Star Wars_ Cloak of Deception - James Luceno [100]
From the passenger seat of an airspeeder, all of Eriadu City looked the same. That, at least, was Qui-Gon’s considered opinion after more than an hour of searching the city from above for the location of the roofscape image stored in Havac’s holoprojector.
Bisected by a slow-moving, muddy river, the city was a confusion of domes, interior courtyards, and precarious towers, cleaved by narrow streets and a few broad avenues. Dwellings were built on top of one another in haphazard fashion, sprouting annexes here and additional levels there, extending from the bay clear to the barricade of hills at the city’s back.
It was little wonder that none of the security officers had been able to identify the span of roofs Havac’s holoprojector had singled out. When a quick study of 2-D maps had only complicated matters, copies of the stored image had been fed into the terrain-following computers of three airspeeders, in the hope that a series of overflights would allow the computers to match the image to an actual roofscape. But flights to the north and to the east of the summit hall had failed to yield even a possible match.
Qui-Gon continued to believe that Havac had wanted the holoprojector to be found, but he wasn’t willing to take the chance that Havac’s leaving the device behind hadn’t constituted a genuine oversight.
Just now the trio of airspeeders was approximately two kilometers south of the summit hall. Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan were passengers in the lead vehicle, trailed by Ki-Adi-Mundi and Vergere in the second, and two judicials in the third.
Gazing down over the speeder’s starboard gunwale, Qui-Gon thought he glimpsed movement on one of the rooftops. But when he shielded his eyes with the edge of his hand and looked again, all he saw was what might have been heat shimmer at the base of a slender brick tower.
He reached out through the Force.
At the same instant the speeder’s terrain-following computer began to chirp repeatedly, indicating that it had matched the image. The computer’s screen displayed the stored image superimposed on the roofscape directly below. Pivoting in his seat, Qui-Gon saw Ki-Adi-Mundi wave a sign of acknowledgment that the computer of the second airspeeder has also discovered the match.
The Eriadu security officer at the controls banked the airspeeder through a sweeping turn and was headed back toward the stretch of roofs when the craft’s threat assessor suddenly added its voice to the steady chirping of the terrain-following computer.
“Missile lock!” the pilot said in astonishment.
Obi-Wan leaned over the side of the craft and pointed to something below. “There, Master!”
Qui-Gon caught sight of the small rocket and realized at once that it had been launched from the base of the tower, just where he had detected movement moments earlier.
The pilot dropped the airspeeder into an abrupt dive, prepared to execute another maneuver should the missile home in on them, but the rocket stayed true to its original course. Narrowly missing the rear of the craft, it exploded high overhead, raining shrapnel on the airspeeder, which came about and shot for the source of the fire.
“Movement below,” the pilot said, glancing at one of the scanner displays. “I count six figures.”
Obi-Wan raised himself out of his seat. “I don’t see anyone.”
“Mimetic suits,” Qui-Gon said. He swung to the pilot. “Find a place to set us down.”
Another rocket streaked into the sky, detonating between the second and third airspeeders.
“Targets are headed south,” the pilot said.
Qui-Gon let his eyes roam over the varied domes and hip roofs. Emerging from a narrow cleft between two domes, three humans came briefly into view, only to disappear against a background of roof tiles.
The pilot steered the airspeeder for the top of a long barrel vault and let the craft settle down. Blaster bolts began to whiz past the fuselage and ricochet erratically from the vault’s arched walls. Lightsabers ignited, Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan leapt over the gunwales. Hitting the vault, they somersaulted through the air for the flat area below. Some