Star Wars: Battlefront: Twilight Company

Star Wars: Battlefront: Twilight Company Read Online Free PDF

Book: Star Wars: Battlefront: Twilight Company Read Online Free PDF
Author: Alex Freed
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction, Space Opera
would argue, but she was lifting the governor’s bag as she said, “They say kidnapping an Imperial is bad luck.”
    Namir couldn’t tell if she was joking. “
Bad men crave bad luck
,” he replied. It was a saying he’d learned long ago on a more primitive world. “Now can we get off this planet?”
    He was ready to be done with the rain. He was ready to sleep. He was ready to forget the piles of dead civilians and the opulent mansion filled with aromatic fruit and busts of murderers. The attack on Haidoral Prime hadn’t been a failure, but it had been laden with troubles.
    Now he was taking one of those troubles home.



CHAPTER 3
    PLANET SULLUST
    Day Eighty-Five of the Mid Rim Retreat
    As evening approached in Pinyumb, the obsidian of the cavern roof slowly lost its refracted iridescence. The great towers of the city, rising from the cave floor like stalagmites, dimmed their upper lights until the dome was lost to blackness. The yellow sulfur that clung to the cavern walls seemed to turn sickly pale. The rustling of ash angel wings came and went as the creatures returned from foraging to nest.
    With the ash angels came the people of Pinyumb, arriving in lifts and shuttles from the factories of the surface or departing their housing blocks for the night shifts. There were dark and pale humans, gray-skinned Sullustans, and rarer species, too. Pinyumb was cosmopolitan in its way—those willing to toil were welcome, and all others were outcasts.
    Thara Nyende didn’t linger in the streets or stroll along the turquoise streams that flowed by Pinyumb’s walkways. She didn’t stop to pick out familiar faces from the commuter crowds. Like everyone else, she had errands to run before curfew. She did, however, take the time to nod firmly in the direction of the stormtroopers posted at every shuttle and intersection. Only twice did the men or women inside the armor nod back.
    Thara passed squat, steel-gray buildings that bore no signs but that she knew well—a public bathhouse, a hospice, a café—and then descended a short flight of steps hewn from the cavern rock to an unmarked door. She hoisted the leather bag slung over her shoulder and pushed inside, where her eyes slowly adjusted to the dim cantina lighting. No more than a dozen customers were present—nearly all men and nearly all old, no matter the species. They were broad-shouldered and wrinkled, sturdy and scarred from years of work in the Inyusu Tor mineral processing facility. Most were gathered about a holotable displaying an offworld sporting event, but they spoke to one another loud enough to drown out the soft holocast.
    “Uncle!” Thara called in the direction of the bar. “I’m here to spoil you.”
    The man who looked up from the array of nozzles behind the bar and started Thara’s way looked old enough to be her grandfather rather than her uncle, and if his hair had ever matched her bright-blond locks, the color had faded long ago. He clapped her on the shoulders as other heads turned and aged lips smiled at the young woman.
    The voices around the holotable lowered.
    “The only person getting
spoiled
is you,” Thara’s uncle said before accepting the leather bag from her hands. “Working half as long as the rest of us, and paid twice as much! But let’s see what you’ve got anyway.”
    He placed the bag on an empty table and began to rummage through its contents. First out was a tube of ocher gel. Thara’s uncle turned it in his hands, then shouted over his shoulder, “Myan! Got another tube of burn salve. Boys in dorm four still hurting?”
    Thara remembered the accident with the dorm four workers. They’d been scalded badly when the steam pipes in the magma extractors had broken. Some of the workers still hadn’t returned to duty. Soon they’d be evicted from their residence.
    Myan, a diminutive Sullustan, hobbled over to the table. He spoke in his native tongue—too quickly for Thara to fully understand, but the tone sounded
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Army of the Dead

Richard S. Tuttle

A Bridge of Years

Robert Charles Wilson

Snowbrother

S.M. Stirling

vampireinthebasement

Crymsyn Hart

The Three Sentinels

Geoffrey Household

Most Likely to Succeed

Jennifer Echols