The Last Command (5 page)

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Authors: Timothy Zahn

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Adventure

BOOK: The Last Command
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“Oh, come on,” Luke snorted. “You don’t think Ackbar’s going to have time to worry about smugglers, do you?”

Karrde smiled wryly. “Not really. But I’m not willing to risk my life on it, either.”

Stalemate. “All right, then,” Luke said. “Let’s put it on a strictly business level. We need to know the Empire’s movements and intentions, which is something you probably keep track of anyway. Can we buy that information from you?”

Karrde considered. “That might be possible,” he said cautiously. “But only if I have the final say on what I pass on to you. I won’t have you turning my group into an unofficial arm of New Republic Intelligence.”

“Agreed,” Luke said. It was less than he might have hoped for, but it was better than nothing. “I’ll set up a credit line for you as soon as I get back.”

“Perhaps we should start with a straight information trade,” Karrde said, looking around at the crystalline buildings. “Tell me what started your people looking at Calius.”

“I’ll do better than that,” Luke said. The distant touch on his mind was faint but unmistakable. “How about if I confirm the clones are here?”

“Where?” Karrde asked sharply.

“Somewhere that way,” Luke said, pointing ahead and slightly to the right. “Half a kilometer away, maybe—it’s hard to tell.”

“Inside one of the Towers,” Karrde decided. “Nice and secure and well hidden from prying eyes. I wonder if there’s any way to get inside for a look.”

“Wait a minute—they’re moving,” Luke said, frowning as he tried to hang on to the contact. “Heading… almost toward us, but not quite.”

“Probably being taken to the landing field,” Karrde said. He glanced around, pointed to their right. “They’ll probably use Mavrille Street—two blocks that direction.”

Balancing speed with the need to remain inconspicuous, they covered the distance in three minutes. “They’ll probably use a cargo carrier or light transport,” Karrde said as they found a spot where they could watch the street without being run over by the pedestrian traffic along the edges of the vehicle way. “Anything obviously military would attract attention.”

Luke nodded. Mavrille, he remembered from the maps, was one of the handful of streets in Calius that had been carved large enough for vehicles to use, with the result that the traffic was running pretty much fore to aft. “I wish I had some macrobinoculars with me,” he commented.

“Trust me—you’re conspicuous enough as it is,” Karrde countered as he craned his neck over the passing crowds. “Any sign of them?”

“They’re definitely coming this way,” Luke told him. He reached out with the Force, trying to sort out the clone sense from the sandstorm of other thoughts and minds surrounding him. “I’d guess twenty to thirty of them.”

“A cargo carrier, then,” Karrde decided. “There’s one coming now—just behind that Trast speeder truck.”

“I see it.” Luke took a deep breath, calling on every bit of his Jedi skill. “That’s them,” he murmured, a shiver running up his back.

“All right,” Karrde said, his voice grim. “Watch closely; they might have left one or more of the ventilation panels open.”

The cargo carrier made its way toward them on its repulsorlifts, coming abruptly to a halt a short block away as the driver of the speeder truck in front of it suddenly woke up to the fact that he’d reached his turn. Gingerly, the truck eased around the corner, blocking the whole traffic flow behind it.

“Wait here,” Karrde said, and dived into the stream of pedestrians heading that direction. Luke kept his eyes sweeping the area, alert for any sense that he or Karrde had been seen and recognized. If this whole setup was some land of elaborate trap for offworld spies, now would be the obvious time to spring it.

The truck finally finished its turn, and the cargo carrier lumbered on. It passed Luke and continued down the street, disappearing within a few seconds around one of the red-orange buildings. Stepping back into the side street behind him, Luke waited; and a minute later Karrde had returned. “Two of the vents were open, but I couldn’t see enough to be sure,” he told Luke, breathing heavily. “You?”

Luke shook his head. “I couldn’t see anything, either. But it was them. I’m sure of it.”

For a moment Karrde studied his face. Then, he gave a curt nod. “All right. What now?”

“I’m going to see if I can get my ship offplanet ahead of them,” Luke said. “If I can track their hyperspace vector, maybe we can figure out where they go from here.” He lifted his eyebrows. “Though two ships working together could do a better track.”

Karrde smiled slightly. “You’ll forgive me if I decline the offer,” he said. “Flying in tandem with a New Republic agent is not exactly what I would call maintaining neutrality.” He glanced over Luke’s shoulder at the street behind him. “At any rate, I think I’d prefer to try backtracking them from here. See if I can identify their point of origin.”

“Sounds good,” Luke nodded. “I’d better get over to the landing field and get my ship prepped.”

“I’ll be in touch,” Karrde promised. “Make sure that credit line is a generous one.”

Standing at the uppermost window of Central Government Tower Number One, Governor Staffa lowered his macrobinoculars with a satisfied snort. “That was him, all right, Fingal,” he said to the little man hovering at his side. “No doubt about it. Luke Skywalker himself.”

“Do you suppose he saw the special transport?” Fingal asked, fingering his own macrobinoculars nervously.

“Well, of course he saw it,” Staffa growled. “You think he was hanging around Mavrille Street for his health?”

“I only thought—”

“Don’t think, Fingal,” Staffa cut him off. “You aren’t properly equipped for it.”

He sauntered to his desk, dropped the macrobinoculars into a drawer, and pulled up Grand Admiral Thrawn’s directive on his data pad. It was a rather bizarre directive, in his private and strictly confidential opinion, more peculiar even than these mysterious troop transfers the Imperial High Command had been running through Calius of late. But one had no choice under the circumstances but to assume Thrawn knew what he was doing.

At any rate, it was on his own head—not Staffa’s—if he didn’t, and that was the important thing. “I want you to send a message to the Imperial Star Destroyer
Chimaera
,” he told Fingal, lowering his bulk carefully into his chair and pushing the data pad across the desk. “Coded as per the instructions here. Inform Grand Admiral Thrawn that Skywalker has been on Calius and that I have personally observed him near the special transport. Also as per the Grand Admiral’s directive, he has been allowed to leave Berchest unhindered.”

“Yes, Governor,” Fingal said, making notes on his own data pad. If the little man saw anything unusual about letting a Rebel spy walk freely through Imperial territory, he wasn’t showing it. “What about the other man, Governor? The one who was with Skywalker down there?”

Staffa pursed his lips. The price on Talon Karrde’s head was up to nearly fifty thousand now—a great deal of money, even for a man with a planetary governor’s salary and perks. He had always known that someday it would be in his best interests to terminate the quiet business relationship he had with Karrde. Perhaps that time had finally come.

No. No, not while war still raged through the galaxy. Later, perhaps, when victory was near and private supply lines could be made more reliable. But not now. “The other man is of no importance,” he told Fingal. “A special agent I sent to help smoke the Rebel spy into the open. Forget him. Go on—get that message coded and sent.”

“Yes, sir,” Fingal nodded, stepping toward the door.

The panel slid open… and for just a second, as Fingal stepped through, Staffa thought he saw an odd glint in the little man’s eye. Some strange trick of the outer office light, of course. Next to his unbending loyalty for his governor, Fingal’s most prominent and endearing attribute was his equally unbending lack of imagination.

Taking a deep breath, putting Fingal and Rebel spies and even Grand Admirals out of his mind, Staffa leaned back in his chair and began to consider how he would use the shipment that Karrde’s people were even now unloading at the landing field.

Chapter 3

Slowly, as if climbing a long dark staircase, Mara Jade pulled herself out of a deep sleep. She opened her eyes, looked around the softly lit room, and wondered where in the galaxy she was.

It was a medical area—that much was obvious from the biomonitors, the folded room dividers, and the other multiposition beds scattered around the one she was lying in. But it wasn’t one of Karrde’s facilities, at least not one she was familiar with.

But the layout itself was all too familiar. It was a standard Imperial recovery room.

For the moment she seemed to be alone, but she knew that wouldn’t last. Silently, she rolled out of bed into a crouching position on the floor, taking a quick inventory of her physical condition as she did so. No aches or pains; no dizziness or obvious injuries. Slipping into the robe and bedshoes at the end of the bed, she padded silently to the door, preparing herself mentally to silence or disable whatever was out there. She waved at the door release, and as the panel slid open she leaped through into the recovery anteroom—

And came to a sudden, slightly disoriented halt.

“Oh, hi, Mara,” Ghent said distractedly, glancing up from the computer terminal he was hunched over before returning his attention to it. “How’re you feeling?”

“Not too bad,” Mara said, staring at the kid and sifting furiously through a set of hazy memories. Ghent—one of Karrde’s employees and possibly the best slicer in the galaxy. And the fact that he was sitting at a terminal meant they weren’t prisoners, unless their captor was so abysmally stupid that he didn’t know better than to let a slicer get within spitting distance of a computer.

But hadn’t she sent Ghent to the New Republic headquarters on Coruscant? Yes, she had. On Karrde’s instructions, just before collecting some of his group together and leading them into that melee at the
Katana
fleet.

Where she’d run her Z-95 up against an Imperial Star Destroyer… and had had to eject… and had brilliantly arranged to fly her ejector seat straight through an ion cannon beam. Which had fried her survival equipment and set her drifting, lost forever, in interstellar space.

She looked around her. Apparently, forever hadn’t lasted as long as she’d expected it to. “Where are we?” she asked, though she had a pretty good idea now what the answer would be.

She was right. “The old Imperial Palace on Coruscant,” Ghent told her, frowning a little. “Medical wing. They had to do some reconstruction of your neural pathways. Don’t you remember?”

“It’s a little vague,” Mara admitted. But as the last cobwebs cleared from her brain, the rest of it was beginning to fall into place. Her ejector seat’s ruined life-support system; and a strange, light-headed vagueness as she drifted off to sleep in the darkness. She’d probably suffered oxygen deprivation before they’d been able to locate her and get her to a ship.

No. Not
they: him.
There was only one person who could possibly have found a single crippled ejector seat in all the emptiness and battle debris out there. Luke Skywalker, the last of the Jedi Knights.

The man she was going to kill.

YOU
WILL
KILL
LUKE
SKYWALKER
.

She took a step back to lean against the doorjamb, knees suddenly feeling weak as the Emperor’s words echoed through her mind. She’d been here, on this world and in this building, when he’d died over Endor. Had watched through his mind as Luke Skywalker cut him down and brought her life crashing in ruins around her head.

“I see you’re awake,” a new voice said.

Mara opened her eyes. The newcomer, a middle-aged woman in a duty medic’s tunic, was marching briskly across the room toward her from a far door, an Emdee droid trailing in her wake. “How are you feeling?”

“I’m fine,” Mara said, feeling a sudden urge to lash out at the other woman. These people—these enemies of the Empire—had no right to be here in the Emperor’s palace….

She took a careful breath, fighting back the flash of emotion. The medic had stopped short, a professional frown on her face; Ghent, his cherished computers momentarily forgotten, had a puzzled look on his. “Sorry,” she muttered. “I guess I’m still a little disoriented.”

“Understandable,” the medic nodded. “You’ve been lying in that bed for a month, after all.”

Mara stared at her. “A
month
?”

“Well, most of a month,” the medic corrected herself. “You also spent some time in a bacta tank. Don’t worry—short-term memory problems are common during neural reconstructions, but they nearly always clear up after the treatment.”

“I understand,” Mara said mechanically. A month. She’d lost a whole month here. And in that time—

“We have a guest suite arranged for you upstairs whenever you feel ready to leave here,” the medic continued. “Would you like me to see if it’s ready?”

Mara focused on her. “That would be fine,” she said.

The medic pulled out a comlink and thumbed it on; and as she began talking, Mara stepped past her to Ghent’s side. “What’s been happening with the war during the last month?” she asked him.

“Oh, the Empire’s been making the usual trouble,” Ghent said, waving toward the sky. “They’ve got the folks here pretty stirred up, anyway. Ackbar and Madine and the rest have been running around like crazy. Trying to push ‘em back or cut ‘em off—something like that.”

And that was, Mara knew, about all she would get out of him on the subject of current events. Aside from a fascination with smuggler folklore, the only thing that really mattered to Ghent was slicing at computers.

She frowned, belatedly remembering why Karrde had ordered Ghent here in the first place. “Wait a minute,” she said. “Ackbar’s back in command? You mean you’ve cleared him already?”

“Sure,” Ghent said. “That suspicious bank deposit thing Councilor Fey’lya made such a fuss over was a complete fraud—the guys who did that electronic break-in at the bank planted it in his account at the same time. Probably Imperial Intelligence—it had their noseprints all over the programming. Oh, sure; I proved that two days after I got here.”

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