“We already—” Chin began. The major looked at him, and he fell silent.
The frisking took only a minute, and came up empty. “Put him in the pocket with the others,” the major ordered. “All right, Chin, you and your friends can go. If he turns out to be worth anything, I’ll see you get a piece of it.”
“Uncommonly generous of you,” Chin said with an expression that was just short of a sneer. “Can we have our guns back now?”
The major’s expression hardened. “You can pick them up later at our HQ,” he said. “Hyllyard Hotel, straight across the square—but I’m sure a sophisticated citizen like yourself already knows where it is.”
For a moment Chin seemed inclined to argue the point. But a glance at the stormtroopers clustered around evidently changed his mind for him. Without a word he turned, and he and his three companions strode back toward the city.
“Move out,” the major ordered, and they started up again.
“Well,” Han muttered, falling into step beside Luke. “Together again, huh?”
“I wouldn’t miss it,” Luke muttered back. “Your friends there seem in a hurry to get away.”
“Probably don’t want to miss the party,” Han told him. “A little something they threw together to celebrate my capture.”
Luke threw him a sideways look. “Shame we weren’t invited.”
“Real shame,” Han agreed with a straight face. “You never know, though.”
They had turned into the avenue now, moving toward the center of town. Just visible over the heads of the stormtroopers, he could see something gray and rounded directly ahead of them. Craning his neck for a better view, he saw that the structure was in fact a freestanding archway, rising from the ground near the far end of the open village square he had noticed earlier.
A fairly impressive archway, too, especially for a city this far outside the mainstream of the galaxy. The upper part was composed of different types of fitted stone, the crown flaring outward like a cross between an umbrella and a section of sliced mushroom. The lower part curved in and downward, to end in a pair of meter-square supporting pillars on each side. The entire arch rose a good ten meters into the sky, with the distance between the pillars perhaps half that. Lying directly in front of it was the village square, a fifteen-meter expanse of empty ground.
The perfect place for an ambush.
Luke felt his stomach tighten. The perfect place for an ambush … except that if it was obvious to him, it must be obvious to the stormtroopers, as well.
And it was. The vanguard of the party had reached the square now, and as the stormtroopers moved out of the confines of the narrow avenue, each lifted his blaster rifle a little higher and moved a little farther apart from his fellows. They were expecting an ambush, all right. And they were expecting it right here.
Gritting his teeth, Luke focused again on the archway. “Is Threepio here?” he muttered to Han.
He sensed Han’s frown, but the other didn’t waste time with unnecessary questions. “He’s with Lando, yeah.”
Luke nodded and glanced down to his right. Beside him, Artoo was rolling along the bumpy street, trying hard to keep up. Bracing himself, Luke took a step in that direction—
And with a squeal, Artoo tripped over Luke’s outstretched foot and fell flat with a crash.
Luke was crouched beside him in an instant, leaning over him as he struggled with his manacled hands to get the little droid upright again. He sensed some of the stormtroopers moving forward to assist, but for that single moment, there was no one else close enough to hear him. “Artoo, call to Threepio,” he breathed into the droid’s audio receptor. “Tell him to wait until we’re at the archway to attack.”
The droid complied instantly, its loud warble nearly deafening Luke as he crouched there beside him. Luke’s head was still ringing when rough hands grabbed him under the arms and hauled him to his feet. He regained his balance—
To find the major standing in front of him, a suspicious scowl on his face. “What was that?” the other demanded.
“He fell over,” Luke told him. “I think he tripped—”
“I meant that transmission,” the major cut him off harshly. “What did he say?”
“He was probably telling me off for tripping him,” Luke shot back. “How should I know what he said?”
For a long minute the major glared at him. “Move out, Commander,” he said at last to the stormtrooper at his side. “Everyone stay alert.”
He turned away, and they started walking again. “I hope,” Han murmured from beside him, “you know what you’re doing.”
Luke took a deep breath and fixed his eyes on the archway ahead. “So do I,” he murmured back.
In a very few minutes, he knew, they would both find out.
C H A P T E R 29
“Oh, my!” Threepio gasped. “General Calrissian, I have—”
“Quiet, Threepio,” Lando ordered, peering carefully around the edge of the window at the minor commotion going on across the square. “Did you see what happened, Aves?”
Crouched down beneath the windowsill, Aves shook his head. “Looked like Skywalker and his droid both fell over,” he said. “Couldn’t tell for sure—too many stormtroopers in the way.”
“General Calrissian—”
“Quiet, Threepio.” Lando watched tensely as two stormtroopers pulled Luke to his feet, then righted Artoo. “Looks like they’re okay.”
“Yeah.” Aves reached down to the floor beside him, picked up the small transmitter. “Here we go. Let’s hope everyone’s ready.”
“And that Chin and the others aren’t still carrying their blasters,” Lando added under his breath.
Aves snorted. “They aren’t. Don’t worry—stormtroopers are always confiscating other people’s weapons.”
Lando nodded, adjusting his grip on his blaster, wishing they could get this over with. Across the way, the Imperials seemed to have gotten themselves sorted out and were starting to move again. As soon as they were all inside the square, away from any possible cover …
“General Calrissian, I must speak to you,” Threepio insisted. “I have a message from Master Luke.”
Lando blinked at him. “From Luke?”
—but even as he said it he suddenly remembered that electronic wail from Artoo just after he’d fallen over. Could that have been—? “What is it?”
“Master Luke wants you to hold off the attack,” Threepio said, obviously relieved that someone was finally listening to him. “He says you’re to wait until the stormtroopers are at the arch before firing.”
Aves twisted around. “What? That’s crazy. They outnumber us three to one—we give them any chance at all at cover and they’ll cut us to pieces.”
Lando looked out the window, grinding his teeth together. Aves was right—he knew enough of ground tactics to realize that. But on the other hand … “They’re awfully spread out out there,” he said. “Cover or no cover, they’re going to be hard to take out. Especially with those speeder bikes on their perimeter.”
Aves shook his head. “It’s crazy,” he repeated. “I’m not going to risk my people that way.”
“Luke knows what he’s doing,” Lando insisted. “He’s a Jedi.”
“He’s not a Jedi now,” Aves snorted. “Didn’t Karrde explain about the ysalamiri?”
“Whether he has Jedi powers or not, he’s still a Jedi,” Lando insisted. His blaster, he realized suddenly, was pointed at Aves. But that was okay, because Aves’s blaster was pointed at him, too. “Anyway, his life is more on the line here than any of yours—you can always abort and pull back.”
“Oh, sure,” Aves snorted, throwing a glance out the window. The Imperials were nearing the middle of the square now, Lando saw, the stormtroopers looking wary and alert as anything. “Except that if we leave any of them alive, they’ll seal off the city. And what about that Chariot up there?”