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Everybody Wants Some 1988/1999 short story by
Mark Newbold One year after Episode IV - A
New Hope Jan wiped a muddy arm across his forehead and
cursed mutely. His eyes darted back
and forth like fireflies at the slightest movement, his head filled with
frantic thoughts. Well, that's the last
time I keep a secret from a client, he thought. Especially Glann Cipple. It was bad, whichever way he viewed it. He was holed up in a warehouse on the wet
and windy world of Lifferia being tracked down by four of Cipple's gunmen who
were moving perilously close to his position. He spun around and closed his eyes in frustration. Damn
that run out to the Quarshannel Sector.
I knew I should have let it pass.
I don't know why Glann sent me in the first place. He never has any luck out there
anyway. He peered over the lip of
the crate to view his situation - it was growing steadily worse by the
second. Glann can't blame me for picking up a contact of my own while I was
out there. Can he? Jan barely saw the Blaster butt as it swung down
towards his head and he overbalanced back into a stack of empty crates,
avoiding the impact but blowing his precarious cover. Jan’s assailant, a broad, hooded alien
yelled out to his companions for assistance.
Jan saw his opening and sprung forward from his sprawled position,
over a crate and into the jaw of the gunman, hammer-sized fist first. The alien crumpled under Jan's weight as
he dived onto him and hit the floor hard with a crack. One
down, three to put to bed. Jan
smiled broadly. Sweet dreams sucker. Jan stooped to conceal his great height and
scuttled along the row of crates.
Footsteps from one of the other gunmen echoed to his immediate left
and Lomona moved diagonally to intercept.
This gunman seemed more confident, giving the aura of honed
experience. Chances are this guy has already figured out where I am, and what I'm
doing. Jan looked more closely at
the gunman as he passed by the crack of another crate. He was sure he had seen him somewhere
before but he couldn't place him. Only one way to find out. Lomona waited on the corner of the avenue of
crates until the gunman stalked past and then casually swung out a foot. The man hit the floor with a thud and in a
second Jan was on top of him wrapping a hand over his surprised mouth.
"I'm at a distinct advantage." Whispered Jan into the gunman's ear. "One false move and I pop the cork, get my drift?" The man nodded slowly as Jan raised him up and led
him out of the alleyway and into the shadows. Jan disarmed the man and secured the Blaster into his left
thigh holster, which was usually empty.
Now he had two guns, which definitely gave him the advantage. "I
can't place you but I know we've
met before." The man shook his head and began to struggle furiously. Jan frowned and checked his chrono.
"Uh-oh. 0400 hours. Lights out." Jan swiftly fastdrew the mans Blaster and
with a deft flick switched the setting from kill to stun. Concentric circles flashed and the man was
introduced to unconsciousness in a second.
That was set to kill. Glann must really be angry. Jan hoisted the man onto his shoulder and began to
work his way out through the maze of crates, aware that there were still two
other gunmen on the prowl for him and a speeder outside. And if these were any indication of
Cipple's intentions, they were playing for keeps. Jan had downed the Berone Sunrise on Lifferia for a break from the insanities of
hyperspace and a chance to rest his weary bones. His journey out to the Quarshannel Sector with his colleagues
the assassin Goah Galletti and the older smuggler Anzai Karoo had been
exerting and he welcomed the opportunity to get some respite from the
onslaught of work. Not that he
disliked being busy, far from it. Jan
Lomona was amongst the hardest working smugglers in the Setnin Sector and had
built his reputation upon that. Over
a decade of running for the premiere ganglords of the Mid and Outer Rims had
made him a name worthy of constant employment. Until a comedy of errors in the Quarshannel
Sector. The mission had taken longer than expected and
Galletti, Karoo and himself had split up in order to locate the major
organisations within the sector. They
were expected - Cipple's name carried weight, even within the usually
enclosed borders of Quarshannel. But
despite intense negotiations and bargaining none of them could broker a
deal. And so, admitting defeat the
three contacted each other and agreed to meet up at a point in deep space
where they would begin their journey back to Setnin. And Glann Cipple's displeasure. That was the part Jan was least looking forward
to. He was unfamiliar with
failure. For so many years things had
run like clockwork. A new contact here led to a new mission there that led to a better job over there. One thing seemed to run effortlessly into another, so when the
Quarshannel job went belly-up he didn't know how to take it. And so, three days before he was due to
rendezvous with Galletti and Karoo he took a final stab at making a contact, anyone at all just to give him a hold
in the sector. And he found it in the
unlikeliest of places. The Berone
Sunrise, like every other ship before her required regular power-ups and
flight checks and after all the many days of travel through unfamiliar
territory, dodging black holes and dustcloud nebulas, pirate raiding parties
and other alien obstacles she needed some juice. So Lomona docked her at the Bell-Karnff Station, a circular
trading post just on the edge of Quarshannel space. It was a battered, beaten station that had seen better days in
the past as an old Republic outpost before the fall of the Republic and the
purge of the Jedi. These days it saw
service as a market for star pilots travelling through the periphery of the
sector and a refuelling point before the journey through the vast expanses of
deep space. Jan brought the Sunrise to her docking point on the
exterior of the station and waited for the docking tube to attach and
pressurise. He gazed through his
cockpit window at the edge of the station and the unfamiliar ships that
shared the docking ports with him. I wonder how many of these guys had any
better luck than me? Lomona left his Stock Heavy Freighter through the
zero-gravity tube and disembarked on the station, papers and permits in hand.
Three Stormtroopers waited for him,
weapons at the ready and the lead trooper gruffly barked for the papers.
"Ship documentation, weapons permits and licences." Jan handed them over silently and, as he always
did at times like this, prayed that Romanoe was as good at forging documents
as he bragged he was. The trooper inspected the documents more closely,
shuffling the flims in his hand and staring at Lomona. Jan couldn't read what expression sat on
the Stormtroopers face but the hairs on the back of his neck began to bristle
and that was always a bad sign.
"Captain…Lomona, we need to ask you a few…questions." He pointed towards an ominously painted
black door across the corridor.
"This way." Jan weighed up the situation for a brief
second. Three troopers wouldn't be a problem if I thought it was just three
troopers. These Whitecaps usually
come in six packs. He nodded and
exhaled deeply, handing his Blasters over to the trooper next to him and
stepping into line behind the lead trooper. The office was bathed in muted light that fell
upon a simple table and three chairs.
Jan paused at the doorway, unsure of quite what to expect. He'd been in situations like this before
and had always come off best. Given
the nature of this trip to the Quarshannel Sector now he wasn't so sure of
himself. The Stormtrooper behind him
nudged him in the small of the back with his Blaster Rifle and Jan hopped
forward. The lead trooper turned and
motioned for the door to be closed. Jan straightened himself and breathed out
again.
"Captain. You're probably
running a hundred questions through your mind right now. What have I done? Why am I here? What are they going to do
to me?" Jan raised his eyebrows in agreement.
"You must be a telepath.
Why am I here?" The trooper motioned to his two companions who
moved from behind Jan into the corners of the room. Jan watched one of them as he flicked at a switch behind the
camera concealed in the corner and watched the small red indicator light fade
to pink and then nothing. This is getting worse all the time, thought
Lomona. What the hell am I going to do?
"You are a smuggler from the Setnin Sector." Jan raised his hands in a defensive manner and
smiled.
"Whoa, wait pal. I'm just
an independent free trader who makes the occasional run out here to make some
extra credits. I'm no smuggler. You've got all my permits right
there."
"You can insult my intelligence if you like, but please don't try
to insult Imperial Intelligence as well.
Our operatives here have been trailing you for some time. You are a known felon from the planet
A-desando in the Setnin Sector.
You've worked for the gangster Jabba the Hutt as well as most other
Setnin ganglords…including Glann Cipple." Jan's face drained of colour as he sat in the
empty chair before him. Now I'm really done for. They've nailed me well and good. He raised his face from the table and
shook his head at the Stormtrooper.
"So, you've got all this on me.
Why aren't I being lined up against a wall and shot?" The trooper paused for a second. Jan sensed that something vital was about
to be revealed and he leaned forward.
The trooper seated himself opposite Jan.
"All in good time Captain."
He raised his hand slightly and his fellow troopers began to remove
their helmets. Jan's eyes widened as
the man before him did the same. Jan
looked around at the three men. They
all looked exactly the same. The
seated trooper smiled.
"Confused?"
"Yeah. How come you got to be sergeant?"
"First out of the jar I guess." Jan frowned. "I
wish I hadn't asked. So, why remove
the helmets?" "So
we can't be eavesdropped. These
helmets have built-in transmitters.
And what I have to say doesn't exactly come under the remit of
Imperial law." Jan's eyebrows creased again and he leaned back in
his seat. This is really getting weird.
What's he want me to do, find his long-lost quoin?
"Let me get this right.
You know who I am, where I've been and what I do. So why do I get the impression that we're
going to cut a deal?" The trooper shifted the helmet on the table and
looked at his two companions.
"Because that's precisely what I'm going to do. We need a package delivered. Something of vital importance that must
make it into the Setnin Sector."
"And you need me to do
that? Why? Couldn't you have
one of your own ships do it?" The trooper shook his head vigorously. "No
Captain. This must be delivered to a
specific location on Trefnare. The
city of Chollywood. And no one must
know about it. No one." Jan rubbed the bridge of his nose and leaned back
in his seat.
"What's the cargo?" "I
can't tell you that." Jan shook his head slowly.
"Well then I can't help you.
I'm not transporting an unknown cargo. It's not the way I run my ship." The trooper smiled and intertwined his fingers,
the amusement evident on his face.
"Captain, let me remind you that you are currently facing one of
two options - life imprisonment or death.
There is no other choice. So
you either take this cargo to Trefnare or we leave you to the hands of
Imperial justice." He opened his
hands. "It's your choice
Captain. If you refuse we can contact
another Setnin traveller to do it.
But our intelligence told us that you were the most likely to succeed
and the most likely to agree." Jan smiled at that. Maybe Imperial
Intelligence wasn't as blinkered as I thought. They sure got me nailed down there. Jan nodded at the trooper.
"Okay, lets say I do it. I transport your cargo to Trefnare, an
Imperial held world and deliver it without question. What's to say I won't open the cargo and
have a look?" The trooper glanced at his fellow troopers and
smiled again.
"The tracking device we're currently placing aboard your
ship. And the agents we shall send to
shadow your movements." Lomona nodded slowly and raised his chin.
"Okay that's a good back-up plan. But what if I arrived and the Imperial customs officials there
find the tracking device? And realise
it's Imperial? I'll be taken into
custody for questioning and your cargo shall be taken away for
inspection. I'll be executed and your
package won't make it to its intended owner.
So where does that leave you?"
Jan leaned forward. "It
doesn't take a genius to see that the last
people you want to get their hands on this package is the Empire. So you don't want to increase the risk of
me getting picked up by them." The trooper rubbed his temple and breathed in. "So
what do you suggest? We let you just
leave with the cargo? No guarantee
that we'll ever see you or the cargo again?"
"You could guarantee my
compliance, no questions asked. Your cargo would be on Trefnare before you
knew it."
"And what would that guarantee entail?" Jan smiled his infuriatingly smug smile.
"Removing any mentions of Jan Lomona or Glann Cipple from
Imperial records. You guys obviously
have quite a file on our misadventures.
If you want the package delivered without any fuss then make those
files disappear." The trooper balked at this. "Do
you have any idea how much effort that would take?"
"I'm betting it wouldn't take half as much effort as it has to
set up this little charade. And
what's one more ganglords career matter to the mighty Empire?" Standing to his feet the trooper began to pace
around the table, eyeing his two colleagues as he did so. "I
don't know if we can take that kind of risk."
"Risk is part of the game." Jan waited as the trooper weighed up his
options. A minute of whispered
discussion passed as the three conferred and made calls on personal communicators. Then the trooper spoke.
"Agreed. Go back to your
ship and await my signal. The cargo
shall be delivered within the hour and the tracking device removed." He replaced the helmet back onto his head
and pointed at the door. "We
shall be speaking again Captain." Jan Lomona smiled and nodded as the cameras
clicked back into life.
"No, we won't." Jan returned to the Berone Sunrise after a quiet afternoon in the centre of Dooget
Town. Lifferia had little to offer in
the way of excitement, the constant rain put paid to that, but as far as
planets went it was pleasant enough.
Jan lifted his trench coat collar to shield himself from the rain and
depressed a switch on his belt buckle.
The ramp of the Sunrise
lowered and he could plainly make out the shape of his trusty old droid
Aurran waiting for him. Smiling at
his old companion he didn't notice the speeder as it approached through the
metal fencing and parked a short distance away, four of its occupants
clambering out.
"Lomona." Jan turned and squinted through the rain that was
driving harder as the afternoon wore on.
He wiped the rain from his eyes.
"Who wants to know?"
"Glann Cipple. He wants
to ask you about a certain delivery of merchandise you transported from the
Quarshannel Sector." Jan shrugged and waved the men away, rain
splashing off his arms.
"Tell Glann I'm due back on Amagad in three days. I'll explain everything then."
"Mister Cipple was most insistent. He wants an explaination now." The lead man drew his Blaster, followed by a large
hooded alien and the other two hooded gunmen behind. The speeder driver also raised a
weapon. Jan raised his eyebrows in
surprise. What the hell's brought this on?
Glann can't know about my little cargo drop-off on Trefnare. "Glann doesn't know squat about what
went on. Like I said, I'll give him
the full story when I'm back on Amagad."
"That's not good enough Lomona.
We're leaving. Now." Jan didn't take too kindly to being ordered about
and showed his displeasure with a flurry of Blaster bolts that scattered the
men and gave him the chance to make a run for the Sunrise. As he was about
to leap into the ship the speeder dove in front of him, blocking him off from
his escape and making him skid and roll around it. He saw an alleyway that led to the nearby cargo loading areas
and made a run for it. He left the four men far behind as he splashed
through the puddles and mud of the alley.
It was a long run and he feared that they would have a good bead on
him if he didn't find a door or cargo bay soon. There, that will do! He skidded to catch the corner of the
door as he ran past and lost his footing, hitting the floor with a thud. He shook his head and cursed his
clumsiness as he saw the four men bearing down on him. Scrabbling to his feet he entered the
warehouse and entered into the corridors of crates… Jan stepped from the shadows where he had subdued
the second gunman and tread carefully away from the light towards the sound
of pursuit. He ran his fingers through
his hair and checked the Blaster was set to stun. Two alleys away he could see the shadow of his third pursuer, a
nervous looking man who was quickly checking every crate and cranny for signs
of Lomona. Jan's mouth curled into a
smile. Thanks Glann. It's not like
you to make things easy for me. The gunman moved into Jan's view, dead meat if the
A-desandian was in the mood for killing.
Luckily he wasn't. Jan pumped
a shot into a crate to the mans left, distracting him and making him spin in
surprise. As he did Jan wound up and
threw the Blaster at the mans head, thumping him heavily on the temple with
the handgrip. That's a first. I nearly
knocked a guy out with my butt. Well,
Frans always said it was a good one. The man staggered in muted surprise, mainly at the
thought that someone would be mad enough to throw a Blaster at him. But it had happened and Jan capitalised on
his shakiness. Two fists hammered on
his head as Jan came at him at speed and the man dropped heavily to the
floor. Jan dusted his hands off and
straightened his jacket. Three down… Suddenly the ceiling lights arced into view, air
rushed past his head and the concrete floor raced towards him and greeted him
with a crack. Jan's Blaster skidded
away into the crates and he let out a gasp of shock. He tried to lift his head and couldn't,
the impact was so severe. He opened
his eyes instead …and saw a large boot swing rapidly towards his face. Jan rolled and narrowly avoided the foot,
scrambling to his feet and getting some distance.
"Not so fast Lomona.
Glann wants you in, so in you go." Lomona shook his head to free his vision of the
watery blurring that was plaguing it.
"Gern? Gern Omik? What the Stang are you doing working for Glann?" The lizard assassin shrugged and licked his dry
lips. Jan could see the ornate sword
that Omik preferred to use swinging from a belt at his hip, but couldn't
ignore the Blaster that was trained unwavering at his head.
"Cipple pays well, doesn't he.
Likes men he can trust."
"How's he account for you then?"
"Temporary arrangement.
Cipple knows that Galletti wouldn't chase you down, and you know Feese
too well. But me? I've wanted a job like this for a
while." He smiled a cold
grin. "I think your scalp would
look rather good hanging from my shoulder." Jan rubbed the bridge of his nose and smiled back. "It
wouldn't fit Gern. The chip's too
big." Omik frowned.
"Come Lomona. Sticks and
stones may break my bones…"
"Probably." Jan leaped to his left, behind a tall crate and
narrowly missed the flurry of deadly blasts that sprayed towards him. That
should get him angry enough. Jan
grabbed a hefty crow bar and waited at the edge of the crate. He could clearly see Omik's shadow put his
Blaster behind a crate and swing out the sword. Jan snarled. Arrogant creep.
"Come on out of there Lomona.
I'll give you a fair chance." Jan stepped further back into the shadows. "I
bet you say that to all your prey."
"Not all of them. Just
the ones worth playing with." Jan grinned.
Playing with? I'll turn you into matching boots and
handbag for that. Jan breathed
deep and stepped out. Omik was
waiting in a battle stance with his sword at the ready. The lizard nodded in appreciation. "I
thought you'd spot the crow bar. An
effective weapon…if you know how to use it." Jan shrugged.
"Let's find out." Omik nodded and brought the sword up in a fluid
motion, bringing the blade high and down towards Lomona's head. Jan brought the bar up, holding it at both
ends and parried the blow, which carved a deep etch into the metal. Omik rasped at Jan as they came in close,
his tongue flicking out. Jan grimaced
with effort as he pressed his height advantage and pushed down on the
powerful lizard. Omik slid the blade
away and spun back, giving himself clearance for another attack. This time the attack was low and Jan
hopped over the blade, giving him time to bring the bar down on Omik's
shoulder. The lizard yelled out in
shock and staggered back.
"There ya go Gern.
There's room for my scalp now." Omik furrowed his hairless brow and spun the blade
in his hand. Jan shifted the bar from
left to right hand and swung a parry, splashing sparks from both
weapons. They came in close again and
Lomona managed to get the bar inside Omik's attack. He yanked and the blade came loose in the assassin's hands,
skittering away into the shadows. Jan
grinned.
"Shall we just assume that I know how to use one of
these?" He spun the bar in his
hands. "I'd hate for anyone to
get hurt." Omik glanced from left to right, seeing that his
weapons were too far away to make a run for it.
"Man to man then Lomona." Jan threw the bar noisily to the ground and rolled
up his sleeves. "If
you think you're up to it." Omik ran into the attack, bringing a scaled fist
crashing onto Jan's jaw. The
A-desandian staggered but didn't fall and returned the punch with a solid
blow to the stomach. Gern gasped and
the two men stepped back. Jan swung
another punch to the head, and another that connected and soon the two were
trading furious blows in the centre of the alleyway. After a minute of frantic fighting Jan
moved back, blood and sweat streaming down his cheek in a stinging torrent of
pain.
"Had enough Lomona? I
expected more from you."
"And I expected more from you Gern. I had no idea that you'd be so easily lured." Omik frowned at Jan's remark.
"What do you mean?" Jan reached down to the skirting of the crate and
lifted out a Blaster. Omik's face
fell.
"Shoes and handbag it is then." "So
what exactly was I supposed to do Glann?" Jan raised his arms in exasperation and turned to
the window overlooking the Bay of Amagad City. He pressed his forehead against the cool Plexiglas window and
closed his eyes. Easy Lomona. The security guards
around here don't even have stun settings. Glann Cipple picked up the almost empty glass of
Geenau Whiskey that sat before him and swilled it around. He turned slightly to watch Jan and
allowed a small smile to creep onto his face.
"You should have told me.
We might have avoided this…unfortunate chain of events." Jan shook his head and leaned away from the window
as a security skimmer buzzed past.
"Look, I gave my word. I
said I'd drop the cargo on Trefnare and that would be the end of it. Besides, it was worth the hassle just to
get our names cleared off Imperial records." Glann eyed Lomona closely and finished the
Whiskey.
"You don't truly believe that, do you?" Jan shrugged.
"Why not? These guys
risked everything to get a cargo to the Setnin Sector. Why not believe that they came
through?"
"It's an intriguing thought I suppose." Cipple scratched his neck. "Any more idea of what the cargo was? You could have been transporting almost
anything."
"You think I don't know that?
I don't carry slaves - it could have been slaves. I don't carry chemical weapons - it could
have been chemical weapons. I've run
through it all Glann and I still don't know what was in there." Cipple nodded slowly. "At
least I know I can send you on out on missions to Imperial held worlds. Apparently they have no records of
you." Jan turned and leaned on the glass.
"You can try. How's
Omik?"
"Recovering…slowly. He
said that you left him out in a typhoon overnight. The cold almost killed him.
He only survived because the Landspeeder driver found him" "I
thought lizards liked the water."
"That's amphibians, Lomona." Jan shrugged and finished off his own glass of
Whiskey.
"Lizards, amphibians.
They're all the same to me."
He threw his jacket on and made for the door. "Still want that run to Gista doing
next week?" Glann Cipple raised his eyebrows.
"Have I said any different?" Jan Lomona grinned and left the office.
"It's almost complete.
One more cycle through the main computer and the virus will be too
deeply encoded into the Imperial Network." The trooper nodded at his identical triplet and
glanced at his third brother.
"With luck Lomona will have delivered our cargo. Eventually
compatriots in the Setnin Sector shall reap the benefits of our work."
"There." The trooper
at the workstation leaned back into his seat. "It's complete.
Any past, present or future records on Jan Lomona and Glann Cipple
shall be automatically wiped from the files." He frowned and leaned closer to the screen. "We've been detected. If we want to make it out of here alive we
should go now." The lead trooper lifted his helmet and slowly
lowered it onto his head. His fellow
Stormtroopers did the same.
"For the Empire."
"For the Empire, brother." Everybody Wants Some1988/1999 short story by
Mark Newbold One year after Episode IV – A
New Hope Histories - Begun in
1988 Everybody Wants Some
originally told of a botched mission to Wennsia undertaken by Jan Lomona. The ramifications of this
mess was Lomona's falling out with Glann Cipple. As the years have passed
and the RPG scenarios progressed
Lomona and Cipple became more of a friendship than a simple employer/employee
relationship. However, as this story
shows Jan can still manage to enrage his boss enough to have him send a hit
squad out for him. In the 1999
version the mission has changed location from Wennsia to the Quarshannel Sector, a dangerous region of
space that Cipple would dearly like to have dealings with. And the cargo delivered to Trefnare? That will prove to have serious
ramifications years later through the timeline. Cast of Characters Jan LomonaGlann Cipple Gern Omik |