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    Emissary of the Void

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      talent for the Force. Still, now and then, his luck was unusual enough to

      suggest that Master Skywalker's academy had left him with something.

      This time, he didn't think he would be as lucky as usual. When a sixth flier

      rose up from below the barge, scarcely two meters to his right, he was sure

      of it. He winced as blasters fired.

      But the bolts seared over his head and struck the flier harassing him at

      close range, and his focus suddenly changed, centering on the

      yellow-and-black-clad figure at the controls of the newly arrived vessel.

      The figure was gesturing impatiently.

      'You don't have to tell me twice,'' Uldir muttered. Still dodging the more

      distant fire, he ran toward the flier and jumped in. The instant he was on

      board, the girl punched the throttle, weaving through a net of white bolts.

      'Thanks,'' Uldir said.

      'If this is a trick, you'll regret it,'' the girl snapped. 'Why were you

      chasing me?''

      'I didn't know you were Jedi.''

      The girl banked crazily and dropped low toward the landscape.

      'I think you really want altitude, here,'' he added.

      'Yeah? You want to fly?''

      'Um -- okay.''

      'Great.'' She let go of the controls, leaving Uldir to dive for them before

      the flier smacked into a transmission tower. Meanwhile, she went back to

      work on whatever was strapped to her leg.

      'Didn't know I was Jedi?_That's_ why everyone else is after me.''

      'I thought you were a thief,'' Uldir explained, nosing up in time to avoid a

      serious insult from coherent light and charged particles. 'Why are they

      after you?''

      'Because I'm Jedi. Are you stim-pickled? Don't you know every planet in the

      galaxy is scrambling to turn us over to the Yuuzhan Vong?''

      'I'm aware of that,'' Uldir said, dryly. 'I nearly got turned in myself.''

      She laughed. 'You're no Jedi.''

      That stung more than Uldir cared to admit. 'Hey, be nice to me. I saved your

      skinny . . . er, your skin.''

      'And I returned the favor,'' she reminded him. 'We're even now. So. Why

      would anyone try to turn you in?''

      Uldir flipped a lock of his chestnut hair away from his eyes. 'I'm a rescue

      flier,'' he said. 'An ex-partner of mine turned out to be Peace Brigade, and

      he found out I once attended the Jedi academy. He arranged an ambush I was

      lucky to get out of. That was right after the Yuuzhan Vong warmaster

      announced that if all the Jedi were turned over to him, he'd stop conquering

      the galaxy.'' He shook his head. 'As if anyone could really believe that.''

      'You attended Master Skywalker's academy?'' The girl asked, skeptically.

      'Is there another?''

      'No.''

      'I didn't have any aptitude for the Force, though,'' Uldir added.

      'So much is obvious,'' the girl said.

      'Yeah, I think you mentioned that,'' Uldir said, veering sharply to port,

      where the police fliers were trying to flank him and doing a pretty good

      job. 'Hold on a second,'' he said. 'We'll have to fight a little, here.'' He

      glanced over his shoulder. 'My name is Uldir, by the way.''

      'Klin-Fa Gi, at your service,'' she said grimly. 'You almost got me killed,

      Uldir. Don't do it again.''

      'I'll try not to, Klin-Fa Gi. Stay down. We're going to take some hits.''

      'Not if I have anything to say about it.''

      For the second time that night, she leaped past him, landing with feline

      grace on the prow of the speeder. She stood there, a perfect target for the

      two fliers they were barreling toward. Then a snap-hiss carried over the

      wind, and a sliver of yellow energy appeared in her left hand, cutting

      quickly into a figure eight and sending a pair of blaster bolts humming off

      into the wastelands.

      _So that's what was taped to her leg_, Uldir concluded. Klin-Fa must have

      walked in front of one of the weapons sensors that Bonadan was lousy with.

      'I guess I have shields now,'' Uldir murmured, thumbing the blaster fire

      controls on his stick and jinking starboard. His shot was dead on, frying

      the opposing flier's stabilizer. It went spinning off. Uldir hoped the pilot

      would get the flier under control before it hit the ground below.

      _That's one_, he thought, as Klin-Fa executed another crazy series of

      parries that left their flier unscathed by enemy fire.

      As he'd noticed before, the pilots weren't stupid. Contrary to the usual

      tactics of aerial combat, they were now trying to get underneath them, where

      the Jedi's lightsaber wasn't. He let the flier drop, hoping that Klin-Fa

      could keep her footing, afraid to do any really tight turns.

      Shadowed wasteland came up at them, endless hectares of chemical-blistered

      ground cut into fractal patterns by violent erosion. Bonadan's primary was

      now a thin red lens on the horizon, and a little north of that lightning

      serpentined inside an anvil-shaped cloud. The wind tasted of water, grit,

      and unwholesome carbon compounds.

      The storm gave him an idea, though, so he flattened his course toward the

      thunderhead. Rain would stymie eyesight, and lightning would confuse

      instruments. Maybe even the eye-in-the sky droids the patrol was undoubtedly

      tapping into. If he and Klin-Fa got through that, maybe he could circle back

      and find the_No Luck Required_ before the security fliers picked up the

      trail. If the ship was repaired, then they might be able to get off-planet

      before the port authority shut them down. If . . .

      He grinned tightly, remembering what Vega would say:_'If'' is just a short

      way of saying, 'we're doomed.''_

      'Are those guys Peace Brigade?'' Uldir shouted to the girl.

      'You mentioned them before,'' she shot back. 'I never heard of them.''

      Uldir arched an eyebrow. That was surprising. 'They're a collaborationist

      organization,'' he told her. 'They figure we can't beat the Yuuzhan Vong, so

      they might as well join them, get in their good graces while it's still

      possible. Sometimes they infiltrate local law enforcement.''

      Klin-Fa snorted. 'Nobody in the Corporate Authority ever needed prompting

      when there was any potential for profit, and the 'zecs don't deal with

      middle-men unless they have to. There's a Yuuzhan Vong executor on this

      planet even as we speak. I'm guessing the 'zecs cut their own deal.''

      'What? But that violates the neutrality pact.''

      'I'll bet it doesn't. CSA attorneys can find a loophole when there isn't

      even a loop.''

      The cloud loomed, but the fliers were getting too close. He dipped lower,

      dropping into one of the arroyos that crawled downhill toward the spaceport.

      'I guess you can fly,'' Klin-Fa conceded reluctantly, leaping over the

      cockpit to land on their stern, now the most threatened portion of the ship.

      'You don't say?'' Uldir retorted. 'Gosh, I'm glad you told me. I'd never

      have known. Now I'm all beaming and confidant. I just know I can get us out

      of this.''

      She ignored the sarcasm. 'Rescue flier, huh?'' she mused. 'Who do you

      rescue?''

      'Jedi, mostly.''

      Klin-Fa blocked a bolt aimed for their rear stabilizer and shot him a

      strange look. 'What?'' She asked. 'Who do you work for?''

      'The paychit comes from the New Republ
    ic Search and Rescue Corps, but that's

      sort of a cover. The orders come from Master Skywalker, ultimately. He's

      been organizing a network to move Jedi out of danger for months.''

      'I wouldn't know about that,'' she said. 'I've been . . . out of touch. I

      didn't even know about the warmaster's ultimatum until yesterday.''

      That explained why she didn't know about the Peace Brigade either. 'Where

      were you that you didn't hear about that?'' Uldir asked.

      Her eyes narrowed. 'You'll understand if I don't just volunteer that

      information.''

      'Hey, you're the Jedi. Can't you tell if I'm lying, or a threat?''

      She hesitated. 'I've been fooled before,'' she admitted. 'Just understand

      this -- I'm on a mission, also for Master Skywalker. I've discovered

      something of utmost importance, a dire threat to the New Republic.''

      'But you won't tell me what it is?''

      'No.''

      Uldir was impressed at how impassive she remained. Though his crazy course

      through the canyons had them temporarily free of blaster fire, it couldn't

      be easy for her to keep her footing, yet she hadn't even blinked. She had

      liquid helium in her veins, this girl.

      'We're about to plow straight into a storm,'' he said. 'Maybe you ought to

      get back into the cockpit.''

      'Storm? No. Maybe you ought to --_watch out!_ ''

      Uldir jerked on the stick, mentally tasking himself for becoming distracted.

      One of the security fliers had somehow worked its way up a side canyon and

      was now quite suddenly in front of him. Blaster fire scorched along their

      underbelly, and the craft jerked like a harpooned toukfin. The power system

      whined, and all of the indicators on the board went dead. The flier dropped

      as Uldir frantically jiggled at the re-route to emergency systems.

      The power failure lasted only an instant, but it was a gut-plunging one, and

      he was now on a collision course with the offending flier. He banked hard to

      port, momentarily forgetting he had a passenger balanced on his prow.

      Klin-Fa didn't seem to mind -- she deftly shifted to stand on the narrow

      part of the flier now presented to the sky, crouched, and cut downward at

      the other vehicle. Uldir saw a shear of sparks before the impact. It was a

      glancing blow, and their opponent went gyring away missing a good chunk of

      its nose. Uldir was vaguely aware of the crunching sound it made as it

      plowed into a canyon wall, but most of his attention was focused on avoiding

      the same fate. The repulsors sputtered again, and with a silent curse he

      rose out of the arroyo, unable to trust his craft enough to maneuver there

      anymore.

      It was then, facing the black wall of the storm, that he realized he didn't

      see Klin-Fa. His last maneuvers must have dislodged her.

      He dug into a sharp turn -- hoping to spot her and hoping as well that her

      Jedi abilities had helped her survive the fall -- when a shout from below

      got his attention. He saw the young Jedi clinging to the craft's magnetic

      mooring lock by the fingers of one hand.

      'Hang on!'' Uldir locked the course for the storm and reached into the dash

      compartment, coming out with an enforcement special blaster. Then he climbed

      out of the cockpit and onto the nose of the craft, waving his arms for

      balance.

      The three remaining fliers were catching up quickly, and the air was brittle

      with ionized death. Uldir dropped to his belly and reached over the brink,

      grasping Klin-Fa by the wrist. She locked her own fingers around his wrist

      in turn and dangled in space, whirling her lightsaber to deflect a blaster

      bolt that would have cut her in half. Uldir stood, hauling her up, watching

      in amazement as she continued to fend off attacks. With his free hand he

      grimly fired at the lead police craft, which was coming in way too fast. He

      grazed it twice, then hit the cockpit a glancing blow that must have hurt

      the pilot, because the craft peeled off suddenly. Then two concussions in a

      row rocked his flier so badly that Uldir nearly lost his footing. He swung

      the Jedi back onto the bow just as the first of the rain spattered around

      them.

      'Back in the cockpit!'' he shouted. The craft was beginning to list weirdly

      toward starboard, indicating a probably fatal malfunction in one of the

      stabilizers.

      Another bolt hit them as they made it to the crash seats, and then, as if

      they had passed under a curtain, the rain was driving so hard Uldir couldn't

      see anything. He flipped on the weather shield, and the water began sheeting

      off against its field, but visibility didn't increase in the slightest.

      An eighteen-headed dragon of lightning howled around them, and Uldir's neck

      hairs pricked to attention. The sound was like the implosion of a planet.

      'Sithspit!'' Klin-Fa shouted. 'What have you done to us?''

      'You don't see our friends anymore, do you?''

      'No. They'd know better than to fly into a sweeper storm.''

      'A what?''

      'Bonadan has weather control stations all over it. You don't think this is

      natural, do you? They generate these on the outskirts when the air gets too

      caustic for the miners. The rain and lightning precipitates some of the crud

      they put in the sky every day.''

      'Oh. Your point?''

      'My point is, it's more concentrated and violent than a normal storm,

      jets-for-brains. The funnel around the eye is designed to create maximum

      ionization.''

      'Maximum -- uh-oh.''

      It had been getting darker, but in the not-to-distance he saw sheets of

      lighting dancing like nebula veils.

      'So we don't want to go there, huh?'' Uldir grunted, frantically pulling the

      stick starboard. Nothing happened. The ship was carrying them nowhere but

      the heart of the storm.

      'No. So get us out of here already,'' Klin-Fa shouted. Even through the

      windscreen, the sound of the storm was almost deafening.

      'I can't. I locked the controls when I went out to get you. They're still

      locked.''

      'Well, unlock them, vac-brain!''

      Uldir continued flipping switches. 'Not happening,'' he said.

      'Well, what, then?''

      'Hang on, I guess.''

      He pointed the blaster at the rear repulsor assembly and fired.

      'Are you insane?'' Klin-Fa shrieked.

      'I wasn't before I met you,'' Uldir replied. 'Now I'd need a professional

      opinion.'' He fired again, and the flier seemed to sag against the wind. The

      bow dropped nearly perpendicular to the ground.

      'Like I said,'' Uldir remarked, as another net of lightning crackled

      completely around them, 'hang on.''

      He felt a tingle then that did not come from the lightning, and he

      recognized it as a movement in the Force. He might not be sensitive enough

      to actually wield it, but he had been around the most powerful Jedi in the

      galaxy, and had learned to recognize its use.

      Especially now, when it felt somehow wrong. He looked at Klin-Fa and found

      her eyes shut and her face utterly composed. For some reason that was

      momentarily terrifying. Then he didn't have any more time to think about it,

      because they hit the ground, skipped, tumbled, and hit again. The screen

      went down, and rain was
    suddenly smothering them. After that, darkness.

      * * *

      Uldir woke spitting water from his mouth and feeling the painful itch of it

      in his lungs. One of the flier's running lights shone murkily from beneath

      the surface. Other than that, the darkness was broken only by the terrible

      white and red flares of lightning that grew more extreme with each second.

      The rain was mixed with hail now, which struck painfully against the bare

      skin of his face, and the thunder was an almost uninterrupted roar. The

      torrents unleashed from the sky were continuing to sculpt the arroyo he'd

      crashed in as it had been doing since the natural vegetation of Bonadan had

      given up its tenuous hold on existence. The flier was fetched up against

      something and filling quickly with water.

      In the dull light, he made out Klin-Fa Gi, slumped unconscious, her face

      just out of the water. He felt for her pulse and, to his relief, found it

      strong. When he failed to wake her, he got her in a swim carry, holding her

      from behind so her head would remain above the surface. Even as he did this,

      the level and speed of the flood rose, and swiftly. He had to get to higher

      ground; that much was obvious. Not too high, though -- lightning had a lofty

     

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