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    Ghost of the Jedi

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      full of rage.

      GET OUT!

      CHAPTER 8

      Tash screamed.

      She couldn't help herself. The angry voice came from all around her,

      striking her with the force of a punch in the stomach. But there was no one in

      the room. As the echoes of her scream faded down the long passageways, Tash

      was still looking around with wide, frightened eyes. She felt another wave of

      cold air wash over her, but this time a sensation entered her bones along with

      the chill. Fear.

      Terrified, she backed away from the cursed room. But she was too slow.

      She felt the icy cold wave pass through her again. It was so strong that it

      overwhelmed her senses, and everything went black.

      Tash woke to the feeling of a warm hand holding her own. Slowly, she

      opened her eyes, and blinked in the light of several portable glow panels. The

      bright light made a halo around ForceFlow's gently smiling face.

      "You'll be all right," he said softly. "Just relax."

      She tried to speak, but fear seemed to have choked the words out of her.

      She knew she had to warn the others about the curse, but all she managed to

      rasp out was "Hoole."

      "I sent for him," ForceFlow said. "Your friends were in their ship.

      They'll be here any minute-"

      "I'm here," said Hoole's sharp voice as the Shi'ido appeared next to

      ForceFlow.

      Like Mangol's cry earlier, Tash's voice had echoed up through the metal

      walls of the space station. ForceFlow and the treasure hunters had come

      running when he'd heard her. Hoole was visibly relieved to see that his niece

      was safe.

      "Tash, what are you doing down here?" he demanded.

      Zak was right behind him. "Are you all right?"

      ForceFlow stopped all conversation. "By the Force! She found it!"

      He pointed down the tunnel, where the entrance to the library was still

      visible.

      "No, no!" Tash yelled, grabbing ForceFlow's arm. "Don't go down there!

      It's cursed. It's haunted!"

      ForceFlow raised an eyebrow. "It's what?"

      "There was a voice. There was no one there, but something shouted at me.

      But there was a..." She didn't know how to describe it. "It was like a wave of

      fear."

      "Tash, calm down," said ForceFlow, his blue eyes twinkling at her. "The

      most important thing right now is that you've done something no one else has

      been able to do. You've found the Jedi library!"

      "Mangol found it," Tash muttered, "and he's dead."

      ForceFlow frowned. "True, but I'm sure that had nothing to do with the

      library itself."

      "It did," she said dejectedly. "The legend says that only a true Jedi can

      break through the dark-side curse. The treasure hunter wasn't a Jedi, and"-she

      took a deep breath-"and neither am I."

      Hoole put a gentle hand on Tash's shoulder.

      Beside Hoole, Deevee said in the warmest voice his program could manage,

      "Tash, if that really is a Jedi library, then it would be the greatest

      galactic discovery in a hundred years."

      Tash shook her head stubbornly. "I don't care. That place is dangerous.

      I'm not going back there."

      Hoole's black eyes studied his niece for a moment, then the Shi'ido

      nodded. "Very well. We'll return to the Shroud to make sure you're all right.

      Then we can discuss our next step."

      ForceFlow disagreed. "You said yourselves that Gog is after you. In the

      library-with all the knowledge it contains-you might find a way to stop him.

      You're wasting valuable time."

      The Shi'ido shrugged. "Our decision is made."

      A dark cloud passed over ForceFlow's handsome face but he said nothing.

      The others, however, were not so silent.

      Domisari said she would return to the solarium as well, but the other two

      treasure hunters were reluctant to leave.

      "We've been searching for the library for weeks," one of them said, "and

      we can't just walk away from it now."

      Hoole returned to the solarium with Zak, Tash, and Deevee. Instead of

      entering the library himself, ForceFlow followed them to the upper levels.

      "Just think of it," ForceFlow was saying as they reached the solarium.

      "Twenty thousand years of Jedi lore are stored in that one room. Think of the

      secrets those books must contain! All the mysteries of the universe may be

      answered there."

      Hoole stopped short. "I hope you are right, ForceFlow," he said. He

      pointed toward the pile of cargo containers that had marked the boundaries of

      Mangol's camp. "Because we now have another mystery to solve. Mangol's body is

      gone."

      They all followed Hoole's long, bony finger. The Shi'ido was right. The

      body of the treasure hunter had disappeared.

      Deevee asked the obvious question. "Who would have taken a corpse? And

      why?"

      Looking around, Zak asked a question no one had considered. "Where is

      Dannik Jerriko?"

      The others could not answer. They realized that Jerriko had not come when

      Tash screamed. And he wasn't here now. "I'm telling you, he's up to something,

      " Zak insisted. "I'll bet he killed Mangol and now he's removed the evidence."

      Tash was about to insist that there was no murderer, but before she

      opened her mouth, another cry drifted mournfully through the space station. It

      was followed by another, desperate, scream for help. The small group in the

      solarium looked at one another and every face grew pale.

      They all knew what they would find at the library. The two treasure

      hunters were dead.

      CHAPTER 9

      Only a few people were left on Nespis 8 now. Aside from Hoole, Zak, Tash,

      and Deevee, ForceFlow still remained, as well as the old woman Domisari, and

      the mysterious Dannik Jerriko.

      The next day, after finally getting some sleep, everyone gathered outside

      the library.

      No one believed Tash's story of an evil curse, but no one wanted to enter

      the chamber. Something was killing people, and none of them wanted to become

      the next victim. Only Deevee, because he was a droid, could enter. Tash and

      Zak hovered near the door as the droid entered the room and, careful not to

      touch them, examined the two bodies, which sat slumped at tables in the center

      of the library.

      "There are no marks," the droid announced as he stepped away from the

      corpses.

      "It's as though the life had been stolen right out of them," ForceFlow

      mused. "Perhaps it is the work of the Anzati."

      "It's the curse," Tash whispered.

      Hoole frowned. "So far our only suggestions are a mythical species of

      killers and ancient dark-side magic. There must be a more logical explanation,

      and I know where to look for it."

      The survivors formed a small circle in the solarium with Dannik Jerriko

      in the center. The narrow-faced man calmly studied his suspicious companions.

      "This is ridiculous," Dannik was saying. "Do you truly think I have

      killed those pathetic fools? You might as well believe this girl's fear of a

      dark-side curse."

      "We do not know what to believe," Hoole replied. "All we know is that

      three people are dead, and that you were missing when each of them died. And,

      again, when Mangol's body was
    stolen, you were the only one missing."

      Dannik blinked very slowly. "This is a civilized Empire. There are laws,

      and this is not a court. You can't accuse me."

      Hoole's voice was as cold as steel. "We are on the very edge of

      civilization. I have two young humans under my protection, and I intend to

      protect them by any means necessary."

      Dannik locked eyes with Hoole. "Do not threaten me." Hoole's gaze did not

      waver. "That is not a threat." Suddenly, the Shi'ido's entire body seemed to

      quiver. The skin seemed to crawl across his frame, and a moment later, Hoole

      had vanished. In his place stood a tall, shaggy Wookiee, who flexed and

      unflexed the claws of one massive hand. When the Wookiee spoke, its voice

      growled, but it still sounded like Hoole. "It is a promise," he said.

      The fact that Hoole was a shapechanger made most people nervous. When he

      changed into something ferocious, most people quickly backed down. But Dannik

      seemed to become excited. His eyes flashed, and for a moment Tash thought he

      was going to attack Hoole. But then Dannik yawned and said, "Very well. You

      may threaten or promise or whatever you like, but the fact remains I did not

      kill those people."

      "Then where were you when the murders took place?" Hoole growled, still

      in Wookiee form.

      Dannik smiled coldly. "Come with me."

      Hoole melted back into his own shape and Dannik led them to a small

      chamber just outside the solarium. At first Tash found nothing unusual about

      the square room, except for a strong smell of burning leaves. Then she noticed

      that one corner of the little room was covered with a thin layer of ashes.

      Dannik produced a long, thin reed from his vest pocket-a pipe. "I confess

      that I have acquired a rather unpleasant habit. I smoke t'bac. Although I find

      the habit detestable myself, I have been unable to quit. In order to hide this

      personal failure, I prefer to smoke in private." He waited.

      Zak squinted his eyes. "Are you saying you were smoking during the

      murders?"

      Dannik raised the pipe to his mouth and lit it with a small laser

      lighter. "That is exactly what I'm saying."

      Deevee's photoreceptors glowed as they scanned the ash-covered floor.

      "Master Hoole, there is a significant ash layer here. It would take quite a

      bit of smoking to produce this amount. I am inclined to say that this man is

      telling the truth."

      "But-" Zak started to say.

      "It seems," Hoole interrupted, "that we owe you an apology."

      "Indeed," Dannik said stiffly. Without waiting for another word, he

      slipped past the others and returned to the solarium.

      Zak and Tash watched Hoole and the others file out of the small room.

      "But Tash," Zak said in a low voice, "if Dannik's not the killer, then

      who is?"

      "I think I know," replied a voice. It was Domisari. Her face was full of

      excitement. "Meet me in fifteen minutes on the lower level, just outside the

      tunnel to the library. And don't tell anyone-not even your uncle!" Then she

      slipped away.

      "What was that all about?" Zak groaned.

      "I don't know, but I'm not sure we should go," Tash said. Her stomach had

      twisted into knots as soon as Domisari had spoken.

      Her brother shrugged. "Have you got any better ideas?"

      "Yes," she argued, "we could tell Uncle Hoole what she said, and tell him

      to come with us."

      Zak scoffed. "Uncle Hoole would tell us we were being foolish."

      With that, Zak headed for the passage to the lower levels. "Zak!" Tash

      whispered after him. But her only answer was the hissing echo of her own

      voice.

      She caught up to him at the edge of the huge ventilation shaft. Zak

      shivered. "I still don't get this coldness. If there were no power at all it

      would be even colder-like deep space. This is more like... a refrigeration

      unit."

      "Or an air conditioner," Tash added. "This is a ventilation shaft,

      remember."

      Zak shook his head. "Yeah, but there's not enough power in the space

      station to generate climate control."

      "Can we worry about one thing at a time?" Tash snapped. "Come on, if

      we're going to do this, let's get it over with."

      She did not like the idea of going near the library again. She was afraid

      of the curse, but even more than that, every step reminded her of the voice

      that had yelled at her to get out.

      No one was waiting for them outside the tunnel to the library.

      Zak looked to his sister. "Where do you suppose Domisari could be?"

      "Maybe just late," Tash suggested hopefully. Zak nodded halfheartedly.

      They waited for five minutes, and then ten. The darkness seemed to crowd

      in around them. Once, Tash swore she thought she saw something floating just

      outside the circle of their light. It looked like fog. It was gone as soon as

      it appeared.

      Finally her nerves got the better of her. "I can't stand just waiting

      here," she whispered. "Maybe Domisari meant that we should meet her inside one

      of the tunnels."

      "That's not what she said," Zak argued.

      "Well, she's not here. Besides, you're the one who wanted to come down

      here. So if we're going to talk with her, we should at least find her and get

      it over with. Come on.

      Wanting to stay far away from the fifth tunnel that led to the library,

      Tash turned to the first passageway. "Maybe she's waiting down here."

      The two Arrandas had traveled a few meters inside the tunnel when they

      heard the faint echo of footsteps behind them. They stopped and listened for a

      moment. Then a soft voice drifted through the darkness.

      "Children... children..."

      It was Domisari. They could see her approaching the tunnels. In one hand

      she held a glow rod. In her other hand gleamed an object made of black metal.

      Tash was just about to call out to the old woman when a shadowy figure

      darted into Domisari's circle of light. The figure slammed into her with a

      jarring thud. The old woman grunted in surprise as she was shoved outside the

      circle of light and swallowed up by the surrounding darkness. Something

      clattered to the ground as sounds of a struggle reached them from the shadows.

      "What happened?" Tash whispered as they stepped out of the tunnel. "Where

      are they?"

      "There!" Zak said, pointing toward movement in the gloom.

      Tash thrust the glow rod forward and gasped.

      What she saw horrified her. A fallen blaster lay on the ground and over

      it, Dannik Jerriko and Domisari were locked in a struggle. Dannik was holding

      Domisari's head between his hands, and pressing his own face close to hers.

      There was a look of terror on Domisari's face.

      And she saw something even more horrible.

      Two small holes opened up in Dannik's cheeks. Out of each hole slithered

      a long, wriggling tendril. As Tash and Zak watched, the tendrils wormed their

      way across the short space that separated him from Domisari. They jabbed into

      her nostrils and crawled upward into her brain.

      CHAPTER 10

      Domisari was dead before her body hit the ground. Her lifeless corpse

      fell into a heap at Dannik Jerriko's feet as the killer turned to face the two

      A
    rrandas. They watched in horror as the two tendrils retracted. The tendrils

      were sucked back into the killer's cheeks and vanished, leaving no marks on

      his skin.

      Tash swallowed. "Zak, you were right."

      "No visible marks," Zak whispered, remembering Deevee's story about the

      Anzati. He looked at Dannik. "You-You are an Anzati."

      "Wait," Dannik warned, "it's not what you think. He took a step forward.

      Zak and Tash turned and ran for their lives.

      Blindly, they plunged into the first tunnel.

      "Stop!" Dannik's voice called from behind. "Let me explain!"

      They had seen Dannik kill Domisari in a matter of seconds without leaving

      a mark. They had looked into the eyes of one of the galaxy's most frightening

      species. That same creature now chased them down the tunnel.

      An Anzati was after them.

      "Y-You were right," Tash panted without slowing down.

      "Remind me," her brother gasped as he ran in front of her, "to be wrong

     

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