Chapter Nine
"Mistress
Leia, His Imperial Majesty will see you now."
"Thank
you," Leia said coldly, as the droid whirred to one side to allow her to
enter the room.
She had not been
inside this room before. It was, she
was relieved to see, not purple. The
drapes on the walls were a dark blue instead, but the room, like so many others
in the Palace, was dominated by tall, arched windows, which displayed the
gleaming expanse of Imperial City.
Outside, it looked like a beautiful day. Leia remembered that it must be spring on Coruscant now. There was a balcony outside one of the huge
windows, and Leia wished that the window was open. It would be wonderful to feel the soft spring air, rather than
choking on the fumes of Palpatine's favourite incense.
The Emperor was
standing beside a round table carved of crystal, just large enough for two
people to sit at comfortably. The
chairs were crystal as well, with leaf and vine patterns carved around their
legs and arms. Near the table was a
black goldstone sideboard, laden with another selection of expensive
foodstuffs. The sight, and the smells
which managed to break through the incense, made Leia suddenly realise that she
was starving. The minuscule amount she
had eaten since being kidnapped had fallen victim to her most recent bout of
morning sickness.
She was not,
however, just going to throw herself at the food. Palpatine was going to give her some answers, first.
She walked toward
him, planted herself behind the chair that was further from him, and demanded,
"what have you done to Luke?"
"I'm sorry, my
dear?" Palpatine asked, smiling at her.
"I know you've
done something. I could feel your
stench on him." Even as she said
it, she knew it was a stupid comment; one didn't generally feel stenches. What the heck, though. When it was Palpatine's stench, you felt it.
Palpatine laughed
indulgently. "My dear child, your
family is so melodramatic."
Leia raised her
eyebrows.
"I haven't
done much, I assure you," said the Emperor. "Merely planted a suggestion in his mind."
"What
suggestion?"
"Only that the
best thing he could do would be to continue watching the holos. That he must learn more about his
parents. He should learn more,
after all. He wants to. I just made that desire a trifle
stronger. I couldn't let him get in the
way, you see, while we had our little talk."
Her automatic
impulse was to declare that they had nothing to talk about. But she didn't bother to say it. She knew it would not have been true.
"Won't you
help yourself, my dear?" Palpatine suggested, gesturing at the
sideboard. "You must be
famished."
Leia gave him
another hostile glare, for form's sake, then stepped over to the food. She picked up a plate, crystal with silver
interlace, and loaded it with massive slices of fresh bread, a cream pear paté,
and another paté which looked like Sarcaasian salmon. She filled a goblet with fruit juice, as well, then returned to
the table, where Palpatine was already seated, dipping his spoon into a bowl of
thin, golden soup. A tureen, presumably
holding more soup, sat on the table in front of him. He didn't seem to take any interest in the rest of the food. Leia wondered if being evil had deleterious effects
on one's digestion.
Spreading paté onto
one of her slices of bread, Leia warily eyed the Emperor. He seemed to be enjoying his soup, and his
yellow eyes were focusing on it, not on her.
That was a relief. Apparently
Palpatine wasn't one for smalltalk while eating. Spared from having to converse with her dear friend the Emperor,
Leia ate with gusto, although her enthusiasm was dimmed by the recollection
that the last time she'd tasted patés like this she had been on Alderaan.
The Emperor served
himself a second bowl of soup. Leia
went back to the sideboard for more bread.
Leia finished her
last slice of bread, decided against a third trip to the sideboard, and sipped
at her fruit juice while Palpatine's spoon sought out the final specks of soup.
Glancing up from his bowl, Palpatine
caught her watching him, and smiled once more.
"So, my dear," he said, pushing the bowl away, "you have
questions to ask me."
She still had the
feeling that by talking with Palpatine she'd be setting herself up for something
horrible. But then, horrible things
would probably happen if she didn't talk with him, too.
"Yes,"
she said, setting her goblet down on the table. "You did something to my mind this morning. I want to know what."
Palpatine attempted
a wide-eyed expression that on anyone else might have looked innocent. Leia's own expression was far from
amused. After delaying just long enough
for the silence to grow irritating, the Emperor replied, "I merely enabled
you to make use of a short-cut."
Leia picked up her
goblet again, took another drink and waited.
Palpatine said, leaning back in his chair, "you know how your
brother developed his Force abilities, do you not?"
"Yes. He's told me about it."
Palpatine shook his
head, assuming a mournful look.
"Such a waste of time," he said. "So typical of the Jedi.
Jogging around a swamp, while a gnome squats on your shoulders spouting
platitudes. Levitating rocks. Standing on your head. So very trivial. You wouldn't want to waste your time on that, would you, my
dear?"
He was right, Leia
wouldn't want to. She thought it would
probably drive her out of her mind. But
he still wasn't giving her any answers.
"So?" she demanded impatiently.
"Now you don't
have to," he told her. "For
Force-sensitive individuals, it is simply a matter of developing the area of
the brain which allows us to connect with our powers. Generally the connection is developed through practice. I have allowed you to avoid that. For you, the connection is already
made."
She couldn't think
of anything to say to that, so she finished her fruit juice instead. Palpatine was continuing, "of course,
you still need to familiarise yourself with your abilities. Some practice will be necessary. You won't yet be able to successfully fight
those more assured of their powers. And
not everyone's skills develop along the same paths. But you do have power.
All you have to do is use it.
You are certainly at least as powerful as your dear brother."
"I've
levitated some soap," Leia scoffed.
"That isn't very impressive."
"Have you
tried to do anything else?"
Leia didn't
answer. Palpatine watched her, enjoying
her animosity, then said, "I think it's time you had something more
interesting to practice on."
The Emperor rose
and crossed over to the com panel by the door.
He spoke, too quietly for Leia to catch the words. Leia stood as well, went to refill her
goblet from the amethyst jug on the sideboard, and then walked to the window,
looking out at the sun-gilded city.
"We'll be
having company, my dear," said Palpatine.
"I think you'll be happy to see him."
Leia's gaze lit on
a group of distant humanoid figures, apparently playing some ball game on one
of the roofs that neighboured the palace.
Probably playing bryasha, though she couldn't be sure from this
distance. She tried to imagine herself
out there with them. Would that possibly work? she wondered. Could she just think herself out of
here? Of course, she'd probably just
teleport herself into mid-air and fall to her death before she figured out how
to levitate. Even if she didn't, she'd
still be stuck on Coruscant. And Luke
would still be watching holo-vids.
The entry-bell
buzzed. Palpatine said, "ah, here
he is now."
The door hummed
open. There was a pause, then Leia
heard the Emperor's smug tones, "my friend, so good of you to join
us. Leia, my dear. You remember our friend Datang?"
Leia whirled to
face them.
The tentacled mass
of Datang the kidnapper crouched just inside the closed door. Datang announced, "I am here at your
bidding, Your Majesty."
"We have use
for you, my friend." The beaming
Emperor turned toward Leia. "Leia,
dear, I think you two have some unfinished business?"
Leia didn't say
anything. She put her goblet down on
the sideboard.
She didn't trust
her voice. She didn't trust anything
about herself. She felt the anger well
up inside her again, so strong that she thought it was going to choke her. She closed her left hand around her right
wrist, clutching at its blood-stained cuff.
Palpatine was
whispering, "Arin Pellar was your friend, wasn't he? He mattered to you. He shouldn't have died. But he did."
"Shut
up!" Leia yelled. "I know what
I think."
Palpatine looked
surprised for an instant, then he grinned.
"Good," he murmured.
"Good."
She bit her lip as
she stared at Datang.
She didn't want to
be angry. She wanted to forgive him, to
say he had just been doing his job. To
say that it was Palpatine's fault, not his.
She wanted to act like the good, decent, humane individual that she
tried to believe she was.
And she wanted
Datang to die.
She thought, I'm
going to have to write to Arin's family.
She remembered him mentioning that his mother was still alive, and she
thought he'd said that he had a younger brother somewhere. She wondered if anyone had thought to inform
them yet that he was dead. What was she
going to tell them? There wasn't any
way she could make it sound like he'd died for some great cause, doing
something he'd believed in. He'd died
because he'd walked down a hallway looking for one of his friends. Because she had sent him there.
"Leia,"
said the Emperor, "Datang is yours.
A present. I give him to
you."
She saw the
kidnapper shift uneasily, but make no attempt to leave.
Leia closed her
eyes, picturing the last time she'd seen Arin alive. Wishing, with all her being, that she'd never sent him searching
for Luke.
"Leia,"
Palpatine whispered. "You know
what you want. Do it."
A gasp escaped her
that was almost a sob. For a last
instant she tried to hold her anger back.
Then she hurled it at Datang.
The creature
lurched upward as if lifted by enormous invisible hands. Leia flung him against the door, watched him
bounce off and plummet back onto the floor, and let him flounder there for a
moment. Then her mind grabbed him again
and she sent him soaring to the ceiling.
She held him there, pressing him against the ceiling harder, and harder,
until she heard him make a keening sound that didn't quite resolve itself into
words.
A cloud of thick,
black vapour shot out from the cavity at the base of Datang's body. Leia remembered this from her capture. It would knock her out if she breathed it,
she couldn't let it reach her. Her eyes
narrowed as she concentrated harder, and then suddenly the cloud was gone,
sucked back up inside Datang. Leia
laughed in delighted surprise. She
couldn't believe that had actually worked.
The surprise had
jolted her concentration. Datang
started to fall, but she caught him before he reached the floor, and hurled him
to the ceiling again. She watched him
squirm, his tentacles jerking desperately.
Leia thought of
Arin's face. She thought of his warm
blood on her hand.
She thought that she
would like to see what would happen if all of Datang's bodily fluids boiled.
The kidnapper was
writhing on the ceiling. Leia smiled at
him.
Slowly, Datang's
form started changing. The mass of his
body twisted inward for a moment, then started to expand. All of his tentacles had gone rigid. The skin on them was bubbling.
Not too fast, Leia warned
herself. That wouldn't be any fun.
The kidnapper's
eyes were fixed on her.
Leia watched the
skin shifting, bubbles appearing then disappearing, giving place to the next,
larger bubbles that grew beside them.
She thought she was letting him off a bit too easily, just boiling him,
so she gave a mental tug on one of his tentacles and wrenched it off. Dark greyish blood gushed out to make a
steaming pool on the floor, and she flung the tentacle to land on Emperor
Palpatine's table.
She decided that
she liked the sound of Datang's screams.
Enough was enough,
though. The fucker had lived too long
already. She clenched her fist, and
watched as all the skin of Datang's body bulged outward. She did not flinch when he exploded.
It caused an
immense mess. No remaining pieces of
his body were large enough to be recognisable. There was a huge splotch of grey
blood spread over the ceiling. Blood
and globules of flesh were dripping down Palpatine's blue drapes, bubbling
quietly on the floor, slowly trickling down the windows.
But none of it had
touched her. She had enough blood on
her jacket already, she didn't want any more.
She took a deep
breath and, dread starting to rise in her again, looked over at Emperor
Palpatine.
He, too, seemed to
have been untouched by the explosion.
He gazed benignly around him at the steaming filth, then he started
clapping his hands.
Leia stared at
him. She was suddenly trembling. If he said anything congratulatory, she
didn't think she could stand it.
Without thinking, she threw a wave of anger at Palpatine, but it stopped
without reaching him. Of course, she
realised, he would have his defences.
He couldn't be pulverised like Datang the kidnapper.
Leia said in a taut
voice, "I'm sorry about the mess.
I'm very tired. Would you please
excuse me?"
"Of course, my
dear girl. Of course."
Palpatine waved his
hand at the door, and it slid open.
Leia walked out,
not looking back at him. Her path to
the door was mostly free of bits of Datang, so she managed to make her exit
without either picking her way around blood puddles, or taking the risk of
slipping in them.
She didn't dare to
think until she was back in her room, alone.
Then she sat on the bed, against the headboard, her knees pulled up to
her chest and her arms wrapped around them.
She hadn't been
lying when she told Palpatine that she was tired. She felt drained. And she
did not like herself.
What a delightful
specimen of humanity you are, she told herself.
Your first day using the Force, and you go from levitating soap to
committing murder.
What was Luke going
to say about this? Gods, what would he
think of his sister now?
Of course she could
try and convince herself that it was all Palpatine's doing. That somehow he had influenced her into
killing.
But what would be
the point? She knew it was a lie. She had wanted Datang to die.
And she didn't
regret it. If she had this day to live
over, she would kill Datang again.
That realisation
was the worst part of everything she was feeling.
She leaned forward,
resting her head on her knees. The Leia
she had always thought she was would be racked with remorse right now. Torturing herself with the thought that
Datang might have left behind a family as well, just as Arin had. Dwelling on imaginings of their grief, which
she had caused.
Well, she could
still feel sorry for them, if they existed.
But not for Datang. He should
have thought about his family before he accepted a job from Emperor
Palpatine. Before he murdered Arin
Pellar.
She was going to
have to tell Luke. She couldn't try to
keep this secret from him. And somehow
she would have to get him away from that damned holopad.
How long was the
Emperor's "suggestion" going to last? Would Luke go on watching holos forever?
Of course she could
try to counter the suggestion with one of her own, but she thought that she was
too new to this Force thing to risk it.
With her luck, she'd probably end up accidentally wiping his mind
instead.
Oh, Gods. When he knew what she had done, would he
ever speak to her again?
She thought of
their father, and wished that she could talk with him about this.
Never, ever, would
she be able to believe again that she was a better person than Darth Vader.
"Grigori?"
As Mon Mothma
stepped into the holding cell, she saw Piett reluctantly drag his gaze upward,
as if she were a great deal less interesting than the area of floor he had been
scowling at. He looked at her
unreadably for a moment, before vouchsafing her a minimal nod and then focusing
again on the floor.
Mon Mothma felt a
rush of anger. Would it have killed him
just to say "hello"? She had
to forcibly remind herself that Piett had every right to be angry as well. Of course, he ought to understand
that they couldn't have acted any differently.
Their duty was to protect the Rebellion. As circumstantial as the evidence against him was, they still couldn't
leave him at large until they had proof one way or the other.
But, still, it was
not surprising that he felt betrayed.
For the past year he had been "working his butt off" for the
Rebellion, as Commander Antilles had so elegantly put it. It couldn't be pleasant to discover that the
people he'd been working with didn't trust him any farther than they could
throw a Star Destroyer.
She took a slow,
deep breath. She hadn't come here to
get into a fight with him. She said,
"I want you to know that I don't believe you're guilty of this."
He looked up again,
surprise breaking through his hostile expression. Mothma forced herself to meet the gaze of his solemn grey
eyes. He still didn't smile at her, but
that, she supposed, would have been too much to expect. At last Piett said quietly, "thank
you. So we've got five people in the
Admiral Piett Fan Club. Too bad the
rest of the Alliance is after my blood."
Mon Mothma
sighed. "Nobody's after you,"
she told him. "Well," she
admitted, "I guess except for Madine." Even that didn't get a smile out of him. She glanced at the bunk on which he was
sitting, its thin blanket the usual lurid orange of the Rebellion. "May I join you?" she asked.
"Please,"
he said automatically, edging closer to the head of the bed to make room for
her. Mothma sat down, and suppressed
another sigh. She was not going
to think about the last time they'd occupied a bed together, not yet even
twenty-four hours ago.
"It's not
going to be left like this," she said, with a lot more assurance than she
felt. "If someone else is behind
this, we have to find them."
Piett leaned
forward, staring at his hands. "It
won't be easy," he said.
"They'll be on their guard now.
They'll know better than to get caught out again while their scapegoat's
in jail."
"They'll make
a mistake," Mon Mothma said firmly.
"Maybe."
"They
will. Are you sure there's nothing else
you can think of, that would prove your alibi?"
"Oh, for gods'
sakes," Piett snapped, turning to face her. "We've been through this twenty times already. I can't get my trees to testify for me, can
I?"
They glared at each
other, but before Mothma could say something she'd regret, there was a buzz
from the cell's com panel.
"Admiral," came the voice of the guard on duty, "you've
got another visitor."
Piett
shrugged. "Send them in."
The door opened,
and Wedge Antilles stepped into the cell.
At the sight of Piett and Mon Mothma together, Antilles looked like he
wanted to make a hasty retreat.
"I'm sorry," he said quickly.
"I can come back later if -- "
"No,
Commander," sighed Mon Mothma, "come on in."
Antilles obeyed,
standing awkwardly by the door which had slid shut behind him. "Admiral," he began, "I just
want to apologise for all that shit back there. At the hearing. It was
way out of line, you shouldn't have to put up with this."
Piett managed a
very faint smile, and Mothma felt a twinge of resentment that he'd forced a
smile for Antilles but not for her.
While she tried to crush her resentment, Piett was commenting to
Commander Antilles, "I never would have believed I'd be sorry Lord Vader
isn't around. At least he'd know
that I'm not guilty. And he could
probably find whoever is."
Commander Antilles
nodded. "Look," he said,
"I don't know if we can count on Security for this one. They'll do their job, but it's easier for everybody
if you're the bad guy. They may not
look close enough. The more people
we've got looking into this, the better."
Mon Mothma was very
conscious of the fact that she ought to rebuke Antilles, telling him in no
uncertain terms that this was not the appropriate place for amateur
detection. The only thing that stopped
her was the fear that he was probably right.
Antilles went on,
"you said you can account for your whereabouts at the time of the
transmission, but they don't believe you?"
Mothma tensed, but
the repeat of the question did not prompt another explosion by Piett. Of course, Antilles hadn't been at the first
meeting this morning, so he had not heard this particular issue get beaten into
the ground. Piett said wearily, "I
was in my office till 1.00, then I thought I should get some sleep since we
were off early to Chandrila. I went
back to my room, spent some quality time with my trees, and went to bed."
Antilles
frowned. He didn't ask about the trees,
so presumably he either already knew of the Admiral's hobby, or he figured that
it wasn't any of his business.
"And there's no way to prove any of that?" he asked.
Piett shook his
head.
"What about the trees?"
Antilles persisted. "Did you water
them or something? Maybe it's possible
to tell when they were watered most recently?"
The quiet little
snort from Piett might almost have been a laugh. "I doubt it, not down to the minute. And if any of those trees get hurt in this
investigation, I'll murder the person responsible." A worried frown banished the last trace of
humour from his face. "Damn,"
he realised, "they're going to need tending while I'm in here." He looked hesitantly at Mon Mothma. "I don't suppose you ... "
She put her hand on
his. "I'll see to them," she
told him, "of course. Just let me
know what they need."
Commander Antilles
said, obviously feeling like a fifth wing-foil on an x-wing, "um, I'll get
out of your way. Ma'am, just one other
thing -- you haven't heard anything more about Commander Skywalker and the Princess? Or Lord Vader?"
Mon Mothma
hesitated. "No," she said
finally. "The last contact we had
was the message from Vader that reached us at Chandrila Seven. That he, Solo and Chewbacca were going to
seek out Skywalker and the Princess on Coruscant." She was looking up at Antilles as she said
this, and she wondered whether it was just her imagination or whether his face
had in fact gone pale.
"Hell,"
he said. "I guess there's no way
Command would approve sending out a rescue mission ... ?" From the unhappy
tone of his voice, he was already well aware of the answer.
Mon Mothma said,
keeping her voice as gentle as possible, "we don't even know for certain
that they're there. At the moment we
have no reliable sources on Coruscant.
Even if we did, it would never be approved. I'm sorry, Commander. We
just can't risk anyone else."
Antilles visibly
pulled himself together.
"Okay. They can take care
of themselves. Vader won't let anything
happen to them, anyway." He almost
sounded like he believed that. "All
the more reason for us to get things sorted out here, before they get
back. Vader's not gonna want to find
out we let everything fall apart while he was gone."
"Yes,"
Mon Mothma said quietly, and then she added, almost against her own will,
"if he comes back."
"He'll come
back," Admiral Piett put in, in a voice that allowed no argument. "He will come back."
That was too easy, thought Han.
But then, it had
been easy getting onto Coruscant, too.
Relatively easy, give or take the cardiac arrest he'd almost gotten from
flying invisible through traffic. Maybe
this was just the way things were when you went on rescue missions with Darth
Vader. As opposed, he thought ruefully,
to blundering around the Death Star in badly-fitting stormtrooper outfits with
Luke Skywalker.
As they strode
through the corridors of the Imperial Palace, he forced himself not to nod in
acknowledgement of the salutes from the soldiers that they passed. Darth had warned them to act like they were
too cool to notice anyone, except for the Moff of Coruscant and the Emperor
himself. Apparently Imperial Guards
weren't into socialising with other ranks.
Han still had a hard time believing that they actually looked like
Imperial Guards, since according to what his eyes were telling him, they still
were very obviously Darth Vader, Chewbacca and Han Solo. But Darth said that was just because he was
inside the illusion. To anyone outside,
they would look like bona fide Red Idiots; no one would even notice that two of
the supposed Imperial Guards were way beyond standard regulation height. Certainly, the other passengers on the
shuttle train they had taken from Baccara Chovitza's place had seemed to
believe the illusion, judging from the looks of terror that had greeted the
three of them and the not-so-subtle migration of most of the passengers into
the next car along. Although, Han supposed,
maybe that was the same reaction the passengers would have had to the sight of
Darth Vader and two notorious Enemies of the Empire.
But now here they
were. No one had challenged them as
they made their way to the highest level of the palace, and now they were
nearing the turn-off where the next phase of their plan began. Han swallowed nervously, his right hand
going instinctively for his blaster.
Pretty soon he and Chewie wouldn't have Darth's illusion to cover them
anymore. They'd be on their own again,
just them against the Empire.
Gee, just like old
times.
The three alleged
Imperial Guards stopped at the corner where a second squishily-carpeted hallway
branched off from the main corridor. No
one seemed to be around. Darth Vader
asked, "you know what to do?"
Han glanced at
Chewie, then nodded. "Yeah. I think so.
First door on the right."
"Yes. Give me a moment ... there. The guards are unconscious. They should remain so, long enough for you
to secure them."
"Right,"
said Han. "Uh ... Darth?"
Vader waited for
Han to go on, and Han felt immensely stupid.
Then he said brusquely, "you be careful, okay? You're the only grandparent my kids are
gonna have, I don't want you dying and not being there for them."
Vader said,
sounding amused, "I could be there for them even if I was dead."
"Yeah, well,
no offence, Darth, but I want my kids to have a live grandfather. Not one who turns up glowing blue and tells
them to 'feel the Force'."
"Believe
me," Vader said quietly, "I want them to have a live grandfather
too. And a live father."
"Yeah. Okay.
Uh, may the Force be with you."
"Not too
noticeably, I trust," said Vader, "or it will wake our Emperor from
his nap. Good luck. Both of you." With no further discussion, Darth Vader turned and strode away
from them.
Chewbacca growled
at Han impatiently.
"Yeah,
Chewie. I know." The two of them started down the second
corridor. Sure enough, on either side
of the first door on the right, two guards -- in black uniforms and caps, not
the red robes and masks of the Imperial Guard -- were standing propped against
the wall, apparently fast asleep. Han
eyed them warily as he stepped to the panel by the door and entered the code
that Darth had made him memorise.
The door slid
smoothly open. Han and Chewbacca
grabbed a guard each and dragged the unconscious men into the room. After setting his guard down on the floor,
Chewie crossed to the bank of controls that was their target. Han set about keeping the guards quiet. After a moment's consideration, he decided
that old-fashioned methods were probably the best. He took off the guards' caps and stuffed them into their mouths,
then, feeling like a character in some corny old adventure holovid, tied their
hands behind their backs with the guards' belts. Darth had warned them that blaster fire would be picked up by the
Palace security system, so they couldn't risk firing unless they absolutely had
to.
Han located a
closet and dragged the guards into it.
"Sleep tight, boys." He shut the closet door, then went to
join Chewie at the controls. "Have
you found it?" he asked.
Chewie growled that
he had. Han frowned at the readings on
the screen in front of Chewbacca.
"Shit," Han muttered, "this Palpatine is one majorly
screwed-up guy."
Chewbacca suggested
that Han should take over, as his hands were better suited to the
human-designed keyboard than were the Wookiee's. Han nodded, rubbed his hands on the front of his jacket to try
and get the sweat off them, and took his place at the screen.
Convinced that the
first thing he did was going to set off system-wide security alarms, Han stared
at the status report on the Number Five Perimeter Defence Station, the orbiting
station they had passed on their way in to Coruscant. He really hadn't believed it when Darth had told him that all of
the Perimeter Stations' systems could be shut off from the Imperial
Palace. Gods, Palpatine was sick. He must really get his jollies out of
knowing that all of his soldiers' lives were in his hands; that if he felt like
it he could turn off their oxygen supply, or shut down their shields, or take
their weapons off-line, and they wouldn't even know about it before it was too
late. Darth had explained that this was
supposed to "motivate" the men.
Failure was not an option, since if they failed to operate at maximum
efficiency their Emperor could abandon them to the vacuum of space, or switch
off their guns in the middle of a battle.
It was also a security precaution, in case any of the stations should be
captured by enemy troops. It would be
no problem at all to wipe out all of the enemy -- and, incidentally, the entire
Imperial garrison along with them.
Han grimaced. No wonder all the Imperials with brains
wanted to defect.
Still, though, in
this case Palpatine's control mania was going to be damned helpful. Han would feel a lot better traipsing past
the defence station if he knew its guns were off-line. Especially since, after whatever
Force-filled stunts Darth might currently be up to, it might be harder for the
Dark Lord to maintain the illusion of their invisibility. And since, once Leia and Luke's escape was
discovered, the defence forces were sure to be alerted that an enemy ship would
be trying to leave.
Han called up the
readings for Station Five's weapons systems.
He almost felt like he should apologise to the Station's crew for what
he was about to do to them. Once
Palpatine found out how the Falcon had gotten out Coruscanti space, the
crew of Number Five Perimeter Defence Station were not going to be in the
Emperor's good books.
Sorry, guys, Han thought. How about joining the Rebellion? He punched in the code for disarming the
system, then the security confirmation code, both codes courtesy of Vader.
Well, he thought, now
I guess we find out if the codes have been changed since Darth buggered off at
Endor.
The screen informed
him, in large, friendly letters, "system disarmed".
Then the door
swooshed open.
Even as Han was
turning, his hand going for his blaster, he heard the sizzle of blaster fire
and heard Chewbacca howl. The Wookiee
plummeted to the floor with an impact that shook the room. One corner of Han's mind registered the fact
that there was no burning hole in Chewie's chest, so the blaster must have been
set on stun. Han shot back at the
black-uniformed soldiers in the doorway.
One of them leaped aside from the blasts. Another yelled in pain.
Han kept firing. One soldier
lunged to the floor to avoid Han's shots, then fired upward from his prostrate
position. The shot hit Han's blaster,
sending it arcing away through the air and dropping it behind the control
panel.
Han stared in
shock. Slowly he put up his hands.
The soldier picked
himself up and continued to aim his blaster at Han. Other soldiers stepped into the room, all of them keeping Han
covered.
"Hi,"
said Han. "Um, we seem to have
lost our way. Could you just tell us
how to find the exit?"
Before any of the
soldiers could make a scathing reply, an officer in a grey-green uniform walked
into the room, and the soldiers all snapped to attention. "Good work, Captain," said the
newcomer, to the man who had shot away Han's blaster. Then the officer turned to Han.
He shook his head, looking weary and even regretful.
"I'm
sorry," he said in a tired voice.
"You must have known this was all too easy."
Han looked at the
officer, whose red hair and beard were starting to go grey and whose uniform
jacket looked slightly too tight, suggesting the need for either a new diet and
exercise regimen, or a bigger jacket. The
many coloured squares on the man's chest, Han realised, were those of a
full-fledged Moff. Han supposed he and
Chewie ought to feel honoured.
"You knew we
were coming," Han said hoarsely.
"Of
course," said the Moff, with a sigh.
"His Imperial Majesty knows all."
All, Han thought. He thought of Darth, and hoped that the Dark
Lord had a few more miracles in reserve.
He was going to need them.
Luke stared dully
at the holo image, as Senator Diam Palpatine began his oration at the funeral
of Field Marshal Anakin Skywalker.
Palpatine's voice was strong and clear, but every now and then it
trembled. As the holocam zoomed in on
him, it became obvious that there were tears coursing down his face.
And he's not even
dead, Luke thought. My father's
not dead, and Palpatine's got to know that, and he can still make himself look
like part of his life has been wrenched away.
Luke listened as Palpatine's speech continued, and he realised it
wasn't surprising that Palpatine had managed to take over everything. It would have been surprising if Palpatine hadn't
managed to.
He's so plausible, thought Luke. My Gods, he's almost got me
crying! Most of the funeral guests
seemed to be in the same state; when the holocam panned over them it revealed a
multitude of tear-streaked faces, and people biting their lips to keep them
from trembling.
This is sick, Luke thought. I can't keep watching this. Luke reached for the remote, but somehow the
pain and sorrow in Palpatine's voice were addictive. Luke's hand hovered over the stop button, but he didn't press it.
Then something
shook him. He felt a sudden jolt in his
mind, the mental equivalent of something colliding with him and knocking him
over.
As if a force field
had been turned off, or gravity had abruptly reasserted itself, Luke's hand
came down on the stop button and the holo image vanished.
Luke stood up. He felt faintly dizzy, but he ignored
it. What he'd just felt, he realised,
was what Obi Wan would call "a disturbance in the Force". A familiar presence had moved into the range
of his senses, momentarily disrupting everything with its arrival.
Luke thought, Father!
He spun toward the
door, just as door was opening. At the
sight of the tall, dark figure, Luke felt an upsurge of joy and relief, which
he immediately, with guilty horror, tried to suppress. Shit, he realised, I'm broadcasting my
feelings like a godsdamned holo transmitter; it'll be a miracle if Palpatine
doesn't pick them up. Luke hurried
around the sofa to the door and Darth Vader.
Vader grasped Luke's shoulder for an instant, then he said,
"hurry. We have to get to your
sister."
Vader must be
sensing Leia's presence, for he started immediately down the hallway toward the
guest quarters, without needing directions from Luke. Luke rushed after him, concentrating on keeping a damper on his
emotions. He was starting to realise
that he didn't understand how he had spent this past day. Why had it seemed so crucial to keep
watching the holovids? Why hadn't he
tried to --
Down the corridor
ahead of them, the door to the guest quarters opened. Leia ran out into the hallway.
To Luke's amazement, she went straight to Darth, grabbing one of his
hands and clasping it in both of hers.
Then she said, "let's get out of here."
As they turned and
started along the hallway again, Luke also noticed in surprise that Leia was
shielding her emotions, just as he and Darth were. He stared at his
sister. Surely, just yesterday, she
wouldn't have been able to do that.
What had happened since he saw her last?
Leia and Darth were
slightly ahead of Luke. Suddenly they
both stopped, and Luke heard Leia gasp.
A second later Luke saw what they had seen.
Standing a few
metres ahead of them in the corridor, Emperor Palpatine said with his usual
beaming smile, "my dear friends, you didn't think I'd let you leave so
easily?" He grinned at Darth. "Lord Vader, welcome back."
The three of them
stood together, Leia holding Darth's left hand, and Luke, who had stepped to
his father's side, holding Darth's right.
There was a ripple in the air that Luke could almost see, and he
realised that Darth must be projecting his personal defences, to cover the
three of them.
"Foolish, my
friend," murmured Palpatine.
"Very, very foolish."
Luke felt a wave of
malicious hatred break against the wall of Darth's defences. Luke tried to add his own defences to the
wall, to strengthen it. Another swell
of hate pulsed through the air, filling Luke's mind with a sensation of dark,
surging emptiness. Luke felt their
defences tremble. Palpatine was
chuckling.
"Protect your
children or protect yourself," came the Emperor's voice. "You cannot do both. And now ... you cannot do either."
Luke felt Darth's
hand tighten around his, and heard Leia cry out, "no!" Then Darth's hand let go. Vader was reaching up to his chest box, or
trying to. But something was stopping
his hand from reaching it. The hand,
clawlike now, was frozen inches away from the chest box controls. And Darth's breathing was changing. The regular wheezing was gone. His breath was coming now in tortured gasps,
with terrifyingly long spaces between them.
Then there was a sound like a choking cough.
Darth fell to one
knee. All shielding of emotions was
past; Luke could feel the fury and hatred that Vader was casting at the
Emperor. But they were not strong
enough.
Leia hurled an
attack at Palpatine. And the Emperor
laughed. Leia's attack dissipated into
the air around him, and then he turned his yellow eyes on her.
Leia screamed as
she was flung against the wall. She was
clutching at her stomach, and Luke reeled at the terror flooding out of
her. That wasn't just Leia's terror, he
realised. Luke could feel what Leia was
feeling, the uncomprehending agony of her children inside her. Their comfort and protection were being
ripped away from them. The knowledge
came to Luke in a rush of horror that Palpatine was cutting off the oxygen coming
to them from their mother, and the foetuses were suffocating.
Luke screamed,
"no!"
Luke threw his own
attack at Palpatine, his rage so strong that he felt like it was burning
him. All the anger, all the hatred he
had ever felt was concentrated into one white-hot blast.
Palpatine reached
up his hand as if he was pulling the fury out of the air. And then he opened his hand toward Luke.
Luke was thrown
backward, his body continuing to roll after it had hit the floor. He tried to claw his way up again, but his
veins, and his brain, seemed to be bursting, every portion of his body and mind
filled with rolling waves of flame. He
heard his own twisting scream blend with another scream from Leia, and Darth's
choking gasps. Then something seemed to
explode in Luke's mind.
The helpless wail
he could hear now must be coming from him, and the horror of it came from the
fact that his own fear was all he could sense.
The world seemed to have become two-dimensional around him; the colours
no longer seemed real.
Distantly, Luke
felt himself falling back again, his head sinking into the carpet. Darkness was pouring in at him, but not soon
enough.
He couldn't feel anything.
Leia was gone. Darth was gone. Everything was gone.
"My
Lord," Piett said shakily. And
then he had to force his mouth shut on the words that were threatening to spill
out, the hysterical pleas that would do no good and might only cause Lord Vader
to choose an even more horrible method of killing him.
My Lord, please, oh
Gods, it's not my fault, oh, no, no, please, please, spare me --
"You were
warned, Admiral," Vader's cold, calm voice echoed around him.
"But, my Lord
-- " and Piett realised that he diidn't even know what he had done wrong,
why he was here. He had failed Vader
somehow, but what --
Vader turned away
from him, to talk to another officer, and Piett felt the first hint of pressure
at his throat. And something in him
snapped. It wasn't fair, it couldn't be
happening, it couldn't! All his resolutions
not to beg for his life evaporated. He
threw himself to his knees, not caring how much his knees hurt when they hit
the floor, and began desperately, "My Lord, for Gods' sakes, please --
just wait, give me another chance, please wait -- let me see my family
again, let me say goodbye -- "
Lord Vader turned
back toward him. "There's no need
to say goodbye, Admiral. You can be
with your family for eternity."
A gasping sob
escaped the throat that was closing even tighter. "My Lord -- "
Vader's hand moved
downward. The pressure on Piett's
throat was gone, only to be replaced by something far worse. Piett stared in disbelief and tried to get
back to his feet, but the pain was making him shake too much to stand. Agony was pouring out of his abdomen,
tearing into every other part of him. A
horrible vision flashed into his mind, and Piett knew that the Dark Lord was showing
him what he was doing, sharing the knowledge that Piett's guts were being
slowly, methodically ripped into shreds.
He couldn't even
scream now. There was too much
pain. In one last desperate rear guard
action, his mind was trying to deny all of this, to negate everything in a
final please, no ...
Piett woke up. He knew where he was immediately, in his
darkened little cell, the only lights in the room glowing on the com
panel. He ought to be relieved at
having woken up, but there wasn't any relief.
The pain was still there.
He was clutching at
the bunk's pillow. He noticed that he
was sweating; the pillow felt damp against his face. He struggled slowly to a sitting position, holding the pillow now
in both hands as if he wanted to tear it apart.
Essentially, this
wasn't anything new. He'd lost track of
the number of times in the last two years that he had woken up from a nightmare
to find his stomach burning with pain.
But never like this. Never this
bad. Nothing had ever been this bad.
The cold knowledge
swept through him, completely undeniable, that something was incredibly wrong.
He managed to stand
up, although his body seemed to take hours to respond to the commands of his
brain. He hobbled across the cell to
the com panel, the pain seeming to grow with every step, and fell heavily
against it, his hand smashing against the button that opened a channel to the
guard on duty.
A few agonising
ages later, the guard's voice came, bored and irritated, "yes, what is
it?"
Piett grated out,
in a voice he didn't even recognise, "I need a doctor. Now."
That at least
seemed to shake the guard out of his annoyed lethargy. "Hunh?
What's the matter?"
"I don't
know," Piett hissed. "My
stomach. Hurry. Get a doctor. Hurry."
"Yes,
sir," said the guard. "Right
away."
Piett staggered
back to the bed and sat down on it. He
was dizzy; he wondered if he was going to become delirious on top of everything
else. He put up a hand to his face, then
the hand jerked away again at the shock of how cold his face felt, and how much
sweat was pouring off it.
Vaguely, he thought
he remembered pain just about like this.
When was it ...? Oh, yes. In the combat simulation exams back at the
Academy, in which pain from the wounds allegedly received was simulated to add
realism to the exercise. It was always
difficult to remember what pain really felt like, but this, he thought, felt
just about the same as at the highest level of the exam, the one where you had
to complete your mission with a mortal blaster wound in the gut. He'd done pretty well in that exam, got
almost the highest possible marks, managing to complete his assigned tasks
before the anguish had made him black out.
He didn't think he could be so successful now. Now he wasn't even sure he could move.
What was taking
them so long? Gods, where were
they? They'd forgotten about him, the
idiot guard hadn't called a doctor at all --
Piett fought to
stand up again, to go back to the com panel and give the guard hell. Before he got more than two steps from the
bed, he fell to the floor.
He was distantly
aware of his legs twisting up into a foetal position, his entire body trying to
cave in on itself. He felt like the
middle of his body was just a burning, gaping, blood-gushing hole, like a
torpedo had shot straight through him and somehow he hadn't yet died.
I'm going to die.
It wasn't a fear,
or a possibility, it was an absolute certainty.
Something in him
wanted to laugh.
After all this,
after two years of imagining death, torturing himself with dread of Darth
Vader, he was going to die and Vader wasn't even here. It wasn't the Dark Lord who was going to
kill him, it was his own damned stomach.
And the pain
managed to be worse than anything he had imagined.
As he lay there, he
remembered that he was wearing his pyjamas.
Damn, that was irritating. He
wished he were in his uniform instead.
But, of course it didn't really matter.
So he was going to be a corpse in pyjamas. So what?
He ought to be
unconscious. Why wasn't he? There was no way he should be conscious in
pain like this.
He lay there on the
floor, consciousness finally starting to drift away as he noticed that sweat
and tears were making a puddle against his cheek.
Chapter 10
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