards and Commander Jerjerrod were dizzily starting
to struggle to their feet.
Jerjerrod looked
up, trying to blink the haze out of his eyes, and saw Darth Vader standing
above him. Fully awake now, Jerjerrod
looked around desperately, only to find that he and all of the Emperor's guards
were at the receiving ends of the twelve stormtroopers' blaster pistols.
"Commander,"
Vader remarked, "I'm disappointed in you.
I had thought you might have enough common sense to emerge from this
situation alive."
He was doomed
anyway, Jerjerrod knew, so he might as well say what he thought. "Traitor," he snarled. "Damned, filthy traitor! The Emperor created you, you bastard. He made you everything you are. And you dare turn your back on him! He'll make you suffer, Dark Lord,"
Jerjerrod continued, sneering out Vader's title. "He'll tear you apart piece by piece, you warped mechanical
freak."
"Perhaps." Vader's voice was chill but
undisturbed. "Unfortunately,
Commander, you will not be alive to witness it." The Dark Lord knelt down beside the still half-prostrate
Jerjerrod. "I'm curious. At our meetings, I felt no sense of your
intention to mutiny. Was this unplanned,
or have you more skill at shielding your thoughts than I realised? Not that it matters. I merely like to know something of the men I
kill."
Jerjerrod
stared. Some sense of just how horrible
his situation could be started to creep through him. He finally managed to admit, "it wasn't planned. Just before we seized the station, I
received a message from the Emperor. He
promised me immunity and promotion if I brought the Death Star to him."
"Where is
he?" The question was not only asked in words, but probed straight into
Jerjerrod's mind.
"Coruscant. He's back on Coruscant."
"Ah. Well, Commander, His Imperial Majesty has
been known to have contact with the spirits of the departed. You may, then, be able to apologise for your
failure in person."
Vader stood. "Captain Faren. I believe you are of sufficient rank to have
a code for this station's self destruct program?"
Faren smiled in
vicious enjoyment. "Yes, My
Lord."
"If you would
care to do the honours." Vader
gestured to the central control panel.
"Will a fifteen minute count-down be sufficient for evacuating all
remaining personnel?"
"I think so,
My Lord. The place may have collapsed
by then, anyway."
"Very
well. Fifteen minutes, then."
Faren crossed to
the panel, initiating the self-destruct sequence and entering his activation
code. "My Lord?"
Vader joined him,
and added his own code to the sequence.
"We need a
third code, My Lord," Faren reminded him. "Shall I contact Admiral
Piett?"
"No need. We have another command officer among us. Commander Jerjerrod," he said, without
turning from the panel, "would you be good enough to join us?"
Jerjerrod, still
crouched on the floor, goggled at him in horror. "You're mad."
"Come,
Commander, your code. It's impolite of
you to keep us waiting." Vader
turned to face him.
Jerjerrod gasped as
the cold, probing touch delved into his mind again. Vader's gleaming mask, those huge reflective eyes that revealed
nothing, were all that Jerjerrod could see, looming both outside Jerjerrod's own
eyes and behind them.
With cool
deliberation, Lord Vader was sifting through Jerjerrod's mind. Jerjerrod squeezed his eyes shut, tried to
resist, to think of something else, anything else, anything but the code ...
"Thank you,
Commander," came Vader's amused tone.
"That wasn't so difficult, was it?"
Vader turned back
to the panel, and entered the third self-destruct code.
"Self destruct
initiated," a message on the screen announced. The lighting in the room suddenly switched to red, as it would
have done throughout the station.
Unobtrusively, in the background, the count-down began.
Jerjerrod was still
staring, stunned with disbelief.
"Sir?"
asked one of the stormtroopers, gesturing with his blaster at one of the now
awake, but still groggy Imperial guards.
"What do we do with this lot?"
Faren glanced
questioningly at Vader.
"I'm sure the
transports are over-crowded already," Vader said mildly. "We don't need to burden ourselves with
them."
"No, My
Lord." With a smile of immense
personal gratification, Faren drew his own blaster pistol and fired point blank
at the nearest Imperial guard. Faren
watched the man collapse, a blackened hole smoking in his chest, then nodded at
his stormtroopers. Obediently they
mowed the remaining guards down.
"Do what you
can to assist in the evacuation, Captain," Vader ordered. "The Commander and I have some business
to complete before I join you."
"Yes, My
Lord!" Faren and the stormtroopers
departed, the officer wistfully wishing that Vader had let him stay to watch.
"Now,
Commander," Vader's voice purred.
"You needn't look so terrified.
I know how fond you are of this station. Being an understanding man, I'm going to let you remain on
it."
Jerjerrod's eyes
were widening farther than seemed physically possible. He had wet himself, but at least he didn't
have to feel alone in his shame, since most of the Emperor's guards had
relieved themselves as they died.
"Of
course," Vader went on, ignoring Jerjerrod's discomfort, "in fifteen
minutes -- I beg your pardon, fourteen -- you might contrive to countermand the
self-destruct program. I am getting
very tired of this Death Star, Commander.
So, you'll understand if I take steps to ensure that you do not delay
its destruction."
Vader's hand barely
moved. He made no move toward
Jerjerrod. Vader slowly closed the
fingers of his right hand toward each other, and heard a quiet little series of
pops as each of the bones in Jerjerrod's right foot snapped in two.
Jerjerrod screamed. He kept
screaming, as Vader took care of the left foot in like manner, then moved on to
the ankles and both legs. For
insurance, Vader broke the bones in Jerjerrod's hands, wrists and arms as well,
just in case the Commander were inclined to drag himself to the control panel.
"Now,"
said Darth Vader, "I'm afraid I must be going. Do give my regards to the Emperor."
He was back on the
bridge of the Executor, and the last of the transports were safely away
and out of range, when the Death Star exploded. Vader smiled to himself, appreciating the shimmering pattern of
colours as the dying space station erupted.
It really was a very good sight, and the ring of gases that escaped from
the detonating Death Star made an attractive touch. He wondered if Luke had taken the time to appreciate the beauty
of it when he'd blown up the first Death Star.
Probably not. And that thought
made him chuckle quietly. Luke
really won't be pleased if he learns of my little entertainment in the Command
Centre, will he? But, who blew up a
Death Star with 1,180,000 people on it -- give or take a few thousand -- and
who blew up a Death Star with a full crew complement of one?
It all depends on
your emotional state, of course.
Perfectly fine to blow up 1,180,000 people, if you don't hate them while
you're doing it.
Sure. And I have some lovely waterfront land on
Tatooine to sell you.
Admiral Piett,
standing next to him as usual, thought how very unnerving it was to hear Darth
Vader laugh.
Chapter 3
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