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    Edge of Victory 2 Rebirth

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      that Anakin had heard twice; once when she was under the heaviest influence

      of her Yuuzhan Vong conditioning; once in a vision he'd had of her as a dark

      Jedi, her face mutilated by the scars and tattoos of a Yuuzhan Vong

      warmaster.

      "No," Anakin said. "Let them go."

      His generosity didn't stop the Peace Brigaders from taking a parting

      shot as they ducked around the corner.

      "Jedi brats!" one of the men shouted. "Your days are numbered!"

      When he was sure they weren't just hiding around the corner, waiting

      for his guard to drop, Anakin turned to survey the damage.

      The Peace Brigader had stopped moving. Kelbis Nu was still

      alive-barely. His glassy eyes were looking beyond Anakin, but he reached up

      a hand.

      "Ya . . . ," he said weakly.

      "Tahiri, use your wrist comm. Try to find the local emergency channel."

      He took Nu's hand and pulsed strength from the Force into him. "Hold on for

      me," he said. "Help will be here soon."

      "Ya-ya-ya . . . ," the Rodian gasped.

      "Don't try to talk," Anakin told him. "Waste of strength."

      Suddenly Kelbis Nu went still, his trembling ceased, and for the first

      time he seemed to actually see Anakin.

      "Yag'Dhul' he whispered, and behind that whisper was a stormwind of

      danger.

      That was all. The Jedi's life left him with his last breath.

      Tahiri was shouting at someone over her wrist comm.

      "Never mind, Tahiri," Anakin said. "He's gone." Tears started in his

      eyes, but he battled them down.

      "He can't be," Tahiri said. "I was going to save him."

      "I'm sorry," Anakin said. "We got here too late."

      Tahiri's shoulders began to twitch, and she made a sound like hiccuping

      as she fought to control her tears. Anakin watched her, wishing he could

      help, that he could make the grief go away, but there was nothing he could

      do. People died. You got used to it.

      It still hurt.

      "He said something at the end," Anakin told her, hoping to distract

      her.

      "What?"

      "The name of a planet, Yag'Dhul. It's not far from here, right where

      the Corellian Trade Spine and the Rimma Trade Route meet. And I felt. . .

      danger. Like he was trying to tell me something bad is happening there." He

      glanced down at the bodies. "C'mon. We'd better go."

      "We have to do something," Tahiri said. "We can't just let those guys

      get away with it."

      "We can't hunt them," Anakin said.

      "Why not?"

      "Because we're Jedi, not assassins."

      "We could at least tell security or whoever enforces the law around

      here."

      "We're supposed to be here anonymously, remember? If we draw attention

      to ourselves, we endanger the mission."

      "Some mission. Getting supplies. This is more important. Anyway, we've

      already drawn attention to ourselves." She nodded at the crowd of vagrants

      drifting toward them, the curiosity of two dead bodies overcoming their fear

      of two live Jedi.

      And as if to highlight her point, a trio of groundcars arrived at the

      end of the alley and disgorged armed, uniformed people.

      "I guess we'll be talking to security after all." Anakin clipped his

      lightsaber to his belt and held up his hands to show they were empty.

      The officers approached warily, led by a lanky, craggy-faced man with

      the fading remnants of a black eye. He looked down at the two bodies and

      back up at them. Then his eyes focused on their lightsabers-Tahiri still had

      hers in her hand.

      He raised his gun. "Place your weapons on the ground," he said.

      "We didn't do this," Tahiri exploded. "We were trying to help."

      "Put it down, now, girlie."

      "Girlie?"

      "Do as he says, Tahiri," Anakin said, carefully detaching his weapon

      and placing it near his feet.

      "Why?"

      "Do it."

      "It's good advice, kid," the officer said.

      Radiating anger, Tahiri placed her lightsaber on the duracrete.

      "Good. As officers of the judicials, it is now my duty to inform you

      that we are detaining you for questioning and possible prosecution."

      "What? You're arresting us?" Tahiri said.

      "Until we sort this out, yes."

      "Ask the crowd. They saw what happened."

      "We will; don't worry. There will be a thorough investigation. Make

      this easy on yourselves."

      But words are only the shadows of thoughts, and behind the officer's

      words, Anakin felt something that suggested that this was going to be

      anything but easy.

      THIRTEEN

      By the time Jaina reached the vicinity of the Sernpidal system, her

      X-wing felt like a suit of clothes she'd been wearing for way too long.

      In fact, her clothes felt that way, too, but more so.

      Jedi meditation techniques and isometrics made the long hyperspace

      jumps bearable, but nothing could hide the fact that there was no room on an

      X-wing for a shower. Or ' room to stand up, to walk, to run.

      That's not likely going to happen anytime soon, she chided herself. So

      concentrate!

      She was near her goal now. Somewhere down there-or so the tracer told

      her-was Kyp Durron. Or his X-wing, at

      least,

      Or merely the tracer beacon, if Kyp was more clever than Uncle Luke

      imagined. Jaina started sweeping with long-range sensors.

      Kyp wasn't at Sernpidal anymore, but a system several very strange

      jumps away. The star at the bottom of the gravity pit was old, a white dwarf

      that at this distance was barely brighter than its much more distant, hotter

      cousins. It was wreathed with a lazy torus of nebulas ejected when the star

      collapsed into its present pale form. Jaina had appeared in the inner fringe

      of the gas cloud.

      She punched up the stellar survey and found a brief entry more than two

      hundred years old. The star had a number but not a name. Six planets. The

      nearest to the sun was a lifeless rock; the next three were sheathed in

      frozen carbon dioxide and water ice. On the outer planets, the ice got more

      exotic: methane, ammonia, chlorine in various com-

      pounds. The largest planet, a gas giant, had picked up its own nebula

      from the outbound gases expelled from the parent star.

      No known intelligent life in the system, no known life at all. No

      resources that couldn't be found more easily elsewhere, and no reason to

      come back.

      But Kyp Durron had come here.

      She followed the beacon in, dropping from above the plane of the

      elliptic. It took her to the fourth planet, a rock half the size of

      Coruscant that made Hoth seem like a hothouse. She tried not to fidget.

      She hadn't expected to come in unnoticed, and she didn't. As she was

      making orbit a pair of X-wings rose up to meet her. One had the beacon in

      it.

      A few moments later, she answered what turned out to be Kyp's hail.

      "Amazing," he said. "Simply amazing. Jaina Solo, you continue to find

      ways to surprise me."

      "Hello, Kyp."

      "I'd ask you what could have possibly brought you to this place, but I

      almost don't want to know. If the Force guided you, it's almost too

      frightening."


      "How so?"

      "Because I was just about to come looking for you and Rogue Squadron,"

      Kyp answered, sounding sardonic.

      "Really."

      "Yep. I've found something, Jaina-something I can't handle with my

      Dozen. Something that could strike a death blow to the New Republic if we

      don't deal with it now, while we can."

      "What are you talking about?" Jaina asked.

      "I'd rather tell you in person. Follow me in-we don't have much down

      there, but it's better than the cockpit of an X-wing."

      Kyp and his followers had melted tunnels and caves

      through the water ice and sealed it, then sifted an oxygen-nitrogen mix

      from higher up, where the planet's atmosphere had condensed when its primary

      went cold.

      "We keep it right at freezing in here," Kyp explained, "so our humble

      home doesn't melt." He handed her a parka. "You'll want that."

      "To tell you the truth," Jaina said, "the cold feels good. Almost as

      good as it feels to stand up." Her legs were having a little trouble finding

      their stride in the lower gravity.

      "Well, like I said, it's not much, but we like it," Kyp said.

      "Kyp, what are you doing all the way out here? This whole sector must

      be crawling with Yuuzhan Vong."

      "Oh, they aren't far, though you'd be surprised by their numbers, I

      think-but they aren't here. No worlds to colonize, no slaves to be had, no

      machines to be destroyed."

      "Except you, your people, and your ships."

      "Good point. But there are a lot of these played-out star systems near

      the Rim. This one isn't even particularly rich in ore because the star died

      with a whimper-no supernova to spew heavy metals all over the place. I don't

      see them looking here when all of their efforts are focused on the Core,"

      "You think they'll push toward the Core?"

      Kyp rolled his eyes. "You're smarter than that, Jaina. The Yuuzhan Vong

      are taking a breath, that's all, hoping their collaborators will do some of

      the work for them. But they're building up everywhere. And what I've found

      out here-"

      "Yes, you mentioned that."

      "First things first, Jaina. Do you mind telling my why you're here?

      And, in all seriousness, give me a little hint as to how?"

      "Master Skywalker sent me to talk to you."

      "Really? He has something new to say?"

      "He and Mara fled Coruscant after Borsk Fey'lya ordered their arrest."

      Kyp blinked, and his brow creased.

      "Come in here and sit down," he said. He ushered her into what was

      obviously his war room-a portable sensor sweep, a tactical display, and star

      charts were its furnish-

      ings. He pulled up a collapsible chair for Jaina and one for himself.

      "That was uncommonly stupid," he murmured. "Even for Fey'lya. Do you

      think our chief of state is working with the Peace Brigade?"

      "Master Skywalker doesn't think so. Neither do I."

      "Huh," Kyp said dubiously. "So what is Master Sky-walker doing now?"

      "Aunt Mara's pregnant, you know. It's not long before her time comes.

      Uncle Luke's hiding out with Booster Terrik. He intends to find a planet to

      build a Jedi base on."

      Kyp's eyes narrowed. "A base for what?"

      "To operate from. A place where endangered Jedi can go, a place for

      them to strike from."

      "Jaina," Kyp said, "choose your words carefully. What do you mean by

      'strike'? Don't put words in the Master's mouth just because you think I

      want to hear them."

      Jaina looked down at the floor. "No," she said, "he's still not

      advocating what you're doing. He's trying to build a network to pass people

      and information in and out of Yuuzhan Vong space. A system of places like

      this, and ships-"

      "But no direct action. No bringing the fight home to the Yuuzhan Vong."

      "Not exactly-not the way you mean. But, Kyp, he is doing something, and

      he needs your help."

      Kyp shook his head. "I think he sent you out here to find out what I'm

      doing."

      "Partly. But he also sent me to bring you back into the fold."

      Kyp rubbed his jaw thoughtfully for a moment. "I don't object to what

      Master Skywalker is doing. I have my bolt-holes and contacts, but they're

      limited, scattered, one day at a time. I don't have the resources or the

      leisure to build and maintain a stable network. If Luke does, that's great.

      I wish he would take a more active hand, but this is more than I was

      starting to think he would do. He's right; I can be of help to him, in

      certain sectors. And I'll do it-I'll meet with him. But Jaina, I need

      something from you in return." He

      frowned. "Though this arrest business changes things." He mulled that

      over a bit and shrugged. "I'll lay it out for you anyway. I'm not on good

      terms with any of the military leaders. I need someone who is. Is that still

      you?"

      Jaina thought back to her last encounter with Rogue Squadron. And Wedge

      Antilles, so far as she knew, was still on the side of the Jedi.

      "They might listen to me," she allowed.

      "Or your mother."

      "What do you need, Kyp?" Jaina asked wearily.

      He looked at her as if for the first time. "It can wait a few hours,"

      he said. "Why don't you get cleaned up? We sank an old cargo tank to use as

      a warm room. There's a hot tub of water calling your name."

      "That sounds really, really good," Jaina said. "That's not a

      proposition I'm prepared to refuse, anyway."

      The rogue Jedi's eyes twinkled mischievously. "When you're done, we'll

      discuss what other propositions you might find interesting."

      That did something tickly to Jaina's stomach. She tried to ignore it.

      Clean and in a change of clothes, Jaina spent half an hour limbering

      up, enjoying the luxury of motion. Then she rejoined Kyp in the tactical

      room. A few more of his Dozen-plus however many now-were in evidence. They

      nodded at her when she entered.

      "That better?" Kyp asked.

      "A lot better," Jaina told him. "Solar diameters better. Parsecs

      better. So. What's up?"

      "I like that," Kyp said. "You get to the point." He gestured for her to

      take a seat.

      "Like I said earlier," he began, as she settled into the reinforced

      flimsiplast chair, "we've been mostly taking things day by day. Harassing

      Yuuzhan Vong convoys, providing aid to resistance movements, keeping our

      receivers tuned. The problem was, nothing we could ever do was enough. We

      were no more than ore mites, irritating the Vong. The other thing I realized

      was how little we really know about

      them. How many are there? Where do they come from? Are they still

      coming? So a few months ago I decided to spend some time on an extended

      recon. We began at the Rim, where they first entered, then visited Belkadan

      and Helska. It wasn't easy, but it wasn't as hard as I expected, either. I

      found a few answers. I found a lot more questions. But Sernpidal-Gavin

      Darklighter took Rogue Squadron to Sernpidal. After."

      Jaina stiffened.

      "Right," Kyp said. "You were with him, weren't you? What you saw was

      confidential, not something for crazy Kyp Durron to know. But when people

      see strange things, J
    aina, they talk." He leaned forward on his elbows.

      "I've been known to accuse the New Republic and the Jedi of being slow to

      act, of having their priorities confused. Sometimes I've been right; maybe

      other times I've misstated the case. This time..."

      He tapped on a holo display, and the Sernpidal system appeared. An

      adjustment, and a small section of it came into tight focus-a crescent of

      debris.

      "The remains of Sernpidal."

      Jaina suddenly felt her throat closing and tears welling behind her

      eyes. She'd thought she had a handle on this, on Chewbacca's death, but

      seeing the wreck of an entire planet, knowing somewhere in that jumble of

      rocks were the molecules that had once knit together into a person who had

      lived and loved, had held her when she was young-it stung. In some ways,

      Chewie had been a bigger part of her life than her own mother.

      Kyp felt her grief and gave her the space of a few moments to adjust.

      Then he pointed to the holo.

      "They did it to make ships," he said softly. "They grow the ships as

      they grow all of their tools. They feed the young ones on broken planets."

      He looked significantly at Jaina. "You knew this, right?"

      She nodded.

      "Right. Coralskippers, bigger ships, all of the things we've seen

      already. But then there's this."

      He magnified yet again.

      As they looked at the image, Kyp continued. "Gavin

      Darklighter saw the Yuuzhan Vong growing a ship the size of the Death

      Star. Why didn't anyone think that was a serious thing?"

      The . . . thing . . . portrayed in the holograph was clearly a Yuuzhan

      Vong ship. It had the same organic look to it, and in color and alternating

      textures rough and smooth was much like the larger ships Jaina had already

      seen. But in form it was quite different.

      It spidered across the sky, a huge, multilegged monster with each

      leg-or arm, or whatever-curving in the same direction, so the whole thing

      looked like a mad sculptor's attempt to portray a galaxy. It was beautiful

      and terrible, and it made her mouth dry to look at it.

      "It didn't look like that before," Jaina said. "It was just

      an ovoid."

      "What you and Gavin saw was hardly more than a seed," Kyp said. "That

      thing could swallow Death Stars for lunch. And no one has done anything."

      "We've had our hands sort of full," she replied, aware that her voice

      was hushed. "How did you get this? Surely after Rogue Squadron's recon, the

     


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