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The
Tatooine Effect 1986/2002/2003 story by Mark
Newbold Three years after Episode
IV – A New Hope It had been one hell of a night. But then, it’s not every day you cross
Jabba the Hutt and get away with it. Jan Lomona raised his hand to cover
his face, the days first light glinting into his tired eyes. He moved to sit upright, but the throbbing
in his head made him pause for a second.
What the freck do they put in
the drinks round here that they don’t in Setnin? He wondered to
himself. My brain feels like the morning after a swoopers convention. He looked around and saw that he was
lying in the shadow of an old landspeeder, itself parked in an alleyway off
the main street of Mos Banely, and realisation hit as he remembered the
events of the last few days. Jan and Goah Galletti, both employees
of Setnin Sector ganglord Glann Cipple, had travelled to Tatooine on business
of differing natures. Galletti to meet
with one of the Hutts representatives and Lomona to do some business for the
hulking gangster. And while it was
known that Galletti didn’t approve of Jan’s activities away from Glann
Cipple, Jan nevertheless suggested sharing a ship, and so the Berone Sunrise left Amagad bound
for the Outer Rim and whatever awaited them.
It had been a productive trip. Seconded in their regular Mos Banely hotel,
they flew overland to the palace of Jabba the Hutt, where Galletti was met by
an obsequious man who was clearly knowledgeable of Galletti’s reputation and
who ushered him into a briefing room, a cave-like area replete with barred
windows and the feint smell of rodents, and Jan to Jabba’s main audience
chamber. His Gamorrean escort pointed
thuggishly to an empty seat near the rear of the room and Jan sat, nodding to
a couple of familiar faces he spotted in the throng and waited his turn to
address the Hutt. It was a long wait, but Jan minded
little. He was always able to glean
some useful extract of information from his semi-regular trips to Tatooine,
information that was either useable back home, sellable or of use in
negotiations. Most knew of his
Tatooine jaunts, and many were either envious of his connections or impressed
by his willingness to mix it up with the cream of the galaxies scum. But Lomona knew that while in Setnin he
was a big fish in a small pond, here, where the action had galactic
implications, he was a very small fish indeed. But a fish that Jabba, for reasons
even Jan couldn’t fathom, liked to use. It was four hours, eighteen Twi’lek
dances, three Rancor feedings, four shootings and a Hutt snooze later, but
finally Jan was called up. Jabba the
Hutt eyed Jan, one lazy eye squinting more than the other, the foul stench of
rotting food and heavy alcohol tingeing the air. Jan sucked it all in, keeping his cool
exterior while his insides were screaming for oxygen.
“Lomona. It’s been too long.”
“As ever I can’t disagree.” Jan
returned, bowing slightly in an attempt to appear courteous yet cool. He chided himself as he straightened up to
look at the Hutt. Why do I do that? It never comes off.
“I have a job for you, one that suits your unique abilities.”
“And which ability would that be?” asked Jan, immediately realising
that it wasn’t a statement that required a flippant response, and he gave
Jabba a sorry look. Jabba breathed
deeply through his nose and shifted on his dais.
“I need a consignment taking into the Setnin Sector.”
“What cargo?” Jabba frowned and
made as if to speak, but Jan raised his hands. “Look, I only ask because you know I don’t smuggle breathers. Livestock yes, slaves, no. If it can order a flameout then it’s good
enough to sit up front with me.” He
grinned, an expression that made the Hutt wince. “That’s the way I’ve always operated Jabba,
you know that.” Jabba nodded in agreement.
“Trust me Lomona, this cargo couldn’t be more inanimate.”
“Then we’ve got a deal.”
“Agreed.” Jan nodded, satisfied with Jabba’s
reply. Besides, he’d know if it were
alive, his ships sensors could easily be fine-tuned to penetrate the crate
and read any life signs inside. Jabba
motioned towards one of his many aides who pointed the way to a side room and
a more detailed description of the job.
Jan half-smiled at Jabba again.
“Always a pleasure.” Jabba didn’t respond, he simply
narrowed his eyes and fixed Lomona with a glare.
“This mission will not go
wrong. Am I right?” Jan began to move away and looked back
over his shoulder as he left the audience chamber.
“Jabba, you’re always right.”
“Cipple will be satisfied with this.”
“I’ve been instructed to iron out any…disagreements that might crop
up.” Goah Galletti fixed the burly
negotiator with a steely glare and waited for the mans resolve to
falter. It didn’t, but Goah knew that
genuine toughness was about more than a hard stare. The atmosphere in the room had been frosty
from the start, and he still wasn’t sure why Glann had sent him to oversee a
business negotiation. He was the last
person he’d have sent if he had any say in the matter. He had the patience of a demon and the civility
of a guillotine. Signing peace
treaties wouldn’t be what he was remembered for. Being the ultimate cause for the need for peace treaties probably
would be. The burly man stood and moved away
from his chair, peering through the barred window. It was dark outside, dusk was approaching
fast and the rays of Tatoo II were diminishing over the horizon. Soon it would be dark, and the temperature
would drop rapidly. He had a home and
a family to go to, and this long negotiation was tiring him. He turned back to Goah, glancing at the
obsequious man who had led Goah in, seated in the corner taking notes.
“One last issue. We will soon
require free and unfettered passage through the Setnin Sector. Will that be a problem?” Goah raised an eyebrow. You
don’t need Glanns permission. It’s a
free galaxy.
“No problem at all.” What the
freck is in the crate? Jan paused as he spoke to himself and
blew out a long breath. He knew better
than anyone that if Jabba didn’t want the contents of the consignment known,
then that was that, but Jans natural curiosity and desire to keep his ship
and hide intact always overrode that fact.
The crate was a simple wooden box, crudely hammered shut with a nail
gun. Clearly the contents within were
hardy and durable. No breathers then, at least there’s
that. And this is no spice crate
either. Must be weapons or technical parts or
something. He watched the crate
as it was pushed on a repulsors field into the Sunrise. How dull. Night had fallen, and the cool air was
crisp and clear. Jan had parked at the
rear of the Hutt palace, other vehicles scattered around and about. He could see a phalanx of familiar
vehicles; a Firespray was close by, as well as a handful of other custom
jobs. He noted that the Sunrise was the largest freighter
present, although there were a few larger transports that sat at the edge of
the compound. There ain’t too many of these babies here on the Rim. Desando Dynamics sure made these stock
heavies exclusive. The consignment loaded, Jan waited at
the foot of the ramp as Galletti left a rear exit and strode towards
him. Jan began to board the Sunrise and Goah followed, the ramp
and airlock sealing shut behind. He
headed to the cockpit, where Jan was waiting with his trusty old droid
Aurran. Two glasses of Vineau sat on
the dash, and Jan offered one to Goah.
The gunman shook his head.
“No thanks.” Jan cocked his head to one side and
looked at the red liquid as it sloshed around the tumbler.
“We’re not at work anymore.”
He waggled his eyebrows like a used speeder salesman. “C’mon, I insist.” Goah raised an eyebrow in return and
accepted the drink, taking a sip and placing it on the side. Jan turned to the console and began the
warm-up routines that would soon see them departing Tatooine, bound for the
relative safety of the Mid-Rim.
Galletti watched Jan intently as he operated the controls and seated
himself in the co-pilots seat. It was
warm and familiar. He’d spent many
hours there, watching the stars as they sped by, doing jobs alongside his
friend Lomona. But now it seemed such
a long time ago, almost like another life.
He could hardly imagine himself accompanying Lomona on any jobs. Smuggling was certainly not in his blood. Although blood was very much a
constant in his life. The Sunrise powered up her engines and Lomona raised her from the
sands of Tatooine, aiming her nose towards the skies and away from the
coolness of the night. She corkscrewed
into the night sky at full burn, racing free of the desert worlds gravitic pull until she was a speck in the cosmos, then
nothing. Safe in the openness of deep
space, Jan turned to Goah and left the immediate task of plotting an
astrogation course to his R2 unit Troopie.
Jan reached for the glass again.
“So, everything go smoothly?
Amagad business I assume.” Galletti nodded, guarding his words
and facial expressions. He knew Jan
was adept at reading such small signs.
Understanding the stunningly obvious however, that often eluded him. Jan smiled and took another swig.
“Well I’ve been given a real
doozy of a job.” Galletti raised his hand to stop Jan
from continuing.
“I shouldn’t hear this. What
you do for Jabba is your business.” He
looked down into the depths of his tumbler.
“When it concerns Glann, then
it concerns me.”
“Then this might just be worth listening to.” Jan leaned forward conspiratorially in his
chair, lowering his voice. Despite
them being alone in the cockpit, Goah leaned forward to listen. “This information you could get from anyone
at the palace, but I’m taking a crate to Setnin for Jabba. Not sure where yet, I’m due to drop out of
hyperspace and receive a coded message in four hours time. But this is a weird one. It’s a wooden crate, nailed up tight. I can’t see what’s inside, but I’ll tell
you this, it’s like nothing I’ve transported for Jabba before. You remember
what running for the slug is like.” Goah nodded. Years previously he had done many such
similar jobs for Jabba, before moving away from smuggling towards
more…questionable activities for Glann.
While Jan still operated primarily as a free-lance trader, working for
many different operators Goah was exclusive to Cipple. And as such had gained a fearsome
reputation in a short space of time.
But he remembered well the details of running for Jabba the Hutt. And rule number one: never ask what’s inside the box.
“You think it’s dangerous?”
“Do Krayts crap in canyons? Of course it’s dangerous, I’m running
for Jabba the Hutt. But is it
dangerous enough to get me killed?
Look, I’m as curious as the next guy about what I smuggle, but this
has got the hairs on the back of my neck up.”
He paused, looking closely at Galletti. “Aren’t you even a bit curious?”
“It’s not my problem. You’re the captain.”
“But what if this has
got something to do with Glann? You
know Jabba would like him out of the picture in the Mid-Rim.”
“Him and a thousand others.”
“Exactly!”
“Exactly.” Jan blew out an exasperated breath,
not sure what it was Goah was missing.
He lowered his glass and turned to pull the levers that would plunge
the Sunrise into hyperspace,
and outside the universe swirled into crimson. A few seconds of checking they were secure
and he turned back to the black clad gunman.
Goah simply stared back, giving nothing away and sipped again from his
Vineau. Jan stood and moved towards the
astrogation panel, altering a few switches and toggles. Goah noticed him working from his detailed
starmap, viewed on a small hooded screen in the centre of the panel. That map is worth more than the ship, Galletti
thought to himself. The reason he has such an edge. Jan spoke.
“I’m gonna scan the crate. I
don’t know what’s inside, but I have a feeling it’s not there by choice.”
“A slave?” asked Goah, knowing Jans distaste for ferrying live
cargo. Jan shook his head.
“Jabba wouldn’t transport a sentient in a crate like that, not if he
wanted it delivered alive. No,
something weird is up, I just don’t know what. You cool to give me an assist?” Goah looked around the smart and roomy
cockpit and shrugged his shoulders.
“I’ve got nothing better to do.”
“The readings are inconclusive Master Jan.” Aurran drawled in his
measured monotone, adjusting the monitor and flicking switches and
dials. Jan frowned, unsure of how to
proceed. Maybe Goah was right an hour
ago, best not to mess with the damn thing.
But he’d be damned if a wooden box would get the better of him, not
after three hours of probing. He had
an hour until the coded message would tell him the destination of the crate,
and he had every intention of knowing what the cargo was before then. Or who. He still had the feeling that there
was someone inside, a feeling he just couldn’t shake. It was illogical, he knew, but logic rarely
paid Jan Lomona a visit. Galletti
stood to one side, impassively watching the proceedings. Jan gave him the occasional glance, as if
to say `Well you think of something,’ but said
nothing.
“Aah crud, this is hopeless.” said Jan, standing back and shoving his
hands on his hips. “We could spend all
day scanning this.”
“Do what you usually do then.” said Goah, and Jan frowned as he turned
to face him.
“This is Jabba I’m working for, not Glann. Glann tells me what I’m transporting, and
if he doesn’t he knows I’ll
find out as a matter of personal and professional pride. Jabba…he tends to remove hands from wrists
when you do that.”
“But Jabba isn’t here. So open
it.” Goah shrugged his shoulders as he
placed his hands in his pockets and leaned against the wall. “What are you afraid of? That it’s going to
blow up?” He almost smirked. “Wouldn’t your sixth sense have alerted you
to that?” Jan ignored the not-so subtle dig and
sized up the crate. It was long, about
two and a half meters and a meter deep.
He could sense that there was some kind of power supply running
inside, and the contents weren’t very heavy.
In fact, he could almost lift the crate himself. He frowned again, looking at Aurran and Goah. Galletti stared back at Jan for two
seconds, blew out an exasperated breath and lashed out with a steel-capped
boot, hitting the crate perfectly on the edge and cracking the casing open,
shards of splintered wood hitting the steel floor of the hold. Lomona was too surprised to react, especially
when he saw the contents of the simple crate. A carbonite block. Dammit I
was right, it was someone thought
Jan to himself as he moved to inspect the body. Thoughts of who it could be raced through
his mind, and recent events of huge importance came to him. Nah,
it couldn’t be…
“I recognise him,” said Goah, leaning over Jans shoulder and brushing
some of the splinters away from the block.
“That’s Galindro. He’s one of
the best hitmen on the Outer Rim.” He
paused, lost in thought for a second.
“What would Jabba be doing putting him in carbonite?”
“Maybe he opened something he shouldn’t have.” stabbed Jan as he
looked closer. Sure enough it was
Galindro, his long snout protruding upwards, a mask of pain etched into his
features. He wore his usual outfit, a
tight fitting suit that accentuated his canine physique, and his customary
blasters were held high on his hips, his short arms ready to swoop down and
fast draw his opponents to oblivion.
Jan had met him once before, on Dantooine doing a clandestine job for
Jomobol Pocock, and he certainly didn’t want to face him in anger again. Galindro belonged to the Outer Rim, and
long may he stay there.
“Galindro has nothing to do with Setnin. He’s never worked for any ganglords here,”
pondered Galletti as Aurran disengaged the anti-grav field and heaved the
block onto its end in preparation for thawing it out. “So why send him here? Someone in Setnin wants him, but who?”
“May I suggest a simple way to find out sir?” interjected Aurran as he
waited by the control panel that sat on the edge of the block. Goah nodded in agreement, but Jan shook his
head.
“Look, I know say you know this guy, but I do too. I don’t want him coming out of a carbonite
block, blind and frecked off, running round my ship causing trouble.”
“I’ve got him covered,” said Goah with a twist in his voice, but Jan
still held firm.
“No, I need more of a reason than that to upset Jabba. Setnin might be in the Mid-Rim and Jabba
might have stumpy arms but his reach goes right the way to Coruscant. We’ll sit on this until we have more
information.” He checked his
chrono. “Which should be in about an
hour.”
“Well that sure explains a lot,” Jan murmured to himself an hour
later, his voice low as he waited to gauge Goahs reaction to the coded
message. He busied himself with
closing down the transmission and swung his seat around to face
Galletti. The gunman was calm, relaxed
even, which surprised Lomona given the nature of the message, and the strange
twist of fate it contained. Jan gave
Goah another few seconds, then spoke.
“Formoon, eh?”
“Yes.”
“Small galaxy.”
“Too small.” Goah paused,
taking a long look out of the window to the swirls of hyperspace they had
since returned to. Formoon, he intoned to
himself. I always swore I’d get my revenge on you someday. And now…
“We’ve got Galindro on ice in the hold, you’re on a job for Glann, I’m
carrying crates for Jabba and now Formoon is involved. What’s the connection?” Goah gave Jan a blank stare and Jan
shuddered inside as the side of Goahs mouth curled into a twisted smile.
“I’m the connection.” Jan frowned.
“Yeah?” He scratched his head
in confusion. “How do you figure
that?”
“I know Galindro. I work for
Glann, and I’ve worked for Jabba. I
have a history with Formoon. I’m the
connection.” Jan could see the links clearly enough
but was sure that wasn’t the answer he was seeking. He needed to know why Galindro was being
taken to Setnin and to Torona Formoon, the sadistic ganglord who had tortured
Galletti three years previously. And who’d also tortured Jan’s fiancé
Frans Latka.
“Master Jan?” Lomona turned to Aurran who was stood
in silent expectation at the door of the cockpit, waiting for the word. Jan half-smiled and nodded.
“Okay old friend, you win. Thaw
him out.” Galindro shivered, the effects of
hibernation sickness still wracking his body.
Jan handed the gunman another towel as Aurran notched up the heat on
the thermal blanket that was wrapped around him. Galindro drank deep from the hot chav he
was holding and looked up at Goah.
“So run that by me again.” he asked Galletti in a weak but even
voice. “The Hutt was sending me
where?”
“To Formoon.” Goah narrowed his
eyes. “You have a history with him?”
“You could say that,” answered Galindro, his canine-like snout easing
into a wry smile as another set of shivers shook him hard. He composed himself. “We’ve been adversaries for a long time. Ever since Formoon sent me out alone on a
mission that needed back up. I failed,
Jabba was upset and Formoon got the blame.
And in turn he blamed me for making Jabba angry with him. Let’s just say that we weren’t drinking
partners.” Galindro eyed Goah closely,
his bleary eyes still stinging from the carbonite. “You
certainly have a past with him. I can smell
the hate.” He looked at Jan and
Goah. “So, do you have a plan?”
“Actually I do,” spoke Lomona, moving towards the opposite side of the
hold to where the now empty carbonic block was standing against the
wall. He raised an eyebrow as he looked
at the two gunmen. “But you might not like it.”
“I didn’t much like Formoon holding me over a lava pit on the wrong
end of a rusty chain.” answered Galletti dryly. “Trust me, I can take it.” Jan nodded and continued.
“Okay. All three of us have
things to do and places to be, right.” Galindro took another sip of chav and
eyed the block.
“In a manner of speaking.”
“I’m taking a crate to Moot, Goahs on his way back to Setnin and
you’re…” He motioned to the block.
“You’re chilling out. And
unless I deliver something to
Moot I’m the one who’s gonna
get it. So…” Jan paused again as he
eyed Goah. Galletti shook his head in
confusion.
“So?”
“So I’ve got to deliver something
to Formoon. But whatever that
something is, it’ll get inside Formoons base.
Undetected. And close enough to
get some of that revenge you’ve both been after.” He looked at Galindro. “Do you see where I’m going with this?”
“Yeah, and you can forget it.”
He glared at the carbonite block.
“I’m not getting back in there for nothing. I want Formoons intestines as a necklace as
much as the next guy, but I’m not going through that again. No one’s that desperate to nail him.”
“I am.” stated Goah flatly. He
turned to Lomona. “I’ll do it.” Jan didn’t give Goah time or chance to
change his mind; he quickly moved back towards the two men and seated himself
beside them.
“Alright, we’ve got to move quickly on this. We need two things. A carbon freezing chamber – “
“And a disguise,” cut in Galindro.
Goah turned to look at him. The
gunman cocked his head. “Think about
it. Formoon is expecting me. If he gets a human frozen in carbonite
he’ll know something’s
wrong.”
“Exactly,” said Lomona with emphasis.
“What we need is to make you look like Galindro.” Jan and Galindro watched in momentary
confusion as Goah pushed his nose and chin out, forcing his lips into a
freakish approximation of a snout, then relax. He raised an eyebrow and shook his head.
“Sorry, no good. Just haven’t got the snout for it.”
“You know I’d totally forgotten what a funny frecker you are
Goah.” Jan looked around his hold and
grinned as his eyes lay on an opened metal tin. Bingo!
“Aurran you old cogmeister, you’ve done it again.” He lifted the tin and held it out in front
of him for the other two to see.
“Exterior panel filler. Quick
drying, fills any gap. This tin made
the Kessel run in less than twelve parsecs.
If we take a mold of your face,” He nodded towards Galindro. “Then you can wear that in the freezing
chamber. Formoons men won’t suspect a
thing, especially if you wear his clothes.” Goah seemed agreeable to the idea,
sizing the gunman up beside him.
“Is that stuff toxic?” asked Galindro.
Jan checked the details on the side of the tin.
“Lethal.”
“Gotta die of something I suppose.” Thirty minutes passed as Jan and Goah
made their makeshift moulding of Galindro, and with the use of two cable
casings they were able to fashion crude but working breathing tubes. Jan stood back, picking pieces off the edge
of the mold and turned to Galletti.
“Now comes the interesting part,” began Jan as he moved in to grip the
edges of the mold. Galindro made as if
to stand, but Jan held him down.
“What interesting part?” he asked.
“Taking it off,” answered Jan as he heaved back in a sharp motion,
pulling the mask and a sizeable amount of facial hair with it. Galindro howled loudly and grabbed his head
as the stinging loss of hair hit him and Goah couldn’t hide a wry smile as
Jan stepped back very quickly.
“You’ll pay for that.”
“Hey, don’t take it out on me, blame Formoon. He put you in this situation.” Galindro growled something under his
breath, despite the fact that it was Jabba who had done this to him and
nodded in agreement. Considering I refused to get back in the
block, this job hurts enough already.
Maybe Galletti’s the wise one. “We’re changing course and heading for
Commodor. They have a first-class
freezing chamber, state of the art.”
Jan motioned towards Goah. “You
won’t know you’ve been frozen until you wake up.”
“I’m not doing this for my health,” growled Goah as he began to psyche
himself up for the ordeal. “Just get
me there as soon as you can.” Galindro joined the conversation
again.
“Do you know the owner of this chamber? Is he trustworthy?” Jan gave the canine gunman a half
smile.
“Pal, there’s no-one I
trust. There’s just people I distrust
less than others.”
“So who is it?” asked Galletti.
“Romanoe, you old dog!” yelled Jan as he greeted his friend and
regular mechanic. The older man strode
across the metallic platform that made for the exterior landing bay of his
latest hired base and grinned as he returned the welcome.
“Jan Lomona, you’re looking well for a no-good, double-crossing,
two-timing schemer. What can I do for
you? More work on the Sunrise?” Jan shoved a thumb over his shoulder
at Galindro and Galletti who stood behind him in silence. Goah gave Romanoe a silent nod and Galindro
gave a blank stare.
“Not today. I need to use your
freezing chamber. I’ve got a cargo
that needs delivering to Torona Formoon and it’s better if it’s secure.” Romanoe raised an eyebrow and glanced
at Jans two companions. He lowered his
voice as he spoke to the A-desandian, turning him round to face the large
metallic hangar that served as his current base of operations.
“Two gunmen and a smuggler need use of my carbon freezing chamber. For
Formoon you say?” Jan nodded in the affirmative.
“I know I shouldn’t ask but I’m going to anyway…” He left the sentence
hanging, and Lomona grinned widely.
“Rom, I’d tell you if I could but this is a run for Jabba. You know
how he is with this kind of gig.” Romanoe blew out a long breath and
whistled loudly.
“Say no more, say no more.” He
motioned towards the open doors of the hangar, which was a bustling hive of
activity, packed with mechanics and droids busily repairing and stripping
freighters and all manner of vehicles.
On Commodor, a world that was one of the oldest in the Setnin Sector
and which was covered in docking bays, hangars and repair facilities, any
captain could locate whatever part, spare or ship-related item he or she was
searching for. Jan often used the
facilities here on Commodor; the fact that his regular mechanic was based
here was an added bonus. Romanoe led the trio through his main
bay and towards the rear of the hangar.
Jan noticed a few furtive glances as various mechanics spotted Goah
and Galindro, and acknowledged a few workers himself as he strode confidently
alongside Romanoe through a blast door and into a clean, brightly lit area at
the back of the building. Romanoe
opened a concealed panel cut into the wall and keyed in a secret code that
opened yet another door. Inside was
dark and the mobile mechanic activated a set of lights that illuminated the
room. It was the carbon-freezing
chamber, and the glow of red and blue lights bathed the room in neon
hues. Romanoe paused at the door
allowing Jan to enter.
“There’s a rear exit to bring in whatever you need. The controls are self-explanatory, you
won’t have a problem. If you need any
help I’ll be in my office.” Jan patted Romanoe on the shoulder and
entered the room, Goah and Galindro following close behind.
“Thanks for this Rom. We’ll be
out of your way soon.”
“Take your time.” Goah secured the door behind him and
moved to the centre of the chamber, his eyes never leaving the pit where he
knew he would soon descend. Galindro
walked slowly around the hollow, recent memories of being dragged kicking and
snarling, bound at both feet and paws still fresh and vivid in his
memory. Jan made his way directly to
the control stand, keying in instructions and details. This was indeed a modern chamber, which
allowed such details as weight, height, species and age to be accessed. Eyeing Goah he noted all the details, his
pure Trefnarian heritage, his height, weight and most importantly his
age. Nothing about Goah that I don’t know, he said confidently to
himself. A trip through a chamber with the wrong settings could really send a
guy over the edge... Galindro let his bag slip from his
shoulder and into his hands, and opening it he pulled out the rough but
detailed mask that Goah was to wear.
Galletti took it wordlessly from him and held it against his face. As before it was a good fit, the only
difference being the sheen of sweat that had accumulated across Goahs
face. He snapped the elastic around
his ears to check it was okay, then removed it along with his top layer of
clothing that he began to swap with Galindro.
Jan left the chambers exit, jogging around to the Sunrise, which he entered and ran
down to the hold. He jumped onto the
waiting load lifter that bore the carbonite block he intended to re-use,
covered with a tarpaulin to hide the contents. Aurran had jury rigged a remote device,
enabling the group to choose the precise moment they wanted Goah to wake and
wreak havoc, and Jan checked it before pulling out of the freighters bottom
ramp and to the back of the hangar again. He pulled the block to the side of the
chamber and hopped off, yanking the sheet free and with the assistance of
Galindro dragged it to the edge of the chamber. Jan then manned the controls of the claw
that was held high up in the ceiling and lowered it, grabbing the block and
talking it down into the pit where it waited for Goah. Lomona breathed deeply though his nostrils
and nodded at Goah, who was now fully prepared in Galindro’s clothes, the
mask in place. Beneath the mask covering
his eyes was a pair of space-worthy protective goggles, there to shield his
eyes from the freezing and blinding effects of the carbonite. Goah returned the nod to Jan and
approximated the pose that Galindro had been frozen in when they had thawed
him scant hours before. Without
preamble the floor began to lower and gases billowed as Galletti was engulfed
by the potentially deadly carbonite.
Jan and Galindro watched, solemn as a funeral as he was carbon frozen,
and seconds later Jan operated the claw that brought the block out of the pit,
ebon and steaming, and laid it on the grilled floor. Galindro eyed the still figure of
Galletti with a cool eye and turned to Jan Lomona, who for some reason had a
broad grin rippling across his face.
“What’s so funny?” Jan pointed at the block of Goah, face
covered in the mask of Galindro.
“Goah Galletti.” He rapped his knuckles against the still cooling
block. “Freeze dried for freshness.” The Berone Sunrise roared away from Commodor at full burn, their
destination of Moot locked into the astrogation computer. Jan had secured Galletti firmly in the
forward lounge area, between the gaming table and the steps down to the
galley, and Aurran and Troopie gave the imposing monolith a wide berth. Galindro had seated himself next to Jan in
the co-pilots seat, his keen eyes watching the swirls of hyperspace with
interest. Jan knew that there were a
select few who knew the lanes so well they could track their journey through
hyperspace with the naked eye. Indeed,
Jan could always recognise the unique swirls and eddies of Setnin whenever he
approached it after time away, the gravimetric pressures of neighbouring
sectors causing her hyperspace hue to glow neon purples and pinks. He was by no means the most experienced
smuggler on the lanes in the Mid-Rim, but he was one of the most travelled,
and was always ready with an open ear to absorb any hints and tips an older,
wiser, gamer trader might drop. But
Galindro, he had a fearsome reputation.
Even in the Mid-Rim his fame was noted, and despite almost never
leaving the broad circle of the Outer Rim his notoriety was rife. Lomona had seen Romano’s men follow
Galindro’s steps with cautious eyes, and he himself made certain he covered
his back. Jan sighed inwardly, comforted
by the security his electri-grid security system gave him and his droids. Commodor to Moot was a long trip, but
using the star maps Jan had at his disposal it was a shorter, less perilous
journey than it might have been.
Galindro nodded with approval as Jan cut a sizeable chunk off the time
he had initially described, and was caught unprepared as the large stock
heavy freighter dropped sleekly out of hyperspace into Moots airspace. Jan switched the cockpits interior lights
off, and the glow of running lights that bathed the Sunrise was diminished.
Dropping into silent running mode the freighter began a swift,
unpowered descent into the atmosphere, heat from the atmosphere skimming the
shields at a sharp angle. Buffeted by
the upper reaches of the atmosphere and skipping like a stone across a pond,
Galindro held on to the edge of his chair as Jan concentrated, aiming for
Moots capital continent and the base that lay at its centre, the base of
Torona Formoon. Air traffic control didn’t register
the stock heavy freighter until she was well within the lower reaches of the
atmosphere, travelling across the ocean at twice the speed of sound. Jan took the com unit and announced his
presence to the authorities, his transponder showing the freighter as a
legitimate trading vessel from A-desando.
Cleared for passage, Jan nudged her towards Formoons base. He landed the Sunrise in a clearing next to a long winding walkway that led
up to the flat area that made up Formoons headquarters. It was edged by tall trees and bushes that
formed, from the ground, a natural barrier.
But from the air the base was clearly delineated, a square in the
forest surrounded by peaks and troughs, and one that Jan located with
ease. He had been here on a handful of
occasions on jobs for various employers but had no reason to explore the
surroundings or enjoy Formoons hospitality.
His last time was four years ago, before Goahs and Frans’ unfortunate
encounter with the sadistic gangster. And that’s what he was, a sadist. He enjoyed pain and misery in equal
measure, but only when handing it out.
Lomona smiled to himself as he powered down. You’ll
soon get all the pain and misery you can handle. Galindro was sitting right back in the
cockpit, aware that it was he who was supposed to be frozen in the deadly
carbonite block. Jan silently nodded
at him and stood, opening the cockpit door and allowing Galindro to pass
through the ship and to the hold. On
the way Jan activated the anti-gravity field on Goahs carbonite block and
pushed it ahead of him. Once inside
the windowless hold Jan lifted the lid of the crate, which he had patched up
as best he could after Goahs solid kick had cracked and splintered it, and
lifted the block inside. Once secure
Aurran stepped forward, nail gun in hand, and hammered the lid shut.
“Good enough?” asked Jan.
“I wouldn’t know,” answered Galindro dryly. “I only saw it from the inside.”
“Good point.” Galindro moved back into the main
spine of the ship and into the galley area, locking the door shut behind
him. Inside was a secret deck plate
Jan used for small illegal cargoes and hiding people in times of need. Underneath the deck plates of the Sunrise were an intricate run of
passages, narrow enough to crawl through that led to various sections of the
fifty-meter long ship. It had been
useful in the past. Jan hoped it would
be again. Jan used his load lifter to heave the
crate up and Aurran activated the main lower cargo ramp, allowing Jan to
amble down at a slow and unthreatening speed.
Aurran waited like a sentinel at the top of the ramp and watched as
Lomona rode the load lifter to the edge of the long walkway and then up the
incline. He watched until Jan was a
dot in the distance and then closed the ramp. It didn’t take long for someone to
come running out of Formoons perimeter guard box and approach Jan, blaster in
hand, waving wildly. The man, a gruff
Barada, jogged to a halt and frowned.
Jan frowned back.
“State your name and business.”
“Lomona, Jan Lomona.” He jerked
a thumb behind his back. “I have a
consignment from Jabba the Hutt.” The man visibly blanched at the
mention of Jabba’s name and hurried to open the com connection back to the
main building. A few mumbled words
with his back turned to Jan and he motioned for him to follow. Moments later the wide gates slid open and
Jan was admitted entry. The Barada
pointed towards a hangar that lay separate from the rest of the facility.
“Take the crate over there.
Someone will be with you shortly.” Jan nodded and slowly crawled the
fifty meters across dampened soil and scrub to the lone hangar that sat in
the clear mid-morning sunlight. It was
a crisp morning, the air was sharp and thin and the dew still clung to the
trees. Jan inhaled deeply as he killed
the engine and waited. He shoved his
hands into his jacket pockets, the green and beige camouflage jacket matching
his surroundings perfectly, the orange trousers less so. He popped a Cockon into his mouth and
crunched as he watched activity in the main building, one of the windows on
the upper level was opened and a distant face peered out. Someone motioned towards him and he took
that as a sign to hop off the load lifter and make his way to the main
building in the compound. Jan reached the main entrance and
raised his left hand above his head, freeing his left hip blaster with his
hand, and then reversed the process for his right hip blaster. He turned to the attractive aide who was
waiting for him at the open turbo lift and inclined his head for him to
follow. Jan couldn’t resist a
lingering look at the woman, who was clearly one of Formoons higher ranked
operatives, and admired her curves as they travelled up the turbo lift into
the complex. Inside it was a hive of activity, much
like Cipple’s operation, although Jan noticed a plethora of aliens from
outside the sector, some sitting in doorways waiting for meetings, some who
appeared to be begging. Jan remembered
that Formoon was also a loan shark, and sucked up his pity for the
unfortunates who littered the passageways.
Shouldn’t borrow what you
can’t afford to pay back. They reached the end of the busy
corridor and moved right onto another long corridor, but this one was clean
and free of bodies. Jan managed to
glance in a few rooms, and saw various sights. Conferences, interrogations, torture,
Lomona saw it all, and he had to quickly remember that when a ganglord leads
by example it follows that a sadist like Formoon would pass that on to his
underlings. They reached their destination, a
small but brightly lit room that sat alone on the corner of the
building. Jan entered and waited as
the woman followed and closed the blast door behind them. He watched her closely as she moved around
the table, picking up a clipboard as she did so, and perched herself on the
edge of the wide table. Jan remained
standing, hands shoved in his pockets, an expectant look across his face.
“Captain…Lomona?” she asked questioningly. Jan nodded and smiled as he moved towards
the empty chair that sat close to the table.
“That’s right, but you can call me Jan.”
“I’ll bear that in mind, captain.” She replied, glancing down to check
her notes. “I see here that you’re
on…”
“Whoa, whoa, hold on.” Jan
raised his hands up. “Before we start
the dry stuff, what’s your name?” He
grinned again. “I know you’re trying
to be professional but I have to call you something.”
“The names Arriandell, but my friends call me Arriane.” She flickered away from his interested
smile for just a second. “You can call
me Ms. Dell.”
“Ms. Dell? Married and being mysterious about it, or
just playing hard to get?” “If
I told you I wouldn’t ask you to call me Ms, would I?” Jan held back a laugh and raised his
eyebrows in amusement.
“Alright Ms.
Dell. What would you like to know?” She shifted on the table, crossing her
legs and revealing a flash of shapely thigh.
Jan cleared his throat and looked back at her face, concentration
clear to see.
“You’ve brought a consignment here from Tatooine.”
“That’s correct.”
“From Jabba the Hutt?”
“The one and only.” She shifted again, pulling her hair
back from her face. Wow, what beautiful eyes, Jan
thought to himself, but refrained from saying his thoughts aloud.
“And this consignment. Do you
know what it is?” Jan smiled inwardly. Either Ms. Dell was new to the job or she
was making a ham-fisted attempt at catching the smuggler out. Either way, he wasn’t biting.
“Ms. Dell. Arriane. This is a job for Jabba the Hutt, not
Ploovoo Two-for-One. If I knew what
was in that case then I wouldn’t be here enjoying your company, I’d be headed
for the Red Nebula at full burn.” He
cocked his head. “No, I don’t know
what’s in the consignment. Why, should
I?” She checked her information and placed
the clipboard and light pen on the table, fixing Jan with a solid stare.
“I don’t know either. But my
intelligence tells me you have a history with Mister Formoon.” She paused for a second. “So why would Jabba the Hutt send you to
bring this cargo?” Jan pulled a face of indifference and
shrugged.
“Who knows. Jabba likes using
me for Mid-Rim jobs, I know the quickest way to Moot, my ship is hot and
ready for action, I was in the area at the time.” He fixed her with his own stare. “My maiden aunt lives in the next system. Shall I go on?” She gracefully slid off the table and
moved to the other side of the desk where she seated herself, hiding her
figure from Jan’s eyes. Lomona leaned
forward in his seat.
“Ms. Dell…”
“Arriane, please.” She gave a
slight smile.
“Arriane. This is just another
drop for me. Clearly you have no more
idea what’s in that crate than I do.”
He pushed himself to his feet and glanced out of the window. I
really shouldn’t be doing this, there’s too much going on. He checked Arriane out again. Oh,
what the hell. “So, after I’ve
signed the delivery papers, what’s say you and me grab a bite to eat
somewhere in town. Pick you up at say,
13.00?” Arriane rotated her seat and stepped
up, moving back to Jan and standing directly in front of him, a smile curling
the edge of her luscious lips. Boy, thought Jan.
That’s the most inviting thing I’ve seen for days.
“13.00 would be great. But…”
“But?” asked Jan. Arriane
smiled coyly, her eyes warm and wide.
“But I don’t think my husband would approve.” Jan nodded and took her hand,
squeezing it gently and locking eyes with her. Hey,
nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Dammit…
“That’s okay Ms.
Dell. I wasn’t asking for his
approval.”
“What took you so long?” asked Galindro, an edge of irritation clear
in his voice. Noon had passed and
trickled into afternoon and Jan had been gone four hours. Despite Ms. Dell being married she was
evidently still willing to accommodate casual acquaintances, and Jan had seen
more of Moot than he ever thought possible.
He lowered his collar that had partially shielded him from the light rain
that had begun to fall and hit the palm-sized ramp activator. He shook his jacket and moved past the
airlock as it cycled shut.
“I had some…pressing business to attend to.”
“What kind of business?” Jan glanced at Aurran who stoically
shunted his way past, an air of droid disappointment practically wafting from
him. Jan shook his shoulders.
“Look, I’ve been chained to a desk for three hours, can we discuss
this later?” He tossed the jacket onto
the main couch and rubbed his hands together.
“We need to get some distance between us and Formoons base and then
get this party started.” Galindro nodded in silent agreement
and seated himself as Jan walked to the cockpit, stopping off at his cabin to
grab a towel with which he rubbed his hair dry. The Berone
Sunrise was in hot stand-by mode as she always was, the twin quadex
power cores working in unison to keep her at optimum capability and Troopie
and Aurran monitoring every operation.
Jan nudged a couple of switches and gently lifted off, watching the
compound below as it dwindled into the soft mist and then the clouds. Galindro joined him in the cockpit as Jan
grabbed his jet-juice and took a chug.
“Want a blast?” offered Jan, but the gunman shook his head.
“So they took the crate?”
“Yep, they’re holding it in a hangar close to the main building. No-one opened it while I was there, but it
shouldn’t be long.” He turned to face
Galindro. “After all, it’s from
Jabba. Who’d want to keep him
waiting?” Galindro didn’t reply, he simply seated
himself in the co-pilots chair and fell silent. Jan could understand his concerns. He’d been captured on a handful of
occasions himself and it was never a pleasant experience. More importantly, Jan found it was rarely
something he could learn from and that was his main irritation. He’d quickly learned that life was a
lesson, and those who paid attention passed the tests. Any fool could choose to ignore the class. They were the ones who paid the price when
the hard questions arose.
“Did you speak to Formoon?” Lomona shook his head and left the
cockpit, standing in the doorway that led to his cabin on the left.
“No, just one of his aides. I
don’t think he was there. If he was he
must have been in a meeting. You know
what these ganglords are like, always got something more important going on.” Galindro followed Jan out of the
cockpit, leaving the simple job of attaining a higher altitude to
Aurran. He paused and turned to glance
at Aurran.
“Your droid attached the remote device to the carbonite block?”
“Yep. They’re handy devices, I
use them occasionally when I need to make sure a load has been picked
up. You’d be surprised how many consignments
get left in warehouses. When we’re far
enough away I’ll activate the camera and we’ll see where the block has been
taken. Knowing Formoon he’ll have it
taken to his main room. If he thinks
it’s you he’ll thaw it out in front of his top brass.” Galindro frowned at this.
“And when he does he’ll find that it’s not me but an incapacitated and
disorientated Galletti.” He shook his
head. “Your friend will be dead in
seconds.”
“Give me some credit. Formoons
top men work all over the planet. He’s
got six bases on four different continents.
It’ll take hours to get them together.
Once Goah’s left alone we’ll send the signal and free him.”
“And if he isn’t left alone?
What then?” Jan halted in his stride, half turning
to Galindro.
“Then someone’s in for a hell of a surprise.” Torona Formoon could barely contain
his emotions when he took a closer look at the carbonite-smeared visage of
Galindro. The canine gunman had been a
thorn in his side for many years, causing problems all around the Outer Rim
Territories, but now… Now he would be no trouble at all. He gave himself the pleasure of a
wicked smile as he walked around the block, admiring its gruesome
beauty. To capture Galindro, Jabba
must have used many of his men, and his best men at that. Galindro was more than capable of tackling
more than one opponent at a time, a fact not lost on Formoon given Galindro’s
failure to carry out that one simple mission.
But that was in the past. Jobs
came and went but vendettas were forever.
Loyalty however was another thing entirely, and while he had been away
from Jabba’s employ for a number of years he still nudged certain deals and
information the Hutts way. And clearly
that had been acknowledged by this gift from the gangster, and what a gift it
was. He had immediately gathered his top
men from across the globe as soon as the gift was opened, and most of them
had arrived. Now in his office, buried
deep within the winding corridors of his base, he moved to face front and
addressed his assembled underlings.
“Quite the prize, isn’t it?” he smiled as he rapped his knuckles
against the solid surface. “Should
make a good chav table.”
“Or a doorstop.” Shouted out one of his men, bringing a smile to all
present. Formoon paused for a moment
and gathered himself.
“Men, this is a sign of our good work.
An indication of what Jabba thinks of our operations here. Remember, no other Setnin operator has ties
to Hutt clans like I do. Cipple may
have his liaisons, Dressel his snitches, but I have the hot line to Jabba himself.” He pointed to Galindro again. “This signifies that fact. You could say it’s set in stone.” His men burst into an impromptu round
of applause at this, which brought a smile of satisfaction to Formoons
lips. Finally, after years of building
his assets and his staff he had gathered a team worthy of challenging for the
position of top dogs in the underworld.
And with Jabba’s blessing he could extend that challenge throughout
the Mid-Rim. Yes, one day I may even challenge Jabba himself…
“Later, when all of you are here I shall thaw out my gift. Galindro has been a problem to me, for many
years. Once he is released from this
carbonite block I shall see to it that he is not a problem to anyone ever
again.” Another round of applause, this time
punctuated with the steely edge of intent.
Galindro was in a heap of trouble, that was for certain. And on the side of the carbonite
block, a tiny hidden camera watched and waited.
“It’s been four hours.”
“Not long enough. We must bide
our time.” Jan turned to Galindro with a
quizzical look on his face.
“Bide our time? What are you, a
sith lord? Look, my friend is in
there. We need to free him so he can
do his stuff and get out.” Galindro nodded.
“I agree. But he also requires
time to gather himself after his release from the block. If you time this wrong he’ll be vulnerable
to attack.”
“If I may suggest,” said Aurran, moving between the two men as they
watched the base of Formoon from an altitude of many kilometres. “Master Galletti will require time to recuperate,
but night time is approaching.” Jan nodded, a smirk on his face.
“Planetary rotation old friend.
Happens to the best of planets.
What’s your point?”
“My point is, sir, we know Formoons men are on their way here. So perhaps we could intercept them?” Galindro gave Jan a glance as Lomona
raised his eyebrows in thought.
“Intercept?” asked Jan.
“Yes sir.”
“Intercept permanently or just hold them up?” questioned
Galindro. Aurran paused, his circuits
perceiving that he was now the focal point of their plans. His gears shifted as he leaned forward
again.
“A sufficient diversion will inevitably cause a furore at Formoons
base. The carbonite block will be the
least of their concerns. After all,
it’s hardly going to open itself, is it?” Galindro nodded his head in admiration
of the droids thinking as Jan smirked with pride.
“I think he listens to you more than you know,” said the canine
gunman. Jan nodded.
“Damn right.” Jan patted the
droid on the shoulder. “He’s
indispensable.” Galindro eased out of his seat and
moved towards the cockpit exit, a look of determination on his long features.
“We need to locate these ships and hold them up. Aurran, you stand by on the camera. Wait until Galletti is alone for a
sufficient amount of time and then release him. Lomona, you locate the incoming vessels and
make your play. I’ll be on the ion
cannon.” He quickly left the cockpit,
leaving Jan and Aurran to look blankly at each other.
“I am still the
captain of this ship, right?” Aurrans body language gave the
distinct impression of a weary sigh as he chugged his way past Jan into the
main corridor of the Sunrise.
“Yes sir. You are.” Jan straightened his back and nodded
confidently.
“Good. Just beginning to wonder
back there.” Torona Formoon waited patiently in one
of his ancillary offices as night descended outside. It wouldn’t be long before his remaining
men arrived at his forest base, the largest of the six bases scattered across
Moot, and then the ceremony could begin.
He could almost smell the acrid metallic sting of the carbonite as it
thawed out, sense the pained expression of Galindro as his blurry eyes
focussed on the figures before him, feel the rush of air as his ears popped
and sounds echoed around him.
Galindro’s welcome to Moot would be a short and abrupt one. Formoon noticed one of the desks monitors flash with information and he pulled the screen towards him. He read in silence, a cup of warm coffine in hand, and perused the report. The remaining three vessels he was waiting for had been delayed, for what reason he didn’t know. Weather reports indicated a clear evening with no discernable reason |