Read The Deadly Hunter Page 9

the durasteel with his lightsaber. He felt the studded spikes on the end of

  the whip catch his leg as he turned. The pain seared him, but he kept

  moving, raising his lightsaber to meet the flashing whip.

  Without Astri and Didi to defend, the Jedi were now free to attack.

  They moved toward the bounty hunter as one unit, lightsabers whirling and

  arcing, anticipating her moves and the striking, curling whip.

  Obi-Wan remembered Qui-Gon's directive to watch the bounty hunter's

  shoulders. Her footwork was fast but she had a tendency to lean into her

  moves.

  She began to retreat backward, though the action of her whip did not

  falter. In the glow of the lightsabers and whip, he could read an

  expression on her face: sheer rage. No doubt she had never fought Jedi like

  this before.

  When at last she stood at the edge of the curving ramp, Obi-Wan made

  a bold move. He copied her action, leaping up to grab onto the conduit

  pipes overhead, then as the whip snaked and curled around him, drove into

  her with both feet.

  She let out a surprised sound as she flew back, high above the ramp.

  She landed with a solid thud, then continued to skid down the ramp. She

  tried to stop her descent but the smooth stone was slippery. Her leg

  twisted underneath her and her head hit the stone wall with another

  sickening thud.

  She lay still.

  "Hurry, Padawan." Qui-Gon strode to the windows. Together with Obi-

  Wan he cut through the durasteel. It peeled back, leaving an opening big

  enough for them to get through.

  Qui-Gon threw open the cubbyhole doors. Quickly, Obi-Wan helped Didi

  and Astri to the window ledge.

  "You'll have to carry Astri," Qui-Gon told him. "I'll take Didi."

  Without pausing to reply, Obi-Wan swept up the slender Astri in his

  arms. Qui-Gon picked up plump Didi with the same ease. Then they leaped

  into the air and landed softly on the ground below.

  Qui-Gon jumped into the pilot seat of their cruiser. He fired up the

  engine. Red warning lights flashed, and there was no answering surge of

  power.

  "She tampered with it," he said tersely. "Let's try ours," Didi

  suggested, already running toward his own cruiser.

  They followed, but Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan were not surprised when Didi's

  cruiser would not operate.

  "She has to have transport nearby. If we - " Qui-Gon began, but his

  words were drowned out by a piercing, animallike cry.

  For a moment, the light was blocked out as the bounty hunter threw

  herself out the window above. Her lips were curled back in a snarl.

  She landed on one leg, whip flashing, and went straight for Obi-Wan.

  CHAPTER 16

  Qui-Gon sprang forward to place himself between Obi-Wan and the

  bounty hunter as Didi and Astri leaped back to get out of his way. Obi-Wan

  used the opportunity to quickly scan the mountainside. It was crucial that

  they locate some form of transport. They had to get Didi and Astri away,

  even if he and Qui-Gon had to hold off the bounty hunter long enough for

  Didi and Astri to take off.

  At first he couldn't distinguish anything. The snow was thick and

  blindingly white, dotted with boulders and crags. The sun bounced off the

  snow, hurting his eyes.

  He had only seconds. Obi-Wan drew the Force around him, connecting

  him to everything he saw, from the craggy peaks and rocks to the fresh,

  dense snow.

  He only saw a slight irregularity in the surface of the snow hundreds

  of meters below him.

  Then he snapped his gaze back. It was a small cruiser. It was white,

  and it nestled in the snow, but he made out its outlines.

  "Down there," Obi-Wan told Didi and Astri crisply as Qui-Gon's

  lightsaber tangled with the bounty hunter's whip. "Below that crag."

  "I see it," Astri said.

  "Go," Obi-Wan urged, already spinning to cover Qui-Gon's flank.

  "Don't wait for us!"

  Didi and Astri stepped off the landing platform onto the snow. They

  sank into the snow up to their knees. They pushed through, making their way

  slowly across the side of the mountain. Drifts alternated with patches of

  ice, but they pushed on.

  The bounty hunter redoubled her efforts, suddenly launching an

  offensive that sent Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan back against the edge of the

  landing platform. She had grabbed Astri's blaster and let loose a stream of

  fire from one hand while the other expertly plied her whip.

  Their lightsabers were a blur as they fought off the frenzied attack.

  She pushed her advantage, and they stepped off the landing platform into

  the snow.

  Now their footing was uneven. Obi-Wan expected an attack, but the

  bounty hunter changed her tactics. Instead of pressing on, she turned her

  back and raced to the other end of the landing platform.

  She poised on the edge and pressed a device in her utility belt. A

  thin material skin shot out from her shoulders and thighs, creating a

  cradle around her. She leaped into the air and came down on the snow on her

  back. Then she dug her heels into the snow and Obi-Wan could see that there

  were now spikes protruding from her boot soles.

  "She is prepared, as usual," Qui-Gon said.

  She pushed herself off and flew down the mountain in the improvised

  sled, gaining speed as she went.

  "She's going to come at Didi and Astri from below," Obi-Wan said.

  "She'll be between them and the transport."

  "Exactly. We must reach them first."

  Didi and Astri had made some progress. Though the footing was

  treacherous, desperation had fueled their speed. They had not seen the

  bounty hunter yet.

  Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon hurried down the steep incline in their

  direction, carefully negotiating the ice and drifts. Obi-Wan glanced down

  the mountain at the bounty hunter. He could not imagine how she would

  manage to stop her descent. But as she slid, she unfurled her whip.

  With an expert flick, the whip arced in the sky and looped around a

  craggy boulder. As the whip went taut, she dug her heels into the snow. Her

  treacherous slide was halted. She rolled to her side and sprang up, then

  detached the sled and began to race across the mountainside.

  She made good progress as she moved across and up the face of the

  slope. Qui-Gon called out to Didi and Astri, alerting them to the fact that

  their enemy was now below them.

  They hesitated, not knowing which way to go. Holding each other, they

  stood in the shadow of a crag. If they continued their descent, they would

  walk straight into the bounty hunter. The crag was too steep to climb.

  Didi looked over at Qui-Gon helplessly.

  "Stay there!" Qui-Gon shouted as he pushed through a drift. "We will

  come to you."

  Obi-Wan wasn't worried. They were closer to Didi and Astri than the

  bounty hunter was. They would be able to reach them before she did, he had

  no doubt.

  They were almost to the pair when the bounty hunter cracked her whip

  and sent it flying toward Astri. It lengthened farther than they had ever

  seen it go, growing longer and longer as it sailed through the air. It was
r />   not in laser mode, so it did not cut her. Instead, it whipped around her

  ankle. Didi desperately tried to hold on, but Astri was yanked off her feet

  and slid down the mountain, straight at the bounty hunter. At the same

  time, the bounty hunter reached down to her holster, withdrew a blaster,

  and shot Didi. He fell softly, silently, into the snow.

  "She knows Astri has the data pad," Qui-Gon said tersely. "See to

  Didi. I have an idea."

  Qui-Gon activated his lightsaber again. He kept it in front of him,

  sweeping the snow with each stride to cut a narrow path through it. The ice

  melted in seconds, and he was able to hit firm ground. He made fast

  progress down the mountain. But not fast enough.

  Obi-Wan used the same technique to get to Didi. He fervently hoped he

  was still alive. He fell to his knees by Didi's side and reached for the

  emergency medpac on his belt. He saw the spreading stain of blood on Didi's

  tunic and ripped it open. He quickly poured bacta into the wound.

  Didi's eyes fluttered open. Despair pooled in his deep brown gaze.

  "Astri," he murmured.

  Obi-Wan turned. Qui-Gon had not yet reached the bounty hunter, but

  Astri had. She lay at their enemy's feet. The bounty hunter had one booted

  foot on her chest. She reached down for the data pad, which had slipped out

  of Astri's tunic. Astri held the data pad in a deathgrip. The bounty hunter

  set the whip to laser mode and it glowed red.

  Qui-Gon was too far away to stop her. "Astri," Didi moaned.

  Obi-Wan summoned the Force. He felt the power in his muscles as he

  leaped from Didi's side onto the crag. He scrambled to the top in seconds.

  Then he bent his knees and gathered power for the spring. He leaped high in

  the air, so high that the bounty hunter sensed his presence in the sky and

  looked up, confused. She only had time to raise her arm back before Obi-

  Wan, in the same maneuver he had used in the house, came straight at her,

  feet first. He hit both of her shoulders with a mighty blow that sent her

  backward onto the snow. Obi-Wan landed in the snow, his feet planted on

  either side of her body, his lightsaber raised.

  "Enough," he said.

  She lay rigid, but he felt a flicker of movement in her right hand.

  He saw the glint of a vibroblade. Moving only her fingers, she flicked it

  with expert aim toward Astri.

  Obi-Wan's blow with the lightsaber was only a split second too late.

  It grazed the bounty hunter's fingers in a searing wound. At the same time

  he leaped backward, twisting in midair to try to catch the blade with his

  other hand. He used his Jedi reflexes to slow time down, allowing him to

  eye exactly where to grab it. The hilt thudded into his hand.

  The bounty hunter stuck her wounded fingers in the snow for an

  instant. Her teeth sank into her lower lip.

  The pain must have been terrible. She spoke for the first time. Her

  eyes blazed hatred at Obi-Wan. "You... will... pay."

  Suddenly a lunge line shot out from her utility belt. It had a homing

  beacon to her cruiser, attaching itself to it and yanking her backward. Her

  body bounced across the ice. It must have been excruciatingly painful.

  "Stay with them," Qui-Gon directed, and took off after her.

  Obi-Wan watched as Qui-Gon gained on the bounty hunter. She scrambled

  into her cruiser. The engines fired and the loading ramp began to close as

  Qui-Gon gave a great leap and landed.

  Horrified, Obi-Wan saw the flash of blaster fire. Qui-Gon staggered.

  "Master!" Obi-Wan screamed.

  Qui-Gon fell backward into the bowels of the ship. The ramp

  retracted. The ship rose in the air and shot away into the upper

  atmosphere.

  Obi-Wan could hear as if for the first time the wind whispering along

  the surface of the snow. Astri raggedly breathed behind him. The echo of

  his own anguished cry reverberated off the mountain as he watched the ship

  disappear.

  Had Qui-Gon been captured by the bounty hunter, or had he captured

  her? Was he mortally wounded? Was he alive - or dead?

  The anguish of not knowing made Obi-Wan want to crash to his knees.

  But there were wounded he had to care for. Qui-Gon had told him to stay.

  "Don't lose heart, Qui-Gon," he whispered. "I'll find you. Hold on."

  He would find a way to bring back his Master.

 


 

  Jude Watson, The Deadly Hunter

 


 

 
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