Chapter 2:
Old Soldier
I'd never been a student of history, something that became a real problem for me while I explored the wreck of the sort-of star destroyer. I hadn't been a student of much, really. Whatever my master had taught me. Basic things, things to get me by. He wasn't much of a teacher of academics, but he had tried in his own way.
If he hadn't died, I'd likely never have fled, but as it was…
The ship was definitely Imperial, pre-first-order, pre-Battle of Jakku, that much I could be sure of. An eight-spoked version of the imperial crest was painted all over the ship, inside and out. The hanger bay had been littered with scattered armor, reminiscent of old stormtroopers, the owners long since turned to dust.
Whatever had brought the starship down, I could only hope for the crew's sake that their death was from the crash and not starvation from a lack of supplies. Of the ways to go, starvation wasn't one of the best.
My lightsaber had made quick work of the door at the far end of the landing bay, and so I'd made my way deeper into the ship, each corridor a mirror of the last. The sharp angle of the deck was the only thing that gave me any indication of which end of the ship was the front, my only illumination the head-lamp I'd scavenged from the emergency supplies kit on the TIE.
But something on the ship was still drawing power, which meant something on the ship was still
producing power, I could feel it in my
teeth, the dull, almost imperceptible vibration that let even the most inexperienced spacer know they still had a chance, that the ship wasn't dead.
The air was stale, but not as much as I would have expected for a wreck this old, at least, what, forty years? Maybe, it was older than anything I was familiar with, so it had to be at least that old. But it had power, and so
I still had hope.
So maybe there was still some air flow from a backup life support system, or maybe somebody had been in the ship recently… or, if I was to dash my hopes completely, it was just because the ship had been ripped open on impact with the planet. That last one would mean I had a lot slimmer of a chance of finding functional navi-computer parts.
Not that I had much hope that they'd be compatible with the TIE anyway, but it was worth trying at least. At the very least I might figure out what planet I was on.
The hard soles of my boots clicked across the slanted decking as I climbed towards the stern of the ship. If it was anything like an impstar-deuce, the reactor compartment would be back there, below the bridge tower and just forward of the engines.
I tried to suppress a chuckle at the thought of somehow managing to re-launch the ship and fly it out of here, but the disturbing echo of my own voice in my ears shut down any mirth I might have been feeling rather quickly. Whatever had brought the ship down likely meant it wasn't going back up again, to say nothing of the fact that it was most definitely out of fuel by now if the reactor had still been functioning after the crash.
I don't know if it was the echo or just the sound of a voice that had startled me, it had been hours and no small measure of stress since I'd heard the sound of my own voice, I'd gotten used to the quiet. I shook my head and continued down the hallway, the vibrations were getting a little stronger with each meter.
One, two, three more steps, my fingertips passed over a doorway and the vibrations intensified, just on that one door. Showtime.
I pulled my lightsaber from my belt and snapped down the safety catch and slapped my thumb down on the igniter switch. The crimson blade flashed into existence with a snap-hiss and I jammed it into the door. I didn't need to cut open every door with the lightsaber, a pry-bar would likely work, they weren't locked, just without power.
However, I
wanted to cut the doors open, and so I did.
A few quick swipes of the blade through the thin doors and a kick later, I'd broken into the room. The room that still had power and lights... and corpses… and carbonite? Whatever had happened in this room, it had been rough, a few decades ago.
There were three sets of that old stormtrooper armor stacked up against the forward bulkhead, from the crash most likely, and I wasn't particularly interested in seeing what the armor had inside of it. No, this was a grave wasn't it? Of all the things I'd done, I hadn't robbed graves.
But this was survival, not greed. That made it okay, or, at least less bad. My master wouldn't have agreed with me about that, he would have said that the dead don't care, that our own prosperity mattered more than reverence for the dead.
Well, more directly, he'd have said that they didn't matter, and taken whatever he wanted. That was the kind of man he was. He treated me well because he treated everything he owned well, so he did care in his own way, I would suppose. His apprentice…
I shook my head, that wasn't what mattered, what mattered was getting off this planet.
But the carbonite? I turned my head towards the brick of carbonite leaned against the wall, tucked into a dent that it likely made during the crash. That was certainly interesting, not the most interesting thing, but pretty interesting.
I stepped over a skeleton clad in brown robes, I didn't recognize the attire, but something felt… familiar. That was a question for later, that block of carbonite looked… very interesting, now that I'd gotten a closer look. It looked almost like somebody had frozen a set of stormtrooper armor in it, why they'd do that, I didn't know.
But if it was frozen from before the crash, that meant the power cells would have been preserved in perfect stasis, and those I
could use, if for nothing else, I could recharge the lightsaber when I eventually depleted it by carving through every door in the ship.
I clipped the lightsaber back to my belt and crouched down by the control panel set into the block of carbonite, blew the dust off of it, and started poking at it. It lit up at my first touch, whatever backup power supply the ship was using, it had been keeping this panel charged up for quite some time.
"Let's see what secrets you hold, little panel."
It wasn't something I was intimately familiar with, but it shouldn't be too different from any other carbonite freezing frame that I'd seen, I just had to set up the defrosting cycle. I tapped through a few menus, status, no, power consumption, didn't care…
"Execute, huh? Let's try that then..." I muttered under my breath as I pressed a finger down on the command. Either it would engage the command, or it would kill anything contained in the carbonite, but that would just be foolish.
Long idle heater coils groaned to life and the surface of the carbonite slab glowed a dull red, the radiating heat forced me to take a couple steps back. The front of the armor was freed from its cold prison and my jaw dropped.
It wasn't just armor, it was a body, a person was inside the armor. Suddenly the multitude of readouts I hadn't cared about made sense, vital signs. This stormtrooper was
alive. My hand dropped to my hip and gripped at the lightsaber. The stormtrooper was alive and the Empire was
not kind to twi'leks.
I wished I'd brought my mask, too late now though. He stumbled out of the frame and took a knee on the deck plate, coughed through his helmet. He was clutching something in his right hand, an older model of blaster rifle was slung over his shoulder.
Do or die time. I took a few steps back and snapped the lightsaber off my belt and popped the safety catch. "Trooper," I snarled, "I am Sith, you will obey!" I snapped my thumb down on the igniter switch and held the blade down and to my side.
The trooper tensed when I yelled, then, to my great surprise he came up swinging his closed fist towards my chin. My teeth clacked together and I saw stars and felt my feet leaving the decking. My thumb slipped off the catch and the lightsaber extinguished itself, I flew backwards through the air and landed on my back. Yy head smashed down on top of my lekku and I felt the bile rising in my throat, my eyes slipped out of focus as I tried to gather myself.
That wasn't the reaction I'd been looking for. Out of all possible outcomes, that one wasn't even on the list. I heard his boots clicking on the floor and snapped my thumb back down on the igniter, the snap-hiss filled the room and I forced myself back up onto my feet.
My head was swimming, but I wasn't going down without a fight, not after everything. I glared at the expressionless visage of his helmet. He held up his hand, the one he'd clocked me with, and stared at it, as if only now noticing the object he held.
He lunged towards me and snapped his hand down to his side, there was a crackling and a snap-hiss and the room was bathed in blue to counter my red. Another lightsaber? I jumped back as he swung and cleared the door frame.
"A Jedi?" I mouthed as I brought my own lightsaber up to deflect the incoming strike as he launched himself through the door after me. He wanted blood, and I happened to have some. It was imperative that I keep him from his goal.
The blades slammed together and his superior strength pushed me back a few steps. He was fighting angry, his rage was fueling his strength. This was something I was familiar with, this was how a Sith would fight, not a Jedi. Who the hell was he? His technique was brutal, all strength, harsh swipes, there was no fluidity, no follow-through, he was aggressive, using the weapon like a club.
I dropped and swung at him, knocking his blade up from underneath, he kicked me in the chest with his boot and I fell to a sitting position, the blade fell from my hand and shut itself off. He had me defenseless, and really I shouldn't have been so surprised, I'd been faking it the whole time anyway.
"You're a kid."
I looked up, I'd been expecting a deathblow, but he spoke instead. He sounded confused, angry. He had a Jedi weapon, he attacked me for being a Sith… This was not a stormtrooper. It was nagging at the back of my mind what he had to be, couldn't quite grasp the thought, my head was still spinning, my lekku felt like they were going to explode.
He thought I was with whoever brought his ship down, my declaration must have… he was at war with Sith, must have been. Sith must have brought the ship down.
His lightsaber shut off and he crouched down to look at me. His left hand clamped down hard on my shoulder, as if to let me know that trying anything wouldn't end well for me, and he was definitely right. "You're not Sith. What are you playing at, little girl?"
I licked the blood off my lip, "It worked before, the bluff that is. I didn't want you to attack me for being non-human--"
The trooper made a sound almost like a laugh, not one of joy, more like I'd just said something unfathomably stupid. "You tried to bluff a Republic soldier into thinking you were Sith to make him
not attack you? You're not very smart are you?"
I blinked my eyes, I definitely had a concussion from the blow to the head, that thread of memory, if I could just grab onto it… A Republic soldier? That would make him-- That wasn't the Imperial roundel. "You're a clone." I said, mostly to myself, as if saying it would be what made it real.
"And you're Twi'lek, what has that got to do with anything? What are you doing on this ship? You're obviously not with the separatists. What are you playing at?" He asked and shook me by the shoulder.
I grit my teeth against the pain of my pounding headache and my bruised lekku, "Not… playing at anything. I don't know what you expected but the situation isn't what you think it is."
He grabbed my lightsaber off the deck with his free hand and hoisted me onto my feet with the one clamped to my shoulder. I did my very best not to express how much that actually hurt. I failed.
"Then I suggest you enlighten me as to the situation."
xxx
The walk back to the landing bay was a lot less eventful than the walk from it, certainly less eventful than what transpired in the carbonite chamber. I didn't even get to slash a single door open with a lightsaber; the trooper wouldn't give back my lightsaber. No matter how much I whined.
"I have no idea how anyone would ever take you seriously as a Sith. You behave like a child," He chastised as we ducked through the last half-melted hatchway into the hanger.
I shrugged, "I'm young at heart, what can I say?
Most people find it refreshing."
"I bet." He said simply and then he paused, his helmet turned on his shoulders, he seemed to be taking in the state of the bay. I could imagine it was hard for him. Time didn't really pass when frozen in carbonite, so all those dead soldiers piled up in the bay were friends he'd been with only hours ago, as far as he was concerned.
I put my hand on his shoulder and shook my head, "I'm sorry that it ended up like this. You've been asleep for a very, very long time."
I could almost feel the grief washing over him, a slight tremble through his armor. He hadn't a chance to decompress from his ordeal, and then I'd been there with my lightsaber, pretending to be the thing that he'd been at war with.
Sure I'd spent the greater part of my life around Sith, but that didn't mean I was without empathy.
He turned towards me and seemed to hesitate, "How many years?"
I frowned, I wasn't really a student of history, "I'm not sure, at least fifty. The war ended, you won."
"Fifty years..." He trailed off and walked away from me, towards my TIE, though I doubted that was his destination.
I was on a roll today. Ran from the First Order, got shot at, ended up on a random planet, found my way onto a crashed star destroyer, and ruined a man's worldview. Maybe I
was Sith.
I couldn't really waste time feeling too sorry for him though, if I couldn't get off this planet my freedom was going to be meaningless. One prison was just as good as another and starving to death on a wrecked backwater wasn't my idea of a good time.
That this ship spent so long undisturbed meant that the planet wasn't exactly swimming with sentients or they'd have stripped the wreck years ago.
I stared after the clone and then at my TIE. Despite the fight we'd just been in, and my being almost-but-not-quite his prisoner, well, he was starting to tug at my heartstrings. Hell with it. "Hey--"
A sonic boom cut me off and I looked up at the sky, a shuttle dropped below the cloud-deck and into view. It was definitely Imperial. Neither of us needed that. They had to have tracked my TIE, I should have known there would be some kind of tracking device.
"Hey clone!" I yelled and started running across the deck towards him, "Hey clone! This
really isn't our kind of dance party, trust me on this! We have to get out of here!"
He turned towards me, "What? I thought you said we won the war, that's just a shuttle."
"It's what's in the shuttle that scares me. Get in the TIE fighter, if we don't get out of here we're both going to be facing a firing squad! The First Order doesn't really appreciate escaped slaves!" I yelled as I ran past him and started climbing up the left solar panel of m fighter. The fear I'd felt when he woke up was nothing like the fear I felt now, knowing how easily I'd lost a fight with him, I knew there wasn't a hope in this world or any other that I'd be able to protect myself on the ground.
I looked back over my shoulder, he was headed towards the opposite solar panel, he yelled up at me, "I'm a clone, not a slave. There's a difference."
"I wasn't talking about you. Hurry up and get in the back seat, we're getting out of here," I yelled as I ran across the horizontal support. I dropped to my knee and jammed my fingers under the boarding hatch and lifted.
Adrenaline was a hell of a drug, shaking aside, it got me moving despite my injuries. The second my butt hit the couch my hands were dancing across the controls, start-up sequences remembered from hours of simulator practice and one actual panicked flight served me well.
I felt the thump of a body landing in the couch behind me and I reached over to lockdown the boarding hatch. My bruised lekku throbbed with the sudden pressure change as the on-board life support brought the ship to one standard atmosphere.
"So, the hyperdrive works, but the navicomputer is damaged, so we can't flee the planet. I'm going to try to shoot down that shuttle before it can report us, then we have to disable the tracking beacon on this fighter and find some place to hide," I explained in a manic run-on-sentence and grabbed the throttle control and it felt slick in my sweaty palm.
"So we're stuck on Taris? Could be worse, I guess. I could've spent the last fifty years frozen in carbonite," The clone yelled from the seat behind me. At least he had a sense of sarcasm. He'd be a better companion than a droid at least.
"Taris huh? Well at least now I know where I am." I hauled back on the control yoke and slammed the throttle forward. The inertial dampeners took a second to adjust and I was slammed back in my seat as the small fighter tore out the hanger like a rocket.
Shields still read as weak, navicomputer was still out, I knew that. My hand flew over the weapons panel and I was pleased to find that the blasters were still operational and that the capacitor had charged successfully.
I toggled the targeting scanners and the shuttle popped up immediately, high on my nine o clock. I stomped into the left rudder and hauled the yoke around. Shooting a shuttle in the middle of a landing cycle was a bit like shooting a star destroyer from the inside, I couldn't miss.
I pressed my thumb down on the firing stud. I missed.
"You have flown a fighter before, haven't you?" He asked from the back seat, I could hear the accusation in his voice.
"Of course, I've flown before! This will be my
second flight!"
"That explains why you can't shoot!" He yelled.
"Well maybe I wouldn't have missed if you hadn't punched me in the head!" I yelled back as I hauled on the yoke for another pass.
"Try not to deserve it next time," He shot back at me. A moment later I heard the sound of blasters discharging, he'd found the controls for the rear turret and was firing, presumably at the shuttle.
I stomped into the rudder hard and swung the front of the TIE around on the shuttle, it had aborted the landing cycle and was trying to power back into the air. I wasn't going to give it the chance. I pressed my thumb down on the firing stud and a pair of green blaster bolts lanced out and put a pair of messy holes through the shuttle's starboard engine.
The engine immediately started to belch flame and the shuttle listed violently and started to descend towards the crashed star destroyer. I pushed the throttle forward and angled away from it. "See? I
can shoot!"
"Anyone can shoot a shuttle."
"Hey, you can't mock me too much you know, you got into the fighter with me of your own free will. So, this is Taris? I don't suppose there's anything resembling civilization on Taris?" I asked and finally allowed myself to relax into the pilot's couch. I was still jittery, pumped up, but the anxiety of my impending death had reduced to something tolerable. At least I didn't feel like throwing up anymore.
"That is what we were trying to protect. If we won, it might still be there. I'll punch in the coordinates," He answered back.
Bonding, this was bonding right? Go into combat with somebody, don't die, become friends? I'd never had one of those before, but this new situation I found myself in… well, maybe an attachment or two couldn't hurt.