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She shot him a look. "If and when you get us out of this, and not a moment before." They were each in their chairs, as were the others, some of them asleep, heads pillowed on folded arms or hung backwards with mouths ajar. Lighting was faint, the air was frigid, and the scrubbed and rescrubbed oxygen had a distinctly metallic taste.
The much-abused refresher was rank.
They had been inside the arm for almost four standard days, subsisting on food pellets and relieving the boredom by putting on EVA suits and venturing out into the hangar. Where the shuttle had artificial gravity, moving about in the arm was like exploring a deep - sea wreck. Many of the cargo pods had ma.s.sed along the outer wall of the arm, but clouds of lommite and tangles of droids drifted about like flotsam and jetsam.
Boiny had even discovered the body of one of the Twi'leks who hadn't made it back to the rendezvous point, burned almost beyond recognition by blaster fire.
They hadn't planned on remaining in the hangar arm after the explosion.
But once it had been determined that the arm was just outside the tug of Dorvalla's gravity, Cohl had decided that the hangar would be the best place to bide their time. The Hawk - Bat and the Nebula Front support ships had fled, and even the Acquisitor had disappeared--a fact that Cohl found curious, since it was unlike the Neimoidians to leave cargo behind, jettisoned or otherwise.
Another option would have been to race for Dorvalla's surface, to what had been their base before the boarding operation. But Cohl suspected that the base had been discovered and would probably be under surveillance.
When Rella and some of the others had suggested striking out instead for nearby Dorvalla IV, it was Cohl who reminded them that salvage and relief ships would be on their way to Dorvalla, and a lone shuttle, crawling through s.p.a.ce, would certainly attract unwanted attention.
In fact, salvage crews had arrived within local hours of the explosion.
Since then, Dorvalla Mining had been employing their ferries to gather up what cargo pods they could, though much of the lommite had plunged into the atmosphere, as if bent on returning home. The detached centersphere and the other hangar arm had been hauled off, in advance of Dorvalla's bringing them down. Soon the salvagers would turn their efforts to the starboard arm.
For Cohl, the long days were no more than tedious; nothing like the years of confinement he had endured after being imprisoned on false conspiracy charges by people he had fought beside and had counted as friends.
Because the rest of the shuttle's crew trusted him implicitly, they, too, suffered the monotony without complaint. Most of them were stoic by nature and no strangers to privation, in any case. Anyone who wasn't wouldn't have been selected for the operation.
Only Rella was inclined to speak her mind. But she and Cohl had an understanding.
"Anything on the comm?" Cohl asked Boiny.
"Not a peep, Captain." Rella snorted. "Who are you expecting to hear from, Cohl? The Hawk-Batis long gone." Cohl looked past her to the Rodian. "What's the status of the systems?"
"Nominal." Rella growled impatiently. "You know, I can last in here as long as any of you, but this litany is driving me s.p.a.ce happy." She mimicked Cohl's voice, "Systems status," then Boiny's, "Nominal." She gave her head a shake. "Can't you at least come up with other ways of saying it?"
"Here's something that will cheer you up, Rella," Jalan said irritably.
"The arm's...o...b..t is deteriorating." She forced her eyes wide open. "If you mean we're actually in danger of falling from the sky, you're right: I'm thrilled!" Jalan looked at Cohl. "No imminent danger, Captain. But we should probably begin to think about leaving." Cohl nodded. "You're right. It's time we bid good-bye to this place. Served us well, though."
Rella raised her eyes to the low ceiling. "Thank the stars."
"Where are we off to, Captain? " Boiny asked.
"Downside."
"Captain, I hope you're not thinking of riding this thing down to Dorvalla," Jalan said. "The salvage crews will--was Cohl shook his head negatively. "We're returning to base under our own power." The crew members traded uneasy looks.
"Begging your pardon, Captain," Jalan said, "but didn't you say the base was probably being watched?"
"I'm sure it is being watched." Rella stared at him for a moment. "Are you scrambled, Cohl? We've been monitoring Judicial Department ships for the past four days, not to mention Dorvalla s.p.a.ce Corps corvettes.
If you wanted to be caught, why did you make us sit through--was She gestured broadly. his-comth?" The others muttered in agreement.
"Even if we make it to the base in one piece," Rella went on, "what happens then?
Without a s.p.a.ceworthy ship, we'll be stranded."
"Maybe Dorvalla IV'S worth a shot, after all, Captain," Jalan interjected. "If we manage to make it... I mean, with the Nebula Front likely thinking that we're dead, and all that au - rodium right here with us..." Rella cast Cohl a sly glance. "Are you listening?" Cohl firmed his lips. "And when the Nebula Front learns that we survived? You don't think they'll move planets to hunt us down?"
"Might not matter, Captain," Boiny said guardedly. "That much aurodium could buy all of us new lives in the Corporate Sector or somewhere."
Cohl's gaze darkened. "That's not going to happen.
We took this job on, and we'll see it through. Then we collect our pay."
He swung angrily to Rella. "Begin your preflight. The rest of you, prepare for launch." The small ship burned its way through sunlit Dorvalla's nebulous envelope, red nose aglow and losing pieces of itself to the thin air. The crew cinched their harnesses tighter and focused silently on their separate tasks, even as items broke loose from the consoles and began to carom around the cramped cabin-s.p.a.ce like deadly missiles.
Rella aimed the trembling shuttle for a broad valley in the equatorial region, defined by two steep escarpments. There, where ancient seas had once ruled and plate tectonics had wreaked havoc with the terrain, the land was blanketed by thick forest, with trees and ferns primeval in scale.
Ma.s.sive, sheer-faced tors, crowned with rampant vegetation, rose like islands from the forest floor.
Blinding white in the sunlight, the tors were the birthplace of waterfalls that plunged thousands of meters to turbulent turquoise pools.
But for all the wildness, it wasn't a wilderness.
Dorvalla Mining had carved wide roads to the bases of most of the larger cliffs, and two circular landing fields, expansive enough to accommodate ferries, had been hollowed out of the forest. The tors were gouged and honeycombed with mines, and a thick layer of lom - mite dust blanketed much of the vegetation.
Likewise the product of outsize machines, deep craters filled with polluted runoff water reflected the sun and sky like fogged mirrors.
It was from here, with an a.s.sist from several disenfranchised employees of Dorvalla Mining, that Cohl had finalized his plans for boarding the Revenue.
But not all of Dorvalla expressed a loathing for the Trade Federation, much less a tolerance for mercenaries; certainly not those who saw the Trade Federation as Dorvalla's salvation, as the planet's only link to the Core Worlds.
The shuttle was leveling out of its bone-rattling ride down the well when a blunt-nosed ship tore past to port, intent on making its presence known.
"Who was that?" Rella asked, reflexively ducking as the sonic boom of the ship's pa.s.sing overtook the shuttle.
"Dorvalla s.p.a.ce Corps," Boiny reported, his black orbs fixed on the authenticators. "Coming about for another pa.s.s." Cohl swiveled his chair to the viewport to watch the ship's lightning-fast approach. It was a fixed-wing picket ship, single - piloted but packing dual laser cannons.
"Incoming transmission, Captain," Boiny said.
"They're ordering us to set down."
"Did they ask us to identify ourselves?"
"Negative. They just want us on the ground." Cohl frowned. "Then they already know who we are."
"That Judicial Department Lancet," Rella said, turning to Cohl. "Whoever was piloting it probably registered our drive signature." The picket ship screamed overhead, closer this time.
"Another pa.s.s like that and they're going to knock us to the ground, Captain," Jalan warned.
"Stay on course for the base," Cohl ordered.
The picket barrel-rolled through a tight loop and came back at them once more, this time firing a burst from its forward laser cannons. Red hyphens streaked across the shuttle's rounded nose.
"They mean business, Captain!" Boiny said.
Cohl swung to Rella. "Keep an eye out for a place to crash." She gaped at him. "You mean land, don't you?"
"As I said," Cohl emphasized. "Until then, all speed. Get us as close to the base as you can." She gritted her teeth. "There had better be an aurodium ring at the end of this thrill ride, Cohl."
"The picket's firing."
"Evasive," Cohl said.
"No good, Captain. We can't outmaneuver it!" The picket's lasers st.i.tched a ragged line across the shuttle's tail, flipping it through a complete rotation. What had been a steady roar from the engines became a distressed whine. Flames licked their way through the aft bulkhead, and the cabin began to fill with thick, coiling smoke.
"We're dirtbound!" Rella shouted.
Cohl clamped his right hand on her shoulder. "Hold her steady! Fire repulsors and brace for impact." Trailing black smoke as it swept past one of the tors, the shuttle clipped the top of the forest canopy, pruning huge branches from the tallest trees. Rella managed to keep them horizontal for a moment more, then they began to nosedive. The ship slammed into a ma.s.sive tree and slued to starboard, spinning like a disk as it buzz-sawed through the upper reaches of the canopy.
Birds flew screeching from the crowns, as wood splintered to all sides.
Seat restraints snapped, and two of the crew were flung like dolls into the starboard bulkhead. Rolled over on its back, the shuttle rocketed toward the forest floor.
The viewports cracked, spiderwebbed, then blew into the cabin.
Contact with the ground was even harsher than any of them had antic.i.p.ated. The starboard stabilizer plowed into the leaf - littered soil at an acute angle, causing the ship to flip like a tossed coin.
Seats tore loose from the deck, and instrumentation ripped away from the bulkheads. The roll seemed to go on forever, punctuated by the deafening clamor of collisions. The hull caved in, and conduits burst, loosing noxious fluids and gases.
All at once it was over.
New sounds rilled the air: the pinging of cooling metal, the hiss of punctured pipes, the boisterous calls of frightened birds, the tattoo of falling limbs, fruits, and whatever else, striking the hull. Coughs, whimpers, moans...
Gravity told Cohl that they were still upside down.
He unclipped his harness and allowed himself to drop to the ceiling of the shuttle. Rella and Boiny were already there, bruised and bleeding, but regaining consciousness even as Cohl went to them. He put an arm under Rella's shoulders and took a quick look around.
The rest of the crew were surely dead, or dying.
Satisfied that Rella would be all right, Cohl sprang the portside hatch.
Moisture-saturated heat rushed in on everyone, but blessed oxygen, as well. Cohl bellied outside and immediately consulted his comlink's compa.s.s display.
Unaccustomed to standard gravity, he felt twice his weight. Every motion was laborious.
"Did Jalan make it?" Rella asked weakly.
The human answered for himself. "Barely." Cohl squirmed back inside.
Jalan was hopelessly wedged beneath the console. He placed a hand on Jalan's shoulder. "We can't take you with us," he said quietly.
Jalan nodded. "Then let me take a few of them with me, Captain." Rella crawled over to Jalan. "You don't have to do this," she started to say.
"I'm most-wanted in three systems," he cut her off. "If they find me alive, they're only going to make me wish I was dead anyway." Boiny looked at Cohl, who nodded.
"Give him the destruct code. Rella, separate the ingots into four equal allotments.
Put two allotments in my pack, one in yours, and one in Boiny's." He glanced back at Boiny. "Weapons and aurodium only. No need for food or water, because if we don't make it to the base, Dorvalla Penal will be providing all of that for us. If that isn't inspiration enough for you, I don't know what to tell you." Moments later the three of them exited the ship.
Cohl shouldered his weighty pack, took a final compa.s.s reading, and set off toward a nearby tor at a resolute clip. Rella and Boiny kept up as best they could, climbing steadily under thick canopy for the first quarter hour while the picket ship made pa.s.s after pa.s.s in search of some sign of them.
From the high ground, at the base of the lommite cliff, they could see the picket ship hovering over the treetops.
Rella grimaced. "He found the shuttle."
"Unlucky for him," Cohl said.
No sooner had the words left Cohl's mouth than an explosion ripped from the forest floor, catching the picket ship unawares. The pilot managed to evade the roiling fireball, but the damage had already been done. Engines slagged, the fighter listed to port and dropped like a stone.
A second picket ship roared overhead, just as the first was exploding. A third followed, angling directly for the base of the tor where Cohl and the others were concealed.
The picket poured fire at the tor, blowing boulder-size chunks of lommite from the cliff face. Cohl watched the ship complete its turn and set itself on course for a second run. As it approached, a deeper, more dangerous sound rolled through the humid air. Without warning, crimson energy lanced from the underbelly of the clouds, clipping the picket's wings in midnight.
Unable to maneuver, the fighter flew nose first into the cliff face and came apart.
"That's another one we won't have to worry about," Cohl said, loud enough to be heard over the roar in the sky.
Rella raised her head in time to see a large ship tear overhead.
"The Hawk-Bat!" She glanced at Cohl in surprise. "You knew.
You knew she would be down here." He shook his head. "The contingency plan called for her to be here. But I didn't know for sure." She almost smiled. "You may get that pardon yet."
"Save it for when we're safely aboard." The three of them scampered to their feet and began a hurried descent of a scree field skirting the cliff face. Not far away, her weapons blazing, the Hawk-Bat was setting down at the center of a Muddy and befouled catch basin.
T Thousands of sentient species had a home on Coruscant, though it might be only a kilometer-high block of nondescript building.
And nearly all those species had a voice there, though it might be only that of a representative long corrupted by the diverse pleasures Coruscant offered.
Those manifold voices had their say in the Galactic Senate, which sprouted like a squat mushroom from the heart of Corus - cant's governmental district. Surrounded by lesser domes and b.u.t.tressed buildings whose summits disappeared into the busy sky, the senate was fronted by an expansive pedestrian plaza. The plaza itself lorded over a sprawl of spired skysc.r.a.pers and was studded with impressionistic statues thirty meters high, dedicated to the Core World founders. Angular and humaniform in design, the long-limbed and genderless sculptures stood on tall duracrete bases and held slender ceremonial staffs.
The iconic motif was continued inside the senate, where many of the public corridors that encircled the rotunda featured statues of similar spindly design.
Proceeding briskly along one of those corridors, Senator Pal - patine marveled at the fact that the senate had yet to commission and display sculptures of nonhumanoid configuration. Where some delegates were willing to dismiss the lack of nonhuman representation as a simple oversight, others viewed it as an outright slight. To still others, the decor was a matter of small concern, either way. But with nonhumanoid species dominant in the Mid and Outer Rims, and their delegations fast overwhelming the senate--to the secret dismay of many a Core World human delegate--changes were certainly in order.
With its multilevel walkways, corridors, and vertical and horizontal turbolifts, the hemispherical building was as labyrinthine as the inner workings of the senate itself. Courtesy of Supreme Chancellor Valorum's announcement of a special session, the corridors were even more jammed than usual, but Palpatine was heartened to find that the delegates could still be motivated to set aside their personal affairs for matters of broader import.
Flanked by his two aides, Doriana and Pestage, he smiled pleasantly as he threaded his way toward the rotunda, easing past the blue-robed Senate Guard stationed at the doorway and stepping down into ationaboo's balcony platform in the vast amphitheater.