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What Lies Within 1986/2003 short story by Mark Newbold
and Jonathan Hicks Four years
after Episode IV – A New Hope “Mactin’s dead?” Jan Lomona
could hear his own incredulous words, but their true meaning had yet to hit
home. Goah Galletti smacked his fist
into his open palm again as he fought the urge to strike something, stalking
the room like a maddened beast. Goah
had told Jan ten minutes before, but the smuggler couldn’t believe it. Mactin Selka. Smuggler, pilot, friend
to both Jan and Goah and a hugely experienced operator. Dead? It just didn’t seem right. Stars burned themselves out and moons
collided, but Mactin Selka was as constant as time. Until time ran out for him. Jan composed
himself for a moment and focused on Goah. “Does Durne know?” Galletti
nodded briefly as he made another slower journey across the compact
communications room, seconded on Level Eighteen of the monolithic Chancai
Trade Centre. “I contacted him myself.” He slowed his pace and looked ruefully at
Jan. “He was distraught. I don’t know how Durne will cope with his brothers death.” Jan sadly
shook his head, images of his own two lost brothers flooding back to
him. He watched Goah as he blew out a
long breath. Galletti had lost his
brother, sister and parents to the Empire, as well as his beloved wife
Tref. If anyone knew about grief it
was Goah Galletti. “He’ll cope the
same we all do. In
his own way.” Jan lowered his
head for a moment, remembering the many friends he’d lost over the
years. He’d been on Chancai for the
last five days, as had Galletti, overseeing business for Glann Cipple. As ever he had been quick about his work
and had found time to catch up with a handful of old friends. It had been an enjoyable distraction from
his usual work routine, and he wished he could find more time to kick back
and enjoy the friends he had made, and Paige, the daughter who had recently
found him. After this shock he
promised himself that he would do just that.
He returned his eyes to Goah and narrowed them into slits, brimming
with intent. “Do you know who did it?” Even Jan was
surprised at the intensity that burned in Goahs eyes as he turned to face the
towering smuggler. Jan hadn’t seen
such anger and fury mixed on a face for a long time. He almost didn’t recognise him. “Terrov.” It was the
only word Jan needed to hear. Anything
else would have been extraneous information. “When do we go?” “Two duargas. That will be four donalees
sir.” Jan flipped
the coins to the robo-barkeep and turned back towards the dark corner table
where he and Goah were seated in shadow.
The Frequent Flyers Freakout Factory was a regular dive for
traders and smugglers passing through Level Eighteen of the enormous centre,
and Jan as was something of a frequent flyer himself he was more than
familiar with the place. The owner, a
friendly native of Zelon named Drystill was a client of Lomona’s accepting
various consignments of legal and illegal items on a semi-regular basis. The Factory was a hiding hole that
Jan liked, and he’d recommended it to a number of people over the years,
Galletti included. But today was not
the time for a quiet chat and a friendly drink. Today was all about business and revenge. Jan took a
deep chug from his glass and licked his lips free of the heavy beverage,
casting a glance across the room and then back towards Goah. The gunman had barely looked up from the
table, his previous drink sitting undisturbed where it had been placed. Jan smiled sadly, knowing what a valuable
friend Mactin had been to Goah over the years, and his proficiency as both a
co-pilot and confidante to Galletti.
It was a keen loss. “I had a word with Grin while I was out
back,” began Jan, referring to the street urchin and informer who regularly
travelled through the Mid-Rim, bumming lifts and waiting at the foot of
freighter ramps, picking up news and gossip.
He grabbed a Cockon and dropped it into his mouth. Crunching on the snack, he grabbed
another. “He’s put out the feelers,
started some enquiries. He’ll find out
where Terrov’s posted.” Jan waited for
Goahs response, but there was none.
“But I’ve got a feeling that even if he doesn’t come up trumps, you’ll
search every star until you find him anyway.” “That bastard is already dead.” answered
Goah meanly, coming to life as if by the flick of a hidden switch. Lomona nodded slowly and took another sip. “I wish it was that easy.” He paused, choosing his words
carefully. “Look, I’m no expert on the
matter but I do know payback takes time. Life doesn’t just throw these things into
your lap.” Goah looked up at Jan,
anger and mild confusion covering his face.
Jan shrugged. “All I’m saying
is, this’ll take time.” “I’ve got time. All the time it takes to bring down that
murderous scum.” Goah rapped his knuckles
lightly against the course wood of the tabletop. “Do you know what that…”
He struggled to find the right word that summed up his emotions. “Frecker did to my wife?” Jan knew first
hand the story of Goahs late wife more times than he cared to remember. It was a tale of sorrow that had eaten away
at Galletti for many years. Jan
wondered if it was that which had caused his slide into the depths of sullen
depression that had plagued his friend these past few years. Jan had never married, and Frans Latka, the
woman he was engaged to he had been less than faithful to. To love someone enough to
marry them, and then to lose them.
He didn’t think his heart could bare that. “I know Goah.” He nodded sadly. “I know.”
Jan paused, unsure of what to say next. He didn’t wish to sound glib or dismissive,
but he knew he would. “It doesn’t
help, but life goes on. Tref and
Mactin are gone now, and there’s nothing we can do about that. You’ve got to focus on your life and make
the most of it.” “Life?” sneered
Goah, straightening up and glaring at Lomona.
“Life?
You call this a life?”
He threw a disdainful look around the room. “Hiding in filthy tapcafes with you, while
my wife and friends rot in their graves?
This isn’t life, it’s a life sentence.” I didn’t
realise you felt that way, thought Jan to himself
as he watched Goah and waited for him to calm down. The fire in the assassins’ eyes was burning
brightly and it was a look Jan was familiar with. And hundreds of others
who had crossed the Trefnarians path.
Galletti meant business, and beware anyone who got in his way. Jan included. “We both lost a friend today. Mactin was a good man. I think he’d want us to knuckle down and
get through this–“ “Who gives a damn what you
think!” exploded Goah suddenly, pushing himself from the table and standing
to his feet. Jan leaned back in
surprise, not expecting such a volatile reaction and froze, unsure of what
Galletti was going to do next. The
black clad assassin bore a hole through Jan as he hovered over him, his
barely pent-up fury brimming over. Jan
composed himself and looked calmly up at his friend, motioning to the fallen
chair. “Sit down Goah.” Goah barely
hid the curled snarl that crinkled his lip and knelt down to retrieve the
chair from the Factories floor, for the moment thinking better of
tackling the experienced two and a half metre tall bar room brawler in his
own environment. Goahs field of
expertise was with a rifle in his hands.
Then, he thought to himself, watching Jan as he sat down, you
wouldn’t be so damn cocky. “Gentlemen, if I may take a moment of your
time?” Jan and Goah
looked up as a human and an Ithorian joined them by the table. The human who had addressed them smiled
courteously and extended a hand to Goah. “Doctor Evvran Joenligg. This is
my associate Doctor Thrace Meenton.” Galletti ignored the proffered hand. “Get lost.” Joenligg continued, undeterred. “My colleague
and I are seeking passage to the Escall System. We are eminent archaeologists.” He glanced at Jan, realising by his
clothing and demeanour that he was the pilot.
“It’s a matter of some urgency.” “It always is.”
smiled Jan, gesturing to the empty seats around the table. The two men seated themselves and waved
away the robo-tender that flew by. “So, Escall. You
boys have business there?” “Pressing
business.” spoke up Meenton. He
glanced at his superior Joenligg, as if to check he was allowed to
speak. “We have matters of high office
to attend to.” “What my
erstwhile partner means to say is,” interjected Joenligg swiftly, “Is that we
are on a strict timetable.
Certain…deadlines have to be adhered to.” Jan threw Goah
a sly look. “Imminent deadlines?” “Yes sir.” Jan dropped
the smile. “Well, that’ll cost. Freighters don’t come cheap, especially
mine.” He raised his eyebrows in a
conspiratorial manner. “And there
ain’t many souped up like the Sunrise.” Meenton looked
surprised. “The Berone Sunrise?” Jan looked
sideways at Goah, a smirk melting across his features. “That’s right. You’ve heard of her?” “Who hasn’t?” added Joenligg, an air of
satisfaction apparent in his voice.
Jan grinned broadly. Finally, someone with taste. “So, a trip
out to Escall. Right away.” “Expediency is the key.” He raised his chin as he addressed
Jan. “And finance is no problem.” The doctor
spoke the language of money, which Jan appreciated. He was fluent in nine languages, and money
was one of them. “Well my good doctors, it appears you got
yourselves a ship.” “And they paid the full fee upfront, which
is a bonus.” Jan grinned as he patted
his bulging front pocket but could see that Goah was paying little
attention. “You’ve got nothing on with
Glann, why not come along? The
break’ll do you good.” Jan stood
straight, placing the quadex power feeder cable onto the top of a packing
crate and clapped his hands free of dust.
He was concerned about Galletti.
Even given his volatile and sparky nature, his reaction at the Freakout
Factory earlier was distinctly out of character and Jan wondered just
what kind of havoc he would wreak if not kept in check. Not that Jan could ever keep Goah in check,
especially these days. He continued. “It’s a simple run, direct there and direct
back. We should be back on Amagad in
two days. What do you say?” Galletti gave
a shallow nod in return, signalling his acquiescence. Satisfied, Jan returned to his pre-flight
duties. In the distance, Meenton and
Joenligg entered the vast docking bay of Level Eighteen and made their way
through freighters, custom ships, fighters and speeders until they reached
the area that held the Sunrise. Jan
once again dusted down his hands and lowered the ramp for them to enter. “Glad you could make it.” He waved them in. “My friend will be joining us for the
duration of the trip.” Jan motioned to
Goah, who scowled back at the three of them.
“Take-off in ten minutes. Aurran!” Lomona’s
trusty and ancient droid lumbered his way to the top of the ramp. “Give these gentlebeings
their transponders and show them to their quarters.” “At once Master Jan.” Aurran collected the bags from the two
doctors and made his way inside as Jan completed the final pre-flight checks
that he had made so many times before.
Satisfied that all was well he watched Galletti board his freighter
and locked down the final few hatches and compartments, and then walked the
ramp himself into the body of his ship.
A brief discussion with the Portmaster and he was cleared to
disembark, and scant minutes later Chancai and Zelon were just another speck
in the cosmos. The journey to
Escall passed without incident. That is unless
you regard such occurrences as two blazing rows, an unscheduled bump out of
hyperspace in a region of the sector known for pirate attacks and a bout of
food poisoning as incidents. In
that case the eight-hour circuitous journey was incident packed. Initially the trip was quiet and without
problems, until Jan and Goah started a discussion on the merits of free
trading as opposed to the merits of being a hitman, Goah seeing little merit
in the smuggling trade and Jan none whatsoever in being a hired killer, which
escalated into a heated discussion and finally Aurran inventing a fake
emergency to stop the two men from thumping each other repeatedly. And then after the false emergency an
interdictor field dragged the Sunrise out of hyperspace into the
Eleffs Expanse, a long but narrow stretch of space that had to be traversed
in order to swiftly reach Escall from Zelon, dropping her directly into the
midst of a pirate attack on a cruise liner. Despite the best efforts of the
doctors to diffuse this one, another argument sprang up, this time between
Jan insisting they strike a deal and aide the stricken vessel and Galletti
firmly making the point that they should leave the scene and return to
hyperspace and Escall. On this
occasion Goah was backed up by the two doctors, and so Jan found himself out
numbered, and knowing he would require their assistance to have any hope of
making his gambit a success he decided to swing away from the pirate attack
and return to hyperspace. On board the
atmosphere was less than civil, and strangely enough a change had
occurred. Whereas before it was Jan
who was civil to the two passengers and Goah was quiet and sullen, now Jan was
visibly agitated by them. True to form
Galletti remained quiet and sullen. Just over an
hour before arrival at Escall Aurran prepared a light meal for the four
humans and laid it out in the galley for them to dip in when they so desired,
and returned to the landing strut assembly he was working on in the lower
portion of the ship. He heard the
mumbles of satisfaction above him, and then the groans of discomfort as the
doctors’ experienced sudden and explosive food poisoning and swiftly carried
himself up top to find his galley redecorated and his attempts at culinary
satisfaction sprayed in ten directions.
Jan and Goah joined him a moment later, hanging back in the doorway
and checking the untouched food that Aurran had laid out for them. “I think I’ll wait till we get to a
Zythlies,” said Lomona, turning past Goah and grinning as he checked the
scene. “Likewise.” replied the gunman as he
returned to his seat. An hour later
and the haul of retro’s
screamed through the heavy air as the stock heavy Berone Sunrise
skipped like a stone through the atmosphere of Escall and manoeuvred her way
to a landing in a vast and wide glade.
It was mid-morning and the sky was bright and full of life, birds and
gliding reptiles swinging their way overhead.
Jan powered his ship down to hot standby and swung his jacket on,
aware that while Escall may look warm and inviting she had a decidedly
deceptive wind that could cut through permacrete. “Doctors, if you’ll follow me. I know a speeder rank that’ll take you into
the city for a good price.” Doctor Joenligg smiled courteously and shook his head. “Many thanks captain, but our travel
arrangements are well in hand.” He
raised an eyebrow at Meenton, who followed with Aurran and their luggage. “We’re being met by our associates, to be
taken to a private location.” “Matters of high
office.” Interjected Meenton again, and receiving yet another stinging
glare from Joenligg. Jan stuck out his
lower lip and nodded, as if unbothered by this. “Well that’s fine by me.” He glanced at Goah who stood leaning
against the forward landing claw, disinterest emanating from him like a
noxious cloud. “Me
and my friend here have our own business to attend to. Matters of high urgency.” “Then we’ll take up no more of your time.” Joenligg extended his hand and shook
Jans. “Many thanks for the passage
Captain Lomona. You have a fine ship.” He rubbed his stomach. “Although your galley
could do with an overhaul.” Jan raised his
eyebrows in agreement and grinned as he turned towards the Sunrise. “I’ll bear that in mind.” Jan stood at the foot of the ramp in the
bright morning chill and watched the two doctors waddle their way towards the
tree line with their heavy baggage and out of sight as Goah re-entered the
freighter and began to gather his equipment for the hour long hike to the
nearest settlement. Jan knelt down and
snapped up a stalk of grass, chewing on the root and watching birds twirl
their songs through the air, seemingly without a care in the world. If only life were that easy, he
thought as he moved up the ramp and into his quarters. “Y’know, before Endor I couldn’t remember
the last time we’d hiked through a forest.
A few weeks later and here we are again.” Smiled Jan, looking
sideways at Galletti as the gunman pushed up north towards yet another
hilltop. The Trefnarian raised
his eyebrows in agreement. “It’s been a while.” He swatted a batch of bothersome flies away
with his free hand. “Which is fine with me.
I hate forests.” “You hate everything with a pulse.” Jan paused.
“You hate everything without a pulse. Gotta hand it to you buddy, you don’t
discriminate.” “Don’t read too much into that.” Galletti
swatted back, and an easy smile melting across his face like a valve
releasing pressure. Jan had almost
forgotten the man that Galletti used to be, before the killing and the
assassin work. A man he thought lost
forever, until that smile lit his face.
Lomona often wondered what it was Goah had seen or done that had
changed the easy, carefree young man he used to know into the cold killer of
today. Certainly he’d seen more than
his share of misery and destruction, but then so had Jan. Galletti had lost his wife Tref as well as
a brother and a sister; Lomona had been forced to kill his own elder brother
Hijjin. Jan was for all intents and
purposes estranged from his own world.
Galletti had no real desire to return to his. Lomona drifted from job to job with little
path or purpose in his life. Galletti
seemed to have acquired an agenda to his existence – bring pain and misery to
the enemies of Glann Cipple. For sure,
Jan had seen trouble and bother, but not on the scale of Galletti. But despite all that he couldn’t pinpoint
the genesis of the turn from the Galletti of before to the Galletti that
swatted flies with intent beside him today. Jan was sure
that he’d find out some day. The forest
thinned, revealing the outskirts of a compact city that led through a
boulevard of trees to the coastline of Escalls second largest ocean. Jan lengthened his stride as the grass
turned to permacrete and soon Galletti and Lomona were in the boundaries of
the city of Elvrenns. It was a small
city that both had visited before on their various trips to Escall, and
despite its diminutive size Elvrenns was among the most visited places on the
planet. Jan led the way, taking them
through the main thoroughfare towards the business district of town, through
that and along the quayside and into a large warehouse complex. Galletti held himself tight, ready for
action, tensed like a cat prepared for attack. Lomona walked with the easy air of a man in
control of both himself and his surroundings. Even though he was patently neither. A door opened
and a wafer-thin figure walked through, blaster in hand and a twisted grin
across his features. Jan stared
blankly at the alien, its pale green skin glowing slightly in the
shadows. So this dude is no master
of stealth, that’s for sure, thought Jan to himself. He frowned slightly as Goah nudged past him
and extended a hand to the alien, his face remaining stoic. “Jork.” “Goah.” The alien replied,
taking the assassins calloused hands, worn from years of repeated blaster
use, and shaking it heartily. Although
their faces didn’t reveal it, they were clearly friends. Or at the very least
useful acquaintances. Jork
motioned for them to follow, and Galletti took the lead from Jan as they
entered the room. It was a
gambling den and around the various tables sat a bunch of underworld types
Jan knew well. He acknowledged a
handful as he followed Goah to the rear of the room and sat next to the black
clad assassin. Goah nodded to someone
in a dark recess of the room and sat back in his seat. “So, do you mind telling me who the freck
that was?” asked Jan. “I thought I was
leading this party.” “You were, until your invite ran out.” Answered Goah.
“Jork is a man of many skills.
You’d do well to become his friend.” “I don’t make friends with people who glow
in the dark.” “With a dress sense like yours I find that
surprising.” Jan looked
Goah up and down with a barely hidden sneer. “If I glowed in the dark I’d be on and off
like a flashlight. Besides, it’s time
someone told you the spectrum doesn’t begin and end with black.” Goah stared
straight ahead as a drink was placed before him. “Everything begins and ends in black.” Jan pondered
the deeper meanings of that statement for a moment before checking the room
out once again. “So how do you know this dive? I thought it was a little hole that only I
knew about.” “I’ve never been here before but I know
some of the faces.” He looked sideways
at Lomona. “Sometimes it pays to get
around.” “Oh I get around alright.” Replied Jan. “Just
not down to the levels you do.” He
raised a hand in acknowledgement of the harshness of the statement. “No offence.” “None taken.” Galletti scanned the room again, mentally
tallying up the bounties on display, for later opportunities. “So why bring us here? You said this was a simple drop, a two day
job.” Jan shrugged
his shoulders and sipped at his brew. “We made good time, and our passengers
were no trouble. Didn’t think it would
hurt to scope out the state of play round here, make some contacts.” He rolled his drink in its glass. “Besides, I bet you’ve tallied up the total
for this dive already.” “Forty grand at a push,
not including you and me.” “Of course. My butts worth more than
that.” And your ego, thought
Galletti to himself. The assassin
pushed on with his line of questioning. “So, what now?” He knew what he would have done himself, if
he had decided to lead the excursion into town. Thirty targets in here would be congealing
already if he’d had the final word.
But, Jan had taken the initiative, and so this jaunt was purely profit
and information based, a smugglers mission.
Head counts would have to wait until later. “We mingle. Find out what the word is.” He frowned at Goah. “Come on GG, you know the routine.” Galletti did
indeed, but it sometimes felt like a hazy recollection from a distant past,
almost like another life. He stood and
made his way into the crowd as Jan stepped up to the bar. “Flameout,” he asked the robo-tender, and
waved his empty glass in its direction.
The ice cold, red-hot drink filled the glass from an extension the
tender looped out from across the bar and Jan took a sip as it settled in the
glass. He thanked his lucky stars that
A-desandians were practically immune to the disabling effects of alcohol, his
blood type being slightly different to average humans, and eyed those humans
and aliens in the vicinity. Before he
could start a conversation with any of them he felt a tap on his shoulder. “Lomona, right?” asked the tall Entallian
standing behind him. Jan turned
slightly. “Who wants to know?” “Offexx Carrn. We did a job together ten years ago for
Jabba.” Jan couldn’t
recall the Entallian, or the mission. “Remind me.” “Run out to Ord Mantell, dropping off some
scaffolding.” Jan shook his head,
still hazy on the particular job. “You
sold some DL-7 on the side.” “Offexx,” laughed Jan warmly, still
totally oblivious to whom he was speaking to but wakened by the mention of
illegal spice jogging his memory like an electric shock. “It’s been a while.” “Yep. Ten years.
What you been up to?” Jan did a
mental rundown of all he had done in the last decade. Working for Jabba the Hutt, Glann Cipple
and numerous other ganglords, operating his own smuggling concern, getting
engaged, breaking up, getting engaged again, becoming governor of his home worlds capital city and then seeing it destroyed by the
forces of the Empire. Making a good
name for himself in the underworld as a smuggler who
gets the job done, and fast.
Discovering a long-lost daughter he never knew existed. Mastering the lost art of
the power nap. “This and that. You?” “Same.”
Offexx caught himself as he remembered something. “Oh yeah, a friend of yours passed through
here the other day. Yesterday. Oh, what was his name?” He hovered on the spot, willing the name to
drop into his head. “Litti, was it? Lotti? Lotti Tallax?” “Latti Tellex?” asked Jan, all pretences
of politeness dropping away. Latti was
one of Jans oldest smuggling colleagues, and a
genuine friend to both him and Goah.
But he was supposed to be running through Gista this week for
Glann. What the hell was he doing on
Escall? “Tellex, that’s it. Yeah, he came through the day before
last. Said he’d heard of something
going down in the forest to the south of the city and wanted to check it
out. Seemed really
serious about it too.” Latti? Serious? The only
thing he gets serious about is cockons. Jan grabbed a handful of the crunchy,
shell-shaped wheat snacks off the bar and emptied them into his mouth. Whatever had caught his attention must have
been important for him to blow off a job for Glann and then take a hike into
the forest. Latti wasn’t known for being the rugged, outdoors type. On the contrary, he once got lost on his
own ship. “Did he come in his ship?” asked Lomona. Offexx nodded. “Yep, parked out back.” Jan followed
the Entallian to the rear of the warehouse where Latti’s ship the Cronta’s
Lady sat patiently, waiting for her owner to return. She was an old vessel, practically an
antique, and there were a queue of pilots who would have loved to get their
hands on her and try her out, but Latti was resolute. Unlike so many in the Setnin Sector, this
lady was not for sale. “So where in the forest did he go?” asked
Jan, hands on hips and a squint in his eye, as the bright noon sun was
counterpoint to the brisk chill that ran through the air. Like so many others before him, he had a
bad feeling about this. “He must have
given you more than just south.” Offexx raised
the hard ridge above his eyes that Jan guessed acted as an eyebrow and
checked left and right before he spoke. “Word is, there’s
an outpost in the forest.” “Outpost? What kind of outpost?” “Like the ones on Zelon, outside of
Chancai.” Jan
froze. Those were Imperial
outposts. If Latti had got his
snooping hat on, he could be in big trouble. “Did he say why he was going out there?” Offexx shook
his head. “No, just that he figured there could be
some kind of reward attached.” “And you didn’t try to talk him out of
it?” Offexx pulled
a face of surprise. “Are you kidding? He works for Glann Cipple, I wouldn’t cross
him. Besides, he’s friends with
Galletti.” Jan glanced across the room
as Goah shoved a large man into a corner booth and followed,
intent on his face. “I’m not crazy.” Lomona blew
out a long breath and nodded as he kept his eye on Goah. “Point taken. But I need to know what’s happened to my
pal.” Offexx raised
his hands in front of his face. “Whoa, look. I told you everything. The base in the south
forest. That’s all I know.” Jan snarled
under his breath and left the bar, walking towards the booth Goah and the
other man were occupying. Galletti was
giving him the third degree, roughing him up and pressurising him into
divulging some information. Jan paused
for a second as he summed up the situation and stepped past Goah. “We haven’t got time for this.” Jan loomed in front of the man and landed a
heavy blow square in his face, decking him like a puppet with its strings cut
and raised a finger to silence Goah before he could even begin his angry
reply. “Latti’s here and he’s
in trouble. We’ve got to go. Now.” Goah narrowed
his eyes and stared at the prone figure slumped on the ground. “This space trash knows about Glann’s runs
into Quarshannel.” Goah made for the
rifle that was hidden under his long black overcoat. “That’s privileged information. Glann’s got an informer.” “We’ll deal with it later, there’s work to
do.” “Glann ordered me to sort out these
situations – “ Jan leaned in
close to Goah, right up to his ear. “I’ll say this once. We’ve already lost a friend today. I don’t want to lose another. Got it?” Jan rarely got
serious with Galletti. Indeed, he
rarely got serious with anyone at all, and was one of only a handful of men
who could walk away from such a confrontation with Galletti. Goah knew that the situation was indeed
dire. “Got it.” He nodded his agreement. “Let’s go.” “You got everything?” “Yes Master Jan, your equipment is ready.” Jan nodded
with satisfaction as he thumbed the comm. to reply. “Well done old man, we’ll be there in
three.” “Very good sir.” Jan pocketed
his comm unit and shielded his eyes to the sun as
the topped the last hill and looked down the vast glade to where the Berone
Sunrise sat, alone in the middle of a natural bowl of grass. The two men upped the paced and jogged down
to the freighter, where Aurran waited at the top of the ramp, their equipment
kits at the ready. Jan shrugged off
the large and colourful jacket he was wearing and replaced it with a thin
combat fatigue, insulated against the cold air. Flipping on a pair of shades he was
ready. Goah took the bag off Aurran
and did the same, taking off his long black overcoat and replacing it with a
forest fatigue and shades. A minute of
checking their equipment and they were ready.
Jan faced Aurran. “Go to the cockpit and scan to the
north. We need to know how far away
this base is. I’ll keep the comm open until we hit trouble. After that, you know what to do.” Aurran nodded
as he activated the ships security measures, the Sunrise sitting on
hot standby. “Yes Master Jan. Take care sir.” “You too.” Goah pointed
towards the tree line where the two doctors had left and began in that
direction. Jan talked to Aurran over
the comm for the first few klicks, ascertaining the
distance and direction of the base Latti had so foolishly gone searching
for. What the hell has got into
him? Thought Jan to himself, annoyance with his good
friend brimming over. As if
we’ve not lost enough friends to scum like Terrov, he has to go looking for
trouble. Goah suddenly
lowered himself and knelt down, Jan following suit. He pointed above and ahead, just as a trio
of TIE fighters screamed overhead.
They followed the trajectory of the TIE’s to the rim of a massive
mountain, and watched as they descended towards a base carved into the side
of it. It was an enormously impressive
structure that must have taken many months, if not years to build. Jan looked at Goah, who looked right back. “How the hell did we not know about this?”
asked Goah. “You read my mind.” Jan took another cautious look, checking
above for more fighters. “We’d have
known if Glann had any intell on it.” Goah nodded in
agreement. “Correct.
So if Latti has stumbled upon it…” “Then he’s in way too deep.” They continued
their approach, staying in the bushes and thin trees that led to the lower
reaches of the mountain. Once there the brush and bushes ended, relieved by cold shale and
stone. Still, they were
afforded enough cover to get close enough to the entrance and make a
temporary base camp, allowing them to get a better look at the base. Goah pulled out a pair of macrobinoculars
and zoomed in to the opening. “What do you see?” asked Jan. Goah frowned. “Crap loads of Imperials, what do you
think.” “Can you see Latti?” Goah lowered
the binoculars and gave Jan a tired look. “Of course I can,
their holding him by the front entrance.
No I can’t see Latti.” He
returned to his viewing. “I can’t see
much of anything. Wait a second.” Goah fell silent as he adjusted the toggles
on the side of the macrobinoculars.
Jan looked at him eagerly. “Well?
Wait a second for what?” Galletti
lowered the binocs. “Your two archaeologist friends weren’t
kidding when they said they had matters of high office to attend to.” “What?” said Jan incredulously, taking the
binocs off Goah and checking for himself.
He watched in surprise as Meenton and Joneligg
shook hands with a handful of Imperial officers, clearly oblivious to the
fact that they themselves were being watched.
Jan let out a long breath of disappointment and handed the binocs back
to Goah. He rolled onto his back and
paused for a second, taking out a small flask of Duarga and nailing back a
shot. Sure enough, the two
archaeologists had well and truly taken him for a ride. Jan hated
being played. “So what do we do?” asked Lomona, turning
his attention back to Galletti. He
could see Goah formulating a devilish plan so
fiendish in its intricacies as to be woven by a supercomputer. He waited for Goahs response. “We wait” “We wait?” Jan shook his head in opposition. “No, no, no. Latti’s down there. We can’t leave him with them; he’ll shoot
his mouth off like he always does. Except
this time he doesn’t have us to back him up.” “And if we go blasting down there all guns
blazing then we’re just as likely to get him killed.” Goah lifted the binocs again for a final
check. “Besides, you always manage to
come up with a…” He stopped talking so abruptly that Jan checked for blaster
holes in his jacket. The A-desandian
hovered for a second. “What?” Goah folded
the binocs away and raised his rifle to his eye, taking aim immediately with
the scope. “Change of plan.” Jan grabbed
Goah hard by the shoulder. “Care to share? What’s got you so fired up all of a sudden.” Galletti
pointed down to the gathering, his finger shaking with rage. “Terrov.” He raised the rifle again. “And this might be my only chance to nail
the bastard.” Jan shook his
head again, almost frantically as he again pulled Goah from his shot. “Look, this isn’t an arcade game, this isn’t one of your recurring dreams when you
just walk away. That’s a fully
stationed Imperial outpost down there.
With our friend in it. You want Terrov, fine. Can’t say I blame you after what he’s done
to you. But if you nail him now then
me, Latti and probably you are gonna die because of it.” Jan gave him a serious but supportive
look. “Believe me Goah, I’m with you
one hundred percent on this kill Terrov deal.
But let’s think this through, okay?” Goah paused in
thought and Jan thought he might just go ahead with the shot and deal with
the ramifications later. Jan breathed
a silent prayer as he lowered both the TY-96 rifle and his head and spoke
into the ground. “So what now?” Jan looked in
at the entrance again as the group of archaeologists and Imperials moved back
inside the base. He checked that all
his equipment was secure and his P-48 type three blaster was in order and
stood in a low crouch. “I’m going inside to check it out. You’re staying here and watching my back
with that rifle.” “There’s no way you’ll get in there
without being spotted.” Jan began to
jog away, down through the broken rocks, keeping tight against the rocky
formations that carved their way into the entrance. Goah hissed after him. “Are you crazy?” Jan turned and
threw Galletti a smirk as wide as a Hutts belly. “You have to ask?” And he was
gone. Twenty minutes
passed before Galletti saw Lomona again, sneaking around the back of a six
man grouping of Stormtroopers and behind another large rock, up onto the path
that he took to get down and finally back to Goahs position. He was sweating profusely, his face marked
with the early swellings of bruising.
His jacket was torn and he clearly carried a limp. Goah shook his head in disbelief. “What the freck happened.” Jan shrugged
the question away nonchalantly. “I’ll tell you later. First, we’ve got to get Latti out of there
and fast.” “Why?
What’s in there?” Jan drew deep
breaths to steady his racing pulse and raised his eyebrows. “What isn’t in there. I could see starship sub frames being
constructed. They’re planning
something big, just don’t know what it is yet. And there’s something else.” Goah didn’t
like the way Jan said that last part, at all. “What else?” “Janos Jewel. Tonnes of it. Being carved out of the
ground. Looks
like they’ve built themselves a mine of some kind. It’s being brought out from a deep
cavern. I didn’t see it but I
overheard some commanders talking about it.”
He paused again to catch his breath.
“Sounds like it goes down a few klicks.” “And we’re right on top of it.” Galletti caught Jans nod out of the corner
of his eye, but his full attention was on the cavern entrance before
them. Jan spoke again. “We need a way in, free Latti fast and
nail Terrov. And a side order of
miracle wouldn’t hurt either.” Miracles never
hurt, thought Goah to himself. Because they never happen. “There’s only one way to get this done.” Said Galletti firmly as he stood to his feet. Jan held up his hand wearily, making Goah
pause. “Just a second. Is this the hero moment when we go in all
guns blazing?” Galletti
straightened his equipment belt and nodded. “Yes.” Jan joined him
on his feet. “Good.
I’d hate to miss out on any heroics.” “Alright, after three.” “Do you mean one, two, three and go
or one, two and go on three?” Goah raised
the rifle and began to run down the incline, his footsteps managing to sound
like velvet hitting silk. Clearly he’d
already finished his countdown and Jan cursed in A-desandian as he
followed. They ran for what seemed
like an age but was only a matter of seconds before they encountered the first
group of troops and blasted their way through, dispatching the men like
skittles. Jan continued his run into
the cavern entrance, lancing fire at everything that moved and watched as
Galletti rained laser bolts like an avenging angel. They were
making good progress, cutting through the surprised and unprepared troops at
speed and were soon well inside the cavern.
Jan gulped in realisation as the scale of the cavern hit him. It was truly as if the mountain had been
scooped out from the inside, and the brightness of the outside world was soon
a memory as he noticed the sunlight being negated by a force field that
seemed to emanate dark light. Of
course, sunlight decays Janos Jewel.
Makes it explode. It all
began to make terrible sense, and he was so deep into his musings and so into
the killing zone that he didn’t notice the huge masses of reinforcements that
had marched into the melee, or Goah as he realised he was vastly out
numbered. Or Terrov as he witched the
fight with an air of smug satisfaction painted across his face. Jan spun around to continue his attack and
grimaced, throwing his blaster down on the ground in frustration as at least
twenty rifles were aimed directly at him.
He cursed again, heard Galletti do the same and waited for the flash
of blaster and the end of his short but eventful life. But it never
came. “Captain Lomona.” Terrov’s voice echoed around the cavern
like rolling thunder, his deep voice given added bass by the hard rocks. “Goah Galletti.” He seemed to savour saying Goahs name,
rolling it around his mouth like a fine wine.
“I would have thought you dead by now.” “Better kill me while you have the chance
you piece of …” Terrov wagged
a finger at him as he interjected. “Now, now Goah. There are ladies present.” He motioned for the troopers to manacle
both men. “Ahh Goah. Finally you and I can have a little talk.” He smiled again, like oil on water. “I’m sure there are many things you want to
ask me.” Galletti
remained silent as the handcuffs were secured tight around his wrists and he
was shoved on his way towards the prison block. Goah watched as Jan was shoved in a similar
manner and gave Terrov the most venomous glare. “I swear you’ll be dead by daybreak.” Terrov half
grinned. “Down here we don’t care if it’s day or
night. And very soon neither will you. Take them
away.” The cell was
sparse, even by Imperial standards.
Thick iron bars ran around in a square three meters, a simple mattress
lay on the dirt strewn floor, a bucket acted as a make shift lavatory. Jan was on the edge of the mattress, knees
brought up to his chest to keep himself warm. An air duct that ran from the outside and
down to the mine below passed directly through the prison block, making for
almost freezing temperatures. Jan blew
out a cold stream of air and looked up at Goah, pacing the small cell like a
caged animal, just like he had a day before when he’d heard of Mactins
death. And now
here we are, about to join him. Goah had
scanned the other cages around them to see if he could locate Latti, but
hadn’t heard or seen his friend and he wondered if this was indeed the main
prison block or simply a holding cell before standard Imperial
interrogation. Goah had been a guest
of Imperial hospitality before, as had Jan, and had little desire to be
subjected to it again. He began pacing
again. “For frecks
sake, sit down will you. You’re making
me seasick.” Goah turned
swiftly and glared at Jan, who looked surprisingly small curled up on the
ground, wrapped around himself for warmth. Goah blinked slowly, composing himself and
saving his strength for better battles and leaned against the bars. “This is just a holding cell,
we won’t be here for long.” “Good.
Don’t think I could take much more of the five star treatment.” They both
looked up as the main door opened and six Imperial Stormtroopers entered the
prison block, swatting batons at hands or tentacles that dared to overhang
outside the bars and marched directly towards Goah and Jans
cage. Galletti stepped away from the
bars, his hands still manacled. Lomona
struggled to his feet and waited for the troops. “Come with us. The commander wants to speak with you.” Both men knew
that speak was a very loose term for what Terrov wanted, and left the room
wondering what Terrov’s chat held in store for them both. They were marched down a dark, barely lit
corridor to another intersection where they bore left through what appeared
to be natural tunnelling and into a metal walled room. The guards left the two men alone in this
brightly lit room and they looked at each other briefly as they scoped out
their surroundings. They may have had
their hands manacled. But given the chance they would make a fight of it. After all, the events of Endor just a few
weeks ago surely made the Empire a spent force. Goah Galletti and Jan Lomona would have
little trouble fighting their way through this… “Gentlemen.” It was Terrov’s voice, but neither man
could see him. “I would offer you a
seat, but as you can see this room is a trifle sparse.” Goah grimaced
as he began to walk forward, Jan following a few steps behind. “I didn’t come to chat. I came for you.” “Of course you did Goah.” Terrov’s voice seemed to be floating about
them like a mist and Goah gave up trying to locate it. “If you really wanted me dead Goah, do you
think I’d even be on the same planet.
After all the things I’ve done to you.” An edge of twisted humour began to leak
into Terrov’s voice like a tumour.
“Your lovely wife, oh what was her name?” “Tref.” said Goah quietly under his
breath, as if saying the name out loud would hurt too much. Jan stayed back, knowing Goahs volatile
temperament of late. Friend or not, he
didn’t want to get in the middle of this particular argument. He had a long enough of a list of enemies
without taking on board other peoples. “Ahh yes, the beautiful
Tref. She was quite the
firebrand you know. She put up a good
fight, near the end.” Terrov’s voice
dropped another octave. “If she had
been more co-operative, who knows? She
may have survived.” “I know what you did to her you
son-of-a-bitch!” screamed Goah, fighting against his bindings, drawing blood
from his wrists. Jan made as if to
step forward but paused. This was
something Galletti needed to do. Cleanse
his soul and his guilt over his wife’s murder. “You know, do you? I doubt that very much.” Another pause. “She loved you, you know. Right until the very end. She kept whispering in my ear, `Goah, oh
Goah.’ But then, women often say the
wrong thing at the wrong time. Isn’t that right Captain Lomona.” Jan looked up
in surprise at the mention of his name, lost as he was in the vindictiveness
of the commander’s words. He stepped
alongside Goah, shoulder to slumped shoulder and lifted his chin. “Women do a lot of things. So do men.
But scum’s the same the universe over.” He grinned, something he felt loathe doing
but necessary. “I guess you’re the
authority on that.” “If you say so Captain. Oh Goah, one more thing. Your friend Mactin Selka.” Terrov began to chuckle, a chuckle that
mutated into a laugh. “So much blood. I
wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t seen it for myself. And bright blue. I don’t know how I’m going to get the stain
from my hands” Goah was
shaking with rage, unable to find the words to express himself
without raving like a lunatic. Jan
shook his head and breathed deeply through his nose. He’d seen and heard many things, but this
really was close to the top of the disgusting list. He spat on the ground in front of him and
turned to leave. “C’mon Goah. I’d rather stew in a latrine than listen to
this.” “You’re a dead man Terrov!” screamed Goah
again, spittle flying through the air, his hair ragged and wild. “A dead man!” Terrov laughed
again as he closed the tannoy down. “One day Goah. But not today.” Jan led Goah
towards the door they had entered through, where waiting for them were the
guards who had marched them there.
They were led back down the dimly lit corridor to the intersection,
but instead of turning right back they way they had come they carried on into
another detention block. This was much
brighter, with more room and facilities.
The door slid open and they entered.
Goah immediately collapsed on the bed, unable to get his hands up to
his face to wipe away the angry tears that swelled there. Jan stood in the corner, respectfully
turning his face away so’s not to crowd Goah.
His friend had too many ghosts to lay to rest for his clumsy words and
so the A-desandian smuggler remained silent. Fifteen
minutes passed without words, without a sound. Jan could hear other prisoners in the block
and began wondering if Latti were here.
He checked left and right to see if any guards were around and
whistled out a sound like a singing bird.
It was the regular call sign for the Zythlies crowd, one that alerted
others to danger. And Latti was one of
the founder members of that group. Jan
tried the call again and got no reply.
Disappointed he stepped back from the bars of the cage and looked at
Goah, gaunt and dishevelled, as beaten as he had ever seen him. He gave a lopsided grin of encouragement
and sat beside him on the bed. “Stupidest question I ever asked but are you alright?” Goah didn’t
look up but managed to give a slight smile and a dry chuckle. Jan breathed out a laugh and nudged his
friend with his shoulder. “Listen, whatever I say will be wrong,
but there’s a bunch of things we’ve got to do. Get out of here, find Latti, kill Terrov
and blow this base to hell. In that order, right?”
Goah didn’t answer, so Jan asked again. “Right?” “Right.” He
replied wearily. Jan looked up
and rubbed his fingers together. “Okay, so getting out of here. We need to…” Then he heard
it. The birdsong he’d just sung was
coming right back at him. Goah noticed
it too and looked up. “That’s no echo,” smiled Jan as he stepped
to the bars again. “That’s our Mister
Tellex.” He grinned at Goah who stood
and joined him at the bars. “Latti,
where are you?” “Right here where they
left me.” Came the reply. Jan laughed with glee and winked down at
Goah. “Told you we’d be alright. Latt, we need a plan to get us out of here
fast. The whole mountain is loaded
with Janos Jewel.” Latti slapped
his hands together, and Jan realised that he couldn’t have been shackled like
he and Goah were. Latti whistled
through his teeth. “Darn, I knew it. I followed a cargo carrier here on its way
from Janos. They’ve been bringing it
here by the freighter load.” “And they’re mining it too, but enough about
that, we need a way out. Then you can
give me the history story on the way back home.” “I’d be glad to.” Latti paused a moment. “Do you remember how we got out of that
Hutt dungeon on Commodor a few years back?” Jan nodded
slowly as the memory came back to him.
Yeah, that might just work… “I do, and that’s a good idea. These Whitecaps are twitchy enough to fall
for that old one. Go for it.” Latti began to
gather phlegm in his throat and stepped back from his bars. He twirled his face braids for good luck
and began coughing in the most horrendous manner, throwing himself on the
floor and writhing in pain. It sounded
like a massif being choked and Jan almost wondered if his old friend was in
genuine danger. Only a few moments
later three medical staff, dressed in local militia colours came running into
the block, medical livery adorning their green scrubs. Jan watched closely as they sped past and
waited for the Stormtroopers familiar flash of white armour to follow, but it
didn’t. Jan turned and gave Goah an
encouraging thumbs-up and waited. He
heard the door to the cell open and the frantic discussion of the medical
staff, then a moment as their equipment was opened and then gasps of shock
and the sound of three electrical discharges.
It sounded like three bodies slumping to the ground and the echo of
footsteps running away. Jan
frowned. If Latti had somehow managed
to overpower three people surely he wouldn’t leave his two pals behind? Then again, Janos Jewel residue could have
a strange effect on some people. Once
the fine mist was inside some it would decay and go off inside them like a
drug, blasting them into ecstasy and back in seconds, again and again. Jan was certain Latti wasn’t one of them… And had almost
managed to convince himself that he was when the
door to the cell and every other cell on the block opened and Latti ran
around the corner with a grin on his face as wide as the side of a barn. In his hand he held Jans blaster belt,
sadly without the weapons, and an activation pad. He depressed a button and everyone’s
manacles unlatched and dropped to the floor.
Jan grabbed his friend in a hug and hustled Goah out of the cell as
the other prisoners milled about, uncertain of which way to go. Goah pointed down the corridor they had
come, his natural sense of direction as sure as a compass. Latti nodded and the three men began to
break into a jog and then a run. “So where are we headed?” asked Latti as
they picked up speed. Jan looked down
at Goah who gave no sign of reply. “The hell out of here
before they get themselves together.” “We’re going after Terrov,” said Goah,
almost too quietly to register. Jan
shook his head as they made a left turn.
“Goah, this hand basket’s just gone to
hell. Terrov’s not going anywhere, and
if we don’t make like a tree neither will we.” Goah suddenly
slowed and grabbed Jan by the arm, slamming him hard against the wall and
ramming his forearm up against his throat.
Jan was so surprised by the move he didn’t have time to make any
defensive action and found himself gasping for breath. And the look in Galletti’s eyes told him
that if he said the wrong thing that breath would be a long time coming. “We agreed. Terrov goes down. My way. Got it?” Jan managed a
shallow nod, pushing against the forearm.
Goah released him and ran on as Latti gave Jan a worried look. “Am I missing something here?” he asked
quietly as they continued their run.
Jan rubbed his throat and coughed. “Not as much as he’s missing.” Klaxons began
to blare throughout the complex and Commander Terrov raised an eyebrow from
his sumptuous meal, wiping the corners of his mouth with his napkin and
standing to his feet. His fellow
officers did the same and Terrov waved them back to their seats. “Please continue gentlemen. This won’t take long.” He moved
across the room to a panel inlaid into the wall and thumbed a switch. “Security control, this is Commander
Terrov. What’s happening?” “We have a security breach in Detention
Block CF-29. All of the prisoners have
been released. Security teams are on
their way but are meeting resistance.
What are your orders sir?” Terrov glanced
back at his fellow officers. Good men
one and all, but lacking that important x-factor that separated the mainstream
officer from those fast tracked for success.
He spoke quietly into the mic. “Eliminate all the prisoners except for
Goah Galletti and his associate Captain Lomona. I want them alive for further questioning.” A brief
silence was Terrov’s only reply. “Yes Commander.” Terrov turned
to his subordinates and bowed slightly. “My apologies. I have somewhere I need to be.” He placed his
napkin on the table and left the room, walking swiftly and with purpose. “And why the freck would he come here?” Jan swung his
arms around the entry to the enormous mine shaft and shook his head in
confusion. Goah stood implacably next
to the huge doorway, as if waiting for Terrov to simply walk through the
doors and appear, sardonic smirk on his face and the blood of innocents on
his hands. Goah turned to face Jan and
Latti. “Because he knows I’m after him. He knows the only way to stop me hunting
him down is to kill me. And he knows
that now, after Endor, being a member of the Empire isn’t enough to keep him
safe from me. Not that it ever was.” “Well we’d better play it clever and keep
out of sight.” said Latti, surprising Jan and taking the lead, moving behind
a large highly stacked pile of crates.
“This base must be on high alert by now.” Goah half
smiled, casting an almost sneering glance at Jan and followed Tellex behind
the boxes. Jan shook his head and
joined them, still unsure as to quite what Galletti was planning. Blasters could
clearly be heard down the corridors, and screams of dying prisoners as they
were gunned down by Imperial fire.
Goah knew from experience what Terrov was capable of, and knew what he
had initiated now. The
slaughter of all the prisoners bar himself, Lomona and Tellex. It made twisted sense. A show of strength and
determination, a blatant disregard for life of any gender or species. As cold hearted and callous as he had ever
been. Pure Terrov. Goah froze for
a moment. He could hear footsteps come
down the corridor. Footsteps that he
knew would sound the same marching on grass as they would on stone or
snow. Terrov. He gripped the edge of the crate
tightly. Jan frowned and glanced at
Latti. “Can you hear something?” Latti stuck
out his bottom lip in confusion and shook his head. “Nope.” “Goah.” It was Terrov,
and the three men bristled to alertness. Goah made to rise but Jan caught his
eye and gave a negative sign. Terrov
spoke on. “Goah, perhaps we should talk. Clearly you and Captain Lomona have issues
with me. Perhaps I can help assuage
your concerns.” Latti adjusted
his footing on the floor, getting into a more comfortable position, and as he
did a shadow was cast onto the ground.
Terrov unholstered his blaster and shot high above the stacked crates,
pummelling a volley of shots into the rocks and bringing them crashing down
onto the three men below. “Look out!” yelled Galletti as he dived to
the right, and Jan dived left. Latti
looked up and raised his hands to shield himself as half a tonne of rock and
rubble slammed down on top of him. Too late. “Latti!” Jan scrabbled
to his feet and began to pull at the enormous pile of rocks, blistering his
fingertips and drawing blood in just a few short seconds. Goah circled around the crates and spied
Terrov standing there with a gleeful grin on his face, clearly unaware that
he had crushed a third man. Galletti
looked down at the floor, saw a smudge of blood and shook his head in
disbelief. In almost slow motion he
lifted the heavy spanner that he could see lying on the crate in before him,
felt the satisfying weight in his hands and checked through a gap in the
cargo crates. Terrov was still in the
same spot, and as Goah swung the spanner up to his shoulder and stepped out
from behind the crate he spun on his heel and smashed the blaster right out
of Terrov’s hands. The Imperial
commander took a huge step back and saw the look of rage in Goahs eye. He thought for a nanosecond about standing
his ground and thought better of it, turning tail and running hell for
leather through the entrance and into the mine facility. Without
turning to check on Jan’s progress or to help in his efforts to free Latti,
Galletti followed. “Damn you Goah,
help me!” cried Jan, pulling more rocks away, but his plea went unheard. Goah was in pursuit and lost to his words,
revenge and vengeance the only thoughts on his mind. The walkway
narrowed and inclined at a rapid rate and Goah felt he was running through a
neon tunnel, the green hue of Janos Jewel emanating from the walls. As he ran he could occasionally spy Terrov
up ahead, looking over his shoulder at the enraged Trefnarian assassin behind
him. Without an energy weapon Goah
knew he was at a disadvantage, but so was Terrov. Unless he was leading Goah into a trap then
he would have to face him, and given the volatile nature of Janos Jewel he
knew that Terrov would be just as unlikely to use a blaster. Finally, after
so many fruitless years of searching he had got Terrov on an equal playing
field. Goah heard the
slam of a lift door and saw Terrov enter one of the two turbo lifts that took
workers down into the very depths of this mineshaft. Goah remembered that Lomona had said the
mine went down a significant distance, and as he dived into the second lift
he wondered exactly how far that was.
The lift shuddered and began its descent, his ears almost exploding
from the pressure of the drop. It
rattled and shook for what seemed an eternity, his lift running almost
parallel to Terrov’s. They both
stopped at the same level and Goah checked the wall plaque. Level 134, three
kilometres below ground. He at
once marvelled and was repulsed by Imperial mining technology, and as he left
the lift he grabbed one of the many pieces of equipment that adorned the lift
cage wall, a welding torch. It was dark
and dimply lit down at this level, and Goah could see the many holes in the
walls from which the Janos Jewel had been excavated. He wondered for a moment the kind of
creatures or droids that would or could work in an environment such as this
but was broke from his thoughts by a large spade whizzing over his head and
slamming into the wall. “You shouldn’t have followed me Goah,”
yelled Terrov as he swung again, this time connecting with Goah and knocking
him to the ground. Goah rolled and
sprang to his feet, welding torch in hand.
He was by no means a natural fighter but could more than hold his own
against most. And in a fight against
Terrov he was more motivated than ever to cause pain. “You talk too much Terrov.” Replied
Galletti as he moved in for an attack, activating the welding torch and
stabbing it out at the Imperial.
Terrov used the spade to deflect the torch, pitting the blade of the
spade in the process. They circled each
other slowly, waiting for points of weakness, eager to attack. Terrov curled a slight smile. “You do realise this is the last time the
two of us will be together. Only one
of us is leaving this room alive and I intend it to be me.” “Touché,” answered Goah as he spotted a
large power-generating unit at the far side of the platform that led into
level 134. It looked like a main
junction and he wondered the effect of its inaction. Maybe that would give him the break he was
looking for and he broke from the standoff and sprinted towards it,
activating the welding torch as he did so.
Terrov could see what he was about to do and began to chase, shaking
his head, his commander’s cap flying off his head. “No you fool! That’s the core generator for the light
shields. Interrupt the power flow and
the sunlight outside will react with the Janos Jewels inside.” Galletti
skidded to a halt and aimed the torch point directly at the console, a look
of annoyance on his face. “And your point is?” “You’ll destroy this entire mining
facility.” He motioned towards the
mineshaft. “It goes down another fifty
kilometres. You’ll start a chain
reaction that could destroy the entire planet.” Goah snorted
back a dry laugh. “You expect me to believe that?” He shifted the torch to his other hand and
stabbed an accusing finger at Terrov.
“You’re life is built on lies and death.” Terrov licked
his dry lips, the green glow of the surrounding rocks casting a pallid glow
on his sweat soaked skin. “Perhaps you’re right, but not about
this.” Goah looked
away for a second, pondering on Terrov’s words and in that instant the
Imperial attacked, slamming into Goah and knocking him to the ground… But not before ramming the welding torch into the controls. Immediately
there was a flickering of the lights and the two men were cast into momentary
darkness. Terrov cried out his
frustration and rolled on top of Goah, pummelling him with blows. Goah couldn’t catch his breath or gain
leverage to get Terrov off him as the blows rained down like a torrent and he
could feel the cold darkness of unconsciousness begin to close in. He could still feel the satisfying weight
of the welding torch in his hand and began to wonder why he hadn’t used it to
free himself, and almost as if in answer to his own
query he raised the white hot torch and sliced it into Terrov’s shoulder like
a knife through butter. Goah couldn’t
ever remember a mans scream sounding quite like
that, deep and yet piercing, rolling around the mineshaft like a fog. Terrov slumped off him and to the floor,
rolling around with his hand grabbing the wound. Goah cleared his head and wobbled to his
feet and looked down at his enemy, the torch still in his hand. This man had murdered his wife, Mactin,
Latti, gods knows who else. The room
flickered into darkness again and when the light returned Goah could see four
more clear torch holes cindering their way through
Terrov’s back. Did I do that? “No, don’t!” Terrov cried, crawling away from Goah. “Don’t kill me like this, please!” Goah glared
down at the pitiful man. “Is that what she said?” Terrov looked
up at Goah, pleading with his eyes. “What?” “My wife? Is that what she said when you murdered
her?” Terrov winced
as another lancing stab of white-hot pain cut through him. “Please, I don’t remember. Have mercy!” “Mercy? Mercy!
Did you show Mactin mercy? Or Latti?” He
sliced through the fleshy part of Terrov’s arm, and watched him slump to the
floor. “Or Tref?” Goah could feel a rage building up inside
him, bubbling from his very core and knew that within seconds Terrov would be
proven right. Only one of them would
survive this encounter. He watched as
Terrov crawled away, as slow as a snail, towards the edge of the mineshaft
and walked around to block his way.
Galletti knew exactly what the Imperial was planning to do. “No Terrov. When you die it’ll be by my hand.” He looked at the torch in his hand, the tip
glowing brightly. “I’ve dreamt about
this day for years. So thank you
Terrov.” “Thank me?
For what?” Goah Galletti
raised the welding torch above his head and positioned it to strike directly
through Terrov’s head. “For making my dreams come true.” Just as
Galletti was about to strike the lights failed again, and he could hear a
shuffle and a bump. He lowered the
torch, hoping its illumination would cast a light on Terrov, but when the
lights wavered back he was alone. For the final
time Terrov had evaded him. Goah threw the
torch down the shaft and lowered his head, a lifetime of thoughts racing
through his mind in a moment. Jumbled,
thoughts, almost as I they belonged to someone else. He turned his
back on the mineshaft and returned to the turbolift. Jan Lomona had
managed to remove the final few large rocks and rolled them away, keeping out
of sight as best he could as security, Stormtroopers and officers ran in
every direction, as lost and confused as he felt inside. Latti’s body was a battered mess of crushed
bone and flesh but miraculously Jan could still feel a pulse and the uneven
but clear rising of his chest told him he was still breathing. Jan felt a rush of adrenaline as he brushed
away the last few pebbles and dirt from his friend and took his one good
hand. “Hold on buddy. Helps on the way.” “Jan…” was all Latti could say, the pain evident on his bloodied face. Jan tried not to show the shock on his own
face, hoping to comfort his friend as he faced what was likely his last
minutes alive. He squeezed the hand
gently and smiled. “Hey, just take it easy. We’ll have you back on the Sunrise
soon. Aurran will patch you up good as
new.” Latti
swallowed and winced at the pain of it and opened his eyes wide. “Go.” “No way Latt. You know the rules. We don’t leave our own behind.” Latti’s
breathing became shallower and shallower until it was almost inaudible and
Jan couldn’t keep the frown of sorrow and regret from his face. Latti was almost gone and there was nothing
he could do. If only Goah were here. He turned at
the sound of a mighty explosion and the lights dimming. The turbolift had arrived from its journey
down below at top speed, slamming into the housing above. He looked down at Latti to tell him but
felt the limpness in his hand and the lifeless glaze in his eyes. It was too
late. Latti Tellex was dead. Jan lowered
his hand and his eyelids gently and turned to the turbolift, an angry glint
in his eyes. Whichever one of the two
had made it back, Terrov or Galletti; they’d be getting it with both barrels. The turbolift
door slid awkwardly open and out staggered Galletti, clearly bruised and
battered by the rapid ascent. Jan ran
towards him and shoved him hard against the wall. “What have you done?” yelled Jan as the
ground shook and the explosions intensified.
Power was fluctuating and the walls rumbled like dragons. Lomona fixed Galletti with an intense
glare. “Why did you leave me with
Latti? We could have saved him if
you’d stayed to help.” “Latti was dead.” “He wasn’t. He is now.” Goah looked
over at his friend’s lifeless body and lowered his eyes in respect. “We’re not medics. Name one thing we could have done to save
him.” “Not coming to this damn mine to play out
your little revengers game for a start,” growled Jan, his fist balling into a
fist, his face contorted with genuine anger. Goah cocked his head and wiped
blood and sweat from the corner of his mouth. “What.” He said darkly. “You heard me. Ever since Mactin died you’ve been acting
like a freak.” Jan and Goah both
almost lost their footing as another explosion ripped from way beneath the
ground. “No, I take that back. You’ve been acting like a freak for a long
time. Hell Goah, what’s gotten into
you?” Goah shoved
his way past Jan as he exited the mine area and re-entered the corridors that
led to the main entrance to the facility.
Imperials and labourers ran in all directions, confused and afraid of
the impending consequences. Jan
followed swiftly. “What’s gotten into me is a sharp dose of
reality syndrome. Maybe you should try
some.” Jan recoiled
in mock horror. “Me?
Listen pal, you’re the one who’s been on a major league killing spree
for Glann this past few months, nailing everything in sight.” Goah continued
his rapid exit form the mine, turning left at the junction towards the main
entrance. “I’m sorry, I thought you’d approve. You nail anything with a pulse.” “And speaking of pulses, maybe Latti would
still have one if you hadn’t gone off playing tag with your buddy Terrov.” Goah stopped
dead in his tracks and turned back to Jan, lashing out with a fist and
hitting the A-desandian squarely on the point of the chin. Jan’s knees wobbled and he slumped to the
floor, surprised at the strength and the accuracy of the punch. Goah towered over Jan, anger and bitterness
seeping from his face. “Terrov is dead. I killed him. He murdered my wife and two of my
friends.” He sneered at Jan as he
tried to regain his bearings. “And you
have the nerve to judge me, after the life you’ve lived.” Another explosion, this time much more intense. Jan got to his knees and to his feet and
steadied himself against the green rocked wall. “Save it for later, we’ve got to get out
of here.” Jan moved past Goah and
broke into a run, stopping as he realised that the Trefnarian assassin wasn’t
following him. Jan motioned for him to
follow. “Come on, we’ve got to get back
to the Sunrise.” Galletti shook
his head slowly and glanced back the way they’d just come. “What’s the point? This place is going up and it’s too far to
your ship.” “If Aurran’s done what he was told to do
then he’ll be outside.” Goah narrowed
his eyes and gritted his teeth, weighing up his limited options, torn between
accepting the ride and… “No.” he said quietly. Jan frowned. “No?
No what?” “I’m not leaving with you. I’d rather burn than accept a ride off
you.” Jan couldn’t
grasp what Goah was saying. He blew
out a long breath and moved back to Galletti, grabbing his arm tightly. “Look, I know we’ve had a disagreement but
this is no time for games. This is
serious.” Goah shrugged
free of the grip. “So am I.
You’ve made it clear what you think of me and my choices. Well screw you. I’ll take my chances with Escall.” Jan stared at
his former friend for a long few seconds, the rumblings and blasts of the
exploding mine a dim flicker of noise in the background. He knew Goah, knew that once his mind was
set there was little chance of it changing back. “Fine, do what you want.” He looked at Goah as if truly seeing him
for the first time. “I lost you a long
time ago anyway.” And with that
Jan Lomona turned his back on one of his oldest friends and sprinted away. The shields at
the entrance to the mine had indeed collapsed and a chain reaction was
starting. Janos Jewel that had been
piled up in huge amounts near to the opening of the facility were beginning to liquefy in the light, building up to
detonation point. Pools of deadly
liquid were pouring into the cavern and the mineshaft, joining the other
melting rocks and streaming towards the deep shaft, and the core of Escall. Aurran could see all this clearly as he
stood atop the Berone Sunrise, parked on a rocky outcrop a kilometre
away from the Imperial base, watching the proceedings through his
binocs. Vessels, speeders, swoops,
troop carriers, shuttles, anything capable of flight were being taken up and
away from the facility in droves and Aurran scanned the crowds carefully for
a sign of his master. It had been five
minutes since the sirens began to wail and the masses had started to pour out
and still he had seen no sign of Master Jan. There! He saw Jan break through a squad of
Stormtroopers and run across the flat landing area at the entrance to the
base and back to the path he had taken around the rocks to gain entry. Clearly he had seen his ship high in the
distance and was heading towards it.
But if Aurran had the capability he would have frowned. Master Jan was alone. Aurran
re-entered the stock heavy freighter and brought her off the outcrop on
repulsors, swinging her low into the small valley that led down to his
master. Jan waved as his ship began to
lower for a touch down and activated a button on his blaster belt. From the underbelly of the Sunrise a
hatch opened and a sturdy but slim rope ladder dropped down. He grabbed the bottom rung, gripped his
fingers into the holes of the steps and held on tight as the ladder winched
its way back into the ship. Jan
crawled two meters under the deck plates of his ship to another hatch that
brought him out into the cargo hold.
Aurran was waiting as he dusted himself off and began to walk to the
cockpit. “Are you alright Master Jan?” Jan nodded
silently as he slid into his pilot’s chair and checked the Sunrises
controls. All systems were hot and
ready to go. Aurran hovered behind
Jan, made uncertain by Jan’s mood if he should ask his next question. “Master Galletti?” Jan gave his
ship a massive boost of power and ignored the masses below who waved
frantically for a fast ship away from the ticking time bomb that lay just a
kilometre away. He waited a few
seconds before answering. “He’s decided to go his own way.” Was all
Jan could think to say as Escall receded in his rear view monitor and the
stars blurred to purple. Goah kicked
and punched his way through the teeming mass of people and droids as he
fought towards the one-man fighter.
The floor was rumbling like a quake now and he thought back to
Terrov’s apocalyptic words. You’ll start a
chain reaction that could destroy the entire planet. Only three
people were in front of him and he grabbed the leg of the closest, a young
woman who was almost inside the cockpit.
She slammed to the ground and he wrapped his arm around the throat of
the next, a native Escallian who had managed to get half his chunky body into
the vessel. Goah choke held the man
into oblivion and clambered up the three cut out steps that would get him
into the fighter. He lashed out a hard
boot to the third man, watching as he tumbled back into the throng, and slid
into the ship, pulling the cover down above him. The systems were prepped and ready for
flight and he slammed the ship into flight mode, the rear jets furnacing out a jet of blue flame. He raised the fighter, her ascent made
awkward by the six figures clinging onto the ship for dear life and shook the
ship to shake them loose. The Janos
Jewel in the walls had almost totally liquefied now, leaving behind only
course hard rock and as he aimed the ship towards the opening he could feel
the liquid Janos Jewel seep it way to the planets core and initiate the chain
reaction that would prophetically prove Terrov right. Escall was
indeed going to explode. But this
wasn’t the time for regret, and he wasn’t free yet. Goah swung out of the cavern and into the
sunlight of Escalls last day, racing towards the stars above. He could see hundreds if not thousands of
other vessels all doing the same, weaving and dodging their way
off-planet. All
unaware that the man responsible for their worlds demise was in their very
midst. He could see the larger
ferry ships and cruisers above, bulk freighters filled with life and aimed
for them, knowing he would be safer in this small vessel if he stuck close to
the large ones. He swallowed, his
mouth dry, his mind racing from the events of the past few days, and as the
grip of Escalls gravity gave out so did its heart and the core of the world
ripped open, flinging continents and oceans into the void, never to be joined
again. Goah Galletti
activated the hyperdrive unit and headed for home. Wherever that might be. What Lies Within 1986/2003 short story by Mark Newbold
and Jonathan Hicks Four years
after Episode IV – A New Hope Histories
– Originally recorded on 12th and 14th August 1986 as an NHP
Audiotape, this Mark and Jonathan story was
recorded during NHP’s most productive Star
Wars year and was notable for the advance in
recording techniques used at the time.
Set after the Battle
of Endor and the fall of the Empire, this story was written when Lomona and Galletti were still both smugglers, ex-employees of the late Jabba the Hutt, partners and great friends.
It also saw the temporary end of the Lomona/Galletti friendship. In the current Lightsabre chronology, Jan and Goah are now poles apart. Lomona is an independent free-trader,
father and occasional aide to the Rebel Alliance and this
Goah is a mentally decaying clone of the original Galletti who is Glann Cipple’s prime assassin. After both
being involved in the climactic battle of the Galactic Civil War as
depicted in Return
of the Jedi, Galletti going undercover as
an Alliance pilot to keep a close eye on activities and Lomona aiding as best
he can in the Berone
Sunrise, both are now headed for the world of Escall. This story was also notable
for the tying up of two plots – the Commander Terrov storyline,
which had plagued both the real and clone Goahs for years, and the death of Latti Tellex. And as well as this, the
destruction of Escall, the original home world of the Janites. And a peripheral point, the 1000th character to be added to the Lightsabre Characters Guide was Drystill, the barman briefly mentioned in the story. Cast of Characters Goah Galletti Jan Lomona Commander Terrov Latti Tellex Doctor Evvran Joenligg Doctor Thrace Meenton Drystill Jork Offexx Carrn |