Even without Jabba’s obese form rotting under the thermal weight of the suns, the debris zone stank. Dengar lifted a length of chain, the broken metal at its end twisted by blaster fire. The last time he’d seen this hand-forged tether, back at Jabba’s palace, it’d been fastened to an iron collar around Princess Leia Organa’s neck.
Now the links were crusted with the
dried exudations from Jabba’s slobbering mouth. The
Hutt must’ve died hard, thought Dengar, dropping the chain. A lot to kill there. He’d gotten an account of the fight from a couple of surviving bodyguards that had managed to drag themselves back to the palace. When Dengar had left, to come out here to the Dune Sea wastes, most of the remaining thugs and louts were busily smashing open the casks of off-planet claret in the cool, dank cellars beneath the palace, and getting obliterated in a orgy of relief and self-pity at no longer being in Jabba the Hurt’s employ.
“Yeah, you’re free, too.” Dengar picked
up
an unsmashed foodpot that the toe of his boot had uncovered. The still-living delicacy inside, one of Jabba’s favorite trufflites, scrabbled against the ceramic lid embossed with the distinctive oval seal of Fhnark & Co., Exotic Foodstuffs-we cater to the galaxy’s degenerate appetites. “For what it’s worth.” His own tastes didn’t run to the likes of the pot’s spidery, gel-mired contents; he hooked a gloved finger in the lid’s airhole and pried it open. The nutrient gases hissed out; they had sustained the delicacy’s freshness, all the way from whatever distant planet had spawned it. “See how long you last out there.” The
trufflite dropped to the sand, scrabbled over Dengar’s boot, and vanished over the nearest dune. He imagined some Tusken Raider finding the little appetizer out there and being completely perplexed by it.
One substantial piece of wreckage remained, too big for the Jawas to have carted away. The hardened durasteel keelbeam of the sail barge, blackened by explosions that had destroyed the rest of the craft, rose at an angle from where the stern end was buried beneath a fall of rocks. Dengar scrabbled aboard the curved metal, nearly a meter in width, and climbed the rest of the way up to where the barge’s bow had been, and now only the exposed beam was left, tilted into the cloudless sky. He wrapped one arm around the end, then with his other hand unslung the electrobinoculars from his belt and brought them up to his eyes. The rangefinder numbers skittered at the bottom of his field of vision as he scanned across the horizon.
This
was a pointless trip, Dengar thought
dis gustedly. He leaned out farther from the keelbeam, still examining the wasteland through the ‘binocs. His bounty-hunting career had never been such a raging success that he’d been able to refrain from any other kind of scrabbling hustle that chanced to come his way. It was a hard trade for a human to get ahead in, considering the number of other species in the galaxy that worked in it, all of them uglier and tougher; droids, too. So a little bit of scavenger work was nothing he was unused to. The best would’ve been if he had found any survivors out here that could either pay him for their rescue or that he could ransom off to whatever connections they might have. The
late
Jabba’s
court
had
been
opulent-and lucrative-enough to attract more than the usual lowlifes that one encountered on Tatooine.
But the bunch of rubble Dengar had found out here-the few scattered and pawed-over bits of the sail barge and the smaller skiffs that’d hovered alongside as outriders, the dead bodyguards and warriors-wasn’t worth two lead ingots to him. Anything of value was already trundling away in the Jawas’ slow, tank-treaded sandcrawlers, leaving nothing but bones and worthless scrap behind.
Might as well just stay here, he thought. And wait. He’d sent his bride-to-be, Manaroo, aloft in his ship, the Punishing One, to do a high-altitude reconnaissance of the area. Soon enough she’d be finished with the task, and would come back to fetch him.
The knot of frustration in Dengar’s gut was instantly replaced with surprise as the keelbeam suddenly tilted almost vertical. The strap of the electrobinoculars cut across his throat as they flew away from his eyes. He held on with both hands as the beam pitched skyward, as though it were on a storm-tossed ocean of water rather than sand.
Charred metal scraped tight against the ammo pouches on his chest as the keelbeam rotated. As the beam twisted about, Dengar could see the surrounding dunes heaving in a slow, seismic counterpoint to the wrecked barge’s motion, cliff faces of rock and sand shearing away and tumbling downward, slower clouds of dust stacking across the suns’ smoldering