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joysweeper ([info]joysweeper) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-10-17 15:31:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:char: grand admiral thrawn, char: han solo, char: luke skywalker, char: wedge antilles, creator: fred blanchard, creator: mike baron, creator: olivier vatine, in-joke: tl;dr, publisher: dark horse, title: star wars

The Thrawn Trilogy: Heir to the Empire
Five years after Endor and the death of the Emperor, the Empire was in bad shape. There had been successors who had ruled the Empire, or tried to. Pestage, the Tribune, Ysanne Isard. Under them it splintered, warlords like Teradoc and Zsinj splitting off on their own to fight them and the New Republic. The Empire just kept losing people and worlds, rarely if ever winning any important battles. And then the last of the Grand Admirals came back from the Unknown Regions. Alien. Analytical. Awesome.

"I am Grand Admiral Thrawn. I have been away, but now I have returned. I know some of what has occurred. You will fill in the details of the rest when I come aboard. Rejoice, Captain, for the Empire will rise again." - A Grand Admiral Returns



Each of these is twenty-four pages.

Luke wakes up with Mara standing over him. She says "Don't like it, do you? Suddenly losing everything that made you special." He realizes that his Jedi senses are gone. Luke then thanks her for saving him, and she tells him to save it, since the only question now is whether to turn him over to the Imperials or just kill him. Then she has him walk out, saying "Try to escape and I'll kill you."

She marches him to where Talon Karrde is lounging in a room under a giant tree. His vornskyrs, Drang and Sturm - get the German? - growl at Luke despite Karrde telling them to be easy, so he has one of his people lead them off.





The Falcon lands on Abregado, and since Threepio is still complaining about impersonating Leia, so they get Lando to undo the programming. Lando tells Han that he and Winter should have worked out a better verbal code, and hopefully this is the last contact and the guy shows. The bit of Abregado they're on seems to be a canal city. They see someone's ship being impounded.

They're supposed to take a table near the casino, one of them saying that last time he was at Abregado-rae it was worse than Mos Eisley. They go, leaving Threepio, and see someone they recognize playing sabbac. Lando wishes he knew why the Imperials wanted Leia. Han says they want the twins. That's why they didn't use stun weapons at any point.

They can cause miscarriage. Then the two see planetary security officials coming into the casino, and realize why the guy they recognize is hiding at a sabacc table. It must be connected to that impoundment. Han gets some sabbac chips.

Long story short, he joins the game, drops a lot of hints, it's found that he was dealt a cheating card, and the game gets broken up. They take the guy they recognize back to the Falcon and find that the impounded ship is his boss's. There's a drop about how Han "stole" the Falcon from Lando. They get the man to take them to Talon Karrde, on the promise that they'll get that ship out of impoundment.



Mara drives Luke out of the cell he was being kept in, saying "We've got company coming, and we don't have any formal wear your size." She gets him into a sort of storage closet and shoots the door interface so it closes behind her. He examines the interface and determines that it's locked and he'll need another power source.



Meeting Karrde, Han and Lando pitch the shipping proposal, and he politely declines since it would look like he was taking sides. They then ask if he knows a really good slicer, and he says one will be at dinner. Which they attend.

The slicer is Ghent, who has long blue hair and really likes Han's heroism, going on about the time Han and Chewie attacked a slave ship and turned the ship over to the slaves. Karrde and Mara are called away for a bit, and Lando thinks he's seen Mara before. She wasn't a smuggler then, but he's not sure when that was.



Thrawn ends the call, saying he looks forward to their meeting, and three shuttles leave the Star Destroyer. Karrde rubs the back of his neck, and tells Mara to alert the others that they've got Imperial guests. The Falcon needs to be moved deeper under cover. Mara wants him to turn over Han and Lando, but Karrde says no. They are his guests; that means they are under his protection. Mara wants to know if he'll give them Skywalker. Karrde says he's not going to bargain with an Imperial Star Destroyer overhead. She doesn't agree, but she accepts his decision. It's going to be an interesting afternoon, he says.



He finds a small ship and takes off in it. Mara sees and pursues, of course.

Luke's sensors pick up on the Star Destroyer and Mara, and he goes evasive, shearing the tops off some trees.

He then flies over some really nice scenery in a two-page spread, saying "Hang on! I'm going to pull a drop-kick Kologran turn!" He fails and crashes. Oh, Luke.





That's Ghent.

Luke gets himself and Artoo out of the crash and see that Mara's ship also went down. He goes to take a look and whoops, Mara is there, holding a blaster on him and saying "I knew you'd come."

Next issue.

She tells him to stay there and keep his hands where she can see them, then sees a shuttle.

They hide in the woods while it lands and stormtroopers file out. Then the stormtroopers look into the crashed ships, board their shuttle again, and take off. Mara knows they left a sensor behind, so she and Luke and the droid will have to get moving, but quietly.



Lando and Han ask Karrde what that was about, accusing him of working for the Empire now. Ghent apologizes and said that they insisted on coming out and watching. Karrde tells the two that he doesn't work for the Empire, he just helps them collect ysalamiri. Han wants to know what the Grand Admiral's name will cost them. It's not for sale. They can't leave until the Star Destroyer does. Han makes a lame excuse about leaving something on the Falcon, and they turn away.

They go to inspect the storage shed with the prisoner, which is now empty, and see that the prisoner was tampering with the equipment. Talon Karrde catches Han looking through the room with the droid restraint collar. "You seem to have gotten lost. And to have lost General Calrissian along the way."





It's night. Luke says the forest reminds him of Endor, how it sounds so busy at night. Mara tells him that vornskrs are nocturnal. They hunt at night anyway. Artoo picks up on something, and a black vornskr with a red mouth goes after Luke.



Tailless vornskrys = neutered vornskrs? The "Jedi mind control" Mara thinks about there isn't control of other people's minds, it's how quickly he seems to relax. This is much clearer in the book.

Karrde stands atop a building with Sturm and Drang. One of his people comes up, is asked if Solo and Calrissian got bedded down, and tells him that they went back to the ship, not being trustful. Karrde doesn't blame them, and says maybe pulling Skywalker's computer logs will convince them he's on their side. Sort of. He doesn't have much choice; they're his guests. A search party must be organized for tomorrow; if they don't get to them first, they need to take them from the stormtroopers. Karrde's guy thinks that won't be hard. Lots of his people think highly of Skywalker for saving them from Jabba. Karrde says that's a problem. If they can't get them away from the Imperials, they can't let them take them alive. One way or another, his life here is at an end.



Another Nohgri grabs her from behind, but lets her go after catching her scent, saying "Mal'ary'ush!" Chewbacca grabs the Nohgri, and Leia tells him not to kill him, so he just gets knocked out. Ralrra appears with a bloody sword and says the other three have been dealt with. Chewbacca was wounded.



They climb down under the city, but Nohgri in an airspeeder find them. Leia ties her lightsaber to a vine and swings it so that it takes them out.



I love regal!Leia. Don't know why she's still wearing her night stuff, though.

Rather formally she lets Khabarakh go. She's not really happy about it, but she can't dodge them forever, and she has to take any chance to get them out from Imperial control. Leia then attends part of the memorial period for Salporin, who had a somewhat bigger role in the book. Parts are Wookiees-only, and she spends them getting the Lady Luck ready to fly, even if it's not safe to leave. She has to go back to Coruscant and begin a records search on the Nohgri. "Will this war never end?"

On Myrkr, Mara shoots another vornskr off of Luke. He says she's gone two days without sleep. She won't give him his lightsaber, though. They go and set up the sonde balloon, and Mara thinks "Jedi!", seeing Luke lie down and go to sleep while he waits.

Artoo wants to wake Luke up, Mara says that the message can just be replayed for him later. The recording Artoo picked up from the sonde balloon is of Threepio, and it boils down to the fact that stormtroopers are waiting in Hyllyard City, Karrde told them an ex-employee stole the Skipray with a current employee in pursuit. He didn't say Jade was a woman, so they should think about switching roles. They're working on a plan to get them out. Luke says it's a good idea, and Mara says she knew he was faking. Then a vornskr attacks Mara.

It knocks the lightsaber away, and while Luke distracts and Mara tries to keep its jaws away it it just whips him with its tail. He tells Artoo to grab the tail.

Artoo does, but his manipulator arm just gets torn off. This bought Luke enough time to grab his lightsaber and kill the vornskr. Mara gets up, trains her blaster on him, and demands to know what stupid game he was playing. "I didn't think you'd like your hands cut off if I missed." "Just drop the lightsaber and move back." "Didn't you notice that Artoo and I just saved your life?" "I noticed. Thank you."



On that Star Destroyer, Thrawn checks on reports. No word from Myrkr. At Sluis Van, there are 112 warships, 65 being used as cargo carriers. Pellaeon thinks this is the kind of operation they should use C'baoth on, but Thrawn says they don't need him. Careful timing will work fine. C'baoth says he doesn't want power, but he lies. He wants Leia and her twins, and once he has them he'll be no more threat than any other fool.

They test the cloaking shield of a small freighter, close enough to see outside of the viewport. Activated, it's still completely visible from the viewport. Thrawn is very pleased. Alert the task force; the operation has a green light. The Sluis Van ships are theirs.

Next issue, and the last for this book.

Artoo projects a map, and Mara and Luke look it over. Luke plans to walk right in, since the Imperials are going to try and ring them. All that's left is a bluff, and better bluff, better chance. Mara reluctantly agrees to the role-switch thing and gives Luke her blaster. He says they'll probably check if it's loaded, and she even more reluctantly hands over the power pak and his lightsaber. He puts the lightsaber into Artoo's smuggling compartment, and Mara says she'd wondered how he smuggled it into Jabba's.



Oh, Mara.

They head off, with Horible Blister Victim Luke training a blaster on Mara as she hauls Artoo. Scout troopers on speeder bikes ride up and tell them to identify themselves.

Luke is Jade, a bounty hunter with a prisoner. The scout troopers take them to an officer.

The officer tells his people to cuff both of them, saying that for the moment they're both prisoners. And what happened to him, anyway? "Ran into some kind of bush." "How inconvenient. Fortunately, we have a fully qualified medic back at HQ." The Imperials load everyone into a speeder and head back to the city.

In the city, one of Karrde's people have bound up Han and turn him over, as someone suspicious they found in the forest, to the officer, who doesn't recognize him. Han gets put with Luke and tells him that he's got friends. Luke trips Artoo and tells him to call to Threepio and tell him to wait until they're at a stone archway to attack. The officer is suspicious.



So Lando triggers the traps then, and the Imperials cover their prisoners and take defensive positions while being shot at. These are Zahn's Imperials, after all. They're professionals. Han gets out of his bindings to cause a distraction, and gets Luke's hands free.



Luke flings his lightsaber up so that it spins, and the archway crashes down on the remaining Imperials while our heroes run out of the way.










Oh, Wedge. Snubfighter jockeys get no respect.

That freighter he was suspicious of comes apart, and it's full of TIE fighters that had been hidden by the cloaking shield. And fifty truncated cone-shaped things. Five Star Destroyers also jump into the system with twenty smaller ships. The Falcon towing Luke's X-Wing appears and is appraised of the situation. Luke takes a gunwell, suspecting that the cone things are Lando's missing mole miners.

Thrawn knows this is the Falcon towing an X-Wing. Karrde will have a lot to answer for.

Wedge congratulates Rogue Five for good shooting, then flies by a ship that has a mole miner on it. The ship fires on him; since he's Wedge Antilles, he dodges. Luke in the Falcon shoots a TIE that was chasing him.

They see more mole miners and follow. One latches onto a frigate, and they see that they're burning through the hulls and getting through to the bridge emergency escape hatches. The Falcon and the Rogues decide to go after the remaining twelve unattached mole miners. A space trooper comes out of one of them and shoots.

Wedge shoots the space trooper, and they head off to hit more mole miners. Thrawn monitors the battle, micromanaging the fight against one assault frigate. He wants it intact. Pellaeon tells him that forty-three mole miners have attached to target ships. Thirty-nine are secure, four are still struggling with internal resistance. Thrawn says that it's time to withdraw. The captured ships are on their way.

Our heroes see what's going on. They get Lando up out of sickbay, saying that since on Nkllon when the Imperials stole the mole miners they were jamming everything, and most of the miners were on radio remote. Lando sends the signal to start them all running. This makes the ones that are still radio-controlled burn through the ships.




Next up is Dark Force Rising.

Why is the tag "Heir of the Empire"? And why have a tag for it at all? Only two posts will ever use it.


(Post a new comment)


[info]damar148
2009-10-17 07:56 pm UTC (link)
Why do lightsabers produce such blood sprays as if they're made from iron instead of plasma?


Thrawn ordering the retreat at the first sign of a possible defeat was an awesome moment of competence.

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[info]va1tyr
2009-10-17 08:01 pm UTC (link)
In the novels, it's stated that the wounds cauterize instantly - there's a bit where stormtroopers are found with mysteriously cauterized wounds on Thrawn's ship, and straight away he's all, Lightsabers! Jedi! Skywalker!

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-17 08:23 pm UTC (link)
And then "I want them alive, if possible. If not - if not, I'll understand."

Even the first time I was reading this trilogy, when I couldn't really follow the plot and was kind of bored, I got to that part and went basically "Whoah! Whoah! No one ever says that! Thrawn is awesome!"

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[info]va1tyr
2009-10-17 08:26 pm UTC (link)
Yeah! It's like - the Evil Overlord list? It's like he read it, and took it on board. Remember when he realised that the infiltrators had access to the main ship computer, and he shut it down?

He never, ever made stupid mistakes - when he was defeated, the heroes had really earned it.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-17 08:26 pm UTC (link)
I'm guessing the artist just wanted some gorn. :/ The books don't have that.

He does know when to fold them. (Warning TVTropes.)

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[info]statham1986
2009-10-18 10:24 am UTC (link)
Even Lucas didn't seem to have this down regarding the lightsabers, though - When Ben Kenobi cuts off Ponda Baba's arm in Episode IV, it leaves blood, I'm fairly certain, but when Vader takes Luke's hand off in V, it doesn't.

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[info]va1tyr
2009-10-17 07:59 pm UTC (link)
I'm sure I've fangirled Thrawn's cleverness before, so here I'll say I love that he knows how to calmly fold.

And I love that the plots require other people to be clever in totally reasonable ways - Luke using his artifical hand as a power supply, and Wedge's piloting skills allowing him to spot something wrong with the freighter.

And the fact the victories/defeats are complicated and have knock-on effects - the Empire didn't steal the ships, but they were disabled, which is still pretty good for them. Thrawn's efforts to build himself a good fighting force to take on the New Republic with are fascinating.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-17 08:37 pm UTC (link)
I love how the heroes are always coming up with plans that are themselves difficult and clever, and unlike in just about any other book, even when they work, Thrawn is right there taking things in and making countermeasures. I don't think I ever see anything like that! It's usually villain does something, heroes scramble out of it, heroes counter, villain is defeated, at least for this engagement. But Thrawn... guh.

He's amazing in Outbound Flight. Vagaari, Seperatists, Jedi - a new language, a new piece of the galaxy, new species, new tech? Not a problem, he'll adapt to everything.

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[info]va1tyr
2009-10-17 08:44 pm UTC (link)
Yes, and it never seems like the author 'cheated' - it's all reasonable deductions. Very smart deductions, sure, but reasonable. And the characters get their own victories, like Delta Source, so it's always tense.

Outbound Flight? I haven't read that one, thank you! I shall. :)

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-17 08:58 pm UTC (link)
Imagine what the prequel trilogy would have been like if Zahn wrote it, and Lucas just provided a general outline and characters and the visual stuff.

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[info]va1tyr
2009-10-17 09:44 pm UTC (link)
): I try not to. *sigh* Oh, the lost opportunity.

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[info]bluejaybirdie
2009-10-17 08:01 pm UTC (link)
You have made me so happy with these posts. Star Wars was my first fandom back when I was a wee little nerd!

I never thought of Leia as the type to sleep in her underwear though. A robe, maybe.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-17 08:55 pm UTC (link)
Heh. Well, there are four more to come.

Yeah, I found that kind of odd. I guess the artist wanted to draw some skin.

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[info]unknownscribler
2009-10-18 09:45 pm UTC (link)
It's Leia. Who can blame him?

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[info]earthelemental
2009-10-18 04:37 pm UTC (link)
After what she had to wear at Jabba's palace, she figured, hey what the hell, anything goes!

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[info]jeyl
2009-10-17 08:59 pm UTC (link)
Hmm. Mara Jade. I hope she dies at the hands of murderous someone who will later be regarded as a hero. In fact, I think that's already happened.

(Reply to this)

I wanted to like this, but the art...
[info]devastron
2009-10-17 10:19 pm UTC (link)
The Noghri are supposed to be short, lithe, stealthy ninja types and not giant, broad shouldered brutes. I also seem to recall Leia was pregnant with the twins at this point. She certainly doesn't look pregnant here. Maybe she wasn't showing at this point but I always got the impression she was.

I did love the novel and the writing is awesome.

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Re: I wanted to like this, but the art...
[info]joysweeper
2009-10-18 12:56 am UTC (link)
Yeah, it's annoying. The next book is better about that. Promise.

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[info]dreamreaver
2009-10-17 11:39 pm UTC (link)
...sometimes I imagine moments where Luke and Mara just talk and poke fun at the situation they were in at this point in time...

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[info]aaron_bourque
2009-10-18 12:40 am UTC (link)
This adaptation really . . . fell flat in a lot of places. For instance, the cloaking ship.

In the comic, it's like "Here's a ship, we're talking about cloaking, now it's jumping," and the audience is all "Ho hum." In the novel, it's like "There's a ship. Okay, turn on the cloak. The ship's still there? Excellent" and the audience goes "Wait, wha--what? Isn't the cloaking device supposed to, you know, CLOAK?? WHAT'S GOING ON? IT DIDN'T CLOAK? WHAT JUST HAPPENED!!??!"

So awesome.

Aaron "The Mad Whitaker" Bourque; the adaptations really should've been at least 8 issues each. Hell, even 12 issues might not have captured all of the AWESOME contained in each book.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-18 01:00 am UTC (link)
Agreed. The trilogy suffers from being condensed. It's pretty faithful, sure, compared to most adaptations, but even in the comics with good art, it just doesn't have the same impact, and everything seems to be happening very quickly. Zahn books are fast-paced and a lot happens, but this is a bit much.

I still like these comics, though. Just not as much as the novels.

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[info]zechs27
2009-10-18 12:55 am UTC (link)
Good question consider the Heir tags gone.

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[info]alphamonkey928
2009-10-18 08:59 am UTC (link)
Heh. It's good to see these and nerd out on some Star Wars. Haven't done that in a while. Not since I stopped posting on TheForce.net's boards waaaaaaaaay back when. :)

Also, I wonder what ever happened to the Wookie with the "speech impediment?" I don't think he's ever mentioned outside of this trilogy.

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[info]stretchdude
2009-10-18 03:19 pm UTC (link)
That's supposed to be Ghent? He looks like he's in his thirties and...not oozing "hacker prodigy" from every pore.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-18 09:55 pm UTC (link)
I kind of like the image of him being kind of big and awkward-looking, personally.

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[info]hearthemvoices
2009-10-18 04:51 pm UTC (link)
Once we're done with the Thrawn Trilogy and Duology, I'll have to find Union and post scans from it.

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[info]alphamonkey928
2009-10-18 08:47 pm UTC (link)
Great. I can drool over Iella Wessiri. (Laughs.)

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[info]unknownscribler
2009-10-18 09:46 pm UTC (link)
I was so bummed when the closing duology finally deepsixed Thrawn.

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[info]hearthemvoices
2009-10-19 12:37 am UTC (link)
Same. I was really really bummed out. Then there was the whole sequence of Luke and Mara trying to get out alive - which made me a really happy shipper. :D

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-19 02:25 am UTC (link)
Survivor's Quest fairly strongly hints that there's another Thrawn clone. I really like that book.

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[info]dreamreaver
2009-10-19 06:59 am UTC (link)
I recall reading a statement somewhere that said Zahn wanted to write a novel involving Ben Skywalker meeting a Thrawn clone...

...screw it, I'd pay big money just to read a Zahn-written Ben, period.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-19 10:37 am UTC (link)
He also wanted a book about Luke Skywalker and his family while Ben was a teen, but noooo, Legacy was all "You can't have nice things!"

[little bitter, yeah]

I like the detail about the clone knowing he's not Thrawn and feeling incredible pressure to live up to the original.

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[info]unknownscribler
2009-10-19 07:38 am UTC (link)
Really?

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-19 10:29 am UTC (link)
*breaks out the book*

At the end of everything and on the way home, Luke and Mara talk, both epilogue-ing for us and resolving one of her subplots. Then Luke asks her what has her "walking around like a kid in a cemetary at midnight. The thing you've been trying to bury where you hope I won't notice it."

"Did it ever occur to you - I mean, did you ever really think about it - just how sneaky and convoluted this whole scheme of [redacted] was?"

"You forgot to add underhanded."

"Oh, absolutely underhanded. The idea of [redacted! Read the book, it's awesome!] is about as devious as you can get. Especially when you add the extra touch of [redacted]."

"Devious and a half. So?"

"So who do we know who specialized in exactly that kind of convoluted plan?"

"I don't know. Car'das, maybe? You said he used to work for Karrde, who's always been pretty good at the devious approach himself. And we already know he was the one who maneuvered [redacted] aboard."

"I suppose it could have been him. Though from one Shada said it sounded like he mostly keeps out of galactic affairs there days. I was thinking more about someone with a proven record for strategic and tactical finesse."

"No. It couldn't be. We destroyed that clone, remember?"

"We destroyed a clone. But who's to say he didn't have another one stashed away somewhere?"

"No. It's impossible. If there was another clone of Thrawn running around, we would have heard about it by now."

"Would we? Remember, according to Parck, the only reason Thrawn came back to attack the New Republic was to whip us into fighting shape for some danger looming out there at the edge of the galaxy. Maybe he figures we're as ready as we're going to be and has decided to concentrate on [redacted]."

"Or maybe the [redacted] were more than just locals. Maybe they've already been in contact with the threat Parck and Fel mentioned to you."

"Could be. Of course, that would just give the Chiss one more reason to squash the [redacted]. Not only would it eliminate part of the threat, but they might also learn something about possible new enemies when they sifted through the rubble."

"I wish you'd mentioned this while we were still aboard the Chaf Envoy. We could have asked [redacted] about it."

"That's exactly why I didn't mention it then. Because we probably would have asked, and frankly I don't want to know. If Thrawn's back, I think we can assume he's more or less on our side. If he's not back, I guess we'll all just have to make do on our own."

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[info]unknownscribler
2009-10-19 11:53 am UTC (link)
Man, the new ongoing set during the Vong War really really should have been an ongoing Infinities title.

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[info]unknownscribler
2009-10-19 07:37 am UTC (link)
I'd trade Thrawn for the two of them any day. The Vong invasion would have worked out quite differently if he'd survived the change in publishers.

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[info]joysweeper
2009-10-18 09:54 pm UTC (link)
I don't think there was a comic for the duology. Am I wrong? I'd rather like to be wrong...

Sure, do it. But have a scan or two of Wedge in it, okay? I like him.

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[info]aaron_bourque
2009-10-19 12:01 am UTC (link)
Never made a Hand of Thrawn comic.

But there was Mara Jade: By The Emperor's Hand, which was what happened to her after Jabba's Palace.

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[info]hearthemvoices
2009-10-19 12:35 am UTC (link)
I was always under the impression that there was. o.o

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[info]hearthemvoices
2009-10-19 12:39 am UTC (link)
Yep, I'll have a scan or two of Wedge. (: But Union troubled me greatly. It seemed that all the guys had identical faces.

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[info]aaron_bourque
2009-10-19 02:21 am UTC (link)
Which is hilarious considering the number of photo-refs of celebrities in there.

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