Chapter Six
"What exactly
are we looking for?"
"Treachery, of
course," answered Trooper Tash Karnak, not taking his eyes from the
numbers scrolling up the screen in front of him. "You'll know it when you see it. It'll be the message printed in red, saying 'top secret personal
information for Emperor Palpatine'."
"Ha ha,"
muttered Gima Tol. He scowled at his
own screen, wondering whether Karnak was perpetually sarcastic with everyone,
or whether it had something to do with Tol being a Twi'lek. As a former stormtrooper, Karnak was
probably unused to interacting with non-humans in any way other than kicking
them. Or worse. Then again, thought Tol, I'm
probably being too sensitive. Karnak's
probably just pissed off about having to take a pre-dawn trawl through two months'
worth of communications records.
"'Cause if it
isn't," Karnak continued, "I'd sure like to know how they expect us
to find it. I mean if I was going to be
a traitor, I'd make damn sure I didn't leave any trace. What, do they think our traitor wants
Lord Vader to strangle him?"
"I heard
Vader'd left the base," Tol ventured, trying to make conversation.
"Unh-hunh. I heard that too."
"Hey,"
Tol said, so struck by an idea he'd just had that he forgot to worry about
whether Karnak despised him, "maybe it's Vader."
"Maybe what's
Vader?"
"The
traitor."
Trooper Karnak
jumped noticeably and jammed one hand down on his terminal's freeze
button. "Holy Saint Mynar!"
he exclaimed, turning to stare at Tol where he sat at the next terminal. "Are you crazy?" Karnak
hissed. "You watch what the fuck
you're saying!"
"What?"
Tol protested, thoroughly confused.
"Mynar's
balls," the former stormtrooper muttered, in a tone of disgust. "You people are so stupid it's a wonder
the Rebellion survived. Don't
talk about Vader like that," he went on, more urgently. "Not when I'm next to you, anyway. I don't want to get caught in the
conflagration when you spontaneously combust."
"Does he do
that to people?" Tol asked in amazement.
"I don't know,
and I don't want to know. I just know
some things aren't smart to talk about."
Karnak turned back to his screen and started the information scrolling
upward again. A moment later Tol did
the same.
"Sorry,"
Tol said awkwardly. "But ...
" the idea was still burning in him, and he really wanted to talk about
it. Though if he tried that line of
conversation with Karnak again, he was probably as stupid as the
ex-stormtrooper said he was.
The silence got
heavy. Finally Karnak sighed. "Okay," he said, still staring at
his screen. "What?"
"Well, I just
thought, Vader leaving the base, right when people are saying a traitor told
the Empire where the meeting was going to be ... and right after Commander
Skywalker and the Princess get kidnapped ... "
"So what? You think he's behind it all?" Karnak looked around nervously, as if
expecting an avenging Darth Vader to leap in through the ceiling. "No way. Look, genius, Skywalker is Vader's kid. Okay? So he's gone
looking for him. So he's a good
father. So shut up."
Right, thought Tol. I'll shut up. He rubbed his eyes and wondered, if there was
some glaring evidence of illicit activities on the screen in front of him,
whether he'd even notice it. This was
not the best time of the day for him.
Of course, he reminded himself, there were a lot of worse things he
could be doing right now. He'd heard
they even had people going through the garbage, searching for anything
incriminating. Like what, he had no idea. Karnak was right, this whole thing was
stupid. Did the officers expect their
traitor would've written a rough draft of his treacherous message and then
tossed it in the trash?
Then Tol felt his
whole body going cold. Both of his
tentacles involuntarily twitched.
"Hey," he said, in a very small voice.
"What?"
snapped the exasperated Karnak.
"Hey,"
Tol said again. "Um. Take a look at this."
Karnak got up and
crossed to stand beside Tol's chair. He
frowned at the screen.
"Hunh," he said a moment later. "That's weird."
"You see it,
don't you? Compared to the other output
readings?"
"Yeah,"
Karnak whispered. "Yeah. Oh, Mynar.
When's that output from?" he asked, propelling himself back into
his chair.
Tol read out the
date code to Karnak. It had been two
standard days ago. "First
watch," he added.
"Well,
surprise," Karnak told him.
"No official base communications on that watch, to anywhere that
would've used that much power. We'll
have to check all the personal accounts."
He sat back, then turned to stare at Tol. "Mynar," he breathed again. "Guess we'd better report.
You want to do the honours? You
found it."
"Uh,
right," agreed Tol. He suddenly
felt like an idiot. There was probably
some perfectly innocent explanation for the power drain. Maybe there was even a mistake in the
readings.
But, they had
been told to look for anything unusual.
He had another
idea. He swiftly typed in some
calculations. Then he stared at the
answer he got. His left tentacle
jumped. "Oh, shit," he said.
"What?"
"Yeah,"
Tol said numbly, "we'd better report." He looked at Karnak, wide-eyed stare meeting wide-eyed
stare. "I just checked. That's the same power output it'd take to --
to send a message to Coruscant."
Darth Vader woke to
the smell of his burned hair, his roasted flesh, his blood, and over everything
the medicinal stink of fire-suppressant foam.
He snarled, trying to banish the stench back to his memories where it
belonged.
For a few seconds
he wasn't sure where he was. Then he
remembered. He switched on the lights
with a thought, then stood up, irritated and surprised at how much his muscles
ached. Especially those at the back of
his neck. Getting too old for this
kind of thing, he thought. He
scowled at the pitiful attempt at sleeping arrangements he had constructed out
of the berth's one chair and a pillow from the bunk, both of which he'd propped
against the wall. Most of the pillow
had slipped down behind the chair, providing not even the most mediocre
substitute for the retractable head-rest with which the seat in his Meditation
Chamber was equipped. It didn't help,
of course, that he'd gone to sleep still wearing his helmet. Pathetic, really, to put more value on his
stupid pride than on a decent night's sleep.
But he hadn't been able to conquer the irrational fear that Han Solo
would come barging in here and be treated to a view of Darth Vader's face. Ha, not that that would necessarily be a bad
thing. Then maybe his face would give
someone else nightmares for a change.
He reached up to
his chest box and made a slight adjustment on his suit's temperature
controls. Great, and on top of
everything else I'm getting more sensitive to cold. I'll be developing rheumatism, next. That is, assuming I've got enough of my own joints and muscles left
to get rheumatism.
His sour self-pity
was disrupted by a whispering sensation somewhere in his mind, the sense of
someone else's presence. He homed in on
it.
Leia.
He had tried to
contact both Leia and Luke earlier, before he slept, but had had no
success. Now, he realised, Leia was
trying to contact him. He focused on
her, concentrating on sending reassurance and encouragement. He could tell that she was afraid, but she
didn't seem to be injured, nor in as much turmoil as she would have been if
something had happened to Luke. That
was a relief, at least. He tried to let
her know that he and Han were on their way, but he couldn't be sure that his
thoughts were getting through to her.
For an instant he thought he caught a glimpse of her surroundings, some
dim, low room, and felt the hum of a ship's engines, their resonance different
from that on the Falcon. Then
the vision, and the sense of her presence, was gone.
Vader took the
pillow from behind the chair and flung it back on the bed, on top of the case
that held his portable infusion units.
He should have known that trying to sleep would be a fruitless
quest. Logically, he had told himself
that there was no point in going into a probable combat situation without
adequate rest. But hell, if rest had
been his priority, he should have allowed Solo to move his "egg
thing" on board. He'd been asleep
for less than an hour, and already he'd succeeded in giving himself a nightmare
and a painful cramp in the neck. Not to
mention almost missing Leia's attempt to contact him. No, he could definitely do without sleep.
He left the tiny
cabin that Solo had grandiloquently termed the "guest quarters", and
started along the corridor toward the forward cargo hold that doubled as ship's
lounge. It was strange, he thought, to
be a passenger on this ship rather than chasing it around the galaxy. At least he knew the Falcon was
fast. He also knew it had a tendency to
break down every hour or so, but he would just have to hope that Solo had his
repair kit handy and was not too out of practice.
As he stepped into
the lounge, he saw that Han Solo had got there before him. Han was sitting slumped at the holographic
games board, staring dully at a selection of small holograph alien warriors
that flickered on the board, patiently waiting for him to start the game. It didn't look like Han had any intention of
starting.
"General
Solo," said Vader. "Leia is
all right. At least for the
moment. I've just been in contact with
her."
"You
have!" exclaimed Solo, looking up with startled hope in his face.
"I'm sorry,
there was nothing specific. I can't
even tell if she knew she had reached me.
But she is unhurt, and I believe Luke is as well. They seem to be still on shipboard. That's all I could sense; the contact was
brief."
Han nodded, then
stared down at the game board again.
Vader glanced at the semi-circular bench which surrounded the
board. "May I join you?" he
asked.
Han looked up once
more, tension and weariness showing clearly in his face. He nodded again. Vader sat down across the board from Han. The two men watched the bored-looking
holographic aliens.
"We're
probably looking at another six hours now," Han said finally. "Any idea what we do when we get
there?"
"We should be
able to ascertain easily enough if Leia and Luke are there. If their kidnapper headed straight for
Coruscant from Chandrila Seven, they should be approximately four hours ahead
of us, depending of course on their speed.
We should begin monitoring Coruscant's flight control channels, to see
if any ship matching the description we were given arrives there. Of course, if they're going straight to
Palpatine, all communications will be on a secured channel. But I doubt that they've bothered to change
all the access codes since I left. If
they have, I should still have sufficient ... friends at the palace. We will be able to get the information we
need."
Han nodded. "And then?"
"I know of a
private landing pad whose owner owes me some favours. We can leave the Falcon there. As for getting into the palace, if that's where they are -- well,
I should be able to maintain an illusion that we are people who belong
there. Would you care to join the
Emperor's Personal Guard?"
Han managed a
grudging smile. "Just as long as
we're not two stormtroopers with a captured Wookiee. Chewie says he'll kill me if we ever try that disguise
again."
Vader went on,
"I won't be able to keep up the illusion once we've started fighting, so
we'll just have to hope that --"
His words broke off
as the Falcon gave a wild lurch.
Vader had to grab the edge of the game board to keep himself from
tumbling onto the floor. Han did not do
so well, and landed with a jarring thump on the metal deck. The holographic aliens winked out of sight.
"What the
hell," Han yelled, scrambling to his feet. "We've been pulled out of Hyperspace."
Han ran for the
corridor, without checking to see whether Darth Vader was following him. As Han neared the Falcon's cockpit,
there was another jolt, and sparks burst from a collection of wires running
along the corridor's ceiling.
"Shit," murmured Han, almost under his breath. He raced through the cockpit door and threw
himself into the pilot's seat. Chewie,
already at the co-pilot position, greeted him with a series of infuriated
roars.
"Shit!"
Han said again, this time in a yell. It
looked bad. As Chewie was informing
him, the moment they'd appeared in Realspace their opponent had opened fire on
them. Their shields were down and,
Chewie now yelped in rage, both the turret guns were off-line.
As if that weren't
enough, the shots had been immediately followed by a tractor beam, which now
had them securely caught. The Falcon's
engine's made an unhappy whine as they struggled to counter the beam, and Han
felt sick at the sound of them.
It shouldn't have
been this easy. It was as if their
enemy had known precisely how to strike at them with maximum effect.
He had, Han
realised. Because their enemy knew
their ship and knew them.
Han stared at the
forward viewscreen. He snarled,
"Duduk."
The ship that held
them in its tractor beam was a much-modified skipray blastboat, which, Han well
knew, had not been acquired from its Imperial former owners by any legal
method. Han tried to remember what
Duduk had re-named the ship. Something
pretentious, he was sure. And Duduk had
certainly been adding to the ship's capabilities since the last time Han had
run into him. Skiprays weren't supposed
to have tractor beams. And they
definitely shouldn't be able to pull ships out of Hyperspace. "I don't believe it," Han protested. "He's got himself a gravity well!"
Business must have
been good, all right. Only Imperial
Interdictor Cruisers had gravity wells.
To install one in his ship Duduk had to have had a hell of a lot of
money and a hell of a lot of friends in the right places.
"I take it you
know this individual?" Darth Vader's voice sounded from behind Han.
"Duduk
AlManara," Han grated. "Used
to be co-pilot for Lando Calrissian.
Long time ago." Han opened
a channel and hailed the skipray, though his choice of greetings was not the
most diplomatic. "Duduk, you
bastard. What the fuck are you
doing?"
A smug-sounding
voice said cheerfully over the com channel, "Solo, old pal, how's it
hanging?"
Han grimaced. "Be hanging a lot better if I wasn't
stuck in a tractor beam."
"Just my
little joke, pal. Just my way of saying
'howdy'."
"Howdy,"
snapped Han. "Can we go now?"
The voice sounded
insincerely regretful. "Sorry,
Han. No can do. See, I'm gonna have to ask you to hand over
your passenger."
Instinctively, Han
glanced back at Vader, who was standing beside the passenger seat looking
imperturbable as usual. "What
passenger?" Han asked.
"Come on, Han,
you know you're the galaxy's worst liar.
I am referring to that notorious intergalactic criminal, Darth Vader,
Lord of the Sith. Now I'd hate to have
to blow that sweet ship of yours out of space, so why don't you just be a good
little humanoid and hand him over."
"Darth
Vader?" Han repeated, trying to sound incredulous. "You think I'd let Darth Vader
onto my ship?"
"Cut the crap,
Han," sighed Duduk, suddenly giving up on his tone of cheerful
bumptiousness. "I know he's on
board and I'm going to take him. You
can either play nice or you can get hurt."
Han abruptly closed
the communications channel.
"Chewie," he said, "get up to the turrets and see if you
can get the guns back on line. Looks
like we'll have to blast our way out of this.
I'll keep him talking till you get the guns working."
Chewie gave a growl
of agreement and started out of the cockpit.
As the Wookiee left, Vader said to Han, "I'll attempt to switch off
the tractor beam. Be ready to make the
jump, if I manage it."
Han swung around to
give him a quizzical look. Just like
travelling with Ben Kenobi, he thought.
Except that old coot had to turn tractor beams off by hand. "You're just gonna switch it off by
thinking at it?" Han asked dubiously.
"Yes."
Han shrugged. "Whatever works ... " He opened the com channel again. "Duduk, buddy, sorry to keep you
waiting. Let's just go over this
again. You're saying you think Darth
Vader's on my ship ... "
"Han,
I don't want to kill you. I really
don't. But he's the one worth the
credits. I'm afraid you're
expendable. And Chewbacca. And the Falcon."
"How many
credits?" Han asked, in a tone of sudden interest.
"One hundred
thousand, pal. You know, I might even
let you have a cut -- a small cut -- if you turn him over."
"Well you
know, bud," Han continued stalling, "I might just want that one
hundred thousand for myself."
"You know, I'd
almost believe you," said Duduk, sounding amused, "if there was the
slightest little chance of you handing him over to Palpatine and leaving
Coruscant alive. You ain't exactly on
Palpatine's good list. Tell you
what. I'll make the delivery, and you
can have ... five percent."
"Five???"
"Final offer,
pal. Take it or leave it."
Come on, Chewie, Han thought. Get those guns working! He wondered how Vader was doing with his
thinking at the tractor beam. He cast a
glance at the Dark Lord, but of course the man's stance and his mask were
revealing nothing. Or almost
nothing. Both of his fists were
clenched, which Han supposed might mean he was concentrating. Experimentally, Han made a cautious attempt
at pulling the Falcon out of the beam.
No surprise, the beam still held.
But ... was it weaker? There'd
been a tentative jolt from the Falcon, like they'd almost managed to
break free. Surely the beam had been
stronger when he'd first reached the cockpit.
Hunh. Maybe Vader's thinking was
doing something after all. Han started
keying in a new hyperspace destination.
"Oh now look,
Duduk," he continued, trying another tack. "Maybe you oughtta take a reality check, hunh? I mean, Vader's not some load of cargo I can
just hand over. The guy's a fucking
Jedi Master. He's not gonna just let
you take him. He'd eat you for
breakfast!"
Duduk laughed. "Don't you worry about that, Han. Got it all under control. He's gonna be Palpatine's breakfast."
The hum of the Falcon's
engines was changing. They sounded more
healthy again. The tractor beam was
definitely weakening. Han wondered
whether Duduk would notice it.
"Hey,
buddy," Han pleaded, "have a heart, will you?" In fact, he remembered, Duduk had three
hearts, but it was the thought that counted.
"Give me a break. I can't
turn him over -- he's my father-in-law!
If I let Palpatine get him, my wife'll kill me!" Well, okay, Han thought, so he's not
officially my father-in-law, but it sounds a lot better than "the father
of my girlfriend".
This argument
hadn't worked any better than the others.
"So I'm doing you a favour," Duduk said. "I thought most humanoids wanted to get
rid of their in-laws." All the
joking left Duduk's voice. "Look,
Han, I'm gonna give you thirty seconds to make up your mind. You can hand him over peaceably, or I can
blast the Falcon. Ol' Palp won't
pay as much for Darth Vader in pieces, but it'll still give me enough to retire
on."
Chewie! Where the hell are those guns!
Then a massive
shudder went through the Falcon.
My gods, Han thought, he's
actually done it. The tractor beam is
off!
Han reached for the
lever to send them back into Hyperspace.
Duduk's skipray
opened fire.
The Falcon reeled
under the impact. Han heard an
anguished howl over the ship's intercom, and realised to his horror that Chewie
only made that sound when he was in pain.
That's it, Duduk, he thought.
You are one dead sonofabitch --
He pulled the
Hyperspace lever, but nothing happened.
Oh, no. Not
again. Must've been damaged by those
last shots --
Then Han stared at
the viewscreen. Suddenly he no longer
understood what the fuck was going on.
Duduk's ship was
disintegrating. But Han knew that the Falcon
hadn't fired one shot.
Apparently, that
didn't make any difference. The skipray
was unmistakeably caving in on itself.
For a second longer
Han gaped at it, then he realised what was about to happen. With a desperate yell, he pulled the Falcon
away.
The moment he had
done so, the skipray's power core was breached by the ship's own collapsing
wreckage.
The skipray
exploded.
Han squeezed his
eyes shut against the searing light on the screen.
When the light had
faded, and there was nothing to be seen except scraps of metal, Han switched
the Falcon onto autopilot. He
stood up unsteadily, and when he turned away from the viewscreen he discovered
that Darth Vader was no longer in the cockpit.
The disappearance caused him a momentary shiver of superstitious
fear. Then he squelched that emotion
and ran from the cockpit, toward the gun turrets.
At the foot of the
ladder, Han saw Vader again. He was
reaching up to help the shaky-looking but definitely alive Chewbacca, who was
climbing down. As the Wookiee reached
the bottom of the ladder and turned around, Han saw blood matting the fur on
one side of his friend's face.
"Chewie --
" Han began.
Chewbacca roared
that he was all right, and to prove it, reached out and enveloped Han in one of
his best bone-crushing hugs.
"Okay, pal,
okay," Han protested. When the
Wookiee released him, Han looked at his companions and realised that the two of
them were almost the same height. Gods,
did Han ever feel short. "What
happened?" he asked.
Chewie gloomily
informed Han that one of Duduk's last shots had hit the turret he'd been
working in. The gun, he thought, was
out of commission for good. They'd have
to replace it. Chewie asked, was Duduk
dead?
"Yeah,"
said Han. "He's dead. But I'd sure like to know how."
Darth Vader said
calmly, "I apologise, General, if you wanted our opponent left alive. He could have survived if he hadn't fired on
us. When he did -- I lost
control."
Han swallowed. "Lost control how?"
"I was
angry," Vader admitted. "I
was already focused on the inner workings of his ship, it was fairly simple to
activate the gravity well and turn its power onto the skipray itself. It would have been more difficult on an
Interdictor, but he'd neglected most of the safety precautions in installing
it. I'm sorry if you wanted him to
live."
"No," Han
said, trying to sound casual. "No,
that's okay. He always was an annoying
son of a bitch." But Han couldn't
help envisioning the effects on Duduk's body of that massive increase in
shipboard gravity. He felt vaguely ill.
He was angry! Han thought. Oh, gods, am I glad this guy is on my side!
Han took a deep
breath. "He hit the hyperdrive
generator," Han reported glumly.
"It's gonna take a couple hours to repair. At least."
Darth Vader sighed
quietly. "Why am I not surprised?"
Leia only realised
that she had fallen asleep when the ceasing of the ship's engines jarred her
awake. In the abrupt silence she
struggled to her feet, her heartbeat suddenly racing and her stomach cramping
with fear.
She was determined
to look calm. She'd done this before,
after all; captive princess was a role at which she had a lot of practice. She told herself, as long as they don't
dress me up in a metal bikini, I'll be fine.
No matter how calm
she might look, though, the tension was immense. Soon, she should find out where they were. And who had captured them. Her stomach twisted, and she prayed that she
wasn't going to be sick again. That
really wasn't the impression she wanted to give.
The door to the
cargo hold slid open. Leia blinked in
the sudden increase of light. Most of
that light was blocked out again an instant later when the bulky figure of
their kidnapper appeared in the doorway.
She'd only got the
briefest impression of their captor earlier.
Now she watched its approach in fascinated dislike, wondering what race
it belonged to and what planet it came from.
She didn't think she'd ever seen one of these beings before. It was, as it had been when she was
captured, brandishing a blaster pistol which was wrapped in one of its six
tentacles. Two of the tentacles, which
she now noticed were thicker than the others, served as legs. They were currently bent near the middle so
the being could shuffle along on them, giving the impression that it was
walking on its knees. Near the top of
the rounded central body were what appeared to be two small, dark eyes, but
Leia saw no other hint of a face.
The being's path
took it right though the small puddle of vomit, but it didn't seem to
notice. Leia grimaced, reminding
herself that there was no reason why other species should have the same sense
of what was disgusting.
As Leia watched her
captor moving closer, she was startled by the strength of the hatred that
pulsed through her. For a moment her
view of the being was obscured by a vivid image of Arin Pellar's dead face, and
the pool of blood that had surrounded it.
She thought if
there was any way that she could hurt this creature, she would do it.
The being shuffled
to one side of the hold, moving aside to allow room for the figures that
followed it. Leia saw, with a rapidly
sinking heart, that they were two soldiers in the uniform of the Imperial
army. Between them floated a
repulsorlift sled. Cursing as they
tried to manoeuvre the repulsorlift in the confined space, the soldiers moved
it toward Luke's suspendor unit.
Leia's anger surged
at the sight of Luke being treated like an item of cargo. She demanded, her voice slightly hoarse from
disuse, "aren't you going to release him?"
For the first time
Leia heard a voice emanating from their captor, seeming to emerge from the base
of its body. The voice was sibilant and
strongly accented, but the Basic it spoke was easily understandable. It said, "that is for his Master."
Leia wanted to snap
that Luke didn't have a master, but she forced the words back. She had a very bad feeling that she knew
exactly who this "master" was.
With increasingly
bitter oaths, the two soldiers managed to raise Luke's suspendor unit onto the
repulsorlift. They glanced
questioningly at the kidnapper, who gestured at the door with one of its free
tentacles. The soldiers guided the
repulsorlift and its burden out of the cargo hold. When they were out of sight, the kidnapper moved its blaster
toward Leia and then toward the door, and commanded, "out."
Her hands still
fastened in front of her, Leia walked across the hold, haughtily not glancing
at her abductor as she passed it.
As she stepped
through the door, she found herself in a corridor space which opened
immediately onto an exterior loading hatch. She was hit by fresh air and sunlight. The two soldiers and the unconscious Luke on his repulsorlift
were nearing the bottom of the ramp that led out of the hatch. Leia glanced back at her captor, close
behind her, who said "out", again.
She shrugged, and started down the ramp.
All of her worst
fears were confirmed. She recognised
this exterior landing bay -- not that she had been at this specific landing bay
before, but the architecture surrounding it was unmistakable. The roseate sky, tinting the building's
spires to a warm pinkish glow, was supposed to be attractive, but at the moment
she loathed it. She loathed the clean,
balmy air, as well, thinking of how different the air was in the lower levels
of this city. Imperial City, Coruscant,
the "jewel of the core worlds".
It wasn't a jewel, she thought bitterly, it was a necklace carved out of
sentient beings' bones.
Judging by the
architecture, and the quality of the air, they must be very high up in the
Imperial palace. There were no other
skyscrapers visible besides the palace's own crystalline towers; Palpatine had
made sure that no building in Imperial City could match his palace's majestic
height. Leia had seldom been this high
in the palace before. Only when she'd
been officially received by Palpatine on her induction into the Senate, and on
the two interminable occasions when she'd attended the Emperor's annual
Senatorial banquet. She thought, that
was one good thing at least about the Senate being disbanded. No one would ever have to go through that
particular horror again.
Leia followed the
soldiers and the repulsorlift across the open bay toward an arched doorway
elaborately carved in Kashandian acanthus patterns. She was glad to find that at least she was able to walk steadily;
despite all her dread her legs were not giving up on her. The small procession, with the tentacled
kidnapper bringing up the rear, passed under the archway and into the tall,
tapestry-draped corridors of the palace.
The air inside was heavy with incense.
Leia remembered now that Palpatine loved incense, which was the main
reason why she had always hated it. She had also forgotten, in the years since
she had been here, the soft thickness of the carpet with which the corridors
were lined. It squished buoyantly underfoot,
giving the impression that one was walking on live marsh fungus.
The corridors were
quiet, but not unpeopled. Every now and
then their party passed a droid trundling about its business, or a
self-effacing, black robed Imperial servant.
Neither of these groups paid them any noticeable attention, but the
same, unfortunately, could not be said of the occasional Imperial noble --
"advisors", they were called, though Leia doubted that Palpatine was
in the habit of taking advice from anyone -- that they encountered. Leia even recognised a few of these, and
passionately wished that she didn't.
Their reactions varied, from open surprise to pursed-lipped disapproval
to disdainful triumph. Leia
determinedly ignored them, all the while wishing that she could take their
stupid rubbish bin-like hats and shove them up their noble bums. It didn't help her self-confidence to
realise how pathetically scruffy she must look. She had at least managed to avoid getting vomit on herself, but
Arin's blood was all over one sleeve of her jacket, soaked deeply into the gold
braid at the cuff. Her long skirt was
irretrievably wrinkled, and anyway, white was not the best colour to wear when
one was getting kidnapped. She thought
sourly that she just ought to stop wearing white; she knew perfectly well how
filthy white clothes could get when one was gallivanting around the galaxy in
them. She didn't know what state the
braided hairdo she had constructed before the long-ago cocktail party might be
in. Luckily it was not one of her more
elaborate creations, so there was a chance that it might still look halfway
respectable.
They were nearing a
tall, black marble door, at which the corridor abruptly stopped. Leia recognised the door to Palpatine's
private office and audience chamber. At
either side of the door stood a red-robed Imperial Guard.
The foremost of the
two soldiers saluted and spoke in a quiet voice to the guards. Without answering, the guard at the left of
the door turned to the wall control panel which was almost hidden by the edge
of a gleaming, iridescent tapestry. He
keyed in a number sequence, and the door slid silently open.
"Enter,"
came a dry, rasping voice from inside the room. Leia immediately recognised the voice, and immediately remembered
how much she hated it.
The two guards
marched in, with the repulsorlift between them. Leia, for a moment unable to control her instinctive horror,
hesitated, until she felt her kidnapper's blaster pistol jab into the small of
her back. Her mouth tightened and she
raised her head defiantly. She stepped
into the room.
Palpatine liked the
sensation of being above everyone. The
audience chamber was dual-levelled. The
lower level on which the door opened led to a broad, black goldstone staircase,
at the top of which sat Palpatine's desk and chair, with a vast arched window
behind them. Outside the window soared
the palace's rosy towers. The room
itself was a rich, deep purple, the walls being drenched in hangings of thick
purple velvet.
The guards stood at
either side of the repulsorlift and bowed.
Leia stood next to them, but made no such gesture. At her other side, the kidnapper lowered
itself onto the floor, with the blaster set down in front of it, all of its
tentacles curled up underneath its body.
Leia had an insane urge to leap for the blaster. Instead she just looked up at the seemingly
distant figure perched behind the big desk, watching them out of its beady
yellow eyes.
Nausea washed
through her again, but she didn't think it was morning sickness this time. Again she had the sensation of having been
through this all before, but it was worse, oh Gods so much worse than any
previous time she'd been captured. What
she wouldn't give to see Grand Moff Tarkin before her now, or Darth Vader. Vader!
Gods, how she wanted to see him!
She thought wildly that she would forgive him everything, everything. All the murders, the torturing, the
persecutions, if only he were here now instead of the withered, smirking relic
of humanity at the desk above them. She
wondered how anyone could ever have trusted Palpatine, how he could ever have
inspired any emotion save revulsion.
Palpatine said,
"remove Commander Skywalker from the repulsorlift, and leave us."
The guards bowed
again, lower this time, and carefully lifted Luke's suspendor unit, using none
of the swearwords they'd employed in the cargo hold. With exquisite caution they lowered the suspendor to the carpeted
floor. They made a third bow, then they
and the floating repulsorlift departed.
Palpatine stood and
moved out slowly from behind his desk.
He was wearing a black robe as usual, and his face was half-shadowed by
its hood. His pale claw hands were
clasped in front of him.
He smiled broadly
at the respectfully huddled figure of the kidnapper.
"Rise, Datang
my friend," Palpatine purred.
"You have done well. The
payment has been credited to your account."
The kidnapper --
Datang, Leia supposed -- levered itself upward on its two most central
tentacles, picking up the blaster with a third. Datang hissed, "thank you, your Imperial Majesty."
"Leave us now,
my friend," Palpatine went on, with an airy flutter of his hand. "But remain in the palace. I may have further need of you."
Datang lowered
itself halfway to the floor, then backed out of the room. The door shut behind it.
Leia was alone with
her unconscious brother and with Emperor Palpatine.
The Emperor beamed
patronisingly at her, as if she were a child that had just distinguished itself
in some school competition. "Leia,
my dear," he said, acknowledging her for the first time. "How beautiful you look."
Oh gods, she thought, I
really am going to be sick all over this bastard.
Palpatine started
down the staircase, his smile growing wider.
"Your anger is beautiful," he went on. "I like the freshness of it. Its vigour.
It is very powerful, my dear. I
wonder if you realise how powerful you could be."
Since the only
response that sprang to her mind consisted of obscenities, Leia said nothing.
"My sweet
child," Palpatine murmured. He was
now standing on the lower level. He
said, his voice taking on a sorrowful tone, "your father's betrayal
wounded me deeply. More than you can
dream. But all is not lost, since his
children have come to me to take his place."
That almost goaded
Leia into an angry response. But she
knew that anything she might say would be useless.
Palpatine was
beaming at her again, with an avuncular smirk that made her flesh crawl. "Your future is with me, Leia. Your destiny is at my side."
Leia still stared
at him in stony silence. He reached out
a withered hand and for one horrifying instant she thought he was going to
touch her, but all that happened was that the restraints opened and fell away
from her wrists. She gasped at the
sudden, painful return of sensation, and for the first time words were torn
from her. "Let Luke go," she
demanded.
Somehow the
Emperor's smile broadened even further.
She shivered at the gaze from his glowing eyes. "You think that together the two of you
can fight me," he breathed.
"You cannot, my dear. But I
will enjoy watching you try."
He made another
tiny gesture, this time toward the suspendor unit. The lights on the control panel changed colour, and then the lid
of the unit slid open. Slowly, as the
force field decreased in intensity, Luke was lowered to the suspendor's
floor. Leia hesitated an instant, then
rushed to the unit, kneeling beside it.
Luke made a vague,
sleepy murmur, and turned his head. One
of his hands moved. Although her own
hands were burning from their slowly returning circulation, Leia reached in to
the unit and clasped her brother's hand.
"Luke," she whispered.
His eyes fluttered
open. For a moment they seemed distant
and lost. Then suddenly they widened, as
consciousness and memory both came back to him. He sat up abruptly, and his hand tightened around Leia's as he
fought against dizziness. Leia reached
out with her other hand to grab his shoulder and support him. They stared at each other, but there were no
words that could be said. Leia realised
that Luke could feel the Emperor's presence, and that although he had never
been here before, he knew exactly where they were.
Unsteadily, he got
to his feet, Leia helping him. He
managed to step out over the edge of the suspendor unit without stumbling, but
when he was standing beside her Leia felt him sway slightly, and was afraid
that he would fall. They clutched at
each other's hands, as if somehow that would keep them safe. And they faced the Emperor.
"Welcome back,
my young apprentice," said Palpatine.
"I have missed you."
To Leia's complete
astonishment, Luke made the sort of response that she had been wanting to make
since this encounter started.
"Fuck you, Palpatine," he grated. "We're getting out of here."
Palpatine laughed.
"What do you think you can accomplish, my young friend? Didn't our last meeting teach you the truth
about your helplessness?"
"We can fight you," Luke
said stubbornly. He drew his
lightsaber, and its blade hummed into life.
"No,"
Palpatine told him in a chilling whisper, "you cannot. You will not try. I have your sister, my little Jedi. And I have her children.
And all of their lives are in my hands."
As he spoke,
Palpatine turned the glow of his yellow eyes back on to Leia.
She gasped, then
the gasp turned into a short, choked-off scream. She fell to her knees, clutching at her belly. There was a searing pain in her abdomen, but
worse, she could hear her children.
She could hear them in her mind and feel their presence, but that
presence was being ripped away from her.
Their voices were twisting with anguish and terror.
"No," she
gasped out, "no, please." She
screamed. "Luke! Please!"
Luke retracted his
lightsaber, then he threw himself down beside Leia, hugging her to him. He yelled at Palpatine, "stop it! Stop it!"
As suddenly as it
had hit her, the pain was gone. And the
screams ceased, but she could still hear their echoes in her mind.
She stared up at
Palpatine. "Are they all
right?" she demanded.
The Emperor smiled
at her again. "Of course, my
dear. I would not wish to hurt your
children. And my future servants. I will not hurt them. Unless I have to."
The hatred she felt
for him was stronger, she thought, than anything she had ever felt in her life.
Palpatine was
continuing smoothly, "you're tired after your long journey. You will be shown to your quarters. After you have rested and dined, I will see
you again."
The purple velvet
drapes on one wall parted to reveal an opening door, and a droid whirred in to
the Audience Chamber. "I will
guide you to your rooms," the metallic voice announced.
This time it was
Luke who helped the still trembling Leia to her feet. He paused for a last impotent glower at the Emperor, then with
his arm still around Leia's shoulders, he started walking with her toward the
waiting droid. "Follow me,
please," the droid said politely, and it led them out of the room.
They did not speak
as they followed the droid along another corridor, the walls lined with the
same purple drapery as in the Emperor's office. After they had passed four doors on each side, the droid stopped
at one door on their left and keyed in a code on the pad beside the doorframe. The droid stood aside. "Welcome to the guest quarters. I hope everything is to your
satisfaction. If you require anything I
can be summoned from the panel inside the door."
Leia looked at
Luke, who was eyeing her worriedly as if he feared she would break. Personally, she was not at all convinced
that she would not. She said shakily,
"if we run, he'll know. Won't
he. And he'll find us."
Pain crossed Luke's
face. "Yes," he admitted.
She nodded, and
stepped into the guest quarters. Luke
followed her. The door slid closed
behind them.
They were in a
luxuriantly appointed lounge, with, thank the gods, red wall hangings instead
of that damnable purple. One wall was
entirely window, with the turrets of the palace and, far in the distance, of
the rest of Imperial City, spread out in an entrancing vista beyond it. The lounge held a wide selection of chairs
and sofas, a table of dark, intricately carved wood, and even what appeared to
be a liquor cabinet in one corner. To
the left were two doors, which Leia guessed led to bedchambers, and on the
right an open door through which she caught sight of an apparently vast,
opalescent marble bathroom. There
seemed to be a sunken bath at the centre of the room, from which steam was
rising lazily.
It looked
wonderful, but right now Leia couldn't bear the thought of anything wonderful. She sat down on the nearest of the sofas and
buried her face in her hands.
Hesitantly, Luke
sat down beside her. "What
happened?" he asked softly.
She looked up at
him, tears streaking her face.
"Arin's dead," she told him, her voice raw and painful. "It's my fault. I sent him to look for you. That creature -- with the tentacles --
Datang, that's its name -- Datang killed him."
"Oh,
gods," Luke whispered.
"How? Did it ... did it
shoot him?"
She smiled
bitterly. "Oh, yes," she
said, "it shot him. It must have
half-strangled him, too, there were bruises and cuts all around his neck. And then it must have thrown him against a
wall. The back of his skull was
smashed."
Luke's face twisted
with sorrow. He looked down at his
hands. "It's my fault," he
whispered. "Not yours."
She stood up
suddenly, with a smile that she knew must look absolutely terrifying. "It's Datang's fault," she
said. "And Datang's going to die. I'll kill Datang. No matter what."
"Leia!"
Luke exclaimed, shocked. He stood up as
well. "Leia, please. Don't give in to hate. Hatred will make you like the Emperor. He'll win."
"I don't
care. Datang is going to
die." She meant it, too. She thought, that is it. I won’t take any more of this. I won’t let the people I care about be hurt
any longer.
For a moment she
just glared, as if all her enemies could hear her challenge. Then her gaze shied away from the hurt in
Luke’s. "I'm going to take a
bath," she declared wearily.
"If Palpatine wants to see us before I get out, tell him to go fuck
himself." She strode away toward
the open bathroom door.
Luke was left, and
he thought that he felt more alone than he ever had before.
Darth Vader was
stretched out on his side, as lying on his front would have run the risk of
accidentally switching off some crucial system on his chest-box controls. He was reaching up with a laser screwdriver
into the dim, wire-filled mess behind one of the access panels, wondering how
this damned ship had lasted this long without killing everyone aboard it.
Vader had been
assigned this particular task after he'd told Solo that his vision could be
enhanced to the point where he wouldn't need a torch to assist him. When Solo had been sprawled down here, the
Correllian had kept dropping either torch or screwdriver or both, and hitting
his head when he brought it back up too far after scrabbling around to retrieve
them.
Vader didn't mind
the work. He had often made his own
adjustments and improvements on the fighters and shuttles at his disposal, and
always enjoyed it. He admired what Solo
had accomplished with this ship -- or he would admire it, if only Solo were a
bit more organised about it. When the Falcon
did eventually get annihilated, it wouldn't be due to enemy fire but to Solo
connecting the wrong wires, or dropping a screwdriver where it didn't belong.
Vader was
attempting to re-connect the deflector shields. A few metres away, Solo had another access panel open and was
coaxing the temperamental hyperdrive generator back into working order. They'd been here for two and a half hours
now -- Chewbacca was back at the task of reviving the turret guns -- and in
that time, scarcely one word had been spoken.
Darth Vader was
himself a master of unnerving silences, but this particular silence was
starting to annoy him. He already felt
somewhat ridiculous at having apologised to Solo for the death of this Duduk
character. Apologising was not
something Vader had done very frequently over the past couple of decades. But it had seemed to be the wisest
course. He already had enough problems
with Leia, without her boyfriend nursing new grudges against him.
Vader wondered
whether he ought to bring up the subject again, but when he cast out his senses
to feel Solo's emotions he didn't pick up any major guilt or confusion over
Duduk's loss. Good. Vader had not particularly relished the idea
of counselling him about it. He didn't
want to ask "do you want to talk about it?", and he certainly wasn't
going to make some kind of poncy speech interpreting Han's feelings for
him. He had always hated the practice
of re-interpreting people's feelings in Jedi-speak. People had a right to their own emotions, without the Jedi
telling them what those emotions were.
But having ruled
out that topic of discussion, he could think of precisely nothing to talk
about.
Talking about the Falcon
was not an intelligent notion, since he was likely to slip up and say something
snide, and send Solo into a melt-down of outraged protectiveness. So what did that leave? Besides his ship, what was Solo interested
in?
Hell, for that
matter, what was Vader interested in?
It was obviously no
good talking about the Force; that would go straight over Solo's head. Vader didn't know if Solo was a follower of
any sports, and it wouldn't have helped if he did know, since Vader's
familiarity with contemporary sports coverage was about as extensive as Solo's
knowledge of the Force. Vader could not
possibly have cared less than he did about the fortunes of the Corellian
bryasha team or Coruscant's hyperpolo league.
He did not keep up with any of the popular holo-dramas, had no idea who
might be the leading musicians of the moment, and wouldn't have recognised any
of today's holo film stars even if they were dying in agony in front of him.
This was
ludicrous. He must once have known how
to maintain conversations! So what in
the hell had he talked about?
The weather? he thought
wryly. That'd make an interesting
conversation, since we've both been living on Omean.
He'd talked about
politics, he supposed. The war. The perniciousness of the Jedi. On certain (usually drunken) occasions, the
mysterious nature of women.
At least that last
choice was one probable common ground, but it would also probably cause more
trouble than it was worth. Leia was
about the only interest that the two of them shared, but Vader could hardly
launch into any fatherly reminiscences, since the majority of his contact with
her had consisted of pursuit and torture.
She hadn't even impinged on his consciousness until she became a
suspected enemy of the Empire. When she
gave her first speech in the Senate, he hadn't even been on Coruscant, he'd
been suppressing the revolt in the Catalath sector. He only knew this because he had looked it up, on the Executor's
recent history database, a couple of months ago. He wanted to convince himself that he had noticed her, that he'd
felt some connection, but no, the first memory he had of her was when her
records had appeared in the file of suspected traitors.
He did remember
what he'd thought then. He'd looked at
her picture, thought how bloody young Senators were these days and that embryos
were going to be running for Senate next, and moved on to the next possible traitor.
It was
infuriating. He didn't even have any
pictures of Leia or Luke as children.
He could have got some easily enough in her case at least, from the
files on Prince Bail Organa. But thus
far he had resisted the urge. It was
just too damned bloody sentimental, and too humiliating.
All right. It was either talk about the Millennium
Falcon, or talk about nothing. He
would just have to make an extra effort to restrain any snide comments. He said, picking at random one of Solo's
many adjustments to the Falcon, "I noticed the modifications on the
gravity-flux compensator. Is the design
yours? I wouldn't have thought it would
work in a ship of this size."
He felt surprise
from Solo, and a hint of gratified pride.
"Yeah, it's mostly my design, mine and Chewie's. We had some help from this guy who used to
hold the Kessel Run record. He'd done a
lot of modifications to improve his Run, he was the one who came up with the
idea about the compensator. The ships
he was working with were a lot smaller, though."
Vader said, putting
aside the screwdriver and reaching for the small laser beam wire clippers,
"it must require constant maintenance to stop it from going
off-line?"
"It
does," Solo replied. "It and
every other system on the ship."
Solo was warming to his topic.
"That's what a lot of people don't understand. They think the Falcon's just a hunk
of junk. They don't realise she's got
the systems of eight different ships inside her. It's no wonder she gets touchy sometimes; those systems were
never meant to go together. It's not
her fault."
Vader ventured,
knowing that this suggestion might cause Solo to explode, but thinking that he
ought to say it anyway, "have you kept a record of all the
modifications? I know you don't want
anyone else to work on your ship. But
if you were willing to allow it, and all the adjustments were noted down, it'd
be possible to keep up a regular maintenance schedule on the Falcon,
that didn't put all the burden on you and Chewbacca. We might be able to forestall most of the break-downs before they
happen." Oops, he'd ended up
mentioning the Falcon's problems after all. So much for his good intentions.
"Yeah,"
Han said brusquely. "Maybe."
At least the
Corellian did not seem especially angry.
Rather, Vader could sense Han's surprised, if grudging, pleasure, that
someone was actually taking an interest in his ship.
This feeling
gradually transformed into hesitation, and then into a jolt of reckless
decision.
"Vader,"
Solo began, "you mind if I ask you a question? Something I've been wondering, for a while."
What the hell? Well, only one way to find out. "Ask," Vader told him.
"What really
made you join the Rebellion? Was it
just because of Luke and Leia, like you said?"
"Primarily,"
Vader answered. Then he added, out of a
trouble-making urge to see how Solo would react to this next statement,
"and I was probably suffering from a mid-life crisis."
Solo's reaction was
most gratifying. He yelped out an
incredulous "what?", and from the dull thud that followed the word,
he had once again bumped his head against something.
Vader continued,
"it's the right timing for one, after all. I'm fifty-two this year."
Solo still couldn't
seem to get his brain around this concept.
"A mid-life crisis?"
"Yes. You
know, you find yourself in a dead-end job ... personal life going
nowhere..." Suddenly, Vader had no
more wish to continue this game.
However much he might try to present it to himself as a joke, what he
was saying to Solo was basically the truth.
Vader sighed and focused on a small nest of still-tangled wires.
They both fell
silent. Then Solo asked, his voice so
quiet that Vader could barely hear it, "Vader? What happened with you and your family? How come you didn't know about Leia and Luke?"
Damn.
Well, it was his
own fault. He was the one who had
brought up the subject of his personal life, or lack of one. He'd left himself open to just this sort of
question, and he couldn't blame Solo for accepting the invitation.
Vader began,
somewhat surprised to find that his voice was steady and he could make himself
say the words, "my wife left me when she learned she was pregnant."
At least, he
supposed that she had known about it when she left him. From the timing, that seemed the most
logical conclusion. Damn. He did not want to think about this
again. He said with finality, "she
never told me about them."
"Oh,"
Solo said uncomfortably. "I'm
sorry." Vader could feel the
younger man's embarrassment at discussing such a personal subject, but he could
also feel a sort of empathic horror from Solo.
The Corellian was imagining what it would feel like to have something
like that happen to him.
Solo tried to ask,
"this was when you were still -- uh, before you -- er, I mean -- "
the words trailed out in a surge of embarrassed confusion.
"Before I
turned into a mechanised man of mystery?" Vader asked dryly. "Yes.
It was."
"I wasn't going
to put it like that," Solo protested.
Then he rushed on recklessly, before his natural suspicion of emotions
-- and of Darth Vader -- could hold himm back.
"Look, Vader, I want you to know -- I do love Leia. I'm going to do everything I can to make her
happy. And keep her safe. I don't want you to think I would ever hurt
her -- "
The poor bastard, Vader thought, in
sudden amusement. He's probably been
sweating over this ever since Leia's long-lost father popped out of the
woodwork. He's been expecting that I'll
demand to know his intentions. Or, more
likely, just strangle him.
"General
Solo," Vader told him, "believe me.
If I had any objection to your relationship with my daughter, you would
know of it."
"Uh --
right." Mentally blushing, though Vader
could not see whether his face was following suit, Han turned all his attention
to the Hyperspace generator. Or at
least, he tried to. A moment later,
however, he said, somewhat awkwardly, "and look, you can stop calling me
General. I can't stand it when people
call me that. Makes me feel like I
oughtta have a paunch and big sideburns and a monocle."
Vader thought how
very far this conversation had gone from anything he'd expected. "Han, then," he said. "All right?"
"Yeah,
fine." Then Han's usual sense of
humour kicked in again, and he added, "Darth. Or would you rather I called you 'dad'?"
Darth Vader
sighed. Well, you asked for this,
he told himself. You're the one who
decided you wanted a family again.
"No," he
said wearily, "'Darth' will do fine."
Luke was watching
Leia sleep.
She'd emerged from
her bath a few minutes ago, wearing a soft white robe which she must have found
in the bathroom. There was plenty of
clothing provided for them in the bedchambers as well. Luke had discovered this while his sister
was bathing. He didn't imagine that
Palpatine had picked out the clothes himself, or had been keeping tabs on Luke
and Leia's tastes in fashion, but the presence of the clothing did show that
they had been expected and prepared for.
The realisation made Luke nervous, as he wondered how long Palpatine had
been planning for their arrival.
He'd mentioned the
clothes to Leia when she got out of the bath, but she had just ill-temperedly
enquired whether there were any metal brassieres for her, and then curled up on
top of one of the beds and almost immediately fell asleep. Luke was sitting on one corner of the bed --
the bed was larger than Luke's entire quarters back on Omean -- and watching
her.
He didn't understand
what was happening to her. Of course
she felt bad about Arin's death; so did he.
And of course it wasn't any fun to be kidnapped by the mad monarch of
the galaxy. They were going to have to
get out of here, somehow, though at the moment he didn't have any ideas as to
how. And, he supposed, she had her
babies to worry about now, not just herself.
That couldn't be helping matters.
But still, he was
so used to Leia being the calm one, the one who could keep the rest of them on
track. Throughout all the shit they'd
been through, she'd seemed to stay strong, pure in her beliefs, assured of
herself and who she was. When Luke got
lost in identity crises, or Han went through one of his bouts of desperate
self-centredness, or the Rebellion itself seemed set to degenerate into chaos,
it was always Leia, he thought, who pulled them out of it.
But now -- well,
she was still strong, all right. But
this anger in her was new to him. It
was as if she intended to take a stand this time no matter who she had to hurt
by doing so. That frightened him. There was a hardness in her that he didn't
recognise. Or rather, he thought he did
recognise it, but not as part of the Leia he knew. It reminded him of their father.
He wished he could
guide her somehow. He ought to
be able to. If Ben or Yoda were here,
they would be able to. But he wasn't
Ben or Yoda. He knew he should be able
to help her, but he didn't know how. It
seemed like all he could do was recycle his teachers' pithy sayings, but
somehow they never sounded so pithy coming from him. And then of course, there was Vader, who was always willing to
express an opinion on any questions Luke had, but who didn't seem to be in the
business of dispensing spiritual words of wisdom. Good thing, too, Luke thought ruefully. If he had Ben and Yoda's philosophies and Vader's mixed up
in his head, his brain would probably suffer a matter/anti-matter explosion.
Suddenly Luke felt
an upsurge of fear and pain. It wasn't
his own. Instinctively he reached
toward Leia, and as he did so she screamed and sat bolt upright. She was clutching the pillow with one hand
and staring at him wildly.
"Leia," Luke said desperately. "Leia, it's me."
For another moment
she didn't seem to understand him.
Then, surprising him, she flung herself into his arms, shuddering
against him. He felt her still-damp
hair against his face and neck, and smelled the hint of some floral scent. Her fingers dug into his shoulders. He caught himself wishing, for one instant,
that she wasn't his sister, but he sternly pushed that thought aside.
"Luke,"
she sobbed out. "He crashed. I saw it.
He -- everything was burning -- Oh, Luke, he was so afraid -- everything
hurt -- so much --"
She pulled away
from Luke, but still clutched at his shoulders. There was a weird urgency in her face, as if she was desperate to
make him understand. "Luke, he
broke all of his ribs. Every one
of them. And -- and his arms,
and -- and his face was burned, and -- oh Luke, they thought he was dead. They were laughing at him. They were saying -- saying things -- "
"Who,
Leia?" Luke asked, as her words ran down.
"What have you seen? Is
something going to happen to Han?"
She looked at him
as if he was out of his mind.
"No," she said.
"Our father."
He stared at her in
amazement. She let go of his shoulders
and moved away, sitting huddled on one edge of the bed. He moved closer to her, putting an arm about
her. He half expected her to push him
away, but she did not. After a few
moments she looked up at him.
"Luke," she
said earnestly, "do you know what happened to him? How did he become Darth Vader?"
This was the first
time she had brought up the subject of Vader in conversation with Luke. She'd listened to him talk about their
father, but never before had she been willing to discuss Vader herself.
Luke shook his
head. "I've never asked him,"
he said. "I -- guess I didn't know
how to. And Obi Wan never really told me. He just said Anakin had been seduced by the
Dark Side. I guess I'd kind of assumed
they fought about that, and that maybe he was injured --"
"No," she
said, without any doubt in her voice.
"He crashed. He was flying
an x-wing, or something like it. I saw
it, Luke. I felt it." Leia's hand, startlingly cold, closed around
Luke's. "Luke, I have to find out
what happened to him. I think we both
have to."
Slowly, Luke
nodded. A chilling thought occurred to
him. He tried to ignore it, but he
couldn't. "Well," he said,
"there's one way we could try to find out. But -- we can't know what would happen if we did. It could make everything worse."
"What?"
she asked him.
He said, "we
could ask Emperor Palpatine."
Chapter 7
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