Abyss Read online




  By Troy Denning

  Waterdeep

  Dragonwall

  The Parched Sea

  The Verdant Passage

  The Crimson Legion

  The Amber Enchantress

  The Obsidian Oracle

  The Cerulean Storm

  The Ogre’s Pact

  The Giant Among Us

  The Titan of Twilight

  The Veiled Dragon

  Pages of Pain

  Crucible: The Trial of Cyric the Mad

  The Oath of Stonekeep

  Faces of Deception

  Beyond the High Road

  Death of the Dragon (with Ed Greenwood)

  The Summoning

  The Siege

  The Sorcerer

  Star Wars: The New Jedi Order: Star by Star

  Star Wars: Tatooine Ghost

  Star Wars: Dark Nest I: The Joiner King

  Star Wars: Dark Nest II: The Unseen Queen

  Star Wars: Dark Nest III: The Swarm War

  Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Tempest

  Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Inferno

  Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Invincible

  Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi: Abyss

  For my niece Jennifer Jane Denning

  The smile behind Allana’s

  Acknowledgments

  Many people contributed to this book in ways large and small. I would like to thank them all, especially the following: Andria Hayday for her support, critiques, and suggestions; James Luceno, Leland Chee, Pablo Hidalgo, Keith Clayton, Christine Cabello, Scott Shannon, Frank Parisi, and Carol Roeder for their fine contributions during our brainstorming sessions; Shelly Shapiro and Sue Rostoni for everything, from their remarkable patience to their insightful markups to their great ideas; to my fellow Fate of the Jedi writers, Aaron Allston and Christie Golden, for being such a blast to work with and for their myriad other contributions to this book and the series; to all of the people at Lucasfilm and Del Rey who make writing Star Wars so much fun; and, finally, to George Lucas for sharing his galaxy with us all.

  Dramatis Personae

  Ahri Raas; Sith apprentice (Keshiri male)

  Ben Skywalker; Jedi Knight (human male)

  Han Solo; Captain, Millennium Falcon (human male)

  Jagged Fel; Head of State, Galactic Empire (human male)

  Jaina Solo; Jedi Knight (human female)

  Leia Organa Solo; Jedi Knight (human female)

  Luke Skywalker; Jedi Grand Master (human male)

  Olaris Rhea; Sith Lord (human female)

  Vestara Khai; Sith appentice (human female)

  Yuvar Xal; Sith Master (human male)

  In a galaxy long, long ago …

  BURIED DEEP INSIDE THE JEDI TEMPLE ON CORUSCANT WAS THE Asylum Block, a transparisteel cube standing in its own hidden atrium, bathed in artificial blue light and surrounded by tidy rows of potted olbio trees. Peering up through the leaves to a second-story wall, Leia Solo could see Seff Hellin kneeling in his cell. He was in the near corner, staring at his bloody knuckles as though surprised that hours of hammering at a fusion-welded seam might actually have damaged them. In the adjacent cell, Natua Wan was endlessly scratching at her door lock, trying to slip her splintered talons into a magnetic seal that a nanoscalpel could not have breached.

  Seeing the pair in such a state made Leia’s heart ache. It also terrified her, for both of Corran Horn’s children had fallen victim to the same condition. Now, with Temple scientists no closer to identifying a cause, she was beginning to fear that this strange insanity might claim an entire generation of Jedi Knights. And that was something she would not allow—not when every new case reminded her of how confused and helpless she had felt losing Jacen to the madness of the Sith.

  The golden outline of an access portal appeared in the invisible barrier field that enclosed the atrium. With Han and C-3PO following behind, Leia stepped into the leafy-smelling interior. She was not surprised to feel a subtle pang of loss and isolation. The olbio trees were filled with ysalamiri, small white reptiles that hid from predators by creating voids in the Force. The adaptation was an invaluable tool for anyone who wished to incarcerate rogue Force-users—and all too often lately, that included the Jedi themselves.

  As the portal crackled shut behind them, Han leaned close and warmed Leia’s ear with a whisper. “I don’t think cutting them off from the Force is helping. They look crazier than ever.”

  “Seff and Natua are not crazy,” Leia reprimanded. “They’re ill, and they need our understanding.”

  “Hey, nobody understands crazy better than me.” Han gave her arm a reassuring squeeze. “People are always calling me crazy.”

  “Captain Solo is quite right,” C-3PO agreed. The golden protocol droid was standing close behind the Solos, his metallic breastplate pressing cold against Leia’s left shoulder. “During our association, Captain Solo’s sanity has been questioned an average of three times per month. By the psychiatric care standards of many conformist societies, that fact alone would qualify him for a cell in the Asylum Block.”

  Han shot a frown back at the droid, then turned to Leia with his best smirk of reassurance. “You see? I’m probably the only one in the whole Temple who receives on their channel.”

  “I wouldn’t doubt that,” Leia said. She gave him a wry smile, then patted the hand grasping her arm. “All joking aside, I just wish you really did know what’s going on with them.”

  Now it was Han who grew serious. “Yeah. Seeing ’em slip away like this brings bad memories. Really bad memories.”

  “It does,” Leia acknowledged. “But it’s not the same thing. By the time anyone realized what was going on with Jacen, he was running the Galactic Alliance.”

  “Yeah, and we were the enemy,” Han agreed. “I just wish we could have stuck Jacen in a deten—”

  “We would have, had there been some way to take him alive,” Leia interrupted. They didn’t turn down this lane often, but when they did, it devastated her, and she couldn’t let herself be devastated now. “Let’s just focus on the Jedi we can save.”

  Han nodded. “Count me in. I don’t need anybody else’s family getting caught in the kind of plasma blast we did.”

  Han was still speaking when Master Cilghal and her assistant Tekli appeared, walking between two rows of potted olbios. In their white medical robes, the pair made a somber impression: Cilghal a long-headed Mon Calamari with sad bulbous eyes, Tekli a diminutive Chadra-Fan with her flap-like ears pulled tight against her head fur.

  Cilghal extended a web-fingered hand first to Leia, then to Han, and spoke in her rippling Mon Calamari voice. “Jedi Solo, Captain Solo, thank you for coming. I trust you were able to find someone to watch Amelia on such short notice?”

  “No problem,” Han said. “Barv’s keeping an eye on her.”

  “Barv?” Tekli squeaked. “As in, Bazel Warv?”

  “Yeah, Amelia just loves the big guy.” Han smiled. “I’m beginning to think that girl’s going to marry a Ramoan when she grows up.”

  The glance that Tekli shot up at Cilghal was almost imperceptible, as was the answering dip from the Mon Calamari’s near eye—but not quick enough to escape the notice of a former diplomat.

  “Is that a problem?” Leia asked. “Barv has always been very good with her.”

  “I truly doubt there’s anything to worry about,” Cilghal said. “It’s just that the only link we’ve been able to establish among patients is one of association.”

  “What kind of association?” Han asked.

  “Age and location,” Tekli supplied. “All four victims were among the students hidden in Shelter.”

  Leia nodded. Shelter was the secret base where the Jedi had sequestered their young during the last part of the war with the Yu
uzhan Vong. Located deep inside the Maw cluster of black holes and cobbled together from the remnants of an abandoned weapons lab, it had been a gloomy place to care for young Jedi—and now, it appeared, perhaps a dangerous one.

  “Are you thinking environmental toxins?” Leia asked.

  “We decontaminated the place pretty well,” Han added. “But I suppose we could have missed something. The Imperials were making some strange stuff there.”

  Cilghal spread her hands. “It’s impossible to say. At the moment, all we have is a simple observation.” She lowered an admonishing eye toward her assistant. “The sample is too small to establish a statistical correlation.”

  “True, but it’s the only firm link we have,” Tekli countered. “And whether it’s causative or not, Bazel does associate closely with both Valin and Jysella.”

  “Yeah, along with Yaqeel Saav’etu,” Han said. “I’ve heard Barv call the four of them ‘the Unit.’”

  Leia raised a brow. “Did this Unit include Seff?” She glanced up and saw that Seff was still staring at his hands; in the adjacent cell, Natua continued to worry at her lock. “Or Natua?”

  “Not that I ever heard,” Han said.

  Tekli confirmed this with a shake of her golden-furred head.

  “You see?” Cilghal asked. “There are plenty of facts and connections, but which are significant? Are any?”

  “If anyone can sort it out, it’s you,” Leia said. “In the meantime, there’s nothing wrong with being careful.”

  “Of course not,” Cilghal said. “So if you’d rather return to Amelia right away—”

  “No, I don’t think that will be necessary,” Leia interrupted. “Artoo-Detoo is there, and he has standing orders to contact us if anything starts to look out of the ordinary. And we’re very eager to help you.”

  “Yeah.” Han glanced toward the cell block. “Judging by the looks of those two up there, you need it.”

  “Thank you.” Cilghal turned and waved them toward the cell block. “But actually, the reason I asked you here is that Seff has begun to improve.”

  Han looked doubtful. “So he didn’t tear up his hands punching walls?”

  “He did,” Cilghal admitted.

  “But he has stopped,” Leia noted. “Is that the improvement?”

  Cilghal nodded. “A few days after we isolated them from the Force, both Seff and Natua began to exhibit symptoms of violent psychological withdrawal. Seff’s present calmness suggests he may have entered a recovery phase.”

  “Wait a minute.” Han cast an uneasy look toward Leia. “You mean they’re addicted to the Force?”

  “All we know is that there appears to be a connection,” Cilghal said carefully.

  “We’re wondering if the Force acts as some sort of carrier for the madness,” Tekli explained. “Or maybe a trigger.”

  Cilghal fixed a disapproving eye on her assistant. “That’s all speculation at this stage, of course.” The other eye swung toward Leia—a Mon Calamari ability that Leia still found a bit unsettling. “So far, we haven’t been able to confirm either the withdrawal or the recovery.”

  “And that’s why you need us?” Leia surmised.

  Cilghal nodded. “We’d like to conduct a furtive encephaloscan to determine just how calm Seff truly is—”

  “And you want us to distract him,” Han finished.

  “Would you mind?” Cilghal asked. “We can’t establish a baseline stress pattern unless we keep his attention focused elsewhere. And you’re the best con artists in the Temple.”

  “On Coruscant,” Han corrected, a bit too proudly. He hitched a thumb toward C-3PO. “But Goldenrod here isn’t going to be much help tricking anyone. Why’d you want him along?”

  “Natua has been hissing as she works,” Tekli explained. “I’m beginning to think she’s talking to herself.”

  “That’s entirely possible,” C-3PO offered. “The phonetics of many reptilian languages have sibilant root patterns. I’d be happy to assist you in identifying the language, if you wish.”

  “A translation would be much more useful,” Tekli said. “It might be helpful to know what she’s saying.”

  “See-Threepio is entirely at your disposal,” Leia said to Cilghal. “As are Han and I.”

  Cilghal thanked them and led the way to the Asylum Block. Tekli disappeared into the control room to retrieve a pair of stun sticks for the Solos and a tranquilizer pistol for Cilghal, then announced she would join them with the encephaloscanner once Seff was distracted. Leia and Han secured the stun sticks in the small of their backs, under their belts, then followed Cilghal to a turbolift and ascended to the second-story catwalk.

  The cells arrayed along the catwalk were clearly designed to confine rather than punish, for they were furnished with flowform couches, holographic entertainment centers, and privacy-screened refreshers. Judging by the muffled screel of fingernails coming through the second door, the distinction of purpose was no comfort to Natua Wan.

  The first door stood open. Inside the cell, a tall, powerful-looking human Jedi sat meditating, with an upturned palm resting on one knee and a wrist stump on the other. On the floor beside him rested an artificial hand, palm-up, with the thumb and middle finger touching. Dozens of surgeries and skin grafts had repaired his burn scars to the point where his face looked merely plastic instead of horrific, but his ears remained flat and misshapen, and the bristly texture of his short blond hair betrayed its synthetic origins.

  As the group approached his door, the Jedi’s blue eyes popped open, fixing first on Leia, then Han. “Princess Leia, Captain Solo,” he said. “It’s nice to see you again.”

  “You, too, Raynar,” Han said. “You doing okay in here?”

  “Very well,” Raynar said. “Thank you.”

  A sad reminder of the price young Jedi too often paid for their service to the galaxy, Raynar Thul had gone missing on the same strike mission that had claimed the life of the Solos’ youngest son, Anakin. Years later, Raynar had reappeared as UnuThul, the badly disfigured, insane Joiner who was leading the Killik Colony’s expansion into the Chiss territories. Fortunately, Raynar had not proven too powerful to capture alive, and he had been residing in the Asylum Block for more than seven years while Cilghal helped him put his mind back together.

  Had Natasi Daala been the Galactic Alliance Chief of State at the time, Raynar would probably have been frozen in carbonite and hung up in the nearest detention center—just as Valin and Jysella Horn had been when they fell ill. And that thought made Leia about as angry as a wampa in a sauna. Anyone whose mind came undone because of what they had suffered for the Alliance deserved to be nurtured back to health, not labeled a “danger to society” and treated like wall art.

  Leia stopped at the entrance to Raynar’s cell. “Hello, Raynar. Cilghal has told us how much progress you’ve made.” Actually, the Mon Calamari had told the Solos that all that remained was for Raynar to realize he was recovered. “Is there anything you need?”

  “No, I’m free to visit the commissary myself,” Raynar said. He glanced toward the adjacent cell, where Natua was still scratching at her door, then grinned a bit mischievously. “Unless you care to do something about all that racket? It’s enough to drive a man crazy.”

  “No problem,” Han said, reaching for the control pad on the exterior of the cell. “It’ll be quieter if we close this—”

  “On second thought,” Raynar interrupted, “I may be growing fond of the noise.”

  Han smirked. “I thought that might fix your problem.”

  “You should apply for therapist credentials, dear,” Leia said drily. She turned to Raynar. “But seriously, Raynar, if the noise bothers you, why don’t you just change your quarters?”

  Raynar’s eyes widened as much as his rigid brows would allow. “Leave my cell?”

  “The door has been open for quite some time,” Cilghal said. “And if matters continue to deteriorate with the younger Jedi, we may be needing your room.”


  “There are plenty of empty quarters up on the dormitory level,” Han prompted.

  Raynar retrieved his artificial hand, then rose and stepped toward the door. “Would I be welcome?”

  “That depends,” Han said with a smirk. “Are you going to do your own chores?”

  “The days when I considered myself above doing chores are long past, Captain Solo.” Raynar’s tone was more distracted than indignant, as though he was so consumed in thought that he had failed to notice Han was joking. He stood at the door, considering his options, then shrugged and began to reattach his artificial hand. “I don’t know if I’m ready. I don’t know if they’re ready.”

  Leia started to suggest there was only one way to find out, but before she could speak Raynar started toward the interior of his cell. Cilghal shook her head in disappointment, Han sighed, and Leia bit her lip in frustration.

  “Relax,” Raynar called over his shoulder. “I’m just going to pack. I have been here awhile, you know.”

  Leia’s relief was bittersweet. As happy as she was to see Raynar leaving his cell, it made her wish that incarceration and rehabilitation had been possible for her son Jacen. But Jacen had been too powerful to capture and too destructive to leave free, and in the end there had been no choice except to hunt him down.

  There had been no choice.

  Leia reminded herself of that almost daily. Yet she knew that she and Han would go to their graves asking why they had not seen Jacen’s peril in time to save him, why they had not realized until it was too late that their son was falling to the dark side.

  Once Raynar had begun to pack his few possessions, Cilghal smiled and led the way down the catwalk again. As they passed the next cell, Natua stopped scratching at her door locks and pressed herself to the transparisteel, her narrow eyes fixed on Han. A ruddy flush began to creep up her delicate face scales, and she slid a hand along the wall, reaching out in his direction.