Star Wars_ Darth Maul 02_ Shadow Hunter - Michael Reaves [94]
I-Five took him gently but firmly by the shoulders and turned him away from the hatch. Lorn let the droid lead him over to the carbon-freezing unit. He felt no fear as he stepped into it. The temptation was to not feel anything at all, to just be numb.
No, he told himself. He had lived too long that way. If these were to be his final moments—which they could very well be; the odds of the droid’s plan succeeding were slim indeed—he would not live them in an emotional void.
It was the very least he could do in acknowledgment of her sacrifice.
He stepped into the open cylinder of the device. I-Five crowded in beside him. There was barely enough room for both.
Lorn looked at the droid.
“If we come out of this alive,” he said, “I’m going to kill that Sith.”
I-Five did not reply; there was no time. Lorn felt freezing-cold steam boiling up around him. His vision was obscured by mist, which turned to darkness—a darkness as deep and complete as death.
Darth Maul felt a slight disappointment as he realized that the Jedi was not truly as powerful as she had first appeared. Her depth in the Force was impressive, but her methodology did not match it. Both of them knew it was only a matter of time now. He focused his attacks, forcing her to use a more technique-based defense.
She leapt down to the floor, and he followed her. He felt a Force-powered pressure move toward him and deflected it, sensing several large tanks and canisters being shoved around behind him. She was growing weak. Such an attack was a sign of desperation. Soon it would be over.
He dived forward, rolling to come up alongside her, deflecting her attack as he did so. Another invisible pressure wave knocked over more equipment behind where he had been.
Pitiful.
Maul thrust upward with his blade and was met with hers, thwarted for the moment. A deliberately left weakness in his attack was not exploited, and again he felt a loss of respect for her.
It was too bad, but there would be other missions, other challenges more worthy of his skills. Someday the Jedi Temple would be in ruins, and he would be there to see it, after having killed many of the Jedi himself. But now it was time to end this.
Darth Maul readied himself for the final strike.
Darsha sent a second wave of the Force outward, tumbling over yet another tank of fuel. She had managed to move several welding cylinders and fuel cells toward each other. They were heaped together now, an extremely explosive accident waiting to happen.
How appropriate, she thought, to use Master Bondara’s sacrifice as an example.
Darsha let herself think of Lorn for a moment. She hoped the droid had figured out the potential for escape that the carbon-freezing unit represented. If not, then her sacrifice would be in vain.
She had seen Lorn’s face in the hatch window, his expression full of desperation and concern—not for himself, but for her. It had most definitely not been the expression of someone who hated her, or was even indifferent to her fate.
It was too bad, she thought. If they had had more time … If they’d been able to see this through to the end, reach the Jedi Temple together …
But that was not the way it was fated to be.
There is no passion; there is serenity.
She thrust at the Sith, her lightsaber thrumming, and moved into a better position. She had to get this just right, make it look like it wasn’t deliberate.
She left herself open. The Sith immediately took advantage of it.
His blade pierced her side, a fiery hot jet of pain that caused her to cry out.
Darsha Assant released her lightsaber, using the Force to send it forward, still lit, to pierce one of the gas cylinders.
She had time for one last thought.
There is no death; there is the Force.
She knew it was the truth.
Darth Maul saw his opponent’s strategy, realizing what she planned to do nearly too late. He jumped, using the Force to propel