[Legacy Of The Force] - 02 - Bloodlines (Karen Traviss), Star Wars - Books And Short Stories
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Star WarsLegacy of the Forcebook 2Bloodlinesby Karen Traviss###############################################################################Dramatis PersonaeBarit Saiy; (Corellian male)Ben Skywalker; (human male)Boba Fett; Mandalore and semi-retired bounty hunter (human male)Cal Omas; Chief of State, Galactic Alliance (human male)Cha Niathal; Admiral, Galactic Alliance (Mon Calamari female)Goran Beviin; Mandalorian soldier (human male)G'vli G'Sil; Coruscanti Senator, head of the Galactic Alliance Security Council (human male)Han Solo; captain, Millennium Falcon (human male)Heol Girdun; captain, Galactic Alliance Guard (human male)Jacen Solo; Jedi Knight (human male)Jaina Solo; Jedi Knight (human female)Leia Organa Solo; Jedi Knight, copilot, Millennium Falcon (human female)Joni Lekauf; corporal, Galactic Alliance Guard (human male)Lon Shevu; captain, Galactic Alliance Guard (human male)Luke Skywalker; Jedi Grand Master (human male)Lumiya; Dark Jedi (human female)Mara Jade Skywalker; Jedi Master (human female)Mirta Gev; bounty hunter (human female)Taun We; scientist (Kaminoan female)Thrackan Sal-Solo; Corellian Head of State (human male)PrologueAtzerri system, ten standard years after the Yuuzhan Vong war: Slave I in pursuit of prisoner H'buk. Boba Fett's private record."Whatever he's paying you, Fett, I'll double it," says the voice on the comlink.They say that a lot. They just don't understand the nature of a contract. This time it's an Atzerri glitterstim dealer called H'buk who's overstepped the mark with the Traders' Coalition to the tune of four hundred thousand credits. The coalition feels it's worth paying me five hundred thousand credits to teach him-and everyone else-a lesson about honoring debts.I agree with the Traders' Coalition wholeheartedly."A contract's a contract," I tell him. Slave I is close enough on his trail for me to get a visual on him: I swear he's flying an old Z-95 Headhunter. No hyperdrive, or he'd have jumped for it by now. And no wonder he's surprised. An old, old Firespray like Slave I shouldn't be able to catch him on sublight drive alone.But I've fitted a few more . . . extras recently. The only completely original part of Slave I now is the seat I'm in."My laser cannon's armed," says H'buk, breathless."Good for you." Why they always want a conversation, I'll never know. Look, shoot or shut up; I know you'll have to come about to target me with that cannon, and in that second or two I'll take out your drives anyway. "The galaxy's a dangerous place."The Headhunter executes a neat turn to port with its aft maneuvering jets and the Slave's laser locks on to the Headhunter's drive signature, matching its turns and loops with no need for guidance from me. His engine flares in a ball of white light. The fighter begins an uncontrolled roll and I have to gun it to get the tractor beam locked and haul H'buk in.The grapple arms make a satisfying chunk-unkkkk against the Headhunter's airframe as I secure the fighter against the casing above Slave's torpedo launcher. The sound of that reverberating through your hull, I'm told, is just like a cell door closing behind you: the point at which prisoners lose all hope.Funny; that would only make me fight harder.H'buk is making the noises of panic and pleading that I hardly notice these days. Some prisoners are defiant, but most give in to fear. He makes me offers all the way back to Atzerri, promising anything to survive."I can pay you millions."The contract is to deliver him alive. It's very specific."And my stock holdings in Kuat Drive Yards."I think it's the silent routine that gets to them in the end."Fett, I have a beautiful daughter . . ."He shouldn't have said that. Now I'm angry, and I don't often get angry. "Never use your kids, scumbag. Never."My father put me first. Any father should. Not that I ever felt pity-or anything-for H'buk, but I'm satisfied now that he deserves everything that the Traders' Coalition is going to do to him. If I were the sympathetic kind, I'd kill him. I'm not. And the contract says alive."Want to negotiate a landing fee?" asks Atzerri Air Traffic Control."Want to negotiate an ion cannon?""Oh . . . apologies, Master Fett, sir . . ."They always see my point.Landing on Atzerri is a little tricky when you're hauling a crippled fighter on your upperworks. I set Slave I down on the landing strip, lowering gently on the thrusters, feeling the aft section vibrating under the load. And I have an audience.The coalition wants to show they can afford to hire the best to hunt down anyone who crosses them. I oblige. A bit of theater, a little public relations: like Mandalorian armor, it makes the point without a shot needing to be fired. I walk along Slave I's casing to clamber up onto the Headhunter's fuselage and crack open its canopy seal with the laser housed in my wrist gauntlet. So I hit H'buk harder than I need to, and haul him out of the cockpit to rappel down ten meters to the ground on the lanyard with him.It hurts deep in my stomach. I don't let anyone see that.Then I deposit the prisoner on the landing strip in front of the men he owes four hundred thousand credits. It makes the point. I like making points. Presentation is half the battle."Want to keep the starfighter, too?" asks my customer."Not my taste." The spaceport utility loader comes to remove it from Slave I. I hold out my palm: I want the rest of my fee.He hands me the outstanding 250,000 creds on a verified chip. "Why do you still do this, Fett?""Because people still ask me."It's a good question. I ponder it while I sit back in the cockpit and catch up with the financial headlines on the HoloNet news as Slave I heads for Kamino on autopilot. My doctor is meeting me there. He doesn't like the long journey but I don't pay him to be happy.Now I find I'm thinking of a daughter-Ailyn-who I haven't seen in fifty years, wondering if she's still alive.You see, I'm ill. I think I'm dying.If I am, then there are things I've got to do. One of them is to find out what happened to Ailyn. Another is to decide who's going to be Mandalore when I'm gone.And the third, of course, is to cheat death.I've had a lot of practice at that.Chapter OneHow long are we going to have to bounce from one crisis to the next? We're facing our third galactic war in under forty years-a real civil war. It's just skirmishing now, but if Omas doesn't crack down much harder on dissent this will spiral out of control. We need a period of stability and I fear we're going to have to knock heads together much harder to get it.-Admiral Cha Niathal, in private conversation with Mon Calamari Senate delegatesCHIEF OF STATE'S RECEPTION SUITE. SENATE BUILDING, CORUSCANT, SIXTEEN DAYS AFTER THE RAID ON CENTERPOINT STATION.The worst thing about being thirteen years old was that one moment you were expected to be an adult, and the next everyone treated you like a child again.Ben Skywalker-thirteen and confused about what was expected of him-sat trying to be patient in the reception area of Chief Cal Omas's offices in the Senate Building, taking his lead from his cousin Jacen Solo. It was the kind of office designed to make you feel like you didn't matter: a whole apartment could have slipped into the space between the outer doors and the wall of Omas's personal office. Ben almost expected to see tangled balls of misura vine rolling across the spotless pale blue carpet, driven by a distant wind. He couldn't see the point of all that empty space.But the Senate Building had been occupied and changed out of all recognition by the Yuuzhan Vong, Jacen said. Architects, designers, and an army of construction droids had taken years to wipe away all traces of the alien invasion and restore the building to the way it had been. Ben tried to listen in the Force for the echoes of the aliens and their weird living technology, and thought he heard unrecognizable sounds. He shuddered and tried to occupy himself with the holozines stacked on the low greelwood table.The 'zines were all very dull and slightly outdated current affairs weeklies and political analyses, but one of them displayed an image of Jacen. Ben picked it up and activated it, smiling at the next image of a rotating Centerpoint Station, which didn't look quite so good in real life since he had helped sabotage it.It's good to feel part of something important.The holoreport featured clips of Corellian news reports of the raid on Centerpoint, but it didn't mention Ben, and he wasn't sure if that upset him or not. Some recognition would have been nice; but the Corellian sources that were quoted were pretty rude about Jacen, calling him a traitor and a terrorist. The reporter's voice seemed to fill the room even though the volume was set to minimum and the carpet and tapestries on the walls muffled the sound.The report wasn't very kind about Uncle Han, either. A middle-aged man Ben didn't recognize was telling the reporter what he thought. "So he calls himself a Corellian. But forget that Bloodstripe on his uniform pants-it might as well be a big yellow streak down his back, because Han Solo is just a Galactic Alliance puppet. He's betrayed Corellia by sitting on his backside doing whatever his Alliance buddies tell him to. And his son's just the same."Jacen seemed embarrassed. Maybe he was more upset for his dad. Ben would have been."You should use an earpiece to listen to those privately," said Jacen."But you're famous." Ben offered him the holozine. "Want to see?"Jacen raised one eyebrow and seemed more worried about his meeting with Chief Omas. "Fine...
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