Part 4 (1/2)
”That's actually what I wanted to speak with you about, General,” Ferus said. Then he hesitated. He had spent two decades on Alderaan, cozying up to powerful men of the court. But that had been when he was pretending to be someone else-someone with no character and nothing to say. Ferus had learned to hide in plain sight, acting as a mirror for whatever pompous stuffed s.h.i.+rt he was trying to impress. All so he could protect the princess-and it had worked. But it hadn't taught him anything about how to argue his point gracefully. In fact, it had been far too long since he'd had to speak up for himself with a stranger, to be honest about what he believed. So he did it fast, like ripping off a patch of synthflesh. ”I'm worried about this mission. Something's not right.”
The general stopped walking. ”What do you mean?”
”It's just a gut instinct,” Ferus said. ”But I fear it's a trap.”
”We received this intel from an extremely trusted source who would rather die than betray the Alliance,” Dodonna said. ”Do you have evidence we should distrust his word?”
”No...”
”And is there some reason I should let the fate of the Rebel Alliance rest on your instinct? instinct? ” ”
For a split second, Ferus considered telling the general the truth. But he feared that it wouldn't do much to help his case. Even a Jedi instinct was still an instinct. It wasn't proof.
”Maybe if you let me take a look at the Imperial transmission,” Ferus suggested. ”I was quite the slicer in my day, and I could probably...” He trailed off. General Dodonna was shaking his head.
”I like you, Ferus,” the general said. ”But I have no reason to trust you with cla.s.sified material. The only reason you've even been allowed this much access is that Princess Leia vouched for you.”
”Then perhaps we should contact the princess,” Ferus said quickly.
General Dodonna tensed. It was a nearly imperceptible tightening of the muscles around his eyes and mouth. Most people would never have noticed. But Ferus wasn't most people.
”What is it?” Ferus asked urgently. ”What's wrong with the princess?”
”Nothing,” the general said, too quickly. ”As you know, she's on a covert mission, and can't be reached.”
”Her covert mission ended three days ago,” Ferus said. He kept very careful track of Leia's whereabouts. ”She's supposed to be on a diplomatic visit to the Winagrew system.”
General Dodonna rubbed his temples. ”I suppose there's no harm in telling you...Princess Leia and her team have been out of contact since leaving Nyemari.”
Ferus drew in a deep breath, forcing himself to calm down. The idea of Leia in danger caused him a nearly physical pain. And it wasn't just Leia, either. Luke was with her. The galaxy's two best hopes for survival...lost somewhere in the emptiness of s.p.a.ce.
”There's no cause for alarm yet,” the general said, sounding rather alarmed himself.
”We're doing everything we can to locate them. And it's entirely possible the Millennium Millennium Falcon Falcon's communications instruments are malfunctioning. Just like everything else on the s.h.i.+p.”
Possible...but not likely. Leia would never allow herself to be out of contact with the Rebellion for this long. Not unless she had no other choice.
”Help!” Leia screamed. Han lay on the ground, gasping and shuddering. ”I don't know what's wrong with him, he needs a medcenter! Please, help us!”
Chewbacca's roars echoed against the duracrete walls. Leia knelt by Han's body, shrieking louder and louder. Finally, help arrived. Two men appeared at the gate of the cell. One had a bushy brown beard, the other was bald. Both carried blasters. ”Quiet,” one of them said, in a dull, empty voice.
”You have to help him,” Leia said. Tears streamed down her face. ”He just collapsed. I don't know what happened. Please.”
The men unlocked the gate of the cell and swung it open. As soon as they did, Chewbacca lunged for their blasters. Han sprung to his feet, grabbing the nearest guard around his knees and throwing him to the ground. The guard rolled over, struggling to reach his blaster, but Han kept him pinned. Out of the corner of his eye, he could see Chewbacca twisting his prey into a knot. Han slammed a fist into the guard's stomach, then delivered a blow with his forehead. The guard barely reacted to the pain. Nor did he stop fighting. The blaster lay on the ground, only a few meters away, but every time Han lunged for it, the guard's swinging fists knocked him away. It wasn't just that he was especially strong or especially fast-though he was both. It was the way nothing distracted him from his goal, from Han. Han. Han was starting to get the feeling this guy would fight to the death. And that he wouldn't particularly care whose death it was. Han was starting to get the feeling this guy would fight to the death. And that he wouldn't particularly care whose death it was.
But Han did did care, and maybe that finally gave him the advantage. He gave the guard a mighty heave, sending him thumping to the ground, then lunged for the blaster. His fingers grasped the b.u.t.t of the weapon. Almost simultaneously, he yanked the guard off his feet and pressed the blaster to his head. care, and maybe that finally gave him the advantage. He gave the guard a mighty heave, sending him thumping to the ground, then lunged for the blaster. His fingers grasped the b.u.t.t of the weapon. Almost simultaneously, he yanked the guard off his feet and pressed the blaster to his head.
”Han!” Leia screamed.
Han looked up. Three new guards had appeared in the doorway, and one of them pinned Leia with her arms behind her back.
”Let her go!” Han shouted. He had his arm locked around the neck of the bearded guard. His other arm held a blaster to the man's head. Chewbacca held the other guard by the nape of the neck, dangling him several inches off the ground. ”Let her go or we'll let your friends have it.”
”You're ordered to behave,” one of the newly arrived guards said. He raised a blaster.
”I mean it,” Han shouted. ”I'm not bluffing. I'll shoot.”
A bolt of laserfire shot from the guard's blaster-and smashed straight into Han's. The weapon flew out of his hands, sizzling with the impact. Then the same guard fired another shot. It slammed into the bearded guard's chest.
Han was stunned. ”You shot your own man.”
”He failed,” the guard said simply. He raised his blaster again, but Han put his hands in the air. After a moment, Chewbacca did, too, releasing the bald guard. The man didn't run away from the Wookiee. He didn't even move. It was as if he expected to be shot, too- and was just waiting for it.
”You may go,” the guard at the door told him.
Without any visible sign of relief, the bald man walked out of the cell. The other guards shoved Leia back inside, then locked the cell again and disappeared without another word.
”Great plan,” Leia said, slumping against the wall.
”Hey, it should've worked,” Han complained. ”How was I supposed to know they'd be like... that that. It's not natural.”
Chewbacca growled in agreement.
”You're right,” Leia said gloomily. ”It's not.”
They sat in silence for a long time. Han refused to give up, but he had to admit, he was out of ideas-and it seemed like everyone else was, too.
”Don't try that again.” A man appeared at their cell, his low voice familiar. Unlike the guards, this man's eyes weren't blank. But they were pitiless.
”Rezi Soresh,” Leia said coolly.
He bowed his head in acknowledgment.
Leia glowered at him. ”Where's Luke?”
Han couldn't believe she was holding so steady. Leia could be a real pain sometimes, but he had to admit, she was good in a crisis. He'd never met anyone as tough as she was-or as frustrating. But in this case, stubbornness was the one thing that might keep them alive.
”Don't worry about Luke,” Soresh said. ”He'll be taken care of. As will you-and your precious Rebel fleet.”
Leia jumped to her feet, fists balled. Han knew she refused to let anyone threaten threaten the fleet-even if there was nothing she could do about it. ”What's that supposed to mean?” the fleet-even if there was nothing she could do about it. ”What's that supposed to mean?”
”It means you're luckier than you know,” Soresh said. His lips parted in a gruesome smile. ”You won't have to see the destruction of everything and everyone you care about.”
”Yeah, and why's that?” Han asked. He had a bad feeling he already knew the answer.
Soresh's smile widened, confirming his suspicions. ”Because by the time it happens, you'll all be dead.”