panic devolve them well past the point
of maintaining control of their bodily functions.
The floor of the cage was scratched, though. Bright metallic lines glinted through the darker layer of plastoid beneath Boba Fett’s boot soles. He wondered what could have caused that. He was always careful to take any hard, sharp objects away from the merchandise, with which they might damage themselves. Some captives preferred suicide to the attentions they were scheduled to receive from those who had put up the bounties for them.
Fett glanced over to the corner of the Slave Fs cargo area, where he had tossed the food tray. None of the gray slop had been touched by Nil Posondum, but one of the tray’s corners had been bent into a dull-pointed angle. Just enough to scrape out the markings on the cage’s floor-the accountant must have been working on it right up until Kud’ar Mub’at’s subassemblies had crept in through the access portal. The spiderlike minions had looped restraining silk around him, then carried him from one prison to another. He might have had time enough to finish whatever message he’d wanted to leave behind.
But there wasn’t time now to read it. A red light pulsed on the data readout, alerting him that a return to the craft’s piloting area was necessary. The jump out of hyperspace couldn’t be accomplished by means of a remote; the Slave I’s maneuvering thrusters were too finely gauged, set for zero lag time, in case any of Fett’s many enemies and rivals might be waiting for his appearance. And right now he would be sailing straight into the nest of all those who bore him a grudge. He supposed that lizard-faced bumbler Bossk would already have returned to Guild headquarters, licking his wounds and complaining to his spawn-sire Cradossk about the impossible assignment he’d been given. What Bossk wouldn’t mention would be why it had been impossible, and just who had beaten him to the goods. Cradossk was a wilier old reptile, though-Boba Fett even had a grudging respect for the head of the Bounty Hunters Guild, from some long-ago encounters with him-and would know just what the score was with his feckless underlings.
The Mandalorian battle-gear had a built-in optical recorder, its tiny lens mounted at one corner of the helmet’s visor. Boba Fett leaned over the scratches left by the captive accountant, not even bothering with an effort to decipher them. A second later he had scanned the marks and inserted them into the helmet’s long-term data-storage unit. He could deal with them later, if he grew curious about what pathetic epitaph the accountant might have devised for himself. Maudlin self-pity held little interest for Boba Fett. Right now an additional beeping tone was sounding in sync with the red dot; Slave I, his only true companion, demanded his attention.
He left the bucket of cold, dirty water on the cage’s floor. If it spilled and slopped across the plastoid- clad metal, if the feet of all the captives to come scuffed out the scratched message, whatever it was, there would be no great loss. Memory was like that: the leavings of the dead, best forgotten and erased after payment for their sweat-damp carcasses was made. The moment when his hand was about to seize the neck of the merchandise was the only time that mattered. Readiness was all.
Boba Fett climbed the ladder to the interstellar craft’s cockpit, his own boots ringing on the treads. The new job that he had taken on, this scheme of the assembler Kud’ar Mub’at, was about to commence. Soon there would be more payments to add to his account… .
And more deaths to be forgotten.
7
NOW
“I want to see him.” The female had a gaze as sharp and cold as a bladed weapon. “And to talk to him.”
Dengar could barely recognize her. He remembered her from Jabba’s palace; she had been one of the obese Hutt’s troupe of dancing girls. Jabba had liked pretty things, regarding them as exquisite delicacies for his senses, like the wriggling food he’d stuffed down his capacious gullet. And just as with those squirming tidbits, Jabba had savored the death of the young and beautiful. The pet rancor, in its bone-lined cavern beneath the palace, had merely been an extension of Jabba’s appetites. Dengar had witnessed one of the other dancing girls, a frightened little Twi’lek named Oola, being ripped apart by the claws of the beast. That had been before Luke Skywalker had killed the rancor, followed sometime later by its owner’s death. No great loss, thought Dengar. With either one of them.
“Why?” Leaning against the rocky wall of his hiding place’s main chamber, he kept a safe distance from the female. “He’s not exactly a brilliant conversationalist at the moment.”