Two of the creatures rippled into visibility, clutching their smoking wounds. They fell with the now-familiar hollow cries of pain before they died.
“Don’t just stand there—keep fighting!” the woman snarled, and the young Jedi Knights resumed the battle.
But with the appearance of the newcomer, the creatures’ fighting resolve broke. They began to flee, a flicker of barely seen shadows.
“Hey, they’re getting the space mines!” Jacen cried. Jaina raced toward the workbench as the surviving creatures grabbed the last components and swarmed up toward the air vent near the ceiling.
Jaina watched the dark shaft swallow the shadowy creatures. The young woman ran ahead with a burst of speed and leapt up at the wall, sweeping with her lightsaber and striking the last chameleon creature in the back. It fell with another wordless wail as the rest of its companions escaped.
Jaina frowned at this last needless slaughter. “You didn’t have to do that. It was running, not attacking us.”
“They all need to be dead,” the young woman said bitterly.
Zekk and Lowie knelt over one of the fallen bodies, looking at the fading colors in the skin tone. Jaina knelt beside the one she had struck, gasping its last breaths.
“Who are you? Who sent you?” she said, but breath only rattled in the creature’s inhuman face, and it died. Then she saw emblazoned in its fading multicolored skin a mark, a solid dark circle with designs around it.
She recognized the symbol. Zekk stood next to her, looked at the tattoo and then at Jaina. “That symbol reminds me of Black Sun.”
Jaina swallowed hard. She knew of the legendary underworld criminal organization run by vile gangsters and evil crime lords such as Prince Xizor in the days of the Rebellion. Many other cruel leaders had also had far-reaching claws that extended into numerous activities, controlling a large portion of the most insidious crimes in the galaxy.
“But Black Sun’s been quiet for years,” she said.
Zekk frowned. “I wonder if they’re starting up again. Or if this is something else.”
Jacen turned to their unlikely helper. The wiry young woman stood there, large eyes wide, pupils dilated, body still trembling. Her arms jittered as if she were a barely contained mass of energy searching for another target to fight. Her comfortable, form-fitting shirt left her arms bare, displaying a tattoo on her right shoulder that looked to Jacen something like a piranha beetle with a lightning bolt on its back, but definitely not Black Sun.
“These creatures don’t know anything. They’re only henchmen, sent here to remove your evidence. Those space mines were a setup to destroy the Millennium Falcon.”
“Yeah, we guessed that too,” Jaina said. “But what I can’t figure is who you are. Are you a Jedi Knight?”
The woman snorted. “Just because I can use a lightsaber doesn’t mean I’m a Jedi. I don’t need all that elite training mumbo jumbo. I can fight just fine on my own.”
“We could see that,” Jacen said, enthralled.
Tenel Ka narrowed her eyes. “Fighting with finesse is a greater challenge than indulging a simple battle frenzy.”
The woman scowled. “Yeah? I seem to remember taking out more targets in this little skirmish than you did.”
At that moment, Han Solo came rushing in, accompanied by several members of the Ord Mantell security forces. He looked around, taking in the carnage and the sight of the young Jedi Knights standing with their lightsabers still blazing. “We came as soon as we got Anakin’s alarm! Are you kids okay?”
Jaina switched off her weapon. “We handled it, Dad,” she said.
“I can see that.” Then he noticed the young stranger, who was now staring at him, her dark eyes ablaze with fury. She stepped forward in a tense, threatening posture, her yellow lightsaber held out in front of her. “Han Solo!” she said, her voice dripping with anger.
Han looked at her, but his face showed no recognition.
“Han Solo,” she repeated. “You killed my father!”
7
Upon hearing the stranger’s shocking and sinister announcement, Jacen instinctively moved with his sister to stand beside their father.
Anakin came out of the Rock Dragon, lifting his chin high.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about, young lady,” Han said. “I don’t even know who you are.”
“You’d better explain yourself,” Jacen said. “Sure, we’re glad you helped us out, but how dare you go accusing my father of murder?”
The young woman did not tear her gaze away from Han Solo. Her dark, sad eyes narrowed, as hard and glassy as chips of obsidian. Tenel Ka, Lowie, and Zekk also stood beside Han, but the young woman did not seem to care a whit about being outnumbered. She still held her flickering lightsaber as if ready to take them all on.
“My name is Anja,” she said, her voice cold and even. “Anja Gallandro.”
Jacen watched his father flinch and draw back. His expression fell, and he swallowed hard. Jacen blinked, surprised at the guilty reaction his father had shown. Was there something to what this young woman had said?
“You… you’re Gallandro’s daughter?”
“In the flesh,” Anja said. “I was just an infant when you murdered my father.”
“Wait a minute.” Han held up a hand. “I didn’t kill Gallandro.”
“I’m surprised you even remember him,” Anja said bitterly. “With a career like yours, the way you stepped on your competition, cheated people, dumped your spice loads at the first sign of Imperial patrols, no wonder you’ve had a price on your head for most of your life.”
“Of course I remember Gallandro,” Han spluttered. He looked around nervously at the Ord Mantell security troops who had come with him to investigate the alarm, at the dead chameleon creatures that lay strewn on the floor. Han didn’t seem to notice that the space mines had been stolen.
He said to the troops, “Clean up this mess and… report everything to the authorities. I want to file an official complaint.” He tossed his dark hair back. “My kids were threatened. They could have been hurt.”
“How touching,” Anja said.
Han marched briskly toward the Millennium Falcon with a strong gesture.
“Come with me. We’ll talk inside the Falcon, where we can have a bit of privacy.” He strode up the boarding ramp and did not look back.
Jacen turned to his sister, and they shared a hard glance. Then all the young Jedi Knights quickly followed Han into his beloved, battered ship. Anja sniffed, drew a deep breath, and switched off her lightsaber.
She clipped it at her side. After waiting for them all to board the Falcon ahead of her, she followed them up, wary, as if suspecting a trap.
Han slumped heavily into a seat in the small recreation lounge, with its scratched and dented hologame table in the center. Equipment, spare parts, and leftovers from various cargo trips hung in the supply bins and nets. The ship looked lived in, comfortable and messy, like a familiar bedroom that wasn’t cleaned up any more than it had to be.
Jacen knew that their mother Leia never made any demands on Han Solo’s upkeep of the Falcon. This was his private area, and he could do what he wanted here, so long as it was safe.
“You can’t lie to me, Solo,” Anja said, preferring to stand despite the empty seats available. Instead, she watched him, then paced around the room looking at Han’s mementos and trophies of missions he had flown. “I’ve spent my life learning about my father. My mother told me some stories before she died, and there are plenty of records in the Corporate Sector Authority archives.”
“Well, your father was a hard one to forget,” Han Solo admitted. “He was reputed to be the fastest draw in the galaxy. Challenged the clan leader to a duel on the planet Ammuud, but when I was picked as his opponent, Gallandro declined to fight me.”