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The Doomsday Ship Page 7


  instead.

  The flooring was almost completely loose, clinging by a single bolt. In

  an act of pure courage-or foolishness-Dash let go of his handhold.

  Immediately, he was sucked toward the hole in the window. But as he passed

  over the loose sheet of metal flooring, he grabbed it in a powerful grip. His

  added weight yanked it loose, and man and metal shot toward the hole.

  Just as he had in the turbolift shaft, Dash kept his cool. In the split

  second before he was sucked out the hole, he tumbled in midair so that the

  sheet of flooring was leading the way. It was wider than the hole, and it

  slapped against the transparisteel, covering the hole.

  The vacuum stopped. Dash dropped to the ground. His trick had sealed the

  hole as neatly as a blast door.

  Hajj, Tash, and Zak got to their feet and hurried over to the man who had

  saved them.

  "Now that," Captain Hajj said, "was impressive."

  Zak expected Dash to brag, but instead, the pilot stood up unsteadily on

  his feet. He looked like a man who had stepped a little too close to the edge

  of a cliff.

  "Luck," he said, a little shakily. "Pure luck. But I hope now you know

  I'm not the one trying to kill us."

  Hajj nodded. Zak didn't say anything, but he couldn't help seeing Dash in

  a new light.

  "So who is it then?" Tash asked.

  Captain Hajj frowned. "It has to be someone on the inside. Someone

  reprogrammed all those droids, and you can only do that from the control room.

  "

  Zak slapped himself on the side of the head. How could he have forgotten?

  "Malik!"

  They all looked at him. "It's got to be the technician, Malik," Zak said.

  Quickly, he explained what had happened on his visit to the control room.

  "Malik knew how to shut the whole ship down with just a few commands. I'm sure

  he could have reprogrammed the systems. And," he added, "he's the only one who

  understood SIM well enough to shut him down. That explains why SIM hasn't been

  able to make repairs."

  "But why?" Tash asked.

  "He's got Imperial connections, doesn't he?" Zak said, looking at Captain

  Hajj. "Maybe the Empire has some reason for destroying the ship."

  "Then why not just have a Star Destroyer blast it?" Tash replied.

  "Maybe they want to blame it on someone else," Zak guessed. "What other

  reason could there be for what he's doing?"

  "Money," Dash answered. "Somebody could have bribed him to arrange the

  fake abandon ship order. Then he was supposed to just sit and wait for the

  pirates to show up."

  "Except that we got in the way," Zak concluded. "So he programmed the

  droids to come after us, and rigged the turbolifts so we couldn't get to him."

  Zak noticed his sister's frown. "You still don't buy it?"

  Tash shrugged. "You met this Malik, Zak, and I didn't. But it just

  doesn't seem right to me. It's an awful lot of trouble to go to, just to steal

  a ship."

  "Not just any ship," Dash said. "A cruise ship. Vessels this large aren't

  cheap. With enough work, the Star of Empire could be turned into a warship for

  someone's private army."

  "Malik," Captain Hajj growled. "I'll make him sorry he ever boarded my

  ship."

  Tash examined the sheet of metal, which was stuck to the window. "Will it

  hold?"

  "Not for long," the captain said. "The air pressure is holding it in

  place for now. Let's seal this room, then find the cable pipes."

  They made sure the doors to the observation deck were sealed, so that the

  rest of the ship would be airtight. Then Hajj led them to a storeroom at the

  back of the deck.

  "Look familiar to you guys?" Dash joked. The storeroom was just like the

  one in which they'd been locked.

  In the corner of the storeroom was an enormous industrial pipe, twice as

  wide around as either Captain Hajj or Dash. "This pipe is big enough to carry

  tons of cable inside it," Captain Hajj explained. "We use cable pipe like this

  so that wires aren't running all over the place. Passengers would trip over

  them."

  Drawing his blaster, the captain carefully aimed along the side of the

  pipe and blasted several holes in the metal, then kicked in more pieces until

  there was a hole wide enough for them to crawl through.

  Zak stuck his head inside the wide pipe. Even with a bundle of rubber-

  coated cables running up it, there was a lot of room inside. Once, on a dare,

  he'd crawled through some ancient sewer pipes back home on Alderaan. Some of

  them were almost big enough to stand in. This reminded him of the sewers, only

  the smell was different. Not better, just different. It smelled like hot

  engine oil and the kind of cleaning fluids that stung his eyes.

  "This won't be as hard as it looks," the captain said encouragingly. "The

  cables are coated with protective rubber, so they won't cut you. It'll be sort

  of like climbing a wall covered with ivy."

  "Oh, fine," Tash muttered sarcastically. "I do that all the time."

  "Let's reverse the climbing order," Dash said. "I don't want to lose

  anyone else. If the kids fall, we'll catch them."

  Hajj agreed. "Remember," he said to the two Arrandas, "just keep

  climbing. The pipe leads right to the comm station. And it's only two floors

  up."

  Zak went first. The minute he'd gotten a grip on the cables, he knew that

  Hajj had been right. It wasn't a difficult climb. Many of the cables were just

  the right thickness for him to grab, and there were so many that it was easy

  to use his legs to boost himself up.

  Reaching to pull himself higher, Zak felt something scratch his hand. He

  looked just in time to see one of the small, crablike maintenance droids

  scurry over his fingers. Another one followed the first, clicking its little

  repair claw as it ran.

  "Crabs," Zak said, sticking out his tongue in a look of disgust. "I've

  had enough of crabs for one day. Shoo!" He shook his hand and the two droids

  scampered away.

  Tash had no trouble keeping up with him, and below them, the captain and

  Dash were climbing steadily.

  "This is going to work!" Dash laughed after a few minutes. "Malik can't

  reach us in here. You'll have your hands on him in no time, Captain....

  Captain?"

  "Uhhn-uhhh!" The captain's response was a startled groan. They looked

  down.

  Captain Hajj was covered with crab droids.

  CHAPTER 13

  The crab-shaped droids scurried all over the captain's body. Their metal

  legs pricked his skin. Their repair claws tore at his clothes and bit into his

  flesh. One of them was clinging to his face, covering his mouth and snapping

  at his eyes.

  Captain Hajj let go of the cables with one hand and plucked the little

  droids off his body. But they were fast, and several of them scurried onto his

  back, out of his reach, jabbing and pinching him mercilessly.

  Dash started to slide back down the cable. "Hang on, Captain, I'm coming.

  "

  One of the maintenance droids scrambled from Hajj's back onto his

  shoulders, looking right into his face. A tiny spout rose from its back, and a

&
nbsp; jet of liquid shot into the captain's face. The liquid hissed as it struck his

  skin.

  Hajj screamed. Instinctively, he scratched at his burning face with both

  hands, letting go of the cables.

  Captain Hajj dropped down the cable pipe, leaving only the echo of his

  cries of pain.

  The crablike droids turned to Dash, Zak, and Tash, and started scrambling

  up the cables.

  "Time to move!" Dash ordered. "Climb, climb, climb!" Zak shinnied the

  bundle of cables like it was a tree. "Watch out for that stuff they squirt!"

  Dash called out.

  "It's cleansing fluid. It burns like acid!"

  "How much farther?" Tash cried.

  "I don't know," Zak said, but at that moment his hand touched the end of

  the pipe. All the cables turned and went through a metal grate. Through the

  grate, Zak could see a room full of technical equipment. "We're there."

  "Kick it in!" Dash said.

  Gripping the cables tightly, Zak pulled his foot up and kicked the grate.

  It didn't budge. He kicked again and again. On the fourth kick, the grate

  popped open and he shoved his legs through, sliding into the room. Tash

  followed headfirst.

  Dash was right behind her, gritting his teeth and muttering something Zak

  had never heard before. It was either a different language or a swear word or

  both. Dragging himself into the comm room, the pilot immediately turned and

  reached down for his foot. A crab droid had dug its pincer into his boot and

  was cutting at his toe. Dash scooped the small, droid up and hurled it against

  the wall where it shattered into a dozen pieces.

  Zak shoved the grating back into place as the rest of the crab-droids

  tried to scuttle through. Only when the hole was sealed off did he let out a

  sigh of relief.

  "Captain Hajj," Tash said, her voice almost a whisper. "He was a brave

  man."

  "No time for that," Dash said coldly. "We're here. Let's do what needs to

  be done."

  They were definitely in the communications section. Nearby was an open

  corridor leading to another bank of turbolifts-the way they would have arrived

  at the comm room if their plans hadn't been sabotaged. As Zak walked into the

  room, his eyes fell on the stacks of technical equipment.

  Zak remembered machinery the way most people remembered faces, and he

  recognized the assorted equipment as HoloNet receivers, Commnet transmitters,

  and a variety of translation devices that must have served the hundreds of

  species that traveled aboard the Star of Empire.

  "Where's the transmitter?" Dash said. "That's what we need to send a

  distress signal."

  "And we need to find it fast before Malik finds something else to throw

  at us," Tash agreed.

  "Down there!" Zak guessed.

  At the far end of the room were two doors. One was open, leading to a

  hallway. The other was closed. "The transmitter must be in there."

  A few long-legged strides carried Dash toward the door. As he approached,

  the door automatically slid open, and beyond they could see several empty

  chairs placed before a transmitting station. Dash stepped into the open

  doorway.

  As he did, the heavy door slammed shut with the force of a rocket,

  crushing Dash against the door frame.

  CHAPTER 14

  The door retracted again. As Dash fell, stunned, to the ground, the door

  closed again, smashing into his legs.

  "Dash!" Zak and Tash cried together. They were already reaching for his

  legs. They yanked him to safety just as the door struck at him again.

  Dash Rendar didn't move.

  "Is he-?" Zak asked.

  Tash touched his neck and felt a pulse. "No, I think he's just knocked

  out. What happened to that door?"

  "Malik must have happened to it," Zak guessed. He remembered the security

  cams SIM had mentioned. If Malik had access to the droid programming and even

  the door programming, then he could surely be watching them through the

  security monitors. "He knows we're here."

  Tash tried to lay Dash out on the floor as comfortably as possible. "So

  now what? This is where we wanted to be."

  Zak pointed to the door. It was open again, and very inviting. It may

  have been his imagination, but it seemed to be humming eagerly, waiting. "I

  don't think either one of us wants to try going through there. Let me get some

  advice."

  As her brother headed for a nearby computer station, Tash shook her head.

  "Zak, are you sure that's safe? I mean, if Malik is controlling the ship,

  maybe he's controlling the computer as well."

  "I don't think so," Zak replied as he typed. "Remember, SIM was damaged

  by the fake explosion, too. Lots of his systems went down. Malik probably had

  to dismantle SIM to take control of the ship. I'd say SIM's on our side."

  While his sister watched over Dash, Zak punched through the program to

  reach SIM.

  HI, ZAK. WOULD YOU LIKE TO PLAY A GAME

  "You've got to work on your sense of humor," Zak typed. "We need help."

  I KNOW. I TOLD YOU TO GO TO THE CONTROL ROOM. YOU'VE ONLY WASTED TIME.

  "I know," Zak agreed. "We need to get into the transmitter room, but the

  door is a trap. Can you fix it?" SIM replied: I HAVE NO CONTROL OVER DOOR

  FUNCTIONS AT THIS TIME. IF YOU HELP ME, I WILL BE ABLE TO TAKE OVER ALL SHIP'S

  FUNCTIONS, AND HELP YOU.

  There was another pause. THERE IS NO OTHER WAY. IT'S YOUR BEST MOVE.

  "Tash," Zak called out. "SIM says he wants me to go to the control room.

  There's no other way into the transmitter room."

  "Are you sure?" his sister replied. "Because I was just looking down this

  hallway." She pointed to the second door, the one that led to a corridor. She

  continued, "It looks like we could walk down that hall to the other end. There

  might be another entrance to the transmitter there."

  "But SIM said-"

  "Zak," Tash replied. "People died trying to get to this room. It's too

  dangerous to go to another level. We should try to find another way to send a

  distress signal." She stood up. "Keep an eye on Dash. I think he'll come

  around soon."

  She approached the second door a little nervously, not wanting it to

  slide shut on her as the other door had on Dash. With a quick jump she hopped

  through the door frame. It didn't budge.

  "So far so good," she said. As she started down the hallway, the door

  slid quietly shut behind her.

  Zak waited. Dash Rendar's eyes fluttered open for a moment, but Zak could

  see that his eyeballs had rolled back up into his head and mostly the whites

  were showing. Then Dash closed his eyes, heaved a deep sigh, and was out

  again.

  A moment later, Zak heard a tap on the door, and Tash's muffled voice

  came through. "Um, Zak, the door at the other end is locked. Can you open this

  one?"

  "I didn't lock it," he replied, standing up. He approached the door,

  which should have slid open automatically.

  It didn't move.

  "Tash, I don't want to scare you," Zak said as calmly as possible. "But I

  think you're locked out."

  "That doesn't scare me," Tash called back. Zak noticed a faint hissing


  sound from on the other side of the door. "What scares me," she added with

  panic in her voice, "is that fact that something is sucking all the air out of

  this hallway. It's getting hard to breathe. I think I'm going to suffocate!"

  CHAPTER 15

  Zak could hear Tash pounding on the other side of the door. He could also

  hear the constant hissing that meant some sort of machinery was drawing all

  the breathable air out of the hall where she was trapped.

  "Zak?" Tash called through the door.

  "I'm here."

  "Remember that Jedi philosophy I've been talking about? 'Action through

  inaction'?"

  "yes."

  "Now isn't the time to follow it. Do something!"

  Zak kicked the door in frustration. Then he turned and ran back to the

  computer terminal.

  "SIM-" he started to type.

  SIM erased Zak's message and replaced it with three words.

  CONTROL ROOM. NOW.

  "How?" Zak typed.

  GO OUT TO THE TURBOLIFTS. ONE IS WAITING FOR YOU. THE CONTROL ROOM IS ON