💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › sf › hand_of_ captured on 2023-11-14 at 12:11:54.
View Raw
More Information
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-06-16)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
The Hand of Fate
By Brendon Wahlberg
Second in a series of stories about the Emperor during the film trilogy
(episodes 4-6) See also A New Enemy (1) and The Emperor Eclipsed (3)
Emperor Palpatine, master of the dark side of the Force, made no
effort to hide his satisfaction as he strode across the throne room
floor towards the two combatants. One of them was Luke Skywalker, a
young man clad in austere black. He was holding his humming lightsaber
blade at the throat of his vanquished enemy, Lord Darth Vader. Luke
had given in to his anger at last, and he was astonished at how easily
he had beaten the Dark Lord. Luke panted, barely containing his rage
as he warily watched the approaching Emperor. The blade in his hand
drifted perilously close to Vader's gasping mask. The once mighty Sith
Lord was reduced to abject terror, trying in vain to crawl away from
Luke. Luke saw Palpatine through a haze of anger. The Emperor was a
surprisingly small man, hunched with age and clasping his wrinkled
hands together. "Good!" Palpatine said, his withered features stamped
with lust. "Your hate has made you powerful. Now, fulfill your
destiny and take Lord Vader's place at my side!" Luke looked at the
fallen Sith Lord, once his most deadly foe, now completely at his
mercy. He looked at his prosthetic right hand, gloved in black, and
remembered that Vader had cut his real hand off when they last
met. Not only that, Vader had also tortured his friends and delivered
one of them to the ruthless crime lord, Jabba the Hutt, perhaps never
to be seen again. And those acts barely began to scratch the surface
of Vader's black deeds. If he put an end to this evil being, he would
only be giving the galaxy the justice it cried out for. Luke suddenly
recalled another man who had once been helpless before a lightsaber
blade, and what Vader had done to him. Then he made the decision that
felt right and just. He reversed his grip on the lightsaber he had
made with his own hands and swept it through the torso of the Dark
Lord, crying "For Ben Kenobi!" Vader died screaming, cut in half in a
heap of seared gore. Luke turned his back on the smoking corpse and
faced the Emperor. Palpatine was nearly beside himself with
glee. "Well done, my young apprentice! Now, come and kneel to me, and
pledge your loyalty." Luke didn't move. The Emperor smiled at Luke,
but it was the smile of a crafty predator. "You cannot turn back, now,
young Skywalker," he chided Luke. He held out a wasted hand,
beckoning. "I shall raise you to such heights of power that your name
shall forever eclipse the name of Darth Vader." Luke walked over to
him, and with a grim set to his features, knelt deliberately at the
Emperor's feet. "Lord Vader's destiny is my own," Luke said with
finality. Without warning, Luke moved. "Now you die!" Luke shouted,
stabbing upward with his lightsaber at Palpatine's defenseless, robed
body. The bright green blade did not find its mark, however. Even as
the thrust began, the saber was deactivated by a proximity sensor
hidden on the Emperor's person. The pommel of Luke's weapon thudded
ineffectually against the Emperor's chest, and the galactic ruler
lurched backwards. Palpatine saw a flash of crimson behind Luke, then
the point of a force pike bloomed from Luke's chest. Luke was lifted
from the floor, impaled on the long weapon of a hulking Imperial
guard. Luke had known he would not leave the throne room alive, but
to have failed in his one chance to kill the Emperor...it was too much
despair to bear. Drowning in his pain, Luke was dimly aware that his
lightsaber had returned to life. Knowing death was near, and desperate
to end his physical and mental torment, he managed to turn the weapon
onto himself. The red robed guard let the room's second corpse slide
from his force pike and slump to the floor. He regarded his Emperor
silently. Palpatine stared thoughtfully at Luke's body for a long
time. Then, noticing the guard, he dismissed him distractedly. The
bland voice of Sate Pestage, the Emperor's Grand Vizier, interrupted
Palpatine's introspection. "My condolences, master, on the loss of
your servant." Palpatine looked at Pestage bemusedly, searching his
timeworn face for a hint of the humor he thought might be behind the
statement. There was nothing but a wizened serenity in Pestage's
expression. Pestage knew his master was experiencing a period of great
stress, and he meant his presence to be soothing. Therefore it was
with relief that he saw Palpatine calmly beckon to him and begin
walking. Together, they went out into the halls of the Imperial
citadel. They met no other person as they strode along in silence, for
this part of the citadel was the Emperor's private sanctuary. There
were times when Pestage worried a great deal about his master. Like
the day, four months ago, when Palpatine had collapsed into a vision
trance in front of most of the fleet Admirals. The glorious one had
foreseen his own death, and despite his reliable means of overcoming
that particular affliction, he had been afraid. Seeing fear in his
master had shaken Pestage. Palpatine was the foundation on which he
built his life. He could not imagine what he would do if that
foundation were taken away. Equally worrisome was the Emperor's
accelerated physical decay as the ravages of the dark side became ever
more harsh. For Palpatine was demanding more of the Force than ever
before. Pestage had seen his master spend a great deal of time in his
meditation chamber, trying, he suspected, to see the future. This
ability awed Pestage, but for once, it did not seem to be
working. Palpatine always emerged in a rage, flailing his fists and
cursing his 'blindness'. He exerted more and more power, and his
apparently futile efforts took a fearsome toll on his body. Only once
had Palpatine given him any explanation, and Pestage had not fully
understood. A great nexus was coming, the glorious one had told him,
and the strands of probability were too much in flux to follow. But
whatever barriers there were did not stop Palpatine from trying, and
Pestage had begun to wonder if his Emperor would actually destroy
himself. Then, one day, Vader had returned with a prize. The Emperor
had received his servant with a curious coldness, but once he
discovered what the Sith Lord had brought, Palpatine had seemed
rejuvenated. The prize had set in motion a series of frenzied
preparations, as the Emperor immediately saw in it another means of
gaining the information he sought - the probable outcome of his
meeting with Luke Skywalker. The prize had also made possible the
contents of the room that they now entered. It was a large chamber,
filled with row upon row of man-size tanks. The Emperor moved to the
nearest one and wiped away the moisture beading on its glass
surface. He stared at the face behind the glass with a searching
intensity, but its eyes remained closed, its hair floating in the
gentle currents of the nutrient bath. Sate Pestage suppressed a
shiver. It was the face of Luke Skywalker. The Constable of
Homunculi, Rollo Mon, stepped out of the shadows, his enormous head
ornament casting bizarre shadows in the sharp green light illuminating
the entryway. The Emperor turned to him, his hand still resting on the
tank. "Prepare him," commanded Palpatine.
Three months earlier, Darth Vader was striding through the nearly
empty halls of cloud city. Behind him, struggling to keep up, was a
surgeon droid clutching a foot long cylindrical tank. They hurried
past vacated apartments and hollow, silent casinos. Only stormtroopers
marked their passage by saluting, their rifles held casually due to
the lack of any threat. For the once thriving luxury resort was now
in the hands of the Empire. Any citizens not able to evacuate in the
exodus initiated by Baron- Administrator turned rebel Lando Calrissian
were rounded up and forcibly deported. Those with questionable pasts
had gone to Imperial prisons, as had some of the innocent, caught in
the wrong place at the wrong time. Vader and the droid moved quickly
into the lower levels of the city. The graceful sculptures and rich
decor gave way to the gritty, exposed machinery of the Tibanna gas
mining facility. Here and there, the squat, grotesque Ugnaughts
scurried about, continuing the task of running the enormous
machines. For them, one human master was much the same as any other,
provided they were paid and not mistreated. Now the valuable gas,
useful for antigrav devices and blasters, would go to the Empire, that
was all. Finally, the Sith Lord reached the bottom of Cloud City and
entered a small control room. Vader stepped through a cloud of steam,
suddenly appearing in front of Lieutenant Pralt and his work
detail. Pralt backed away before he could catch himself as the huge
armored figure loomed up before him like a sculpted gargoyle. "Report,
Lieutenant," demanded Vader. "My Lord," the officer stammered,
straightening himself. Pralt knew of Vader's reputation for anger, and
he feared to give the Dark Lord even partial bad news. But over the
past few days, a strange story had circulated through the ranks. A
week ago, when the rebels had escaped both Cloud City and the
Executor, Vader had failed to execute Admiral Piett, or anybody
else. Instead, he had gone to meditate in his private chamber for
three days. When he emerged, he had ordered a work detail to search
the lower levels of the Cloud City reactor shaft for an unspecified
object belonging to the rebel, Luke Skywalker. Rumor had it that the
rebel had faced Vader high above and survived. His bravery bolstered
by these tales, Pralt swallowed once and steadily reported, "My Lord,
we have located what seems to be a lightsaber, but it lies in a rather
difficult location." At least, Pralt assumed it was one of the old
Jedi weapons. Its resemblance to the object hanging at Vader's belt
gave the Lieutenant a bit of confidence. Vader was already moving
past him. "Show me," he commanded in a deep, mechanically amplified
voice that was full of a surprising eagerness. Pralt signaled his men
and the team led Vader and the silent droid into a narrow access
corridor. "Brace yourself, my Lord," Pralt warned as he opened the
heavy door at the far end. Instantly, fierce winds swept into the tiny
hallway, challenging the search team to stay on their feet. Vader
stepped out onto the balcony beyond as if in total calm. Above the
Dark Lord towered the enormous reactor shaft, a breathtaking open
space glittering with distant lights. Below him, a mere hundred feet
down, was the great sphere that terminated the shaft. It was studded
with pressure release hatches that opened in response to the strong,
shifting winds that coursed through the shaft. Vader stared at them as
they rhythmically opened and closed, giving transient views of the
bottomless drop to Bespin. Then, his electronically enhanced vision
picked it out. Lying at the bottom of the giant bowl, between two
restlessly opening hatches, was a lightsaber. Wrapped tightly around
the weapon was a severed human hand. Vader could only attribute the
miracle before him to the workings of the Force. While in meditation,
he had been disturbed by thoughts of the hand. He had had a strong
feeling that it still existed, and that the Emperor would want it. So
he had come in search of it, trusting in the Force, and there it
was. But it was not the pathetic bit of flesh that quickened Vader's
pulse - it was the silvery pommel of the old Jedi weapon clutched in
the stiff fingers. His lightsaber. Returned to him after some twenty
years. It gleamed invitingly from below, somehow calling to him.
Pralt's voice broke into his fascinated contemplation, and Vader was
startled to find that he had been leaning partly over the railing
towards his prize. "My Lord," Pralt shouted, shivering in the cold and
struggling to be heard over the howling of the wind, "if that is what
you seek, I doubt we could send a man down there to get it. It would
be too dangerous. Any attempt to retrieve the object could dislodge it
and send it out one of those hatches." Vader didn't respond
immediately. Turning away from Pralt, he raised his arms to the
immensity of the shaft. "It will be your good fortune, Lieutenant, to
witness a demonstration of the true power in the universe," Vader
said, managing somehow to be heard over the wind. Pralt felt nothing
at first, then his skin began to crawl. The winds in the reactor shaft
had begun to diminish. Pralt's men backed away nervously, but Pralt
stood rooted to the spot. Slowly, inexorably, the swirling air
quieted, then became still. One by one, the pressure release hatches
below hissed to a close, until they were all shut. Vader gestured
again, holding out a hand towards the lightsaber below, and it rose up
to him majestically, settling gently into his outstretched palm.
Pralt shuddered in disgust to see the severed hand up close; its
cauterized stump of a wrist and its ice-covered fingers clutching the
saber even in death made Pralt unconsciously reach for his own right
hand, as if to make sure it was still attached. Vader gestured to the
surgeon droid and it clumped up, holding its cylindrical vat. The
droid pressed a switch on the container and the top hissed open. Vader
pulled the hand from the saber and immersed it in the reddish Bacta
solution. He attached the saber to his belt, and turned to Lieutenant
Pralt. "Good work, Lieutenant," he said simply. Then Vader strode
away, the droid in tow, leaving Pralt and his men gaping. They stood
there for a whole minute, not moving, until finally the chill winds
began to return, urging the search team back into the warmth of the
corridors.
Alone in medstation seventy of the Executor, surgical droid 2-1BV had
finished the treatment of the last blaster wounds from the Bespin
battle. The mighty Super Star Destroyer was moving away from the gas
giant and aiming itself at Coruscant, the dark heart of the Empire,
the Imperial throneworld. Beevee turned to the wall stasis unit where
the hand of the human rebel was stored. With no other commands to obey
at the moment, he clumped over to the unit and opened it. Removing the
Bacta cylinder, Beevee examined the readouts on the container. The
hand was perfectly preserved. It had been frozen during its stay in
the reactor shaft, and the Bacta was acting to keep the tissue in a
healthy state. In fact, Beevee noted clinically, the hand could even
be reattached to the original owner with little loss of function, were
he available. But no doubt the owner would have a prosthetic
replacement by now. A droid hand, of sorts. Beevee's photoreceptors
regarded his own hand. It was so very different from the human hand in
the tank, consisting of three grasping claws at the end of a stark
metal rod. It enabled him to manipulate sophisticated surgical
instruments and heal the wounds incurred by the vulnerable
organics. Once, on a previous assignment, the old droid had seen two
young human lovers sneak into his infirmary. They had not even noticed
him as he stood motionless among the diagnostic equipment. They had
done many things with their hands that Beevee knew he could never do.
His cold, sharp edges could never gently caress a soft cheek or smooth
hair away from a warm forehead. He wondered if the rebel whose hand
this was did such things with a human female. He wondered if there had
been much pain when the hand was cut off. Pain was something Beevee
clinically responded to, but it was not something he could feel
himself. If a lightsaber took his hand off, he would merely have
impaired surgical capacities. Then his manipulator would be
replaced. Like the rebel's hand. He wondered if the rebel's new hand
could feel the skin of another person's face. Internal sensors warned
him of the approach of a new patient, a captain who had broken an
ankle by tripping int o a service well. Beevee quietly replaced the
Bacta tank and didn't give it another thought as he prepared his
instruments for the simple operation. He didn't feel it when, a moment
later, the Executor made the jump to hyperspace.
Emperor Palpatine was at one with the Force. Lines of probability
stretched out before him as he turned his mind towards the future. The
farther he looked, the more the lines branched and the more they
tended to flicker or fade. The focus of his attention lay on a very
strong line that led to a confusing jumble resembling a tangled ball
of twine that kept changing shape. It was the nexus of fates in which
he met Luke Skywalker. The fates of himself, Skywalker and Vader were
tied up there, and he absolutely could not see whether any of their
lives continued past that point. He knew the meeting was
inevitable. It seemed to Palpatine that Skywalker's path met Vader's
first, and then both joined his own at the nexus. But when the Emperor
tried to penetrate that nexus, the awful result was always the same.
It was the mental equivalent of leaping into a whirlpool. He was
swiftly rendered helpless, trapped in a chaotic storm of visions. They
went hurtling past his mind's eye, leaving only fleeting impressions.
A black-clad Skywalker called his lightsaber to his hand and with a
lightening move, burned Palpatine's head from his shoulders...
A passive Skywalker made no move to ignite his lightsaber as Vader
moved in. Vader was saying, "If you will not fight, then you will meet
your destiny." Luke did not resist as Vader cut his son down...
Vader and Skywalker suddenly put aside their fierce duel and marched
towards the Emperor, seated defenseless on his throne. As one, they
treacherously murdered Palpatine...
Vader was dead, killed by the Emperor himself when the Dark Lord had
encouraged Luke to try to kill the Emperor. Now Palpatine was hurling
Force lightning at Skywalker too, leaving the boy writhing in agony,
begging to serve him...
Skywalker was holding his blade at Vader's throat, hate filling his
face, dark side power coursing through him, ready to commit
patricide...
The variations were endless. The Emperor's mind was assaulted by the
nexus, threatening him with destruction. If he did not break out of
it, in mere moments, his consciousness would be pulled in a thousand
directions at once. It took even more power than the last time, but
Palpatine managed to win free, awakening with a sickening spinning
sensation on the floor of his meditation chamber. Fear and anger
coursed through him. It was impossible for him to see the shape of
things to come, but he required absolutely to know. So much was at
stake - everything he had created so far. His Empire. Palpatine
clenched his fists, gazing ruefully at the progressing ruin of his
flesh. He could not continue these ordeals and survive. He doubted
that he could rescue his consciousness from that nexus and make it
into a new clone, were he to perish from the stress it caused him.
Suddenly a call signal demanded his attention. He stood painfully and
moved to his terminal. He saw that the Executor had returned and was
in orbit around Coruscant. Vader wanted to have an audience with him.
Vader. The Emperor's anger burned even more darkly. Yes. He would see
Vader. And learn what the traitor had to say for himself.
Sitting on his throne awaiting Vader's arrival, the Emperor knew he
had finally come to regret the day he had made "Lord Vader". When
Anakin Skywalker had turned to the dark side, so long ago, that had
been well. Palpatine had thought he would be one of the most powerful
dark side adepts among his secret disciples. But just when Anakin had
begun to discover his power, he had foolishly faced his old teacher,
Kenobi, and had wound up so grievously wounded that the only way to
keep him alive was to cyborg him. At the Emperor's order, his limbs
were replaced, increasing his stature considerably. He was encased
within an armored life support system that compensated for the loss of
his lungs. An ancient order of dark side monks, the Sith, had taken
Anakin into their care, helping him to recover and adjust to his new
body. They had seen him as the fulfillment of an old prophecy, and
they created a fearsome mask that resembled the war helm of their
greatest legendary hero. Anakin was given a new name and raised to
leadership of their order. True to the prophecy, Darth Vader had led
the Sith to new heights. When they took him in, they had been a
monastic order living in seclusion, hiding from the Jedi, and
lamenting their lost glory. Vader gave them back their splendor,
however briefly. At the Emperor's command, he led them to emerge and
hunt down the Jedi. The Jedi were no easy prey, and all of the Sith
except Vader were destroyed. With nowhere to go, Vader had become the
Emperor's servant. That was when Palpatine's troubles began. Vader
had been a Skywalker once, and too many of the traits of that line
remained in him. A fierce individuality, a quickness to anger, a
certain recklessness, and very great strength in the Force all
combined to make a servant of unquestionable value but perhaps too
much power. Palpatine had used Vader as his foremost agent. Vader
eventually became the most visible symbol of the Empire. His mask, his
stature, his voice, and his powers presented an image that struck fear
into most people. They obeyed him, and thus obeyed Palpatine. They
did not fear their Emperor, though in reality, they most certainly
should have. In Vader, the Emperor had an instrument through which he
could project something of his true self, while retaining an image of
relative benevolence for himself. Also, Palpatine admitted to
himself, it was simply satisfying to have beside him a living symbol
of his victory over the Jedi. Anakin had been one of the brightest and
the best of the Jedi, and now here he was, twisted and corrupted,
every last trace of goodness eradicated from him. As Vader, he was
strong in the Force, but he kneeled to Palpatine, debasing himself and
groveling at his master's displeasure, and taking his only sustenance
from his master's praise. Yes, it was better than having a dead Jedi,
better by far. A few years ago, the Emperor had seen the first signs
that all was not well with Vader. When Vader had met and killed his
old teacher, then discovered he had a son, old, long unfelt
connections to the past had stirred in him. It became worse when Vader
was given command of the fleet and he used it to indulge his obsession
with finding his son. At the time, Palpatine had swallowed his doubts,
and perhaps that was a mistake. For, when Vader had finally caught up
with his son, his true colors had shown at last. The Emperor had
agreed to try to turn Luke Skywalker, and Vader had agreed to be the
one to do it, or else kill the boy. Vader laid a complicated trap,
placing Luke's friends in danger, knowing that the boy would feel
their pain and come to their rescue. It worked perfectly, and before
long, the boy, full of bravado, faced his father with ignited
lightsaber. As he had done so many times before, Palpatine had used
the Force to watch his servant. He was keen to take the measure of
this boy who inexplicably figured so strongly in his own destiny. As
the battle unfolded, Vader tested the boy, urging him to draw power
from the dark side by encouraging the emotions that would open him to
it. The boy resisted, but by the time he realized he was out of his
depth, it was too late for him. That fierce Skywalker determination
kept him fighting on, though Vader was by far his superior. Palpatine
had been certain that Vader would be forced to kill the boy. The Dark
lord had bludgeoned his way through Luke's defenses and sliced off his
right hand. He cornered Luke, leaving no way out but to turn or
die. Then had come the moment that Palpatine even now recalled with
dismay and rage. The moment of betrayal. There is no escape, Vader
had told Luke, Don't make me destroy you. You do not yet realize your
importance. You have only begun to discover your power. Join me and I
will complete your training. With our combined strength, we can end
this destructive conflict and bring order to the galaxy. Treachery!
Their combined strength! By the dark side, it would never be. Vader
belonged to him! Skywalker was his! It would never be. But betrayal
had followed treachery. Vader revealed his identity, and although the
boy reacted with anguished disbelief, Palpatine had thought he felt
the assertion touch something deep inside Skywalker. Vader had felt
it, too. Search your feelings. You know it to be true. Luke. You can
destroy the Emperor. He has foreseen this. It is your destiny. Join
me, and together we can rule the galaxy as father and son.
Remembering the words, Palpatine began to shiver with anger. Indeed,
his visions of Skywalker's threat to him had had opened Vader's eyes
to the possibility of Palpatine's vulnerability. But there was much to
the notion of "destiny" that Vader did not grasp. He would learn that
to covet Palpatine's power was to earn death. From the moment of that
betrayal, the Emperor had begun to plot the destruction of Darth
Vader. His plan had a great symmetry to it. He would mold events such
that one Skywalker would kill the other, and in that act, turn to the
dark side and replace him at Palpatine's side. He would use Vader's
great hope as the very instrument of his murder, and corrupt the son
as he had corrupted the father. It was the perfect destiny for both of
them. Except that nothing was certain anymore. The boy was strong,
and he had made his servant strong. It would be a risky endeavor.
After long decades of being above risk, the Emperor did not like it at
all. The great throne room doors opened, and Vader strode in,
preceded by Sate Pestage, flanked by six Imperial guards, and followed
by, of all things, a droid. Vader completed the long walk to the
throne, then knelt at the Emperor's feet. This was a ceremonial
audience, and Pestage was wearing full dress regalia. Pestage formally
announced the presence of the Lord Darth Vader and his request to
report to his majesty, the Emperor. Palpatine had designed this
formal meeting to remind Vader of his place, and besides, the
formality helped Palpatine to mask the anger he felt towards Vader. It
would not do to let Vader know how he felt before the moment of his
revenge. Even so, Palpatine waited a full minute before acknowledging
Vader with a cold sounding, "Rise, and report on the events at
Bespin." Vader stood. If he was put off by this ceremony, he did not
show it. Instead, he went along with it. He handed a datapad to Sate
Pestage. "Your majesty," Vader intoned, "I have confronted and fought
the young rebel Force user, Luke Skywalker. I found him to be
formidable, but his skills were undeveloped. He has enhanced physical
abilities, the power to levitate objects, and reasonable skill with a
lightsaber, but little else. What success he had in eluding me was due
to a certain raw talent, perhaps inborn in him, as well as
considerable good fortune. He resisted my attempts to turn him to the
dark side. Kenobi must have prepared him for this before he died. The
battle was ultimately one-sided, and when he was pressed to the last,
he chose to leap to his death. His companions in the Millennium Falcon
rescued him, and his current location is unknown. I am able to resume
my search, but first I have brought something to you, your
majesty. During the battle, Skywalker lost his right hand. I have
recovered it for you. The Force gave me a sense of its importance." He
waved a black gloved hand, and the medical droid, Beevee, came forward
with the Bacta tank. Palpatine had been stewing while listening, his
anger growing hotter as Vader presented an account that omitted his
betrayal. He was tempted to accuse Vader on the spot, but when he saw
the hand, his rage evaporated. Here was an opportunity indeed - one
that could tell him the future in a safe way. The Emperor actually
smiled. "Well done, Lord Vader. The hand will be very useful indeed!
But now I wish you to suspend your search for young Skywalker. Your
new orders are to assemble as much of the fleet as possible at the new
Death Star at Endor. Then you will oversee the final stages of
construction. Moff Jerjerrod must be encouraged to complete the
station on schedule. At the very least, the superlaser must be ready
when I arrive at the station. Go now, and do my bidding." Vader bowed
deeply, and left. The Emperor sensed his frustration at the
orders. Beevee remained behind holding the tank. The droid looked
intimidated by its surroundings. Palpatine turned to Sate
Pestage. "Summon the Constable of Homunculi and Ars Dangor
immediately. Return this droid to the command ship and bring the hand
to the clone vat chamber. I shall wait for you in the conference
room." With that, Palpatine left the room, leaning on his twisted
cane. Beevee was relieved to have the hand taken from him, and as he
was escorted from the throneroom, he reflected that he was glad he was
not a protocol droid. There was much to human interactions that quite
bewildered him.
The Emperor gestured for Rollo Mon to take a seat at the large table
where he, Ars Dangor, and Sate Pestage were gathered. Rollo Mon bowed
to the other men at the table politely. He rarely saw them, as he was
reclusive and habitually immersed himself in his work. Sate Pestage
was a stick thin man who bore the weight of his uncounted years with a
spry endurance. He wore a roomy cassock that glittered with rare gems
from his homeworld, and he was quite lost in the gaudy garment. Its
wealthy appearance contrasted with Pestage's face, which had the stamp
of an ascetic on its weathered features. He looked utterly at
peace. Ars Dangor, the Emperor's advisor, looked almost like a mirror
image of Palpatine. Unlike most of the advisors, Dangor chose to garb
himself in the fashion of the Emperor himself; stark black robes with
a deep hood. Dangor had that hood removed now, and his widely spaced
eyes gave his hot stare a disconcerting aspect. He wore a constant
leer on his thin lips, and he had a towering reputation for
ruthlessness. While Pestage dealt with Palpatine's personal matters
and acted as an intermediary in communications, Dangor made public
addresses and ran the Empire day to day. Dangor dealt with all the
"little pictures" while Palpatine dealt with the "big picture", and
Pestage dealt with Palpatine. Rollo Mon himself was a short man who
compensated for his lack of height with an almost absurd head ornament
that nearly doubled his stature. He smiled nervously with his uneven
teeth and sat down abruptly, unsure of social graces. When all were
seated, Palpatine rose. He was looking very old, and Rollo Mon well
understood the reason. But the Emperor's eyes glittered with
enthusiasm as he began to outline the reason for their gathering. "My
friends, welcome. Lord Vader has brought us the means to clone our
elusive enemy, Luke Skywalker. The Force has shown me that I will
confront him soon, but the outcome remains unclear. I am sure you can
appreciate the need for more information." The other three men
murmured their agreement. Dangor displayed agitation at the mere
mention of Skywalker's name, and Rollo Mon leaned forward in
excitement, pleased at the notion of a new challenge. Looking at Rollo
Mon, the Emperor continued, "I wish to clone Skywalker and test him,
to see what he will most likely do when he comes before me. I need the
clones soon. Can it be done?" The Constable was in his element. "Yes,
your majesty. If you don't need the clones to be stable long term, the
standard growth term of one year can be shortened to as little as two
months. The clones should remain sane for long enough to test them. Of
course, they won't really be this Skywalker. We'll have to implant
them with false memories if they are to behave realistically. Recent
advances in memory conditioning allow coherent experience construction
to be carried out while the clone is still in the tertiary growth
phase, so that the decanted product is already identity
established. The margin for error depends on the quality of the
information we possess on the subject -" Rollo Mon realized he had
left his seat and was pacing. Embarrassed, he took his seat and
concluded quietly, "What background do we have available?" The
Emperor turned to Ars Dangor, who held up a datapad. "Here are the ISB
reports on Luke Skywalker, collected from the battle of Yavin to the
present. Our agents have been busy, and there is much information
here. But the basic outline of what we know may be summarized as
follows. Dangor activated a holographic display above the table. The
identimage of Luke Skywalker, a moisture farmer of the rim world,
Tatooine, shimmered into view. "The subject grew up on Tatooine, in
the care of Owen and Beru Lars. Records are poor on such worlds, but
we are sure they were not really related to him. It is very likely
that the old Jedi, Obi-Wan Kenobi, was also in hiding on Tatooine, and
that he helped to raise Skywalker. Kenobi must have instructed the boy
in the ways of the Force. Skywalker is not a common name, and is
believed that his actual father was the famed Jedi, Anakin
Skywalker. Since Kenobi and Anakin were close friends, it is easy to
imagine Anakin giving Luke into Kenobi's care before his death some
twenty years ago. The subject would then have an inborn aptitude for
the Force, which must have been nurtured over the years by Kenobi."
Dangor looked at Palpatine, whose face was unreadable. He suspected
that the Emperor already knew far more about Skywalker than the ISB
ever would. "Shortly before the battle of Yavin," Dangor continued,
"two events occurred that may have strongly impacted the subject's
personality and motivations. First, Lord Vader's search team killed
the Lars family. Second, Vader killed Kenobi right in front of
Skywalker. Therefore the subject is probably revenge motivated,
especially if you take into account an unverified report that the
subject's childhood friend, one Biggs Darklighter, was killed during
the battle of Yavin. After the battle, Skywalker was a hero in the
rebellion. His feat in destroying the Death Star probably gives him an
exaggerated view of his own abilities. The death of the Jedi, Kenobi,
left the subject without a mentor, so it is probable that his skills
have not greatly improved since then. It is well known that Lord Vader
has an obsession with hunting Skywalker down, probably to avenge his
defeat at the Death Star. It was Lord Vader's conviction that
Skywalker was present on Hoth, but his whereabouts were not confirmed
until several months later, when Lord Vader confronted him on Cloud
City. The subject escaped and remains at large. He is viewed as a
significant threat due to his Force skills and his probable vengeance
goals. Personally, I think his importance is exaggerated. With all due
respect, your majesty, you and Lord Vader have destroyed Jedi masters
in the past. Why is so much attention being devoted to this young
man?" The Emperor's frown was like a knife edge. "I know him to be a
threat, Ars Dangor. You know nothing of the workings of the Force.
Events are in motion which have been predestined. Where the Force is
concerned, a man's own power is as nothing. When I face Skywalker, he
will be a Jedi. So long as the Force is with him, he is not to be
underestimated." Dangor stood and bowed. "Your majesty, I ask your
forgiveness. I do not presume to question your judgment." "It is
given." Palpatine turned to Sate Pestage. "Lord Vader is to be a part
of the confrontation with Skywalker, but I do not wish to involve him
at this point. You will recruit an actor to play his part. Outfit him
convincingly, and prepare the throneroom for the encounters. Only a
single guard need be present. The clone and the actor are to be armed
with specially modified lightsabers that I shall provide." Palpatine
paused, then looked at Dangor. "Leave that report with the
Constable. He will find it most useful. The real confrontation will
occur on the new Death Star, where we shall destroy the cursed rebel
fleet and their Mon Calamari allies once and for all. Make certain
that the throneroom is completed there, and ensure that its view of
the battle area will be unobstructed. Has the information concerning
the shield generator and my own presence on the battle station been
disseminated?" "That information has been planted, and in a few
months, it will be 'discovered' by a Bothan rebel cell we have
identified on Aargau. It will be convincing, as they will pay for the
information with Bothan lives," Dangor assured the Emperor. "It will
be convincing because it will be true," Palpatine sneered. "Lord
Vader is currently assembling the fleet at Endor via convoluted routes
that will deceive the rebellion into thinking that it is still
dispersed throughout the galaxy. The trap will close around them, and
they will realize that the bait is beyond their grasp. Then the
Alliance will die." Palpatine gave a little laugh. "That is all for
now. You are dismissed." Dangor and Pestage rose and filed from the
room, leaving the datapad behind. Palpatine gestured for Rollo Mon to
remain. When they were alone, Palpatine leaned close to the diminutive
Constable of Homunculi, whom he had trusted with his life many times
in the past, and whispered to him. "There are a few other things to
add to the clone's memories, that I must tell you of..."
Assembling the fleet, however secretively, was not fitting work for
the Dark Lord of the Sith. It was properly delegated to Admiral Piett,
and that was exactly what an irritated Lord Vader had done. Now he was
alone in his meditation chamber, its black hemispheres fitted together
like the shells of a Calamarian Deep Bivalve. With the chamber sealed,
and the atmospheric pressure lowered, Vader could breath even without
his mask. He liked to have it off from time to time, to be free of
its confines. The mask was held by a robot arm above his head, which
was a pasty white from decades of being hidden. A long burn scar ran
down the back of his skull, the souvenir of his violent encounter with
Kenobi before the mask was created. There were no mirrors in the
chamber. Vader was absorbed in studying his old lightsaber. It felt
very strange to hold it again after so long. He guessed Kenobi had
taken it, then saved it, and given it to Luke. But why? It was an
age-old Jedi custom to have an aspiring Jedi construct his or her own
lightsaber. Why had Luke not done so? Now it was back in his gloved
hands. What a strange road it had traveled. He caressed the weapon,
remembering how he had constructed it. Its power cell and hand grip
were one unit, which was surmounted by an activation lever. Higher up
the weapon were its controls, blade length and blade intensity
adjustments. The emitter matrix was half shielded by a graceful arc of
metal that housed the internal access lever. Vader's hands paused
there. Something was different - the lever was raised higher than he
remembered it. Had it been bent, or was something underneath
preventing its proper closure? With a gentle twist, he used the lever
to disengage the tiny circular access plate and peered within. He saw
it immediately. A tiny recording chip was affixed to the rear of the
emitter matrix. Vader was mystified. He removed a delicate instrument
from a nearby stand and used it to extract the magnetized chip. He
rotated his seat to face his viewscreen and placed the chip in a
reader. It was an old chip, of outdated design, but the reader should
still be able to handle it. He waited. Long moments later, the screen
flickered to life, and Vader found himself looking into the face of
Obi-Wan Kenobi, some twenty years younger than the old man he had
killed on the Death Star. That was in itself a surprise, but little
could compare to the shock he felt when the image spoke. "Anakin...,"
it said.
Two decades earlier, Obi-Wan Kenobi was alone in his starship,
breaking orbit from Horuz, fleeing the ruin of his greatest
friendship. His body was beaten and his heart was broken. He ached all
over from the wounds he had incurred in his narrow escape from the
Sith. Kenobi was barely able to complete the coordinate entry for the
jump to hyperspace that put that evil world of tragic loss behind him
forever. Space outside the viewport flared with starlines, but Kenobi
did not see them. He was desperately trying to attune himself to the
Force, seeking solace for his pain. Gradually, he began to feel at
one with the great energy field that bound that galaxy together. He
was no longer alone, but in touch with life all around. He felt pain,
but now it was shared. He was given healing as well. Kenobi's grief
became bearable and he was able to meditate. His trim brown beard
framed a mouth that formed an enigmatic almost-smile. The Force was
still with him, and now it showed him something. Within his trance,
he saw a black armored figure with a ghastly pale visage that he
recognized despite its wasted state. It was Anakin, and he was holding
what Kenobi knew to be the very lightsaber he had taken from their
battlefield on Horuz. The Force whispered to him, it seemed, of what
he must do, and its importance. Still in his trance, he nodded. A
minute later, he emerged gently from the meditation, and arose to
cross to his message recorder. Some part of the burden felt lifted
from his shoulders, and he knew that the events of the past day would
only really come to their conclusion on the far off day seen in his
vision. He had no guarantee that what he saw would come to pass, or
that anything would come of it, yet he had to try. Composing himself,
he faced the recorder and turned it on. "Anakin," he said, "If you
are hearing this, then what I have foreseen has come to pass, and you
are still alive, but in the grip of the dark side. I cannot decide if
I hope you still live or not...I left your body on Horuz, hideously
burned. I question whether you could survive." "But if you still
live...my friend -" Kenobi's voice caught. "I am sorry...for
everything. When you were my student, I saw your anger at what was
happening to the Republic. But I ignored it. I thought you would be
able to control your feelings and work to save what was left. I was
confident in the teachings I'd given you. But I didn't see what was
happening until it was too late. You fell under the influence of
Palpatine, and instead of fighting to save the Republic, you embraced
what he wanted to put in its place." "Oh Anakin, Palpatine showed you
so much power - more than you ever knew existed. Power to impose order
on a chaotic and corrupt society. It was the power of the dark side
of the Force, and it seduced you. As your teacher, I should have
helped you to face the dark side during your training - helped you to
deny it. I failed in this duty, and Palpatine was the first to show it
to you. Palpatine is so much more than he seems. As he gains more
power, my fear for the galaxy grows. When I saw what he had done to
you, I resolved to confront you, and to try to turn you back. When at
last you left Palpatine's presence, and went to Horuz, I followed
you. I didn't know why you were you were going, I only saw my chance
to get through to you." "The moment I saw you, waiting for me on that
ridge near the pits with anger in your heart, I realized you had known
I was following all along. I was shocked by how you had changed, by
how far gone you were. You didn't listen to my appeals to our
friendship, or to my pleas that you remember your wife, who still
loves you, despite everything. Nothing got through. I think Palpatine
had warned you that I was going to try to take away your power, so
that all you wanted was to fight me and be rid of me." Kenobi hung
his head in sorrow. It was all so fresh, still an open wound in his
soul. "I taught you all you know about lightsaber combat. You
couldn't have won. I...didn't want to hurt you...but you attacked with
such ferocity that I had no choice. To save my own life, Anakin, I had
to strike you down. It was the hardest thing I ever did. I saw you
fall from the ridge, into the pit...I would have come after you, tried
to help you, but at that moment, I felt a devastating attack through
the Force." Kenobi's face was full of rue. "Too late, I realized why
you had come to Horuz, and how foolish I had been to follow you. I had
stumbled onto the lost Monastery of the Sith. I thought it was long
vanished, but Palpatine knew where it was, and he sent you there to
learn from them. I knew I could not stand against them alone, and I
fled. I barely escaped with my life, using all the power at my
command. Maybe the Sith saved you...If I had not been attacked, I
would have tried to save you." Earnestly, he leaned towards the
recorder. "Anakin, hear me. If you still live, it is not too
late. Palpatine gave you power, but he took so much more. Things of
infinitely greater value. Your friends, your wife, all that is good
and loving in a man's life that makes it worth living. Let go of your
hatred. The dark side can only destroy everything it touches. Turn
away from it." Kenobi sighed deeply. "What am I doing? This is
probably for nothing. If the dark side has you, then the man who was
my friend is dead. I must face that fact. I will never forget you, I
will miss you, Anakin, goodbye." Unable to take any more, Kenobi
slapped the recorder switch off. Smoothly, it ejected the finished
chip. He stared at it for a long time. Then he reached for his
friend's lightsaber, finally letting himself cry as he did so.
Darth Vader sat very still as the screen went blank, the message
finished. He stared at the glassy surface, disturbed at it without
knowing why, until he realized with a start that he was looking at his
own face, dimly reflected on the blank screen. He turned away, made
acutely uncomfortable by the sight. His thoughts were in turmoil, and
he tightly clenched the lightsaber in his gloved fists. Without
understanding why, Vader had a strong, clear memory of his son leaping
to his death rather than joining him. He was filled with feelings he
could no longer name. Vader hastily punched the control keys next to
him, and his black mask and helmet descended over his troubled face,
sealing against his armor with a hiss. Now there was only the angular
breath mask, an iron face that never showed weakness of any kind. Safe
in his fortress, Vader began to feel better. He told himself that
there was no conflict inside of him as he took the chip between his
black gloved machine fingers and crushed it into fragments that fell
glittering to the deck plates.
Two and a half months later, Emperor Palpatine sat in the throneroom
on Coruscant, waiting for the fourth clone of Luke Skywalker to
enter. So far, the project had been frustrating, and he had learned
little, but he thought that this next encounter might be the
breakthrough. In any case, he sensed that time was running out. All
too soon, the real moment would be upon him. Palpatine reflected on
the many variables involved in this testing. Skywalker was a complex
individual. Ars Dangor's report had contained little real knowledge of
the boy's psychology. The truth of Luke's parentage had not been in it
at all. Where it had discussed Luke's feelings about Vader, it had
concluded that Luke must want him dead. The first clone had been
created according to the report, to satisfy the Emperor's curiosity,
and sure enough, he had killed Vader. But Palpatine had been
unsatisfied. The act had not held the passion required for turning
Luke to the dark side; the clone had killed out of a sense of
justice. Luke must feel the anger and hatred, he must let the dark
side empower him to kill his father. Finally, he must become his
father. Besides, despite Palpatine's inability to penetrate the
nexus, he could see the events leading up to it with unusual
clarity. He saw Skywalker coming to Vader of his own free will, hoping
that his father could be turned. He knew the boy had great compassion
for his father. It was a strange aspect of Luke, but the Emperor knew
it could be the boy's undoing. If the boy couldn't kill his own
father, then Vader would destroy him. No matter what Vader felt about
his son, he could not defy the Emperor's direct command. If Luke was
driven in the end to kill his father, then he would belong to the dark
side, and to Palpatine. The boy's fatal compassion for his father was
incorporated into the second clone. The clone had solemnly entered,
accompanied by a replacement false Vader. The Emperor had welcomed
him, and asserted that he was now the clone's new master. The boy had
resisted, but as before, Palpatine had "revealed" to him that the
rebel fleet had been lured into a trap around Coruscant, and that it
was being destroyed. Viewscreens had even been set up to simulate the
battle, and with growing anguish, the clone had cried out for it to
stop. But of course, it did not, and Palpatine had crowed over the end
of Luke's allies. He had taunted Luke for his helplessness, and urged
Luke to take his anger out on him. As the first clone had, this one
had finally tried to move on Palpatine. Vader had intervened and
placed himself in Luke's way, and Luke had begun a reluctant
fight. While the first clone had fought aggressively, the second, in
his compassion, fought purely defensively, angling around for a chance
to rush the Emperor. He didn't get the chance. The false Vader
cornered him. Then, to Palpatine's disgust, the actor had balked at
actually killing the boy. The Emperor had had to go over to them and
finish both of them with Force lightning. The third clone had been
accompanied by a ruthless soldier in the Vader role. It was to no
avail. The clone could not be goaded into attacking Palpatine at
all. He had watched as the fleet was "destroyed", and Palpatine could
tell that the boy's helplessness had paralyzed him. Putting the fleet
in danger was not a sure thing to push Luke over the edge. Irritated,
Palpatine had ordered the clone destroyed. Then the Emperor had felt
he was at an impasse. He needed Luke to enter into combat with Vader,
but there seemed to be insufficient impetus for Luke to give in to his
anger. It was Sate Pestage who finally solved the problem. The Grand
Vizier had pointed out what Vader had already learned; the real Luke
Skywalker had felt the pain of his friends, Han Solo and Leia Organa,
from across space, and tried to come to their rescue. He had been
close to them for three years, and would most likely lay down his life
for them. Why not simply put them in mortal danger? Palpatine had
cursed himself for not seeing the obvious. Of course, when Skywalker
came to Endor, he would be accompanied by his friends. Yes, that was
the key, he was sure of it. Imperial databanks were searched for
images of the Princess- Senator and the Correllian, and then the
Emperor was ready. Now he waited, alone, for the fourth clone. His
guards were absent. He had learned from the first encounter that
their presence was not a good idea. The far doors opened, and Vader
entered with Luke. They came up close to his throne, and Palpatine
smiled. "Welcome, young Skywalker. I have expected you. You will
complete your training with me, my young apprentice." Luke was
defiant. "Obi-Wan Kenobi was my master, killed at the hands of your
servant. He would never turn to the dark side, and neither will I. I
came here to try to save my father from you, but I'll die before I
join you." "Oh, no, my young apprentice," the Emperor corrected
Luke. "Your hopes for your father are empty. He will never go with
you. He is forever mine. As for you, young Skywalker, there is much
for you to learn. I will show you the true nature of the Force, and
you will serve me." Luke stood firm. Palpatine knew he was nurturing
the planted hope that the attacking rebel fleet would either contrive
to aid him somehow, or else destroy the palace and put an end to the
Emperor's reign. "None of this matters, your highness," Luke
protested. "The rebel fleet is on its way here now. The Imperial fleet
has been lured away from Coruscant and this palace is
defenseless. Both of us will die. You'll never have the chance to turn
me." Luke turned to face Vader. "Father, come with me now. We can
escape together. Leave this place and your cruel master." Luke was
getting anxious. Vader didn't move a muscle. Palpatine stood and
crossed the dais, looking down mockingly at Luke despite his smaller
stature. "Your father can never be turned, my young apprentice. As for
your fleet, it will never penetrate Coruscant's planetary shield." The
Emperor's voice went sickeningly soft. "You think I am mistaken, don't
you." Palpatine laughed mirthlessly. "In fact, the Imperial fleet is
poised to arrive via hyperspace at any moment, trapping your rebel
fleet and destroying it. We are in no danger, boy." Palpatine leaned
in very close to Luke, speaking in a low voice. "Perhaps you are
counting on your friends to disable the shields." He was pleased to
see Luke begin to sweat. Smiling, the Emperor reached to trigger a
control on the arm of his throne. Luke was startled as an enormous
wall screen lit up. On it was the security camera transmission from
deep in the bowels of the palace. Luke could see the furtive shapes of
rebel commandos scurrying for cover as a patrol of security guards
passed by. The image moved into a tight focus, and Luke gasped audibly
as the faces of Han Solo and Princess Leia came clearly into view.
"Oh, yes, my young apprentice. I know of your friends' mission. I
lured them here, after all. They have been a thorn in my side, and now
I shall enjoy torturing them. Perhaps I shall let you listen to their
screams." Palpatine laughed again, and Luke's hands clenched.
Suddenly, on the screen, two dozen heavily armed stormtroopers came up
behind the commandos. Han Solo spun and fired, blindingly fast, but he
wasn't able to stop several troopers from wounding him terribly in the
arms and legs. He dropped to the floor, his heavy blaster spinning
into the shadows. Leia screamed and fired frantically, but she, too,
was swiftly taken down. Luke couldn't tell if either of them was still
alive. Then the screen image changed to a view of the space around
Coruscant. Rebel ships were careening madly away from the dimly
visible planetary shield as dozens of Star Destroyers came screaming
out of hyperspace to array themselves like a giant net around the
rebel fleet. Without warning, hundreds of turbolasers spoke fiery
death into the void as swarms of TIE interceptors descended upon the
rebels. Luke watched helplessly as the Alliance ships were cut to
pieces. Explosions bloomed in the darkness, and the dying began in
earnest. "It is the end for the Alliance, my young apprentice," The
Emperor told Luke. "There is no hope left for you. Your friends are
now in my power. I will see that they are a long time dying. You may
beg me for their lives. Perhaps I will give them to you, If you serve
me... if they survive." Luke could stand no more. He ignited his
lightsaber and shouted, "Father, stay back, this isn't your fight." He
moved up onto the dais, menacing the Emperor. "Maybe you'll trade your
own life for the lives of Han and Leia," Luke said fiercely. But Vader
was already moving. Igniting his own weapon, he chased after Luke and
drove him away from the Emperor. Luke defended himself easily, his
green blade blurring in the air. "I'm not here to fight you, Father,"
Luke grated. "You don't have to fight me. Together we can defeat the
Emperor, you know that." But "Vader" would hear none of it. "The
Emperor is my master. Now he is yours, too. The only chance for you
is to serve him." He attacked, more aggressively. "I tortured your
friends on Cloud City, and now they will be mine again. Leia Organa
will scream a dozen times for every minute that you deny your
destiny. I will kill Han Solo before your eyes. The rebel alliance is
dead and soon, your friends will die, too!" Luke was hard pressed to
fend off Vader's attacks, but his anger had been growing. His rage
began to show on his face as the room seemed to spin before his
eyes. Vader pressed the attack, his blade flashing blindingly against
Luke's again and again. The wall screen showed a huge rebel cruiser
annihilated in a billowing fireball. The image shifted, and Han and
Leia appeared again, screaming as they were shot over and over. The
Emperor laughed, long and loud in Luke's ears. Luke's anger was
suddenly alive in him, a clamoring thing writhing in its desire for
destruction. And the dark side answered its call. Luke felt strength
pour into him, and he easily beat Vader's blade aside. He had been so
wrong about his father. There was no good left in him. If Vader now
stood between him and the Emperor, then he would have to fall. Look at
him! The Dark Lord of the Sith, retreating before me. You won't
escape, Vader - you die now! You didn't deserve the power you
had. Now, mine is greater! My father...I hate the day I ever learned I
was your son! No - don't try to run - it ends here! Yes! on your
knees! Down! Down on the floor! A fitting place for you to DIE! Luke
suddenly found himself with no one between Palpatine and himself. The
hate was singing in his ears, a red haze was before his eyes, and a
bloody taste was in his mouth. "Good!" the Emperor cried out. "Well
done, Lord Skywalker! Your father is dead at your own hand, and you
are now my servant. It is exactly as I have predicted. Come and kneel
before your master." Luke could not focus his thoughts. He was oddly
surprised to find Vader dead at his feet. His lightsaber fell from his
fingers, forgotten, striking Vader's helm once before clattering to
the floor. He was aware of an overwhelming urge to go to the Emperor,
and do as he asked. He remembered feeling differently, but his anger
at the Emperor no longer seemed important. He stepped over Vader's
body, and went to kneel before Palpatine. A vast emptiness had opened
up inside him, and much to his pleasure, being near the Emperor filled
up that void. But Palpatine's attention was no longer on him. The
Emperor was walking away, talking to himself. "So will it be when we
meet, young Skywalker. You will be mine...soon...soon." Luke was
confused. What was going on? Hadn't he knelt as asked? What more did
he need to do? What was his Emperor saying? His confusion was in no
way diminished when Palpatine left the room altogether, and six red
robed Imperial guards came in to kill him.
Palpatine felt much better. The future was still closed to him, but
now he felt confident that he knew exactly what Skywalker would do. He
tested no more clones. One day, six months after the Emperor's vision
trance in which he had seen his own death (which now seemed like a
faded, bad dream to him), a message came from Lord Vader. Sate Pestage
delivered it personally, because a curious item accompanied it that
was to be delivered directly into the Emperor's hand. It was a
lightsaber. Pestage reported that the fleet was assembled at Endor,
and that the Death Star's prime weapon was ready. Vader had arrived on
the Death Star, and had made the station ready for Palpatine's
arrival. As the Emperor had commanded, Vader had assigned a legion of
the Empire's most elite stormtroopers to guard the bunker on Endor
that housed the shield generator. All was in readiness, and Palpatine
received the message with satisfaction. But the lightsaber puzzled
him. Vader had said in his message only that it had once belonged to
Anakin Skywalker. It was a gift, Vader had said, to place in his
Emperor's personal collection. That was all well and good, but the why
of it eluded Palpatine. Finally, he concluded that Vader had had the
lightsaber since Cloud City, and that he had decided that this vestige
of the man he had once been did not belong to him anymore. He had sent
it to Palpatine, as a statement that Anakin was no more, and that the
weapon belonged with those of other vanquished Jedi. It pleased him,
but he had other, more important matters to be concerned with. Vader
was already dead, anyway. He just didn't know it, yet. Palpatine gave
the weapon to Sate Pestage to be stored away, and didn't give it
another thought as he prepared for his journey to Endor.
Darth Vader paced the command bridge of the Executor, staring at the
unfinished Death Star. It floated above the green moon of Endor, its
vast surface full of gaps. Roughly an entire hemisphere gaped with
exposed superstructure that trailed off into space, awaiting
completion. One section that was fully finished was the huge circular
dish of the prime weapon. Vader knew it was ready even now, and that
in the near future, it would bring death to entire worlds. Vader
shuddered. Even for him, there were atrocities that went too far. When
Alderaan was destroyed, what Vader had felt in the Force had shaken
him deeply. So much destruction had unbalanced the Force itself, and
threatened the very order of the galaxy that he cherished as an
ideal. The Emperor had been pleased; it had made him stronger. Somehow
Vader saw, as Palpatine did not, that the Force was a single entity
with two aspects. Perhaps it was because he had belonged to both sides
in his lifetime. Greatly weakening one side of the Force must, in the
end, weaken the whole thing. The Emperor's audacity in constructing a
second Death Star was ultimately self-defeating, but Vader could not
allow it to be used. He did not dare any overt sabotage; he could not
defy his Emperor to that extent. The answer had come to him in the
form of the Emperor's orders that the shield generator was to be
guarded by the group of elite stormtroopers from which the Imperial
guards were chosen. Vader used the Force to cloud the minds of several
officers, and arranged for a legion of new recruits to be deployed on
Endor instead. They didn't even remember what they had done
afterwards. It was very easy, but also risky. He had to hope it
wouldn't be discovered by Palpatine, and he knew that the ultimate
result of his action depended on the resources of the rebels. But it
was the most he could do. Vader leaned wearily against the wall as
gazed at the station. Soon, he had been told, he, the Emperor, and his
son would all meet there. The thought depressed him. He had hoped that
he could persuade his son to join him, that together they could be
powerful enough to do what Vader could not do, and transform the
Empire. Now that Luke was to be delivered to Palpatine, that would
never be possible, if indeed it ever had been. Vader also felt
old. Ever since he had seen Kenobi's damnable message, he had been
acutely aware that he had lived two lifetimes, both of which had
exacted their price. He had the feeling that for him, the end was
near, though he could not say why. Perhaps he would welcome the end,
when it came. His only regret would be the boy. His son. What would he
become in the Emperor's hands? Luke continued to stir conflict within
him. His son belonged to his old life, and though he wanted very much
to bring Luke into his new one, Vader understood that it could never
be. He had made his choices long ago, and it was too late for him by
far. Obi-Wan had been wrong to think differently. A flicker of
pseudomotion among the stars caught Vader's attention. He knew
without checking that it was the arrival of the Star Destroyer "New
Order", the Emperor's personal transport. He felt his master's
presence like a signal fire on a nearby hill. He craved its heat, and
despite himself, he longed to go and be near it. Even before the
recognition signal had been received by the flagship, Vader announced,
"The Emperor has arrived. Prepare a military salute. I will receive
him on the Death Star." Admiral Piett hurried to obey as Vader turned
on his heel and swiftly left the bridge, his black cape flaring. Vader
felt a curious calm, a peace that came with the certainty that
whatever the outcome, the end of the game was at hand. He hoped that
the Force would be with him.
The Emperor was falling. He was filled with fear and surprise, and
screamed all the way down. His body was ripped asunder by a collision
with gigantic energy discharges. His life force was swallowed into the
dark side, but Palpatine, having foreseen this moment, was ready. His
essence easily reached the small room at the base of the throne tower
on the Death Star, where he had hidden a single clone body. A person
like the Emperor did not ignore his visions. Months ago, a terrifying
vision of his death had started him on this course, but he had been
determined to outwit his seeming destiny. He knew that if worst came
to worst in his meeting with Skywalker, he would not die so far from
Byss that he could not reach one of his clones. He poured into the
clone with relief. Somewhere above him, he was sure, Luke Skywalker
was still alive. That must be changed. He forced himself to wait
patiently as the decanting mechanisms activated at a touch of his
mind, but it took a supreme effort. The Emperor was still full of
searing anger. Everything had seemed so close to success. Skywalker
had reacted to all his manipulations as expected. The boy's friends
and the rebel fleet had all fallen neatly into the trap. The boy had
clearly been about to kill his father. Palpatine had felt the hate in
him, seen the blade at Vader's throat. Somehow he had resisted. How?
Luke's words had infuriated the Emperor. You've failed, your
highness... Palpatine had decided that the boy must die as painfully
as possible, and the Force lightning had come forth with a vengeance,
fueled by burning rage. That rage still coursed through the Emperor
as the nutrient bath level swiftly dropped. He realized where he had
made his mistake. He had known Vader was treacherous, but he had
thought the Dark Lord to be too weak to be a threat. He had been
completely absorbed in the punishment of the boy when Vader made his
move. Vader had always wanted Palpatine's power. He had taken his
chance to kill his master and seize that power for himself. Palpatine
wasted no more thought on Vader. He knew that the Force lightning had
struck enough blows to end his one time servant's life for
certain. Vader had been paid in full, but Skywalker, he sensed, had
survived. It was time to finish what he had begun. The clone vat
smoothly opened. The youthful Emperor stepped out of the tank and into
the cramped storage room with murder in his yellow eyes. He shrugged
on a robe to cover his nakedness. The sparks had already begun to arc
from his fingertips. Suddenly, there was a deafening thunder and the
floor leaped away from his bare feet. The heavy clone tank crashed
without warning onto his legs, crushing him to the deck. Bewildered,
the Emperor reached out through the Force with his inner sight. What
he saw stunned him. The deflector shield was gone, and the rebel fleet
was no longer trapped. He felt his carefully laid plans fall to dust,
including those concerning his own survival. The Super Star Destroyer,
Executor, had plunged into the Death Star like a titan's arrow finding
its mark in the belly of the beast. That had rocked the station, and
now the rebel fleet had begun a close range bombardment of the Death
Star's unfinished side. Rebel fighters were inside the superstructure,
heading for the main reactor. There would be no time for
vengeance. Skywalker would have to wait for another day. Palpatine
used the Force to thrust the massive tank away from himself, and gazed
at the ruin of his legs. He easily controlled the pain, but he knew he
would not walk out of the room. There was no time for healing. With
the Force, he opened the door to the hallway, where chaos reigned.
Officers and stormtroopers ran in all directions, following or giving
futile orders, or simply panicking. Palpatine spotted Moff Jerjerrod
stumbling by in a daze, and called out to him. Jerjerrod entered,
sweating, his eyes darting crazily about until they fixed on
Palpatine. He saw a young man who lay on the floor, his robes in
disarray, his otherwise naked form slicked with yellow-green
fluid. "Who are you? " he stammered. Palpatine now regretted having
chosen such a weak man as the Death Star Commander. He needed help,
and he knew he would have to mind control the fool to get it. In a
moment, Jerjerrod's face went blank, and he stooped to help the
Emperor to a standing position. Together, they stumbled into the
corridor. With the Moff's help, Palpatine reached a comm panel. He
swiftly keyed a sequence that would send a coded message to his Grand
Vizier. Sate Pestage would know what to do to prepare for the
future. Now he had to ensure that there would be a future. Despite
his precautions, he was very far from Byss now. To reach another
clone, his essence would have to travel vast distances while fighting
the dissolution of the dark side's chaos. Such a journey might take a
year, perhaps too long to survive. But his studies with the Holocron
had taught him about spirit anchors, how a consciousness could retain
its individuality while entirely within the Force, provided there was
a living mind to cling to. He planned to use one himself, to make
sure he survived until he could reach Byss. It was no sure thing, but
it was his only chance. He knew just the person. There was an
operative named Mara Jade, code named the Emperor's Hand. She had the
power to hear his call from anywhere in the galaxy, and he needed that
ability now. He reached out with the Force and found her. The link was
established in a moment, and just in time. Deep inside the station,
the main reactor was exploding. Emperor Palpatine's last thoughts were
of hatred for Vader and Skywalker, and of the vengeance he would one
day have. Then the Death Star erupted with cleansing fire, bringing
Palpatine's Empire to an end.
It was over. Palpatine, Luke, and Vader had gone through their
personal crucibles and emerged forged into new shapes. Vader had lost
his life, but won back his soul. Luke had lost his father and his
innocence, but gained maturity and become a Jedi at last. The Emperor
had lost everything, but somewhere within the dark side of the Force,
he lived on as a hatred that would not die. Years in the future, he
would live again in one of his clones, returning to menace the
children of Anakin Skywalker once again. But for the present, goodness
had triumphed. The newborn New Republic was removing its forces from
Endor. The threat of the Ssi-Ruuk had been countered, and now the
weary freedom fighters could begin to return to their homes and
undertake the monumental task of creating a new government. Mon
Mothma wanted to leave Endor the way it had been before the Empire had
moved in, pristine and unspoiled. A few Ewoks had decided to go
adventuring in space with the former rebels, but most of them bid
farewell to their new tribe members and went back to their primitive
lives among the lofty tree villages. The lights of departing
starships dotted the night sky of Endor as one particular rebel said
his last goodbyes to a place he might never see again. Luke Skywalker,
Jedi Knight gazed sorrowfully at the burned out funeral pyre of his
father. The starlight of the clearing dimly showed him that there
wasn't much left of Darth Vader's body, only blackened, melted
armor. A far greater absence was felt in Luke's soul. He had regained
his father for such a brief time, then lost him forever. That made it
much more painful, somehow. It was time to say farewell. Slightly
embarrassed, Luke spoke into the night softly. "Father. Anakin. I
know you're at peace in the Force now. I think I saw you with Ben and
Master Yoda, that night after I burned your body. I hope that was the
right thing to do. You were turned before the end, but I felt your
body should be freed from the machine that kept it a prisoner." Luke
looked up at the stars. "I know you came to see Leia. She told me you
wanted her forgiveness. It's a hard thing for her to forgive or
forget. But she told me a while ago that she had made her peace with
you, and that you would know it. I wonder if you can hear me? I
wondered why you appeared to Leia and not to me. I'm sure you had your
reasons, but there was more I wanted to say to you." Luke's voice
trailed off. He stood there for several minutes, letting his silence
convey the rest of what he felt. He turned to leave, his face full of
disappointment. Luke was startled to find himself face to face with
the glowing apparition of his father, standing at the entrance to the
clearing. Anakin was dressed in plain brown robes, and as before, he
appeared as a gentle faced late middle aged man. He was smiling at
Luke. "Have you - how long have you been standing there?" Luke
demanded. "I've been watching you, my son. I'm very proud of you, and
of your sister. I meant to see both of you, Luke, and here I am. It
was given to me to see you and speak with each of you once only. I
asked forgiveness of your sister. As for you, my son, I want to tell
you about the Emperor." Luke was pleased and saddened at the same
time. "If that's all the time we can have, we should make the best of
it. The Emperor is dead, what more is there to say about him?"
Anakin's face was troubled. "You can't be sure of that, Luke. I was
very close to the Emperor. He was strong in the dark side, but it made
him weak in the flesh. I don't think this was the only time he died."
Luke couldn't believe what he was hearing. "What do you mean, Father?"
Anakin spread his spectral hands. "I saw him become very old several
times while I knew him. Suddenly, he would be young again. He never
told me how he did it, but I suspect he used a clone of himself to
regain his youth. If he is able to do so again..." Anakin let his
hands fall. Luke shuddered. Palpatine had been so evil, so
powerful. Only his father's intervention had saved his life in the
end. He doubted he could survive another encounter. "However," Anakin
tried to reassure him, "the Emperor always went to a mysterious
location in the core worlds in order to be rejuvenated. It may be
that he could not save himself here at Endor. He may be dead
forever. For now, at least, the galaxy is free of him." "You're free
of him forever, Father," Luke smiled. "Thanks to you, my son," said
Anakin. "Somehow you knew there was good in me when the Emperor didn't
know, and I myself didn't know. How could you tell?" "I'm your son,"
Luke said simply. "I had to believe in the good in my father if I was
to have any hope for the good in myself. Besides, once I accepted the
truth that you were my father, I thought back to how on Cloud City,
you could have killed me. But you didn't. There must still have been
something of Anakin in you." "It was a near thing, my son. You took a
terrible risk. I would have killed you, had the Emperor commanded me
to. You came close to killing me, too. Such is the power of the dark
side. Never underestimate it, my son." "I did come close. Too close."
Luke remembered the moment all too well. The dark side had responded
to him so quickly and powerfully once he had opened himself to it. "It
was your threat to turn Leia to the dark side that pushed me over the
edge. I'm not sure how to put this... I loved her, Father. I saw her
image and followed it across the galaxy. I wanted her to be mine, to
love me back. But she fell in love with Han, and then I learned she
was my sister. I know she can never be mine, but I still love her,
even now. I couldn't bear to think of her going through what I was
going through. But in the end, when I had you at my mercy, when the
Emperor was calling out for me to kill you, what held me back was
this." Luke held up his prosthetic right hand. "I saw your severed
hand, bionic like mine, and I realized that a vision I saw during my
training was coming true. If I continued down the dark path, I would
become Darth Vader. The hand that Vader cut off saved both of us."
Luke couldn't help but recall the horrible attack of the Emperor that
had nearly killed him. "You saved my life, too, Father. The Emperor
would have killed me then and there." "The Emperor's hold on me was
strong, Luke. I had to obey him, no matter what. Even when I realized
he wanted me dead. When you and I fought, He didn't aid me with his
powers. On the contrary, he clouded my mind as he once did to
Obi-Wan. That, combined with the power given to you by the dark side,
was enough to seal my fate as your victim. You withheld, but still I
went back to my master's side. I needed his presence to replace the
emptiness of all that I had lost because of him. He knew that, and
thought his hold on me was absolute. But then I saw you dying. It was
at that moment that Anakin was reborn. I realized that what I felt for
you was love, an emotion I had forgotten. Palpatine's hold on me was
broken. I suddenly saw him, not as my dark master, but as a small,
twisted old man, full of spite and cruelty. And this foul creature was
killing my son. I knew what I had to do. Though it killed me, I had to
save you." "Father, how did the Emperor come so close to winning? He
seemed to know me completely, before I even arrived. He knew exactly
what would tempt me to the dark side." Anakin replied seriously, "The
Emperor could foresee many things. Before our battle, he told me that
you would turn to the dark side if all you held dear was
threatened. Your friends, and the rebel alliance itself were to be in
mortal danger, driving you to seek the power you couldn't find in the
light side of the Force. He did know you, and so he would have won,
except that he did not know me." Luke smiled grimly at the irony.
Palpatine had kept the instrument of his own destruction by his side
for twenty years. His overconfidence had been his weakness after
all. A man who had been one of the Jedi had avenged his kind against
their conqueror in the end. "Yoda tells me that your destiny is a
great one, Luke. He says that restore the Jedi you will. Excuse me,
that you will restore the Jedi. I believe in you, my son. One day, you
will be a Jedi master. Through you, the Jedi will return." Luke
smiled at his father. Anakin had begun to fade away. " I must leave
you now, Luke. Be strong, and believe that someday, you will find
love. The Force will be with you, always." "Goodbye, Father," said
Luke sadly. Luke's father shimmered and was gone, leaving Luke alone
in the quiet starlit clearing. And you shall always be with the Force,
Father, Luke thought. Deep in his heart, he knew the Jedi had already
returned.