"No doubt about it," the comm officer said, standing up and making way for her at the console. "The proprietary encryption is layered," he said.
"I was only able to decode the first level that addressed it to Lady Aryn Dro Thul."
Aryn did not allow her hands to shake as she deftly input her authorization to decode the message. It was trilevel-encrypted, which meant that it must be from either her son or her husband. Not even Boman"s brother Tyko Thul possessed authorization for the third level of encryption. The comm officer discreetly activated his console "s privacy field. Aryn barely noticed when the soundproof and light-scattering security field formed around her.
Realizing that this message might contain news she did not wish to hear, she cued it up to play immediately. Her husband"s voice was accompanied by a sphere of light that pulsated with a variety of ever-changing colors and an audible pattern of harmonics from which Aryn"s musically attuned ears gleaned more information than Boman"s words could possibly have expressed in so short a time.
"My dearest wife. I greatly regret that my work here is not finished and I cannot return to you. I received two shipments that will delay my return."
The sphere of light pulsated with two colors side by side, representing Bornan and Raynar together. The vividness of the hues meant that they were both in good health. Around the edges, bright splashes of color indicated the presence of other friends. At the same time, the music told her through a series of harmonizing tones that her husband and son were happy-but the music skipped a beat or two, then paused on an open chord that symbolized something missing from that happiness: her presence.
"There is no urgency to this message. I am completely alone and need no help,"
Boman"s voice went on. Pastel colors wove through the sphere of light, intertwining and then reversing their colors. So, Aryn thought as she recognized the code, the exact opposite is true. Someone was already there helping, but Raynar and Boman needed reinforcements. Urgently. An undulating low tone warned of danger and the possibility of traitors around her.
"You are a strong-willed woman, my love, and I cannot tell you what to do-but I believe you know what I ask."
Squiggles of alternating color indicating friends and enemies alike began at the outer edges of the sphere and rippled inward to converge on a single point. It meant that he needed her to bring help to a single location, and that the enemy might already be on its way. The music became a precise arpeggio, and in her mind each individual note became distinct, relaying to her a series of numbers. Coordinates-a map that would take her to her husband.
"Until I see you again, remember that I love you," Boman ended.
Light-swirls of sincerity and regret surrounded a bright core of love. A musical note of tenderness rang out a single time. And suddenly the message was gone-music, lights, words... everything. Aryn Dro Thul did not waste time replaying the entire message. She fixed the notes of the arpeggio firmly in her mind, deleted the message, and switched off the privacy field. Coming to a swift decision, she stood and nodded thanks to her comm officer. Then she swept out of the room and headed toward the Imperial Palace. She had to see Leia Organa Solo.
"So you believe your husband found the source of the plague, and he needs our help immediately?" Leia said, leaning forward to study Aryn Dro Thul"s serious expression.
The two women sat together in the Chief of State"s private office.
Aryn nodded.
"From the way his message was formatted I would guess he already has several people helping him in addition to our son-your children perhaps?"
Leia nodded.
"It sounds like they all found each other."
"He indicated that they need even more help," Aryn said. "But Boman seemed to be concerned about spies and traitors."
Leia smiled grimly.
"Don"t worry. We"ll send them some trustworthy reinforcements, if I have to hand-pick every member of the team myself. And my husband, General Solo, will lead the mission personally."
THE EMPEROR"S OLD weapons depot was a labyrinth of pressurized domes, tunnels, and sealed chambers where unimaginable mechanisms of death lay stored. Since the isolated asteroid station had, as far as they knew, no large docks or entrance points, the Rock Dragon and the Lightning Rod were forced to dock against separate domes. The cargo hatches sealed against the airlocks, and the seven companions gathered inside the silent, abandoned station. Low rock ceilings and tunnels plated with metal made the confined chambers feel like a prison. Jacen looked all around, sniffing the air, which was none too fresh. Other than the scavenger Fonterrat and Boman Thul, he guessed that no one had set foot here for decades.
Now Thul looked sickened.
"I wish Fonterrat had never stumbled on this place."
Raynar stood close to his father.
"I wish the Emperor had never even thought of making this asteroid into a weapons storehouse."
The older man looked down at him with a sympathetic smile.
"Well, what are we gonna do about it?" Jaina asked. Zekk stood next to her, his face grim.
"We"ll destroy the depot, of course. Isn"t that why we"re here? Nolaa Tarkona"s probably on her way already."
"First, we must find where the plague itself is stored," Tenel Ka said.
"Then we can neutralize it."
Jacen nodded vigorously to show that he agreed with the warrior girl. But then, he usually did. Bornan Thul took a step forward, placing himself in the lead.
"Follow me. I found it before, but I couldn"t get inside." He swallowed hard. "At the time, there didn"t seem much chance Nolaa Tarkona would ever get here. I thought there might be another solution."
"We"re here to help you this time," Raynar said consolingly. "We can solve this problem if we work together."
Squaring his shoulders with determination, he marched beside his father through the enclosed corridors. The artificial gravity generators still functioned on the tiny rock in s.p.a.ce. The companions pa.s.sed through a central complex where curved transparisteel domes overhead showed a sprawling view of an endless starfield, studded with the occasional floating mountains of asteroids in s.p.a.ce around them. At one time, Jacen knew, Star Destroyers had come here to stock up on weapons. They carried stormtroopers and munitions to oppressed worlds so that the Empire could squeeze its iron fist even tighter. Here in this station, Evir Derricote had tested and stored his most deadly creations, diseases against which no blaster could defend. Derricote had released the Krytos plague on Coruscant just after the capital world had fallen to the Rebels. Because the disease struck only nonhumans, its spread caused a great deal of friction among the member races in the Rebel Alliance.
Now, in a frightening turnabout, it seemed the opposite was about to happen. In order to get her revenge against humans, Nolaa Tarkona wanted to release the ultimate plague-a disease even the Emperor had considered too terrible to use-so she could strike down all of humanity. But the young Jedi Knights would never let that happen. Jacen picked up his pace.
After hesitating at an intersection of corridors, where half-open bulkheads seemed ready to crash down on them, Bornan Thul said, "This way to the central chamber."
He led them through another dome to a large blast-shielded airlock that blocked their way. Though the door was closed, the controls were not pa.s.sworded. Boman Thul worked the keys easily, sliding the long-silent airlock door open. The next corridor held more secure airtight interlocks. Thul operated door after door, until finally they entered a central hub, the core of the asteroid depot.
"This is the chamber of horrors," he said.
Jacen hovered near Tenel Ka"s shoulder, gasping in awe as he stared through broad panels of transparisteel that looked down into the main room. Raynar remained beside Bornan Thul. Zekk and Jaina stood next to each other, while Lowie, taller than the rest, peered over their heads.
Behind the sealed windows, Jacen saw a vast room where row after row of tanks and cylinders stretched to the far side of the chamber: small canisters, large tubes, vats, gurgling spheres. Each was filled with bubbling, evil-looking liquid. Refrigeration racks full of tiny vials and flasks covered one entire wall, floor to ceiling. Every last container held a colorful mixture that was deadly to one species or another.
Jacen could hardly believe his eyes.
"There"s enough contamination in there to wipe out every living creature in the galaxy!"
Lowie growled in agreement.
Em Teedee chirped, "I do believe you"re right, Master Jacen. I could make a reasonably precise estimate, if you like. Given the rate at which the human plague organism spread on Gammalin, and a.s.suming each of the plagues could as easily be pa.s.sed from one member of a targeted life-form to another, I should venture to guess that-"
"We understand, Em Teedee," Jaina cut him off, but she could not tear her eyes away from the transparisteel window. "We understand all too well."
Doors marked with an ominous skull and DNA symbol to denote the deadly virus gave access to the chamber. The two-way intercom system would have allowed for communication between Imperial workers inside the sealed chamber and stormtrooper guards on the outside. But Boman Thul did not go near the entry.
"We shouldn"t risk setting foot inside just yet," he said. "If any one of us were exposed to that human plague... we could all die before we have a chance to destroy anything."
Zekk frowned.
"No. We didn"t come here to die. Any ideas on how to demolish the storehouse? The place looks pretty secure. Could we use blasters to break all of the cylinders?"
Boman Thul shook his head.
"No, that would merely spread the plague. We"ll have to expose it to s.p.a.ce."
"To accomplish that, we must turn this entire asteroid to dust," Tenel Ka said.
"Hey, sounds reasonable to me," Jacen said.
"Shouldn"t we get started before Nolaa Tarkona arrives?"
"We don"t know how much of a head start we have on her," Raynar pointed out. "We"ve got to hurry."
"Well, what are we waiting for?" Jaina said. "Any suggestions?"
Borran Thul raised his eyebrows.
"This is a weapons depot. The Emperor stored munitions here as well as biological weapons. The plague canisters are in this central chamber, but I"m fairly certain that some of the other bunker rooms contain thermal detonators, explosives, s.p.a.ce mines, heavy demolitions equipment."
"Yeah... we could use stuff like that," Jaina said with a twinkle in her eye.
Jacen let out a low whistle. "Sounds just like what we saw Nolaa Tarkona hiding in the tunnels of Ryloth."
Tenel Ka gave him the faintest of smiles. "Those stockpiles produced rather gratifying explosions."
Jacen looked at her and flashed a grin, remembering how they had escaped from the ryll mines.
"If we wipe out every speck of this plague," Raynar said, "Nolaa won"t pose much of a gallactic threat anymore."
Borran Thul strode to a side doorway, unsealed it, and led the way to a tangential corridor inside the asteroid. Jacen paused for one long moment, feeling a shiver down his spine as he looked at all the cylinders filled with the deadly plague, then turned to hurry after his companions.
Thul took them to where a heavy, blaster-shielded door blocked his way.
"I think this is one of the main weapons vaults," he said. "All the munitions should be in there, but..." His shoulders slumped.
"Unfortunately this one has security coding. I was never able to get in to see if I was correct."
Tenel Ka s.n.a.t.c.hed at her lightsaber handle and flicked on the turquoise energy blade.
"A Jedi Knight could find a way in."
"Excuse me," Em Teedee said quickly, "but perhaps I could manage the code? I have had some experience with Imperial systems."
Jacen paused, his hand on his lightsaber handle.
"Let him try, Tenel Ka. We can always use our lightsabers later."
The warrior girl agreed.
"I will save my weapon for the real battle."
Jaina hooked up the leads in Em Teedee"s case to the door control systems. The little droid"s golden optical sensors glowed and pulsed as his computer brain worked through the encryption levels. With a thunk and a hum, the locks unsealed themselves and the door slid open.
"Quite masterful, if I do say so myself," Em Teedee stated, sounding insufferably pleased with himself. The young Jedi Knights drew together.
Bornan Thul and Zekk moved closer as they gazed into a room filled with explosives, detonation packs, sonic grenades, and every form of compact destruction Jacen had ever heard of. The shelves of demolition equipment seemed to go on and on.
"I think that"ll be quite enough firepower," Zekk said, crossing his wiry arms over his chest. Tenel Ka nodded and whispered, "This is a fact."
WHEN NOLAA TARKONA"S armada arrived at the plague storehouse, the Twi"lek leader could barely contain her excitement. She gripped the bridge rail and leaned forward as the Wookiee woman Raabakyysh guided the flagship into orbit high above the small asteroid. Nolaa"s single head-tail thrashed from side to side, while she observed the expressions of her crew through the optical sensors in the stump of her other head-tail. She saw antic.i.p.ation, eagerness for battle, and a bloodthirsty desire for vengeance upon the cursed humans.
The asteroid depot itself was small and nondescript, studded with pressurized domes. Slash marks showed where excavation had shaped the giant rock. The place looked abandoned, though the numerous domes and airlocks and hollow bays offered plenty of hiding places for small ships.
She had feared she might encounter an entire guardian fleet of New Republic warships-but she had beat them all. She had arrived first.
"The human-killing virus is down there," she said. "It is the only weapon we need for our ultimate victory. Raaba, you will command my armada while I go down personally to make sure we get everything we need. Corrsk, Rullak, come with me. Bring guards... and plenty of weapons. I"m not in the mood for further delays."
Nolaa spun about as Raaba proudly took her seat in the flagship"s command chair.
The Diversity Alliance guards suited up, belted blasters to their waists, and prepared to go down to secure the Emperor"s plague. After docking to an isolated dome at the pole of the asteroid, Diversity Alliance guards stormed out of their ships. They marched through mazes of interconnected corridors, weapons raised and ready to shoot anything that moved. Nolaa fervently hoped her soldiers wouldn"t blast any of the plague cylinders in their enthusiasm. She didn"t want to waste the precious deadly substance. She walked with brisk footsteps, her dark robe swirling, her body armor confining but protective. This place stank of humans. It had been built by the human Emperor, used by human scientists, guarded by human stormtroopers. The twisted biologist Evir Derricote had worked here-also a human.
But in a way he hadn"t been so terrible.... Derricote had, after all, devised the means for bringing about the extinction of his own race.
"Spread out," Nolaa said sharply. "This is a small asteroid. It shouldn"t take long to find what we need."
Directing Rullak and Corrsk each to take a team of guards, she herself took charge of the third group.
"And remember, this was a munitions storehouse." She turned back with a smile, flashing teeth that had been filed to delicate points. "Keep an eye out for anything else we might find useful to our cause."
They split up, each choosing a different hallway. As Nolaa"s group pa.s.sed through pressurized doors, she saw how foolish the Imperials had been for not installing better security or identification locks. It made her task almost too easy. She and her soldiers marched down the stone-floored corridors, casting a critical eye at the metal walls, the interlock doors, the decades-old technological enhancements. Someone with less finely attuned senses might have thought this place similar to the comfortable Twi"lek tunnels on Ryloth-but to Nolaa Tarkona it had an entirely different feel. This had been made by humans, dug out as a pit in which to store weapons, not a civilized place for a species to grow and expand.
The soldiers fell into step with her; the pounding of their hard boots echoed in the chill, sluggish air. They explored each alcove and side pa.s.sage under the pressurized domes, searching for the place Fonterrat had described-the chamber that contained the plague. It held the future of the Diversity Alliance, and the death of the human race. They came to a series of small cells. Each had been sealed and marked as contaminated and hazardous.
Curious, Nolaa peered through the thick transparisteel windows at what seemed to be secure pens, each with a cot and a refresher unit but few amenities. Inside lay the desiccated, plague-ridden corpses of various aliens. She saw the remains of a Quarren, a Wookiee, a Twi" lek, and many other species that were unidentifiable because of the advanced decomposition. Test specimens for other genetically engineered diseases, targeted at specific alien species. Here, before her eyes, was clear-cut evidence of the horror Evir Derricote had intended to inflict upon nonhuman species.
Any glimmer of pity that might have remained in her for all humans who were about to die faded in an instant. Nolaa Tarkona could not wait until the murderous species was eradicated entirely.
"Pick up the pace," she said. "Let"s find that plague and get out of here. The Diversity Alliance has important work to do."
On the flagship, Raaba growled orders, insuring that the other ships in the Diversity Alliance armada into line. The asteroid field was spa.r.s.e but still held hazards for clumsy navigators or inexperienced pilots.
Raaba wanted their cl.u.s.ter of ships to act like a military fleet, to Pull together like a well-trained force. Att.i.tude was essential. They cruised above the weapons depot, and she growled for two outlying vessels to tighten up the formation. While Nolaa Tarkona was on the asteroid, Raaba intended to keep the armada alert. They had no reason to antic.i.p.ate any resistance, of course-or that New Republic forces might come after them-but Raaba would not be taken by surprise.
Lowbacca and Sirra had already done that to her.... Leaning back in her command chair, Raaba scanned the asteroid below. She used the ship"s high-resolution sensors to study the pockmarked surface, a.n.a.lyzing the structural refinements Imperial engineers had added: the blister domes and bunker outcroppings, the fuel station, the numerous small docking ports. Then, as she focused in on what seemed to be an anomaly, she sat up with a growl and stared at the image before her eyes, unable to believe what she saw.
In an instant she recognized two small craft nearly hidden in the rocky shadows beside the domes: the Rock Dragon and Zekk"s ship, the Lightning Rod. She leaped up from her command chair with a startled roar.
The young Jedi Knights were already here! They had arrived at the weapons depot before the Diversity Alliance.
Raaba toggled the communications system, sending a tight-beam transmission directly to Nolaa Tarkona. She had to warn her leader that she might be walking into a trap.