Bria stood back, near the entrance, feeling that coldness, that near panic grow, until it was everything she could do not to leave, to just run away and abandon Shild to face the consequences of his own egotistical ambition.
I’ll find out just what he’s planning, if I can, she promised herself, and then I’ll go.
Bria stared at Shild, realizing she was now regarding him the same way she would a man who had contracted a terrible incurable disease. A walking dead man. She found she was actually sorry that Shild had contracted this “disease,” this craving for power. The Moff had always treated her well, and her assignment could have been far worse.
For a wild moment she considered trying to talk some sense into Shild, but she quickly abandoned the thought. The Moff knew she was intelligent, and he valued that, but he had sufficient masculine arrogance that he’d never listen to a woman he was using as a front to disguise his sexual peccadilloes.
The fleet was nearly past the reviewing stand now. In minutes, as soon as they’d cleared Teth’s gravity well, they’d jump to hyperspace on the first leg of the long journey to the Y’Toub system. On the Outer Rim, systems tended to be spread farther apart than they were in the more crowded central portions of the galaxy.
Bria found herself, as she often did, thinking of Han. Surely he was no longer on Nar Shaddaa. He’d gone back to his Hutt masters, delivered Shild’s warning, then taken off. Han was good at self-preservation. He wouldn’t try anything crazy like trying to fight the Imperial squadron, would he?
Would he?
Bria’s mouth was terribly dry. She licked her lips, forced herself to swallow, then drifted back through the massive door to the magnificent reception inside, in search of a cup of stimtea.
As she sipped it, Bria tried again and again to convince herself that Han was long gone from Nar Shaddaa, safe from Admiral Greelanx and his troops.
But, in her heart of hearts, she didn’t believe it. Bria had a sudden vivid memory of the Corellian that time they were about to be boarded by slavers, remembered Han drawing his blaster and squaring his jaw .
. .
remembered him vowing, “They’re not getting me without a fight!”
The odds against them had been approximately forty to three …
Bria’s hands were shaking so badly she had to put the cup down on the table. She closed her eyes, fighting for control. What if he tries to fight? What if they kill him? I would probably never know …
And that was the most terrible thought of all …
Captain Soontir Fel stood on the bridge of the Dreadnaught Pride of the Senate, preparing to follow his commander into hyperspace. In his gray uniform, with decorations and rank insignia providing touches of color, Fel was an impressive sight that inspired confidence in those under his command.
One of the youngest people ever to receive a captain’s commission in the Imperial Navy, Fel was a tall, muscular man, broad-shouldered and exceptionally strong. Black hair, dark eyes, and rugged, almost handsome features made him look as though he’d just stepped out of an Imperial Navy recruiting holoposter.
Fel was a good, conscientious officer, well liked by his men. He had a special camaraderie with his TIE fighter pilots. Soontir Fel had once been a TIE fighter pilot himself, and his exploits and accomplishments were almost legendary.
In a way, Fel wished he could be back down there in the TIE fighter squad room right now, relaxing, joking, and sipping cups of stimtea with the others. Fel was unhappy with his current assignment.
For one thing, this Dreadnaught was a clunky old wagon, especially compared to the new Imperial Star Destroyers. Fel would have given a great deal to be able to command one of those ships!
But he was determined to do his best by the Pride; he just hoped he’d get the chance. Fel had studied Admiral Greelanx’s battle plan, and he was not impressed. Oh, it was by the book, all right, but Fel thought the battle plan was too inflexible, too dependent on several assumptions that Fel perceived as either shaky or outright erroneous.
In the first place, Greelanx was certain that the smugglers were nothing but a disorganized rabble, who couldn’t possibly mount a coordinated attack. Soontir Fel had commanded Customs patrol ships (as had Greelanx), and he knew for a fact that many of these smuggler pilots were the equal of any Imperial pilot ever graduated. They had fast reflexes, were excellent shots, and possessed a reckless courage that made them dangerous customers in a fight.
They were tough and independent, but if the smugglers found someone to lead them wisely, Fel thought that they might well put together a defense to be reckoned with.
Secondly, Greelanx believed that since the smugglers could not possibly pose a threat to this force, there was no point in attempting surprise.