20

The fighters escorted him to one of the smaller warships, directing him to a starboard docking bay. A group of heavily armed and armored guards was waiting there for him: short bipeds with large hands, their features hidden byfaceplates lavishly decorated to look like fright masks. They took him to a small room loaded with sensor equipment, where he was stripped, searched, and scanned multiple times, his clothing taken away presumably for similar scrutiny. The shuttle, he had no doubt, was undergoing a similar examination. Afterward, he was taken to another room, this one bare of everything except a cot, and left there alone.

He spent most of the next two hours either trying to rest or else giving up the effort and pacing back and forth across his cell. If the Vagaari were smart, the thought kept running along the back of his mind, they would simply kill him and go on with their looting. An avian in the hand, after all, was a pretty universal maxim.

But maybe, just maybe, they would be greedy as well as smart. Greedy, and curious.

Two hours after he’d been tossed into his cell, the guards returned with his clothing. They watched him dress, then marched him out and along a corridor to a hatch marked with alien symbols. Beyond the hatch, to his relief, was a shuttle and not simply a quick death by spacing. They nudged him inside and piled in behind him, and a minute later they were off. The shuttle had no viewports, giving him no clue as to where they were going, but when the hatch opened again it was to a double row of Vagaari soldiers in fancier uniform armor than his captors. Apparently, someone in authority had decided to see him.

He’d expected to be taken someplace small and cramped and anonymous, as befit a proper interrogation. It was therefore a shock when the final blast door opened into a large chamber that rivaled the most elaborate groundside throne rooms he’d ever seen. Against the back wall was a raised dais with an exquisitely decorated chair in the center, occupied by a Vagaari clad in a heavy-looking multicolored robe with sunburst shoulder and ankle guards, a serrated cloak back, and no fewer than four separate belts around his waist. Flanking him were a pair of Vagaari in only slightly less gaudy robes—advisers or other underlings, probably. All three wore tall wraparound facemasks that reached from cheekbones to probably a dozen centimeters above the tops of their heads, decorated in the same fearsome pattern as the soldiers’ combat faceplates. A cynical thought flickered through Car’das’s mind, that the height of the masks was probably designed to compensate for the species’

natural shortness and make them look more dangerous to their enemies. Lining the walls were other Vagaari, some in soldiers’

armor, others in what seemed to be civilian clothing and simple face paint. All of them were gazing silently at the prisoner being brought before the throne.

Car’das waited until the guards had positioned him three meters back from the throne, then bowed low. “I greet the great and mighty Vagaari—” he began in Minnisiat.

And was slammed to his hands and knees by a sharp blow across his shoulders. “You do not speak in the presence of the Miskara until spoken to,” one of the guards reproved him.

Car’das opened his mouth to apologize, caught his near error just in time, and remained silent instead.

For a long minute the rest of the room was quiet, too.

Car’das wondered if they were waiting for him to get up, but with his shoulder blades throbbing from that blow it seemed a better idea to stay where he was until otherwise instructed.

Apparently, it was the right decision. “Very good,” a deep voice came from the dais at last. “You may rise.”

Carefully, tensing for another blow, Car’das stood up.

To his relief, the blow didn’t come. “I am the Miskara of the Vagaari people,” the Vagaari seated on the throne announced.

“You will address me as Your Eminence. I’m told you have the insolence to demand that I bargain with you.”

“I make no demands of any sort, Your Eminence,”

Car’das hastened to assure him. “Rather, I’m in terrible difficulty and came here hoping the great and mighty Vagaari people might be willing to come to my assistance. In return for your aid, I hope to offer something you might find of equal value.”

The Miskara regarded him coolly. “Tell me of this difficulty.”

“My companions and I are merchants from a distant realm,” Car’das told him. “Nearly three months ago we lost our way and were taken captive by a race of beings known as the Chiss. We’ve been their prisoners ever since.”

A twitter of muted conversation ran around the room.

“Prisoners, you say,” the Miskara repeated. The visible part of his face had seemed to harden at the mention of the Chiss, but his voice wasn’t giving anything away. “I see no chains of captivity about your neck.”

“My apparent freedom is an illusion, Your Eminence,”

Car’das said. “My companions are still in Chiss hands, as is our ship. Of equal importance, the Chiss now refuse to release to us some of the spoils of one of their raids, spoils that we were promised and that we need to pay off the late fees our customers will demand. Without that treasure, we will face certain death when we reach home.”

“Where are your companions being held?”

“At a small base built deep inside an asteroid, Your Eminence,” Car’das said. “The navigational data necessary to locate it is contained in the computer of the vessel in which I arrived.”

“And how did you know how and where to find us?”

Car’das braced himself. I will do whatever necessary, Thrawn had once told him, to protect those who depend on me.

“Because, Your Eminence,” he said, “I was present aboard the Chiss attack cruiser that raided your forces here during your battle of conquest five weeks ago.”

A deadly silence settled over the room. Car’das waited, painfully aware of the armed soldiers standing all around him.

“You stole one of our ship nets,” the Miskara said at last.

“The commander of the Chiss force did that, yes,”

Car’das said. “As I say, I was his prisoner, and took no part in the attack.”

“Where is this commander now?”

“I don’t know exactly,” Car’das said. “But the base where my ship and companions are being held is under his command. Wherever he might travel, he will always return there.”

The Miskara smiled thinly. “So you offer to trade your companions and some of our own treasure for nothing more than a chance at revenge?”

That was not, Car’das thought uneasily, a very auspicious way of phrasing it. “You’d get your ship net back, too,” he offered.

“No,” the Miskara said firmly. “The offering is insufficient.” Car’das felt his throat tighten. “Your Eminence, I beg you—”

“Do not beg!” the Miskara snapped. “Grubs beg.

Inferiors beg. Not beings who would speak and bargain with the Vagaari. If you wish us to help you and your companions, you must find more to offer me.”

“But I have nothing more, Your Eminence,” Car’das protested, his voice starting to tremble. No—this couldn’t happen. The Vagaari had to agree to the deal. “I swear to you.”

“Not even those?” the Miskara demanded, pointing over Car’das’s shoulder.

Car’das turned. Sometime during the conversation someone had brought in four large crates, two of them a head taller than him, the others coming only up to his waist. “I don’t understand,” he said, frowning. “What are those?”

“They were aboard your transport,” the Miskara said suspiciously. “Do you claim ignorance of them?”

“I do, Your Eminence,” Car’das insisted, completely lost now. What in the worlds could Thrawn have had stashed aboard the shuttle? “I stole the vessel solely to come ask for your help. I never looked to see if there was anything aboard.”

“Then look now,” the Miskara ordered. “Open the crates and tell me what you see.”

Carefully, half expecting to be shot in the back, Car’das made his way back to the crates. The Vagaari had already opened all of them, of course, merely setting the front panels loosely back into place. Stepping to one of the smaller boxes, he got a grip on the panel and pulled it off.

And caught his breath. Inside, folded up neatly with their arms wrapped around their knees, were a pair of Trade Federation battle droids.

“Do you recognize them?” the Miskara asked.

“Yes, Your Eminence,” Car’das confirmed. Suddenly it all made sense. “They’re battle droids of a sort used by one of the species in our region of space. The commander also raided a force of those people; this must be part of the spoil of that raid.”

“What are droids?”

“Mechanical servants,” Car’das said. So Thrawn had been right: apparently no one out here knew anything about droids. At least, no one the Vagaari had run into. “Some are self-motivated, while others require a centralized computer to give them their instructions.”

“Show me how it ‘works.”

Car’das turned back to the crate, peering inside. There was no sign of a controller or programming console. “I don’t see the equipment I need to start it up,” he said, stepping to the other small box and pulling off the front. There were two more folded battle droids inside, and again no sign of a controller.

Each of the two larger boxes turned out to contain one of the even deadlier droideka destroyer droids. Still no controller. “I’msorry, Your Eminence, but without the right equipment I can’t start them up.”

“Perhaps this would be of use,” the Miskara suggested.

He gestured, and one of the non-armored Vagaari watching the proceedings pulled a datapad from beneath his robe. Stepping up to Car’das, he offered it to him.

A small ripple of relief washed over some of Car’das’s tension. It was indeed a Trade Federation droid controller, labeled in both Neimoidian and Basic. “Yes, Your Eminence, it will,” he told the Miskara as he looked over the controls.

Activator… there. “Shall I try to activate them now?”

“Try?”

Car’das grimaced. “Shall I activate them now, Your Eminence?” he corrected himself.

“Yes.”

Bracing himself, Car’das pushed the switch.

The result was all he could have hoped for. In perfect unison the four battle droids unfolded themselves halfway, walked forward out of their crates, and then stood up, reaching back over their shoulders and drawing their blaster rifles. The droidekas were even more impressive, rolling forward out of their crates and unfolding into their tripedal battle stances.

Around one of them, as if to demonstrate the full range of its capabilities, the faint haze of a shield appeared.

And suddenly Car’das realized that there were twelve blasters pointed directly at the dais where the Miskara N’as seated.

Slowly, carefully, he turned around. But the Miskara wasn’t cowering behind his soldiers, and the soldiers themselves didn’t have their weapons lined up ready to turn Car’das into a cinder. “Impressive,” the Miskara said calmly. “Who commands them?”

Car’das peered at the datapad. There should be a pattern recognition modifier here somewhere. “At the moment, whoever is handling the controller, Your Eminence,” he said.

“But I think they can be programmed to obey a specific individual instead.”

“You will order them to obey me.”

“Yes, Your Eminence,” Car’das said, quickly sifting through the datapad’s recognition menu. It looked straightforward enough. “Uh… I’ll need you to come down here, though, so that the droids can see you up close.”

Silently, the Miskara stood up and stalked down the steps, motioning his two advisers to stay where they were. He stepped between the two droidekas and stopped. “Do it now,” he ordered.

Feeling sweat collecting beneath his collar, Car’das ran through what he hoped was the proper procedure. The six droids turned slightly to face the Miskara; then, to his relief, the battle droids raised their blasters to point toward the ceiling as the droidekas swiveled a few degrees to point their weapons away from him as well. “That should do it, Your Eminence,” he said.

“Of course,” he added as something belatedly occurred to him,

“they won’t be programmed to understand orders given in Minnisiat.”

“You will teach me the proper commands in their language,” the Vagaari said. “The first command I wish to know is ‘target.’ The second is ‘fire.’ ”

“Yes, Your Eminence.” Car’das gave him the two Basic words, enunciating them carefully “Perhaps your people can transcribe them phonetically for you,” he suggested.

“No need,” the Miskara said. He lifted a finger and pointed to Car’das. “Target.”

Car’das jerked backward as all six droids swiveled to point their blasters at him. “Your Eminence?” he breathed.

“Now,” the Miskara said, his voice silky smooth, “you pronounce the other word.”

Car’das swallowed hard. If he’d done this wrong…

“Fire,” he said.

Nothing happened. “Excellent,” the Miskara said approvingly. “So you are indeed wise enough not to attempt a betrayal.” He lifted a hand. “Bring me three Geroons.”

“Yes, Your Eminence,” one of the soldiers acknowledged, and left the room.

“Does your Commander Mitth’raw’nuruodo have more of these machines?” the Miskara asked, turning back to Car’das.

“Several hundred at least,” Car’das told him. “Possibly as many as several thousand.” A movement at the door caught his eye, and he turned as three small aliens were herded into the room. “Who are these?”

“Slaves,” the Miskara said offhandedly. “Their pitiful little world is the one currently rolling beneath us. Machines: target.”

Car’das stiffened as the droids swiveled toward the three slaves. “Wait!”

“You object?” the Miskara asked.

Car’das closed his eyes briefly. I will do whatever necessary—the words echoed through his mind. “I was merely concerned for the safety of your soldiers,” he said.

“Let us find out how good the machines’ aim is,” the Miskara said. “Machines: fire.”

The salvo from the battle droids’ carbines sent the three slaves toppling backward, dead before they even hit the floor. They were still falling when the fire from the droidekas almost literally cut them in half.

“Excellent,” the Miskara said into the shocked silence.

Not shocked by the deaths, Car’das knew, but by the display of firepower. “Where do the Chiss keep the others?”

“The commander will have them at the base,” Car’das murmured mechanically, trying without success to force his eyes away from the charred bodies.

“Then we will relieve him of them,” the Miskara said, gesturing to one of the advisers. “Order an assault force to be prepared at once.”

“Yes, Your Eminence,” the other said. Stepping off the dais, he strode from the room.

“And while we wait,” the Miskara went on, turning back to Car’das, “you will teach me the rest of the words necessary for controlling my fighting machines.”

Car’das swallowed hard. Whatever necessary… “As you wish. Your Eminence.”

Outside the Springhawk‘s bridge canopy, the scattered stars and a small but magnificent globular cluster blazed brilliantly out of a black sky. The stars, the cluster, and nothing else.

Surreptitiously, Doriana looked at his chrono.

Outbound Flight was late.

Apparently, the look hadn’t been surreptitious enough.

“Patience, Commander,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said calmly from the captain’s chair. “They will come.”

“They are late,” Vicelord Kav said, scowling at the back of Mitth’raw’nuruodo’s head. “More than two hours late.”

“Two hours is nothing in a voyage of three weeks,” the commander pointed out reasonably.

“Not for Captain Pakmillu,” Kav retorted. “Mon Calamari are notorious for punctuality.”

“They will come,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said again, half turning to eye the Neimoidian. “The only question is whether or not this system is indeed on the correct straight-line path between their last Republic stop and the system where you were preparing to ambush them.”

“Do you dare—?” Kav began.

“The vector was calculated correctly,” Doriana interrupted with a warning glare. “Our question, on the other hand, is why you think they’ll actually stop here.”

“They will,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo assured him. “The droid starfighters are ready?”

“Very much so,” Kav assured him in turn, and Doriana could hear the vindictive anticipation in his tone. The starfighters were ready, all right, complete with the second command layer the vicelord’s chief programmer had built in on top of Mitth’raw’nuruodo’s close-approach pattern.

The commander inclined his head to the Neimoidian.

“Then we have only to wait.” He turned back to the canopy and suddenly, with a flicker of pseudomotion, there it was, floating in space not five kilometers ahead.

Outbound Flight had arrived.

“The device is called a gravity projector,”

Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. “It simulates a planetary mass, thus forcing out any ship whose hyperspace vector crosses its shadow.”

“Really,” Doriana said, trying to sound calm. To the best of his knowledge, no one in the Republic had ever figured out how to turn that particular bit of hyperspace theory into an actual working device. The fact that the Chiss had solved the problem sent discomfiting ramifications ricocheting across his mind.

Kav, predictably, wasn’t nearly as interested in such longterm thought. “Then they are in our hands,” he all butcrowed. “All forces: attack.”

“Hold,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. His voice was still calm, but there was a sudden new edge to it. “I give the orders aboard this ship, Vicelord Kav.”

“It is our mission, Commander Mitthrawdo,” Kav countered. “And as we debate, we lose the precious element of surprise.” Fishing into his robes, he pulled out a comm activator.

“You and your ships may do as you wish. But my starfighters will attack.”

“No!” Doriana snapped, making a grab for the activator. If Kav fouled up Mitth’raw’nuruodo’s plan, whatever that plan was, Outbound Flight might yet slip through their fingers.

But his reach was too short, his grab too late. Twisting his long arms out of range, Kav triumphantly keyed the activator. Swearing viciously, Doriana looked over at the asteroid where the lines of droid starfighters waited.

Nothing happened.

Again, Kav keyed the switch. Again, nothing. “I’m afraid that won’t work, Vicelord,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said calmly. “I took the liberty of removing the alternate command layer your programmers had created in the starfighters’

systems.”

Slowly, Kav lowered the activator. “You are very clever, Commander,” he said softly. “Someday that cleverness will turn against you.”

“Perhaps,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. “Until then, allow me to thank you for showing me how such secondary programming is done. That will prove useful today.”

“So what now?” Doriana asked cautiously.

“We talk to them,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said, keying his board. “Communications: create a channel.”

By the time Lorana arrived, D-1’s bridge had become a hive of quiet pandemonium. C’baoth was standing beside Captain Pakmillu’s command chair, his back stiff as he gazed out the canopy. Pakmillu himself was over at one of the engineering stations, his flippered hands opening and closing restlessly as he studied the displays.

Outside the canopy, arrayed in the distance in front of them like a pack of hunting howlrunners, were a dozen small ships of a configuration Lorana had never seen before.

“The readback seems to indicate we’re in the middle of a planetary mass shadow,” the engineering officer was saying tautly as she reached Pakmillu’s side. “But you can see yourself that can’t possibly be right.”

“This is Commander Mitth’raw’nuruodo of the Chiss Expansionary Defense Fleet,” a cultured voice boomed over the bridge speakers. “Please respond.”

“Who’s that?” Lorana asked.

“The commander of that force over there,” Pakmillu rumbled, still studying the readouts. “He’s been calling every five minutes for the past half hour.”

“You haven’t answered him?”

Pakmillu’s mouth tendrils stiffened. “Master C’baoth has forbidden it,” he growled. “He insists we know what happened to our hyperdrive before we reply.”

“Maybe the commander could tell us what happened,”

Lorana suggested.

“Of course he could,” Pakmillu said sourly. “But I cannot persuade Master C’baoth to that point of view.”

Lorana grimaced. “Let me talk to him.”

C’baoth was still gazing at the alien ships as Lorana joined him. “So, Jedi Jinzler,” he greeted her. “We meet our firstchallenge.”

“Why does it have to be a challenge?” Lorana asked.

“Maybe all he wants to do is talk.”

“No,” C’baoth said, his voice dark. “I can sense a deep malice out there, malice directed at my ships and my people.”

“They’re alien minds,” Lorana reminded him, feeling her pulse starting to pick up its pace. She’d seen C’baoth in this stiff-necked mood before. “Perhaps you’re simply misreading them.”

“No,” he said. “They intend trouble, and I intend to be fully prepared to deal with it before I talk to them.”

“Command, this is Ma’Ning,” a voice came from the command chair speaker. “We’re standing ready at D-Four’s weapons systems.”

“Acknowledged,” C’baoth said, giving Lorana a tight smile. “Dreadnaught-Four was the last. Now we’re ready to talk.”

Deliberately, he lowered himself into Pakmillu’s command chair and touched the comm switch. “Alien force, this is Jedi Master Jorus C’baoth, commanding the Outbound Flight Project of the Galactic Republic,” he announced.

Lorana looked back at Pakmillu, wincing to herself at C’baoth’s casual preemption of his command authority. But there was no resentment in the Mon Cal’s expression or stance, only a quiet sense of resignation. Apparently, he’d bowed to the inevitable.

“Master C’baoth, this is Commander Mitth’raw’nuruodo,” the cultured voice replied promptly.

“Let me see your face,” C’baoth ordered.

There was a brief pause; then the comm display came to life, showing a near human with blue skin and blue-black hair and glowing red eyes. He was dressed in a black tunic with silverbars on the collar. “There are matters of great importance we need to discuss at once,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. “Would you care to join me in my flagship, or shall I come to you?”

C’baoth snorted gently. “I will discuss nothing until you stand away from my path.”

“And I will continue to hold here until we have spoken,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo replied, his voice as firm as C’baoth’s. “Are the Jedi afraid of talk?”

C’baoth smiled thinly. “The Jedi fear nothing, Commander. Come aboard, then, if you insist. A hatchway will be illuminated for your shuttle.”

Mitth’raw’nuruodo inclined his head. “I shall be there shortly.” He gestured somewhere offscreen, and the image vanished.

“You’re going to allow him aboard?” Pakmillu demanded.

“Of course,” C’baoth said, an odd glint to his eve. “Or don’t you find it curious that this supposed resident of the Unknown Regions spoke to us in Basic?”

Lorana felt her breath catch. To her chagrin, she hadn’t even noticed the oddness of that fact. “No, there’s something more here than meets the eye,” C’baoth continued.

“Let’s find out what that something is.”

“Come aboard, then, if you insist,” C’baoth’s voice echoed from the D-4 reactor monitor room speaker. “A hatchway will be illuminated for your shuttle.”

There was a click. “D-Four?” a different voice called.

“Any progress?”

With an effort, Uliar pulled his thoughts back to focus.

“Still negative here, Command,” he reported, running his eyes again over his displays. “There’s plenty of power going to the hyperdrive. It’s just not doing anything once it gets there.”

“That’s confirmed, Command,” Dillian Pressor’s voice seconded from the hyperdrive monitor room half a dozen meters away. “The readouts still insist we’re in a gravfield.”

“So do everyone else’s,” Command growled. “All right.

Keep running your diagnostics, and stand by.”

There was a click, and Command was gone. “This is insane,” Pressor muttered.

“Maybe more insane than you think,” Uliar said, his mind racing. This might finally be their chance. “Or didn’t you notice that Commander Mitth-whatever was speaking Basic?”

There was a short pause. “You mean he’s from the Republic?”

“Well, he’s sure not from the Unknown Regions,” Uliar said. “We’ve got to find a way to talk to him.”

“Who, us?”

“Of course us,” Uliar shot back. “You, me—the whole committee. If this guy’s from the Republic, maybe he’s got the authority to get C’baoth and the rest of the Jedi kicked off”

“It’s not all the Jedi,” Pressor argued. “Anyway, what would some hotshot from the Republic be doing way out here?

It’s more likely a pirate who found out about Outbound Flight and decided to grab some easy pickings.”

In his mind’s eye Uliar saw the firing scores from C’baoth’s Jedi meld tests. “Trust me, Pressor, this thing is not easy pickings,” he said grimly. “But whoever he is, we still have to try.”

“Fine,” Pressor said. “But how? We’re on duty.”

“To what?” Uliar countered. “A reactor that’s working perfectly and a hyperdrive that isn’t working at all?”

“Yes, but—”

“But nothing,” Uliar cut him off. “Come on—this may be our last chance to get Outbound Flight back to what it was supposed to be.”

There was a short pause. “All right, I’m game,” Pressor said at last. “But if this Mitth-whatever’s already on his way, we don’t have much time. Not if we’re going to collect everyone and get all the way over to D-One.”

“You just collect them,” Uliar said. “I’ll make sure he stays put until you get there.”

“How?”

“No idea,” Uliar said. “Just collect everyone, all right?

And don’t forget to bring the children. There’s nothing like children when you’re playing for sympathy.”

“Got it.”

Uliar keyed off the comet, and for a moment sat gazing unseeingly at his displays as he tried to think. D-1 was indeed a long way away, and if he knew C’baoth the conversation was likely to be short and unpleasant. If he tried to walk or even run, he was likely to miss Mitth-whatever completely.

But there should be one of D-4’s swoops parked just a little way aft.

Ninety seconds later, he was racing down the corridor, the wind of his passage whipping through his hair and stinging his eyes. Fortunately, with Outbound Flight at full alert, everyone was either at their battle stations or huddled in their quarters out of the way; the corridors were empty. Reaching the forward pylon, he punched for the turbolift, but instead of leaving the swoop at the way station like he was supposed to, he maneuvered it into the car. Let C’baoth complain about it—let him even lock Uliar in the brig for a few days if he wanted to.

Whatever it took, he would see this Mith-whatever before he left Outbound Flight.

Car’das had been waiting for nearly three hours before the Miskara again summoned him to the throne room.

“All is prepared,” the Vagaari informed him. “We fly at once to draw our vengeance from Mitth’raw’nuruodo and the Chiss.”

“Yes, Your Eminence,” Car’das said, bowing his head and trying not to look at the half dozen fresh Geroon bodies scattered around the throne room. Apparently, the Miskara had been playing some more with his new toys. “I would once again ask you to remember that my companions and ship are also there, and would beg your soldiers to be careful.”

“I will remember,” the Miskara promised. “And I will do even more. I have decided you will be permitted the best view possible of the forthcoming battle.”

Car’das felt something cold run through him. “You mean I’ll be on the bridge, Your Eminence?”

“Not at all,” the Miskara said calmly. “You will be in the forward most of my flagship’s external bubbles.”

Car’das looked sideways to see a pair of armored Vagaari striding toward him. “I don’t understand,” he protested.

“I’ve offered you the chance at both vengeance and profit.”

“Or the chance to fly into a trap,” the Miskara said, his voice suddenly icy. “Do you think me a fool, human? Do you think me so proud and rash that I would simply fly a task force to a supposedly small and undermanned Chiss base in my thirst for revenge?” He snorted a multitoned whistle. “No, human, I will not send a small task force to be destroyed. My entire fleet will descend on this base… and then we shall see what sort of teeth this Chiss trap truly has.”

“The Chiss aren’t waiting there with any trap,” Car’das insisted. “I swear it.”

“Then you should have nothing to fear,” the Miskara said. “If we destroy the enemy as quickly as you claim we will,you will be released and your companions freed. If not…” He shrugged. “You will be the first to die.”

He cocked his head slightly “Have you anything else you wish to say before you are taken away?”

A confession, perhaps, or an admission of guilt? “No, Your Eminence,” Car’das said. “I only hope your soldiers are as capable against the Chiss as they’ve proven themselves to be against other opponents.”

“The Geroons could tell you of our capabilities,” the Miskara said darkly. “But you will see them for yourself soon enough.” He gestured. “Take him away.”

Five minutes later, Car’das was pushed through a narrow doorway in the hull into a zero-g plastic bubble perhaps twice the size of a coffin. Set against the hull on one side of his head was what seemed to be a small air supply and filtering system, while on the other was a mesh bag containing a couple of water bottles and ration bars from the Chiss shuttle, along with a diamond-shaped device of unknown purpose.

And as the thick hull metal was sealed against his back he knew the chance cube had been thrown. From now on, everything that happened would be under the control of others.

He could only hope that the Miskara had been telling the truth about the size of the force he was sending.

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