Read The Force Unleashed Online
Authors: Sean Williams
Tags: #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Space warfare, #Adventure, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Star Wars fiction, #Imaginary wars and battles, #Science Fiction - Star Wars, #Darth Vader (Fictitious character)
familiar as Bail Organa's, with its oval features, black lips, and seven thorns
sprouting from her forehead, black braids coiled intimately around her throat. She
wore combat boots and leather pants and a stripped-down vest to match. The only
difference between this woman and the one he had seen in a vision was her deep red
eyes.
When Shaak Ti had sent her Padawan to hide in the jungle of Felucia, she had indeed
been a servant of the light side of the force. Now she had tipped and joined him on
the dark side.
Because Shaak Ti was dead. Because he had killed her.
And now Shaak Ti's apprentice had come to kill him.
Did she know?
"Maris Brood," he said, moving a step away from Bail Organa.
She tilted her head in acknowledgment. "And you are?"
"That's none of your business." He kept his lightsaber carefully between him and
those hypnotically spinning blades. The shaking of the ground was worsening. "I've
come for the Senator."
"Well, you can't have him."
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"Can't doesn't apply here."
She grinned. "Let's see, shall we?"
"Stand aside, girl. Don't make me hurt you."
She laughed. "Oh, you won't do that. He won't let you."
The thundering noise reached a peak as, with a roar like the colliding of worlds,
the largest rancor yet crashed the bone walls aside and stood over them, dripping
slime from its mandibles. Its skin was a deathly white, giving it a ghostly,
supernatural cast. Organa and the apprentice went flying, followed by an avalanche
of bones.
His head ringing, the apprentice burrowed out from under the bone pile barely in
time to avoid a giant clawed foot crashing down on him. He ran between the enormous
legs and away from the swishing tail, slashing as he went, but the creature's skin
was so thick it didn't even bleed. Surmounted with tusks and horns longer than he
was, the brute-clearly a bull of the species-u a by far the biggest living thing he
had ever seen. Armor plating thicker than some starship hulls protected its neck and
head. Its every movement was ponderous but powerful. It stank of alien flesh and the
dark side. The imbalance that had tipped Mans Brood against the Jedi had also turned
what had probably once been a noble beast into an insatiable monster.
And now he had to kill it. His mind was undivided on that point, even if the precise
details eluded him. It had his scent now and all the malicious will of Maris goading
it to attack. Between grasping hands and cracking tail, he was going to have a hard
time just getting near it. When he tried tipping it over with the Force, it simply
roared at him in annoyance. Sith lightning glanced off its armored hide like water.
He could slash at it with his lightsaber for years and have no effect. Its mind was
small and already consumed by Maris's will.
The situation looked hopeless. Trying to outrun it would be fu tile, and he doubted
even Juno could land long enough for him and Organa to board and take off in time to
avoid several tons of bull rancor bearing down on the ship's hull. If he couldn't
fight and couldn't run, what other options were open to him?
He stalled, dodging the beast's blows and leading it in circles, wondering if it
might eventually tire or grow hungry enough to lose interest in him no matter how
much Maris prodded it. Ii seemed indefatigable, though, and rump, forcing it to
turn, she was there with twin blades spinning, trying to drive him into those
massive, snapping jaws.
He rolled under the bull rancor's boulder-sized chin and was blasted with moist, hot
breath. The sight of its teeth did nothing to reassure him. If Maris caught him off
guard again, OR if he made a mistake, those teeth could easily end any aspirations
he had OF nerving alongside his Master as co-ruler of the galaxy.
Those teeth . . .
All his powers useless . . .
The beginnings of a plan took shape in his mind. At first thought, it seemed
crazy-but no less crazy in its own way than bringing down a skyhook or killing a
Jedi Master.
He jumped a swing of the bull rancor's deadly tail. It brought us huge, white body
about, shaking the ground with every step, and focused its piggy eyes on him. The
slavering mouth opened, not to roar but to lunge and bite him in two. Muscles as
thick as tree trunks flexed, lowering its head, the better to strike.
When the mouth was open to its full extent the apprentice took two steps and a deep
breath, and jumped inside.
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The smell alone was almost enough to knock him out, but that was the least of the
dangers he had to face. He used the Force to keep the jaws open just long enough to
avoid the teeth when they closed. Then darkness fell and the creature's tongue
became the biggest threat. His lightsaber-the only source of life in the dank,
dripping maw-made short work of that. The bull rancor's head whipped from side to
side, but his will overrode the reflex to open its mouth-something Maris had not
thought to control.
Seeking to stun the beast, the apprentice drew on all the power of the Force and
sent a sizzling blast of Sith lightning into the un-armored roof of the creature's
mouth.
Every neuron in the bull rancor's brain lit up like a firework. The following
seconds were among the worst the apprentice had ever experienced. The bull rancor's
convulsions were wild and prolonged. He clung on for dear life, half drowning in
blood and half choked by the foul air, with arms and legs bracing him firmly against
the heaving, fleshy walls.
But it didn't die. He couldn't believe it. Wretched, weakened, stumbling, the bull
rancor clung to life with Kota's tenacity. No less desperate, the apprentice played
the only card left to him.
With one powerful release of kinetic energy, he exploded tin bull rancor's head from
within.
Immediately he was falling. A torrent of blood and vile liquid rushed up the gaping
throat, sweeping him out onto the field of bones. Blinking, gagging, he barely
retained a grip on his light saber as the massive headless body dropped to the
ground behind him with a mighty, wet crash.
It was lucky he had retained his weapon, for Maris was on him in an instant, blades
humming and whirling. He barely raised hi lightsaber in time to avoid decapitation
and stumbled awkwardly to his feet to deflect another attempt.
"You've made me angry now," she said, "and I'll make you regret that."
"I gave you a choice," he said, blocking another double blow "You killed that thing,
not me."
"The dark side doesn't split hairs," she snarled.
Her eyes blazed red as she rained blow after blow upon him. He staggered backward,
weakened by more than just his battle with the bull rancor.
He was fighting himself-but not in some flashback-inspired hallucination, where the
Jedi and the Sith warred in him for control of his future. This time the fight was
real, and his opponent was as joyously rich in the dark side as he had ever been.
She, too, had lost someone she cared deeply about; she, too, had been sent out into
the hard galaxy to fend for herself. They should be helping each other, not fighting
each other. But with Bail Organa watching, he couldn't even raise the possibility of
a truce. He was even using Soresu moves against her raw, unpredictable lunges, just
as the vision of himself had done in Jedi robes. And yet. . .
As he defended himself, he saw nothing but self-pity and fear in her eyes. Both were
inferior to pure anger, although both could be potent gateways to the true mastery
of the dark side that his Master had demonstrated to him. Maris was a newcomer,
barely beginning her journey-as he, too, was journeying along a path toward full
mastery. For the first time, he understood that the
I one didn't come in two shades only: dark and light, distinct and combative, never
meeting in the middle to form gray. Those were ideals, and ideals existed solely for
philosophers and theoreticians to argue over. In the real world, dark and light
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coexisted in varying proportions; nothing was ever static. Thus this former Jedi
Padawan could turn to the dark side after a lifetime serving the light-and she could
just as easily turn back to the light afterward, if she survived.
Light, dark, Shaak Ti had tried to tell him, they are just directions.
We're always moving, he thought, toward the dark or toward the light. It's
impossible to stand still. Some, like Darth Vader and the Emperor, had been
descending through the dark side for so long that the light must have become a faint
and distant memory. Some hovered eternally in the gray, never entirely choosing a
side. There were, in fact, no actual sides, just the direction in which one happened
to be moving. It was all relative.
Coming to that understanding gave him a new kind of strength. When Sith betrayed one
another, it wasn't because they were enemies. Their paths had simply diverged. So
fighting Maris wasn't turning his back on the dark side. She was simply in his way,
like so many other people before him.
Do not be fooled, Shaak Ti had also said, as so many have before you, that you walk
on anything other than your own two feet.
Blocking Maris Brood's spinning strikes, he changed from the staid form of Soresu
into the more aggressive Juyo favored by the dark side. Maris noticed the shift in
his fighting style but, having only been trained in Jedi methods, failed to
understand what it meant. She continued attacking with increasing desperation, even
as he began to drive her back across the mounds of bones, past the body of her giant
pet and away from Senator Organa. Her breathing became hard and her moves less
focused. Fear began to dominate the wild look in her eyes. She was close to losing
her concentration entirely.
Use the fear, he wanted to tell her. Use the fear to make you angry, because anger
makes you strong. I killed your Master. Mm, tried to kill me and I am stronger for
it. You could be, too, if you would only realize that simple truth!
But even in the depths of her darkness, the light had corrupted her too deeply. She
was a lost cause.
Enough, he thought.
Raising his left hand, he used the Force to lift a mound of bones into the air.
Rattling and tumbling, they swirled around tin two of them, picking up speed. Maris
didn't know where to look. While she was distracted, he disarmed her with two swift,
precise moves. Her blades skittered away through the bones and she fell back,
rubbing her singed forearms. Defiance gleamed in her eyes, but too late. Much too
late.
When she turned to run, he struck her in the back with Sith lightning and she fell
sprawling to the bones.
With his lightsaber held loosely in his right hand, he approached her.
"No," she gasped, making a futile attempt to imitate the bone dance floating around
them. He batted the missiles away.
"Please!" Defiance turned to despair and still she resisted het anger. "Don't!"
"Why not?" He stood over her, lightsaber raised, point-down, to strike. "If you're
the slave to the dark side you claim to be, I'd be doing the galaxy a favor."
"But it's not my fault. Shaak Ti abandoned me on this horrible planet." Tears
sparkled in her eyes. "Felucia is evil. It corrupted me. Just let me get away from
here and I'll put the dark side behind me. I want to."
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"Why should I believe you?"
She came up onto her knees. "Please let me go. You've won, haven't you? The Senator
is yours. There's no need to kill me." She reached for him. "Save me instead.
Please."
He backed away, repelled by the display. You're not worthy of the dark side, he
wanted to say.
But this was what the dark side hail turned her into. She had aspired to being a
Jedi Knight, once, and now she was reduced to begging for her life. What talents she
had were poisoned, turned to destruction, directed inward-used toward no greater end
than her own survival.
The dark side had changed Felucia in a similar fashion. The stench of death and
decay in his nostrils came from more than the bull rancor's blood all over him.
Corruption.
He lowered his lightsaber and deactivated it. The swirl of bones fell to the ground
with a clatter.
She clambered to her feet, looking as though she couldn't believe her luck. "Thank
you."
He wasn't sure he could believe it, either. Was he sparing her Out of pity or
because he recognized the emotions poisoning her? "Don't say anything. Just get out
of here."
"Can I come with you? I don't want to stay here..."
"You'll just have to, until another ship comes along. Or maybe the Imperials can
give you a lift."
She backed away, as though he might change his mind at any moment. Then she turned
and made a break for the tree line. He watched her in case she went for her weapons
and tried to take him by surprise. For all her pleading and bargaining, he didn't