Wednesday, March 31, 2021

A More Wretched Hive

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Dr. Threecoal spoke at a relentless pace and Caleb struggled to keep up.  From the typing sounds of the hundreds of other Flight Academy students around the room, he wasn’t the only one.

“Reflect to when you were a child.  If you’re anything like me, some of the choices you made were bad.” The tall professor smiled as a small chuckle rippled around the room.  “Your parents were charged with protecting and guiding you until you learned the right way and, moreover, learned to choose that right way.  ”
“Left to their own devices, with no guidance at all, children will die.  Not because they are stupid, exactly, but because they are just too simple and distractible.  They want the next thing, and cannot focus on The Big Thing.”  Dr. Threecoal paced back and forth as he spoke now, waving his finger for emphasis.
“This is what it means when we say the citizens of the Empire are like children.  Distractible, emotional, and all-around unfocused.  The Empire can be as their parents.  For the good of the Galaxy, it must be, if we are to progress as a society.  They must be made to focus on The Big Thing - The academic phrase, as you know, is Correct Development.”  Caleb nodded with his peers at the familiar term. “The Republic fell because it allowed its worlds to make individual choices.  These individual choices would sometimes clash.  Those clashes would lead to conflicts which generated grievances which lengthened those conflicts, which bled, sometimes literally, into the Senate.

Dr. Threecoal stopped pacing and took an audible breath before continuing. “The Naboo and the Trade Federation never made up after their initial flare-up and that conflict even bled into the Clone Wars, almost a decade after the original confrontation!  And what did the Jedi do about that?! His face was now red under the bright lights at the front of the hall.  “Keepers of the Peace sounds noble, but really they only buried conflict, never solving them.  The grievances remained, and grew.”  The professor took a few gasps of breath and patted his forehead with the handkerchief he kept in his jacket breast pocket.  Today it was yellow.

“The Empire will prevent those tensions from tugging at the Galaxy.  This will allow us to build upward.  Some say the Senate now is a shell of its former self because the Emperor can enforce his will on the Senators.  I say that is precisely the point.  Rather than the Senate representing their people to the government, the Senate can now represent Correct Development to their people. Two neighboring systems argue about hyperspace route jurisdiction?  That cannot be prevented.  However, one is right and one is wrong.  Well, sometimes both are wrong.  No matter.  It is the duty of the Empire to adjudicate that disagreement before it turns to violence and spirals out of control.  This does three things.” Turning around, he said, “R1, if you would?”

The golden astromech behind his crystasteel desk whirred to life and plugged into the screen terminal.  The professor read the text as it appeared on the wall in large white letters.  The furious tapping of datapads resumed.
“One.  It ends the conflict, allowing the parties to focus again on the Big Thing.  They stop wasting their resources on meaningless endeavors.

“Two.  It establishes the Empire as the ultimate power.  Eventually, systems will stop pursuing these meaningless endeavors altogether because they know the Empire will stop them anyway.  This saves their resources for Correct Development.
“Three.  Eventually, existing grievances will fall away as all systems, together, begin to focus on their duty to the Empire.  Children seek to find fleeting pleasures.  Only their parents can guide them towards growth necessary for adulthood.  Similarly, only the Empire can guide the galaxy toward Correct Development.”

The professor paused here and scanned his students, checking their faces for expressions of obvious confusion.  Caleb was amazed at how much Dr. Threecoal could spin out in just a few minutes.  It all makes so much sense.  How could anyone oppose the Empire's goals?  He wondered, if the Rebels heard these lectures, would any of them would be swayed.  No, he thought, they’re just animals.

Dr. Threecoal pointed to a student whose hand was raised.  “How does the Empire determine Correct Development?”
“Through its civil servants.” He answered quickly.  “They take into account all of the needs of the galaxy, determine their resource requirements and potential side effects of action (or inaction) and present their findings to the Emperor.  Then the Emperor decides which to prioritize.”
“And what if the civil servants get something wrong?”
“Then they are publicly executed, along with their whole families.”  He hardly finished before he started laughing.  “No, no, no.  Think of the parental analogy.”  He looked up at all the students.  “Were your parents always perfect?  And yet here you are, at a rare academy studying how to reach your excellence.  Perfection is not necessary for Correct Development – thank the stars.  Mistakes are expected.”

After class was over, Caleb shuffled out of the lecture hall, his eyes carelessly passing over the portraits of past classes.  In the corridor he looked around, but saw no sign of his friends.  Probably already outside.  He walked out the door with a miniature Imperial Walker overhead.
Caleb squinted his eyes as he walked out into the afternoon sun.  The square was busy, with some students unlocking and activating swoop bikes and others waiting in a cramped bunch at the bus stop, and still others crossing the road to take the walking path back to the residences.  As his eyes scanned the pick-up lane he saw Baborak’s speeder; It was hard to miss.
Baborak didn’t have this class with Caleb – he was actually a semester ahead.  However, he had great pride in his speeder and took any opportunity to show it off.  It was bright purple with rainbow reflectors around the base.  The windvisor, higher than standard, had a gold trim.  Baborak had poured all the allowance he could into it ever since he owned it.
As Caleb got within reach of the speeder, it pulsed forward.  Gritting his teeth, he walked a little further.  The speeder moved again, but backwards this time.  “I’m sorry,” Baborak said.  “This baby has a mind of her own, you know?”  He spoke with a bit of a purr, and an extra helping of detachment.  A son of Naboo, he was raised with all the privilege that wealthy planet could offer, though he hated to acknowledge it.  “Come on, Baborak.” Buk said from the back.  Buk had been Caleb’s bunkmate first semester and they had hit it off well.  Not like Vidya, who was sitting in the passenger seat.  She got stuck with a richer.  Baborak was a richer too, of course, but at least he didn’t act like one.  He made a show of shifting the speeder to park then raised his hands over his head.  “Ok, see?  No more tricks."
Caleb got in next to Buk and the speeder zoomed forward.  Baborak let out a high laugh as he turned up the music, a thumping style popular in the Core.  Caleb and the others raised a fist to pump along with the music, but Baborak had to put his hand back on the steering to avoid hitting a few students who walked in front of the speeder.  Caleb and Vidya shouted a handful of choice insults at the crowd before they sped off down the mainway.

Baborak said something, but with the wind whipping around them it was impossible to make it out.  “What?!”  Caleb shouted from his seat.
Baborak hit a button on the dashboard, and a blue shield quickly extended from the windvisor, over their heads, to the back of the speeder.  The roaring wind suddenly died, and the speeder’s twin DC-55 motors reduced to a hum.  “I said, what a bunch of morons!”
“Yeah,” Vidya laughed, tucking her brown curls behind her ear.  “And it’s not like this is a stealth speeder.”
“If I’d hit them, it’d be their fault, really.”
Looking in his rearview Baborak saw Caleb staring at the shield again.  He watched as Caleb put his fist through the shield, then brought it back down.  “Cool,” Caleb whispered to no one.
Baborak let out a laugh and said “Still wowed by a retractable shield?”
“Don’t have that shit on Carida, do you?” Buk smirked.
“We hardly have Bacta.” Caleb said, rubbing his wrist.  “When you get injured they just bind your arm and tell you to wait.”
“Barbaric,” Baborak chuckled.
“I never saw this kind of design on Mon Calimari,” Vidya said, “But at least we had medicine.”
“Yeah,” Caleb said, wishing he hadn’t brought it up. Carida wasn’t a particularly poor system, but it had little sense of luxury.  Imperial interest had increased the standing of the mining guild, but Correct Development demanded the profits be reinvested to improve the extraction operations.  His older sister had joined the Academy and Caleb grew up thinking he’d serve in the guild with his father until…  Well, now he couldn’t wait to bleed the Rebels dry for what they’d done.

Baborak upped the volume on the music again and they jammed the rest of the way, even sitting in the garage after they’d arrived until the song was finished.  “What a banger,” Baborak said as he turned the speeder off.  The shield made a soft zipping sound as it retracted.  “How is a band as perfect as Stony Space Slug even allowed to exist?  I mean, did you hear that,” and he waved his hands around as if smashing a drumset.  “Norfs, I love it.”
“I’m heading to the quad,” Vidya said, pulling her backpack over her shoulder, “Anyone wanna come with?”
“Sure,” Caleb and Buk said immediately.  Baborak ran his hand through his dark hair.  “No.  Hear that?”  They listened and heard some pop music faintly playing from the quad into the garage.  “All horns and beats.  I’ll pass.  Plus, I gotta work on my accent for the party!”  Then Baborak’s voice took on a chirpy, melodic quality.  “Weesa willsa see yousa later, okie-day?”  The others chuckled and said good-bye as they headed out to the quad.

The party, of course, was the Alienfest.  Every semester the students came dressed as an alien native to their system and were expected to speak and act like them, too.  Caleb had learned the hard way that everyone took the opportunity to mock the lesser beings very, very seriously.

Arriving on the artificial grass Vidya pulled a hologram projector from her bag.  “I’m gonna get a game of holo going.  Wanna?”
“It’s not even a real game,” Caleb said, and Buk suppressed a laugh.
“I’d probably feel that way, too, if I sucked as bad as you.”  She turned around and set the projector up on the artificial grass.  A blue disc appeared, eerily still, about a meter above.  She shouted to the people around her and some of them came and joined her.
“So what’s up?” Caleb asked Buk as Vidya pantomimed a push toward the disc, which shot forward towards a curly-haired boy who had joined.
“Nothing, you?”
“Nothing.”  Caleb replied.

The two sat in pleasant silence for a while on the busy quad.  Caleb picked at the grass as he watched a group play cards at a blue picnic table.  Sabaac, probably.  Now that’s a game, he thought.  Not only did it include real cards, but it mattered if you won or lost.  He’d heard of people betting whole starships on games.  Caleb hoped one day to be rich enough to do that.
“You’re doing it again.”  Caleb said.
“What?” Buk said, not moving his head.
“Staring at V.”
“I wasn’t!”  Buk quickly turned to face a different direction.  “I was thinking about class.”
“Well, you were also staring at her.” Caleb said, picking up the grass he had pulled and putting it on his open palm.
“So, what if I was?”
Caleb took a deep breath and blew the grass away, which quickly dropped back down. “It can’t happen, Buk.”
“But you did.”
“Yeah, but that’s before we were friends.  We’d just met then.  It’s different now.  We have a good group here.  You’re gonna mess it up.”
“You’re just jealous she might like it with me more than you.”
“Oh yeah?” Caleb said, “And how much experience do you have to blow her away with?
“Enough,” Buk lied.
“Well, I have double that,” Caleb lied.
“I bet she’ll be a sexy Calimari.”
“Eww, gross.”  Caleb said.  “Disgusting squidmen.”  But despite himself he got an image of her in her head, and it was quite tempting.  “But if anyone could, it was her.”
“So you do care!”  Buk cackled.
“Only because,” Caleb stopped himself.  He hated this argument, but Buk always baited him into it.  It was the only real tension between them.  They’d both met Vidya at the same party and for some reason Caleb was the one who scored.  But afterwards neither of them knew what to say and that was the end.  Or it would’ve been but second semester they were in a lot of classes together.  The familiarity gave them a certain comfort with each other. They still hadn’t talked about it, though.
“Only because what?” Buk yelled.  “NOW who’s staring?”
“Only because she’s a friend,” he said, which sounded lamer than he had intended.  “Having a girl who’s a friend gives us a lot of advantages, Buk.  First, girls won’t think we’re like other boys because they know we can just hang out with them, too.  Second, if we start to get somewhere with another girl and they do something confusing, we’ve got our own personal girl encyclopedia to help us out.”
“Our own hot-opedia.” Buk snorted.
Caleb winced.  He looked over to see Vidya leap with her dark arms outstretched to hit the holo, the bottom of her shirt not quite covering her belly.  He looked away quickly, suddenly hot and embarrassed.  “Yeah, you’re right.”
“Oh shit,” Buk exclaimed, suddenly standing, then sitting down again quickly.  “Patrol behind you,” he said.
“Then stay calm.  Keep moving like that they’ll think you’re an actual rebel.  Come on, let’s get this over with.”

Caleb and Buk stood up and faced the paved walkway and saluted firmly.  The realization spread around the quad, and soon everyone had stopped what they were doing and was standing at attention.  The stormtrooper patrol, seniors, basked in the attention.  They looked over at Vidya and those with her who were saluting but spread out on the grass.  One of them shouted.  “Citizens, we expect an orderly line.”  Vidya and the others scrambled to get into formation.  Two of the four troopers walked toward the group and pulled out stunsticks.
“On the ground!”  One of them shouted, and she fell on her face with the others.  The artificial grass was prickly in her nose.  She heard the zap of the stunstick and the accompanying cries.  The stunstick was only a practice one, of course, but it still gave a shock.  When she heard the girl next to her cry out she steeled herself for the jolt.  She felt the stick press into her shoulder and held her breath.  The sting burst went into her shoulder and quickly coursed through her body.  Despite herself she gave a small yelp and an involuntary gasp.  The artificial grass went further up her nostril.  She thought she could feel it in her eye.
“On your feet!”  The stormtroopers ordered.  Getting up she saw the other two troopers were wandering the quad, practice blasters out, shouting at other students.  She also saw a blade of grass hanging out of her nose.  She wiggled it, but it stayed stuck.  The stormtroopers shouted “By the glory of his majesty, you live in peace.  Long Live the Emperor.”
“Long Live the E-“ but all of a sudden her body convulsed into a sneeze.  Then another.  Then another.  All the stormtroopers stopped what they were doing to look at her, as did many of the others.  She looked at Caleb and Buk but they only looked at her helplessly.  What would they do anyway?
“Citizen?”  The two stormtroopers nearest to her said.  “Have a problem with our Emperor, do you?  Allergic to Correct Development, perhaps?”
“N- no, sirs.  I just, it just happened.”  After a moment, she snapped into a salute and declared “Long Live the Emperor!”
“Where are you from?”
Maintaining her salute she said “Mon Calimari.”
“Mon Calimari,” one repeated slowly.  “Well, we’ll be sure to give those fishheads our finest treatment at Alien.”  The other stormtroopers laughed.  One of them made a show of priming their blaster before aiming at her feet and firing.  The students around Vidya flinched but she held her salute perfectly.  She’d been around enough real blasters to not be scared by fakes.  The white light barely singed the ground.
“Think you’re some kind of hotshot, eh?”  The stormtrooper turned around and yelled, “Half rations for everyone in this residency for the week, and expect room inspections to be more demanding, too.”  Everyone let out a groan and Vidya could feel their eyes on her.

Then, without another word, the stormtroopers regrouped and left the quad.  Everyone remained saluting until they were out of sight.  When they were gone, one of the holo players huffed “Thanks a lot, fish-for-brains” as he walked away.  There were similar, and worse, shouts from around the quad.  Vidya picked up her projector, her face feeling hot.  She would not make excuses and she would definitely not cry.  She’d seen how that turned out.  She refused to be one of those students making pathetic pleas for understanding and mercy.  The best thing to do was to just leave and hope it would blow over.
Suddenly Vidya was coming towards them.  Not wanting to be associated with her Caleb picked up her bag and tossed it.  “Here you go, fishhead.”  He said loudly enough for others to hear.  However, the bag was still unzipped from before and its contents spilled onto the grass as it flew, landing empty at her feet.  The quad erupted in laughter and hoots again.
He hadn’t intended to make things worse, but now he was stuck.  She shouldn’t have sneezed, he reminded himself.  This was her fault, ultimately.  He placed his hands on his hips as he watched her pick everything up.  Discipline was important to the Empire, and discipline was gained through setting aside the self.  To do what the Empire asked, to pursue Correct Development, was no easy task.  But Caleb bursted with pride as he resolutely refused to help his friend.
When Vidya had picked everything up she stood up straight and held her head high.  Briefly looking around, she saw most of the students had turned back to what they had been doing, apparently bored of watching her suffer.  She hurried back to her residence hall before she could attract their attention again.

“Maybe I should go to her,” Buk said when she’d gone inside, bending to pick up his things.
“I think we’re among the last people she wants to see,” Caleb said.
“Still, shouldn’t we help?”
“Help?  Help her how?  You saw, she embarrassed herself.  We didn’t do anything wrong.”
“Well, her stuff.”
“That was an accident – plus that was me, not you.”
“Are you going to apologize?”
“The Empire makes no apologies.  She knows we’re still friends.  She knows why I did it.  She would
have done the same.”
“Well, still,”
“You just want a crack at her while she’s upset.  Come on, Buk.  That’s weak – she won’t respect you at all if you try that.”
“What if she falls head over heels for me?  Love makes people do unusual things.”
“Gross,” Caleb spat.  “You should get those fairy tales out of your head.  This is the Empire, Buk.  Love has nothing to do with it.  Think of the Big Thing.”
Buk nodded his head.  He was glad he had Caleb to talk him down sometimes.  Buk felt particularly vulnerable to chasing the next thing.  Eye on the prize, he told himself, though he wasn’t exactly sure what the prize was yet.  But it wasn’t Vidya.  Probably.
“And anyway,” Caleb drove onward, “She’ll get her comfort when we’re old enough to do the patrols.  Hell, we’ll punish firsties for so much as blinking too much – or too little!”  Buk cracked a smile at that.
“Or make them wash our armor while we’re wearing it.”
“Sure, Buk.  Whatever you think up they’ll have to do.  Come on, let’s go get something to eat.”

***

For Alienfest, the athletic center had been converted into a large dance hall.  Streamers hung from the ceiling, reflecting the bright lights while also casting long shadows on the floor.  A fog machine hissed periodically from the corner.
From patrolling the catwalks to checking IDs at the entrance, the uniformed seniors were eager to lord it over the others.  But the most popular area was the dance floor, where they took special joy in humiliating the costumed students.

“I had really been looking forward to this,” Vidya complained in an accent which was grinding and deep.  “It’s fun to let loose at a dance, you know, even if it is under the watchful eye of the Empire,” she said that last part in mock seriousness.  “But they’ll be looking out for me now.  I just hope none of that patrol recognize me.”
“It’ll be fun,” Buk said encouragingly.
Vidya wasn’t having it as they took a step forward in line. “Yeah, but your costume doesn’t also make you sweat like a Hutt!  What are you anyway again?  They’re going to think you forgot to dress up.”
Buk tapped the antennaepalps that had been taped behind his ear.  “Balosar!  Slythmongers of the galaxy and all-around scum.”
Vidya gave a harupmh and turned aside.  Buk’s costume was very much not in the spirit of the celebration.  She hoped one of the seniors would mistake him for a human and make the night hell for him.  She knew when she was a senior she’d single out anyone who refused to dress up properly.
“Just try not to sneeze again,” Caleb whispered through his three-eyed mask.
“Yeah, thanks,” Vidya scoffed, adjusting the ridiculously large mask on her face.  But Caleb hadn’t meant it like that.  Alienfest was a bit of a free-for-all, the seniors all eager to make a lasting impression on the younger students.  He’d heard of students dying from pranks gone wrong and while he didn’t exactly believe that it still seemed best to avoid attracting attention.  The three took another step forward.

“Heysa!” They heard a high-pitch squeal behind them.  “Heysa, scuzie, oh pardon me boyo, oh.  Pleasa, yousa movsa?  Hero coming through!”  They turned to see Baborak in his Gungan costume, elongated arms flapping around as he shouted at everyone and pushed his way to the front.  Some resisted, some got out of the way, but everyone was laughing.  Gungans were the fools of the galaxy, everyone knew that.  Someone stuck out a foot and he fell on his face.  But he’d hardly landed when he bounded back up again, turning around.  “Ohsa, yousa vewwwwwwwwy naughty.  Going to the bossoh with mesa, eh?”  Turning around, he sang “Vewwwwwwwwy naughty,” as he pushed forward.  Caleb raised his hand, “Hey Baborak, over here!”
“Yeesah, weesa have arrived!”  He gave an exaggerated bow, his costume ears nearly touching the floor, and stood again.  Buk smirked at Baborak, but inside he was worried.  Next to the Vidya and Caleb’s costume he felt he could blend in.  But next to Baborak’s elaborate display it was quite clear how little effort he’d put into his.  Shouldn’t have put it off for so long.
He looked Vidya up and down again.  Even in her costume he found her attractive.  Tonight is the night, he reminded himself.

Finally, the four friends were at the front of the line.  Vidya stepped forward first, eager to get the check-in over with.
“Vidya Terry, a Mon Calimari, at the Empire’s service.”
“Aah, our first squidface,” One of the stormtroopers chuckled.  “We’ve been told to keep a special eye out on your kind tonight.  Tell me, you ever eat shrimp, Vidya?”
Vidya paused, unsure what they wanted to hear.  Probably the most embarrassing thing.  “Yes, whenever I can get my hands on it.  Imagine my shock when I learned I ruined a family reunion, digesting my cousins.”
The stormtroopers laughed raucously.  “Alright, get in fish-for-brains.  Next!”

Buk stepped forward.  “Buk Iazzi, a Balosar, at the Empire’s service.”  The stormtroopers examined him closely.  Suddenly standing one shouted “Looks more like a human?!  What’s this, a reb-”
“No, no,” Caleb stepped to Buk’s side.  This is what happened to him last semester.  Students who arrived without a costume, or a clearly last minute one, were considered to have come to the party as Rebels and treated accordingly.  “He’s really a Balosar.  See the antennae?”  He pointed.
“Aah,” The stormtrooper said, sitting back down, clearly disappointed.  “From?”
“Corellia.”
“Mmmmm,” the stormtrooper mumbled.  “Soon we’ll have the core cleared of all you vermin.  What’s the antennae do, anyway?”
“All the better to hear drug deals going on,”  Buk said.
The stormtroopers laughed and one said, “Addicts, each and every one of ya.  What’s your friend?”
“Caleb Suttle, a Gran, at the Empire’s service.”  One of the stormtroopers knocked one of his eyestocks and Caleb gave an exaggerated yelp.  “What’s that third eye do?”
“For catching Rebels, sirs.”
“Put it to good use tonight.  Catch us one and we may give you a morsel from the officer’s table.”  Caleb bowed, his eyestocks bouncing with the motion.  “Alright, get in and out of my sight!”  Caleb and Buk joined Vidya inside. 

Baborak was next.  “Awwww, yeesa!  Moyo moyo welcome and thanksee from all Naboo.”
“And thanks to Naboo for our wonderful emperor.” The Stormtroopers said, barely suppressing their laughter at the performance.
“Yeesa, Palpateeno vewy famous now!  My uncle privileged to clean toilet at Palpatine-ee museum – vewy lucky!”
“And what is your name, swamprat?”
“Baborak Labor, at the Empire’s servissssssssss”
“Alright, get in.”

Together again, the four looked around the room.  On an elevated platform above they saw a large group of stormtroopers sitting at a table, talking and laughing and toasting.  To their left were tables and chairs for everyone else.  On the far side of the dance floor was a buffet layout of food from a variety of planets.  Well, not really.  The culinary school at the academy made imitation food from different planets occupied by the Empire.  It looked the part, but each was stuffed with a mix of spices and beans and nuts.  The best one could hope for was something passable.  Occasionally food was so bad it caused vomiting.
“Let’s grab some food and pay our respects,” Vidya said in her grumbling accent.  The four picked up pieces of Corellian flat cake and turned toward the troopers on the raised platform.  When they had their attention they bit in.  They each gave cries of disgust but chewed and swallowed dutifully.  One of the stormtroopers yelled something and then they turned back to their tables.
“OK, let’s find it a place to sit,” Buk said over the music.  The first table they came to already had a Wookie and a Jawa sitting together.  “Nice costume, who’d you rip it off from?” Caleb said to the Jawa.
The Jawa responded unintelligently and the Wookie roared loudly.  They must have some vocal enhancer in that outfit, Caleb thought.
“No way,” Buk said.  “At least let’s find some who speak basic.”

A white-furred Bothan was at the next table.
“I’m surprised they let you in here,” Vidya said taking a seat.  “I heard all the Bothans had joined the Rebellion.”
The Bothan let out a deep laugh, then continued in a growling accent.  “They certainly gave me hell, yes.  But not all of us have abandoned Correct Development.” She dropped her accent, “My mother actually employs several in our home.  Great servants, except when their fur gets in the food.  And when doesn’t it, am I right?”
“Weesa gladly serves the Naboo.  We maksa bathrooms shine!  We are proud to serve.”
“Well, not all aliens can be as wonderful as a Gungans,” the Bothan responded.  She turned to Caleb, “And you.  How many Gran serve in your household?”
“Oh, uhhhh, none.  We don’t have servants, and the mines are too valuable to let them work in them.  Gran mostly run the shops.”
“Mines and Gran, mines and Gran,” The Bothan repeated, looking up to the ceiling.  “And you mentioned shops.  You’re Caridan?”
“Yeah!”  Caleb exclaimed.  “How did you know?”
“I aced my cosmography classes all through secondary school, and the one I’m taking this semester.”  The Bothan turned to Vidya.  “You’re from Mon Calimari, obviously.”  And to Buk, “And you’re…. you can’t be a human or they would have announced Rebel infiltration.   Species identification isn’t my strong suit, you know.”
“I’m a Balosar.”
“Balosar…”
“I’m from Corellia,” Buk offered.
The Bothan lightly hit the table with her fist.  “Corellia, one of the major manufacturers of starships, but besides that a dangerous smuggler’s den.  I’m surprised the Empire hasn’t done more to clear the riff-raff.”
Buk just nodded.

“Oh, forgive me,” The Bothan said.  “My name is Ja-Jojinn, from Botawui, obviously.  And all of you are…?”
They all introduced themselves.
“My friends will be here soon, I hope.  You will have to leave when they come, of course.”
“What?” Vidya asked firmly.
“This is my table, I was here first.”
“What if we don’t want to?” Caleb said, his voice rising.  “We got here before them.”
Ja-Jojinn scoffed.  “Don’t make a scene, alright?  You can stay until they come.  That’s fa-”

They were interrupted by two Stormtroopers, one of whom slammed a gloved fist on the table.  He glared at Vidya.  “Another fishface, come to pay their respects to the Empire.  Well, go on, then.”  The other had laid shot glasses out on the table and were filling them from a little glass vial. “This is topshelf stuff!  Well, topshelf for your kind.”  Vidya and the others picked up their drinks, but Ja-Jojinn just stared at it.
“What’s wrong, furface?  You wouldn’t want us to tell the Emperor of your lack of enthusiasm.”
“But I don’t even know her!  Whatever problem you have with her, I’m not part of it.”
“What’s this?” The other trooper turned to face the Bothan squarely.  “That voice sounds awful human.  You wouldn’t be a hu-”
“Oh, alright,” Ja-Jojinn said, growling again.  “If it’s for the Emperor.”
“They are,” The troopers said, now pouring another glass and pushing it towards her. “Make us a toast, scum.”
She picked up a glass, and the stormtroopers thrust the other into her other hand.  She hesitated briefly before saying, “To the Emperor, a great man and powerful leader.  How fortunate are we to live under his reign.  To the Emperor!”
“To the Emperor!”  Everyone echoed.  The yellow liquid burned as it went down their throats, and Caleb hit his chest a few times to ease its passing.  When he looked up, the stormtroopers were gone.
“Vile,” Buk groaned.
“Weesa rather drink froma the swampsa!”
Ja-Jojinn was resting her arms on the table, breathing slowly.  “Seems like the right time to bring this out,” Vidya pulled an arm into her shirt, and when it came out again she was holding a bottle in it.  She filled up their glasses, then she reached towards Ja-Jojinn and filled up one of hers.  “A bit of a cleanse from that acid,” she said.  Ja-Jojinn slowly looked up, her narrow, almond-shaped eyes unfocused, and whispered, “Thanks.”
Vidya picked up her glass.  “To the Empire!”  The blue liquid left a cool feeling in their throats.  Vidya filled another round, spilling some of the drink as she began to feel it in her system.  Ja-Jojinn pushed the second cup away.  “Nomore, she mumbled.
“Bothans, buncha light-weights.” Vidya said.
“No use letting it go to waste,” Buk said, leaning forward and swiping the cup.  As they drained their glasses, Ja-Jojinn suddenly stood up.  “Gotta go!”  She said as she ran with a hand over her mouth.

A few minutes later the music lowered and the PA system cracked to life.  “Attention, subjects, attention.  Take a seat.  We would like to thank you for coming to the 19th annual celebration of our glorious Empire.  While we are sorry you are born as an inferior breed, that doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate our Emperor like full citizens.  In fact, it’s required!  So go on, get up and dance – or else.”  A few white bolts of light shot from the raised table as the stormtroopers waved blasters in the air and descended down the steps.
“Weesa gonna parrrrrrrteeeeeeee!”  Baborak yelled, grabbing Vidya and Caleb and tearing them out of their seats.  Caleb grabbed Buk by the back of his shirt, hauling him to the dance floor, too.  The four friends danced together and whooped compliments to the Emperor.  When the stormtroopers came by they couldn’t help but laugh at Baborak’s antics, even as they tried to maintain their strict discipline.  The stormtroopers moved on.
Caleb looked at Vidya and he swore when their eyes met it meant something.  Filled with more than just confidence Caleb took a few steps toward V, imagining her hips shaking in the blocky costume.
“Watch it!” A coneheaded alien pushed him back. “Why even have three eyes if you’re not gonna watch where you’re going.”
Caleb took a moment to steady himself and then said “I guess tall brains aren’t that good.”
“What?  Shut up.”  The Cerean walked away.  V was still there, but had stopped dancing.  Undeterred, Caleb continued his advance.  But when he got close, she held out a hand.
“Stop, Caleb.  Look, up there.”  She pointed a bulky finger to a stormtrooper on one of the catwalks.
Caleb gyrated as he responded, “What?  Yeah, lots of them are above us.”
“No, no.” She said, dropping her accent. “That’s a real nerfing blaster he’s got, Cay.  I heard it whine as it primed.”
“You heard it over all this?”  Caleb said motioning generally as he danced.
“It’s an important sound to recognize!” She insisted.
“OK, and?”
“And that’s dangerous!  Seriously, chill with your…. Wiggling.”
Caleb stopped moving.  “My-” Caleb didn’t know what to say, so the sentence died before he finished it.

She turned around, adjusting her mask to see clearly.  “I wonder what he’s aiming at.”  Looking at the wall she saw a few stacked barrels.
“What?  Aren’t you gonna tell me anything?” Caleb’s irritation leaked into his voice.
Buk suddenly came over and put his hand on their shoulders.  “What’s going on?”  Caleb noticed, or thought he noticed, Buk’s fingers rubbing Vidya’s shoulder.
“We gotta get out of here,” Vidya said, squirming out of his grip.
“What?” Buk dropped his nasally accent.  “We can’t leave.  What if we get caught by one of the nighttime patrols?  They’ll kick our ass.”
“Theesa party isn’t over!”  Baborak said as he shuffled over, too.  “Weesa gottsto dance for the Emperorino.”
“Alright, well, let’s go dance on the other side of the room.”  Vidya took a step back, but stopped. “Hey!”  She suddenly shouted.
“Yeah?” Caleb said eagerly.
“Not you,” Vidya groaned and pushed him aside, running towards the barrels.
“I thought you said we should be going the other way!  Hey, wait a minute!”  Turning around Caleb saw Vidya beckoning urgently with her hands.  Who was she talking to?  He couldn’t see.  But the next thing he knew Vidya was running by them again with a Bothan in tow.
Then Caleb heard the unmistakable pew, followed by a clank and a long hiss.  Vidya fell to the ground, pulling the Bothan with her.  The music kept going, but many people stopped dancing to see what the commotion was.  A few stormtroopers looked in their direction and began walking over.  Above him, Caleb heard a whine as the blaster charged again, and he swore he even heard the click of the trigger.  “Get down!”  Vidya shouted from the floor before turning her face toward the durasteel floor and covering the back of her head with her hands.  Caleb dropped, and as his knees hit the floor there was another pew.  But instead of a clank there was a whirlwind of sound all around him.

When it subsided, Caleb carefully raised his eyes to see a pile of what looked like cream on the ground.  With the lights still low it was hard to be sure.  Getting up with some of the others, Caleb went over to the pile on the ground.  “What is it?”  Caleb asked.
“Engine cream,” Buk said, coming up behind him. He sniffed loudly through his nose.  “Yeah, this stuff is all over Corellia – all over the galaxy, really, but you can’t smell it in a starship.  It helps keep engines from overheating.  Very heat absorbent, which makes it very hot, for a moment.  It should be cool now, though.
Buk touched it with his hand.  The cream caved under the light pressure, but retook its form when he took his hand away.  “Yep, engine cream.  Harmless now, but, well, when it’s hot, it’s HOT.  It just doesn’t stay hot for long.  Shit, look over there!”  Following Buk’s finger, Caleb and the others looked at the raised platform, which was now precariously dangling from its suspensions.  The cream had disintegrated the durasteel chain.  There was a pile of chairs and tables on the floor.

A crash from the stage captured their attention.  Turning towards it they saw one of the speakers had been knocked over and the other looked as if it had been melted a bit.  The warped music was soon drowned out by a booming voice.  “Alright, you Sarlaac Snacks!  I don’t know who did this, but you’re all gonna pay for it, y’here?”  Craning their necks they saw General Deeus standing at the entrance.  Everyone snapped to a salute.  “Yeah, you nerf-nuzzling idiots.  Up to camp, now!  And take those uniforms off – you don’t deserve to wear the Empire’s finery.  Come on, move it, move it!”  The stormtroopers around them pulled their uniforms off and filed out the door in their underwear.  When the last senior had left, the General bellowed, “And what are you scum staring at?  Clean up this mess you made.  We need this room spotless for Imperial business tomorrow, you hear me?”
“Sir, yes sir!”  The crowd shouted in unison back.  The door slammed behind him.

The lights came on to full brightness and some modified cleaning droids filed into the room as their closets opened.  Modified because they didn’t do any cleaning – only handed their supplies to the nearest students.
Buk and Caleb both grabbed vacuums and got to work sucking up the cream, which was beginning to lose its shape and collapse into a puddle.
“That’sa not how to cleansa,” They heard Baborak’s voice from the stage.  They were surprised he was still using his accent.  “On Naboo, we Gungans privileged to clean.  Swamp vewwy doity, and so we have mastered cleaning.  Get up, meesa show you.  Come on, meesa show you!”

|2|

“Caleb!” Buk nudged me with an armored elbow.  I looked over at him.  “Stop staring, or he’ll know we’re talking about him.”  Buk said in a harsh whisper.
“Relax, he’s gotta know everyone talks about him,” Vidya said, also keeping her voice down.
“You’d think someone with that much attention would have more friends,” Ja-Jojinn said.
“Not that kind of attention,” Buk said, shoveling a spoonful into his mouth.  He looked briefly over his shoulder at the officers’ table, elevated on a platform above us.  Ever since he’d shown up at the start of their final semester they’d only given him hell.  Better him than us, though.
“Still,” I said, pushing the slop on my plate around with my fork.  “Kinda cool to have a real pilot on campus, right?”
“Yeah, a reject pilot,” Ja-Jojinn spat.  “I heard his engines died as soon as he took off – didn’t even make it out of atmo.”
“That even wouldn’t be his fault, it'd be the crew's” Vidya said, and slapped Ja-Jojinn on the back of the head.  “Come on, don’t be dense.”
“Hey, quit it!”  Ja-Jojinn shouted, grabbing her wrist away resting her hand back on her head.  Vidya resumed petting.
“Still” Ja-Jojinn said. “Can’t help but be curious.  Can you imagine how he feels?  Graduating this place only to be sent back?  I cannot wait to get out of here.”
“Musta done something real bad for that.” Buk said.

As we were finishing our food, General Issimo came down the steps from his platform.  “You recruits are all in Section 2C, correct?”
Buk hurriedly stood up and saluted, and put on his commander’s tone.  “Yes, sir, General.  We have flight training next, sir.”
“Excellent.”  The General whistled through his lips.  “Hey Rook!  C’mere!
The loner ran over to the General and gave a crisp salute.
“At ease, soldier.  Time for your flight training.  Or re-training, should I say?”
“Yes, sir.” He said.
“These fine recruits will escort you.”
“Yes, sir.” He said again.
“Well?  Go get your uniform on." Buk motioned to all of us in our stormtrooper armor. "We don't have all day."  Bodhi looked down to the ground and started to say something.
“I did not say walk with him as peers,” the General interrupted.  “Indeed you are not peers – Private Bodhi Rook has seen more action than all of you combined, though apparently he is not better for it.  When I said escort him, I meant as a prisoner.”  He unclipped some bronze binders from his belt.  “Get your stuff, then,” He said to Bodhi, who quickly dashed away.  “Here,” He said, handing the binders to me.  “They pinch wrists if you do it wrong, so don’t worry if you don’t know how to use them, eh?”  He laughed and walked away.

Bodhi returned with his backpack on.  “Alright,” he said forcing a smile.  “So how shoul-“
“Hands up!”  I screamed.  This was my chance to impress him, and I wouldn’t miss it.
Bodhi let out a shriek but quickly stifled it.  “Aah, I see.”  He said blandly as he put his hands over his head.  Suddenly I realized that wasn’t actually what I needed him to do.
“What’s this?  Going to perform for us?  I said behind your back, ingrate!”
Bodhi glared at me – he wasn’t buying it for a second.  Not like that mattered. “Ok, ok,” Bodhi said slowly easing his hands down.
I took the binders and wrapped them around his wrists and locked them in tight.  “Alright, scum.  You’re coming with us.”
Looking up I saw the General and other officers nodding approvingly, and other people further away were laughing.  I turned to Buk.  “Commander?”
I saw his eyes quickly dart up to the officer’s tables.  His smile disappeared and his voice deepened again.  “Nice job, soldier.”  He turned to everyone else, “Alright, grab your gear and let’s go.  Our first prisoner escort.  Let’s make the Emperor proud.”

Unfortunately, it was raining outside so there were few students to show off our new captive to.  To attract the attention of those who were outside Buk led us in a few marching song.

People say th’ Empire steals
I just say that’s how it feels
When crooks see justice in the eye
Most of them would rather die
Freedom isn’t really free
It d’pends on folk like you and me.
Left, right, left, right.

We took Bodhi off the paved walkways and made him slop through the mud with us.  Oh, he must have been really impressed with us.  Going lean on him would only have bred contempt from him, really.  Contempt to grievance to ever-lasting fighting, wasn’t that the theory?  The best way to earn someone’s respect was to treat them like everyone else.  Then, after flight training, maybe I could walk back with him to the residence hall.  He’d tell me what it was like to be fighting the Rebels for real. 
Walking by the old quad Vidya and Buk saw three firsties heading toward the dorm.  They were each carrying a stack of boxes in their arms.  Vidya and Buk broke off our formation to intercept them.  Ja-Jojinn and I adjusted to keep a perimeter around Bodhi.
Vidya and Buk shouted at the first-years, one of whom was so surprised he dropped all the boxes he was holding, spilling its contents.  Vidya and Buk raised their weapons, and continued berating the group.  Behind Bodhi I whispered through my helmet’s filter, “I bet that takes you back.”
“Ohh, yeah.”  He said flatly.  “Really, really missed this place.”
“How real is this stuff?  Do we really just get to lord it over the Rebels everywhere we go?”
“Couldn’t say, I was a pilot.”
“Was?” I needled him.
“My heart was never in it.”
Teasing’s boring if he wasn’t going to argue.  I looked back up.  Boxes littered the ground, and the first-years were on the ground, sticking their heads in the boxes and eating whatever was there.  Finally, when all the boxes were empty, Vidya and Buk holstered their weapons and sent the firsties on their way.

“Serves them right,” Ja-Jojinn said.
“For what?”  Bodhi asked.
"For having stupid faces, for all I care." She said as Vidya and Buk rejoined us.
“Those firsties stole some cakes from a shipment.  The nerve is incredible, we never would have tried that!  We made the three of them eat them all.  They’ll never want cake again after today, and who knows if their friends will believe we forced them to do it.”  We all laughed as Buk and Vidya reintegrated into formation.  “Alright, troops, double time or we’ll be late.  Bodhi, keep up.”

The entrance to the flight school was a plain steel booth, with stairs leading directly into a lift tube.  Buk said the passcode and we all relaxed our stances as the tube closed and slid downward.
“Familiar, Bodhi?” Buk asked.
“Yeah.  If someone could take off these binders though.”
“Not until the captain sees," Buk said.
“Aah, yes.  Won’t he be thrilled to see me again.”
“Not his best student?”  Vidya asked.
“No, THE best.”
“But couldn’t cut it in the real world?” Ja-Jojinn said.
“It’s complicated.” Bodhi said firmly.

The lift tube opened into the training school.  Lights and buttons littered the silver walls.  Several doorways opened to simulation rooms, with large chairs on springs and headsets hanging from the ceiling.  On either side of the main room were corridors of lockers.
“Aah, so the legend has returned!”  Captain Panlox clapped his hands.  “Bodhi Rook!  I didn’t believe it when the report came in, but here you come in cuffs like a prisoner.  Oh-ho, how the mighty have fallen.  How delicious.  Commander?”
Buk went over to Captain Panlox.  I unlocked Bodhi’s binders, leaning in to say “Legend, hm?” then went to my locker to change out of my uniform.  I shook my head as I took off my helmet, feeling the sweat and rainwater shake off me.  The uniforms weren’t the most comfortable thing in the first place, and marching through rain in them always made them much worse.
“Hit the showers,” Panlox yelled as more students entered the training facility.  “You all stink worse than the inside of a Tauntaun.  I won’t have that on my equipment.  And clean your uniforms.  Show some respect for the Empire.”
“You heard him, Bode,” Buk said, wrapping a towel around himself.  “Clean our uniforms.  Don’t forget the girls, too.”  Buk snickered and we high-fived.  Bodhi dutifully picked up our uniforms and took them to the cleaning station.  It was strange that he never argued back, like he didn’t care what we thought of him.  I guess real combat shows what’s really important.

I strapped into the simulator chair as Buk was explaining the mission through the headset.  “Panlox wants us to fly cover for Sabre squadron bombers as they take out a suspected Rebel base on Kashyyyk.  Expect X-wings and some turbolaser fire.”
We all let out a groan into our headsets.  Bombing escorts were one of the most boring missions imaginable, and one we’d run several times before, though not in a while.  We’d long since moved on to other objectives.
“I know, I know,” Buk said.  “So stay sharp.  Expect something funny.  Alright wings, check your systems and report in.”

I looked around my holo-vision, checking lights and flipping switches in my pre-flight protocol.  Weapons, engines, vision, flight yaw, joystick loose, buttons working.  Everything but the real thing.
“Shadow 3, ready standing by.”
“Alright, let’s get in and get out.  Show Panlox we haven’t rusted up.”
Pulling back on my throttle the seat below me began to shake and twist like it would in a real fighter.  I felt goosebumps on my arms and legs.  I wonder if Bodhi still gets goosebumps.  Turning the ship towards the docking bay exit I followed the others out into the atmosphere.  My ears adjusted to the constant whir of the engines, and my body had already become numb to the constant vibrations of my seat.
“There they are, quadrant one-point-five,” Buk said over the headset. “Form up on me and Shadow 2,  Delta pattern.”  Vidya and Buk flew forward as I shifted the power of my own engines to fall in line with Ja-Jojinn.  I saw the three bombers making their runs, and some red laserfire coming from the ground.
“Shadow 2 and 4, go harass those turrets and draw their fire while the bombers hit them.”  Buk ordered.  “Shadow 3, watch the air with me for X-wings.”
“Copy that,” Vidya and Ja-Jojijnn said.

I flew over Kashyyyk‘s forests, eyes darting from my viewport to my sensors and back.  As I reached the edge of the engagement sector I eased up on the engines to tighten my turn.  I heard the others celebrate as a turret exploded.
My scanner started beeping.  “Commander,” I said.  “We have three enemy ships entering from two-point-six-seven.  Looks like two X-wings and an A-wing.  Man, those A-wings are fast.”
“Stay focused, soldier.”  Captain Panlox’s voice came over the comms.  “Admiration won’t kill the Rebels.”
“Sorry, sir.”
“Shadow 2, how many turrets left?”
“One live.  No reading on any that are quiet.”
“If they aren’t firing by now let’s assume they’re not there.  Alright, keep drawing that fire from the bombers.  Shadow 3, form up on me and let’s take out one of those X-wings.  Acquire my target.  Shadow 4, you ready to dance with an A?”
“Ready all my life,” Ja-jojinn said. “All power to engines.”
My computer locked onto the X-wing, and I turned until I saw it in my viewport.”
“Shadow 2 as soon as that last turret is down help Shadow 4 with that A-wing.  Looks like we figured out what Panlox was throwing at us after all.  Bet it’s Bodhi in that A.  Stay sharp.”

Buk and I followed our X-wing over the trees.  I fired shots to keep it from turning towards the bombers, and Buk was firing at the rear whenever he had a good shot.  The orange shield flashed at each impact, but the shield was getting fainter.  Suddenly my alarm went off.
“The other X has got me,” I yelled.
“Draw that fighter away from us.”
I rolled to the right, my ship shaking as it got pounded with a couple lasers.  As I righted I was surprised to see my alarm still going.
“I can’t shake him!”  I cried.  I felt sweat pooling onto my forehead.
“Be there soon,” Vidya said.  “Last turret is down.  Angle low.”
“If I go any lower I’d be safer in a speeder bike.”
“Well it’s that or cook, your choice!”  Vidya insisted.
As I tilted my joystick to go towards the treetops, I saw Vidya’s ship come soaring in.  A hail of green lasers flew over me, and my alarm petered out.
“Did you get him?” I asked.
“No, he broke off.” She said.
“Better than nothing,” I said.  “Thanks.”
“No problem.  Ja-Jojinn, let’s get that A-wing.”
“Shadow 3, regroup with me.  My guy’s down some shields.  Let’s take him out.
“On my way,” I said, reacquiring Buk’s target.
“Tail him close.  If he jukes out of your way I’ll give it to him.”
“Affirmative.”

I shifted power to my engines as I followed the X-wing.  As my fighter settled up behind, I fired a few shots to check the shields.  Existing, but dim.  “Shadow 1?”
“I’m in position, let’s-”
Vidya’s voice suddenly interrupted and roared into our headsets.   “I’m hit, I’m going down!” And then it was all static and silence. I felt my heart drop, but just as soon remembered my mission, and then I remembered this was all training, anyway.  Man, I gotta toughen up!
“Stay on target, everyone,” Buk said, coolheaded as always.  “Caleb, fire, fire!” I pushed up my laserpower and clicked the joystick.  Green bolts broke through the shield and pounded the back of the engine.  The X-wing went left and up,  I followed quickly pulling back on the throttle and firing at the underside.  The X-wing exploded and then disappeared from the simulation.
“Scumbag, down!” I cheered, “Scumbag down!”
Panlox came over the radio.  “Don’t waste radio space like that.  Besides, still got two more marks.”

“Nice shot,” Buk said encouragingly, “Ja-Jojinn, how are you doing with that A-wing?”
“Well, I’m still here.  Got a few hits, but he moves fast.  I’ll need one of you to cut him off.”
“We can do that,” Buk said as I finally turned around to rejoin the fight.  “Hey, where’s that X-wing?”
I tapped my control panel and looked out my viewport.  “Up high.  What’s he doing up there?”
“Who knows?” Buk said.  “Alright, Shadow 4 and I will take out this A-wing.  Shadow 3, can you keep an eye on that X?”
“You got it,” I said, shifting power back to engines to resume the chase.  The A-wing was the priority now.  All I had to do was keep the X-wing from interfering.
“Going to five-point-three-one.  Ja-jojinn, keep dancing.  Bring him to three-point-two-seven.  We should converge there”.
The X-wing turned sharply to the right, going directly to that sector. “Oh no you don’t,” I said.  “He’s coming for you guys,” I said.  I shifted more power to engines to keep up the chase.  The X-wing then turned its nose up and flew into the sky again.  I pulled back on my stick, but couldn’t find him through the viewport.  I couldn’t even find him on my sensors.  Unless he was-

My alarm blared and immediately my chair rocked violently from side to side.  My view went black and everything went silent.

A few minutes later, the black turned to glass and I saw the simulation room through the headset.  I lifted it off my head until the suspension wire tightened to dangle it above.  Reaching down I unbuckled myself from the chair, then I went into the main room.
Panlox was standing there with his hands behind his back.  When everyone was back, he turned to Buk.
“Commander – what went wrong?”
“You gave us a diversion!”  Buk unleashed.  “You said there was a bombing run, but instead you put us against a hyped up opponent  without so much as a warning.  A real mission brief would have prepared us for that.”
“Oh?  Captain Panlox said politely.  “And tell me, how good pilots are you all?”
“We’re at least rank 2 and you know it.  Rank 1 when everything comes together.  You did us dirty, sir.”
“And when you attack Rebels, do you announce your rank?”
Buk’s eyes widened, and his stance seemed to shrink.
“The Rebels are not fools, Commander Iazzi.  Sometimes you will fight an ace without warning.  In the real war, mission briefs are guesses, at best.”
“Yes, sir,” Buk said, and the rest of us mumbled our agreement.
“Now, look, I’d love to rub your noses in this more, but there’s someone else who really deserves that honor.”  Panlox walked over to a simulation room and tapped a button to open the door.  Bodhi Rook stood there, with a focus on his dark face I hadn’t ever seen before.  “See?”  He said, turning to Vidya.  “The very best.”  So cool.
“Now,” Captain Panlox said, “That was a pretty good session, defeat notwithstanding.  Let’s go over some maneuvers and then we’ll run some drills.  Bodhi, stay with us?  These kids could learn from you.”

At the end of training Bodhi agreed to join us all for dinner.  Since he still didn’t have a stormtrooper outfit we had to escort him again, but we didn’t put the binders on so tightly this time, and we stayed on the paved paths.  When we left the first-year part of campus, I undid the binders entirely.
We sat down in the dining hall, trays full of overcooked vegetables, hard bread, and steaming slop – blue, this time.
“What’s food like out there?” Ja-Jojinn asked as she put a spoonful in her mouth.  “I heard we only get this crap because all the good rations are going to the front lines.”
Bodhi shook his head as he piled some vegetables on the bread.  “We get crap because all the good rations go to the officers.  And I’m sure the officers say they eat crap because all the good rations go to the Generals.  And they say the good rations go to the Emperor.  It’s all crap!”  We all laughed.  “You’re all good pilots, so you deserve to know,” Bodhi said, glancing at the officer’s platform above before leaning in and lowering his voice.  “They never got rid of Battledroids.  WE’RE the new battledroids – trained to do only one thing.  Every day, it’s the same.  You just kill and kill and kill and kill and.” His voice trailed off, and his eyes seemed to be looking right through us.
“Hard-core,” Vidya whispered.
“But that’s fine, right?” Buk said cautiously.  “I mean, you’re an ace pilot.  We saw.”
Bodhi looked down at the table.  “The controls just make sense to me.  But the fighting…. There’s no thrill in a real fight.  It’s just a job.  At the end of the day, you’re trying to kill them before they kill you first.”
“Exactly!”  I shouted.  “Fighting’s a tough job, but somebody’s got to do it.  The Rebels attacked my home planet when I was younger.  They killed my sister and a lot of other recruits, too.  That’s why I’m here and not the academy on Carida.  And that’s why I won’t stop fighting till each and every Rebel is good and dead!"
Bodhi looked down at his food.  I think I really impressed him.  He took a bite of his meal and winced.  “This bread could break teeth!  It’s a wonder we don’t use this crap as TIE armor!”  We all laughed again.

An officer came down to our table some time later.  “Rook?  Your reassignment just came in.” She slapped a scandoc on the table.  “Report to the south landing pad in 2 hours.”
“Two hours?!”  Bodhi exclaimed.  “That’s hardly enough time to…” He turned to us.  “Sorry to cut this short, I got to go.”  The officer headed back to her table.
“What’s the reassignment to?”
“Uhhh,” He plugged the scandoc into his reader.  “Cargo pilot.  Sector T10.”
“Cargo?!” I cried.
“T10.”  Ja-Jojinn said thoughtfully, turning her eyes upward.  “Eadu, and Kessel.”  She looked straight ahead again, speaking normally.  “Not exactly the front lines any more.”
“Thankfully.” Bodhi said, pulling his backpack on.
“But cargo?!” I cried again.  "What an insult!  You’re a great pilot, Bode.  The Empire needs more of you, not less.  You’re a natural born killer!”
He took a step toward me, his brown eyes blazing.  “Well, what if I don’t want to be, hm?” He hissed.  “War’s messier than the sims, you know!  Skill isn’t as important as dumb luck.  Take an unlucky shot and that’s it!  I’ve lost too many friends that way, and I’m sick of it.”  And with that, Bodhi Rook walked out of our lives.

“Whoa,” I said, as the door closed behind him.  I turned around to the others.  “Bodhi’s legit.”  I sat down as the others nodded.
Slowly, the hum of conversation and clanking of dishware returned to the dining hall.
“Think we’ll get like that when we’re out there, you know, fighting the good fight?” Buk finally asked.
“Nah,” Vidya chuckled.  “We’re gonna go way darker.”
“I heard of a stormtrooper once,” Ja-Jojinn said, “Guard at a prisoner camp.  Killed a whole wing of prisoners for looking at him funny.”
“Well,” Buk added, “I heard of a bomber squad – took out a whole city because a laser turret scratched their lead’s paintjob.”
I let out a laugh.  “That’s nothing.  When I’m out there, I’ll make whole planets burn.”

 

Copyright ©️ 2021 Maslow Stories.


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I consider this story still a draft (This even more than the others). I edit it occasionally. If you have any feedback for me, I'd love to hear it! Email me at armaslow@gmail.com. Please put "Star Wars Stories" in the subject line. Thank you!

Sunday, January 31, 2021

A Bright Center of the Universe

New Republic Justice Committee

Meeting Minutes

15th rotation of the 3rd month of Coruscant

15 ABY

Opening:

The regular meeting of the New Republic Justice Committee was called to order upon the 16th hour of the 15th rotation of the 3rd month of Coruscant in the Red Room by Helter Kuzi.

Attendence:

Leadership:

Helter Kuzi, Senator from Bogdon, Chair

Demir Abaci, SF Tokadana, Ranking member

Dion Jansen, SF Scarl, Vice Chair

Other Members

Linette Forve, Senator from Raithal

Regufar Collar, SF Bilbringi

Synthia Zelin, SF Ansion, secretary

Rashah Salder, SF Mon Calamari

Thakor Flan’do, SF Chandrila

Hatch Suim, SF Sochi

Jocasta Reznor, SF Ulmatra

Tied Ors-Quy, SF Ryloth

Honored Guests:

Mon Mothma, Chancellor of the Senate of the New Republic

Rica Mwinyi, Representative of the Office of Reconstruction

Mureli Sahora, Representative of the Alderaan diaspora

Regrets:

Maruj Vazin’I, Senator from Corellia.  Regret received five days prior to meeting, citing family emergency.  Soursar Amiri designated as liaison and received.

Dinn Guelleh, SF Aduba. No official regret received, though Abaci says Guelleh told him personally this morning.  No liaison designated.

Leonardo Guelleh, representative of the Office of Legal Policy.  Regret received three days prior to meeting, citing prior commitment.  No liaison designated.

Other attendees:

Soursar Amiri, Republic Citizen, of Corellia, designated liaison to Maruj Vazin’l, Senator from Corellia.

Tao Eroglu, Republic citizen, of Yavin 7

Indra Lai, of Anoat

Approval of Agenda:

The agenda was approved by majority (10-1) as distributed.  Linette Forve voted against.  Forve explained her objection by saying she wished to bring up the events on Carida.  Helter Kuzi said she could bring it up after the conclusion of new business if time allowed.

Approval of Minutes:

The minutes of the previous meeting were unanimously approved as distributed.

Business from Previous Meeting:

Jocasta Reznor reported positive ongoing progress on the unionization of the Kessel workforce.  She will continue to update this committee.

New Business:

Mureli Sahora requests reparations for Alderaanians, in light of the destruction of their planet.  She previously made this request to the Office of Reconstruction, which directed her to the Treasury Department, which directed her to this committee.  She suggested reparations could be compelled from ex-Imperials.

Chancellor Mon Mothma spoke on the importance of the New Republic using the law, not government policy, to right the wrongs of the Empire, though she did not endorse Sahora’s suggestion.  She said this committee should prioritize this issue since Alderaan’s destruction is the best known wrong throughout the galaxy.

By majority vote (9-2), this committee recommends the Department of Justice investigate the feasibility of addressing the situation of Alderaanian refugees in a court of law.  Regufar Collar and Rashah Salder voted against.  They explained their objection by saying such a destructive event cannot possibly be rectified through a court of law and is outside the purview of this committee.  Per Mothma’s endorsement, and in light of the fact Sahora has already been bounced around the bureaucracy a few times, this committee makes this recommendation to the Department of Justice with high and urgent priority.

Additions to the Agenda:

Linette Forve brought up Carida, claiming the fallout from the looming crisis risks the stability of nearby systems.  However, because the Alderaanian discussion took up so much time, Chairman Helter Kuzi suggested the item be tabled until next meeting.  Kuzi also says the delay will allow this committee to hear from Republic citizens in that and nearby systems before making any recommendations.  By majority vote of 6-4-1, this committee added this item to the agenda for the next meeting.  Forve, Regufar Collar, Rashah Salder, and Hatch Suim voted against.  Kuzi abstained.  Forve and Suim explained their objection by saying their systems are near Carida and they would like to see action sooner than later.  Collar and Salder explained their objection by saying such a volatile situation cannot possibly be rectified through a court of law and is outside the purview of this committee.  Kuzi explained his abstention by saying he had called for the tabling and wished to let the rest of the committee decide.

Agenda for Next Meeting:

Response to the events on Carida with whatever representatives from that and surrounding systems who can be present as honored guests.

Adjournment:

The meeting was adjourned two hours after it began by Helter Kuzi.  The next meeting will be on the 25th rotation of the 4th month, 15 ABY, in the Red Room.

***

Solicitor General Kaz D’nommah walked briskly through the brown double doors leading to the conference room.  Most of the cushioned chairs were already full and the chatter died down as soon as he entered.  As was his habit, he got right to business.
“We got a hell of a job ahead of us,” He said, waving the Justice Committee electro-memo he had received.  “Everyone ready?  We need to put the Empire on trial.”
The room erupted in laughter.  The Empire had been broken for several years.  Sure, some warlords still held onto the dream.  Several “emperors” and “supreme leaders” even lived in the outer rim.  But the Republic had returned, and the Empire’s defeat was no longer a strategic priority.
“I wish I were joking.” Kaz shouted over the laughs, “We need to find justice for Alderaan.”
Silence engulfed the room.  The Empire’s floundering was a joke; The destruction of Alderaan was not.  Even 15 years later only the bravest, or brashest, jokesters and poets dared touch it.  It was a tragedy beyond words.

“That’s what I thought.”  Kaz said sharply, one of his tongues lapping quickly at his eye.
“Excuse me, sir.”  A bothan said.  “I haven’t heard the Chancellor say anything about this.”
“It wasn’t publicly, it was to the Justice Committee.”  Kaz leaned on the table, making eye contact with everyone in the room as he went on. “It will be better for all of us to follow through before she has to pressure us publicly.”
“Will she?”
“You wanna bet your job on it?”
“I mean-“
“Forget that, Simon.  You wanna bet MY job on it?” Kaz turned to look right at him and roared, “Cause if I get canned because you didn’t think this was urgent enough, you better believe you’re coming down with me.”
Simon’s fur flushed in embarrassment.  Kaz’ reptilian eyes held a steady gaze, but Simon met it.  Embarrassment was inevitable as the New Republic Department of Justice argued how best to meet the myriad of problems they faced.  But weakness was not allowed.  After a few tense moments Kaz broke away.  Simon sighed quietly, already feeling his fur return to brown.

Sometime later Maruj Lai exclaimed, “So, we’ve made no progress at all!”  She threw her hands up in dismay.  “What’s it been, two hours, and we still don’t know who we’re charging, much less with what!”
“Can’t we just tell Chancellor Mothma that this isn’t within the Justice Department’s charter?”  Said Zelru Dahta.  “What she wants is a show, not justice.”
Without moving his head Kaz rolled his eyes up from what he was reading, “You wanna tell her she wants a show trial?”
Zelru knew enough not to take the bait, so he went a different route, “So you don’t disagree with me?”
“Of course not, but who cares.  Yes, this is political.  But the destruction of Alderaan is an unprecedented event.  The Galaxy will truly never recover.  We can do a lot, but we can’t make new rock.  Hey, that’s a good line, someone write that down.  Anyway, the result we need, in a broad sense anyway, is justice.  There are lots of paths to that goal.  We just need to find them and choose one.  Lot, where are you going?”
Lotmornu was heading towards the door.  “Something you said, sir.  It struck a-“ the doors opened automatically in front of him, “I’ll be right back.  Before I forget.”  The doors snapped shut behind him.

“Why do we keep him on?”  Simon asked, chuckling.  “I swear, we should all just swap seats and see if he notices.”
The others laughed.  Some even stood up as Kaz said, “He’s got the finest legal mind in this generation.  Just never put him in front of a jury.  If any of them asked him a question he’d forget it before they were even finished speaking.”
Everyone who had stood up now sat down at different places.  Someone even moved Lot’s papers to a different seat, too.
“You guys are terrible.”  Kaz said, shaking his head.  Then he sighed and went back to his files.
“It’s too bad everyone’s dead.” Maruj suddenly said.
“What did you just say?”  Kaz responded.
“No, no,” Maruj sputtered.  “I, oh, well, if I said it.”  She cleared his throat.  “Look, everyone on that Death Star died.  And we know the engineers died on Eadu.  That’s where I’m stuck.  Even if we could find the right charge, who could we charge?  We can’t charge the dead.”
“Can’t we?”  Zelru said, eyes lighting up.
Can’t we?!”  Simon responded, with increasing urgency.
“Why not?” Said someone else.
Another voice said, “What’s more of a show trial than trying someone who can’t defend themselves.  And who’s going to represent a bunch of dead Imperials?”
“They’d be assigned a public defender,” Someone else chimed in.
Kaz raised one eye from what he was reading.  “So we – the New Republic’s Department of Justice – ride roughshod over some poor public defender assigned to the worst case imaginable?  It would be a public relations fiasco, if the public defender bothered to show up at all.”
“Then tell that to Mon Mothma!”  Zelru shouted.  “If the Alderaanians want restitution they should go through reconstruction, not us.  There they can be resettled, or given protected refugee status, or a tax break – whatever!”

At that point the door opened again and in came Lotmornu with a single piece of paper.  He went to an empty chair, stood behind it, and loudly cleared his throat before reading: “Due to the disaster of Thorgeld, planet modification is hereby banned by Republic statute and also by Galactic consensus.”
There was silence.  Lotmornu smiled widely at the sea of blank faces before him.  He read it again, and then waited.  Everyone knew about Thorgeld, a galactic disaster much older than all of them.  An attempt to terraform the planet had caused a chain reaction in the outer core that caused every volcano to erupt at once, which led to intense and continuous quakes on the planet’s surface.  The planet rapidly became uninhabitable and all the residents were evacuated – those who didn’t perish, of course.
“That’s an Old Republic statute, you pompnut.  How can we charge them under an old law?  Look, it’s even written on paper!” Simon laughed.
“It’s also by Galactic Consensus,” Lot said, gently turning the page around to show them, pointing a long finger at the phrase.
“What the Sithspawn does that mean?” Zelru said.
Kaz spoke up, “It means it’s a permanent law, at least in theory.”
Everyone turned to Kaz, who motioned to Lot.  “Surely you know more.”
“Galactic Consensus means every planet signed on to this decree.  Not just their Senators, but also their governments.”
“Never heard of Galactic Consensus.” Maruj said dismissively.
“And why would you?” Lot responded.  “This is the only example of it – I think.”
Simon spoke up, “Wait, what you read mentioned Thorgeld.  That’s about terraforming.  They didn’t terraform Alderaan, they destroyed it.”
Lot said “Terraforming is the common term, of course.  But the language here, in the law, is planet modification.”  When there was no response, he looked over at Kaz and tentatively said, “This might work.”

Kaz’s eyes rolled around in his head in different directions as he thought it over. Suddenly, they snapped into place, looking ahead.
“Hell, we have no other ideas.”  He slammed his fist on the table in satisfaction.  “Plus, this legally links the New Republic with the Old, a bonus I’m sure Chancellor Mothma will appreciate.”
“So we have a charge – but now who?” Zelru said.  “Everyone on the Death Star died.”
Lot twisted his face up.  He shrugged and sat down at his new seat.
“Wait a minute,” Simon said, “We keep saying everyone on the Death Star died, but that was at the battle of Yavin.”
“Yes, and?”
“That’s not when Alderaan was destroyed.”
“What are you getting at?” Kaz said cautiously.
“Alderaan was destroyed before then.  And there was someone on the Death Star then who survived.  In fact, she’s still alive even now.”
The blank looks around the table disappointed him.

***

“I can’t believe you’re even going to this meeting.”  Han complained loudly as the garbage disposal continued to choke.  He turned it off and went back to his knees.
“Duty calls, even in retirement,” Leia said wearily.  “Though if it wasn’t about Alderaan I don’t think I would go.”
“I swear,” Han grunted.  “If Ben weren’t at school I’d say he broke this thing.  I don’t understand it.”
“Maybe if you-” She stopped.   Maybe if you gave the control panel a good knocking.  But with the Falcon still missing she knew not to push that button.  “Should I get anything for you on my way home?”
“Nah,” he said, head thrust into the appliance control mainframe.  She picked up her blue purse and put it over her shoulder.  She walked over to him and put a hand on his back.  He pulled himself out and looked up.  “No, but thanks for asking.”  Then quickly, “Well, actually, now that I think about it, grab some red berrycakes.  Chewy’s lifeday is this weekend.”
“I thought you were going to get those.”  She said, looking down at him.
An emotion flashed in his eyes, but he waited a moment before calmly responding, “I forgot.  Mind helping me out?”
“Aren’t you glad I checked.”
“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” he mumbled.  “I just...”  But his voice quickly trailed off.  The therapist had said it was from a fear of sharing responsibility.  He and Chewbacca had been co-pilots for years but Han had always been the captain.  While she was in government Han had been the captain of the house, but when Leia retired Han had a difficult time sharing responsibility with her.  Finally, he let out a sigh. “I’m tryin’.”
“Well that’s a good start.  And thank you.”  She bent to kiss him and then left.
“Love you!”  He shouted from the kitchen.
“I know,” she responded as the door closed behind her.

Leia went over the message again in her head.  They said they wanted her help in coming up with a plan for getting restitution for Alderaanians.  She had known Mureli was still advocating for her homeworld’s expats to the New Republic.  That the issue hadn’t been addressed when she retired was her only regret.  She had made a point to ask Mon Mothma to prioritize it during their last official meeting.  “Even if no money can actually be handed out the Republic must address the destruction,” she had said to the Chancellor.  “It is the one scar of the Empire we’ll never be able to fully heal.  Alderaannian’s can resettle but eventually their descendants will cease to be Alderannians.  And then Alderaan will truly be gone forever.  A whole culture wiped out.”  Leia wiped a tear from her face as she walked down the street.

She saw Dolay’s diner in the distance.  She had never met Kaz or Simon before, though she was confident they’d recognize her as soon as she walked in.  Even with her brown hair shorter and unbraided people still recognized her regularly.  When she began bringing Ben to school after her retirement it seemed every family member suddenly wanted to bring their own younglings to school for a glimpse at the famous leader.  Han had become a usual sight, and they had learned the hard way he was not great at making small talk.  But, as an ambassador, small talk was truly her professional skill, and she felt self-conscious enough about her image that she didn’t want anyone to feel they hadn’t had an authentic experience with her.
She had hardly walked in the door that she saw the two aliens waving at her.  Kaz was a Trandoshan and Simon was a Bothan.  They stood and greeted her before ushering her to a backroom.
“The owner is an old friend of mine,” Kaz explained.  “We didn’t want to trouble you to come to our offices, but this meeting isn’t exactly about public information, either.”
“I understand,” Leia said, sitting at the small grey table.  The chair creaked and was quite uncomfortable.

They spoke for a while about the Republic’s state: Status on the deal with the Hutts (Going well.  Turns out they value profits over criminality), elevation of the Ewoks to a Senatorial represented race (With the fall of the Empire old tribal rivalries re-emerged, making the election of a single Senator increasingly contentious), development of more cities on Bespin to meet rising immigration demands (Tibanna gas was always in demand).
“Ambassador Organa,” Kaz said in a voice that told her they were about to come to the point.
“It’s Solo, now, Solicitor General.”
“Aah, my apologies.  Well, as you know, at the Department of Justice our goal is to re-establish the courts as a legitimate grievance route.  Emperor Palpatine continually pressured the courts to give him what he wanted and a generation has grown up seeing the courts as nothing more than a rubber stamp.  While we have specific judicial goals in different sectors, our overall charge is to restore faith in the system.”
“Indeed.” Leia replied, “And I believe taking on the issue of Alderaan is a strong move in that direction.  Its destruction has gone unpunished long enough.”
“Yes,” Simon cut in.  “What we’ve come to do is tell you our strategy in that regard, as you are both a skilled politician and an honored ambassador, as well as Alderaanian, yourself.”
“I am happy to help how I can, though Mureli Sahora is the official advocate of the Alderaanian Dispora.  I’m retired and would like very much to stay that way.  Sahora has my full confidence – always has.”
“Indeed, and ours!”  Simon said, clapping his paws.  “And don’t worry, this doesn’t require any more of you than it would any other private citizen in your position.”
“So, what’s your idea and how can I help?”  She asked bluntly.
Simon turned to Kaz, who took over again.  “We are going to put the Empire on trial.  Through a rigorous legal process we will show that the destruction of Alderaan broke an old law against terraforming.”
“Old like Old Republic?  How can you charge someone with an Old Republic law?”
“It was passed with Galactic Consensus.  Do you know the phrase?”
Leia shook her head.
“The law banning terraforming – legally known as planet modification –  passed the Senate unanimously and also was signed by every represented planet’s local government. Thus Galactic Consensus.”
“Was that normal?”
“Scragg, no!  Unanimous passage of, well, anything in the Senate is basically unheard of.  And while local governments technically were supposed to sign off on laws passed by their Senatorial representatives, this had become a rather empty ritual.  Most local governments stopped bothering thousands of years ago.  But Thorgeld was such a disaster that most governments were only too eager to be seen as officially decrying it.  Anyway, there is a statute that if every planet’s government signs off on a law it becomes Galactic Consensus, the highest form of law.  In theory, it becomes a perpetual law.”
Leia nodded her head curiously, unsure where Kaz was going.
“If we try the Empire under an Old Republic law that is supposed to be permanent we connect the Old Republic with our New one.  Also, at this point, terraforming is really only for mad scientists.  Even the ex-imperials running around with their amnesty cards won’t push back.  So we have a legal and political path, agreed?”
“Right,” she responded carefully.  Why won’t you get to the point?
“But do you see the problem?”  Simon asked suddenly.
She thought about it for a moment.  “Well, no.  This all seems well and good, if a long shot.”
“The problem is that all the Imperials on the Death Star died at Yavin.”
Before Leia could react, Kaz took over again.  “The Emperor was notorious for his show trials.  He’d try everyone he wanted, even if they didn’t come to the court.  Sometimes he wouldn’t even bother telling them they were on trial.  He’d get them convicted and then suddenly Stormtroopers come pounding down their door for not serving their sentence.  So trying the dead won’t cut it.”
“Right.  So what’s this got to do with me?”
“Well,” Simon said again.  “What I said isn’t entirely true.  Not everyone who was on the Death Star at that time is dead.  When the Empire destroyed Alderaan,” He paused, obviously enjoying the moment, “you were on the Death Star, Ambassador.”
Leia’s indignation poured through her voice. “But I was a prisoner!”
“Yes, and we all appreciate your service.  Now there is one more you must perform.”  Simon’s black eyes lay heavily upon her.  “We must have a defendant.”
“ME?!”  The chair clattered on the floor as she stood.  “What are you talking about?  I did everything I could to protect Alderaan!”  Her face was flush.
“You must forgive Simon here,” Kaz said gently, “he likes to be dramatic.  The truth is we know that.  But we all just agreed a trial with no defendants will only remind people of the Emperor.  We need to charge someone.  If not you, then who?  You were there, were you not?”
“But I didn’t do anything wrong!”
“And so you will be declared not guilty.  But not before we prove - in court – that a crime of planet modification took place.  We demonstrate a legally robust case for the Empire’s greatest crime and you demonstrate your innocence.  We also show the people that the New Republic isn’t afraid to go after its heroes.  Ideals over connections, that kind of thing.”
“And if I refuse?”
“What?”
“What if I don’t want to do this.  What if I don’t like your stupid plan, because it’s stupid.”
Kaz’ response was apologetic, yet firm.  “Oh, you don’t understand, Ambassador Solo.  That’s my fault.  I should have been clearer.  This meeting is informational.  We have already filed our accusations; you should expect to be arrested in a few days.  But we thought it would be prudent to let you know the plan ahead of time.  Please do not flee the system.  It would not be good for your case.”

***

Han answered the knock at the door.  Two uniformed Ithorian’s stood on the stoop.  “Oh, hello, General.”  The shorter one said haltingly.  “We are here with a warrant for Ambassador Solo.”  The taller one held up the metal certificate, the details glimmering in shiny electronic print.  Han squinted at it.
He spoke with a mocking flourish, “She is to be arrested for… this can’t be right.  Planet modification?”
“Yes,” the taller one said firmly.
“Which planet?” Han said, looking at the shorter policeman.  He gulped and looked toward the taller one.
The taller one said, “For the destruction of Alderaan.”
Han gave an exaggerated gasp. “You mean,” he held a hand up over his mouth in mock surprise.  “But officers, why would she destroy her home planet?”
“That is a question for the courts,” the taller one said.  “Now will you please get her, or should I call for her myself?”
“Honey!”  He called back.  “The taxi is here.”  He turned back, brushing some brown hair that fell over his eyes.
“Sir!” The taller one’s voice rose, “We are not a taxi. We are the police and she is under arrest.”

Han just smiled.  He felt bad for taunting the two of them, but only a little.  He didn’t understand governing, which is why he had retired as soon as the Empire surrendered.  But having talked the situation over with Leia these past few days he now wondered how much the New Republic understood governing.
But Kaz had been right.  Fleeing would have only made things worse. Their best response seemed to be to cooperate as much as possible.  But that didn’t stop them from making a few well-placed calls.  Han and Leia were owed favors all over the Republic.  Surely someone would intervene before the trial began.
“Sir,” The shorter officer said, “if she doesn’t come out soon we will have to retrieve her ourselves.”
“She’ll be here in a minute.  Just getting her things.  You know how women are when packing for trips.  Honey!  If you don’t hurry up they will charge you with truancy, too.”
“Truancy!”  She exclaimed, dragging a suitcase as she came down hall.  “Planet modifcation I can handle, but oh not truancy!  I had a perfect attendance record throughout my brief time at the Senate.  What will ever happen to my good name.  Well, here I am boys.”  She turned and kissed Han on the mouth long enough that the taller cop loudly cleared his throat to get them to stop.  “See you soon,” She said as she briskly walked by the officers to their policespeeder.  “Come on, gentlemen, I don’t want to be late.”

Leia was back at the house by the next morning.

“Thump Mink really did a number on them.  He cited laws and precedents even I was unfamiliar with.  They never had a chance.  Did the Republic really expect me not to lawyer up beforehand?  And to bring me to a local precinct for processing?  Their systems could hardly handle the Planet Modification charge.  It didn’t recognize it at first – they had to call their tech guy to connect them to the regional computers which only accepted the entry after a manual override from their counselor droid.”
“What about the truancy charge?”
She laughed.  A loud laugh Han hadn’t heard in a long time from her.  Could it be this ridiculous case could be the thing their relationship needed?  Them against the galaxy – that’s where they thrived, after all.
“Anyway, because I broke no local laws, they can’t hold me there.  The Republic jailhouse is on a space station up in orbit.  Mink convinced them that since I live on Coruscant, and because of my distinguished career with the Republic, that I be given leniency and allowed to remain here under house arrest.  They agreed, on the condition they physically guard our house to prevent any attempt of escape.”
Han laughed, “So turns out we won’t need that security upgrade after all.”
“Not so long as I’m a wanted woman.”
“Oh, you better believe you’re wanted,” Han said with a wink, and Leia blushed as he took her hand.

***

Kaz and Yata Spold, his trial partner, walked up to the courthouse and was surprised to find Leia outside flanked by her lawyer.  Defendants were not allowed to take part in jury selection.  She stepped forward and smiled “Kaz Dnomma’h, I believe you know Thump Mink.”  She motioned to a tall Muun, who had the large forehead and high eyebrows typical of his species.  Of course he knew Mink – he was a well known Coruscant attorney, famous for taking on high-profile clients.  “I’d also like to introduce you to Rue Joinstown.”  Kaz didn’t recognize the pink-haired human female at all.  “Everyone, this is Solicitor General Kaz Dnomma’h.”  Kaz introduced them to Yata and everybody shook hands.  When greetings were complete Leia added “Kaz has been gracious enough to waste everyone’s time.”
Kaz’ eyes crossed as he glared at her.  “Ambassador Solo, may I have a word with you?”
“No, thank you.” Leia said sharply.  She turned on her heels and walked towards the street.  It had been a bold move to come at all, but she was angry with the whole ordeal and wanted to set that tone with her lawyers.  When she reached the road Leia hailed for a cabspeeder.


As she waited, the disappointment of the past few weeks percolated in her mind. None of the favors she or Han called on had materialized into much more than sympathy.  People whom they had helped saw little reason to stick their own neck out.  The only person who expressed any kind of real indignation on their behalf was Lando, but there wasn’t much the General could do.
But it was the call with Mon Mothma that was most disheartening.  Because the charges had already been filed, she said, her hands were tied.  “But you’ll be fine, Leia,” she said in a tone that surely didn’t intend to be so mocking.  “Either, Kaz is a legal genius who will be able to pull off this ridiculous gambit, or he’s an absolute idiot who’ll fail.  No matter which, there’s no galaxy in which you end up convicted.”
At least Rue had come.  She was of course appalled by what Leia had told her, but that isn’t why she had agreed to represent her.  Rue had spent the last few years on a mission in the outer rim to persuade them to adopt Republic jurisdiction, or at least its democratic norms.  It would be useful to her cause for her to have some recent experience in the New Republic courts.  Plus, she missed life in the core.
A mauve cabspeeder pulled up.  Leia got in and went home.

Meanwhile, in the courtroom, Kaz’ day was only getting worse, “If presented with compelling evidence, would you be willing to convict Ambassador Leia Organa Solo?”
“What’s the evidence?  Sorry, did I miss something?” The citizen buzzed.
Kaz wearily put an arm on his podium for balance and shook his head.  “No, no, just listen.  If we showed you compelling evidence, would you be willing to convict her?  Yes or no.”
The insectoid being looked towards the judge “Can I agree to convict someone before hearing the evidence?”
The judge struck the bench lightly with his gavel.  The Nosaurian’s six crooked horns extended about half a foot above his long, sand-colored head.  “Citizen, this is a hypothetical question.  You will not be convicting anyone with your answer.”
“Well good, I don’t want anyone’s punishment on my head.  Not good for the soul, if you know what I mean.”
“Next!”  Yata bellowed from his high chair.  The being’s face twisted in dissatisfaction, but he spread his wings and buzzed out of the room.  Dismayed, Kaz looked at the juror’s box.  It was only half full and they’d been at it for hours.  Originally he had worried that no juror would want to convict a Rebellion hero.  Now it became clear that the common citizenry had no idea how the courts even worked!

The defense obviously agreed.  Though it was the prosecution’s duty to ask the jury questions, legally the defense could ask their own questions, too.  But as it had become blindingly clear the jurors had no idea what they were talking about, Leia’s team was content to watch Kaz and Yata twist in the wind.
Many of the jurors had come from the lower levels of Coruscant, a place where civic responsibility had essentially ceased to exist during the Empire.  Some of them had hardly heard of the Rebellion until the Battle of Coruscant.  The rest of the jurors had been Imperial soldiers who’d been given citizenship in the amnesty agreement.  Besides the obvious issue Kaz foresaw of getting Imperials to acquit a Rebellion hero, they had no working knowledge of the justice system.  Discipline was what they were familiar with, not law.  The only solace was there might have been more of them but some had been involved in the Battle of Endor, of which Leia was also a part, and so they were barred from judging against her.  On that point, the defense had been loud and clear.
When the juror’s box was finally full the judge declared the process complete.  He ordered everyone to return the next morning to begin proceedings.  Kaz and Yata went out for a drink.

***

The next day Kaz and Yata sat behind a plain wooden table, across an aisle from Leia and her lawyers.  Kaz relished every opportunity he had to be in court.  The wooden chairs were indeed uncomfortable, but there was something, what was it, quaint about all these dead trees.  Even the judge’s robes were woven leaves.  Not a ferrocrete block or dynosteel slab in sight.  It brought one’s mind to nature, and reminded him that justice had always and everywhere been pursued, be it in Coruscant’s busy centers today or in an ancient Yavin community.
The judge’s deep voice filled the room. “Dnomma’h, you may begin.”  His gavel landed with a satisfying smack.  Wood hits wood in just that certain way, and Kaz never tired of it.

“Honorable beings of the jury,” Kaz began.  “You have heard the accusation and that the defendant pleads not guilty.  But we will show without a doubt that she was present on the Death Star when it fired upon Alderaan.  And though it pains us to try such a heroic figure, it would pain us even more to see this crime go unpunished, and unfortunately nobody else present on the Death Star at the time is alive any more.  Alderaan deserves justice.
“Planet modification, what we usually call terraforming, was outlawed by the Old Republic 584 years ago.  In addition to being illegal the ban attained a special status known as-”
A hand went up in the jury.  Kaz said, “This is not the time for questions.  Please write it down and we will take them at the end.”  The juror, a skinny, hairy Dug named Whofi, kept his hand up and turned his gaze to the judge.  “Citizen, please put your hand down.  Counselor Kaz will answer your question at the appropriate time.”
“No, no,” Whofi said in his high, raspy voice.  “I just need to go to the bathroom.”
“We will take a short break after the prosecution’s statement, as we will after most statements.  Those times are designated for such needs.  However, if you must go now, you are free to do so.”
Whofi felt the eyes of the room upon him and he shifted in his seat, muttering something under his breath.  When it seemed clear he was staying, Kaz continued his prepared remarks.  When he was finished, a few of the jurors’ hands went up for questions.  He first called on one of the ex-Imperials.  They were the only humans in the jury.
“What other laws have been passed with Galactic Consensus?”

Kaz was glad he had looked into this.  He was worried using the only Galactic Census law would make it seem too convenient. “There are two others.  About 1100 years ago the Senate passed a law forbidding the hunting of creatures to extinction.  Another one was passed at the formation of the Republic, standardizing the process of electing Senators.”
“Have either been enforced?”
“We found no record of either being used in court.”
Kaz called a green Neimodian.  He spoke in great huffs.  “Why not charge Leia also with this extinction consensus?”
Before he could respond Kaz heard the stern voice of the judge say, “A prosecutor decides what charges to bring in a case.  Whether other charges could have been brought is not for the jury to decide.”

Kaz called on another human.
“I think we should also charge Luke Skywalker with this.  By destroying the Death Star, he killed at least a million.”
The judge responded again, “That is not a question, citizen.  And again, it is not for you to decide which charges should be brought, or against whom.  Only the validity of the charges brought.”
Kaz turned to the high-seated judge and said “No, actually, I think this is a good point.  I will respond.”  He turned back.  “We are not charging the defendant with murder.  We are charging her with,” He enunciated each syllable, “planet modification.  The loss of life, while of course tragic, is not part of the charge.”
Another human stood, “Then charge Skywalker with planet monofication, or whatever it’s called.”
Kaz smiled brightly.  “We cannot.  The Death Star was large, but it wasn’t a planet.”
“But people lived there!”  He insisted.
“Sit down, citizen!”  The judge bellowed, slamming his gavel.  “You must wait to be called upon.”
The human glared upward through his green bangs but sat down. Silence filled the room.  Seizing the moment, Kaz said, “I see no more questions.  Thank you for your consideration, I know you will make the right choice.”  Kaz bowed and started back to his seat.  A hand shot up in the back of the juror’s box.  Above him, Kaz heard the judge say “Yes, Whofi, now is the appropriate time.”

Mink gave a withering response, but none of it surprised Kaz.  He pointed out Leia was originally from Alderaan.  He said Leia had been a prisoner and that it was absurd to hold her responsible for what happened.  Kaz made an effort not to nod in agreement.
Mink called on Whofi first when he was finished.  “Why was she captured?”
Kaz perked up, realizing he didn’t actually know this.  It didn’t matter to the charges.
“After the Battle of Scarrif, the Death Star Plans had been transferred to her ship, which was captured by the Devastator, an Imperial Star-Destroyer.  Darth Vader happened to be on that ship and took part in the boarding of the ship.”
Kaz noticed the humans in the jury shiver at the mention of the Vader.  Mink was not a being who spoke casually.  These Imperials served for years in fear of Vader.  Bringing him up is a play for sympathy for Leia.  Brilliant.
“Who else was captured?” Asked another.
“That, I don’t know,” he said.  “Perhaps that’s a good question for the Ambassador during Citizen Questioning.”
Mink similarly deflected the questions from the ex-imperials about her rank at the time, and why Darth Vader himself was present.  That’s how you should have answered those questions, he scolded himself. When the judge struck down the question, you should have let it lie.  He reminded himself that Mink had an actual defendant who could answer these questions, a luxury he didn’t have. Plus, it was important the jury understood how the trials work.  The amnesty program was controversial enough – can’t have imperials calling for the trial of a Rebellion hero.  That’s right, he heard a voice in his head say. That’s your job.

During the break after the opening remarks, Kaz gave Yata an outline of his arguments to go over.  Yata was an expert at reading people and he quickly and skillfully made a few changes to account for jury reactions thus far.  When he was done Kaz looked it over and nodded in agreement.  “Well done,” he said quietly to Yata.
When the break was over Kaz addressed the jury to make his case in detail.  He dove into the legal part of the accusation first, how planet modification was defined in the law, why the law remained relevant even after the fall of the Republic, and how the destruction of Alderaan was, while an extreme example to be sure, modification of a planet.
Then Kaz made his case for justice.  Originally, he was going to argue that the Empire, while defeated militarily, needed to be denounced in some legal method.  But given the makeup of the jury, Yata had suggested they abandon this route the previous night.  Instead, Kaz argued about norms and boundaries.  Galactic conflict wasn’t unreasonable, but some rules still needed to be followed.  Planet modification, in all its forms, could not be tolerated.  To do so would endanger the very fabric of the galaxy.  If planets were destroyed in war, even if it’s only one planet per war, then “eventually the galaxy will be nothing but asteroids”.  He was particularly proud of that line.
When he was finished, the defense began their case.  Leia, for all her hostility, clearly had told them to defend her and not the charge.  Mink introduced his witness by saying that while “ultimate modification of Alderaan” was obviously a crime, Leia had had no part in it.  The case seemed to be going about as smoothly as Kaz had hoped.

Rue took over when it came time to question Leia directly.  After some basic biographical questions she turned the conversation towards the questions the jury had asked.
That’s a mistake, thought Kaz.  You’re clearly out of practice, Rue.  Many young lawyers believed that if you ask their questions you elevate their queries and therefore soothe their ego.  But in fact the jury feels cheated.  They wanted to ask the questions themselves.  It tends to make them less sympathetic.
Worse, it gave them time to come up with questions about those answers.  So rather than winning the jury over and taking the pressure off your client by asking the questions in the softest way possible, you alienate the jury and increase the difficulty of the questions your client must endure.  And, as every lawyer knows, questions are like lasers to the shield of a witness’ story.  The more you fire, the weaker it gets.
When Rue was done every hand in the juror’s box went up.

“Now hold on,” The judge said.  “D’nommah, you may cross examine the witness first."
“No thank you, your honor.”  Kaz said.  He and Yata had tried their best to come up with any questions that would be useful, but had come up blank.  They decided it was better to waive cross-examination and look too arrogant.  A good cover for the inevitable criticism they’d get when Leia was found not guilty.
“Alright,” the judge said flatly.  Joinstown, you may begin.
Rue called on a tall, furry bilar called Cor’vik.  “How did you escape?”
Rue shouted an objection and looked at the judge.  “It is not pertinent to this case.”
The judge looked down.  “Well, the Republic’s position is that she is the only survivor of the Death Star at this time.  The nature of her escape is clearly relevant.  Overruled.  Please answer the question, Ambassador.”
Leia chuckled.  “It’s a little unbelievable but it’s how I met my husband.  Han and Luke – Luke Skywalker, of course –  had come to Alderaan to find my father, but the planet was gone by then.  But we – oh, I mean the Death Star –  was still in the system and they were captured.  While there they learned I was there and rescued me.”  She laughed again.  “It wasn’t a great plan, but it all worked out.”
Cor’vik thanked her and sat down.  One of the humans stood up.  “Please wait to be called, citizen.”  The judge said.
“This is a follow up question.”  She responded, and then without pausing said, “You’re saying you were captured by Darth Vader and rescued by Luke Skywalker?”
Rue looked up at the judge, who banged his gavel.  “Sit down, and wait!”
She sat down, then raised her hand.  Rue called on someone else, an elderly Balosar.  “I had a different question, but actually, yeah.  Is that what you’re saying?  Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker, and Han Solo were there?”
Leia let out a laugh, “And Chewbacca, too!”
The Balosar nodded, then said, “Can I ask my original question, too?”
Rue gestured for him to go on, but Kaz’ attention was drawn to the human who had originally brought it up.  He didn’t need Yata’s skills to see her mind was racing.

When the Balosar sat down, the judge spoke up.  “It is near evening and it is clear the citizens have many more questions.  We will dismiss for the day and return here tomorrow.  Perhaps with a fresh night of sleep the awe of all of these names will be dull, and we can focus on the case at hand, and not play paparazzi.”  His gavel banged loudly.

***

“Sure sound like your standard Imperial idiots.  What did you expect?”  Han chuckled as he lounged in his big black chair.  He put an empty glass on the table beside him.
“I expected competence.  I mean, it isn’t even just the Imperials.  The Coruscant locals don’t even seem to understand what their duty entails.”
“Well, they lived in the heart of the Empire for decades, and then were under the thumb of those criminals – Blokes, was it? –  before we came in and rescued them.  Leia, you gotta give people time to learn these things.  Not everyone grew up with Republic ideals instilled in them like you did.  And as we know,” he leaned forward and looked through the open door down the hall before continuing, “some people are slow learners.”
“You’re right.”  Leia sighed.  She stood up to refill her drink.  Han did the same.  She turned and held out her hand, “I can refill it.”
“No, I got this.”  He said, holding his own hand out.  “You’ve had a long day.  What have I done but tinkered around and picked Ben up from school?”
“Remember,” She said, sitting back down, “add the ice before you mix it – that’s how I like it.”
“Yeah, yeah,” he said walking into the kitchen, though she heard him smiling.  Han really was trying.  That she was gone all day meant he got to be captain of their home, which put him in a good mood, though it only masked the real issue.

Suddenly, a toy came flying into the hallway.  She felt it before she saw it.  Reaching out, she guided it gently to the ground, where it toppled over.  Ben came tumbling down the hallway soon after it.
“Watch ou-” he saw it on the ground.  “Oh, there it is.”  He bent down to pick it up.  “Nevermind.”  He turned around to go back to his room.
“Ben?”  Leia summoned him with a power even stronger than the Force – parental connection.  Ben stopped, turning around again.
“Yes, mother.”
“How did that happen?”
“Luke and Vader were fighting in the Death Star and Luke got the upper hand and Force pushed him away.”
“The toys used the Force?”  She smirked at him.
Han came back, and handed Leia her drink.  He bent to kiss Ben on the head before he returned to his seat.
“No,” Ben said, wiping the sensation of the kiss from his head with his free hand.  “I was imagining and I guess it just happened.”

It had been happening more and more.  Ben needed a teacher, but Luke refused to teach only his nephew.  “Rule of Two” and everything.  Just as the Republic wanted to avoid looking like the Empire, Luke did not want the Jedi to look like the Sith.  So he was searching the galaxy for other Force sensitive children and parents who would agree to send them to his new academy.
Leia held out her arms and Ben crawled up on her lap.  “Oh,” she yelped.  “You’re even bigger than you were at the start of the week.  What’s dad been feeding you?”
“Well, today we went out for ice treats on our way home from school.”
She laughed, and Han said.  “It was a hot day!”
“Ben – why were you having your uncle fight Darth Vader?”
“Because he did!  That’s how we beat the Empire.”
Leia summoned her serious face and pushed Ben’s hair back from his eyes.  “We’ve been over this.  The fleet fought the Empire, and won, but Luke didn’t really fight Vader.”  Leia sometimes wished he did – she didn’t think he deserved to be saved.
“I know,” he said with his head downcast.
“Luke was Vader’s son.  He didn’t kill Vader.  He loved him.  That’s why he saved him.”
“But that’s BORING!”  Ben howled, leaning his head back.
“One day,” Leia said, “you’ll think love is the most interesting thing in the world.”  She looked up at Han, “Even if it takes you places you didn’t expect.”  Ben started to squirm in her lap so she put him down.  “What would you do if I or your father went bad”
Ben stood there for a moment, thoughtfully rubbing the Darth Vader toy with his thumb.  “If either of you went bad, I’d use my lightsaber and strike it out of you.”  His stance tensed, and he swung a pretend lightsaber around a few times in Leia’s direction.  “You couldn’t possibly be bad any more after that!”  Han and Leia laughed together.  Then Ben said, “Can I go now?”
Leia looked at the time.  “Yes.  But bedtime is in 20 minutes, mister.”
“Fine.”  Ben said, turning and leaving.

When he left, Han leaned over and said, “Yeah, you want that kid on a jury?”
“That’s awful,” Leia laughed.  “Yes.  When he’s old enough, anyway.  Well,” Leia considered it again.  “Will Jedi be allowed to sit on juries?  I’d assume no one would want to try to need to persuade them of anything.  I wonder…” Her voice drifted off as she thought it over.
Han nodded.  “Oh,” he said after some time.  “I saw on the news another report of fighting in the outer-rim.  The last of the Empire struggles on.  Think they know he died?”
“A Sith as powerful as Palpatine probably gathered some very loyal followers.  We’ll wear them down.”
“That’s just it,” Han said.  “Our forces retreated.”
“Oh,” Leia said.  She took a sip of her drink.  It went down cool, just like she liked it.  “I’m sure Lando has it all in hand.  And if the fighting goes on for much longer the Republic will have its Jedi.”
“And then Ben can have his fill of fighting.”
“True.  Then maybe he’ll see it isn’t all fun and games.” Leia said.  She leaned forward to look into his room and sighed,  “He’s excitable, alright, but he’ll never thrive in war.  He has too good a heart.”
“What about me?!”  Han responded in mock indignation.  “I think I did pretty well in the war.  What about my heart?”
“I agree,” She said with a smile, “That’s why you’re a scoundrel.”

***

Rue entered the courtroom that day eager for the trial to be over.  The cases had been made.  The Republic had demonstrated the relevance of Planet Modification, and she felt certain they had defended Leia sufficiently.  Even a jury as stupid as this one would have no choice but to declare her not guilty.
The trial resumed with jury questions, but none of them were very interesting.  In this way Rue was looking forward to returning to the outer-rim.  Those who lived beyond the reach of the Republic were not the political primitives she saw on display here.  In fact, because they had no dependence on the Republic, they had all become quite adept political players.  Tatooine had conflicting regulations around moisture farming, selectively enforced by those in power.  Geonosis had an annual lottery to determine their leaders, ensuring everyone had a motivation to stay current.  While they were galactically ignorant, their knowledge of local issues far outstripped that of the common Coruscantian.

Kaz gave his closing arguments first.
“Honorable beings of the jury.  We all know what happened to Alderaan, and what the tragedy of its loss means to the Galaxy.  Never again can we explore the Isatabith rainforest, see the grandeur of the twin snow-capped peaks of Mount Enots and Mount Tinarg, or contemplate the meaning of life under the Cloudshape Falls.
“We must make a statement to the galaxy that Planet Modificiation, of all kinds, is not only repulsive but also illegal.  The New Republic will enforce the laws of the galaxy, even against one of its own.  In centuries to come the Empire will be a mere blip in the Republic’s long reign.  And you, yes even you who had served the Empire, have an opportunity to right this terrible wrong.  The destruction of Alderaan must not go unpunished.  To do so would leave the galaxy in such a lurch as to undo the fundamentals of the law.”
Then Rue stood.  Though Mink was the stronger legal mind, Rue was the more persuasive speaker.  But they had gone over her speech the night before together.
“Honorable beings of the jury, the Republic is in a crisis of its own making.  So quick to make a statement about the Empire it has forgotten the purpose of such a statement.  The Death Star destroyed Alderaan, and the Rebellion destroyed the Death Star.  Not a legal argument, but a compelling rejection of planetary modification nonetheless.
“Alderaan will not be recreated by a guilty verdict.  Leia was a prisoner at the time.  She did not press the button.  She did not give the order.  She was present, but she was not involved.  You must acquit her.”

When she finished the judge rose and explained deliberations.  “Are there any questions?” He said when he was finished.
“Yes!”  A young woman’s voice said. Rue recognized her as the one who asked about Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader.  She hadn’t said anything during the first round of jury questioning.
“Proceed,” The judge said.
“Yesterday after I went home I decided to do some digging into Luke Skywalker, because when the defense said he and Darth Vader were on the Death Star together, I don’t know, it reminded me of-”
“Is there a question here, citizen?”
“Oh, sorry.  Yes.  Leia, why didn’t you tell us Luke Skywalker was your brother?”
There were audible gasps from the jury.  The judge shook his fleshy head.  “No.  Again, we are not here to play paparazzi.  The focus of this court session is to-“
“Wait a minute!”  Another human of the jury stood up, shouting over the judge.  “That makes you Darth Vader’s daughter?”
The judge was banging his gavel, but other jurist were also making connections.
“You said you were the only person on the Death Star when Alderaan blew up who survived, but Darth Vader didn’t die until much later – on the second Death Star.”
Another yelled. “Luke let himself get captured to get close to the Emperor in order to save his father.  Isn’t that the story?”
“Yes, yes!”  Others cried as the judge and all the lawyers desperately tried to reign the room in.
“How do we know Leia didn’t pretend to be captured, too?”
“She let herself get caught so she could warn her father of the attack!”
“Yes, yes!”
The weight of the gavel went flying off the handle, soared through the courtroom, and made a hole in the far wall.  That, at least, got everyone’s attention.  The judge was covered in sweat.  “None of this has anything to do with Leia’s guilt about Alderaan,” he roared, and everyone was silent.

Order restored, the jury was filed out of the room for deliberations.  They went into the next day.  And the next day.  And the next day.  “Not good,” Yata said needlessly to Kaz.
In the deliberations room, the jury discussed the obvious gaps in the Republic’s argument  But Leia had also clearly kept some information from them, too.  Some said those gaps showed the Republic hadn’t proven guilt, but others claimed her omissions were evidence of such guilt.  After a week of deliberations with no verdict the judge declared a mistrial.
This announcement created a frenzy in the press, which ricocheted around the galaxy.  Interviews with the jurors only made matters worse.  Threats were regularly received at the Solo home, and the Republic was compelled to maintain (and increase) the security they had provided before and during the trial.
Kaz motioned for a withdrawal of the accusations but the judge insisted a mistrial necessitated a new one “to ascertain the truth”.  In response the Republic announced Leia was being sent with Rue back to the outer-rim, where victories by the First Order, a reorganization of the Empire, were threatening Rue’s earlier progress.  Leia responded with a public communication reaffirming her resignation.  When the new trial commenced, Leia appeared with Mink and a new legal team, but no one representing the Republic came.  The trial was delayed indefinitely.

***

“I’m hungry!”  Ben shouted from his closet.
“You heard your mother,” Han said firmly, “First we finish packing, and then we can enjoy the rest of the evening.”
“But,” he loosely picked up a shirt, “This is so heavy!  I need food for strength, dad.”
“Ben!”  Han raised his voice, “Please.  Just,” he paused for a moment.  He had done it again.  He hoped Leia hadn’t heard.  He spoke in a quieter voice now, remembering what he’d read in those parenting books.  How to Master your Padawan, or something like that.  “Ben, how about we switch roles.  You hold your bag open, and I’ll just get everything.”
Han went to the closet as Ben squirmed under his tall legs to get to the bag.  How did he get so many clothes?  Han wondered.  “Hey buddy, what colors you want?”
“All of them,” He heard him yell.
“Yeah, but we’ve been over this.  You can’t fit your whole closet in your bag.  So, which are your favorite?  How about the blue, I know you like the blue.”
“I HATE THE BLUE!”  Ben screamed.  Han felt the heat in his mind rise, but he resisted the easy reaction.  He’s just a hungry boy, he reminded himself.  Han took the blue, the black, and the red shirts and turned to hand them to Ben, but he was gone.  Han quietly grumbled and finished packing by himself.
In the kitchen Ben was pulling on his mother’s shirt.  “Dad’s being mean to me again,” he said.  Leia took a deep breath.  Even with her ambassador’s instincts and her Jedi training she still found Han’s outbursts difficult to deal with.  She had loved (sort of) his carefree style when they first met – so different than her own upbringing – but their son needed a father who was more in control of himself.  She had talked to him this morning about it, even.  Luke was coming to take Ben tomorrow morning.  If Han could just keep it together for this final night she knew it would make a big impact.

But of course he couldn’t.  Not even for her.

But when she went with Ben to his room, she found Han with the bags fully packed, though he was clearly annoyed.  Leia reached out and felt the aggressive energy in the room, but it was no more than usual.  Ben, it seemed, had lied to her again.
But it was their last night together and she couldn’t bring herself to scold him.  And anyway, maybe her senses weren’t rightly attuned to the situation.  Could living in a place make one less able to sense the energies there?  Maybe she’d ask Luke tomorrow when he came.  She hoped Luke could reach Ben in a way Han had not.

“Looks like you two did a great job!”  She said lightly, “And just in time, too.  Dinner is almost ready.”

***

New Republic Justice Committee

Meeting Minutes

15th rotation of the 3rd month of Coruscant

15 ABY

Opening:

The regular meeting of the New Republic Justice Committee was called to order upon the 16th hour of the 15th rotation of the 9th month of Coruscant in the Red Room by Helter Kuzi.

Attendence:

Leadership:

Helter Kuzi, Senator from Bogdon, Chair

Demir Abaci, SF Tokadana, Ranking member

Other Members

Linette Forve, Senator from Raithal

Regufar Collar, SF Bilbringi

Maruj Vazin’I, SF Corellia.

Synthia Zelin, SF Ansion, secretary

Rashah Salder, SF Mon Calamari

Dinn Guelleh, SF Aduba.

Jocasta Reznor, SF Ulmatra

Tied Ors-Quy, SF Ryloth

Honored Guests:

Leonardo Guelleh, representative of the Office of Legal Policy

Rica Mwinyi, representative of the Office of Reconstruction

Kaz D’nommah, former Solicitor General of the Department of Justice

Regrets:

Vice Chair Dion Jansen, Senator from Scarl. Regret received seven days prior to meeting, citing prior commitment.  Eroglu Yanlin designated as liaison and received.

Hatch Suim, SF From Sochi.  No official regret received.  No liaison designated.  Linette Forve interrupted roll call to motion for Suim to be removed from this committee, as he has not attended the past few meetings nor sent a liaison nor attended any regular sessions of the Senate.  The motion was not seconded.

Thakor Flan-do, SF Chandrila.  Regret received two days prior to meeting, citing a matter in his sector demanding his presence.  Lata Tanji designated as liaison, but not received.

Ambassador Leia Organa Solo. Regret received immediately upon invitation citing lack of confidence in this committee.  No liaison designated or received.

Other attendees:

Kharish Nasrallah, Republic Citizen, of Bespin

Eroglu Yanlin, Republic Citizen, of Scral, designated liaison to Dion Jansen, Senator from Scral and Vice Chair of this Committee.

Approval of Agenda:

The agenda was majority approved (8-1-1) as distributed.  Demir Abaci voted against.  Linette Forve abstained.  Abaci explained her objection by accusing Helter Kuzi of continuing to put his own priorities on the agenda above hers.  Linette Forve explained her abstention by saying inadequate prioritization had been given to their missing colleague.

Approval of Minutes:

The minutes of the previous meeting were majority approved 9-1 as distributed.  Linette Forve objected.  Linette Forve explained her objection by saying the minutes failed to properly convey the urgency with which she recommended this committee to prioritize Hatch Suim’s disappearance, and that it downplayed the mockery she received in response.

Business from Previous Meeting:

Helter Kuzi reported the plan created at this committee’s recommendation by the Office of Reconstruction to respond to the spreading Carida Crisis had been rejected by the Senate.  Rica Mwinyi said the crisis has significantly worsened since that time and that a new recommendation is needed to guide the creation of a new plan.  By majority vote (7-3) this committee prioritized this business.  Regufar Collar, Maruj Vazin’l and Rashah Saldar objected.  They explained their objection by saying that such a volatile situation cannot possibly be rectified through a court of law and is outside the purview of this committee.

New Business:

Leonardo Guelleh said outer-rim refugees from First Order occupations need a legal framework for citizenship.  This committee voted unanimously to prioritize this business in future meetings.

Kaz D’nommah spoke on the subject of the Planet Modification trial and his resulting resignation.  He insists this committee gave him and his office in an impossible task.  When reminded this committee recommended him to only “investigate the feasibility of addressing the situation of Alderaanian refugees in a court of law,” he responded such a recommendation was better suited for the Office of Legal Policy than the Department of Justice.  He says he was reasonable to assume action was expected given the severity of the Alderaanian tragedy, the capacities of his office, and the “high and urgent” priority with which the recommendation was delivered.

Chairman Helter Kuzi interrupted D’nommah to ask if he had any specific requests for this committee.  D’nommah demanded the resignation of all members immediately.  Kuzi again interrupted D’nommah to call for a vote to cut short D’nommah’s time, citing this insult, but the vote failed (4-4-2).  Demir Abaci, Regufar Collar, Maruj Vazin’l and Rashah Saldar voted against.  Linette Forve and Kuzi abstained.  Collar, Saldar, Vazin’l, and Abaci explained their objection by saying they saw no reason to restrict the time of a Galactic citizen expressing displeasure.  Forve explained her abstention by saying her voice was continually sidelined by this committee and she wouldn’t take part in sidelining another’s, though she said D’nommah’s request was “out of line”.  Kuzi explained his abstention by saying he had called for the vote and wished to let the rest of the committee decide.

D’nommah continued.  Kuzi interrupted him a third time to announce his immediate resignation from this committee and left the Red Room.  With no other leadership members present Abaci took Kuzi’s seat without a vote and became Chair of this committee.  Stating he was satisfied by Kuzi’s resignation, D’nommah yielded the rest of his time.

Additions to the Agenda:

Creation of a new recommendation for the Office of Reconstruction to create a plan to respond to the Carida crisis.  Chairwoman Demir Abaci suggested further discussion be tabled until the next meeting, citing this committee is now down two members and has a vacant leadership role.  By majority vote (5-3-1), this committee added these agenda items to the next meeting.  Regufar Collar, Maruj Vazin’l, and Rashah Saldar voted against.  Linette Forve abstained.  Collar, Vazin’l, and Saldar explained their objection by saying they agreed this meeting should be ended until this committee can refill its ranks but objected to the Carida crisis being on the next meeting’s agenda, continuing to believe crisis was too volatile to be rectified through a court of law and is outside the purview of this committee.  Forve explained her abstention by saying that she had lost all faith in this committee in its current form and would abstain from all votes until further notice.

Agenda for Next Meeting:

Confirming new members.

Nominating and confirming new leadership.

Response to the growing refugee crisis.

Response to the crisis on Carida.

Adjournment:

The meeting was adjourned one and a half hours after it began by Demir Abaci.  The next meeting will be on the 25th rotation of the 10th month, 15 ABY, in the Red Room.


 Copyright ©️ 2021 Maslow Stories.


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