About the Book
About the Author
Also by Christie Golden
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
The Star Wars Novels Timeline
Dramatis Personae
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Copyright
Only one thing could unite the forces of Jedi and Sith: an enemy far deadlier than both.
What began as a quest for truth has become a struggle for survival for Luke Skywalker and his son, Ben. They have used the secrets of the Mind Walkers to speak with the spirits of the fallen, risking their lives in the process. They have faced a team of Sith assassins and beaten the odds to destroy them. And now the death squad’s sole survivor, Sith apprentice Vestara Khai, has summoned an entire fleet of Sith frigates to engage the embattled father and son. But the dark warriors come bearing a surprising proposition that will bring Jedi and Sith together in an unprecedented alliance against an adversary more ancient and alien than they can imagine. For in the treacherous web of black holes that is the Maw, the Skywalkers and their Sith allies will have to fight an unimaginable evil, and Luke will be rocked by a staggering truth.
Christie Golden is the award-winning author of 28 novels and over a dozen short stories in the fields of fantasy, science fiction, and horror. Her media tie-in works include launching the Ravenloft line in 1991 with Vampire of the Mists, over a dozen Star Trek novels, and the Warcraft novel Lord of the Clans. Her website is www.christiegolden.com.
Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi: Omen
Ravenloft: Vampire of the Mists
Ravenloft: The Enemy Within
Star Trek Voyager: The Murdered Sun
Instrument of Fate
King’s Man and Thief
Star Trek Voyager: Marooned
Invasion America
Star Trek Voyager: Seven of Nine
Invasion America: On the Run
Star Trek The Next Generation: The First Virtue (with Michael Jan Friedman)
A.D. 999 (as Jadrien Bell)
Star Trek Voyager: The Dark Matters Trilogy, Book 1: Cloak and Dagger
Star Trek Voyager: The Dark Matters Trilogy, Book 2: Ghost Dance
Star Trek Voyager: The Dark Matters Trilogy, Book 3: Shadow of Heaven
Star Trek Voyager: Endgame (with Diane Carey)
Warcraft: Lord of the Clans
Star Trek Voyager: Gateways—What Lay Beyond
Star Trek Voyager: No Man’s Land
Star Trek: The Last Roundup
Star Trek Voyager: Homecoming
Star Trek Voyager: The Farther Shore
On Fire’s Wings
Star Trek Voyager: Spirit Walk, Book 1: Old Wounds
Star Trek Voyager: Spirit Walk, Book 2: Enemy of My Enemy
In Stone’s Clasp
Warcraft: Rise of the Horde
StarCraft: The Dark Templar Series, Book 1: Firstborn
StarCraft: The Dark Templar Series, Book 2: Shadow Hunters
Under Sea’s Shadow (eBook format only)
Warcraft: Beyond the Dark Portal (with Aaron Rosenberg)
Warcraft: Arthas: Rise of the Lich King
This book is dedicated to Jeffrey R. Kirby,
for reasons as numberless as the stars
This book did not come to be in a vacuum. The team of people contributing to this series is an outstanding collection of individuals who continue to impress me with their professionalism, talent, and good humor. Thanks must go to Shelly Shapiro, my editor, and her counterpart at Lucas Licensing Ltd., Sue Rostoni, who continue to be enthusiastic supporters of my writing. More gratitude to Leland Chee and Pablo Hidalgo, who are always so quick and helpful with any questions that arise (and special thanks to Pablo for letting me play on Klatooine, which he created). Appreciation and affection go to my two fellow authors: Aaron Allston is an inspiration in his ability to face adversity and maintain humor and good cheer, and Troy Denning has been positively Yodaesque in his advice and support. I’d be happy to buy all of you a drink at the cantina anytime. To the readers who have taken the time to write and tell me how much you enjoyed Omen, I am deeply appreciative and hope you continue to enjoy the series and my contributions to it. And again, as always to George Lucas, for giving us all a galaxy far, far away.
Allana Solo; child (human female)
Ben Skywalker; Jedi Knight (human male)
Han Solo; captain, Millennium Falcon (human male)
Gavar Khai; Sith Saber (human male)
Jagged Fel; Head of State, Galactic Empire (human male)
Jaina Solo; Jedi Knight (human female)
Lando Calrissian; businessman (human male)
Leia Organa Solo; Jedi Knight (human female)
Luke Skywalker; Jedi Grand Master (human male)
Maadhi Vaandt; reporter (Devaronian female)
Natasi Daala; Galactic Alliance Chief of State (human female)
Sarasu Taalon; Sith High Lord (Keshiri male)
Tahiri Veila; former Jedi Knight (human female)
Vestara Khai; Sith apprentice (human female)
Wynn Dorvan; assistant to Admiral Daala (human male)
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.…
BEN WONDERED IF he’d be his father’s age before things started going right for him on any basis other than what appeared to be happy accidents.
Then he wondered if he’d be older than his dad.
True, he’d had a couple of uneventful years after the war. But then his father got arrested and exiled for a decade. Jedi who had spent formative years on Shelter in the Maw—and yes, Ben was among that number, how reassuring was that little fact—started going crazy. Ben and Luke had learned about some creepy powerful being with dark slithery mental tendrils of need who was probably responsible for the crazy Jedi, and had been going to pay her a visit inside the Maw when they abducted a Sith. One that was definitely easy on the eyes, but who was nonetheless a Sith, from a whole planetload of them, no less. A Sith who was still with them right now, standing and smirking at them while nearly a dozen frigates crammed with her pals surrounded them.
Yeah. He would definitely be older than his dad.
Luke had followed the instructions given by the unnamed, unseen Sith commander of the Black Wave, placing the Shadow in a parking orbit around Dathomir. There was no other choice, not with eleven ChaseMaster frigates ready to open fire.
“A wise decision,” Vestara said. “I’m fond of my own life, so I’m glad you’re cooperating, but if you had attempted to flee they most certainly would have destroyed you.”
Luke eyed her thoughtfully. Clearly, he wasn’t so sure.
“So,” Ben continued, “what are they going to do with us? Are we going to be the main attraction at some kind of Sith ritual party?”
“I’ve no idea,” Vestara said. She might be lying through her teeth. She might be telling the truth. Ben simply couldn’t be sure.
“Your cooperation is appreciated, Master Skywalker,” came the voice that had first hailed them. Ben and Luke exchanged puzzled glances. Of course, Vestara had told them who was holding her captive, but why the courtesy and respectful title?
“I am High Lord Sarasu Taalon, commander of this force,” the voice continued. “Your reputation precedes you. We have studied you, and your son, a great deal.”
“I wish I could say the same,” Luke said. “I know nothing about you and your people, High Lord Taalon.”
“No, you don’t. But I am prepared for that to change … somewhat. Your vessel carries a Z-95 Head-hunter.”
“It does,” Luke said. “I presume you’re about to ask me to come over to your flagship and chat over a nice glass of something.”
“You and Vestara, yes,” Taalon said. “You will have to turn her back over to us, of course. But there is no reason we can’t be civilized about this.”
“No thanks,” Luke said. “Anything you have to say to me can be said at a distance. Vestara isn’t the worst companion I’ve ever traveled with. I think I’ll let her stay here with us for a while longer.”
Ben looked again at the Sith girl. His father was right. She wasn’t the worst companion he’d ever traveled with.
“Let us revisit that subject in a moment,” came Taalon’s reply. “As I’m sure you know by now, Apprentice Vestara Khai has done a commendable job of keeping us informed of what has transpired. We are aware that you are having … difficulty with certain Jedi who were fostered inside the Maw. We believe this is due to the intervention of a being known to us as Abeloth, whom Vestara encountered. Many of our own apprentices are displaying the same symptoms as your younger Jedi.”
“Your younger Sith were in the Maw as well?”
“No. But such identical displays of aberrant behavior cannot be attributed to anything else.”
Ben was skeptical. But there was so much they didn’t know yet. His father’s blue eyes met his and he shrugged slightly. It was possible.
“We are many. You are only three,” Taalon continued. The third to whom he referred was Dyon Stad, a Force-sensitive human who had joined Ben and Luke on Dathomir and was currently aboard his own Suieb Soro yacht. “We have a common cause.”
“Are—are you proposing a formal alliance?” Luke was so surprised he didn’t even bother to hide it. Ben, too, literally gaped for a moment. Vestara seemed more shocked than any of them, judging by her expression and her feeling in the Force.
“Precisely.”
Luke started to laugh. “I’m sorry, but that doesn’t sound like a very Sith thing to say.”
The voice was cold when Taalon spoke again. “This creature, this … Abeloth … has the audacity to reach out and harm our apprentices. Our tyros. To toy with the Tribe—the Sith. The insult cannot be borne. It will not be borne. We are going into the Maw and teach her a lesson.”
Ben glanced at his father. “That, however, is a very Sith thing to say.”
Luke nodded. To Taalon, he said, “It may be that we do not need to teach her a lesson, as it were. We may simply need to find out why she is doing this.”
“And ask her nicely to please stop?”
Ben thought Han Solo could learn a thing or two from this Sith about infusing one’s voice with sarcasm.
“You just asked me nicely to help you out. Clearly you’re capable of good manners,” Luke replied, unruffled. “If it accomplishes the goal with fewer or perhaps no casualties, how is that not the best solution?”
There was silence. “It is possible she may not be amenable to … polite conversation. What then, Master Skywalker?”
“I will do whatever is necessary to free the ill Jedi from her control,” Luke said. “I assure you of that.” His voice was not harsh, but there was a tone in it Ben recognized. The deed was almost as good as done when Luke Skywalker spoke like that.
“You agree, then?” Taalon asked.
Luke didn’t answer at once. Ben knew what he was struggling with. And he was surprised that it was even a struggle for the Grand Master. Luke was a Jedi. These were Sith. There couldn’t possibly be an alliance. Everyone would constantly be watching their own backs.
But then again … He glanced at Vestara. She came from an entire culture of Sith. They couldn’t be backstabbing one another constantly—they’d have become extinct long ago. Somehow this flavor of Sith had learned how to cooperate. Vestara had proved it was possible. She had worked with Ben and his father before, on Dathomir, and that cooperation had saved Luke Skywalker’s life.
“We do have a common goal,” Luke said at last. “It would be better to work toward it together rather than getting in each other’s way. But don’t think that I will not be expecting treachery at every turn. There are fewer enmities more ancient than that of Sith and Jedi.”
A sigh. “This thing we both fight might be older than that,” Taalon said. “Well, I did not expect this to be a particularly comradely union. Very well. You deliver Vestara Khai. Together, in an alliance not seen since this galaxy was new, Sith and Jedi will confront and defeat their mutual foe—one way or the other. And after that … well, let us see where we stand then, shall we?”
“Vestara stays here.”
The Sith girl froze. There was a long silence.
“I cannot permit that.”
“Then we have no alliance.” Another long silence.
“She has information we require. She comes with us, or there is no deal,” Taalon said.
“Information about how to reach and confront our mutual foe?” Luke said, turning Taalon’s own flowery words back on him. “That, I do not object to permitting her to share. That was the information you were talking about, wasn’t it?”
“She will come to no harm while entrusted in your … care,” said Taalon. “None. Or we will attack and destroy you down to your marrow and obliterate your very cells.”
“Provided you keep your bargain, she’s perfectly safe. Jedi aren’t in the habit of torturing children.”
Vestara frowned at being referred to as a child. Ben started to smile a little, despite the situation, then realized that she was the same age as he was. He shot his dad a disappointed glance.
“Then I believe we have an agreement,” Taalon said.
“Not just yet. We need to decide who is going to be in charge of this alliance first.”
“I would suggest we command as a pair, you and I,” Taalon said. “No Sith will take orders solely from a Jedi. And I am sure you would bridle at being told what to do by a Sith High Lord.”
“I would indeed. And I would suggest we begin this joint command by sharing information. You first.”
“Ah, but Master Skywalker, you have our source of information right there with you. Start with her. We will be prepared to depart within a half hour.”
“So will we. I’ll be in touch. Jade Shadow out.”
“Dad,” Ben said, the second the communication was terminated. “You just agreed to help the Sith.”
Luke shook his head. “No, son. I agreed to let the Sith help us.”
Ben regarded him, incredulity mixed with curiosity. “You trust them to keep their word?”
“I trust them to do what is best for them. And as long as what is best for them is best for us, then we’ll be fine.”
“And when it’s not?”
“Like Taalon said … we’ll see where we stand then. I’m prepared for that. There are two old sayings, Ben: ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend’ and ‘Keep your friends close, and your enemies closer.’”
Luke pointedly turned to Vestara, who stood straight with her hands clasped behind her back. “Now,” he said, “High Lord Taalon assures me you know everything they do.”
She lifted a small information chip. “Most of it’s here,” she said.
“And what’s not there?” Luke asked.
Vestara smiled slightly and tapped her temple. “And this is where it will stay until it is necessary. We have a card game on my world. It is called Mahaa’i Shuur, which means Ultimate Success in the tongue of the natives. The rules are complicated, but the goal is simple. The winner is the one who never, ever has to play his last card.”
Luke Skywalker watched Vestara Khai the way, long ago, a bartender named Wuher had watched him at the Mos Eisley cantina—coldly, expecting the unexpected, and looking for an excuse to cease being civil. Her back was to him, hands on her hips, her long brown hair hanging loose. She was looking out over the gathering of Sith vessels that were starting to fall into formation in preparation for departure, and he didn’t have to sense her in the Force to make a damn good guess as to what she might be thinking. As soon as he had the thought Luke amended it.
She was Sith. So were they. In Luke’s mind, that automatically meant they could not be trusted. Even if they were sincere in this desire to unite forces and approach the Maw with a lot more firepower than the Jade Shadow would have mustered alone, there had to be a trick, or a trap. They were Sith. Deception was a keystone of their culture.
Vestara Khai was Sith. But she was also a girl who seemed to have at least a few virtues along with her vices, something Luke found unexpected and disconcerting. No doubt she was contemplating treachery. But he was willing to admit that she also might just be missing her people. A soft sigh escaped her, as if confirming his thoughts.
He had assigned Ben the job of being the first to read through the information Vestara had given them, thinking the task would distract his son from the admittedly attractive female his own age who was going to be living in such close quarters with them. He was not worried for Ben’s state of mind regarding the Force. Ben had been through more things in his short life than most beings had in century-long ones. He wasn’t likely to be tempted by offers of power or greatness, the usual tools those who tried to corrupt Jedi liked to employ.
But it was, Luke realized, entirely possible that Ben might get a little confused now and then. Vestara was strikingly attractive, and had presumably been through things comparable to what Ben had undergone. And she was extremely, in fact exceptionally, strong in the Force. It was a combination that might make any father at least a little anxious for his Jedi son’s well-being.
The Shadow was quiet, the air heavy with all the “not talking” that was taking place. The only sound was Vestara’s single, almost inaudible sigh and the occasional sounds of Ben shifting position in his chair as he read and occasionally cross-referenced data.
The sudden noise alerting them to an incoming message therefore sounded especially loud. No one actually jumped, but a sense of surprise rippled through them all. Luke glanced at the screen and frowned slightly. Three words flashed.
VESTARA KHAI. PERSONAL.
As far as Luke was concerned, they might as well have been EMERGENCY INCOMING ATTACK.
“Who’s it from, Dad?”
“I don’t know. But it’s for our guest. Do you know who might want to contact you, Vestara?”
Vestara actually looked surprised. Luke felt the faintest flicker of worry, like an echo of a whisper, in the Force. “I’ve no idea,” and it sounded genuine. “Is there a place where I can—”
“I can’t let you receive a private message, especially from someone who won’t identify him- or herself,” Luke said matter-of-factly.
Vestara nodded. “Of course not. If I were in your position, I would take similar precautions.”
Luke flipped a switch. “This is the Jade Shadow to the anonymous sender of the previous message directed at Vestara Khai. You must understand I cannot permit her to receive a private missive.”
There was a long silence. Luke could feel young ears straining. Then another message appeared, addressed to LUKE SKYWALKER.
THE MESSAGE MAY BE PUBLICLY VIEWED.
“Well, a reasonable Sith, what next,” Luke muttered, and touched another button on the console.
A small holographic figure took shape. It was a human male, wearing the traditional Sith black robes. A lightsaber of antique-looking design was clipped to his belt. His long dark hair was pulled up in a topknot. His face was chiseled and handsome.
Vestara’s startled gasp revealed her emotions, but the Force did so even more prominently. There was a rush of warm, affectionate feelings, quickly clamped down, as if a lid had been put on a pot. Luke’s eyes flickered to the girl, then back to the hologram. Both images appeared to be trying hard not to smile, although Vestara often looked as though she were smiling when she wasn’t due to the little scar on her mouth.
“Daughter. You are well.”
Luke’s eyes widened. Daughter?
Vestara bowed. “Father. I am. It is good to see you. I am pleased that you were among those selected for the honor of this mission.”
“You, it would seem, have already brought honor to the Tribe,” the elder Khai said. “I understand you are the sole survivor of the … initial exploratory team.”
“Thank you, Father. I have always striven to elevate the standing of our household.”
“Master Skywalker,” Khai said. “I understand that you are graciously providing hospitality to my daughter.”
“That’s … a word for it,” Luke said.
“And that High Lord Taalon has agreed that you may continue to provide hospitality. Despite a father’s wishes to the contrary.”
“Let’s face it,” Luke said. “Sith and Jedi don’t exactly mesh well. Put us together and we’re about as volatile as Tibanna gas. If you were tentatively allied with eleven Jedi vessels, and my son were aboard your ship—well, I think you’d like to keep him there for a while.”
Khai considered this for a moment, then nodded slowly. “Very well, your point is taken, and it is a shrewd one. You have promised she will come to no harm. I am sure that if Luke Skywalker gives his word, then every hair on Vestara’s head will be safe,” said Khai. His voice was melodic and rich and beautiful, just like the voice of every member of this lost Tribe they’d encountered so far.
“It seems we have nothing more to discuss then,” Luke said. “Say your farewells and—”
“Dad?”
Luke frowned a little, turning to Ben. “Yes?”
Ben jerked his head a little in the hologram’s direction, and Luke muted the sound. “I know we can’t just turn her over to them,” Ben said, glancing over his shoulder at Vestara, who had been silent as the grave during the debate between the two parents. “But what harm can there be in letting them talk for just a few minutes?”
“A lot,” Luke said. “You know that.” Neither of them had ever bothered to hide their suspicions of Vestara, and Luke did not attempt to do so now.
“But … you said it yourself, what if it were me?” Ben’s blue eyes were intense. “What if this situation were reversed, and Vestara’s dad was keeping a tight grip on me? A hologram is nice and everything, but you know it doesn’t beat actually being with someone. And it’s clear they really miss each other.”
That much was true. “A private conversation would enable her to relay anything she’s learned from us,” Luke reminded him.
Ben rolled his eyes in exasperation. “Dad, let’s face facts here—she already has. Otherwise how would the Sith know about the Jedi going crazy?”
Luke glanced at Vestara. He was not expecting a sheepish grin and a nod—even if their bluff was called, Sith were not likely to simply docilely show their hands—but neither did she make an earnest effort to contradict Ben. She was a smart kid.
He didn’t reply to Ben, but turned around to the console and unmuted the channel. “Since I am prepared to admit that even nexu are fond of their cubs, I’ll permit you to see Vestara for a brief visit. I will extend my hospitality to both Khais. You will be permitted to come aboard the Jade Shadow, alone, and without weapons.” He knew, as he knew Khai knew, that any powerful Force-user did not need weapons to pose a deadly threat. But acquiescing would take this arrogant Sith down a notch. “Any hint of treachery from you and this alliance is dissolved.”
Khai frowned. He was clearly struggling to contain his offense. “I would never dream of doing anything to harm a union that my superiors have deemed necessary.”
“Then if you are truly simply a concerned father anxious to be reunited with his child, I certainly wouldn’t stand in the way.”
The two regarded each other for a long moment. Out of the corner of his eye, Luke saw Ben and Vestara exchange glances, and the young man stepped closer to her. He seemed to want to put a hand on her shoulder, but stopped just short of making the gesture.
Khai was good. He gave away nothing. At last he said, “Your terms are acceptable.”
* * *
A short time later, Khai’s small, podlike ship was secured to the docking port of the Jade Shadow. The port was located on the underside of the vessel. Vestara, Ben, and Luke stood awaiting him as he emerged from the connecting tube.
Khai was, not unexpectedly, an imposing presence, both physically and in the Force. He was tall, much taller than Luke, and while not bulky, was clearly muscular. Luke guessed he was in his early forties, but there was no trace of gray in the jet-black hair, and the lines on his face seemed to be either furrows of concentration or laugh lines rather than the marks of age.
Khai’s belt was empty of weapons, and scans that would detect even the smallest bits of metal on his person had turned up nothing. He paused before stepping fully onto the Shadow and spread his hands. They were strong and callused, with long, clever-looking fingers.
“Saber Gavar Khai,” the Sith said, bowing. “Permission to come aboard.”
“Permission granted. I am Master Luke Skywalker. This is Ben Skywalker, my son and Jedi Knight. And Vestara, of course.”
Vestara had locked down her feelings. Save for the brightness of her eyes, she looked composed, almost bored. She bowed, deeply, respectfully.
“Father.”
Saber—whatever that meant—Gavar Khai opened his arms and Vestara went into them. For a brief moment, they were simply a reunited father and daughter, and Luke felt a brief flicker of embarrassment. It was swiftly quashed. Father and daughter they might be, and Luke was willing to grant that there might even be familial love between them, but they were still Sith. They probably fought pretty well as a father-child team, just like he and Ben did.
Vestara pulled back, keeping her face averted from Luke and Ben until the mask was back in place.
“Thank you for permitting me to see her,” Khai said, his arm still around his daughter’s shoulders. “Her mother and I have missed her greatly.”
That comment raised a hundred other questions in Luke’s mind, but he didn’t think any of them would be answered. At least, not honestly.
“I’m a father myself. I know how it is,” he said instead. “If you like, you two are welcome to use my quarters for a chat. A very brief chat.”
Vestara glanced first at Luke, then at Ben. Ben shrugged slightly.
“Thank you,” Gavar Khai said again. “That is most kind of you. Our chitchat about Vestara’s mother and servants and the state of the household would likely not interest you anyway.”
“I doubt very much that it would,” Luke said. Both men smiled. Both knew that if any mention of mother, servants, and the state of the household did indeed occur, it would be only in passing. Between Sith, there were other matters to discuss.
Luke indicated his cabin, and the two Khais entered. The door slid shut, and Luke and Ben made their way back to the cockpit.
“How come you did that?” Ben asked. “I thought you were against a private visit.”
“I said they could have a chat. I never said that it would be private.”
“I see. But it’s not going to do us any good. I mean—Khai’s acting all polite, but he’s not going to speak Basic just so we can eavesdrop more efficiently.”
“No. They’ll speak the other language we’ve heard from Vestara before.” Luke flicked a switch. Gavar Khai’s voice was heard, speaking in a lilting tongue. Then Vestara’s, light and musical.
“It’s pretty,” Ben said, and Luke wasn’t sure if he meant the language or Vestara’s voice. “But what’s the point? We’ve got no reference in the databanks. There’s no way we can translate this.”
Luke gave him a grin. “We can’t. But I know someone who can.”
“They will be recording everything we say,” Vestara said.
“Of course they will. It is what I would do. But they have never heard Keshiri before. I doubt they will be able to translate it swiftly enough for our conversation to be useful to them.”
Vestara nodded. “This is not a diplomat’s vessel,” she agreed.
“You have been given free rein of it?” Khai said, reaching into his robes and producing a piece of flimsi and a writing instrument. When Vestara nodded, he said, “Good. Draw it for me while we speak.”
At once Vestara obeyed, laying the flimsi down on a flat piece of furniture and beginning to sketch. She heard a slight rustling and turned, curious. Her father was reaching inside his robes, searching for something, and a moment later his hand emerged.
He held out a shikkar.
Vestara smiled. Of course. The sensors would detect no weapon, as the shikkar was made entirely of glass. She recognized this one as one from her father’s personal collection. It was a piece crafted by one of the most famous shikkar glassmakers, Tura Sanga. Sanga’s work was distinctive, and this was no exception. The shikkar was narrow and elegant, stark black-and-white, the hilt slender and long, the blade barely the width of a finger. Its fragility was deceptive. The only weak spot was where the blade joined the hilt—a quick snap would separate the two. Vestara wondered who she would use it on. Ben? The great Luke Skywalker himself? Perhaps, if she was lucky. After all, she had already cut him once. She could do so again, should the opportunity arise. She accepted the noble weapon with a humble nod of thanks, and stashed it carefully in her own robes.
“How is Mother?” she asked.
“She is well. Missing you, but proud of what you are doing.”
Vestara smiled a little. “I am glad. I strive to make you proud.” And to become a Saber like you … or even soar higher than you. She did not attempt to shield her emotions from her father; he encouraged her ambition and would not take offense.
“You did fine work on Dathomir,” Gavar continued. “And even though your Master is dead, you are still to be granted the rank of apprentice. We will find a new Master for you when this business with Abeloth and the Skywalkers is complete. I am sure many will be eager to teach you.”
Vestara straightened slightly, basking in the phrase. “The so-called Nightsister prisoners we took are being sorted out according to their abilities and Force-strengths,” her father continued.
“They go willingly?” Vestara was surprised.
“Some do, most do not.” Gavar shrugged his broad shoulders. “It matters not. They will go and do what we tell them, or they will suffer. And a little suffering often changes minds.” He smiled. “And so another world has yielded to the Tribe what we need if we are to be strong and spread across this galaxy.”
Vestara nodded. “I am glad they are proving useful.” She glanced over her shoulder at him. “The apprentices … how are they doing?”
He looked confused for a moment. “Apprentices?”
“The ones that Abeloth is turning mad,” Vestara said.
Khai chuckled. Warm affection spread from him in the Force. “Dearest daughter, there is not a single thing wrong with any of the Tribe Sith apprentices that a good beating will not rectify.”
“But—”
“I know what Taalon told Skywalker. It is an utter fabrication. We got the idea from you, my clever girl. We needed a good reason for the Skywalkers to ally with us, and it made sense to claim that our apprentices were suffering the same fate as the Jedi Knights.”
“I see,” Vestara said. It was an excellent plan, one that played well upon the idealistic natures of both Skywalker men. It was sound enough that she herself, who ought to have known better, had believed it. “So … what is the true reason we are allying with them?”
Gavar gazed at her shrewdly. “You have held your tongue and guarded your feelings well thus far. But I think perhaps that information should come later.”
For an instant, a dark flicker of resentment welled up in Vestara, but she extinguished it almost as soon as it came. She was fairly certain her father hadn’t noticed. “Of course. As you see fit.”
“I share your grief about Lady Rhea and Ahri Raas,” Gavar continued, changing the subject. Vestara’s brow furrowed slightly as she worked on the sketch, smudging out an inaccurate line with her fingers. She would have to remember to clean them before she left Luke’s cabin.
She had respected and had a healthy fear of Lady Olaris Rhea. She had been devoted to her, as befit a proper Sith apprentice to her master. But there had been no affection between them. Vestara did grieve for Ahri, although at one point, she had been willing to kill him herself if need be. Lady Rhea’s words came back to her: Want everything you wish—hunger, burn for it, if that fuels you. But never love anyone or anything so much that you cannot bear to lose it.
“They died well, at the hands of the Skywalkers,” was all she said to her father. “You have met them. You know that there is no dishonor in falling against them.”
“True,” said Gavar Khai, stepping beside her and squeezing her shoulder affectionately as he peered at the sketch. “But I would just as soon neither of us fell against them.”
Vestara grinned. “I agree.”
“My decision to come here was sound. I learned a great deal about them just from the little exposure I had a few moments ago. The journey before us will give us ample opportunity to learn more.”
Vestara examined the sketch critically. She added a few more notes. “I will continue to share with you everything I learn.”
“You might be able to learn even more … or perhaps insinuate yourself better with them.”
Finished, Vestara handed the sketch to her father and cleaned her hands at the sink. “I will do what I can, but I am a Sith, and their prisoner. What they have let me learn is only what they want me to know or the occasional accidental slip.”
Khai turned her around to face him, his hands on her shoulders. “I am willing to wager that the slips have not come from Master Luke Skywalker.”
There was something in the tone of his voice that made Vestara instantly alert. “No,” she said. “It is Ben who has told me the most.”
“You are attracted to the Skywalker boy.”
It was a statement, not a question, and Vestara’s stomach clenched. She wanted to deny it, but this was her father, who knew her better than anyone. Even without the use of the Force he would know if she lied to him about this.
“Yes, I am,” she said softly, not meeting his eyes. “He is appealing to me. I am sorry. I will do my best to—”
Khai tilted her chin up with a finger. “No, you will not.”
“I—” Vestara floundered. She had not felt this off guard since the first time she had killed, when she had been surprised at how hard it had been, how much blood there was, and how the sensation of the victim’s life slipping away at such close range had unnerved her.
“This is something we can use,” Gavar Khai continued. “I certainly do not want you to fall in love with Ben Skywalker. But if you do feel genuine affection or desire for him, do not be afraid to let him sense that. Especially if he can sense it in the Force, he’ll know it’s real, and that will take him off guard. He will begin to lower his own walls, tell you more, trust you more. You can use that.” His eyes brightened as a thought came to him. “You might even be able to turn him.”
“To the dark side?” A strange little jolt swept through Vestara at the thought. She recognized it as … hope. If Ben were to become Sith, then she wouldn’t have to worry about the growing feelings she was having for the Skywalker boy. It wouldn’t matter. They would be on the same side—fighting, killing together, advancing the Tribe agenda to rule the galaxy. Ben would, she was certain, become as powerful as his father one day. He might even become a Lord—or a High Lord. They—
Her father’s indulgent chuckle snapped her out of her reverie. “That would be my hope as well. Ben Skywalker as a Sith would be a glorious achievement for our family, and you could enjoy him to the fullest. But if you fail to turn him, you must be prepared to be content with toying with him. At least until the time comes when he is no longer useful.”
Vestara nodded. “I understand, Father. You do not need to worry about me.”
He regarded her for a long moment. “I never had to lay a hand on you for punishment, child. You have always excelled. You are driven by the dark side to achieve, to rise.” He placed his hands on her shoulders, squeezing them slightly in approval. “Vestara, you are a true Khai. I know you will not fail me in this.”
She stood a little taller at the high praise, craving it, craving the power that lay, unspoken, behind his words. She had once dreamed of becoming a Lord, but now her ambition knew no bounds. Fate, or the dark side, had placed the Skywalkers in her path. In, perhaps, her hands—literally and figuratively. She would make certain she took full advantage of the opportunity.
For her family, for the Tribe—and for herself.
“I’M NOT LOOKING forward to going into the Maw again,” Ben said bluntly. “It was tricky enough the first time.”
“Well,” Luke said mildly, “you’ve done it once, you know what to be aware of.”
Ben grimaced. “Doesn’t mean it’s going to be any easier.”
Vestara nodded. “Agreed. We had difficulty as well.”
Luke scratched his chin thoughtfully. Tadar’Ro, of the Aing-Tii, had told them the safe path to follow through the Maw to go where Jacen Solo had gone so many years before. Not surprisingly, though, considering how mysterious the Aing-Tii liked to keep themselves, he had couched it in the form of a riddle. “The Path of True Enlightenment runs through the Chasm of Perfect Darkness. The way is narrow and treacherous, but if you can follow it, you will find what you seek.” Ben and Luke had indeed been able to follow the “Path of True Enlightenment,” although the way had been treacherous indeed. It had led them between two black holes into an area known as Stable Zone One, in which “stability” was a bit of a misnomer. Ben had been the one to do the navigating of the yacht, and while he’d managed it by a combination of good piloting and trusting his feelings in the Force, it had still been an unnerving journey. Luke wasn’t looking forward to repeating it either, especially not having to worry about a dozen other vessels all making the journey successfully.
“I’m wondering if we might get a little help,” he said at last. “I’ve got an old friend who lives near the Maw who might be able to lend us a ship.”
Instantly, like a nexu scenting danger, Vestara was on the alert. “More ships? You are calling in reinforcements?”
“I said a ship. A specialized asteroid tug that could help us offset the gravitational pull of the black holes. It’s large and it’s designed with more tractor beam emitters than ought to be legal. I have a friend who is very fond of tinkering and upgrading.”
“Oh, Lando?” Ben looked pleased and amused. “We’re going to go to Kessel?”
Vestara was listening attentively, filing away everything. Luke didn’t care. He was not attempting to keep this information from anyone.
“Hopefully not to Kessel,” he replied to his son. “I’m hoping Lando can come join us. Meet us at the Maw so we can just head on in as soon as possible. I don’t want to delay any longer than we have to.” His voice became not hard, but determined. “The longer that being sits in her lair, the stronger she’ll become and the more harm she can do. We need to stop her as soon as possible, but we’ve got to make sure we’ve got every advantage.”
“Well,” Ben said, glancing at Vestara, “Why wouldn’t more reinforcements be a good idea? Lando doesn’t have an injunction against warning him not to associate with you. He’s not a Jedi. Why can’t he help?”
“I think once we reach Abeloth, all of us combined can take her,” Luke said. “All we really need is the Rockhound to get us there safely.”
Vestara’s brown eyes narrowed. “It seems foolish to me that you do not take advantage of your friend’s connections, Master Skywalker. If he will give us more ships for our endeavor, why not?”
“There might be a thousand food items on a table, but you do not need to eat them all in order to satisfy your hunger,” Luke replied. “Others might need to eat as well.”
“Or,” Vestara said, “you might decide to come back for seconds later. When you are hungry again.”
Ben grimaced and leapt up, striding purposefully toward the galley. “All this talk of food is making me hungry right now. Anyone want anything?”
“I’ll come help you,” Vestara said quickly, rising. The two moved out of the cockpit and down toward the galley.
“Oh? You like to cook?” Ben asked, grinning at her as they walked.
“No, I like to hunt,” Vestara replied. “I am very good with the parang. We also had trained hunting reptiles. Cooking meals is left to the servants.”
“I wouldn’t like to see what See-Threepio would do with preparing a meal. Appetizers are about all we trust him with.”
“Who is See-Threepio?”
Their voices grew fainter until at last Luke could not hear them. He sent a short message to Tendrando Arms, and a moment later he was smiling—despite the direness of the situation—at the miniature holographic form of Lando Calrissian. Even at only a third of a meter tall, Lando managed to look impressive. He was missing the hip-length cape and his silky red shirt looked a touch more casual than usual, but his boots gleamed and the black trousers had sharp creases that were even visible in miniature. Lando looked genuinely pleased to see him, and spread out his arms in a welcoming gesture.
“Hey, buddy, long time no see!” Lando said expansively. “I didn’t expect to hear anything from you till you proved that cranky biddy in charge of the GA wrong.”
Luke smothered a grin at hearing Admiral and Chief of State Natasi Daala referred to in such a manner. “I respect Chief of State Daala’s leadership qualities.”
“You gotta say that in case there are any eavesdropping devices, right?” Lando grinned, his eyes dancing.
“Maybe,” Luke deadpanned.
“Hear you’ve gone off on some kind of odyssey with your boy.”
“Something like that,” Luke said. “It’s good to see you, Lando, but this isn’t a social call. I’ve got a favor to ask.”
“For Luke Skywalker? Name it.”
“I’m in need of the Rockhound.”
Lando’s jet-black eyebrows shot up. “The Rockhound?” he echoed. “What makes you think I’ve still got that beat-up antique hanging around?”
“Because you have a nostalgic streak a thousand kilometers wide. Because the thing is one of only three ships made by the BramDorc Corporation known to exist. And because you never get rid of anything.”
Lando shrugged self-deprecatingly and chuckled. “I am what I am. You got me. Yeah, I’ve still got her. I take it you’ve got some asteroids you need moved?”
The Rockhound was a Colossus I Beta Series asteroid tug constructed by the now-defunct BramDorc Corporation. Little was known about the corporation, other than the fact that it had been based somewhere in the Unknown Regions and it specialized in massive vessels. It had vanished from the Galactic record with no trace some five years before the Battle of Yavin. Luke was right—there were only two other remaining ships manufactured by BramDorc: a waterhunter called the Icebreaker and the amusingly named liquefied–Tibanna tanker Gasbag, that had been turned into the orbital fortress of a two-bit Hutt crimelord.
By all rights, Luke knew, the old ship belonged either in a museum like the Icebreaker, now forever planet-bound in the New Brampis Starship Museum, or a scrapyard. No one knew exactly how old the Rockhound was, though the Arkanian Orbital Logs mentioned it as far back as 524 years before the Battle of Yavin. Lando had flown it solo for many years back in his younger days as a prospector. Han had revealed quite a few things he found amusing about the Rockhound to Luke one night when the kids were dead to the world and both their wives had gone to bed.…
Mara, I still miss you, and I swear I feel you here with me now.
… and Luke had never forgotten them. One was the interesting fact that, as seemed to be the case with several ships in Lando’s possession, he had won the Rockhound from a Brubb prospector in an epic, six-hour, arm-wrestling match. Which, Han hinted, may or may not have been rigged. The other intriguing tidbit was the fact that the crew were all droids with a rather unique programming. Han had refused to elaborate further, returning Luke’s queries with smug, self-satisfied grins. Luke supposed he would now get the chance to find out what Han had been talking about.
“Not exactly,” said Luke. “I’m actually heading into the Maw.”
Lando’s jovial good humor, which Luke suspected was largely for his benefit, abated somewhat. “The Maw? Why? It’s hardly a vacation paradise in there.”
“Certainly not,” Luke agreed. “But it’s part of what I’m doing with Ben right now. We’re retracing Jacen’s five-year journey.”
Lando sobered, his eyes kind. “Yeah, I heard a little something about that.”
Luke thought, not for the first time, that while Lando did an effective job of hiding his innate decentness behind his swashbuckling façade, he wasn’t always the bluffer he liked to think of himself as. Lando Calrissian cared deeply for those he called friends.
“Our path so far has led us here. And we’ve come to find out if there’s something … or more precisely, someone … in there who needs taking care of,” Luke continued.
Lando nodded. “Yeah … I was wondering if something was going on there. You heard about what happened here on Kessel, right?”
Luke had. Leia had told him about the strange quakes that had threatened to destroy Kessel, and incidentally Tendrando Arms in its entirety, right along with them. Too, his sister had mentioned that Allana had heard something through the Force. The girl had insisted that “something was waiting” for her “up in space.” It had wanted to know who she was, and was “sad but scary.” True, the girl was just barely eight, but she was the daughter of Tenel Ka and Jacen Solo, the granddaughter of Leia Organa Solo, and the great-granddaughter of Anakin Skywalker. If anyone could claim Force sensitivity was in her genes, it was Allana.
Both Leia and Han had been convinced that their granddaughter had been telling the truth, at least as she was able to comprehend it. It was a disturbing thought. Luke was more certain now than ever that Abeloth had contacted Allana.
He nodded. “Yes, I heard. Sounds like everything is stable for now, though.”
“For now,” Lando allowed. He looked thoughtful for a moment, then as if suddenly becoming aware of the potential for solemnity, flashed a trademark rakish grin. “And hey—I guess that’s all anyone’s ever got, right?”
“I guess so. I had no idea you were quite so profound, Lando.”
Lando waved a dismissive hand. “Don’t let it get around. Bad for my reputation. So, you going in with just you and Ben? Even with the Rockhound, it could be tricky. I hate that place.”
“Actually, Ben and I managed it with the Jade Shadow, but it was close,” Luke replied. “But with a group, the Rockhound will be particularly useful. Come on—that thing’s so big it almost creates its own gravimetric field.”
Lando glanced at him curiously. “A group?”
“I have a few … associates accompanying me.”
Even via holographic communication, Lando knew how to read people. His bright eyes narrowed as he regarded Luke.
“Associates, eh? What kind of associates? Not swindlers and scoundrels keeping the noble Luke Skywalker company, surely.”
Luke debated demurring, but decided not to. He had known Lando for a long time, and certainly the former space pirate could not sit in judgment on Luke, considering the company he once kept—and, probably, still did keep.
“Er … They’re um … well, they’re Sith, actually.”
Lando’s expression of shock was almost comical. His mouth dropped open and his eyebrows shot up, and the carefully cultivated “I’ve seen it all” image went right out the airlock.
“S-Sith?” He could barely get the word out.
“Sith,” Luke confirmed. “Quite a few of them. It’s … a long story.”
“No kidding. I’ll want that story in addition to my fee, Skywalker.”
There would be no fee, of course, and Luke didn’t bat an eyelash. “As soon as I can share it, I will,” he replied, grinning. “So, I take it you’ll surrender the Rockhound for a bit?”
“Bring her back home safe and sound, and yourselves, too, if possible, and she’s yours,” Lando said. “But I have to warn you. You’ll have to cultivate that Jedi patience. She’s been out of service for a while, and it’s going to take some time to bring her up to speed. I’ve made a few … adjustments.”
Luke couldn’t help but smile. Lando, just like Han, was always tinkering with his ships. It was as if the two simply couldn’t stand the notion of flying a ship the way it came out of the factory. While it amused him, Luke was certainly not one to dismiss the pair’s inclination to improve—the Jade Shadow was testimony to what a customized vessel could do.
“I’m sure it will do everything but make me a cup of caf and deliver it to me in bed,” Luke said.
“You know … that’s a great idea, Luke. I’ll get right on it,” Lando said with a straight face, stroking his chin thoughtfully.
“How long do you think it will take?”
Lando considered. “Hm … the old boat’s been sitting in dock for a while. A week? Maybe two?”