
Then he puts a hunk of statue in the boy’s hand. But now a stronger, sharper truth is required: “Jak-the battle isn’t over. It’s not many wars, but just one, drawn out again and again, cut up into slices so it seems more manageable.įor a long time he’s told his son not the truth but the idealized hope: One day the Empire will fall and things will be different for when you have children. He’s heard tales of the Clone Wars-tales spoken by his own father. The confusion in the boy’s shining eyes is clear: He doesn’t understand what’s happening.īut Rorak does.

Over the din he yells: “But the battle station was destroyed, Dad! The battle is over!” They just watched it only an hour before. He looks to his father with pleading eyes. The boy is young, only twelve standard years, not old enough to fight. A billboard high up in the sky among the traffic lanes suddenly goes to static. In the distance, the sound of more fighting, a plume of flames, flashes of blaster fire. The sounds of the battle unfolding right here in Monument Plaza don’t end. Two of those gathered-a father and son, Rorak and Jak-quick-duck behind the collapsed statue. The other two airspeeders lift higher and keep firing. The other crawls out onto the hood of his speeder, opening fire with a pair of blasters-just as a hunk of stone cracks him in the helmet, knocking him to the ground. One helmeted cop is flung from his vehicle. Coruscanti citizens climb up the stone spire behind both speeders-a spire on which are written the Imperial values of order, control, and the rule of law-and begin jumping onto the police cruisers. One of the speeders swings to the side to avoid an incoming chunk of stone-and it bumps another speeder, interrupting its fire. They start picking up hunks of the Palpatine statue and lobbing them up at the airspeeders. Bodies dropped and stitched with fire.īut still, those gathered are not cowed. The laser cannons at the fore of each airspeeder open fire. The glow of their lights reflected back in their helmets. Three airspeeders swoop down from the traffic lanes above-Imperial police. The crowd laughs.Īnd then: The whooping of klaxons. The head of the statue snaps off, goes rolling and crashing into a fountain. But then someone whips the chains around the back ends of a couple of heavy-gauge speeders, and then engines warble and hum to life-the speeders gun it and again the crowd pulls-Ī fracture appears at the base of the statue. Disappointed groans as the stone fixture refuses to budge.

The mad cheers of the crowd as they pull, and pull, and pull. Ropes follow suit-lassos looping around the statue’s middle. the war is just beginning.” -Admiral AckbarĬhains rattle as they lash the neck of Emperor Palpatine. We must remember that our fight continues. Its oppressive hand closes around the throats of good, free-thinking people across the galaxy, from the Coruscant Core to the farthest systems in the Outer Rim. The Empire’s weapon may be destroyed, but the Empire itself lives on. We struck a major blow against the Empire, and now will be the time to seize on the opening we have created. We have reports from Commander Skywalker that Emperor Palpatine is dead, and his enforcer, Darth Vader, with him.īut though we may celebrate, we should not consider this our time to rest. We have triumphed over villainy and oppression and have given our Alliance - and the galaxy beyond it - a chance to breathe and cheer for the progress in reclaiming our freedom from an Empire that robbed us of it.

The first installment, Star Wars: Aftermath by Chuck Wendig ( Blackbird, The Blue Blazes), releases September 4 and begins immediately after the victory celebration on Coruscant seen at the end of Return of the Jedi. As it turns out, the fight for freedom wasn't truly over. Check out the exciting excerpt below. There's over 30 years of space between Star Wars: Return of the Jedi and Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and that's enough time for a lot of conflict. And a new trilogy of books to tell us what happened. The second Death Star had just been obliterated, the Emperor was dead, and Darth Vader was no more. We all remember the last time we saw Luke, Han, Leia, and Chewbacca together. What happens next? Get a sneak peek in this excerpt from Chuck Wendig's highly-anticipated book.
