Read The Force Unleashed Online
Authors: Sean Williams
Tags: #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Space warfare, #Adventure, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Star Wars fiction, #Imaginary wars and battles, #Science Fiction - Star Wars, #Darth Vader (Fictitious character)
together once all this was over. That either of them could be killed was
ever-present in his thoughts, but he had never considered that she might not want to
be with him were they both to survive. He was taken oft guard both by his own
feelings and by the possibility that he-would never be able to act on them.
Feeling the need to reflect on this issue, he had stayed longer in the meditation
chamber than perhaps he should have. It had been days since he had last found the
time to perform his favorite exercise: staring into the blade of a lightsaber in
search of his fury's focus. Since his lightsaber had been lost and he had been using
Kota's, concentration had been hard to come by. The blade was old but perfectly
serviceable; that wasn't the issue. The change of color, likewise, although the bold
green did surprise him sometimes. It was more an issue of ownership. Part of him was
aware, far down in his subconscious, that the lightsaber belonged to another
warrior-one he didn't wholly respect, for all the skills Kota had once possessed-so
achieving full concentration was impossible.
He had spent an hour after his confrontation with Juno replacing one of the green
crystals in Kota's weapon with the blue one he had found on Kashyyyk. It had taken
quite an amount of fine-tuning before the blade acquired its new character, shining
brilliant aqua and with unexpectedly superior optical properties. The blade itself
weighed nothing, yet somehow it seemed lighter in his hand and moved more readily.
He was certain it was now a better weapon than before.
And it was his. Regardless where the crystal had come from or whom it had once
belonged to, it was his now and so was the lightsaber. He knelt, raised the blade to
his face, and stared into it until the world seemed to vanish. The aqua made him
think of oceans and rain rather than the blood of his first lightsaber, but that
didn't overly concern him. He would only need this blade until his mission was
complete, at which time he could obtain new crystals from his Master and make an
entirely new Sith blade.
That thought didn't reassure him as it once might have, coming with so many
provisions. If they won-if he remained loyal to his Master-if he didn't die-if Juno
didn't somehow get him to change his mind. He could rule nothing out. His destiny
was, as his Master had said, in his own hands now. He could do anything he wanted.
There were just so many things to want. . .
"You have some company down there," said Juno's voice over the comlink. "Moving your
way."
"Imperials, I presume."
"Doesn't look like it from here. Most likely scavengers." Great, he thought. Of
course Drexl's band would be scavenging around the ore cannon's perimeter, looking
for anything exhumed by the planet's metal-seeking diggers. The apprentice must have
been sloppy and not seen a security droid patrolling the edge of their territory.
Furthermore, if Drexl had spotted him, so, too, had the planet's core intelligence.
Concentrating solely-and with renewed ferocity, thanks to his annoyance at
himself-on the world around him, he sought deeper channels through the landscape of
waste. In the network of tangled, claustrophobic caves, he became aware of a
thunderous pounding growing louder and louder. The ore cannon, he presumed,
supplying the giant shipyard with the metal it required. Despite the tortuous route
he was following, his destination was definitely getting nearer.
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He descended deeper, seeking the network of sewers he knew lay underneath the
endless junkyard's lower levels. The farther he went, the more droids he found,
burrowing through the compressed garbage in search of metal. Many were drones
possessing little intelligence, multilegged crawlers designed to squeeze through
cracks and crevices, armed with cutting lasers and simple mechanical tools. Some
possessed no eyes at all, since there was so little light in some areas, and more
specialized senses could be relied upon to tell metal from organic strata. When they
found something particularly valuable, they could call for assistance, prompting a
swarm of their fellow drones to assemble in the same location, followed by more
generalized diggers and freighters from farther afield.
The apprentice skirted one such swarm near the entrance to the sewers. Droids of all
shapes and sizes clustered over the leading edge of a buried shuttle skeleton that
could have been covered over for millennia. The noise they made was deafening, an
impenetrable babble of machine chatter, whining vibrosaws, and sizzling metal.
Strange flashes of light strobed from their endeavors, casting flickering shadows
across the subterranean junkscape. The apprentice slipped by them without being
noticed and dropped into a filth-caked, four-meter-wide tunnel via the hole some
long-passed prospector had cut into it.
The way was easier from then on. Only twice did he have to find a way around or
through blockages caused by cave-ins. Muffled, unidentifiable sounds echoed back and
forth along the sewer, issuing from junctions and originating, perhaps, many
kilometers away. He encountered only one working droid and that was literally on its
last legs. It swayed in circles on its sole working limb, whispering a single phrase
of ancient machine code over and over again. Its blank photoreceptors stared at him
but saw nothing.
Feeling sorry for it, he drew his lightsaber and sliced it in two. Spraying sparks,
briefly, it fell dead to the bottom of the sewer, out of its mechanical misery at
last.
Time passed without measure in the sewer. When he judged that he was nearing the ore
cannon's superstructure, he began to look for a way out. At the next junction one
narrower tunnel led distinctly upward, so he took it without hesitation, feeling the
rhythmic throb of each launch right down to his bones. The cannon had looked big
from orbit, but he could appreciate the true enormity of it now that he was drawing
closer.
The tunnel narrowed further, and the number of junctions he passed increased. Some
were completely blocked, crushed by the weight of the rubbish piling above. Out of
others came the chatter of droids, softened by the distance into an almost peaceful
sound. The way ahead was shrouded in permanent shadow.
He slowed, sensing trouble, and activated his lightsaber.
"Yes," said a harsh alien voice. "I thought it was you."
Movement came from all around him. A dozen armored Rodians stepped out of the
shadows ahead and behind, where they had been hidden under rubbish in the side
tunnels, and held a variety of weapons aimed directly at him. Vibroblades, blasters,
mini cannons: they seemed to have been fished out of a motley collection of downed
ships and extensively modified. He had no doubt, however, as to their efficacy.
In such close confines, completely surrounded, he couldn't deflect everything.
A particularly swarthy Rodian stepped through the circle from farther up the tunnel.
The apprentice recognized Drexl Roosh from the brief glimpse he'd received before.
The raider was even uglier close-up.
"You will drop your weapon," the Rodian said in heavily accented Basic.
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"Not until your goons have dropped theirs."
Drexl laughed. It sounded like metal being scissored in two In a junk droid. "You
have spirit; I'll grant you that! But the meddler who brought the Imperials down on
our heads is going to need more than spirit today."
"What are you talking about? I didn't bring the Imperials here."
"I have images of you snooping around when that mad old fool in his Temple bought
it. His droids kept the Empire at bay for years, you know. Once they were gone, the
planet was easy picking." Drexel's purple face twisted in something that could only
have been a snarl. "Half the metal is gone in this area, and what's left isn't worth
excavating. And now you come scurrying back here, acting all innocent. Well, we saw
you first and arranged this little reception. No more mother lodes for you, I'm
afraid. No more lucky finds. Your masters will think twice before messing with us
again when we present your head to them on a platter. Ready!"
The raiders tightened their grips on their weapons and pointed them at various
locations on his body.
"I think you're being unreasonable," he told Drexl.
"Take aim!"
The raiders squinted down sights and along sword blades.
Before Drexl could give the order to fire, the apprentice-dropped to one knee and
telekinetically shoved with all his strength. He couldn't deflect everything at
once, but he could shorten the odds a little.
Rodians flew everywhere, arms and legs akimbo, in a sudden maelstrom of rubbish.
Weapons slipped from startled fingers. Some discharged, adding to the contusion. The
pipe flexed and twisted, resonating to the force of his blow. The sound it made was,
momentarily, louder than even that of the ore cannon.
The apprentice didn't waste any time following up on that surprise. Lightsaber
cutting aqua arcs through the air, he struck down any Rodians who managed to get to
their feet. Their alien squeals and cries grew louder when he started using Sith
lightning to drive them ahead of him up the tunnel. Drexl ran at the head of the
pack, exhorting his underlings to fire behind them as they fled. Any bolts that did
come the apprentice's way he managed to send back at their source, prompting renewed
cries of alarm and panic.
The tunnel suddenly ended, leading into a cavern hollowed out from the junkyard,
with a high, vaulted roof and piles of reclaimed rubbish laid out in rows. The
apprentice almost laughed. Without knowing it, he'd been following a path right into
Drexel's lair! If the raiders hadn't ambushed him, he would have popped up in their
midst anyway, and conflict would have been inevitable.
As the raiders fanned out and called for help, he reached up through the Force and
brought down one of the overhead beams.
The raiders directly below scattered as it crashed to the floor. A rain of trash
followed. The ceiling sagged.
One of the raiders hopped behind the controls of a scavenged quad laser cannon. The
apprentice crouched to defend himself from a stream of energy fire. The deflected
bolts discharged into the walls of the chamber, provoking further collapse.
"Stop that, you idiot!" cried Drexl, waving his arms at the Rodian behind the
controls.
The apprentice seconded that sentiment. With a flexing of his will, another beam
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came down from directly above the quad cannon, squashing it and its operator under
an avalanche of rubbish.
Drexl cursed and swore in his native Rodese, gesticulating wildly at his raiders
from behind cover. The apprentice had no real issue with the raiders, except that
they had recognized him. It was essential to his cover that no one learn what he had
done on Raxus Prime the last time he was here. That made Drexl a serious liability.
Bad luck for him, the apprentice thought as he brought down a third beam. Leave no
witnesses.
The roof sagged heavily now. Another broken beam would bring the whole lot crashing
down. Seeing that there was no way he could win, Drexl bolted for a jetpack leaning
against the far wall. He was too far away for Sith lightning, so the apprentice
threw an assortment of tubes, restraining bolts, and drained batteries at him.
Jumping and ducking, the Rodian managed to dodge all of them. Scooping up the
jetpack and swinging one arm through the straps, Drexl bolted for an exit on the far
side of the chamber.
The apprentice reached out one hand with the palm cupped and lifted the device into
the air. Drexel's feet left the ground and his legs pinwheeled in space. "Waaargh!"
he cried, frantically trying to start the jetpack. Higher he rose, wriggling and
wailing. The jetpack coughed and flared into life. The apprentice held it tight for
a moment as Drexl pushed the throttle forward in an attempt to break free. When the
engine was straining at its maximum output, the apprentice flipped it upside down
and let go.
With one final cry, Drexl Roost plowed into the ground and the jetpack exploded. The
shock wave was too much for the ceiling, which collapsed in a slow but inevitable
rush. The apprentice walked through the chaos, deflecting the worst of it. In the
path he left behind, no living beings stirred.
STARKILLER'S VOICE CRACKLED FROM the comlink. "You were right, Juno. It was Drexl."
She glanced over her shoulder before answering. PROXY was sitting in the copilot's
seat, still trying to slice into the world's core computer. Kota was in the hold, no
doubt sleeping again.
"Do you think Drexl saw you?"
"I'm sure he did. But don't worry. I think I got to him before he alerted the
Imperials. The situation is contained."
By contained, she presumed he meant that Drexl and his minions were dead. That gave
her a slightly sick feeling in her stomach. How many beings had Starkiller destroyed