
Generative AI used for image only; text is original.

Previously on Jedi/Superman . . .
Detention Block 8A-9, Death Star
Luke Skywalker ignited Ben’s lightsabre and sliced a hole through the ceiling. He leaped through the gap, landing in a crouch as Princess Leia and See-Threepio followed, assisted up and through by the half-dozen Rebels they'd rescued since Clark and Ben had left. The rest of the Defiance's skeleton crew had to be on this floor. Unfortunately, every level of the detention block was guarded, and some of those guards were already on the move.
Luke turned to face the squad of Stormtroopers racing down the corridor at them. He swept an open hand toward the troopers, using the Force to yank their blasters from their hands.
The befuddled troopers stopped in their tracks as Luke guided their floating weapons into the hands of their former prisoners. The Rebels grinned.
“Get on the floor, face down, hands behind your heads!” Leia barked, brandishing one of the captured weapons at the disarmed Imperials.
The Stormtroopers complied. Luke looked at Leia, surprised by her authoritative tone; she winked at him. Then she turned to face the other Rebels. “Tie them up with anything you can find. Leave them.”
"Let's go," Leia ordered after the Stormtroopers were bound. She led the way toward the detention control room. Luke and the other Rebels rushed the two officers and three stormtroopers stationed there, quickly subduing them.
Once inside the control room, Threepio made a beeline for a computer terminal. "It's just like Artoo to be off flying around with Red Squadron when he should be here with us. He's much faster than me at working with security software. Ah! I have it! All the detention cells are opening now, Mistress Leia."
It was true; down the three halls connecting to the control room, doors were sliding open and Rebel troopers were spilling out. They all felt and urge to celebrate, and there were smiles and back-slapping—but everyone knew they were far from free.
"Threepio, find out where the Defiance is being stored," Leia said, resting a hand on the droid's gold-plated shoulder.
After a moment, Threepio replied: "Bay 717, mooring 91. I've downloaded a route map to that location."
"Great work, Threepio," Luke said. "Let's go, everyone. Those with weapons, protect those without; everyone keep your eyes peeled. There could be a lot of Stormtroopers between us and Bay 717."
"Excuse me, Princess, but there's one more thing. The Millennium Falcon is also on board the Death Star, in Bay 609, mooring 2."
"Oh, no," Leia said. "Han...Chewbacca. They came looking for us. And now Tarkin and Vader have them."
"I'll find them," Luke volunteered.
"You...against Vader? Luke..." Leia said. Her face was twisted with worry.
"I'll be okay. You get everyone else to safety. I'm sure Ben and Clark are already on their way back."
Leia nodded grimly. "Be careful," she said, and suddenly wrapped her arms around Luke's shoulders and kissed him with more fervor than either of them had expected.
They both blushed. The Rebel troopers pretended not to notice. "You guys all be careful," Luke said as he joined Threepio at the computer terminal. "Threepio, you're with me. I'll need some help finding our friends."
"Oh, dear. I was afraid of that," Threepio muttered.
Leia and the troops reluctantly left Luke and Threepio behind. One Rebel, a human trooper named Gullivan, noticed something strange as they made their way to Bay 717.
"Princess, when we arrived this station was crawling with droids of all kinds," he said. "But since breaking out of our cells, I haven't seen a single one."
The others looked startled, realizing Gullivan was right.
"That's very strange," Leia answered. "But we don't have time to worry about it now. If anything, it could be something we can take advantage of. Keep watching for patrols and keep moving, everyone."
Grand Moff Tarkin's Office, Death Star
“I'm sorry, sir.”
The blue glow of the hologram winked out, leaving Grand Moff Tarken in the shadows. The image of his best spy faded into nothingness.
Tarkin had suspected that Emperor Palpatine was dead for some time, so the news wasn't a surprise. Nor was it any great revelation that the Kryptonian madman, Zod, was responsible.
The news was still troubling. And yet there was opportunity in it.
Vader had to have known all along. And yet the Sith lord had said nothing, acting as if he was still in regular communication with his mentor.
Tarkin's fingers drummed out a soft beat on his immaculate desktop. Betrayal was the way of the Sith. According to their bleak religion, Vader was destined to pit himself against Palpatine; the Emperor himself expected it of his protege. And yet Zod had beaten him to the punch, which must have enraged Vader.
That the Sith lord hadn't taken revenge against the Kryptonian meant only one thing: he was afraid. Fear. The Sith loved to wield it, but they were also vulnerable to it. A powerful thug is fearless only in the absence of someone with greater power—Zod. Vader was the most powerful Sith alive now, one with even greater potential than Palpatine. But his fear held him in check.
Tarkin had hoped the two would distract each other. Both were too dangerous, too chaotic to rule the Empire. With the Emperor dead, Tarkin was, of course, the best choice to lead. But he was no match for a Kryptonian, not even with all the power of the Death Star and the Imperial Starfleet at his back.
But there was another Kryptonian survivor. The young lad who'd joined the Rebels to wreak havoc on the Outer Rim. By all reports, he was an altruist. And altruists could be manipulated.
His door chimed.
“Come.”
Tarkin's aide, Lieutenant Propyl, entered, followed by the infamous Han Solo and Chewbacca, both in manacles, blasters pointed at their backs by a pair of Stormtroopers.
“Well, if it isn't Grand Mockery of Decency Tar Pool,” Solo sneered.
“Shut up, Rebel,” said the trooper behind the smuggler, jabbing him in the lower back with the barrel of his laser rifle. Solo grimaced.
“Troopers, you're dismissed,” Tarkin said. The troopers made themselves scarce, the office door sliding closed behind them.
“Propyl, unbind them. I need to chat with these two gentlemen.”
Propyl, a sandy-haired, rugged-looking Corellian in his late fifties, looked askance at his commander.
“You're certain, sir?” He glanced up at the Wookie to emphasize his point.
“Yes, and you can leave after you've freed them. Take the rest of your shift off, you've done yeoman's work today,” Tarkin said.
Propyl rarely smiled, but his lips did twist a little at that. “Yessir,” he said with a salute. A second later, Tarkin was alone with the wookie and the smuggler.
“Okay, tell me why my pal here shouldn't pull your limbs out of their sockets,” Solo said, putting a restraining hand against Chewbacca's chest, who indeed looked determined to dismember Tarkin.
“The galaxy is in flux,” Tarkin said. “I'm aware of your friendship with the Kryptonian some people have taken to calling the super-man. His activities are short-sighted and counterproductive, like the Rebel cause itself. And yet, your super-man may be the only counter against an even greater threat to order—an agent of chaos who, I believe, plans to make Imperial rule look as gentle as that of a doting nanny in a creche.”
Tarkin leaned forward, steepling his fingers, regarding Solo and Chewbacca with a gravity they could feel.
“I'd like to propose...a temporary understanding.”



























