True Colors
True Colors
By Karen Traviss
Republic Commando - Book 3
Republic Commando
01 - Hard Contact
Omega Squad: Targets
02 - Triple Zero
Odds
03 - True Colors
04 - Order 66
Imperial Commando
01 - 501st
Dedication
For Christian Stafford, TC 1219, 501st Legion,
who left this world aged eight, March 6, 2005, and whose courage continues to inspire us all.
Nu kyr’adyc, shi taab’echaaj’la:
not gone, merely marching far away.
Acknowledgments
My grateful thanks go to editors Keith Clayton (Del Rey) and Sue Rostoni (Lucasfilm); my agent Russ Galen; the LucasArts Republic Commando game team; Bryan Boult and Jim Gilmer—insightful first readers; Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins of Penny Arcade, for bestowing coolness and feeding me; Ray Ramirez (Co. A 2BN 108th Infantry snipers, ARNG), for technical advice and generous friendship; Officer Antony Serena, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, for outstanding starship procurement; Lance and Joanne, of the 501st Dune Sea Garrison, for practical and inspirational armor expertise; Wade Scrogham, for reliable intel; Sam Burns, for input of solid common sense; and all my good friends in the 501st Legion.
And in this twenty-fifth anniversary year of the Falklands war, my special thanks go to all the veterans of that conflict who’ve shared their experiences with me in the intervening years.
Acknowledgments
Republic commandos:
Omega Squad:
RC-1309 Niner
RC-1136 Darman
RC-8015 Fi
RC-3222 Atin
Delta Squad:
RC-1138 Boss
RC-1262 Scorch
RC-1140 Fixer
RC-1207 Sev
Clone trooper CT-5108/8843 Corr
Clone commander CC-3388/0021 Levet
General Bardan Jusik, Jedi Knight (male human)
Sergeant Kal Skirata, Mandalorian mercenary (male human)
Sergeant Walon Vau, Mandalorian mercenary (male human)
Captain Jaller Obrim, Coruscant Security Force (male human)
General Etain Tur-Mukan, Jedi Knight (female human)
Jinart, Qiiluran spy (female Gurlanin)
General Arligan Zey, Jedi Master (male human)
Rav Bralor, Mandalorian bounty hunter (female human)
Null ARC troopers:
N-7 Mereel
N-10 Jaing
N-11 Ordo
N-12 A’den
ARC trooper Captain A-26, Maze
ARC trooper A-30, Sull
Agent Besany Wennen, Republic Treasury investigator (human female)
Prologue
Mygeeto, Outer Rim,
the vaults of the Dressian Kiolsh Merchant Bank,
470 days after the Battle of Geonosis
We’re running out of time.
We’re running out of time, all of us.
“Sarge…” Scorch looks at the security locks on the strongroom hatch with the appraising eye of an expert at breaking the unbreakable. That’s how I trained him: he’s the best. “Sarge, we got what we came for. Why are we robbing a bank?”
“You’re not robbing it. I’m robbing it. You’re just opening a door.” This is about justice. And relieving Separatists of their wealth stops them from spending it on armaments, after all. “And I’m a civilian now.”
It doesn’t feel like it. Delta are still my squad. I won’t go as far as Kal Skirata and call them my boys, but… boys they are.
Scorch is about twelve years old. He’s also twenty-four, measured in how far along that path to death he actually is, which is the only definition I care about. He’s running out of time faster than me. The Kaminoans designed the Republic’s clone commandos to age fast, and when I think of them as the tiny kids I first knew, it’s heartbreaking—yes, even for me. My father didn’t quite kill the last bit of feeling in me.
Scorch places circuit disrupters against the locks spaced around the door frame, one by one, to fry the systems and create a bogus signal that convinces the alarm there’s nothing out of order. He freezes for a moment, head cocked, reading the display on his helmet’s head-up display.
“What’s in there, Sarge?”
I’m not robbing for gain. I’m not a greedy man. I just want justice. See? My Mandalorian armor’s black—black, the traditional color of justice. Beskar’gam colors almost always have meaning. Every Mando who sees me understands my mission in life right away.
“Part of my inheritance,” I say. “Father and I didn’t agree on my career plans.”
Justice for me; justice for the clone troops, used up and thrown away like flimsi napkins.
“The drinks are on you, then,” says Boss, Delta’s sergeant. “If we’d known you were loaded, we’d have hit you up earlier.”
“Was loaded. Cut off without a tin cred.”
I’ve never told them about my family or my title. I think the only person I told was Kal, and then I got the full blast of his class-war rhetoric.
Sev, Delta’s sniper—silent, which might mean disapproval, or it might not—trains his DC-17 rifle on the deserted corridors leading from the labyrinth of vaults and storerooms that hold the wealth and secrets of the galaxy’s richest and most powerful, including my family.
Fierfek, it’s quiet down here. The corridors aren’t made of ice, but they’re smooth and white, and I can’t shake the impression that they’re carved straight out of this frozen planet itself. It makes the place feel ten degrees colder.
“In three,” says Scorch. “But I’d still prefer a nice big bang. Three, two… one.” I know he’s grinning, helmet or not. “Boom. Clatter. Tinkle.”
The locks yield silently and open in a sequence: clack, clack, clack. No alarms, no theft countermeasures to take our heads off, no guards rushing in with blasters. The vault doors roll back to reveal row upon row of polished durasteel deposit boxes lit by a sickly green light. Inside, two security droids stand immobile, circuits disrupted along with every lock in here, weapon arms slack at their sides.
“Well?” Fixer asks on the comlink. He’s up on the surface a kilometer away, minding the snowspeeder we’ll use to ex-filtrate from Mygeeto. He’ll get the icon views from all our helmet systems, but he’s impatient. “What’s in there?”
“The future,” I tell him. His future, too, I hope.
When I touch the deposit box doors, they swing open and their contents glitter, or rustle, or… smell odd. It’s quite a collection. Boss wanders in and fishes out a small gilt-framed portrait that hasn’t seen the light of day for… well, who knows? The three commandos stare at it for a moment.
“What a waste of creds.” Scorch, who’s never expressed a desire for anything beyond a decent meal and more sleep, checks the droids, prodding them with the probe anchored to his belt. “You’ve got until the next patrol to clear out what you need, Sarge. Better hurry.”
As I said, we’re all running out of time, some of us faster than others. Time’s the one thing you can’t buy, bribe or steal when you need more.
“Go on, get out of here.” I walk down the corridor lined with unimaginably excessive wealth: rare precious metals, untraceable credit chips, priceless jewels, antiques, industrial secrets, blackmail material. Ordinary credits aren’t the only things that make the galaxy rotate. The Vau family box is in here. “I said dismiss, Delta.”
Boss stands his ground. “You can’t carry it all on your own.”
“I can carry enough.” I can haul a fifty-kilo pack all right, maybe not as easily as young men like them, but I’m motivated, and that shaves years off my age. “Dismissed. Thin out.
Now. This is my problem, not yours.”
There’s a lot of stuff in here. It’s going to take longer than I thought.
Time. You just can’t buy it. So you have to grab it any way you can.
I’ll start by grabbing this.
Chapter One
Look, all I know is this. The Seps can’t have as many droids as Intel says—we’ve seen that when we’ve sabotaged their factories. And if they have gazillions of them somewhere, why not overrun the whole Republic now and get it over with? Come to that, why won’t the Chancellor listen to the generals and just smash the key Sep targets instead of dragging this war out, spreading us thin from Core to Rim? Add that garbage to the message Lama Su sent him griping about the clone contract expiring in a couple of years—it all stinks. And when it stinks that bad, we get ready to run, because it’s our shebse on the line here. Understand?
—Sergeant Kal Skirata to the Null ARCs, discussing the future in light of new intelligence gathered during their unauthorized infiltration of Tipoca City, 462 days after Geonosis
Republic fleet auxilliary Core Conveyor,
en route for Mirial, 2nd Airborne (212th Battalion) and Omega Squad embarked,
470 days after Geonosis
“Nice of you to join us, Omega,” said Sergeant Barlex, one hand wrapped around the grab rail in the ship’s hangar. “And may I be the first to say that you look like a bunch of complete prats?”
Darman waited for Niner to tell Barlex where to shove his opinion, but he didn’t take the bait and carried on adjusting the unfamiliar winged jet pack. It was just the usual bravado that went with being scared and hyped up for a mission. Okay, so the sky troopers’ standard pack didn’t fit comfortably on Republic commando Katarn armor, but for accuracy of insertion it still beat paragliding. Darman had vivid and painful memories of a low-opening emergency jump on Qiilura that hadn’t been on target, unless you counted trees. So he was fine with a pair of white wings—even if they were the worst bolt-on goody in the history of procurement in the Grand Army of the Republic.
Fi activated his wing mechanism, and the two blades swung into horizontal position with a hiss of hydraulics, nearly smacking Barlex in the face. Fi smiled and flapped his arms. “Want to see my impression of a Geonosian?”
“What, plummeting to the ground in a spray of bugsplatter after I put a round through you?” said Barlex.
“You’re so masterful.”
“I’m so a sergeant, Private—”
“Couldn’t you at least get us matte-black ones?” Fi asked. “I don’t want to plunge to my doom with uncoordinated accessories. People will talk.”
“You’ll have white, and like it.” Barlex was the senior NCO of Parjai Squad, airborne troops with a reputation for high-risk missions that Captain Ordo called “assertive outreach.” The novelty of supporting special forces had clearly worn off. Barlex pushed Fi’s flight blades back into the closed position and maintained a scowl. “Anyway, I thought you bunch were born-again Mandalorians. Jet packs should make you feel right at home.”
“Off for caf and cakes afterward?”
Barlex was still unsmiling granite. “Orders are to drop extra matériel and other useless ballast, meaning you, and then shorten our survival odds again by popping in for a chat with the Seps on Mirial.”
Fi did his wounded concern act, hands clasped under his chin. “Is it the Mando thing that’s coming between us, dear?”
“Just my appreciation of the irony that we’re fighting Mando mercenaries in some places.”
“I’d better keep you away from Sergeant Kal, then…”
“Yeah, you do that,” said Barlex. “I lost ten brothers thanks to them.”
Clone troopers might have been able to sing “Vode An,” but it was clear that the proud Mandalorian heritage hadn’t quite percolated through all the ranks. Darman decided not to tell Skirata. He’d be mortified. He wanted all Jango Fett’s clones to have their souls saved for the manda by some awareness of the only fragile roots they had. Barlex’s hostility would break his heart.
The compartment went quiet. Darman flexed his shoulders, wondering how Geonosians coped with wings: did they sleep on their backs, or hang like hawk-bats, or what? He’d only ever seen the bugs moving or dead, so it remained another unanswered question. He had a lot of those. Niner, ever alert to the mood of his squad, walked around each of them and checked the makeshift securing straps, yanking hard on the harness that looped between Fi’s legs. Fi yelped.
Niner gave Fi that three-beat silent stare, just like Skirata. “Don’t want anything falling off, do we, son?”
“No, Sarge. Not before I’ve had a chance to try it out, anyway.”
Niner continued the stare for a little longer. “Sitrep briefing in ten, then.” He indicated the hatch and inspected the interior of his helmet. “Let’s not keep General Zey waiting.”
Barlex stood silent as if he was working up to telling them something, then shrugged and took Niner’s indication that what was to follow wasn’t for his ears. Darman did what he always did before an insertion: he settled in a corner to recheck his suit calibration. Atin inspected Fi’s jet pack clips with a critical frown.
“I could knit better attachments than these,” he muttered.
“Do you think you could try cheery and upbeat sometime, At’ika?” Fi asked.
Niner joined in the inspection ritual. It was all displacement activity, but nobody could ever accuse Omega Squad of leaving things to chance. “All it has to do is stay attached to Fi until he lands,” he said.
Fi nodded. “That would be nice.”
Atin set the encrypted holoreceiver he had been holding on a bulkhead ledge and locked the compartment hatches. Darman couldn’t imagine any clone trooper being a security risk, and wondered if they were offended by being shut out of Spec Ops briefings as if they were civilians. But they seemed to take it as routine, apparently uncurious and uncomplaining, because that was the way they’d been trained since birth: they had their role, and the Republic commandos had theirs. That was what the Kaminoans had told them, anyway.
But it wasn’t entirely true. Trooper Corr, last surviving man of his whole company, was now on SO Brigade strength and seemed to be enjoying himself charging around the galaxy with the Null ARCs. He was becoming quite a double act with Lieutenant Mereel; they shared a taste for the finer points of booby traps. They also enjoyed exploring the social scene, as Skirata put it, of every city they happened to pass through.
Corr fits in just fine. I bet they all can, given the chance and the training.
Darman slipped on his helmet and retreated into his own world, comlinks closed except for the priority override that would let the squad break into the circuit and alert him. If he let his mind drift, the scrolling light display of his HUD blurred and became the nightscape of Coruscant, and he could immerse himself in the precious memory of those brief and illicit days in the city with Etain. Sometimes he felt as if she were standing behind him, a feeling so powerful that he’d look over his shoulder to check. Now he recognized the sensation for what it was: not his imagination or longing, but a Jedi—his Jedi—reaching out in the Force to him.
She’s General Tur-Mukan. You’re well out of line, soldier.
He felt her touch now, just the fleeting awareness of someone right next to him. He couldn’t reach back: he just hoped that however the Force worked, it let her know that he knew she was thinking of him. But why did the Force speak to so few beings, if it was universal? Darman felt a pang of mild resentment. The Force was another aspect of life that was closed to him, but at least that was true for pretty well everyone. It didn’t bother him anywhere near as much as the dawning realization that he didn’t have what most others did: a little choice.
He’d once asked Etain what would happen to the clone troops when the war was over—when they won. He couldn’t think about losing. Where would they go? How would they be rewarded? She didn’t know. The fact that he didn’t know, either, fed a growi
ng uneasiness.
Maybe the Senate hasn’t thought that far ahead.
Fi turned to pick up his helmet and started calibrating the display, the expression on his face distracted and not at all happy. This was Fi unguarded: not funny, not wisecracking, and alone with his thoughts. Darman’s helmet let him observe his brother without provoking a response. Fi had changed, and it had happened during the operation on Coruscant. Darman felt Fi was preoccupied by something the rest of them couldn’t see, like a hallucination you’d never tell anyone about because you thought you were going crazy. Or maybe you were afraid nobody else would admit to it. Darman had a feeling he knew what it was, so he never talked about Etain, and Atin never went on about Laseema. It wasn’t fair to Fi.
The Core Conveyor’s drives had a very soothing frequency. Darman settled into that light doze where he was still conscious but his thoughts rambled free of his control.
Yes, Coruscant was the problem. It had given them all a glimpse into a parallel universe where people lived normal lives. Darman was smart enough to realize that his own life wasn’t normal—that he’d been bred to fight, nothing else—but his gut said something else entirely: that it wasn’t right or fair.
He’d have volunteered, he was sure of that. They wouldn’t have had to force him. All he wanted at the end of it was some time with Etain. He didn’t know what else life had to offer, but he knew there was a lot of it he would never live to see. He’d been alive for eleven standard years, coming up on twelve. He was twenty-three or twenty-four, the manual said. It wasn’t time enough to live.
Sergeant Kal said we’d been robbed.
Fierfek, I hope Etain can’t feel me getting angry.
“I wish I could sit there and just relax like you, Dar,” Atin said. “How’d you get to be so calm? You didn’t learn it from Kal, that’s for sure.”