The Ghost suddenly appeared in deep space, just short of the star system Jacen Syndulla guided them to. The freighter began making scans of the uncharted system, attempting to locate the positions and trajectory data of all its planets. Jacen, of course, had a better way. Seated in the Ghost’s copilot seat next to Sabine Wren, he closed his eyes and called on the Force for their next course. Sabine watched as he took hold of the controls, slowly precessing the ship until it was pointing the way he wanted.
“Check that vector,” he said confidently.
“283 mark 124, it is,” Sabine said breezily. “Scans show a gas giant along that line—a big one. So, unless there’s a habitable moon . . .”
“There’s definitely something,” Zeb remarked from the console behind them. “I’m picking up a homing beacon signal from directly ahead.”
“If it’s a beacon, it can’t be Ezra’s,” Sabine reasoned. “Not after ten years. Wait a minute . . . this doesn’t make any sense. That homing signal is encrypted with the Ghost’s ciphers. It’s one of Chopper’s! That’s impossible!”
“Mom placed a homing beacon on the mercenary ship,” Jacen reminded them. “Could it be them?”
“If they haven’t found and deactivated it by now, they are the worst mercenaries ever,” Zeb chuckled.
“Whatever it is, this is no coincidence,” Sabine stated firmly. “If it is them, we can handle them. Skoll is dead, and I can take Hati if it comes to that. The rest of their crew are a handful of gun thugs.”
“We aren’t going to sort it out sitting around up here,” Zeb said eagerly. “If they’re here, it has to be because of Ezra somehow, right? So what are we waiting for?”
“You’re right,” Sabine replied. “Jacen, you’ve got the ship. Can you jump us in closer? There’s no time to waste!”
“I’ve got it,” he replied confidently. Moments later, the Ghost briefly disappeared into hyperspace again.
Ezra Bridger stood in the center of a group of Zef. They were so large that they had to form a rough circle around him, leaning in with their large heads and faceted eyes as he bade them farewell. He thanked them for his life, for their aid to him, and for being his friends. He told them they would be dearly missed, and they could sense the truth of it in his mind and heart. Please pass my final message to all the Zef: May your aeries be strong, your eggs healthy, and may your people flourish for all time, he told them.
Farewell, friend-Ezra, they told him return. We feel your eagerness to fly home to the stars. We will pray that you reach the aeries of your people. Long life to you, good fortune, and peace.
May the Force be with you, my friends, he replied, tears stinging his eyes. The Zef took their leave of him, launching themselves into the air one at a time, creating powerful whirlwinds that buffeted him. Ezra wiped his eyes, feeling the world shifting beneath his feet. One era of his life was ending, and another beginning. He took a breath, and eagerly headed back to the clearing where the Aldo Nova waited.
Shin was there, with R4, finishing up the change-out of the ship’s atmosphere and using the oxygen generators to top off the internal tanks. They were standing just underneath the ship, working at an exterior drop-down console. That was when they heard it.
There was no mistaking the distant echo of the double sonic-boom extending all the way to the surface. It had been so long for Ezra that he didn’t realize what it was right away, but Shin Hati’s reaction was immediate. She stepped away from the hull of the Aldo Nova, shielding her eyes and looking skyward, seeking the source of the disturbance. Nothing natural on Valarian could move at supersonic speed except for a falling meteor.
Ezra was distracted by his emotional parting with the Zef; he hadn’t sensed the approaching Ayto hunting party, and only the sudden movement of one looking skyward from on top of Aldo Nova’s hull saved them. The hunter’s stalk had been near-perfect, but now it locked eyes with Ezra, who froze momentarily in shock as he realized it was there. The Ayto sprang into action, loping across the hull in two bounds and leaping for Shin, swinging its crude bone club two-handed as it dropped. The Ayto was at least nine feet tall, and its club would have knocked her skull clean into her chest if it connected.
“Shin! Look out!” he cried. She reacted with Jedi-like reflexes, sensing the danger at the last moment. She spun away from the Ayto, eyes widening as the gigantic ape smashed its club into the forest floor beside her. Ezra was already reaching out with the Force, jerking the Ayto off its feet, towards him.
Then there were more of them, at least half a dozen, dropping out of the trees all around them. A club swung, and R4’s electronic squeal cut out abruptly as his conical dome was knocked clean off in a shower of sparks. Ezra sensed one behind him, sensed the swing coming, and it was too late to get out of the way. He pivoted in place, reaching out with both hands and calling on the Force, applying pressure at precisely the right point. The Ayto’s club hit a solid wall of nothing at just the right juncture to send the force of the blow rebounding back into the attacker’s wrists, fracturing them. The club flew free of its grip, spinning off violently across the clearing. The Ayto screamed in pain and fled into the trees.
“Shin! Get in the ship! Get in the ship!” He yelled to her. She had blasters in hand now and pumped four shots at max power into the Ayto that attempted to club her. The creature’s thunderous, raging scream was cut off as it keeled over backward, crashing dead into the dirt. A large, furry foot appeared as if out of nowhere, tripping Ezra as he ran and knocking him flat on his face. He rolled, aided by the Force, as another bone club smashed into the ground where he’d been, narrowly missing him. He rolled again, dodging a second strike. A gob of foul smelling Ayto saliva splashed into Ezra’s face as the club came down a third time. He blindly reached up and pushed with the Force; the club stopped about twelve centimeters above his head, quivering, as the Ayto tried to bear down and kill him.
“Roll, you idiot!” he vaguely heard Shin shouting at him, firing at an unseen target. Ezra took her advice, letting go of his Force-hold at the proper instant. The club finished its arc, smashing into dirt he’d vacated. A great, furred hand snapped out and grabbed him around the torso, trapping his arms, lifting, and squeezing. Ezra thought his insides were going to burst, but the Ayto quickly dropped him when a Force-aimed blaster bolt from Shin struck it in the side of the head. It wasn’t enough to kill the creature, but it staggered back, severely wounded. It didn’t have the chance to do anything else before two curling smoke trails from above rocketed into its neck, detonating with loud crumps, and blowing the simian’s head half off. The loud whine of an approaching Mandalorian jet pack sounded briefly in his ears, and a familiar figure clad in colorfully painted armor landed in a combat crouch several feet away.
“Sabine!” Ezra cried, bewildered, then: “Behind you!”
Sabine whirled with Jedi reflexes, igniting the lightsaber she held in one hand. She swung against an enormous hand that swung at her, and the lightsaber won the contest. The Ayto’s arm was severed at the bicep and the creature staggered back, shrieking defiance at the trees. She followed up with the blaster in her other hand, dropping it with two headshots.
Another Ayto was charging her; Sabine backed it off with a quick blast from her flamethrower, causing it to recoil in fear of fire. She was surprised when a series of blaster bolts fired by Shin Hati ripped into its torso, finishing it for her.
An Ayto moving to attack Ezra turned when it heard the howl of an approaching threat. Garazeb Orrelios emerged from the trees running at full speed, his Bo-rifle configured as a staff. The Ayto swung its club, and the Lasat ranger swept aside the first attack, delivering an electrified counterstrike that would have knocked over a Wookie. The Ayto took the hit in stride and hit back, its club whistling downward in a ferocious two-handed blow. Zeb locked his joints and blocked above his head with his staff, pitting his own massive strength against his opponent’s. He grunted heavily under the strike but stopped it cold. The two strained for a moment, primal rage warring with sapient pride, but the huge Ayto hunter was far stronger than the Lasat ranger. The Ayto lashed out with a brutal kick, knocking him flat on his back and taking his wind. Worse, he lost his grip on his weapon. The Ayto’s club swung over its head to deliver the skull-crushing finish, and Zeb’s eyes widened in fear.
The blow never landed.
The Ayto was hurled sideways by the Force; Ezra sent it flying into a nearby tree, hard enough to split the trunk halfway through. Even then, the ape-like simian wasn’t finished. It slumped to the ground, snarling, and crouched to spring back at its prey. It leapt just as blaster bolts from Shin’s pistol winged it, but then Sabine was there, flipping acrobatically through the air using the Force and her jetpack. Her lightsaber flashed in a cut that met the Ayto midair and burned through its vitals. All Zeb had to do was roll out of the way, lest he be pinned under its dead weight.
Then there were no more Ayto—it was over.
Stunned silence reigned in the aftermath of the short, vicious fight. For about five seconds.
Ezra’s heart was overflowing at the sight of his friends. He was just about to call out to them when he suddenly sensed fear and anger from all quarters. Rather than acknowledge him, Sabine and Zeb were both locked onto Shin Hati, whose blue eyes had the look of a cornered kath-hound. Her fingers worked at the grips of her blasters, but she knew better than to fire on Sabine, who held an activated lightsaber.
“You!” Zeb Orrelios’s voice thundered across the clearing. He didn’t even reach for his staff, just leapt to his feet and started towards her. Ezra recognized that look and Zeb’s offensive gait, and he sensed the righteous anger in the Lasat—Zeb was going to take her apart with his bare fists.
Shin raised a blaster, coldly taking aim.
“Wait!” Ezra shouted, executing a Force-leap that placed him squarely between the two. He could have pulled the blaster from her grip but knew she would see that as a betrayal—the one thing he needed to avoid at all costs.
“Out of the way, kid,” Zeb snarled, obviously recognizing him but moving to push past him. “She’s a bloody murderer, that one! Warm or cold, I’m taking her in!”
“Ezra! Listen to him!” Sabine shouted, peeling off her helmet.
“Wait!” Ezra called again, desperately. “Everyone, stop! Just stop!” He used the Force as a last resort, physically blocking Zeb from moving by him. The Lasat pushed, his face turning a darker purple with effort and anger.
“Have ya lost yer bloomin’ mind? Let me go, Ezra!”
Ezra turned, to find Shin’s blaster aimed at him, now. Her eyes weren’t cold any longer, but sad and miserable. As if all the hope she’d slowly begun to build in the past day had been dashed, just like that. “You know them? You’re with them?” she asked in a low voice.
Ezra turned sideways, holding up both hands to keep everyone apart. Sabine had begun slowly circling around him, but she was hesitant. She’d gotten to the fight before Zeb, courtesy of her jetpack, and seen Ezra and Shin save each other. Shin had also fired in defense of Zeb and herself when she could have fired at them instead. And she remembered the discussions she’d had with Huyang and Ahsoka about this very moment, should it ever arrive. How to handle it had been the big riddle, but fate had solved it for her.
The Force worked in mysterious ways. It was an enigma, no doubt about it.
So it was that Sabine, true to her Jedi teaching, offered the first olive branch. She drew herself up, de-activating her lightsaber. “Zeb, stand down for a minute. Nobody’s going anywhere, anyway,” she said, gesturing upward. The whine of the Ghost’s engines and repulsorlifts suddenly assailed them, and the ship appeared over the line of trees, tracking sideways in a slow semi-circle, her forward weapons aimed squarely at Aldo Nova’s vulnerable cockpit bubble.
“Hera!” Ezra breathed, naturally making the wrong assumption.
“Sabine!” Zeb complained.
“Just do it,” Sabine said. “If we can’t trust Ezra . . . “
“Karabast! All right,” he growled, shrugging. Ezra let go his grip in the Force, turning back to Shin. He sighed, walking towards her, using the Force to broadcast all the calm and peaceful feelings he could muster. There is no emotion, there is peace. There is no passion, there is serenity. Her chin trembled as he reached her, easing out his hand to grasp her forearm, gently lowering her weapon.
“Let’s go,” Shin whispered to him intensely in a desperate voice that only he could hear. “Just you and me. We can run for it.”
“We don’t need to run for it, Shin. This is my family, and you are safe with us. We’re going to help you, Shin Hati—all of us. You don’t have to be afraid anymore.”
Zeb and Sabine were at his side in the next moment, laughing and crying as they swept Ezra into their arms. Ezra Bridger lost himself for a moment, his spirit lifted to a place higher than he’d ever thought possible. Shin Hati felt it in the Force, and more than anything in her life, she wanted that feeling. Sabine and Ezra felt her longing, and as one, they wordlessly reached out and pulled her into the fold.
“Check that vector,” he said confidently.
“283 mark 124, it is,” Sabine said breezily. “Scans show a gas giant along that line—a big one. So, unless there’s a habitable moon . . .”
“There’s definitely something,” Zeb remarked from the console behind them. “I’m picking up a homing beacon signal from directly ahead.”
“If it’s a beacon, it can’t be Ezra’s,” Sabine reasoned. “Not after ten years. Wait a minute . . . this doesn’t make any sense. That homing signal is encrypted with the Ghost’s ciphers. It’s one of Chopper’s! That’s impossible!”
“Mom placed a homing beacon on the mercenary ship,” Jacen reminded them. “Could it be them?”
“If they haven’t found and deactivated it by now, they are the worst mercenaries ever,” Zeb chuckled.
“Whatever it is, this is no coincidence,” Sabine stated firmly. “If it is them, we can handle them. Skoll is dead, and I can take Hati if it comes to that. The rest of their crew are a handful of gun thugs.”
“We aren’t going to sort it out sitting around up here,” Zeb said eagerly. “If they’re here, it has to be because of Ezra somehow, right? So what are we waiting for?”
“You’re right,” Sabine replied. “Jacen, you’ve got the ship. Can you jump us in closer? There’s no time to waste!”
“I’ve got it,” he replied confidently. Moments later, the Ghost briefly disappeared into hyperspace again.
* * *
Ezra Bridger stood in the center of a group of Zef. They were so large that they had to form a rough circle around him, leaning in with their large heads and faceted eyes as he bade them farewell. He thanked them for his life, for their aid to him, and for being his friends. He told them they would be dearly missed, and they could sense the truth of it in his mind and heart. Please pass my final message to all the Zef: May your aeries be strong, your eggs healthy, and may your people flourish for all time, he told them.
Farewell, friend-Ezra, they told him return. We feel your eagerness to fly home to the stars. We will pray that you reach the aeries of your people. Long life to you, good fortune, and peace.
May the Force be with you, my friends, he replied, tears stinging his eyes. The Zef took their leave of him, launching themselves into the air one at a time, creating powerful whirlwinds that buffeted him. Ezra wiped his eyes, feeling the world shifting beneath his feet. One era of his life was ending, and another beginning. He took a breath, and eagerly headed back to the clearing where the Aldo Nova waited.
Shin was there, with R4, finishing up the change-out of the ship’s atmosphere and using the oxygen generators to top off the internal tanks. They were standing just underneath the ship, working at an exterior drop-down console. That was when they heard it.
There was no mistaking the distant echo of the double sonic-boom extending all the way to the surface. It had been so long for Ezra that he didn’t realize what it was right away, but Shin Hati’s reaction was immediate. She stepped away from the hull of the Aldo Nova, shielding her eyes and looking skyward, seeking the source of the disturbance. Nothing natural on Valarian could move at supersonic speed except for a falling meteor.
Ezra was distracted by his emotional parting with the Zef; he hadn’t sensed the approaching Ayto hunting party, and only the sudden movement of one looking skyward from on top of Aldo Nova’s hull saved them. The hunter’s stalk had been near-perfect, but now it locked eyes with Ezra, who froze momentarily in shock as he realized it was there. The Ayto sprang into action, loping across the hull in two bounds and leaping for Shin, swinging its crude bone club two-handed as it dropped. The Ayto was at least nine feet tall, and its club would have knocked her skull clean into her chest if it connected.
“Shin! Look out!” he cried. She reacted with Jedi-like reflexes, sensing the danger at the last moment. She spun away from the Ayto, eyes widening as the gigantic ape smashed its club into the forest floor beside her. Ezra was already reaching out with the Force, jerking the Ayto off its feet, towards him.
Then there were more of them, at least half a dozen, dropping out of the trees all around them. A club swung, and R4’s electronic squeal cut out abruptly as his conical dome was knocked clean off in a shower of sparks. Ezra sensed one behind him, sensed the swing coming, and it was too late to get out of the way. He pivoted in place, reaching out with both hands and calling on the Force, applying pressure at precisely the right point. The Ayto’s club hit a solid wall of nothing at just the right juncture to send the force of the blow rebounding back into the attacker’s wrists, fracturing them. The club flew free of its grip, spinning off violently across the clearing. The Ayto screamed in pain and fled into the trees.
“Shin! Get in the ship! Get in the ship!” He yelled to her. She had blasters in hand now and pumped four shots at max power into the Ayto that attempted to club her. The creature’s thunderous, raging scream was cut off as it keeled over backward, crashing dead into the dirt. A large, furry foot appeared as if out of nowhere, tripping Ezra as he ran and knocking him flat on his face. He rolled, aided by the Force, as another bone club smashed into the ground where he’d been, narrowly missing him. He rolled again, dodging a second strike. A gob of foul smelling Ayto saliva splashed into Ezra’s face as the club came down a third time. He blindly reached up and pushed with the Force; the club stopped about twelve centimeters above his head, quivering, as the Ayto tried to bear down and kill him.
“Roll, you idiot!” he vaguely heard Shin shouting at him, firing at an unseen target. Ezra took her advice, letting go of his Force-hold at the proper instant. The club finished its arc, smashing into dirt he’d vacated. A great, furred hand snapped out and grabbed him around the torso, trapping his arms, lifting, and squeezing. Ezra thought his insides were going to burst, but the Ayto quickly dropped him when a Force-aimed blaster bolt from Shin struck it in the side of the head. It wasn’t enough to kill the creature, but it staggered back, severely wounded. It didn’t have the chance to do anything else before two curling smoke trails from above rocketed into its neck, detonating with loud crumps, and blowing the simian’s head half off. The loud whine of an approaching Mandalorian jet pack sounded briefly in his ears, and a familiar figure clad in colorfully painted armor landed in a combat crouch several feet away.
“Sabine!” Ezra cried, bewildered, then: “Behind you!”
Sabine whirled with Jedi reflexes, igniting the lightsaber she held in one hand. She swung against an enormous hand that swung at her, and the lightsaber won the contest. The Ayto’s arm was severed at the bicep and the creature staggered back, shrieking defiance at the trees. She followed up with the blaster in her other hand, dropping it with two headshots.
Another Ayto was charging her; Sabine backed it off with a quick blast from her flamethrower, causing it to recoil in fear of fire. She was surprised when a series of blaster bolts fired by Shin Hati ripped into its torso, finishing it for her.
An Ayto moving to attack Ezra turned when it heard the howl of an approaching threat. Garazeb Orrelios emerged from the trees running at full speed, his Bo-rifle configured as a staff. The Ayto swung its club, and the Lasat ranger swept aside the first attack, delivering an electrified counterstrike that would have knocked over a Wookie. The Ayto took the hit in stride and hit back, its club whistling downward in a ferocious two-handed blow. Zeb locked his joints and blocked above his head with his staff, pitting his own massive strength against his opponent’s. He grunted heavily under the strike but stopped it cold. The two strained for a moment, primal rage warring with sapient pride, but the huge Ayto hunter was far stronger than the Lasat ranger. The Ayto lashed out with a brutal kick, knocking him flat on his back and taking his wind. Worse, he lost his grip on his weapon. The Ayto’s club swung over its head to deliver the skull-crushing finish, and Zeb’s eyes widened in fear.
The blow never landed.
The Ayto was hurled sideways by the Force; Ezra sent it flying into a nearby tree, hard enough to split the trunk halfway through. Even then, the ape-like simian wasn’t finished. It slumped to the ground, snarling, and crouched to spring back at its prey. It leapt just as blaster bolts from Shin’s pistol winged it, but then Sabine was there, flipping acrobatically through the air using the Force and her jetpack. Her lightsaber flashed in a cut that met the Ayto midair and burned through its vitals. All Zeb had to do was roll out of the way, lest he be pinned under its dead weight.
Then there were no more Ayto—it was over.
Stunned silence reigned in the aftermath of the short, vicious fight. For about five seconds.
Ezra’s heart was overflowing at the sight of his friends. He was just about to call out to them when he suddenly sensed fear and anger from all quarters. Rather than acknowledge him, Sabine and Zeb were both locked onto Shin Hati, whose blue eyes had the look of a cornered kath-hound. Her fingers worked at the grips of her blasters, but she knew better than to fire on Sabine, who held an activated lightsaber.
“You!” Zeb Orrelios’s voice thundered across the clearing. He didn’t even reach for his staff, just leapt to his feet and started towards her. Ezra recognized that look and Zeb’s offensive gait, and he sensed the righteous anger in the Lasat—Zeb was going to take her apart with his bare fists.
Shin raised a blaster, coldly taking aim.
“Wait!” Ezra shouted, executing a Force-leap that placed him squarely between the two. He could have pulled the blaster from her grip but knew she would see that as a betrayal—the one thing he needed to avoid at all costs.
“Out of the way, kid,” Zeb snarled, obviously recognizing him but moving to push past him. “She’s a bloody murderer, that one! Warm or cold, I’m taking her in!”
“Ezra! Listen to him!” Sabine shouted, peeling off her helmet.
“Wait!” Ezra called again, desperately. “Everyone, stop! Just stop!” He used the Force as a last resort, physically blocking Zeb from moving by him. The Lasat pushed, his face turning a darker purple with effort and anger.
“Have ya lost yer bloomin’ mind? Let me go, Ezra!”
Ezra turned, to find Shin’s blaster aimed at him, now. Her eyes weren’t cold any longer, but sad and miserable. As if all the hope she’d slowly begun to build in the past day had been dashed, just like that. “You know them? You’re with them?” she asked in a low voice.
Ezra turned sideways, holding up both hands to keep everyone apart. Sabine had begun slowly circling around him, but she was hesitant. She’d gotten to the fight before Zeb, courtesy of her jetpack, and seen Ezra and Shin save each other. Shin had also fired in defense of Zeb and herself when she could have fired at them instead. And she remembered the discussions she’d had with Huyang and Ahsoka about this very moment, should it ever arrive. How to handle it had been the big riddle, but fate had solved it for her.
The Force worked in mysterious ways. It was an enigma, no doubt about it.
So it was that Sabine, true to her Jedi teaching, offered the first olive branch. She drew herself up, de-activating her lightsaber. “Zeb, stand down for a minute. Nobody’s going anywhere, anyway,” she said, gesturing upward. The whine of the Ghost’s engines and repulsorlifts suddenly assailed them, and the ship appeared over the line of trees, tracking sideways in a slow semi-circle, her forward weapons aimed squarely at Aldo Nova’s vulnerable cockpit bubble.
“Hera!” Ezra breathed, naturally making the wrong assumption.
“Sabine!” Zeb complained.
“Just do it,” Sabine said. “If we can’t trust Ezra . . . “
“Karabast! All right,” he growled, shrugging. Ezra let go his grip in the Force, turning back to Shin. He sighed, walking towards her, using the Force to broadcast all the calm and peaceful feelings he could muster. There is no emotion, there is peace. There is no passion, there is serenity. Her chin trembled as he reached her, easing out his hand to grasp her forearm, gently lowering her weapon.
“Let’s go,” Shin whispered to him intensely in a desperate voice that only he could hear. “Just you and me. We can run for it.”
“We don’t need to run for it, Shin. This is my family, and you are safe with us. We’re going to help you, Shin Hati—all of us. You don’t have to be afraid anymore.”
Zeb and Sabine were at his side in the next moment, laughing and crying as they swept Ezra into their arms. Ezra Bridger lost himself for a moment, his spirit lifted to a place higher than he’d ever thought possible. Shin Hati felt it in the Force, and more than anything in her life, she wanted that feeling. Sabine and Ezra felt her longing, and as one, they wordlessly reached out and pulled her into the fold.
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