Into the Void: Star Wars (Dawn of the Jedi) Read online




  Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi: Into the Void is a work of fiction.

  Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Copyright © 2013 by Lucasfilm Ltd. & ® or ™ where indicated.

  All Rights Reserved. Used Under Authorization.

  “Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi: Eruption” by John Ostrander, copyright © 2013 by Lucasfilm Ltd. & ® or ™ where indicated. All Rights Reserved. Used Under Authorization.

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Crucible copyright © 2013 by Lucasfilm Ltd. & ® or ™ where indicated. All Rights Reserved. Used Under Authorization.

  Published in the United States by Del Rey, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  DEL REY is a registered trademark and the Del Rey colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.

  This book contains an excerpt from Star Wars: Crucible by Troy Denning. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.

  eISBN: 978-0-345-54194-9

  www.starwars.com

  www.delreybooks.com

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  Jacket art: Torstein Nordstrand

  Jacket design: Scott Biel

  v3.1

  For Ellie and Dan, my young Padawan

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Dramatis Personae

  Epigraph

  Chapter One: Dark Matters

  Chapter Two: The Great Journey

  Chapter Three: The Good and the Great

  Chapter Four: His Own Man

  Chapter Five: Sharp Edges

  Chapter Six: Old Myths

  Chapter Seven: Safe and Sound

  Chapter Eight: The Memory of Pain

  Chapter Nine: Scars

  Chapter Ten: Empty Spaces

  Chapter Eleven: Slaves

  Chapter Twelve: Chasm

  Chapter Thirteen: Other Ways

  Chapter Fourteen: Sad History

  Chapter Fifteen: Ran Dan’s Folly

  Chapter Sixteen: The Alchemy of Flesh

  Chapter Seventeen: Repulsion

  Chapter Eighteen: The Descent

  Chapter Nineteen: Might

  About the Author

  Other Books by This Author

  Short Story: Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi: Eruption

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Crucible

  Introduction to the Star Wars Expanded Universe

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith: The Collected Stories

  Introduction to the Old Republic Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan

  Introduction to the Rise of the Empire Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Outbound Flight

  Introduction to the Rebellion Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Allegiance

  Introduction to the New Republic Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Scourge

  Introduction to the New Jedi Order Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: New Jedi Order: Vector Prime

  Introduction to the Legacy Era

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Betrayal

  Excerpt from Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi: Outcast

  Star Wars Novels Timeline

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thanks to everyone at Del Rey, LucasBooks, and Dark Horse for their help and encouragement. And as ever, a big thanks to my agent, Howard Morhaim.

  DRAMATIS PERSONAE

  Lanoree Brock; Je’daii Ranger (Human female)

  Dalien Brock; dreamer (Human male)

  Tre Sana; rogue (Twi’lek male)

  Dam-Powl; Je’daii Master (Cathar female)

  Lha-Mi; Je’daii Temple Master (Dai Bendu male)

  Kara; troublemaker (Human female)

  Lorus; Kalimahr Police Captain (Sith male)

  Maxhagan; gangster (Human male)

  A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.…

  At the heart of any poor soul not at one with the Force, there is only void.

  —Unknown Je’daii, 2,545 TYA (Tho Yor Arrival)

  CHAPTER ONE

  DARK MATTERS

  Even at the beginning of our journey I feel like a rock in the river of the Force. Lanoree is a fish carried by that river, feeding from it, living within it, relying on the waters for her well-being. But I am unmoving. An inconvenience to the water as long as I remain. And slowly, slowly, I am being eroded to nothing.

  —Dalien Brock, diaries, 10,661 TYA

  She is a little girl, the sky seems wide and endless, and Lanoree Brock breathes in the wonders of Tython as she runs to find her brother.

  Dalien is down by the estuary again. He likes being alone, away from all the other children at Bodhi, the Je’daii Temple of the Arts. Her parents have sent her to find him, and though they still have some teaching to do that afternoon, they’ve promised that they will walk up to the boundary of the Edge Forest that evening. Lanoree loves it up there. And it scares her a little, as well. Close to the temple, near the sea, she can feel the Force ebbing and flowing through everything—the air she breathes, the sights she sees, and all that makes up the beautiful scenery. Up at the Edge Forest, there’s a primal wildness to the Force that sets her blood pumping.

  Her mother will smile and say that she will learn about it all, given time. Her father will look silently into the forest, as if he silently yearns to explore that way. And her little brother, only nine years old, will start to cry.

  Always at the Edge Forest, he cries.

  “Dal!” She swishes through the long grasses close to the riverbank, hands held out by her sides so that the grass caresses her palms. She won’t tell him about the walk planned for that evening. If she does he’ll get moody, and he might not agree to come home with her. He can be like that sometimes, and their father says it’s the sign of someone finding his own way.

  Dal doesn’t seem to have heard her, and as she closes on him she slows from a run to a walk and thinks, If that was me I’d have sensed me approaching ages ago.

  Dal’s head remains dipped. By his side he has created a perfect circle using the stones of chewed mepples, his favorite fruit. He does that when he’s thinking.

  The river flows by, fast and full from the recent rains. There’s a power to it that is intimidating, and, closing her eyes, Lanoree feels the Force and senses the myriad life-forms that call the river home. Some are as small as her finger, others that swim upriver from the ocean almost half the size of a Cloud Chaser ship. She knows from her studies that many of them have teeth.

  She bites her lip, hesitant. Then she probes out with her mind and—

  “I told you to never do that to me!”

  “Dal …”

  He stands and turns around, and he looks furious. Just for a moment there’s a fire in his eyes that she doesn’t like. She has seen those flames before, and carries the knotted scar tissue in her lower lip to prove it. Then his anger slips and he smiles.

  “Sorry. You startled me, that’s all.”

  “You’re drawing?” she asks, seeing the sketchbook.

  Dal closes the book. “It’s rubbish.”

  “I don’t believe that,” Lanoree says. “You’re really good. Temple Master Fenn himself says so.”

  “Temple Master Fenn is a friend of Father’s.”

  Lanoree ignores the insinuation and walks closer to her brother. She can already see that he has chosen a fine place from which to draw the surroundings. The river curves here, and
a smaller tributary joins from the hills of the Edge Forest, causing a confusion of currents. The undergrowth on the far bank is colorful and vibrant, and there’s a huge old ak tree whose hollowed trunk is home to a flight of weave birds. Their spun golden threads glisten in the afternoon sun. The birdsong complements the river’s roar.

  “Let me see,” Lanoree says.

  Dal does not look at her, but he opens the pad.

  “It’s beautiful,” she says. “The Force has guided your fingers, Dal.” But she’s not sure.

  Dal picks a heavy pencil from his pocket and strikes five thick lines through his drawing, left to right, tearing the paper and ruining it forever. His expression does not change, and neither does his breathing. It’s almost as if there is no anger at all.

  “There,” he says. “That’s better.”

  For a moment the lines look like claw marks, and as Lanoree takes a breath and blinks—

  A soft, insistent alarm pulled her up from sleep. Lanoree sighed and sat up, rubbing her eyes, massaging the dream away. Dear Dal. She dreamed of him often, but they were usually dreams of those later times when everything was turning bad. Not when they were still children for whom Tython was so full of potential.

  Perhaps it was because she was on her way home.

  She had not been back to Tython for more than four years. She was a Je’daii Ranger, and so ranging is what she did. Some Rangers found reasons to return to Tython regularly. Family connections, continuous training, face-to-face debriefs, it all amounted to the same thing—they hated being away from home. She also believed that there were those Je’daii who felt the need to immerse themselves in Tython’s Force-rich surroundings from time to time, as if uncertain that their affinity with the Force was strong enough.

  Lanoree had no such doubts. She was comfortable with her strength and balance in the Force. The short periods she had spent with others on retreats on Ashla and Bogan—a voluntary part of a Padawan’s training, should they desire to go—had made her even more confident in this.

  She stood from her cot and stretched. She reached for the ceiling and grabbed the bars she’d welded there herself, pulling up, breathing softly, then lifting her legs and stretching them out until she was horizontal to the floor. Her muscles quivered, and she breathed deeply as she felt the Force flowing through her, a vibrant, living thing. Mental exercise and meditation were fine, but sometimes she took the greatest pleasure in exerting herself physically. She believed that to be strong with the Force, one had to be strong in body.

  The alarm was still ringing.

  “I’m awake,” she said, easing herself slowly back to the floor, “in case you hadn’t noticed.”

  The alarm snapped off, and her Peacemaker ship’s grubby yellow maintenance droid ambled into the small living quarters on padded metal feet. It was one of many adaptations she’d made to the ship in her years out in the Tythan system. Most Peacemakers carried a very simple droid, but she’d updated hers to a Holgorian IM-220, capable of limited communication with a human master and other duties not necessarily exclusive to ship maintenance. She’d further customized it with some heavy armor, doubling its weight but making it much more useful to her in risky scenarios. She spoke to it, its replies were obtuse, and she supposed it was the equivalent of trying to communicate with a grass kapir back home. She had even named it.

  “Hey, Ironholgs. You better not have woken me early.”

  The droid beeped and scraped, and she wasn’t sure whether it was getting cranky in its old age.

  She looked around the small but comfortable living quarters. She had chosen a Peacemaker over a Hunter because of its size; even before she’d flown her first mission as a Je’daii Ranger, she knew that she would be eager to spend much of her time in space. A Hunter was fast and agile but too small to live in. The Peacemaker was a compromise on maneuverability, but she had spent long periods living alone on the ship. She preferred it that way.

  And like most Rangers, she had made many modifications and adaptations to her ship that stamped her own identity upon it. She’d stripped out the table and chairs and replaced them with a weights and tensions rack for working out. Now, she ate her food sitting on her narrow cot. She’d replaced the holonet entertainment system with an older flatscreen, which doubled as communications center and reduced the ship’s net weight. Beside the extensive engine compartment there had been a small room that housed a second cot for guests or companions, but because she had neither she had filled the space with extra laser charge pods, a water-recycling unit, and food stores. The ship’s four laser cannon turrets had also been upgraded, and it now also carried plasma missiles, and drone missiles for long-distance combat. At the hands of the Cathar master armorer Gan Corla, the cannons now packed three times more punch and were effective over twice the range as those standard to Peacemakers.

  She had also altered and adapted the function and position of many cockpit controls, making it so that only she could effectively fly the ship. It was hers, it was home, and that was how she liked it.

  “How long to Tython?” she asked.

  The droid let out a series of whines and clicks.

  “Right,” Lanoree said. “Suppose I’d better freshen up.” She brushed a touch pad and the darkened screens in the forward cockpit faded to clear, revealing the star-speckled view that never failed to make her heart ache. There was something so profoundly moving to the distance and scale of what she saw out there, and the Force never let her forget that she was a part of something incomprehensibly large. She supposed it was as close as she ever came to a religious epiphany.

  She touched the pad again and a red glow appeared, surrounding a speck in the distance. Tython. Three hours and she’d be there.

  The Je’daii Council ordering her back to Tython meant only one thing. They had a mission for her, and it was one that they needed to discuss face-to-face.

  Washed, dressed, and fed, Lanoree sat in the ship’s cockpit and watched Tython drawing closer. Her ship had communicated with sentry drones orbiting at thirty thousand kilometers, and now the Peacemaker was performing a graceful parabola that would take it down into the atmosphere just above the equator.

  She was nervous about visiting Tython again, but part of her was excited as well. It would be good to see her mother and father, however briefly. She contacted them far too infrequently. With Dal dead, she was now their only child.

  A soft chime announced an incoming transmission. She swiveled her seat and faced the flatscreen, just as it snowed into an image.

  “Master Dam-Powl,” Lanoree said, surprised. “An honor.” And it was. She had expected the welcoming transmission to be from a Je’daii Ranger or perhaps even a Journeyer she did not know. Not the Cathar Je’daii Master.

  Dam-Powl bowed her head. “Lanoree, it’s good to see you again. We’ve been eagerly awaiting your arrival. Pressing matters beg discussion. Dark matters.”

  “I assumed that was the case,” Lanoree said. She shifted in her seat, unaccountably nervous.

  “I sense your discomfort,” Master Dam-Powl said.

  “Forgive me. It’s been some time since I spoke with a Je’daii Master.”

  “You feel unsettled even with me?” Dam-Powl asked, smiling. But the smile quickly slipped. “No matter. Prepare yourself, because today you speak with six Masters, including Stav Kesh’s Temple Master Lha-Mi. I’ve sent your ship the landing coordinates for our meeting place thirty kilometers south of Akar Kesh. We’ll expect you soon.”

  “Master, we’re not meeting at a temple?”

  But Dam-Powl had already broken the transmission, and Lanoree was left staring at a blank screen. She could see her image reflected there, and she quickly gathered herself, breathing away the shock. Six Je’daii Masters? And Lha-Mi as well?

  “Then it is something big.”

  She checked the transmitted coordinates and switched the flight computer to manual, eager to make the final approach herself. She had always loved flying and the freedom
it gave her. Untethered. Almost a free agent.

  Lanoree closed her eyes briefly and breathed with the Force. It was strong this close to Tython, elemental, and it sparked her senses alive.

  By the time the Peacemaker sliced into Tython’s outer atmosphere, Lanoree’s excitement was growing. The landing zone was nestled in a small valley with giant standing stones on the surrounding hills. She could see several other ships, including Hunters and another Peacemaker. It was a strange place for such a meeting, but the Je’daii Council would have its reasons. She guided her ship in an elegant arc and landed almost without a jolt.

  “Solid ground,” she whispered. “Ironholgs, I don’t know how long we’ll be here, but take the opportunity to run a full systems check. Anything we need we can pick up from Akar Kesh before we leave.”

  The droid emitted a mechanical sigh.

  Lanoree probed gently outward, and when she sensed that the air pressures had equalized, she opened the lower hull hatch. The smells that flooded in—rash grass, running water, that curious charged smell that seemed to permeate the atmosphere around most temples—brought a rush of nostalgia for the planet she had left behind. But there was no time for personal musings.

  Three Journeyers were waiting for her, wide-eyed and excited.

  “Welcome, Ranger Brock!” the tallest of the three said.

  “I’m sure,” she said. “Where are they waiting for me?”

  “On Master Lha-Mi’s Peacemaker,” another Journeyer said. “We’re here to escort you. Please, follow us.”

  “I’m here representing the Council of Masters,” the Talid Temple Master Lha-Mi said. “Forgive us for not welcoming you back to Tython in more … salubrious surroundings. But by necessity this meeting must be covert.” His long white hair glowed in the room’s artificial light. He was old and wise, and Lanoree was pleased to see him again.

  “It’s so nice to be back,” Lanoree said. She bowed.

  “Please, please.” Lha-Mi pointed to a seat, and Lanoree sat facing him and the other five Je’daii Masters. This Peacemaker’s living quarters had been pared down to provide a circular table with eight seats around it, and little more. She nodded a silent greeting to Lha-Mi, Dam-Powl and the Cathar Master Tem Madog, but the other three she did not know. It seemed that things had moved swiftly while she had been away, especially when it came to promotions.