“Perhaps not.” Gheeta’s hands spread apart in a gesture of unconcern. “But the price I got is paid now, and not doled out over some twenty years to come. Credits in one’s pocket are worth more than the credits that might be sprinkled someday over your grave.” An ugly smile
welled up on his wide face, like inscribed driftwood surfacing in rubbish-clogged waters. “A grave that I think you’ll be in sooner than I will be.”
“Silence!” The roar was deafening; it came from Bossk, thrusting himself to the foot of the steps that surrounded the dais. One of his clawed hands shoved aside the floating cylinder of the elder Shell Hutt Nullada. With his other hand, Bossk stepped forward and grabbed the front of the sprawled corpse’s jacket, singed with laser fire and stiff with dried blood. “I’ve heard enough of your endless bickering-” He held the lifeless figure of Oph Nar Dinnid up in front of himself, the corpse’s feet dangling inches above the tessellated floor. “This is what we came here for?” The corpse danced like a loose-limbed puppet as Bossk angrily shook it. No answer came from Dinnid’s slack mouth, the skin of his face turned as pallid and gray as that of the surrounding Hutts. With an inarticulate growl, Bossk flung the corpse back down into the
rubble
of the dais’s broken platform.
“That creature’s been dead for weeks! I can smell his death on him!”
Bossk’s
nostrils flared back,
showing
his involuntary disgust. Just as with Hutts, Trandoshans were the type of carnivore that preferred its meat fresh. He turned his slit-eyed glare toward Boba Fett. “He was dead before we ever left the Bounty Hunters Guild. This is a fool’s errand you’ve brought us on!” The corner of one scaly lip curled in a sneer. “The great Boba Fett, the master of bounty hunters, and he didn’t even know that the merchandise was already worthless.”
Boba Fett had known that that accusation would come before long, and he had briefly debated with himself about how to answer it. could say nothing-he was not given to explaining his actions and strategies to anyone, let alone a crude, rapacious thug like Bossk. Or he could lie to Bossk, tell him that he hadn’t known, or even suspected, that Oph Nar Dinnid had already been killed, long before he’d assembled this team of bounty hunters to come here to Circumtore. Or …p>
“I knew,” said Boba Fett quietly. “Why wouldn’t I? I’ve dealt with these creatures before, and I know how their minds work. Especially”-he gestured toward Gheeta, still floating at the top of the dais- “when what’s left of
one’s mind is eaten away with the desire for vengeance.”
“Wait a second.” At Fett’s other side, Zuckuss stared at him, astonishment detectable even through the curved lenses of the smaller bounty hunter’s face mask. “You knew all along? But if you knew that Oph Nar Dinnid had already been killed … then there was no point in coming here. …”
“No point,” growled Bossk, “unless Fett wanted to get us all killed as well.” He tilted his head toward the perimeter
of the great reception hall. The
armed mercenaries had stepped farther from the alcoves and exits, herding the other Shell Hutts before them. “Is that it?” Bossk turned his hard gaze back toward Boba Fett. “Maybe you were feeling suicidal-maybe you’re tired of being a bounty hunter-so you decided to take some of us with you. That’s why you were so willing to hand over our weapons and render us defenseless.”
“Don’t be an idiot.” Fett returned the other’s gaze. “Or at least not any more of one than you have to be. You may be without weapons-for the time being-but we were never without defenses. No one walks naked into the midst of creatures like these.”
“No one … except somebody who’s ready to die.”
“I’ll let you know,” said Boba Fett, “when that time comes. But right now I have other business to take care of.” He raised one arm, turning it so that the inside of his wrist faced him; between that and his elbow was a relay-linked control pad. With the forefinger of his other gloved hand, Fett began punching out a command sequence.
“Calling up your ship, are you?” Gheeta had caught sight of what Boba Fett was doing. “Do you really believe that your precious Slave I can get out of our landing docks? It’s sealed down tight with tractor beams. And even if it could break away, what good would it do you? It’s as stripped of armaments as your pathetic selves.”
Boba Fett ignored him. It was a long series of digits to get past the control pad’s encryption circuits, and then another one to initiate the program he desired. That one was buried years deep in his memory, but on matters such as this, his memory was infallible. It had to be; in circumstances such as this, he wasn’t likely to be given another chance.