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)
Star Wars
The Force Unleashed
by Sean Williams
scan&check : Emesen
upload 23.IV.2009
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IMPERIAL
The life of Darth Vader's secret student took a strange and deadly turn the day his
Master first spoke of General Rahm Kota.
He'd had no warning that a moment of such significance was approaching. During his
nightly meditations, kneeling on the metal floor of his chamber while construction
droids built the Executor, unaware of his existence, he had seen no visions in the
pure, angry red of the lightsaber that he held like a burning brand in front of his
eyes. Although he had stared until the world vanished and the dark side flowed
through him in a bloody tide, the future had remained closed.
Nothing, therefore, prepared him for the sudden deviation from the day's punishing
and unpredictable exercises. His Master was not a patient teacher; neither was he a
talkative one. He preferred action to debate, just as he preferred recrimination to
reward. Never once in all the days they had sparred together, with lightsaber,
telekinesis, or suggestion, had the Dark Lord offered a single word of
encouragement. And that was as it should be, he knew. A teacher's job was not to
drag a student along a single, well worn path. Rather it was to let the student
forge his or her own way through the forest, intervening only when the student was
hopelessly lost and needed to be corrected.
Even on the Wrong paths, he knew, lay some wisdom. What didn't kill him only made
him more powerful in the dark side.
And there had been many, many times he had thought he might die...
Breathing heavily after a punishing round of blows, lightsaber lowered in
submission, he knelt before his Master and prepared for the killing strike. He could
feel the wrath radiating from the Dark Lord like heat-a visceral, angry heat that
brought out his skin in gooseflesh. For a moment that seemed to stretch for years,
all he could hear was the regular, implacable respiration that kept the man inside
the mask alive.
"You were weak when I found you." The voice seemed to come from the far end of a
long, deep tunnel. "You should never have survived my training."
He closed his eyes. He had heard these words before. They were the closest thing to
a bedtime story he'd had as a child. The moral he had taken from them was burned
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into his mind: Learn... or die.
Behind his eyelids he pictured again the clean, cleansing heat of the lightsaber. He
had brushed his skin against it many times, defying the pain, and taken numerous
small wounds while dueling with his Master. He imagined that he knew what the blade
would feel like when it struck him down. Part of him longed for it.
The lightsaber drifted so close to his neck that he could smell his hair burning.
"But now, your hatred has become your strength."
The lightsaber retreated. With a hiss it deactivated.
"At last, the dark side is your ally."
He didn't dare nod or look up. What was this? Some new ruse to lure him into
overconfidence and failure?
His Master's next words made his heart trip a beat. "Rise, my apprentice."
Apprentice. So he had always thought himself, but never before had it been said
aloud! And that strange motion with the lightsaber... Could he possibly have just
been knighted?
His lightsaber retracted. It was all he could do to balance on knees that felt
suddenly made of rubber. The black shape looming over him was unreadable, limned
with crimson from the light of the star shining through the wide viewport to their
right. Metal, angular, and functional, the space around them was as familiar to him
as the scars on the back of his hand, but suddenly, disconcertingly, everything
seemed different.
The apprentice kept his eyes up and his voice level.
"What is your will, my Master?"
"You have defeated many of my rivals. Your training is nearly complete. It is time
now to face your first true test."
A roll call of past missions sped through the apprentice's mind. Lord Vader had
instructed him to dispatch numerous enemies within the Empire down the years: spies
and thieves, mainly, with the occasional high-ranking traitor as well. He felt only
satisfaction at having fulfilled his duty. His victims had brought their fates upon
themselves, these vermin that gnawed at the footings of the Empire's magnificent
edifice.
But this was different. He could sense it in more than his Master's words. Darth
Vader wasn't talking about some low-life smuggler with no awareness at all of the
Force. There could be only one foe he was worthy to fight now.
"Your spies have located a Jedi?"
"Yes. General Rahm Kota." The name meant nothing to the apprentice: just one of many
in an archive of unconfirmed Jedi kills. "He is attacking a critical shipyard above
Nar Shaddaa. You will destroy him and bring me his lightsaber."
Excitement filled the apprentice. He had trained and hoped for this moment as long
as he could remember. At last it had come. He could never truly call himself a Sith
until he had taken the life of one of his Master's traditional enemies.
"I'll leave at once, Master."
He had taken barely a step toward the door when Darth Vader's irresistible voice
stopped him. "The Emperor cannot discover you."
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"As you wish, my Master."
"Leave no witnesses. Kill everyone aboard, Imperials and insurgents alike."
The apprentice nodded, keeping his sudden uncertainty carefully clouded.
"Do not fail in this."
The lightsaber hanging back at his hip was a comforting, reassuring weight. "No, my
lord," he said, back straight and voice firm.
Darth Vader turned away and gripped his hands behind his back. The red sun painted
his helmet with lava highlights.
Thus dismissed, his secret apprentice hurried about his latest, darkest duty.
* * *
General Rahm Kota.
The name ran through his mind as he hurried through the warren connecting his
Master's secret chambers. They were sparse, functional spaces, consisting of a
meditation chamber, a droid workshop, sleeping quarters large enough for one, and a
hangar deck. All were on a concealed level of Darth Vader's flagship, a space long
since written out of the floor plans; it would go unnoticed by the future crew.
The emperor cannot discover you.
Excited though he was by the thought of hunting Jedi, the reminder of the goal his
Master allowed him to share was instantly sobering. All his life he had been trained
to turn fear into anger, and anger into power. It was no different, he realized, for
Darth Vader. Where else could Lord Vader look for increased power than to the
Emperor himself? People were either predators or prey. That was one of the most
basic rules of life. Together, Darth Vader and his apprentice would ensure that
their joint power only increased.
But first he had to survive an encounter with a Jedi. That his Master had found one
at liberty was unsurprising. A handful were suspected to have survived the Great
Jedi Purge, and none was more adept at finding them than Darth Vader. The dark side
infiltrated every corner of the galaxy; nothing could remain hidden from it forever.
Perhaps one day, the apprentice thought, he, too, could seek out his enemies by
their thoughts and feelings alone, but like the visions of the future that were
closed to him, that ability remained elusive. He had never met a Jedi. Their natures
were mysterious to him.
Their history, however, was not. His Master set no lesson plans or written
examinations, but Darth Vader did give him access to records surviving from the
Republic and the Order he had helped unseat from its position of undeserved
privilege. The apprentice had devoted himself to the study, understanding that
knowledge of his enemy might mean the difference one day between life and death.
General Rahm Kota.
The name still brought forth no details of combat styles, character, or last
sightings from his memory. He would access the records when he reached the Rogue
Shadow. There would be time to research on the journey to Nar Shaddaa. If he dug
deeply enough, he might find some small detail that would give him an edge when he
most needed one. That was the only preparation he required.
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Entering the hangar bay, he wound his way through the familiar maze of crates,
weapons racks, and starfighter parts. The ambient lighting was dim, with shadows
pooling in every corner. The air tasted of metal and ozone-a sharp stink that had by
now become very familiar. For some, the underbelly of a Star Destroyer might have
seemed a strange place to grow up, but for him it was a comfort to be surrounded by
such unambiguous symbols of technological and political power. Ships like these had
patrolled the trade lanes of the galaxy for years. They had put down insurrections
and quashed resistance around hundreds of worlds. Where else would a Sith apprentice
live and learn?
Kill everyone aboard, Imperials and insurgents alike. Leave no witnesses.
Even as he mulled over this new development, a familiar snap-hiss sounded to his
right and a glowing blue-white blade sprang into life in a dark corner of the
hangar. A brown-robed figure ran forward, weapon raised.
Instantly in a fighting crouch, the apprentice brought his own blade up to block the
blow, teeth bared in a delighted snarl.
He and his adversary held the pose for a bare second, light-sabers locked across
their chests. The apprentice quickly sized up the being who had attacked him. Human
male, fair-haired and bearded, with calm, serious eyes and a firm set to his jaw.
Anyone within living memory of the Clone Wars-or possessing free access to the Jedi
Archives-would have recognized him immediately.
Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi, High General of the Galactic Republic and master of the
Soresu form of lightsaber combat, slid his deadly blade down and to the right,
ducking at the same time to avoid the inevitable countersweep. Sparks flew as the
apprentice Force-leapt high into the air and landed with perfect agility on top of a
stack of crates. He reached out with his cupped left hand and swept a metal tool kit
across the hangar bay, toward his opponent's head. Kenobi ducked and leapt up after
him, deflecting a flurry of blows that would have left an ordinary man in pieces,
then responding with a sweep of his own that sent the apprentice dodging backward,
jumping from one stack to another in temporary retreat.
So the duel proceeded for almost a minute, with Kenobi and the apprentice dancing
like acrobatic Gados from stack to stack, lightsabers spinning and clashing, racks
and tools turned into temporary weapons as they hurled themselves from one to the
other. The racket was enormous, and the threat very real. Kenobi slashed a new rip
in the sleeve of the apprentice's combat suit with a move that would have taken his
arm off at the elbow had he not moved in time. Twice he felt rather than saw the
Jedi's blade sweep over his head.
The apprentice wasn't afraid of dying. His only fear was of failing his Master, and
that fear he put to good use. The dark side ruined through him, made him strong and
resilient. He felt more powerful than he ever had before.
Vader was sending him to hunt one of his old foes-and how better to warm up for the
mission than by killing the man who had once been among the most famous Jedi in the
galaxy?
Alive with murderous intent, the apprentice rushed forward, his red blade swinging,
to finish the job.
At the sound of an unfamiliar energy weapon activating nearby, Juno Eclipse looked
up from her work and reached for the blaster pistol at her side. She had just about
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finished sealing up the hull of the Rogue Shadow, and her thoughts had already
turned to testing the new systems she'd installed when this distraction had come