"Maybe." He had his doubts about whether it was anything useful. He had even bigger doubts about Neelah herself. Or whatever her real name is, thought Dengar. Keeping one"s contacts primed for information was an essential part of the bounty-hunter trade; he had been in and out of Mos Eisley and other sc.u.mholes on a regular basis, listening and asking the right questions, and he hadn"t heard anything fitting her description. If anybody was looking for her, they were doing it on the quiet. That might make getting paid for finding her somewhat difficult.
Or else-another possibility rose in Dengar"s thoughts-somebody doesn"t want her to be found. Boba Fett might have been working for someone who had wanted this Neelah to be disposed of, maybe in some way that left her still alive. What better way than to strip out her memory and stick her on a backwater planet like Tatooine? Though how long she would"ve stayed alive in Jabba"s palace was debatable, given the Hutt"s murderous amus.e.m.e.nts. Whoever had sent her there couldn"t have been too concerned about her survival. Then why not just kill her quick and fast, for whatever reasons they had, rather than leave her where any number of the galaxy"s hustling scoundrels, the criminal dregs that had found employment with Jabba, might have spotted her?
His brain felt weighted down with all these questions stacking up on top of each other. Mysteries and skulduggery were what one dealt with in the bounty-hunter trade; all this reminded Dengar of why he had wanted to get out of it. There must be an easier way to make a living.
Or a safer one. Now he had two potential bombs on his hands, either one of which could result in a quick death for him, if he was lucky, or a messy one, if his luck ran true to form. It hadn"t been bad enough getting involved with Boba Fett"s fortunes; now he had to deal with the enigmatic Neelah as well. She was a loose laser cannon by herself-if she"d had a blaster, Dengar supposed he would"ve been crisped by now-plus there were those unseen figures from her past, who"d put her here. They might not be too happy about her turning up again. If they were the kind of people who hired Boba Fett to do their dirty work for them, they wouldn"t be likely to have too many scruples about eliminating everyone hooked up with her.
None of it looked good. Which had its own upside: The more risk, Dengar reminded himself, the more profit. That, more than anything in the so-called Hunter"s Creed, was what governed the actions of bounty hunters, from Boba Fett down to himself. If there was a chance of being partners with Fett, and reaping the rewards from that, he would have to ramp up his courage to a new level.
"All right," said Dengar aloud. He unfolded his arms and pointed to the female on the other side of the hiding place"s main chamber. "Let"s work out an arrangement, you and me. Stipulation number one: Don"t try to kill me. If we"re going to get anything accomplished around here, that"s a basic requirement."
Neelah appeared to think it over, then nodded. "Okay."
"And if you try, I"m going to make sure it"s your corpse that gets thrown out of here. Got me?"
She nodded again, with just a trace of impatience.
"Number two: I"m in charge here. I"m running the show-"
Neelah"s anger flared. "Wait a minute-"
"Shut up," said Dengar. "It"s for your own good. And it"s just for the time being. You get back to wherever you came from, you get your real name and everything that comes with it returned to you, then you can do whatever you want. But right now you don"t even know who you are, you don"t know who might be gunning for you, you don"t know anything about what the galaxy"s like once you get off this little rock heap"s surface. Even if you could find some way out of here without my help, you might poke your nose into some place like Mos Eisley and get your whole head detached from your neck. There"s plenty of types who"d do that for you, even without knowing who you might be."
His lecture had a visible effect on her. "Very well," said Neelah sullenly. "You"re in charge. For now."
The things I put up with, thought Dengar to himself. It was all for Manaroo"s sake; he had to keep that in mind. On the other side of all this, there was her, and a life together with the female he loved. If I get that far.
"I"m glad we understand each other." Dengar pointed to a larger, open niche at the farthest end of the chamber. "You might as well make yourself comfortable down here. I don"t want you wandering around topside. There"s food and supplies; anything else you need, just let me know. I"ll have those two medical droids give you a quick scan, to make sure you"re all right. Tatooine"s got some nasty bugs you can pick up."
Neelah looked straight back at him. "What about Boba Fett? That"s why I came here."
"That"s number three. You don"t see him, you don"t talk to him, you don"t have anything to do with him, unless I"m right there with you."
"Why?"
"Like I told you before. For your own good." Dengar indicated the subchamber with a tilt of his head. "That guy"s one dangerous barve. If there"s some kind of connection between you and him, it might not be one that"s to your benefit. When he"s got his strength back, he might kill you just as easily as look at you. And you won"t be asking any more questions then, believe me."
The message seemed to sink in. "All right," said Neelah. "Whatever you say."
There was more that he hadn"t said. His precautions weren"t just for her sake. I don"t want the two of them conspiring against me, thought Dengar. Even before Boba Fett got his full strength back, that razor-sharp mind of his would be working and scheming away. Fett would be fully capable of making his own deals with Neelah that she wouldn"t be able to resist falling in with. A bounty hunter didn"t get the drop on people just with weapons that someone could see and feel burning through one"s gut; the history of what Boba Fett had pulled off with the old Bounty Hunters Guild indicated that he was a master at ensnaring sentient creatures in subtler traps. Though you wind up just as dead, thought Dengar, either way. And if Boba Fett had been lying and playing for time, back when Dengar had found him out there in the Dune Sea"s wastes, the quickest way to dissolve any partnership would be to use Neelah as his cat"s-paw.
Now I"ve got two that I"ve got to watch out for. That was another reason Dengar had wanted the female down here, rather than wandering around on the surface. He had his hands full as it was; he didn"t need anyone else hooking up with Neelah, for whatever agenda they might have.
She might as well have read his thoughts. A thin smile appeared as Neelah regarded him. "You trust me?"
"Of course not." On that point, Dengar could afford to be honest with her. "I don"t trust anyone." That was almost true; there was always Manaroo. But that was something different. "n.o.body survives in this business by going around trusting creatures. Let"s just say that I"ve got an idea of what to expect from you now. And if you"re smart enough to play along with me, maybe you"ll get what you want."
Neelah signaled her understanding with a quick nod. "I still want to see him."
"That"s easy enough," said Dengar. "But if you were planning on having any kind of talk with Fett, I don"t think that"s going to happen anytime real soon. He"s still unconscious."
"Just as well." The thin smile faded from Nee-lah"s face. "I changed my mind about that part. For now. I"ve begun to see the wisdom of your cautious att.i.tude. Maybe it"s better if he doesn"t know about me. That I found him out in the Dune Sea, and that I"m here, waiting. As you pointed out . . . whatever our connection is, it might not be exactly safe for me."
"Suit yourself." Dengar"s caution went up a notch. She"s a fast learner, he thought. All the more reason to be careful. "Come on." He pushed himself away from the wall of the main chamber. "Let"s go pay our guest of honor a visit."
The tall medical droid"s appendages raised in warning as Dengar and Neelah entered the sub-chamber. "Please observe the necessary hygienic protocols." The chart of vital signs scrolled down the display on SHSl-B"s cylindrical torso. "The patient"s condition remains very critical-"
"Yeah, right." Dengar pushed the droid aside, away from the pallet in the center of the s.p.a.ce. "This barve"s survived worse things than your attentions. If you haven"t managed to kill him, then nothing will."
Neelah stepped close to the side of the pallet and looked down at the unconscious form. "That"s him?" She sounded almost disappointed. "That"s Boba Fett?"
"No-" From the pile of gear in the sub-chamber"s corner, Dengar picked up a battered helmet, etched with the digestive fluids of the Sarlacc"s gullet. He turned the helmet"s narrow-visored gaze toward Neelah. "This is Boba Fett."
She shrank back from the empty helmet, a sudden fear showing in her widened eyes. One hand tentatively reached out to touch the pitted metal, then jerked back as though scorched. She slowly nodded. "That"s what I saw." Her voice was a barely audible whisper. "And I knew ... I knew it was him. ..."
"That"s how everybody knows him." Dengar turned the helmet"s blank visage toward himself. He could guess how the female felt; a little apprehensive chill ran down his own spine. "All through the galaxy." He nodded toward the figure on the pallet. "Not very many creatures have seen him like that. Or if they have, they didn"t live to tell about it."
For a moment the only sound in the subchamber was the clicking and sighing of the cardiopulmonary a.s.sists that the medical droids had set in place. Then Neelah turned a somber gaze toward Dengar. "I did," she said quietly.
Dengar was unable to make a reply. The dark s.p.a.ces in her eyes, and what might lie beyond them, unnerved him as much as the empty helmet. He turned away, to set it back down on the rest of Boba Fett"s gear.
"Remember," said Neelah. "Don"t tell him. Don"t tell him anything about me."
By the time Dengar turned back around, the female had slipped out of the subchamber. He was alone with the other bounty hunter. The presence of the medical droids barely registered on Dengar"s senses.
He stood looking down at Boba Fett for a while longer. The little trace of fear hadn"t gone away; it was still there, inching along his spine. Even unconscious, this man was enough to spook ordinary creatures.
There"s too much past, thought Dengar. Inside Boba Fett"s skull; a whole galaxy full of it. Who could tell what was going on in there as he slept and dreamed his dark dreams?
8.
THEN.
He couldn"t believe his good luck.
"I"ve got him this time," said Bossk. He had upgraded both the firepower and the tracking abilities of the Hound"s Tooth since his last unfortunate encounter with Boba Fett. The other bounty hunter s.n.a.t.c.hing the accountant Nil Posondum away from him had been the final irritant underneath his scales; he had sworn to himself that if he ever got the chance, he would put his rival out of commission for good. And nothing will do that, thought Bossk, savoring the words, like blowing Fett to atoms. "When I get done, there won"t be enough of him left to find without an electron microscope."
Beside him, Zuckuss leaned the hoses of his face mask toward the c.o.c.kpit"s target-acquisition screen. "I don"t know. ..."
"What, you can"t tell that it"s Boba Fett ap proaching? Are you blind?" Bossk rapped a claw against the screen, hard enough to leave a permanent mark amid the glowing vector lines. "Of course it"s him! There"s all the identification data on the Slave I." A tiny column of numbers scrolled down from the triangular icon swiftly moving across the screen. "That"s his ship, so he"s aboard it."
"Oh, it"s Boba Fett, all right." Zuckuss nodded slowly. "There"s no doubt about that. I"m just not sure if you should-what"s the phrase you always use?-"blow him away" right now."
Bossk angrily glared at the shorter bounty hunter. "When"s there going to be a better time?"
"Well, maybe when he"s not traveling under an a.s.surance of safe pa.s.sage from your father." Zuckuss sounded even more doubtful and nervous. The breath in his air tubes rasped quicker and louder. "Boba Fett already contacted the Guild council-you know that-and Cradossk and the others gave him their word that he could dock at the perimeter station without anyone taking a shot at him."
"They gave him their word." The slits in Bossk"s eyes narrowed. "They didn"t give him mine."
"Still . . ."
You little insect, thought Bossk. When he inherited the leadership of the Bounty Hunters Guild-he had already killed, as was Trandoshan custom, all of his father Cradossk"s younger sp.a.w.n-he intended to review the requirements for membership. A certain amount of guts, he figured, should be a prerequisite. Which meant that this sniveling partner that had been foisted on him would be out the air lock like the gnawed bones of yesterday"s lunch.
"Maybe," whined Zuckuss, "you should think about-this a little more. . . ."
"Thinking takes too long." Bossk"s claws moved across the control of the Hound"s weapons systems. "Action gets things done."
"Your father isn"t going to like this."
"That remains to be seen." The same blood ran in his and the old reptilian"s veins; he had the comfort of knowing that his sp.a.w.n-father was just as mean and vicious as himself. "For all you know, this is exactly what he and the rest of the Guild council are expecting me to do."
"Destroy another bounty hunter without warning?" Incredulity pitched Zuckuss"s voice higher. "That"s hardly in line with the Hunter"s Creed!"
Bossk always felt a simmering impatience when someone mentioned the Creed to him. "Boba Fett has violated the Creed enough times," he growled, "that he deserves no protection from it."
"But he"s never been bound by the Creed! He"s never been a member of the Guild!"
"Spare me your tedious legal a.n.a.lysis." Bossk had locked the concentric rings of the tracker sight onto the distant craft. "If Boba Fett wants to lodge a complaint against me, he"ll have to do it from the other side of the grave. If enough of him can be sc.r.a.ped up to put into one."
He ignored the rest of Zuckuss"s tiresome fretting. His index claw hit the main fire b.u.t.ton, and a quick rumble rolled through the Hound"s frame. On the screen, a brilliant white tracer shot toward the icon representing Boba Fett"s ship.
"Got him!" The shot must have caught Fett completely by surprise; he"d taken no evasive action at all. What a fool, thought Bossk with contempt. That"s what you get for trusting other bounty hunters. The advantage of being considered lowlife sc.u.m by most of the galaxy"s inhabitants was that maintaining one"s reputation was never an issue. "You know," said Bossk, "I"m almost disappointed. . . ."
"Why?" Zuckuss turned his large-lensed gaze away from the screen. "Because he didn"t put up more of a fight?"
"No." Bossk peered at the red numbers that had flashed on. "Because there"s anything left of him." He clawed in the command for a damage a.s.sessment on the laser cannon"s most recent target, then studied the result. "That ship of Fett"s had some serious armor on it. It"s still holding together." The glowing triangle had stopped in the middle of the screen, but hadn"t disappeared. To have taken that kind of a hit, enough to punch a hole through the main deck of an Imperial battle cruiser, and still be in one piece, however badly damaged, was amazing. It didn"t correspond with the velocities that the Slave I"s engines-high-thrust but low-ma.s.s-capable units from Mandal Motors-could attain. Like most bounty hunters, Boba Fett had always prized speed and maneuverability over protection. Right now, though, Bossk didn"t have time to puzzle over the discrepancy. "Let"s go finish him off."
The distinctive half-rounded shape of the Slave I filled the viewports as Bossk piloted his own craft toward it. He kept his claws on the controls for the emergency reverse thrusters in case Boba Fett, like the devious scoundrel he was known to be, was lying low inside the other ship, waiting for his own chance to take a shot at his attacker.
"Looks like a clean kill to me." Zuckuss pointed to the c.o.c.kpit"s forward viewport. "Right through the center and out the other side. There couldn"t be anyone left alive on that ship."
"I"ll believe that," said Bossk, "when I see Boba Fett"s .charred corpse." He started moving the Hound"s Tooth in toward the drifting wreckage. "I"m going inside."
"Well, if you need that kind of proof . . ." Zuckuss gave a shrug. "I suppose you"ll have to."
He didn"t even glance over at Zuckuss. "You"re going, too."
"Oh."
They managed to establish a transfer connection between the Hound"s Tooth and what was left of the Slave I. No atmosphere support was needed; enough of the Slave I"s systems were still operating to have sealed off the central interior sections.
"Something"s wrong," said Zuckuss as he looked about the Slave I"s empty hold.
"Something"s always wrong, as far as you"re con cerned." This time, though, Bossk wondered whether his partner might be right. A sense of unease crawled across his scales; he drew his blaster and slowly scanned across the open hatchways.
Zuckuss reached over and poked a gloved finger at one of the bulkheads. The thin material wobbled back and forth; another poke, and Zuckuss"s finger went right through it.
"It"s a decoy." Zuckuss gave a few more exploratory proddings to the hold"s confines, with similar results. "That"s why there"s nothing here-it"s just a sh.e.l.l!" He turned toward Bossk. "No wonder your shot went right through. There"s no real ma.s.s to have taken the hit. It"s like shooting through flimsiplast."
Rage boiled up inside Bossk, nearly blinding him. "That slimy ..." Words failed him. He stomped toward the dummy ship"s aft section, shoulders smashing apart the sides of the flimsy hatches.
"This is why we got a positive identification." Zuckuss had followed behind, into what would have been the c.o.c.kpit if they had been aboard a real ship. He pointed to a beacon transmitter mounted to one of the s.p.a.ce"s curved walls. "Look-you can see that it"s been programmed with the Slave I"s ID profile." Zuckuss nodded in admiration. "Setting up something like this takes a lot of work; you have to force through overrides almost down to the subatomic level. And then to build it back up with the false data . . ." He stepped back from the unit. "Fett must have had this decoy already prepared, just keeping it for sometime when he"d need it." Even behind Zuckuss"s face mask, there was a hint of amus.e.m.e.nt as he glanced over at Bossk. "Like when he might be heading into some territory where creatures might have a grudge against him."
"I"ll kill him." The words seethed out through Bossk"s clenched fangs. "I swear it. I"ll find him and I"ll kill him so hard . . ."
"Chances are pretty good, I"d say, that Fett"s al ready slipped by us. We"re wasting our time here." Zuckuss peered at another device, a cylinder of black metal studded with biosensors. "Now, this is interesting. I wouldn"t have expected something like this aboard a simple decoy vessel."
Bossk knew his partner had more of an interest in technological matters; right now all that moved inside his own head were grim fantasies of cracking bone and spurting blood. He didn"t even bother to look around, but kept on brooding at the mocking stars visible through the port. "What is it?"
"Offhand ... I"d say it"s a bomb. . . ."
"You fool!" Bossk whirled on his clawed heel, in time to see a row of lights flash into fiery life along the cylinder"s casing. The device emitted a faint hum, already gaining in pitch and volume. "We"ve triggered"it! The thing"s going to blow!"
He dived for the false c.o.c.kpit"s hatchway; a fraction of a second later Zuckuss landed on top of him. Both bounty hunters scrambled to their feet. Through the hatch, Bossk could see the bomb detach itself from its mountings on the flimsy bulkhead; with slow, ominous grace, the bomb"s miniaturized antigrav repulsors swiveled it about, bringing the scrutiny of its blind gaze toward them.
"Get out of my way!" Bossk shoved his partner aside and sprinted for the transfer port fastened to the decoy ship"s central hold. He could hear Zuckuss right behind him as he furiously grappled his way through the tube"s flexing pleats and back aboard the Hound"s Tooth.
The first explosion ripped the transfer away from both ships, sending ragged strips of plastex spiraling across the Hound"s midsection viewports. With his stomach across the back of the pilot"s chair, Bossk slapped at the hull integrity controls, sealing off his own ship before any significant amount of ak could escape.
"We ... we should be okay now. . . ." Panting, Zuckuss supported himself against the c.o.c.kpit"s naviputer displays. "That wasn"t . . . much of a bomb. . . ."
There wasn"t even time for Bossk to tell the other bounty hunter not to be an idiot. The second explosion, larger than the first, struck the Hound"s Tooth. Roiling thermic fire filled the viewports as the impact of Bossk"s spine with the bulkhead above stunned him into barely conscious silence. Blood swirled across the scales of his face as the ship"s artificial-gravity generators struggled to catch up with its end-over-end tumbling. Bossk smashed his fist against as many of the thruster controls as he could reach; the resulting force had him digging a hold into the pilot"s chair to keep from being flung through the open hatchway behind him.
A stern-mounted scanner showed the bomb, smaller now but even deadlier, trailing in the erratic wake of the Hound"s Tooth. "It"s . . . it"s locked onto us. . . ." Zuckuss clawed his way up beside Bossk. He pointed to the screen above the controls. "Here it comes. . . ."
Bossk knew how incremental-sequence bombs functioned. The first two charges work you over, he told himself. The third one kills you. His voice grated in his throat: "Not . . . this time ..."
He hit the rest of the thrusters, at the same time throwing the Hound into a suicide arc. Stars blurred across the viewport as the angle of the ship"s turn deepened. A deep ba.s.so groan sounded as increasing vectors tore in different directions across the hull. Sharper cracking noises signaled the navigation modules ripping away from the exterior.
The third and final explosion completed the partial disa.s.sembly of the Hound"s Tooth. Bossk"s desperate maneuver had put enough distance between the ship and the bomb; the hull shook with the impact but remained intact. Zuckuss was knocked onto his face mask by the bulkhead deforming behind him, the blast"s force warping the section from concave to convex. The pilot"s chair broke in two, sending Bossk sprawling across the c.o.c.kpit"s floor, claws holding the padded back of the seat tight against his chest. A rain of sparks, bursting out of the access ports, sizzled across both bounty hunters.
A few seconds later silence filled the Hound"s Tooth. The smell of burning circuitry hung acrid in the air, mixed with the steam of the ship"s automatic fire-dousing units. A few last sparks stung Zuckuss, and he slapped at them with his heavily gloved hands.
"We"ll be here awhile." Bossk didn"t need to do a preliminary damage a.s.sessment on the Hound to know that. Until the navigation modules were rigged back into some kind of operating order, he and Zuckuss were stuck in this remote sector of s.p.a.ce. If Trandoshans had any capacity for the emotion of grat.i.tude, he would have been glad that the sequential bomb hadn"t torn the Hound"s Tooth into bits. He and Zuckuss would have been dead instead of merely adrift. As it was, he just felt a deep irritation over how much work it was going to take to put his ship back together again, with the tools and probes that were now undoubtedly scattered all over the en gineering lockers.
"Look there-" Zuckuss pointed to the one viewport still functioning, set at an angle from the Hound"s midsection.
Sitting in the middle of the c.o.c.kpit floor, Bossk looked over his shoulder at the screen. A fiery course of light, with a too-familiar shape at its head, shot across the field of stars.
"That"s the Slave I," said Zuckuss. Unnecessarily-any fool would have known that much. "The real ship."