He quickly sank in up to his neck.
The mist was rising into his mask, and he could hardly breathe. He could feel a burning sensation in his knees and feet. It felt as if he were being dissolved by the acid gunk.
I am being digested!
Only the helmet allowed him to breathe, to survive. It seemed to have stopped the sinking and the digesting for some reason. But for how long? His chin sank into the muck. In a moment his mouth and nose would be covered, too. The mask was clearly being rejected by the horrible ma.s.s... but how long would that last?
Boba searched frantically for a means of escape. He saw a coil of wire sticking out of a slag heap on the other side of the pond, but it was too far away. A stick lay closer, on the bank below the wire, but still out of reach. The reeds were all around, but they were too thin and frail to hold his weight.
Then Boba remembered: self-sufficiency. It meant using whatever was available.
He managed to get one arm out of the muck and grabbed the longest reed he could find, pulling it up by the roots. It felt slimy, even through his gloves. He used it like a long flexible hook to snag the wire, inching it across the mud until it was within the reach of his hand.
Yes! The wire felt plenty strong. Boba wrapped it around his hand and began to pull.
It was almost too late. His eyes were burning and he could hardly breathe. His arms were weak. He gathered all his strength and pulled...
The wire was coming loose from the slag pile. It dislodged a tiny clod, starting a small landslide down the slippery slope of slag and garbage. Then it jerked tight again. It had snagged on something.
Boba pulled again, but more carefully this time. The wire was barely caught on the edge of an old piece of machinery. If it slipped off, he was a goner.
This was his last chance. Hardly daring to breathe, he pulled himself toward the sh.o.r.e of the pond. One leg was free... then the other...
Boba grabbed a handful of reeds and pulled himself out of the stinking liquid, onto the slimy sh.o.r.e. "Whew!" Plain old slime had never felt so good before.
He was free.
Boba blended in with the crowd of droids, warriors, and workers streaming in the wide, brightly lighted doorway. No one noticed him, and Prax was nowhere to be seen.
Even the filth that covered him didn"t give him away. Many of the others were filthy as well, from the dig.
Boba took off his helmet and wiped it clean. It had saved his life, that was for sure. He now realized why it was so important to his father... and why it would be important to him.
Boba joined the "dig" workers in the shower that steamed the worst of the slime off his clothes and his boots, and then dried them instantly. Now all he had to do was make it back to his room and no one would know he had been outside.
He stepped out of the shower, his clothes already dry - and grimaced in pain as a rough, strong hand gripped his shoulder.
"Come!" The voice was unmistakable. Boba opened his mouth to explain that he hadn"t meant to break the rules, that it was all a mistake. But what was the point?
Cydon Prax wasn"t listening as he dragged Boba down the corridor, toward the Count"s inner sanctuary.
CHAPTER SEVEN.
The Count wrinkled his finely arched nose.
"We shall have to clean you up," he said dismissively.
Boba tried to keep from shaking. He knew it was best never to show fear. He gripped his father"s helmet in his hands.
"Your father didn"t teach you very well," said the Count. "You have been sticking your nose where it does not belong."
"I didn"t see anything," Boba said. He could feel the Count"s power turning steadily into wrath.
"Oh, really?" The Count was scornful; He stood behind his desk, in front of the "window" that showed a blue lake under a blue sky: Anything but the real filth of Raxus Prime.
"Really," said Boba. "I just stepped outside the door. I didn"t go far."
"Perhaps I should take on your training, after all," said the Count: Boba felt a moment"s hope. But the hope was dashed by the Count"s next words: "If I did, the first thing I would teach you is how to lie.
You are not very good at it."
"I am sorry I broke your rules," said Boba. And especially sorry that I got caught.
"Sorry?" said the Count with a smooth, cold grin. "You have broken my rules. And that is not all..."
Not all? Wasn"t that enough?
"I"ve decided that you know too much at a time when information is a valuable commodity." He turned to Cydon Prax, who stood by the doorway.
"Isn"t it ironic that one small boy should be the only one who knows such a great secret?"
Prax didn"t answer, of course. Boba wasn"t sure what the "great secret" was that he was supposed to know about. But the Count"s remark gave him an idea that he hoped just might save his life.
"What makes you think I"m the only one who knows?"
The Count raised his eyebrow - the most surprise Boba could imagine the Count betraying. "What do you mean?"
"Just what I said," said Boba. He tried to keep his voice calm, cool, Jango Fett-style. "I have already told someone else."
He had the Count"s attention now... barely. "May I inquire who?"
the older man asked.
"That"s my secret," Boba bluffed. "And she knows who to tell if anything happens to me."
"She?" Boba could hear a slight undertow of uncertainty. "Might you be insinuating the bounty hunter Aurra Sing?"
Boba was making it up as he went along. "I do mean Aurra Sing," he said.
"Young fool. Are you threatening me?"
"No, sir. I simply want what is mine. My freedom - and my father"s credits."
"Freedom? Credits?" The Count"s eyes blazed like cold fire. "I do not bargain with children. Especially those who are a nuisance."
I went too far! Boba realized. His last chance was lost.
"Cydon Prax, you know what to do with him."
Boba knew it was useless to resist. He closed his eyes as Cydon Prax picked him up. Boba dropped his helmet as his arms were pinned. His father"s voice came to him. If you must die, do so with valor. That is what Jango Fett had done, fighting to the last moment.
The memory inspired Boba. He was done with pleading and pretending.
Whatever was coming, he would face it with the courage of the son of Jango Fett.
Suddenly the Count raised his hand. For the first time, Boba saw genuine concern cross his face. "What is it, sir?" Prax asked.
"The Jedi have found us," the Count answered. Boba strained to hear something beyond the silence of the room. How did the Count know?
"Finish him off, then join me," the Count said tersely as his hand seemed to instinctively find the curved lightsaber handle that glistened beneath his cloak.
BAR-R000M! An explosion shook the floor.
Quickly picking up a holopad from his desk, the Count left the room. As if on cue, a second explosion rocked the room. This one was closer. Small rocks started to fall from the ceiling.
Cydon Prax hesitated for a moment and his grip on Boba loosened just a little as he looked after his master. Boba saw his chance. He kicked out with all his strength against the nearest wall. Prax was propelled backward, into the desk. Boba"s elbows slammed into him as they landed.
"You little..."
Prax"s words were lost in a series of explosions outside. The floor pitched up like the deck of a ship being tossed by a giant wave. The door cracked and fell to the ground. The sound of blaster fire and confused voices filled the air.
Boba lunged and twisted free from Prax"s grip. He scooped up his battle helmet from the floor where he had dropped it. And then he did what his father had taught him to do whenever he was in a bad situation he didn"t expect to get any better.
He ran.
CHAPTER EIGHT.
The once dim corridor was filled with light, and no wonder!
The Count"s underground hideout had been blown wide open. Large parts of the roof were missing, and Boba was standing on, top of a pile of smoking rubble.
He looked up. The filthy Sky of Raxus Prime was even filthier than usual. It was filled with explosions, blossoming like deadly flowers.
The noise was deafening. A battle was raging. Blaster fire screamed past. The Count"s automatic defense system was firing into the air rapid-fire lasers filling the already smoky air with bursts and clouds of brightly colored smoke.
Through the clouds, Boba saw the approaching gunships. They bore the eight-spoked insignia of the Republic. The Count had been right - it was a Jedi-led attack! Republic a.s.sault ships were unloading clone troopers in their gleaming white battle armor. They fanned out in impressive military order through the slag heaps, smashing the Count"s defenses.
My brothers! Boba thought scornfully. His father had helped create the clone troopers; the Kaminoans had used his dad"s genetic material to make millions of them. So why were they fighting on the side of the hated Jedi - again?
Battle droids followed what Boba instantly recognized as GAT tanks, closing in on the clone troopers from behind - until a Jedi on a speeder-bike streaked over the horizon, mowing them down with deadly laser fire.
And here came what looked like a new kind of tank, its telltale red markings signifying it belonged to the Jedi, lurching through the same slimy ponds that Boba had survived.
Jedi gunships were closing in on the ruins that surrounded the crane tower and the pit. One gunship dodged a missile"s streak; another was. .h.i.t and spiraled down to crash unseen over the horizon.
Yes! Boba watched, fascinated. He hated both sides - the Jedi and the Count. But he loved the action.
It was chaos, and it was just the diversion he needed to help him escape. He looked down and saw his reflection in a puddle. His face was streaked with dirt again, but he was grinning from ear to ear.
Anything was better than being the Count"s prisoner. He was free!
Boba heard a noise behind him and turned just in time to see a huge starship rise from the other end of the Count"s hideout.
It was the Count, making his escape. Boba wondered if he had managed to rescue the dark treasure that he had come to Raxus Prime to find.
Two Jedi starfighters raced over the horizon, zeroing in on the Count"s starship. The pursued and pursuers both vanished into the thick clouds.
KABOOM!.
KABOOM!.
Even though the Count had fled, his defense system was still working. It would keep firing until his slave droids were dead and the lasers ran out of energy. Boba kept his head down as he crawled through the rubble, looking for an opening that would lead back down into the hallways of the abandoned hideout where he had to go to get his father"s book.
Wearing his helmet for protection, Boba crawled through a smashed opening in a wall. The hallways were choked with smoke and rubble. The dust, the explosions, the noise, made everything difficult to see.
As he grasped his way through the abandoned corridor, Boba found that he felt very little fear. He had escaped the worst fate imaginable, and now he felt like a new man, or at least a new boy. What could happen to him worse than what he had escaped?
He saw a familiar-looking door. His room!
There was his bed, turned on its side by an explosion. But where was the flight bag that had been under it?
Frantically, Boba dug in the rubble with his hands until he felt the familiar curve of a handle. He pulled, harder and harder, until it came free.
Safe! He threw the helmet into the bag and sealed it. With the troopers around, it was best to keep Jango Fett"s mask out of sight.
CHAPTER NINE.
Boba crawled toward the Open air - and found himself face-to-face with a squadron of clone troopers bursting through the wreckage. As soon as they saw Boba, they leveled their blasters at him.
"Come with us," the trooper said, extending a white-gloved hand.