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Chapter Fifteen With
an elegant curve, belying the size of the ship the star cruiser swung high
over Soluman. Sunlight caught the
edges of her elegant superstructure, her underbelly glowing in the reflection
from the vast oceans below. She seemed
to hang there for an eternity as if deciding what to do, skimming the upper
edges of the atmosphere, making her re-entry tiles glow furnace red. The serenity of space seemed alien to what
was happening below, so many kilometres away on the ground. Silently and almost with regret the star
cruiser began her descent…. “Watch your back!” Yelled Ryath Centaur as he rolled over
another spray of blaster fire and took cover behind an outcrop. Heavy rounds pummelled the rock - he knew
he couldn’t stay there for long. “Topal!”
Ryath tucked his legs in behind the rock and motioned for the Rodian
gunman for assistance. “Lay down some
suppressing fire while I make a run for it.”
Topal nodded and turned from his group, spraying fire at Ryaths
attackers and giving the mercenary time to gain better cover. With a thumbs up
of thanks Centaur was gone. Galletti
was faring no better. Along with
Mactin he had been the first to visually identify the invading hordes
advancing across the west plain towards them and had raced back to warn the
others. On the horizon they could make
out the silhouettes of perhaps forty, forty-five ships of assorted
class. Glanns contingent had
thirty-five, all parked in cover on the edge of the east plain. Goah made a rough estimate - three hundred
men, women, droids and aliens making their way from the landing site,
marching as one towards their position.
They had perhaps two-hundred. Niern was right. This will be a bloodbath. Attacks
had come in waves. Blaster fire from
close quarters, blades and pikes from those aliens and humans experienced in
their use. Snipers had taken up
positions in rocky hiding places, picking off their enemies at will. Goah was wedged into such a nook,
eliminating attackers with lethal efficiency.
But the force of numbers had made them retreat back towards their
encampment, making it more of a stand than a flat defence. Their backs had, within the space of five
minutes, been firmly pressed against the wall. “This is hopeless," Goah growled down
the comm. “We need a plan or we’re finished.” At
the other end of the line the Aqualish Filarf Toon grunted. “Hold your position. Orders are on their way.” Goah
gritted his teeth as he squeezed off another lethal shot, thumping a Bith to
the ground in a mess of guts. Great.
Orders are on their way. Why
wasn’t this organised before the fighting began? More of the enemy pressed forward and
Galletti soon realised there was no good advantage in remaining in the
nook. Pulling a thermal detonator from
his belt he yanked the arming pin out with his teeth and thumbed the
five-second timer, hurling it over his head into the thirty-strong
throng. In the miasma of confusion
they didn’t see it coming. “See you in hell!” Goah covered his ears and shrank back into
the crack he was hiding in as the detonator exploded, throwing some men into
the air, some onto the ground and the rest into pieces. Galletti slid out of the crack, skimming
the rocks down to flatter ground and ran towards the encampment. Fire fights raged on around him, thick
acrid blaster smoke obscured his vision.
It was a tough and dangerous run but he swiftly made his way back to
the main tent. Inside
was humid and sweaty. A war room
atmosphere had descended, section leaders and members of Glanns tactical
hierarchy huddled around screens and projectors. Some were concentrating hard listening to
comm. traffic. All looked
worried. Galletti saw he face he was
looking for near the partition. “Niern,” He gasped, the smoke flaying at
his throat. Nemec Niern turned from
the tactical display. “Galletti.
How’s the fight going?” Goah
frowned. “It’s almost gone. When the hell does Lomona arrive?” Niern
looked to the floor, an almost embarrassed look on his face and took Goahs
shoulder. Galletti shrugged it off
angrily. “Just tell me, whatever it is. I’ve handled bad news before.” Niern
nodded. “Lomonas not coming.” “You what?” Goahs face twisted into an angry
grimace. “What do you mean he’s not
coming? What’s all this for if he’s
not going to be here?” Niern
looked away again. “I’ve only just found out myself. There’s been a change of plan.” “Oh, so there was a plan.” Nemec
Niern shrugged his shoulders in an almost embarrassed motion. “Lomonas not coming. But someone else is.” Goah
scratched his ear and swept his long dark hair behind it. What
now? The fifth coming? “Who?” “Send Bigg Arrams team across the strip to
protect the snipers. Then send Limmle
in. Tell him to find someone who knows
the exact location of the Heed.” Dressel leaned back in his seat, which he
had pulled close to the observation window.
He was alone except for his Twi’lek girl Saarla who reclined on the
sofa across the room, oblivious to the situation. Her pupils were dilated from the Gista
spice she had taken, her lithe body taut and sheened
in sweat. Dressels Holo-unit remained
activated, in case there was need for a swift exchange of information between
the other five men involved, but Dressel didn’t anticipate it. The job had gone well so far and now all
that remained was to learn the final resting-place of the Heed.
It was close, he knew it. So
close he could almost smell the musty history and untold treasures buried
within her. And she would be his and
his alone. The others, they had served
their purpose well. Without the
cross-pollination of information he doubted whether he would have made it
this far. Cipple had led them all on a
merry dance through and out of the Setnin Sector. He admired his cleverness. But now the time had come for Glann to
leave the spotlight and Dressel to take it.
Alone. Devil
take Treece and his petty machinations. If the Moffs ego couldn’t allow for Cipple
and himself to share the same sector then so be
it. Once Cipple had been removed, and
the Heed claimed, no one would
stand in his way. Not even
Treece. And it was so close. Almost without thinking he thumbed his
laptop. “R’Toll, contact Moff Treece through a
secure conventional channel.” “Yes sir.”
Dressel
waited a second as the message was relayed through. “Dressel.
It goes well, does it not.” Treeces smug tones could be heard clearly
through the ether. “Gods, he’s talking to Treece!” Gasped Nemec Niern. Everyone in the room paused, breathed
shallow. If only they could turn the
volume down on the riot outside. “Extremely well Your
Excellency. All that remains is to
discover the exact location of the Heed.” A pause.
“Unless you have found it since our last discussion?” “Dressel, such a faithless thought. I would have shared that information with
you. Never forget, I’m here for Cipple
and Cipple alone. Ships do not concern
me.” Dressel grinned openly, a luxury
afforded to him by communicating through a comm. unit. Of course ships don’t concern you. “My apologies Your Excellency. Please, forgive my tactlessness. We’re so close to completion, I would hate
for anything to go awry.” “As would I. All that remains is for Cipple to arrive
and gloat over his victory. Once he is
in my brig, the spoils are yours.” Dressel
motioned for his Twi’lek companion to come to him and smiled again. A sly, duplicitous smile. “Most generous.” Another
second and the ground where he stood would not have supported his weight
anyway. His rocket pack blasted with a
howl as Tarr Ranth leapt and swooped away from the top of the ridge,
spreading oily fire onto the heads of his attackers below with his
flame-thrower. In-helmet tactical displays informed him of his altitude and
therefore which weapons would be most effective. He wished to remain at a reasonable
distance, giving him vital split seconds to adjust himself and avoid taking
hits. Like a massive armoured bat he
swept past the enemy and onto the wall of the nearest ridge. Moments later he was splatting
shots into his foes with precise accuracy.
His armour deflected the few good shots coming his way, and again he
began his move, sprinting behind a ton-heavy rock and taking cover. Ranth smiled behind his mask. Already he had dispatched twenty or so men,
sent them kicking and screaming to hell.
Their encampment was gradually gaining a strong defence, the enemy not
managing to penetrate their defences.
Both sides had sustained horrific losses during the conflict and would
suffer many more. Ranth was determined
that his side would take the least.
“….anth?
Tar……can you hea…e?” Ranth
twisted a dial on the rim of his helmet, fine-tuning the bandwidth and
focusing in on the transmission. “..py, Rant…an you hear me?” He checked his internal screen. It was a safe transmission, coming from one
of his own people. “I hear you. Who is this?” “This is Galletti.” Goah gripped the mike and glanced at
Niern. “There’s been a change in our
attack plan. I need you to gather a
group of agents and lead the enemy towards the main open plain east of the
ridge. I can’t say any more, just that
it’ll be worth the effort.” Ranth
nodded and checked his rifle. Fully
loaded. “Copy.
Consider it done.” He sprung
out from his covered position, striking and then kicking an attacker down off
the high ridge. Without the aid of a
jet-pack the Barada made a nasty stain at the foot of the ridge. Ranth ran, leapt out into nothingness and
activated his pack. He
free-fell fifty metres, blasted hard and sprayed more fire over the
enemy. Who would be the best man to help me build a team to draw the enemy, he thought. As the
thought coalesced another huge plume of smoke rose from the rocks and ten men
ran out, screaming and yelling, their clothes on fire. Ryath Centaur followed, gunning them down
and pinning them back into defensive positions. Ranth
smiled. Bingo. Fiery
swathes of super-heated atmosphere engulfed the star cruiser as she plummeted
down, nearer and nearer to her landing position. Her pilot knew exactly where to take her,
what her location was, everything.
Like a falling angel she continued to drop. “I’m going back out there.” Goah snatched at his rifle and moved away
from the table. “I’ve wasted enough
time here. I should be out there with
the others.” Niern
nodded and returned his attention to the screens. Mactin held the apron back, allowing Goah
to exit the tent. “Ranth and Centaur are making some
headway.” Mactin said. “According to Grin they’ve almost led them
to the ridge by the East plain.” Goah
grunted. “It’ll all be for nothing if the ship
doesn’t come.” Mactin
laughed. “Oh, come on Goah. When have you ever known Jan to come on
time?” Goah
had to smile. “There’s no answer to that.” They
ran as fast as they could, rounding the edge of the encampment and into the
fray. It was chaos. Packs and groups of fighters were milling
around, laying into each other like a battlefield of old. No one was organising them, no one shouting
out orders. But slowly, gradually,
they were making their way towards the east plain. “Why lead them towards our ships?” Asked Mactin between blaster rounds. “What’s this new plan?” Goah
managed to let out a smile while sending five men back to their respective
makers. “Watch the skies.” Mactin
shrugged at the mystic comment and threw himself at another attacker. “Come on! Come and get some!!” Centaur was doing his level best to rile
and antagonise his enemies, but to no avail.
The volume of the battle was too high, the sounds of screaming and
death too deafening. He needed a
different approach. Above him, Ranth
was still laying down fire. However,
his attacks had been angled into different areas. Using his flame-thrower to great effect he
had managed to herd them, in small pockets, around the ridge and onto the
plain. It gave everyone a level
playing field and equal opportunities for slaughter. Little did they know they were being herded
like Banthas.
Ranth flew over again. And
then Ryath had it. He
knew they were on a tight clock. Seconds counted, now more than ever. His instructions were precise - get the
enemy into the east plain by 17.20 hours.
It was 17.06 already and time was filtering away. He needed Tarr Ranth on the ground, if only
for a second. Spraying shots with one
hand he activated his comm. with the other. “Ranth, are you there?” “Yes.”
Came the curt reply. Ryath
breathed out. “We’ve got fourteen minutes to get them
into the plain. I’ve got an idea, but
I need your help.” “One moment….got him…what do you need?”
Apart from a miracle? Thought Ryath.
Not much. “Did you notice those megaphones in the
command tent?” Quenda
Suncharr ducked under the flack being thrown from his left and rolled into a
better firing position. Satisfied that
he’d improved his angle of attack he let loose with a steady barrage of
fire. Five of his enemies fell under
the withering attack, crumpling to the dusty floor in heaps. With a sly smile he checked his pistol and
began to turn… And
came face to face with Goah Galletti. Well,
almost. Galletti stood twelve metres
away, rifle in hand, despatching laser bolts and opposition to hell. Mactin stood back-to-back, spraying heavy
fire and clearing a path for them.
Suncharr frowned. He’d hated
Galletti for a long while now and this was the closest he’d come to the
assassin in ages. Surely a stray shot,
friendly fire, wouldn’t be totally unexpected. Not in these circumstances. He checked around himself. He was almost totally alone. He’d found such a secure position he
doubted very much whether anyone could see him. Perhaps this was his chance. He
paused. Ahh, to hell with it.
Squinting, he crossed Goah in his sights. “No you don’t Suncharr.” Quenda
cursed beneath his breath as Grin seemingly evaporated out of the ground, blaster
trained on his face. Quenda grinned. “What’s the big deal? I was covering him.” Grin
raised a scaly eyebrow. “Covering yourself is more like it.” He nodded at the battle. “This isn’t the time. Have your feud, I really don’t care. But Glann is paying us a lot of money to
get this done. He’s put a lot of faith
in me, and I won’t let you screw it up because of some old vendetta. Got it?”
Suncharr
nodded. He’d got it alright. Grin was right, and as the scruffy
ramp-hopper slipped away back into the fray he cursed again. He got to his knees to begin edging back
into the battle and noticed three snipers, sneaking their way to the ridges
lip and training their weapons on Goah and Mactin. Oblivious to the sneak attack the two
continued pumping shots into attackers in front of them. Dammit!! “Galletti!!” Suncharr yelled as he squeezed off three
deadly accurate shots into the two Rodians and the Weequay, thumping them
noisily off the ridge and onto the hard rocks below. With a grateful nod Galletti thanked
Suncharr. Quenda returned the
acknowledgement before sliding back into battle. Oh well. He thought.
Scratch another vendetta. There! Again
it showed up on his scanners. A brief
blip, a flash of a power signature. A
broken swirl of transponder numbers. It had to be him, who else could it be?
Spyte angrily thumped his back into his chair and smacked his fist
into the palm of his hand. Damn it! It was a trap, he knew it. He wouldn’t be all the way out here for
nothing, so there had to be more to it than simple deception. His thoughts fell back to his conversation
with Treece. I’m never wrong, but sometimes my
information is. How true. Now was the time for a decision. To tell Treece and the others, or figure
out some personal gain? The men on the ground had so far done well. Of the three hundred and thirty assorted
agents who had touched down on Soluman soil two hundred and five remained. Massive losses, but only to be expected. His own compliment of men had fared well.
Only twelve agents lost. But the Heed remained buried, its location
still a mystery. Spyte stood and moved
away from the window of the Iron Fist.
Contact Treece or sit on it? Stang. Centaur
cursed as another gaggle of Glanns men fell under enemy fire.
Where the hell are you Ranth, he agonised
silently. This wasn’t going to work, there simply
wasn’t the time. Even if Ranth
returned with the megaphone he doubted whether he could coral them into the
plain. No, there had to be another
way. Something simpler. Almost in answer to his thoughts his comm.
crackled and he snatched at it. “Centaur, this is Galletti.” “Go ahead.” “Niern just had an idea. Tune your comm. to an open channel.” Ryath
frowned. Open channel? Was he mad? He thought about that for a moment. Is
Goah Galletti mad? Next question. “And do what?” “Talk about the Heed being buried in the East Plain.” Ryath
raised his eyebrows in surprise. “It
is?” At
the other end of the line Goah ducked back to avoid a phalanx of laser fire
and smiled a weary smile. “It is now. Start talking.” The
man in the frayed leather jacket, with Feeses calling card and Treeces
Imperial funds stashed in his pocket, listened intently to the message being
relayed through his comm. Madness! Had
Centaur lost his mind? This was being broadcast on an open channel. Anyone and everyone fighting on the plain,
on both sides, could hear what was being said. “….that’s what I said Ranth. We’re pulling
out of the encampment. We’ve been
totally over-run here, there’s nothing more we can do. Get the men to the ships and prepare to
dust off.” “I understand. But the Heed - ” “We’ll have to come back for it
later. They don’t know it’s buried in
the East plain. It’s safe for now.” The
man in the frayed leather coat laughed.
Safe in the East plain?! Spyte would love this. As would Treece. It
was a small island, placed almost gently in a swirl of crazy blue ocean. Its pinkish soils could be made out, its
mountains, canyons and plains. One
plain grew larger and larger, and the star cruiser continued her descent…. “The East plain?” Spyte chewed on his bottom lip. He knew
it was a trap, the feeling in his gut couldn’t be wrong. But what a prize to risk your intuition
on. “Push the men forward. Make sure we get to the plain first, and
stake your claim.” The
man in the frayed leather jacket grunted his acknowledgement, killed the
connection and swiftly made another. Lans
paused a second, checking his instrumentation to verify the messages
authenticity, and once satisfied moved to Treeces side. “Your Excellency, we have the exact
location of the Heed.” Treece
slowly turned to face his Commander. “And it is…?” Lans
smiled. “The East plain, sir.” He
checked left, right and over head for signs of attack. When none was immediately forthcoming he
threw the frayed leather onto the ground, picked up a dusty, discarded hat
and pulled it on. There. He looked different enough to switch sides
– no one gets one over on Nester Torr. With a cocky grin he ran towards the massed
ranks of Treeces army battling on the East plain, thinking of his grandmother,
Gundarks and top hats… What
else could they do? There was no way
they could defend the encampment from the constant attack. Nor could they hope to claim or protect the
Heed under such an onslaught. Retreat was the only option left open to
them. Centaur and Ranth had led the
defence of the encampment fiercely for a long while now. Galletti and others had been busy sniping
and picking off the opposition from higher, more protected ground. But it ultimately proved to be useless. Despite the fact that they wished to lure
the enemy into the open ground of the East plain, the operation had moved
quicker than anticipated. Nemec Niern
had no doubt that even if they’d wished to defend the base,
they would have fallen in the face of superior numbers. Galletti
checked over his shoulder, being the last of Cipples men to leave their
temporary base of operations. Treeces
mixed army were massing along the far side of the encampment, secure in the
knowledge that they had finally run Cipples men off. Ranth blasted low overhead as Goah jumped
off the raised area and hit the plain, running to catch up with his fellow
fighters. A
few minutes later, near to the relative safety of the thirty-five vessels
grouped on the edge of the plain, Goah relaxed and slowed down. He turned to view the massed army behind
him. And
wondered what the hell was really
going on. “What the hells going on?” Asked Centaur, slowing to a trot as the
assassin rejoined the group. Ryath wiped his brow as Galletti shrugged. “Ask someone else. As far as I’m concerned we’re leaving.” “Leaving?”
Ryath wiped his brow again.
“What about Lomona?” Goah
pointed up ahead, to the edge of the plain and the distant horizon looming
above it. “Just keep watching. It’s not over yet.” Centaur
smiled. “I don’t doubt it.” “A full retreat. Sensible, under the circumstances.” Treece began to laugh as he raised his
glass to the Holo-image of the five ganglords before him. Dressel looked almost childishly happy.
Formoon radiated stunned disbelief, Predd Jason gave a cocky
I-never-doubted-it smirk, and only Tasar and Spyte seemed subdued. Subdued and sullen. Treece
cared little. This was it, the moment
of glory. For weeks they had tracked,
harassed and chased the Sunrise
team. And now they had even managed to beat the famously swift Berone Sunrise to its final
location. And Treece had no doubt that
Cipple would soon arrive to gloat over his expected victory. He had
to. It was almost poetically
inevitable. He continued. “What do you suggest we do now
Gentles? Now that victory is so
close?” “Close?”
Queried Formoon. “Victory is
complete!” Treece
straightened his face. “For you perhaps. But not for me. I want Cipple.” “You may soon have what you desire Your Excellency.” Treece
spun his seat around at the interruption. Commander Lans stood next to his
desk. “Commander?” Lans
smiled. “We’ve tracked a star cruiser making a
descent over Devlin Island.” Treece
smiled. So close. “Identification, Commander?” “Heart
of Amagad. Glann Cipples
starship.” Two
hundred men, women, droids and aliens filled the centre of the East
plain. Their victory had been hard
won. Cipples men had fought well, hard
and courageously but to no avail.
Cipple was finished. Somewhere
buried beneath their feet laid the Heed. Theirs for the taking. On
the far edge of the plain they could make out the dejected shapes of Cipples
men making their way back to starships and freighters. There would be no celebrations for them
tonight. Knowing Glann Cipple, a swift
death would probably be all that awaited them for their failure. Tough.
They should have sensed which way the wind was blowing and joined the
winning team. To
the victor the spoils. Twenty
kilometres to go. Soon, the star
cruiser would be revealed from behind the thick, white clouds for the people
below to see. Nineteen, eighteen. Surely
they had been picked up on sensors by now. Sixteen, fifteen. The
pilot was surprised that there hadn’t been more resistance. Thirteen, twelve. After
all, this was a highly dangerous mission. Ten, nine. No
matter. Soon the Heart of Amagad would be on solid ground and Glann Cipples
message delivered. Seven, six… “Get off Soluman as quickly as possible
and hit hyperspace. You know the
rendezvous point.” A
flurry of winking comm. lights blinked confirmation, and Nemec Niern switched
off the console. From the cockpit
window of the Phoenix he could make
out the two hundred agents, the few remaining starships lifting off from the
edge of the plain, the skies clouding over threatening rainfall. From the midst of the clouds a white sliver
of star cruiser descending rapidly from the sky above, aiming for the centre
of the East plain. He
smiled. It had gone almost exactly to
plan. Except for the casualties. As ever, what had seemed like the most
important mission in the galaxy had to be paid off in blood. Someone’s
dearest blood. Shaking his head in a
resigned, tired fashion he turned to Goah beside him in the pilot’s
seat. Gallettis face was a study in
solemnity. “What’s troubling you?” Goah
grimaced. “The Heed.
Once it’s dug up everything will
change.” Niern
nodded. “True.
In a few minutes nothing will ever be the same again. But it’ll have very little to do with the Heed.” Galletti
frowned. “What do you mean?” He paused.
Something in the way Niern had phrased that last sentence. What did he mean? A smile was ready to
crack his features. “The Heed is there, isn’t it…?” Niern
shrugged and gazed out of the window at the descending star cruiser. “Who knows?” Retro-thrusters
activated, sending a sonic blast rolling through the canyons and across the
East plain as the star cruiser hovered over-head. The two hundred had parted for its
touchdown, clearing the way towards the centre of the plain. Gracefully, the massive star cruiser
extended her landing claws and softly came to a halt on the pinkish sands of
Soluman. All was silent except for the
hissing of the coolant being released from the engine jets. Seconds later the
ramp began to extend…. “I shall take Cipple into custody myself,
of course.” Said Treece, shrugging his
jacket over his shoulders as he made his way up the ramp and into his
shuttle, the Captive. Commander Lans waited patiently at the foot
of the ramp, arms crossed behind his back.
“You have the Repressor now,
Commander.” “My thanks, Your Excellency.” He paused.
“Any further instructions?” Treece
waited at the top of the ramp as it began to close. Mmmm. What could possibly make today even
better? Ahh, yes… “Only one.
Have all starboard turbo lasers trained on our underworld guests. In case they decide to do anything
rash. Or indeed anything at all.” Lans
smiled and inclined his head. A wise
decision. “With pleasure.” ...a
soft spray of sand billowed away from the edge of the ramp as it hit the
ground. None of the two hundred
moved. None did anything. It wasn’t their place, they’d been told that. Cipple was for Treece, and he was expected
to arrive any minute. All they would
have to do was stop Cipple from leaving.
Once he realised he had foolishly landed in the midst of the
enemy. A flicker of shadows appeared
at the top of the ramp. A glisten of
silver and gold. Who is it? asked the gunman Bohe
R’Toll. What is it? queried fellow shooter Upya Oors. An excited murmur began
to emanate throughout the crowd, a low groan that built in intensity until it
rapidly became a cacophony of sounds.
Yells, cheers, screams and shouts echoed around the plain. If Glann Cipple was idiot enough to enter
the Rancors nest, then he should expect everything he gets. And
more. Silver and gold continued to
glisten. “A toast Kailo.” “To what?” “To life being full of surprises.” The
female Duros smiled openly as the comm. unit crackled on the table. “To surprises.” “Entering Solumans
atmosphere now Your Excellency. We will land in three minutes.” One of the
two pilots turned around from his cockpit view to check on his
passenger. But the Grand Moff was
busying himself with his buttons and his hair, oblivious to the
information. The pilot turned
back. What’s he up to this time?
He rarely left the confines of his safe-hold on Zelon, but when he did
it was never without incident. The previous pilot once told him of a trip
he’d made to the Leogard System… “I’m coming Cipple,” Murmured the Moff
under his breath, just loud enough that the two pilots could hear him. “I’m coming to take you away.” Someone should take you away,
thought the pilot and continued steering the Lambda class shuttle towards
Devlin Island. Smoothly
oiled and perfectly balanced, the female-designed silver and gold droid
walked down the ramp of the Heart of
Amagad and came to a stop at the bottom.
Eyeing the crowd with a coolly detached gaze it lifted the flim it
held in its right hand and began to read. “I have been instructed to read a prepared
statement on behalf of Glann Cipple.”
There was a brief pause as the clouds gathered. “`Gentles.
As you are no doubt now aware you have beaten me to the location of
the legendary Starship Heed. Congratulations. Your cunning and deception has bagged you a
prize undreamed of by most mortal beings.
I, for my sins, bow to your superior power and humbly offer my
surrender in the hope that you allow me to live and serve in your employ.’” There
was an astonished cheer from the two hundred on the plain…. “I don’t like it.” Growled Spyte, rubbing his chin
thoughtfully. “Since when has Cipple
ever talked like that?” The
five holograms flickered. “True,” Concurred Tasar. “Something’s wrong. But what?” “Apart from it being a trap?” Mocked
Dressel. “Come now Geon. Cipple cowers within his ship, too ashamed
to face his victors. A droid reads a
prepared statement. How much more
perfect could it possibly be?” “You’ve been hanging out with Twi’lek’s
too much.” Cut in Jason. “Spyte’s right. Cipple ain’t stupid. He wouldn’t just drop into the middle of a
crowd and surrender.” He squinted
suspiciously. “Besides, Lomona hasn’t
arrived yet.” “Forget Lomona. What are you saying Jason?” Snapped Dressel angrily. “What’s the matter with you? We’ve won!
How could you possibly think otherwise?” “Shhh!” Admonished Formoon. “Listen.” “`As terms of surrender, I offer to you
this star cruiser, and the droids within.
I, however, shall never surrender.’” Somewhere
within the star cruiser a timer activated.
T-minus ten, nine…. “`You shall not take me. You shall not have the Heed ….’” Treece
closed his eyes as the Island gained sharper edges. “So close….” “`….you shall have nothing but the cold
embrace of death. Remember these words
- I know who you are.’” Six, five. “`Good day Treece. I’ll see you in hell.’”
Three, two.... The
droid dropped the flim onto the silent sands.
“That concludes Glann Cipples
message.” Smoothly,
the droid de-activated for the final time.
One, zero… Everything
turned white. Devlin Island turned to
ash. The ocean began to boil. “Sir,
incoming blast wave! Hang onto
something!!” Treece
stood slowly from his seat as the universe around him started to rumble. It couldn’t be. “No!!
So close!” He
saw the mushroom cloud blister its way toward the Captive, felt its hot breath rip around the hull, its force
shudder the shuttle. But all he felt
inside was the emptiness of defeat.
The hollow feeling of loss. And
the thumping realisation that Cipple had known all along that it was Treece
who’d hounded him to hells gate.
Treece sank to his knees, head in hands. He knew he would not survive the next few
moments, but at least he had the small satisfaction of knowing Cipple would
never possess the Heed. “My god….”
Tasars voice trailed off in amazement as the small island below him
disintegrated into dust and mud, a tidal wave lashing back and away from the
hole where Devlin Island had stood moments before. He knew
it was a trap, it had to be. Cipple
was far too clever to do anything less.
But he had believed superior numbers and a wider spread of field
intelligence would win out. How wrong
he was. The Heed was lost now, to everyone.
Two hundred thousand credits gone, and for what? The loss of his best men. Weeks spent
tailing the Berone Sunrise. Weeks of intelligence work, wasted. And because of whom? Tasar rolled his sleeves up and gritted his
teeth. Someone had to pay. Someone
always did. Treece… Breemarr
Trading Station. Along the maze of corridors within the station lay an outlet
of Zythlies Dropout Parlour. Not an
unusual finding in these regions but unusual to find one so empty. Save for two figures nestled at the rear of
the establishment, huddled over a lonely candle, two drinks and a crackling
communicator unit. Kailo the Duros
smiled at her white-haired companion and sipped from her glass. The Geenau Whiskey went down smoothly and
she nodded in satisfaction. Liquor didn’t come much better than this. Opposite, her companion finished his water
and leaned back in his seat, the trace of a satisfied smile teasing the edges
of his mouth. Kailo blinked. “So.
It is done. Your mission is
complete.” Melm
shook his head. “It remains incomplete until I am at Glann
Cipples side. But yes, this part of the mission is ended.” Kailo
frowned. An un-answered question. “Somehow, you knew I would not attempt to
stop you.” She smiled. “A risky gamble. After all, I am Dressels bodyguard. I
had more than a degree of personal interest”
Melm
looked out of Zythlies doorway. No one
about, snooping or eves-dropping. “By the time I arrived on the station I’d
already set the star cruisers co-ordinates for Devlin’s Island and programmed
the droid with the message from Glann.
How could you stop me?” Kailo
nodded in appreciation. “You
did the message?” “I did.
I have an element of latitude in these matters.” He leaned forward. “Although I believe Glann will rue the loss
of his star cruiser.” Kailo
smiled. “Not as much as Soluman will rue the loss
of its island.” She finished her
Whiskey and stood. “I must leave. Dressel is expecting me, and no doubt you
are expecting Lomona.” She knows, thought Melm.
She’s already figured out that
he’s not coming. He nodded anyway. “No doubt.” “Shall we agree that this exchange never
happened?” “A wise precaution.” “We will meet again Melm.” Melm
stood to escort her from the bar. “We always do.” The
female Duros shook Melms hand and left him, alone in the half-lit entrance of
an empty bar on a deserted space station. |