"We acknowledge your transmission," the pilot said. "What is your situation?"
In answer, sobs came over the air. "I… I didn't think anyone would hear me…."
The pilot looked up at Dooku again. "This sounds genuine."
Dooku nodded. It did sound genuine. But that didn't mean it was.
The pilot's tone was gentler now. "Tell us what happened so we can help you."
The intake of breath was so shaky they heard it clearly. "We were attacked — a space pirate. Our ship was under heavy fire. The pilot is dead. My father. " A sob shuddered, and then they could almost hear the child's effort to control herself. "They were taking him away. But he fought back, and they killed him."
"Identify yourself, please," the pilot said.
"I am Joli Ti Eddawan, daughter of Senator Galim Eddawan of Tyan." The voice quavered. "The ship is failing. The warning system lights are all blinking. What should I do?"
"Who else is aboard?"
"They are all dead." The voice was small.
"That attack missed us by hours," Eero said. "Do you know the planet Tyan?" Dooku asked.
Eero nodded. "It's a Mid-Rim planet, I think. Part of the Vvan system.
I don't know the Senators there."
"Can you check on the whereabouts of Senator Eddawan?" Dooku asked.
"We need to stall," he told the pilot. "But the systems are failing — "
Dooku turned to Eero. "Now," he said, as Eero hesitated. "Go!"
Eero hurried toward the onboard computer suite. He sat down and his fingers flew over the keys.
"Hello?" the child's voice called. "I think maybe the oxygen is failing. It's in the red level. It's getting hard for me to breathe."
"Master Dooku!" the pilot exclaimed. "What should I do?"
"The order is the same," Dooku said calmly. "Stall." "But she's suffocating!"
"Talk to her," Dooku said. "Tell her we are getting ready to save the ship."
"Joli, hang on. We are putting together a plan," the pilot said kindly. "Take very slow breaths. Lie down."
They only heard rasping breathing. "All right," Joli said. "I'm so tired…."
"Oxygen deprivation," Qui-Gon murmured.
Dooku felt a spurt of annoyance. He didn't need Qui-Gon to give him a diagnosis. "Eero, do you have anything?" he called.
"Not yet! Hold on."
"Stars and planets, Master Dooku, we have to do something!" the pilot cried. "That child could die while you wait for information!"
Qui-Gon looked pale. He bit his lip, as if to prevent himself from speaking. Dooku felt very calm.
"I've got it," Eero said. "Senator Galim Eddawan of Tyan. He does have a daughter named Joli. And he was scheduled to arrive at the port station Alpha Nonce yesterday. He never arrived."
"Slowly approach the ship," Dooku told the pilot, who let out a held breath. "Keep your flank away from the center of the ship."
"It's just a small cruiser," the pilot said. "A ship like that might have some small arms, but nothing that can penetrate our shields."
"Do as I say," Dooku snapped.
"Joli? We're coming to get you," the pilot told the child. Her voice was a mere whisper. "Good."
"Master?" Qui-Gon's voice was low. "Do you think the distress call is authentic?"
"I do not know, Padawan," Dooku said. "What do you think?"
"I feel that child is in great danger," Qui-Gon said.
Dooku raised an eyebrow at him. "I did not ask you what you felt, but what you thought." The Jedi insistence on feelings was all well and good, but Dooku preferred analysis.
"I think we should proceed carefully. We cannot ignore a distress signal," Qui-Gon said.
"Better." Dooku turned to the pilot. "Engage laser cannon tracking. Be prepared to fire."
The pilot set the controls. The silver ship dipped closer gracefully, as if initiating the first movement of a dance. The other ship sat, eerily motionless.
"Stay out of range of laser cannons," Dooku said. "But if we don't get closer, we can't send the shuttle to board," the pilot said.
"Just do it." In another moment, Dooku would take the controls himself. He trusted the pilot's abilities more than his judgment, and he wanted to remain free to move in case the worst happened. In Dooku's experience, it often did.
Suddenly, the dead ship roared to life. It veered to the right in a burst of speed. At the same time, panels slid back on the underside of the cockpit.
"Turbolasers!" Dooku shouted. "Reverse engines!" "Turbolasers?" the pilot asked, stunned. "That ship is too small to have that kind of firepower."
Dooku lunged forward and grabbed the controls. He reversed the engines himself. The ship shuddered and the engines screamed in protest as they struggled to reverse at high velocity. The ship responded, zooming back out of range.
"A lesson for you, Padawan," Dooku said as the pilot took the controls again and the first turbolaser fire erupted. "Never trust anything."
The ship shook from the percussive effect of the fire, but they were out of range. Senator Blix Annon rushed into the cockpit. "What's going on?"
"We came to the aid of a distress signal," Eero said, hanging onto the back of a chair while the craft dipped and surged in evasive action.
"Apparently it was a ruse."
"Apparently!" the plump Senator roared. "What are we doing answering distress calls? Who authorized this?"
"I did," Dooku said. "You put the Jedi in charge when you asked for us to escort you, Senator."
The Senator disturbed his carefully arranged hair by raking his fingers through it angrily. "I did not authorize rescue missions!" The ship lurched, and he almost fell. He snapped at the pilot, "Stop this ridiculous maneuvering. Our particle shields will protect us."
"We'll have to lower the particle shield in order to fire the laser cannons," Dooku said.