THE SKY LIGHTENED to the east. Zeerid checked his chrono. Almost dawn. The night had disappeared on him. He was too wired to feel fatigue. He worked up the nerve to ask his question of Aryn.
“What are you going to do?” he asked.
She did not look at him, and he took that as a bad sign. “I’m going to get you into the spaceport and you’re going to fly back to your daughter.”
Assuming he could dodge Imperial cruisers on the way out, which would be no mean feat.
“That isn’t what I mean, Aryn, and you know it. What are you going to do with her?”
Aryn did not answer, but the set of her jaw told Zeerid all he needed to know. He regretted mentioning the Twi’lek to Aryn. His honesty would cost Aryn her soul. Hunting the Sith who had murdered her Master was one thing. Killing the Twi’lek simply to hurt Malgus was something else. As he drove, he found himself hoping that the Twi’lek had left the spaceport.
Ahead, the port came into view. He scanned the sky, saw nothing. The control tower was still dark. The Empire had done a poor job of securing the port—they had far too few men guarding a location with many potential entry points—but Zeerid supposed they had limited troops and an entire planet to police. He was glad of it. Otherwise, his plan would have had no chance to succeed.
“I’ll circle wide and we’ll go up top. The key to this is speed.”
“Won’t they spot us on scanners?”
“The tower’s dark and I don’t see any hardware around. If they have orbiting surveillance on the port, well …”
He shrugged. If the Empire had orbiting surveillance or high-altitude surveillance droids watching the spaceport, he and Aryn would have problems.
“Speed is still the key,” he said. “Even if they see us, if we can get in and out fast enough, we can still pull it off.”
Aryn brushed her hair from her face. “Where did you see her? The Twi’lek?”
“There,” he said, pointing at the large transparisteel windows that opened onto the small-craft landing pad where he had spotted the shuttles, the drop ship, and the Twi’lek. Without bringing his macrobinoculars to bear, all he could see through the windows were indiscriminate gray shapes, presumably the shuttles. Aryn stared at the windows for a moment, then nodded to herself.
“Let’s go,” she said.
He killed the running lights on the speeder and took it up to five hundred meters, just above the top of the main center structure in the spaceport. Pushing the thrusters as hard as he could, he accelerated toward it.
His heart raced, not out of fear that they would be caught, but out of concern that Aryn would find the Twi’lek.
He swerved around one of the large-craft landing arms that reached up and over them. He hunched behind the controls, anticipating fire at any moment. But none came.
Below them perhaps a hundred meters, he could see the roof doors of the various small-craft landing pads. Aryn unstrapped herself, turned, and unlatched T7. The droid beeped.
Zeerid slowed the speeder but did not stop. If anyone had seen them approach, he wanted them to think that the speeder just kept on going.
“Ready?” he asked, and set the speeder’s unsophisticated autopilot to fly on another ten klicks before setting down.
“Ready.”
He released the stick, and he and Aryn quickly maneuvered onto the back of the speeder near T7. The wind pulled at them. He had trouble balancing but Aryn took him by the arm and steadied him. They sandwiched the droid between them, shared a look.
“Go,” he said.
She nodded and they stepped off the back of the speeder.
T7 whooped as they fell. The droid’s bulk did not allow them to control their descent; they were flipping end over end immediately. Zeerid’s field of vision veered rapidly, wildly, between the starry sky and the top of the spaceport below. His stomach crawled up his throat and he gritted his teeth to keep down the protein bar he’d eaten.
End over end they spun, T7 whistling with alarm, until Aryn seized them in her power, ended the spinning, and slowed their descent. The metal and duracrete of the spaceport’s roof rushed up to meet them. They had only a second, two. Aryn grunted, slowed them still further, further, until they touched down gently on the roof.
“Much better than last time,” Zeerid said, grinning, heart racing. “I could go my whole life without another fall and feel I’d missed nothing.”
Aryn did not so much as smile.
Zeerid gathered himself, took a blaster in each hand, and scanned the rooftop. He spotted a conduit access panel. “There.”
They ran over to it and he shot off the metal cover with his blaster, exposing a viper’s nest of wires. Ordinarily, a breached cover would have set off an alarm in the control tower, but the control tower was dark, unoccupied.
“Do it, Tee-seven.”
A panel in the droid’s abdomen opened and several thin, mechanical arms reached out. All ended in one kind of tool or another. T7 stuck the arms into the wires and began to work. Zeerid, still concerned that they may have been spotted, scanned the sky. He saw nothing.
T7 hummed while he worked.
“Come on, come on,” Zeerid said to the droid. To Aryn, he said, “You all right?”
She seemed oddly calm, or preoccupied.
“I’m fine,” she said.
The droid gave an excited series of whistles and whoops.
“He’s into the safety and fire suppression system,” Aryn said.
“Trigger it with a ten-second delay,” Zeerid said to the droid.
The droid beeped acquiescence.
MALGUS BOUNDED INTO THE SHUTTLE as it set down near the Temple.
“The Liston Spaceport,” he said to the pilot. “Quickly.”
“Yes, my lord.”
He tried again to raise Eleena on the comm but got no response. With each moment that passed his concern grew. He recognized that his emotions were driving him, controlling him, knew too the weakness it evidenced, but he could not let her come to harm, not by a Jedi.
Angral’s admonition bounced around his brain: Passions can lead to mistakes.
The pilot’s voice over the comm disrupted his train of thought.
“Have you heard the news from Alderaan, my lord?”
“What news?” Malgus said. His muscles bunched, as if in anticipation of a blow, or combat.
The blow came and hit him hard.
“There are rumors that an accord has been reached and that a peace treaty will be signed later today. In exchange for the turnover of certain outlying systems to Imperial control, Coruscant will be returned to the Republic.”
The pilot’s words pushed Angral’s words out of Malgus’s brain and ricocheted around in his head like blaster shots.
Outlying systems.
Coruscant returned to the Republic.
Peace.
The words applied heat to Malgus’s already bubbling emotions. He thought of Angral and Adraas sitting somewhere together, drinking wine and thinking that they had accomplished something by forcing the Republic to surrender some insignificant systems, when in fact they had poisoned the body of the Empire with the venom of peace.
“Peace!”
He paced the compartment, fists clenched, a wild animal tiring of its cage. His thoughts veered between Eleena on the one hand, Angral and Adraas on the other.
“Peace!”
He slammed his fist into the bulkhead, welcomed the pain.
They thought they could tame him, Angral and Adraas, thought they could use Eleena to domesticate him. And wasn’t that what she wanted, too? She, who sought to be his conscience. She, who asked him to put love before his duty to the Empire.
Malgus’s brewing anger boiled over into rage. He slammed his fists down on the worktable, denting it. He picked up a chair and threw it against the bulkhead, drove his fist through the small vidscreen built into the wall.
“Is everything all right, Darth Malgus?” the pilot called over the comm.
“Everything is fine,” Malgus said, though nothing was.
“Coming up on the spaceport now, my lord,” said the pilot.
ZEERID WATCHED T7 WORK, anxious. His internal clock was running. They needed to keep moving.
Having jacked into the spaceport safety and fire suppression system, T7 was to send a false signal into the network, tricking the sensors into detecting a fuel gas leak in the landing bay where the Imperial shuttles had landed. An alarm indicating the leak of highly explosive fuel gas should trigger evacuation and venting procedures.
Or so Zeerid hoped.
The droid’s metal arms worked their magic. T7 cut a wire here, soldered there, reattached several cables here, then plugged into the interface he had rewired. His low whistles and chirps told Zeerid he was communicating with the spaceport’s network. After a short time, the droid retracted his metal arms into the cylinder of his body.
“Done?” Zeerid asked.
T7 beeped an affirmative.
Zeerid slapped him on the head and the droid protested with a low beep.
“Then let’s go,” Zeerid said.
He and Aryn sprinted across the roof toward the launch doors, with T7 wheeling after them. Zeerid counted down from ten in his head. Just as they reached the launch doors, just as he finished his countdown, sirens began to wail, audible even from the roof. A mechanical voice spoke over the facility’s speakers.
“A hazardous substance spill has occurred in landing bay sixteen-B. There is significant danger. Please move rapidly toward the nearest exit. A hazardous substance spill has occurred in landing bay sixteen-B …”
“If Tee-seven did his job,” Zeerid said, and the droid beeped indignantly, “the system will detect the fuel gas leak in the pad right below us. When it does, it should open the launch doors automatically to vent the gas—”
The roof vibrated as the launch doors unsealed and started slowly to slide open.
“Nicely done,” Zeerid said to the droid.
AHEAD, Malgus saw the small spaceport the Empire had commandeered. It looked somewhat like an upside-down spider with a few too many legs, with large-craft landing arms sticking out from the bloated body and raised skyward. Launch doors over the various small-craft landing pads dotted the spider’s body. All were closed save one. Light spilled out into the sky through the open doors.
“There is a crowd near the port’s entrance,” the pilot said.
Malgus looked away from the open launch doors to see dozens of people pouring out of one of the entrances to the spaceport and milling about. Most were port workers in dungarees, citizens of Coruscant whom the Empire had pressed into service to do menial labor at the port, but he counted perhaps twenty Imperial soldiers, a dozen navy sailors, and a handful of other soldiers in half armor.
He pressed his face to the window to look more closely at the soldiers. He saw Captain Kerse, one of those he had picked to accompany Eleena.
But he did not see Eleena.
“Set down near the doors,” he said. “Quickly.”
The shuttle touched down with a heavy thud and Malgus hurried out. Upon seeing him, the Imperial soldiers snapped to attention and offered a salute. The workers backed away, fear in their eyes. Perhaps they’d heard of what he’d done at the hospital.
Malgus walked up to Captain Kerse, a powerfully built man whose bald head sat like a boulder upon his thick neck. Malgus towered over him.
“Darth Malgus, there is a fuel gas leak in the small-craft landing area. We evacuated while the safety system—”
“Where is Eleena?” Malgus asked.
“She is …” Kerse looked around the crowd. His skin turned blotchy. To one of his men, he said, “Where is the Twi’lek?”
“I saw her near the other shuttle, sir,” replied another of the soldiers. “I assumed she followed.”
Malgus grabbed Kerse by his plasteel breastplate and pulled him nose-to-nose.
“She was with you before the gas leak?”
Kerse’s head bobbed on his neck. “Yes. She—”
“Take me.”
“The fuel gas, my lord.”
“There is no fuel gas! It is a ruse to get to Eleena.”
To get to him.
“What?” Kerse said.
Malgus threw Kerse to the ground and strode past him for the port’s doors. Behind him, he heard Kerse call out for the other soldiers to follow. By the time the doors slid open before Malgus, he had six elite soldiers with blaster rifles in orbit around him.
“This way, my lord,” said Kerse, taking position beside him.
“SPEED AND PRECISION,” Zeerid said, as much a reminder to himself as to Aryn. “Speed and precision.”
They watched the launch doors pull back to vent nonexistent fuel gas. The open doors revealed the landing pad below. Zeerid saw the two Imperial shuttles, the Dragonfly-class drop ship. The sirens continued to scream. The automated voice on the speakers continued to drone on.
Zeerid would hijack the drop ship. He’d have to dodge Imperial fighters and cruisers on his way out of Coruscant’s space. The shuttles would fly like the square heaps they were, and he’d get shot down as soon as he cleared the atmosphere. The dropship, at least, would give him a decent chance of getting clear.
He took Aryn by the bicep. “You can still come with me, Aryn.”
She looked him in the face and he saw once more, for the first time since seeing her again, the deep understanding that lived in her eyes.
“I can’t,” she said.
“You can,” he insisted. “You’ve honored your Master’s memory.”
“Time to go,” she said. “Speed and precision, you said.”
He bit back his reply and once more they wrapped T7 in their shared grasp and leapt into the void. Again Aryn’s power slowed their descent and cushioned their landing.
They hit the pad’s metal-and-duracrete floor, assaulted on all sides by the wail of the sirens and the relentless voice on the loudspeakers. Zeerid took quick stock of the situation.
He saw no one in the landing area and the only way out—a pair of double doors leading into a long corridor beyond—were open. Everyone must have evacuated.
Both of the Imperial shuttles had their landing ramps down. The drop ship did not and the canopy of its cockpit was dimmed, as opaque as dirty water.
“Tee-seven, I need you to crack open that Dragonfly. Right now.”
The droid beeped agreement and wheeled toward the drop ship’s rear door. Zeerid looked to Aryn and gave it another try.
“Reconsider, Aryn.” He stood directly before her, forcing her to see him, to hear him. “Come with me. Please.” He smiled, trying to make light. “We’ll start a farm on Dantooine, just like I said.”
She smiled, seemingly amused by the thought, and he was pleased to see it. “I can’t, Zeerid. You’ll make a good farmer, though. I’m going to find the Twi’lek and—”
She stopped in mid-sentence, her eyes fixed on something over Zeerid’s shoulder.
He whirled around to see the Twi’lek descending the near shuttle’s landing ramp, a rucksack thrown over her shoulder. Two Imperial soldiers in plasteel breastplates flanked her to either side. Each had a blaster rifle slung over his shoulder. All three wore breathing masks. They had not left their ship when the alarm sounded, had instead just donned masks. Perhaps there was something on the shuttle they were unwilling to leave unguarded. Everyone froze, and for a moment no one moved.
Then all at once everyone moved.
The Twi’lek dropped her rucksack, her eyes wide behind the lens of her mask, and went for her blasters. The soldiers cursed in muffled tones, unslung their rifles, and tried to bring them to bear.
Aryn ignited her lightsaber.
Zeerid, one of his blasters still in hand, fired at the soldier on the right. Two shots screamed into the soldier’s chest. Armor ablated in a puff of smoke and the force of the impact knocked the man from the ramp, turned his mask sideways on his face. He hit the deck and lay there, scrabbling for cover. Zeerid fired again, and a hit to the man’s midsection made him go still.
The Twi’lek got her blasters clear and fired two, four, six shots at Zeerid. Aryn slid before him and her blade deflected all of the shots, two of them back at the other soldier, which opened small holes in the soldier’s mask. He fell forward onto the ramp, dead.
“Get out of here, Zeerid,” Aryn said over her shoulder. She started walking toward the shuttle, toward the Twi’lek.
“Aryn,” Zeerid called, but she did not hear him. He imagined she heard only the voice of her dead Master now.
Zeerid realized it was no longer his fight. He holstered his blaster and watched. There was nothing else he could do.
Aryn strode toward the shuttle while the Twi’lek backed up the landing ramp, taking aim. Before the Twi’lek could fire, Aryn gestured with her left hand, and both of the blasters flew from the Twi’lek’s hands and landed at Aryn’s feet. The Twi’lek mouthed something lost in the muffle of her mask. Aryn stepped over and past the blasters.
The Twi’lek, wide-eyed, turned to flee into the shuttle’s compartment. Again, Aryn gestured and a blast of power went forth from her, slammed into the Twi’lek’s back, and drove her hard into the bulkhead. She collapsed within the shuttle’s compartment, only her feet sticking out far enough for Zeerid to see.
Aryn deactivated her blade. She stopped for a moment and lowered her head, thinking.
Zeerid let himself hope, almost called her name again.
But then she raised her head and walked for the landing ramp, stepping over the corpse of the soldier.
Zeerid hung his head for a moment, saddened. It was her decision, her fight. He gathered himself, turned, and shouted at T7.
“Get that Dragonfly open, Tee-seven. It’s time to go.”
VRATH AWOKE TO THE SOUND of blasterfire, the high-pitched whine of sirens, and the voice on the port’s speaker system saying something about a fuel leak. He’d taken a sleeptab to put him out and it took a few moments for his head to clear. He’d fallen asleep in the cockpit. He checked his chrono. Almost dawn, or just after. He’d been out the better part of the night.
Something thudded into Razor’s hull, a blaster shot.
“What in the—”
He undimmed the cockpit’s transparisteel canopy and looked out on the landing pad. Razor’s angle offered him a very small field of vision so he could see little, merely part of one of the Imperial shuttles docked near him. Strangely, he saw no workers, no Imperial soldiers, no droids.
He heard a few more blaster shots from behind the ship. He had no idea what was going on and had no desire to find out. He did not yet have permission to leave Coruscant, but he would not leave his ship in dock in the midst of a firefight or whatever was happening out there. He figured he’d just take Razor into the air and stay in-atmosphere. He put the dull monotone of the spaceport’s automated announcement on his in-ship comm.
“A hazardous substance spill has occurred in landing bay sixteen-B. There is significant danger. Please move rapidly toward the nearest exit. A hazardous substance spill …”
On the wall near him, written in large black letters, were the words: LANDING BAY 16-B.
He double-checked to ensure Razor was still sealed tight. It wasn’t. The rear door was open. He cursed. He swore he’d closed it. He hit the button to close it but it still flashed as unsealed and open. Something was keeping it open, or there was a malfunction in the circuit.
He would have to close it with the rear switch or cargo would fall out as he flew. He started Razor’s auto-launch sequence, rose, and headed for the rear of the ship. Halfway there, he realized he’d left his blaster and blades in the cockpit. He’d stripped them off when he’d grabbed some shuteye.
No matter. He wouldn’t need them.
ARYN FELT LIGHT-HEADED as she walked up the shuttle’s landing ramp. She held her lightsaber hilt in her hand, held anger in her heart.
She slowed when the Twi’lek stirred, groaned, and turned over to watch her approach.
Aryn held up her free hand and almost said, I won’t hurt you, but walled off the words before they escaped her mouth.
She did not want to lie.
The woman scrabbled backward crabwise, eyes showing no fear, taking Aryn in, until she bumped into the bulkhead. She slid up the wall so that she was standing. Aryn stopped two paces from her. They regarded each other across the limitless gulf of their respective understandings.
Outside, the sirens howled. Aryn could no longer see Zeerid. More important, he could no longer see her.
The Twi’lek’s eyes fell to Aryn’s lightsaber hilt. Aryn felt no fear radiating from the woman, just a soft, profound sadness.
“You have come to kill me.”
Aryn did not deny it. Her mouth was dry. She belted her own lightsaber, took Master Zallow’s in hand.
“I see your anger,” the Twi’lek said.
Aryn thought of Master Zallow and hardened her resolve. “You don’t know me, woman. Do not pretend that you do.”
She ignited Master Zallow’s lightsaber. The Twi’lek’s eyes widened and a flash of fear cracked her calm façade.
“I don’t,” the Twi’lek acknowledged. “But I know anger when I see it. I know it quite well.”
A sad smile illuminated her face, overcoming the fear in her expression. She was thinking of something or someone other than Aryn and the sadness she radiated increased, sharpened.
“Anger is just pain renamed,” she said. “This I know well, too. And sometimes … the pain runs too deep. Pain drives you, yes?”
Aryn had expected resistance, a fight, a protest, something. Instead, the Twi’lek seemed … resigned.
“You will kill me, Jedi? Because of Darth Malgus? Something he did?”
Hearing Malgus’s name uttered stoked the heat of Aryn’s anger. “He hurt someone I loved.”
The Twi’lek nodded, gave a single, short outburst that might have been a pained laugh. “He hurts even those he himself loves.” She smiled, and her soft voice sounded like rainfall. “These men and their wars. His name is Veradun, Jedi. And he would kill me if he knew I told you. But names are important.”
Aryn had to work to keep hold of her anger. The Twi’lek seemed so … fragile, so hurt. “I don’t care what his name is. You were there with him. In the attack on the Temple. I saw it.”
“The Temple. Ah.” She nodded. “Yes, I was with him. I love him. I fight at his side. You would do the same.”
Aryn could not deny it. She would have done the same; she had done the same.
The anger she’d carried since feeling Master Zallow’s death began to shrink, to drain out of her in the face of the Twi’lek’s pain and sadness, in the realization that her own pain was not the moral center of the universe. The loss of her anger startled her. Since his death, she had been nothing but anger. Without it, she felt empty.
Pain by another name, the Twi’lek had said. Indeed.
“Please be quick,” the Twi’lek said. “A clean death, yes?”
The words sounded not so much like a challenge as a request.
“What is your name?” Aryn asked.
“Eleena,” the Twi’lek said.
Aryn stepped toward her. Eleena’s eyes went to Aryn’s blade but she did not shrink from Aryn’s approach. She stared into Aryn’s eyes and Aryn into hers, each measuring the other’s pain, the other’s loss.
“Names are important,” Aryn said. She flipped her grip on her dead Master’s lightsaber, deactivated the blade, and slammed the pommel against Eleena’s temple. The Twi’lek collapsed without a sound.
“And I won’t kill you, Eleena.”
In so many ways, Eleena was already dead. Aryn pitied her.
She still felt compelled to avenge Master Zallow, but she could not murder Eleena to make Malgus suffer. Master Zallow would never have countenanced it. Aryn could not avenge him by betraying what he stood for. Perhaps he had failed. Perhaps the Order had failed. But both had failed nobly. There was something to that.
She remembered the dream she’d had of Master Zallow, of him standing on the Temple’s ruins silently mouthing words at her that she could not then understand.
She understood them now.
“Be true to yourself,” he had said.
Hadn’t Zeerid been trying to tell her the same thing all along?
“I AM SORRY, my lord,” Kerse said as they hurried through the spaceport. “I assumed they had evacuated, and we had not yet had a chance to take a head count—”
“Save your excuses, Kerse,” Malgus said and resisted the urge to cut the man in two.
The long main corridor within the port felt kilometers long. Counters lined it, businesses, even vendor carts, all of them abandoned. Vidscreens sat dark on the walls of lounges and clubs.
Smaller corridors branched off the main one, leading to commercial passenger pads, to lifts that led to the large craft staging areas, and to the small-craft pads.
“Move,” Malgus said to them, and they did. To Kerse, he said, “Show me where you saw her last.”
Kerse pointed to a side corridor far ahead, near the end of the main corridor. “It’s there, my lord. Pad 16-B. On the left.”
Malgus thought 16-B was close to the launch doors he had seen open upon his arrival at the spaceport. He augmented his speed with the Force and blazed along the hall, leaving the soldiers far behind. The walls, signs, and floor were a blur to him as he sped toward the landing pad, toward Eleena.
T7 HAD THE REAR HATCH OPEN on the Dragonfly and was still plugged into the control panel. Zeerid spent a few long moments turning his head from the Dragonfly to the Imperial shuttle where Aryn had disappeared with the Twi’lek, then back again. He finally started to head for the Dragonfly, but Aryn’s voice pulled him around.
“Zeerid!”
He turned to see Aryn emerge from the shuttle, carrying the still body of the Twi’lek in her arms. Zeerid could not tell whether the Twi’lek was dead or alive. He walked toward Aryn slowly, his eyes not on the Twi’lek but on Aryn.
“Do I want to know?”
He dreaded the answer.
“I didn’t kill her, Zeerid. It was important to me that you knew that.”
Zeerid let himself breathe. “I’m glad, Aryn. Then you’ll come with me, now?” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “Tee-seven has the Dragonfly opened.”
“I can’t, Zeerid, but I’m … all right now. Do you understand?”
“I don’t, no.”
Aryn opened her mouth to speak, stopped, and cocked her head, as if she’d heard something from far off.
“He’s coming,” she said.
The hairs on the back of Zeerid’s neck rose. “Who’s coming? Malgus?”
Aryn knelt and laid the Twi’lek down as gently as she might a newborn child.
The sirens suddenly stopped wailing, the sound cut off as if by a razor. The unexpected silence felt ominous. Zeerid eyed the open double doors of the landing pad. A dark corridor stretched beyond them.
Aryn rose, closed her eyes, inhaled.
“Go, Zeerid,” she said.
“I’m not leaving,” Zeerid said, and drew his other blaster. He ran his tongue over lips gone dry.
She opened her eyes and grabbed him with her gaze. “You are leaving and you’re leaving now, Z-man. Think of your daughter. Go right now. Go … be a farmer.”
She smiled and pushed him away. He stared into her face, knowing she was right.
He could not make Arra an orphan, not even for Aryn. Still, he was unwilling to leave her. He stepped closer to her, and her expression softened. She reached up and touched his face.
“Go.”
Driven by nothing more than impulse, he grabbed her by the shoulders and kissed her full on the mouth. She did not resist, even returned it. He held her away from him at arm’s length.
“You are a fool, Aryn Leneer,” he said.
“Maybe.”
He turned and headed for the Dragonfly. The feel of her lips lingered on his, a ghost of softness he hoped would haunt him forever. He only wished he had kissed her longer.
He imagined her eyes on him and he dared not look back for fear of losing his will to leave. He thought of the holo of Arra he used to keep on Fatman, her smile, her laugh, thought of his promise to Nat that he would not take unnecessary chances.
Hard as it was, he kept his back turned to Aryn Leneer.
“Get aboard, Tee-seven,” he said as he walked up the landing ramp.
T7 beeped a sad negative.
“You’re not coming?”
Again, a sad negative.
Zeerid patted the droid on his head. “You are a brave one. Thank you for your help. Take care of Aryn.”
T7 whistled an affirmative, followed that with a somber farewell, and wheeled away from the Dragonfly.
The ship’s engines were already winding up. T7 must have started the launch sequence.
VRATH PICKED HIS WAY through Razor’s narrow corridors until he reached the rear compartment, which he’d converted from troop carrier to cargo hold. Stacked crates magnetically sealed to the deck dotted the hold, forming a rats’ maze. He hurried through it to the rear door. The firefight outside seemed to have abated, so he allowed himself to relax.
ZEERID WATCHED T7 MOVE AWAY. He hit the control panel to close the rear door, and it began to rise. He waited until the latches sealed. Still thinking of Aryn, he put his hand on the cold metal of the door.
The Dragonfly lurched as it rose on its thrusters. He needed to get to the cockpit. He could not have the autopilot flying the ship when the Imperials started shooting.
He hurried through the converted cargo bay, made into a labyrinth by the many storage crates that dotted it. Rounding a corner, he nearly bumped into another man.
It took a moment for recognition to dawn—the small frame, the neatly parted dark hair, the deep sockets with their dead eyes, the thin mouth.
It was the man from Karson’s Park.
It was the man who had betrayed Zeerid and Aryn to the Sith.
It was the man who knew about Arra and Nat.
“You!” Vrath Xizor said.
“Me,” Zeerid affirmed.
ARYN WATCHED THE DRAGONFLY LIFT OFF, missing Zeerid already. She tried to summon the rage that had brought her to Coruscant to face Malgus, but she no longer felt the same heat. She reached into her pocket, found the bead from the Nautolan bracelet, held it between forefinger and thumb.
She would face Malgus. She had to. But she would face him as her Master would have wished, with calmness in her heart.
She stood over Eleena’s body and waited. Malgus’s presence pressed against her as he drew nearer. His anger went before him like a storm.
MALGUS RUSHED THROUGH the large double doors and into the landing bay. Vrath Xizor’s ship, Razor, rose on its thrusters toward the open roof doors. Two Imperial shuttles sat idle on the landing pad.
“Eleena!” he shouted, hating himself for his vulnerability but unable to contain the shout.
He reached out with the Force as Razor continued its rise, tried to take it in his mental grasp. Its ascent slowed. He held forth both of his arms, made claws of his hands, and shouted with frustration as he sought to hold back the power of the ship’s thrusters.
He felt a tightness in his mind, the string of his power being drawn taut, stretching, stretching. He would not release the ship. Its thrusters began to whine. He held it, teeth gritted, sweat soaking his body, his breath a dry rattle through his respirator.
And then the string snapped and the ship flew free, lifting clear of the roof doors.
He roared his rage as the ship’s engines fired and it headed for the heavens. Seething, he activated his wrist chrono.
“Jard, the spicerunner’s drop ship has just left the Liston Spaceport. Eleena may be aboard. Secure it with a tractor beam and detain everyone aboard—”
The hum of an activating lightsaber cut off his words. Another followed it. He looked across the landing pad and saw Aryn Leneer, a lightsaber in each hand, standing over the body of Eleena.