Part 23 (1/2)

22.

The building to which Luke had been taken was only a hundred kilometers or so, he guessed, from the Bothan safe house-that hadn't stayed safe very long, had it? - and he was now locked in a strongly reinforced cell.

The technology here was a whole lot lower than the Bothans' had been. The walls were plain, of some hard substance, a neutral gray. The heavy door was sheathed in durasteel plate, and a window at eye level was crisscrossed with metal mesh, the strands of which were as thick as his little finger. A guard pus.h.i.+ng two meters tall and probably half that wide stood across the hall with a blast rifle, staring at the door. There was a heavy plastic cot bolted to the floor, with a thin pad and a blanket on it. A dim light overhead cast faint and fuzzy shadows. In one corner was a shallow depression in the floor with a fist-size round hole in the middle of it. He had a pretty good idea what that was used for.

Other than those things and himself, there was nothing in the cell.

Well. It could be worse. There could be vermin.

Luke sat on the cot. They'd taken his comlink and lightsaber, but they hadn't roughed him up or tortured him. Yet, anyway.

Who were they? What did they want?

As if in answer, the lock on the cell door clicked and the door swung inward. The Barabel stepped into view. Luke couldn't see her very well-he was pretty sure now it was a her-she seemed to find the darkest of the shadows as if she belonged there. Well. That didn't matter, either. He could hear her well enough.

”I don't suppose you want to tell me what's going on?”

The Barabel made a gesture Luke interpreted as a shrug. ”No reason why not. No point in being unpleasant. There's nothing you can do about it.”

There was a happy thought, ”I am Skahtul. I make my living as a bounty hunter, as do the others with me. It seems there is a large reward-a very large reward-offered to whoever deliv-ers Luke Skywalker to them, alive and well, no questions asked. Realizing what a difficult ch.o.r.e this might be, a group of us decided to band together. Better to have a portion of a lot of credits than none. Lucky for us, you and those blasted Bothans have increased the amounts of the shares the survivors of the attack will collect. It's the same pie, but there are now fewer of us to divide it among.”

Before he could speak, she continued: ”Oddly enough, there is a second reward being offered for Luke Skywalker; this one is for him-you-dead.

”Fortunately for you, the second amount is not quite as large as the first, so we plan to keep you healthy until we can collect it.”

”Here's a third option,” Luke said. ”How about I give you more than either bounty to let me go?”

Skahtul laughed, a hard-edged sound that lapped against the solid walls and bounced back at them. ”Oh, certainly, we-my colleagues and I-would be open to such an offer.”

Here was a chance. He could borrow the credits from Leia and pay her back later. ”How much are we talking about?”

Skahtul named a figure.

”Whoa! You could buy half a city with that manycredits!”: ”With enough left over for you and six or eight of your friends to retire upon and live happily ever after,” the bounty hunter said. ”Did we miss something in our search? You have a credit tab with that much in your pocket, perhaps?”

”I wish.” If Leia had that much, he'd never live long enough to pay it back, even if he made it to general. Unless he was out walking and tripped over a mountain of platinum that didn't belong to anybody. Not much chance of that.

Skahtul laughed. ”It is good that you maintain your sense of humor.” Her voice turned serious. ”But be warned. Any attempt to escape will be met with maximum resistance. We know how resourceful Jedi Knights are. You are worth a few thousand more alive than dead; however, better to collect the smaller bounty than to risk losing it all. Is this understandable?”

”Yeah, I get it.”

”Good. It's not personal, you know. Some of us even admire what you've done against the Empire, having some sympathies in that direction, but business is business. Behave yourself and you will be treated well.

You'll be kept in here, but you'll be fed and unmolested until we arrange for our benefactor to pay us and collect you.”

”You want to tell me who this 'benefactor' is?”

”Not to worry, you'll find out soon enough.”

With that, Skahtul oozed back through the door andshut it behind herself.

Luke stared after her. Well, this was great. Captured by a bunch of bounty hunters and sold to the highest bidder. Good thing the one who wanted him dead-and who might that be? - was not as generous as whoever wanted him alive. Given the money involved, he had no idea about who the latter could be.

Darth Vader could throw that many credits out a window and never miss them, were the stories true. According to what he'd heard, if Vader's personal fortune was changed into credit coins and dumped in a pile, you could spend the rest of your life digging in it with a shovel and not get to the bottom.

Leia sure didn't have that much. Probably the whole Alliance didn't have that much.

He'd better think of something fast. He had an idea that if he stood face-to-face with Vader unarmed, he wasn't going to have much of a chance of surviving that meeting.

Good idea, Luke. Think of something.

What?

The droid who looked like a woman had hidden her s.h.i.+p in a small clearing centered in a vast rain forest two hundred kilometers away from Avaro's casino. The ride didn't take long by landspeeder, and it was just the three of them: Guri, Chewie, and Leia.

Storm clouds gathered in layers of purple and gray as they arrived. The rumble of thunder followed close after the bright flashes of approaching lightning. The air had that damp, wild smell that ran before a hard rain.

Leia and Chewie stared at the s.h.i.+p.

It was a sleek, somehow almost feminine craft, shaped vaguely like a figure eight lying on its belly, bristling with guns fore and amids.h.i.+ps, a quad of powerful-looking engines mounted aft.

”My vessel, the Stinger,” Guri said.

”Very nice.”

”Named by my master,” she said. ”An appropriate designation. ”

”We'd better get on board before the storm gets here,” Leia said.

The trio started for the s.h.i.+p. Dash and Lando weren't particularly happy being left behind, but Leia wouldn't risk any more people than she had to. Chewie was enough. If this turned out to be what Guri and the mysterious Xizor claimed, it would be fine-a.s.suming they got past the pickets around Coruscant and onplanet customs. If not, no point in all of them getting into trouble.

Well. Any more trouble than they were already in.

The rain let go in earnest, and they ran for the s.h.i.+p. They got drenched anyhow.

A couple ????? le of days had pa.s.sed, at least. Luke had lost track of the time, since there wasn't any light except for the dim one in the cell and no transparisteel on the outside.

He was practicing his levitation, hovering a few centimeters over the cot, when he heard approaching footsteps. He allowed himself to drop to the cot. He didn't want to reveal he knew how to do this. There weren't any holocams in the cell that he'd been able to detect, and the guard usually stayed across the hall.

The door clicked, and Skahtul slipped silently into the room.

”So, has my buyer paid up?”

”Not exactly.”

Luke slipped off the cot and stood, facing the shorter Barabel. ”What does that mean?”

”It means that after a discussion with my... colleagues, we realized that you might be even more valuable than we thought.”