The Force Awakens (Star Wars) (12 page)

Read The Force Awakens (Star Wars) Online

Authors: Alan Dean Foster

BOOK: The Force Awakens (Star Wars)
2.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Now what?”
he asked. “Please tell me you’ve stumbled over a couple of pulse rifles.”

She was staring at a section of wall. “Maybe something even better.” She tapped the cover that protected a slight bulge in the wall. “If this is a flow panel for this corridor, I might be able to manually disrupt the programming. That would trip the emergency sequence and drop all the blast doors in this section. We
can trap both gangs!”

Finn considered. “Shut the blast doors from down here? Won’t that trap Han and Chewbacca, as well?”

She was excited now. “Yes, but they’ll be separated from the gangs. We can work out how to get them out
after
we’ve neutralized the Guavians and the Kanjis. Redirecting the flow should do it. It doesn’t matter to what level: All we want to do is bring down the blast
doors.”

He nodded enthusiastically. “Let’s do it. What’ve we got to lose?”

She opened the panel, exposing the intricate flowtronics within, and set to work. Tools would have made it easier, but the system was designed to be set and reset as easily as possible. Finn lent a hand, following her lead.

Above, Bala-Tik was out of questions and out of patience. “Enough banter.”

“Bantha?
Now you want a bantha?” Han asked. “What, three rathtars aren’t enough for you?”

“We’re going to take that droid,” Bala-Tik told him firmly. “And you’re going to give us our money back.”

“Or your dead body.” Razoo Qin-Fee spoke as he continued to ply the corners of the corridor with his illuminator. “Your choice, Solo.”

Members of both gangs laughed. Han laughed with them, albeit uncomfortably.
Even if he could keep Bala-Tik talking, the Kanjis were notoriously poor listeners. And he was about out of clever things to say.

That was when the lights began to flicker. Laughter faded as Kanji and Guavian alike regarded the now sporadic illumination with uncertainty. Distant components cycling on and off filled the corridor with a clicking and gnashing like the cries of a thousand mechanical
insects. Han’s eyes widened. With Chewie moaning beside him, he murmured softly.

“I got a bad feeling about this.”


Abruptly, the illumination in the corridor returned to life brighter than ever. Below, Rey leaned back from the now modified flow panel.

“Uh oh.”

Finn looked from her to the panel and back again. “Uh oh, what?”

She turned to him, slightly pale. “Uh oh, wrong
reflow. I didn’t close anything. I opened everything.”

He leaned close to the exposed panel, studying the interior lines. “Can you put it back the way it was?”

She shook her head rapidly. “I purposely locked the reset so that if there was a corresponding panel anywhere in the corridor itself, nobody could undo it and raise the blast doors. Except they’re not going to close now—and everything
else is going to raise up.”

Finn stared at her, one thought in his mind, one word on his lips.

“Rathtars.”

IX

“E
NOUGH OF THIS
,” Bala-Tik snarled. He looked back at his men. “New plan! Kill them and take the droid!”

Weapons came up. Han and Chewbacca looked around wildly, but in the smooth-sided corridor there was nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. Han closed his eyes.

Which was when something monstrous appeared behind the Guavians. It was so large it could barely fit in the cargo corridor.
Tentacles whipped out to snatch up two of the gang, who screamed as their torsos were crushed. Whirling, howling, those who were still able to do so unleashed wild bursts of fire in the direction of their attacker. Those that struck the rathtar barely caused it to flinch. Wisely, Bala-Tik and the survivors scattered.

Han opened one eye. Turning, he expected the burst of Guavian fire that had
failed to reach him to be replaced by a similar barrage from the Kanjiklub members. Except that another rathtar had
appeared behind them and, roaring deafeningly, was busily taking the aliens apart. Chewbacca let out a series of short, clipped moans.

“No kidding!” Han yelled. “Come on!” Together, they raced for a side corridor. Under the guns and watchful eyes of both gangs, they never would
have made it. But all remaining guns and surviving eyes were, at present, otherwise occupied.

As misdirected blasts smashed into the crawl space around them, tearing streaks in the metal and threatening to make it impossible to move across the overheating floor, Finn and Rey found themselves crawling for their lives.

“That was a mistake!” Finn howled, ignoring the pain in his hands and
knees.

“Huge!”
Rey agreed.

Above, Han nearly ran into one of the Guavians. Fleeing from the rathtar behind him while shooting fruitlessly at the monster, the Guavian never saw Han and Chewie—though he did make the acquaintance of Han’s fist. Staggering, he tried to bring his gun to bear on the new threat, only to be sent flying toward the rathtar by the strong arms of the Wookiee. One
tentacle caught the unlucky gang member before he could hit the ground.

“Other direction,” Han blurted. Chewie moaned while BB-8 beeped frantically. Finding instant agreement in three different languages, they took an accessway that was, for the moment at least, devoid of Guavians, Kanjis, and rathtars.

Elsewhere, Razoo Qin-Fee scuttled past a pair of Guavians who were racing full bore
in the opposite direction. Their haste gave him pause, which enabled him to hail a fellow Kanjiklub member coming toward him—just before a tentacle emerged in that individual’s wake to grab him and wrench him out of sight. Deciding that the two Guavians who had just passed him going like hell in the other direction might have a better handle on the situation, Razoo whirled and retraced his steps.
This brought him back to two surviving members of his own group. A hasty discussion determined they should avoid both ends of the corridor. Accordingly, they turned down another passageway—whereupon the third rathtar grabbed the pair who had
just counseled Razoo. He fired at the creature, with the same ineffectual result as before, and raced away.

It was a big ship, he told himself. There
had
to be a place somewhere that was safe from the escaped rathtars. On the other hand, if the rathtars were between him and his own ship, he might never get off alive. Working cooperatively, as a pack, the carnivores would hunt him down along with every one of his companions. That was the thing about rathtars: While they acted like mindless eating machines and didn’t have very large brains, they
were really good at working together. And fast. It was hard to believe how fast something that size could move.

No, he was dead for sure, unless he could somehow circle around them and back to where his ship was docked. As he ran, terrified of what he might encounter around the next corner or in the next corridor over, his only solace came from the knowledge that that unspeakable sack of treachery
Han Solo was certain to meet the same fate, and in the jaws of his own cargo.

It was small consolation, but in his present dire situation, he clung to it.

A tentative Finn flipped open a hatch and looked down the brightly lit corridor. Nothing. Turning, he looked in the other direction. Nothing. No evilly chattering Kanjiklub members, no heavily armed Guavians, and most important, no slobbering
multi-limbed rathtars. He climbed out, giving Rey a hand up, and pointed.


Falcon
’s this way!”

She hesitated. “You sure?”

“No! But we can’t stay here and wait for Kanjiklubbers and Guavians. We’ve got to try
something
.”

He was thankful but hardly surprised to see how easily she kept up with him as they raced for a far corner. Surviving as a scavenger on Jakku ensured that she was
in at least as good physical condition as the average trooper.

“These rathtars?” she was asking him. “What do they look like?”

Rounding the corner, they were brought up short by the sight of surviving gang members doing battle with the subject of her query. It
was enormous and round, covered in light-sensitive orange orbs, and composed mostly of tentacles and teeth. Raising one hand to
her mouth, she caught her breath, simultaneously mesmerized and horrified by the sight.

“They look like that.” Finn reached over and took her arm, not caring this time if she objected. Back the way they had come, around another corner—only this time they didn’t stop fast enough.

One tentacle whipped around Finn’s waist, and moving with incredible speed for something so massive, the rathtar
rushed off with the screaming trooper in its grasp.

“FINN!”

Though it was too big for her and too fast, she gave chase anyway.

Fighting in a desperate attempt to break free, Finn realized he might as well have been wrestling with a steel cable. Neither pounding on it with his fists nor kicking at it with his drawn-up legs produced the slightest reaction on the creature’s part. He even
resorted to trying to take a bite out of it. The hard, rubbery flesh proved impenetrable. At that moment he would have given a limb for a blaster, even though small-arms fire had shown itself to be largely ineffectual against the monsters.

“Finn!”

Not only had Rey lost sight of him, but now the rathtar had moved so far ahead she could no longer hear Finn’s shouts for help. It was a futile
exercise anyway. Suppose she did catch up? The rathtar had more than enough appendages with which to sweep her into its grasp without letting go of Finn. Still, she kept running, keeping an eye out for anything that could be of use.

SUBSIDIARY BAY CONTROL ROOM

She’d run all the way past the door before the full meaning of the words struck home. Halting, she ran back and slammed an open
palm over the access panel. For an awful moment nothing happened and she was afraid that the relevant system was down. Then the door slid aside, admitting her.

Ignoring entire banks of instrumentation, she made her way to a set of multiple monitors. Not only was the system not down, it was fully activated. There were clear views of motionless cargo, empty storage rooms, the
Millennium Falcon
, both the Guavian and Kanjiklub vessels, and…

Finn, being dragged down a main corridor by the rathtar. Dragged toward an empty intersection.

One hand over the pertinent control, she leaned toward the monitor, watching, waiting, hoping that it would respond faster than the door that had led to this control room.
Wait
, she told herself, suspecting that if she blew the opportunity she might
not get another. Or at least not another where she would have a chance to recover Finn in one piece.

Slowing, the rathtar edged forward, checking both cross corridors. No wonder they were so dangerous, she told herself as she kept her attention locked on the monitor. Reassured, the creature started forward again, dragging the increasingly weakened Finn behind it.

Her hand came down on
the control. An indicator flipped from green to red. On the monitor, a blast door descended with gratifying speed. The rathtar reacted almost immediately—but not quite fast enough to prevent one of its tentacles from being severed by the emergency door. The tentacle, she had calculated, that was gripping Finn.

The shriek of pain and fury from the rathtar was horrible to hear. She paid it hardly
any attention as she watched a dazed Finn struggle to his feet and commence fighting to extricate himself from the still-clinging piece of amputated limb.

Stunned by his unexpected escape, he was free of it by the time she arrived. “It didn’t get you,” he said unnecessarily. “It had me!” He turned around. “But there was a blast door, came down at just the right moment…”

“Lucky,” she told
him. “Which way did you say the
Falcon
was?”

For a moment he eyed her uncertainly, unable to quite escape the feeling that there was something she wasn’t telling him. No time for questions now, though. He pointed.

“That way—I hope.”

In another corridor Bala-Tik was talking to one of his gang’s surviving members. “That thing’s taken two of my men.” As he said it, a tentacle slipped
forward to wrap itself around another screaming associate. “Three of my men,” the Guavian corrected himself.

If they didn’t do something soon, he knew, none of them would get off this cursed freighter alive. Even as he retreated, firing behind him, he could not keep from wondering how Solo, that worthless dispenser of devious schemes, had managed to pull it off. Capturing even one rathtar
was considered a near-impossibility. Impounding
three
and then getting them aboard a ship alive and in good condition stretched all bounds of believability.

Probably, an increasingly desperate Bala-Tik thought as he let off yet another ineffectual blast, Solo had done it by talking all of them into a state of complete insensibility.

At the far end of the main cargo corridor, the object
of the Guavian’s curses had taken cover together with Chewbacca and BB-8. Demonstrating unexpected determination in the face of rathtar-inspired bedlam, several members of both gangs had continued to pursue. Their persistent fire prevented human, Wookiee, and droid from crossing the cargo-crowded open bay to reach the waiting disc-shaped ship on the other side.

These guys must
really
want
their money back, Han thought as he and Chewbacca returned fire with weapons they had recovered from where rathtar-munched Guavians and Kanjis had dropped them.

Having come this far, he was not about to be denied. Sidling around behind the Wookiee, he gestured across the bay deck. “I’ll get the door. Cover us.”

Moaning assent, Chewbacca let loose a ferocious barrage as Han, also firing,
darted across the open space toward the
Falcon
. BB-8 went with him, judiciously choosing to keep the human between himself and the intruders’ fire. Once back at his ship, Han methodically activated the portal via the external emergency controls. For the first time in quite a while he felt some relief, as the ramp lowered smoothly. Turning, he yelled back toward the corridor terminus.

“Chewie,
we’re in! Come on!”

Letting out a bellow that signified both recognition of Han’s call and defiance of their remaining enemies, the Wookiee turned and raced for the waiting ship—only to be hit in the back of a shoulder by a lucky shot from one of the pursuing Guavians. The impact sent him crashing to the deck.

Uttering a quiet curse, Han left BB-8 behind and raced back toward his injured
copilot, firing as he ran. A single well-placed shot took down the Guavian who had hit Chewbacca.

“Get up! Chewie, get up!” Striving to divide his attention between the wounded Wookiee and the gang members who were trying to break out of the far corridor, Han got one arm underneath Chewbacca and strained with all his might. It was like trying to lift a mountain. A big, heavy, hairy, smelly,
and badly bleeding mountain. One that he would no more leave behind than he would his ship or himself.

Had the gangs been intact, he and Chewbacca never would have made it back to the
Falcon
. There would have been too many guns, too many blasts to avoid. But the intruders had been drastically reduced both in number and capability. The shot that had struck the Wookiee had really been as wild
as the others.

Together, Han still supporting the stumbling Chewie, the two of them started up the ramp. At that moment, the last thing either of them expected to hear was a recognizable, friendly voice.

“Han!”

Dodging the greatly reduced fire from the surviving gang members and keeping to cover as much as possible, Rey and Finn made it across the open deck to reach the
Falcon
. As
they raced up the ramp, a grimacing Han gave orders.

“You shut the hatch behind us!” he instructed Rey, who nodded a swift response. To Finn he snapped, “You take care of Chewbacca!” Half slipping free of his burden, half throwing the wounded copilot in Finn’s direction, Han charged up the ramp.

Nearly collapsing beneath the Wookiee’s weight, Finn manfully
did his best to help the moaning
Chewbacca stay upright as the two of them staggered the rest of the way up the ramp.

“How do I do that?” the trooper called after the pilot. To no avail. Han didn’t answer.

Chewbacca, on the other hand, groaned, bellowed, and chuffed suggestions. Understanding none of them, a willing Finn nonetheless nodded amenably in response to each one.

“That’s right…for sure…yeah, I’ll do that…no
problem.” Wincing as the Wookiee stumbled, Finn had to employ every bit of his strength to keep both of them upright.

If he falls on me
, he decided worriedly,
it’s all over
.

Somehow they made it to the medbay. Helping Chewbacca into the padded alcove that served as a bed, Finn eased the Wookiee in and started digging through the boxes of medical equipment that formed a line on the floor.
This was something he could do, he knew, feeling considerably less helpless than he had when trying to assist Rey earlier. Every stormtrooper received training in how to deal with battlefield wounds. Hopefully, the Wookiee’s shoulder injury wouldn’t present any distinctive surprises.

Other books

Bridge Of Birds by Hughart, Barry
Terminator and Philosophy: I'll Be Back, Therefore I Am by Richard Brown, William Irwin, Kevin S. Decker
Shades of Dark by Linnea Sinclair
Nineteen Eighty by David Peace
The Insanity Plea by Larry D. Thompson
Gadget by Viola Grace
The Secret Heiress by Susie Warren
Destino by Alyson Noel
The Sixes by Kate White
Damaged by McCombs, Troy