She would spend all day, many days at a time, simply contemplating the Force and her place in the universe. @ees remained alive for a long time and did not rush into ill-considered action; yet at times such as this, she could manage to move fast enough.
She understood the importance of protecting the Jedi academy.
She had entered into her training to understand the Force, vowing to defend the side of light-and here she found herself in a clear-cut battle against the Shadow Academy. Dark Jedi enemies coursed through the jungle, searching for victims, but Master Skywalker had taught all the trainees well. The light-side students would put up a good fight.
The treelike Jedi stood motionless, watching, sensing the jungle... and she knew her enemies would come to her. She had only to wait. Her roots dug deeper into the soil, drawing on it for greater energy. She felt the sap pulsing through her, boiling in her veins, allowing her to gain the speed for the unwavering action that she would require just this once...
she hoped.
She had chosen her spot well, next to an ailing Ma.s.sa.s.si tree, tall with outspreading branches. Its trunk was nested with vines and dripping with parasitic shelf mushrooms that had tapped into its heartwood and begun devouring the great tree from within.
The Jedi could tell that this great-grandfather of a tree had lived for centuries and centuries.... It was the way of things, the cycle of the forest. As plants grew, they went to seed to bear their young, and then slowly decayed to warm organic matter and fertilized the forest for subsequent generations.
She saw how the old Ma.s.sa.s.si tree leaned, observed the surrounding jungle... waited.
She reached out with the Force subtly, gently, so that even the adepts of the Dark Side would not know they were being manipulated. "Come here,"
she thought, broadcasting it over and over again. At least one of them would catch the hint. They would think they had detected one of their lightside enemies-but it would be all the plant Jedi"s doing.
After an indeterminate period-she did not measure time in small incrementsshe sensed a clumsy disturbance: two attackers from the Shadow Academy storming through the forest, as if the delicate ecosystem was no more than a nuisance that they would eradicate completely, given the chance.
The Jedi waited. She had to concentrate.
She had to act at the right moment and not waste time thinking, or else her opportunity would pa.s.s.
Curled within one of her gnarled branchesa handlike appendage-was a k.n.o.bby lightsaber built to accommodate her wooden grip.
The two Dark Jedi came into the clearing and stopped. "I see nothing here," said one.
"Lord Brakiss would be ashamed of you."
Lord Zekk would take away your lightsaber.
"The powers of the dark side are wasted on you."
"I tell you, I sensed it," said the other. He stepped forward, looking from side to side, studying the quiet jungle. His companion stood next to him, scowling.
At that moment the Jedi used all her stored reserves-and acted. She ignited the lightsaber and slashed sideways with her branch arm, like a bent sapling suddenly released to snap straight again.
"I am sorry, Grandfather Tree," she said-and her lightsaber blade cleaved through the trunk of the tottering old Ma.s.sa.s.si tree, severing it from the stump and letting the arms of gravity embrace it. Its wide-branched top leaned over and the tree crashed onto the two Dark Jedi intruders.
They had time only to look up with a m.u.f.fled outcry of surprise as a meteor of branches and vines smashed down upon them.
The Jedi deactivated her lightsaber, then felt a trembling through her entire wooden body. In one act, she had drained months and months of her energy reserves. She stretched her branches up toward the sunlight, dug her roots deeper.
It would take her a long time to recover from this day.
AFTER CROSSING THE river, Jaina fought her way through the jungle, seeking a suitable path through the thickest underbrush while keeping herself hidden from other attackers. Right now, the tangled forest was her ally, and she could use the cover to her advantage. She wasn"t afraid to combat the Dark Jedi threatening the academy-but she had a vital mission in mind... something more to her tastes.
As long as the defensive energy shields remained down and the generator damaged, the entire area was vulnerable to repeated attacks from the skies. Luke Skywalker"s trainees were defending themselves... but if Jaina could somehow repair the shield generator and get the protective force field up again, the new Jedi Knights could take care of these audacious enemies one at a time.
Jaina finally made her way to the clearing where her father and Chewbacca had recently installed the new energy shield generator. With only a glance she saw that the machinery was irreparable, despite her usual knack for fixing things.
Normally, she could make temporary repairs to get systems up and running again, at least for a while. But not in this case. An Imperial saboteur had used thermal detonators to wipe out the entire generating station.
It was hopelessly ruined, a pile of shrapnel; no simple fixup would do.
Jaina"s attention remained on the generator for only a moment, however.
She caught her breath.
There in the clearing sat an Imperial TIE fighter in perfect condition.
Ever since Chewbacca had given Lowie the T-23 skyhopper, Jaina had longed for a vehicle of her own. That, in fact, had been the impetus behind her desire to repair the crashed TIE fighter the young Jedi Knights had found in the jungles-Qorl"s TIE fighter.
She stopped and stared, frozen with excitement and apprehension. But other than the m.u.f.fled noises of battle in the jungles and the distant shouts and blaster fire near the Great Temple, she heard no sound.
Jaina withdrew her lightsaber and pressed the power stud. The beam sprang outward, ^ glowing an electric violet. Then she crept forward stealthily, ready to fight if the TIE pilot emerged with his blaster drawn. But she sensed no one else around, heard no noise from the craft.
"h.e.l.lo?" Jaina called. "You"d better surrender if you"re an Imperial!"
She waited.
"Uh, is anyone here?"
Only the simmering jungle noises answered her.
Moving forward, letting her eagerness take over, she ran to the abandoned TIE fighter. It was a sinister-looking ship: a rounded c.o.c.kpit suspended between two flat hexagonal power arrays, twin ion engines that would propel the small fighter across s.p.a.ce, a bank of deadly laser cannons.
Ideas and possibilities thundered through her mind. If she could pilot this ship into the enemy"s midst, Jaina would be in disguise. She could slip in among them, and they wouldn"t know she was actually an enemy...
until it was too late.
Switching off her lightsaber again, Jaina opened the c.o.c.kpit hatch and crawled inside. She had studied how TIE fighters worked when she and her friends had replaced the components of Qorl"s crashed ship. She knew the b.u.t.tons on the control panels, knew how the systems activated.
Though the exiled old pilot had flown off in his ship before Jaina had had a chance to take it on a flight, she was confident she could handle the craft.
She settled into the pilot"s seat, noting the oily scent of stale lubricants and the sour odors the Empire did not bother to remove.
A rebreather mask hung next to a small life-support console. The c.o.c.kpit walls closed around her like a protective sh.e.l.l, giving her little room to move, but all the controls were at her fingertips. Through the ship"s front ports, she could see outside.
Jaina found the power switch and toggled it on, felt the engines"
thrumming, systems gearing up, batteries charging. Control panel lights winked on in a brilliant flurry around her. She drew a deep breath, strapped herself in, and clutched the controls.
"All systems ready for takeoff," she whispered to herself She glanced at the sky, looking for the black specks of other Imperial ships. "Okay, TIE fighters, prepare for some company!" The Imperial craft raised up as Jaina worked the controls. Clearing the jungle treetops, she felt the exhilaration of actually flying. The ship seemed unbelievably quiet inside, until she realized that its noisier primary engines had been disengaged. This TIE fighter flew so quietly because it used only the lesser-powered engines. So that was how the enemy pilot had gotten under their shield unnoticed! No doubt the original systems remained intact, but the enemy commando had slipped in without the @@ami iar howl of TIE engines.
All right then, Jaina thought-she could be silent and deadly as well.
Finally skimming the treetops, she scanned around, acquiring targets. She shot forward, reveling in the thrill of flight, the landscape pa.s.sing beneath her in a mottled green blur.
Up ahead she saw six TIE fighters flying in formation, firing down at the treetops, pounding the temple ruins, even structures that had never been used for training Jedi.
The Palace of the Woolamander, an ancient ruin already nearly collapsed, was pummeled with brilliant streaks from laser cannons, though Jaina didn"t believe any Jedi Knights had gone there.
She kept the Imperial comm channels on so she could hear the terse, gruff chatter as the TIE pilots discussed their overall plan, choosing targets, firing at moving figures sheltered by the thick Ma.s.sa.s.si trees.
Jaina kept her microphone off, though, as she joined the formation of TIE fighters, slipping in at the rear. Over the comm system she heard them acknowledge her arrival; rather than making them suspicious by speaking with a young woman"s voice, she just clicked an okay over the microphone.
Then she powered up her laser cannons.
One of the TIE fighters broadcast, "Plenty of targets here for everybody.
Let"s cause some damage."
Jaina bit her lower lip and nodded. "Yes," she muttered to herself, "let"s cause some damage."
She let her eyes fall partially closed and concentrated, feeling the Force. Despite the sensors and systems available in the TIE fighter, nothing could match heightened Jedi perceptions for enhancing her movements. She needed to target and fire and target again with lightning speed. She would have only one chance.
Jaina gripped the control stick of her weapons and focused on the aiming mechanisms, flying smoothly behind the unsuspecting Imperials. She had to disable them with one shot each. She couldn"t risk repeated fire on a single target, because once she started shooting, they would be rather upset with her.
Jaina sought out the most vulnerable points: their engines and the joints that held the planar power arrays to their sides. If the TIE fighters turned side-on to her, she would blast the power arrays themselves-large targets, impossible to miss.
Giving herself a silent countdown, Jaina pointed her lasers at the closest ship. What am I waiting for? she asked herself.
Gritting her teeth, she fired a single shot, then swiveled the laser cannons, moving with hyperspeed, to target a second TIE fighter.
Even before her second bolt struck the narrow joint next to the c.o.c.kpit and sliced off the planar array, the first TIE fighter careened into a spin.
Jaina blasted again at the rear engine pods of the second ship. The TIE fighter exploded in front of her, momentarily blinding her, but she quickly averted her eyes. As she brought the laser cannons to bear on a third target, Jaina heard the TIE pilots shouting in outrage and panic.
The formation began to split apart.
She didn"t have much time.
The third TIE fighter turned toward her, and Jaina strafed across its surface, severing one of the planar arrays and striking the viewports in the c.o.c.kpit. The third ship went down-but by now the remaining three Imperials had spun around and were headed straight toward her.
Jaina blinked as fiery bolts from their laser cannons shot past her. She put her TIE fighter into a spin. Now using the Force to antic.i.p.ate the incoming weapons fire, just as her uncle Luke had used his lightsaber to deflect blaster bolts, she spun and turned and banked, then began to fly away at her fighter"s top speed.
But the other three Imperial ships came bowling after her, releasing a constant volley of laser fire, ignoring targets below now that they had acquired a single target... a traitor in their midst.
Jaina ducked and dodged, no longer enjoying the thrill of flight. She had a bad feeling about her impulsive attack. She streaked over the jungle, the three TIE fighters hot on her tail.
THE DIM FOREST floor near the Great Temple was familiar ground for Luke Skywalker and most of his Jedi trainees. Even with a battle of light and dark raging around him-or perhaps because of the battle-he found it soothing to be out in the wilds. The jungle itself was rich with life, and therefore rich in the Force that bound all life together.
Reaching down to confirm that his lightsaber was securer attached to his belt next to his comlink, Luke drew on the Force. He let it flow through him, let it show him the skirmishes all around him.
Alert to the emotions of his students, Luke reached out to bolster flagging confidence in one trainee, to warn another against an unexpected attack, to send encouragement to yet another who was growing tired.
An energy bolt from a TIE fighter sliced through the trees close by and set fire to the underbrush, forcing Luke to retreat behind a thicket to avoid choking fumes from the burning vegetation.
With his mind he searched for the center of the battle, the place where he could do the most good. Decades ago, when the Death Star had loomed over the jungle moon, his mission had been clear. The battle station"s superlaser could turn an entire planet to rubble. Luke had had no doubt in his mind that the Empire"s most powerful weapon must be destroyed. And with the Force to guide him, he had succeeded.
But today"s battle was different-it nact no focus. This time he had no superweapon to disable. The Jedi academy"s long-range transmissions had been jammed, the defensive shields sabotaged. With Artoo-Detoo and the Shadow Chaser trapped in the Great Temple"s hangar bay, Luke had no way of reaching orbit to fight the Shadow Academy directly.
The ground a.s.sault itself was directed from the giant battle platform that hovered over the treetops a few kilometers away, but Luke sensed that the military component of the attack was mere hara.s.sment.
TIE fighters had made direct attacks on the Great Temple-and yet ground forces and Dark Jedi had been sent to fight on a nearly even footing against Luke"s students.
With a different strategy, the Shadow Academy"s victory would have been far easier-it almost seemed as if Brakiss wanted to do it the hard way.
Luke knew that must be the answer.
A loud incoming message signal on his comlink startled him. Students at the Yavin academy rarely carried comlinks, but the Jedi Master kept one at his side during times of turmoil so that he could be reached more easily. Even though the Shadow Academy had jammed long-range transmissions, local signals from Artoo could still get through.
Luke switched on the comlink. "Sit tight, Artoo. We"ll be able to get you when the fighting"s over." Before he could say more, a man"s voice blared from the tiny speaker.
"-essage for Luke Skywalker. Repeat: this is a message for Luke Skywalker. If anyone can hear me, respond immediately."
Luke stared at the small device before replying, "Who is this?" But before he heard the answer, his Jedi senses told him the man"s ident.i.ty.
"You can call me Master Brakiss," the voice said. "Tell your teacher that I"m transmitting on all channels. He will want to speak to me."
"This is Luke Skywalker," he said. "If you have a message, Brakiss, you can give it directly to me." Luke"s heart knocked painfully against his rib cage, though from surprise rather than fear.
A cultured laugh came over the comlink.
"Well, my old teacher... the man I once called Master. This is a pleasure."
"What do you want, Brakiss?" Luke asked.
"A meeting," the smooth voice replied.
"Just the two of us. On neutral ground. As equals. We didn"t have a chance to finish our... conversation when you came to my Shadow Academy to rescue your Jedi brats."
Luke paused to consider. A meeting with Brakiss? Maybe this was the answer to the problem he had been trying to solve. After all, who was more central to this battle than the leader of the Shadow Academy himself?
If Luke could reason with Brakiss, turn him away from the dark side, this battle could be won before too many lives were lost.
"Where, Brakiss? What neutral territory do you propose?"
"I think both your academy and mine are out of the question right now."
"Agreed."
"Away from the fighting, then. Across the river in the Temple of the Blue Leaf Cl.u.s.ter.