1165 lines
63 KiB
TeX
1165 lines
63 KiB
TeX
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Story written by: lim@merck.com
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In the early morning light, the wide Alderaani forests were
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tipped with gold. Danah Antilles, Dowager Princess of Alderaan,
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surveyed the dappled pelt of gilt leaves and shadow from high
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above. She sat at her breakfast table as if enthroned. Although
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she was nearly ninety, her back was sapling-straight, and her
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eyes were as clear as the jewels clasped around her throat.
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Another strand of gems shone above them, wound into her silver
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hair. On the other side of the prismed tower chamber, her son
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nodded to the servant droids, dismissing them.
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Danah turned away from the view, waiting for the soft drone
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of the elevator shaft to diminish and fall silent. "Well," she
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said at last, "What is the news from the Senate?"
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"Bothersome," Bail Organa said. His pale blue robes flowed
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behind him as he walked back to his own chair. Sitting down, he
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took a sip of tisane. "Nearly half now support Palpatine's
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proposal, and many of the rest are whispering secession. I don't
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know which party alarms me more."
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"Unfortunately, Palpatine is right. If we do not present a
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unified defense, we may soon have nothing to defend. Alderaan was
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much like that before you were born. If external arbitration had
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not intervened, the noble houses would have torn one another
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apart long ago. Imagine what would have happened if invaders had
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come from outside, as the Republic now faces." She shook out her
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napkin with a sharp snapping sound and laid it across her lap.
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"You were hardly innocent of the vendettas, Mother."
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"I never said I was." A predator's smile leapt across her
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features, vanishing as she bent to examine the fruit. "But I knew
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when to halt and make peace, unlike Helice. She never did accept
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my alliance with your father; she went to her death accusing me
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of having betrayed our house. A pity, really. She and her
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daughter might have been useful to us." Selecting a piece, she
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began to open it with a small silver knife.
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"Yes, well, at present, we have more pressing concerns. Have
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you been able to gauge the mood here at court? How do the people
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stand on the war?"
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"Which party would they prefer to be in, do you mean? Our
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people have an easier decision than most; since we have no longer
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have armed forces nor legal weapons, they need not fear death,
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only taxes. Without the fear of conscription, they seem willing
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enough to forward funds to the front, if it proves necessary."
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She watched Bail bite into another spiced bun. "So, shall you
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declare a necessity?"
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"As little as I like to, we may have no choice. The Nechti
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have retaken Gefras and are advancing toward the Ikatya system."
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"Truly?" With careful motions, she put her fruit rind and
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her knife down on her plate. "I think this might be an opportune
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time for me to inquire about Castra's health."
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"Castra? What has my wife to do with--" Setting down his
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half-eaten bun, he wiped his hands on his napkin. "No, she is not
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pregnant yet. We've only been married a year, you know. Isn't one
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of Liane's children at Academy in this sector?"
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"He graduated into the sector fleet this year. His
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contingent is being forwarded to Ikatya to appease the Senate. I
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had understood the combat front had drawn back from there. I
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thought he might enjoy seeing his sister again, but perhaps now I
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should recall one of them." Her voice was devoid of enthusiasm.
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"Only one?"
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"Very well; both if you insist. I would just as rather leave
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them there, but if you haven't a direct heir yet, they're all we
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have. Unless, of course, you wish Alderaan to dissolve into civic
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feuding again. I doubt the Senate will have the patience to spare
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us more arbitrators so soon.
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"It is a pity about those two, really." Danah chose a small
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pastry and daubed it with yeast-spread as she spoke. "I do hope
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you and Castra will provide an heir soon so I can put Liane's
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children out of the way."
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"I do hope you're joking." Bail paused cautiously. "The
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vendettas are over, Mother. Assassination as a preventive measure
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is no longer considered good domestic policy."
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"Scarcely domestic. They're five sectors away." She poured
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more tisane into Bail's empty cup, then into her own. Before he
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could retort again, she said, "I take it you have forgotten
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Liane's manuevering, then."
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"She paid the price for her treason. I see no reason why her
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children should be forced to as well."
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"Your father said the same of Liane, as Helice's daughter.
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She killed him."
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Bail leaned back in his chair and gazed out through the
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glass-paned walls, his cup of tisane in hand. On the sunward
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side, the panes were automatically darkening in a latticed
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arabesque, screening out daylight as it intensified. Without
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looking at his mother, he said, "I know you've been monitoring
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Liane's children. Is there anything you wish to tell me about
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them?"
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"Not yet. The older one, Arcadia, has been a little mouse of
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a healer ever since she emerged from Jedi training. I doubt much
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danger from her alone. But her brother is of an age to be
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delighted with intrigues and secret plans, and if he recruits her
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into his schemes, she may become capable of dangerous
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subtleties."
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"And is he scheming?"
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"He may be. I've instructed General Kenobi to keep them out
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of trouble. If matters progress...unwisely, perhaps I will ask
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him to put them into trouble.
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Dipping a spoon into a lapis bowl, she dusted her poached
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melon with nut-powder. "If the Organa line should fail, the
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Viceregency will very likely fall to the Antilles-- but not
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without some dispute, and the vendettas would begin all over
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again. I tried to merge the two claims by wedding your father,
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but Helice disagreed with me."
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Bail turned back toward her fiercely. "Helice has nothing to
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do with this. If there is no evidence against them, why even
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consider their deaths? You know they're my presumptive heirs."
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"Yes, I do. And so do they."
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* * *
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Lady Arcadia Antilles looked up as the two men entered
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emergency medical quarters. She brushed a strand of fair hair
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from her face and nodded in greeting, but did not rise from the
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cadet she was tending. Her fingers continued to hover over the
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unconscious girl's shoulder, where charcoaled flesh was buckling
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and flaking away. As fragments tumbled onto the cot, the hollows
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left behind were filled by new skin, smoothly flowing up like
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water in a spring.
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When the process was complete, Arcadia gently blew away the
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flakes of debris and stepped back, smoothing down grey healer's
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robes with her palms. She signaled a medical droid to monitor the
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cadet and joined the uniform-clad newcomers in the antechamber,
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closing the door to working quarters. "Well," she murmured, "no
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permanent damage this time. General Kenobi, is this the
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lieutenant who's been sending me these casualties?"
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The lieutenant stepped forward before Kenobi could speak.
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"Lieutenant Commander Anakin Skywalker at your service. Is Rouvel
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badly hurt?"
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Skywalker's broad shoulders towered over both of them; he
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stood only a head taller than Kenobi, but Arcadia found herself
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confronted with his chest at eye level. She had to move away
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several paces to look at him without craning straight up. "She
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was. I've reconstructed her arm, but we can't yet test nerve
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function. She should revive in a day or two. Are you aware that
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she collapsed a few meters out of training bay and was found in
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the corridor?"
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His dark hair accentuated his pallor. "She said it was a
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minor wound. I took her word for it. I came as soon as I'd
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finished training session with the rest of my cadets."
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"Blaster fire richocheting inside thermal armor can kill
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without striking bone, and it passes through so quickly that the
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victim may never feel it. If she often reflects the bolt from her
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epauliere, I suggest you discourage her, unless she's quite sure
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the angle's tangential. But after this, she may not need a
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reminder." Arcadia stepped past the officers to a wall console,
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where she keyed in a short code. "Lieutenant Commander, I regret
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meeting you in these circumstances. Could you tell me what you
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see on this display screen?"
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"Medical record headings." He studied them for a moment.
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"They're all from my squadron since the start of this year-- from
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all three rotations so far, in fact."
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"Would you name another squadron leader for me?" When he
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produced a name, she pressed another sequence of keys, bringing
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another, much shorter list beside the first. "This is Commander
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Baria's casualty list for the same period. Over the past five
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months, nineteen serious injuries have been reported from your
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squadron, three of them fatal. Baria had eight casualties, all of
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whom survived."
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"Baria fusses over his pilots like a mother Nebbit."
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"Then name two others," Kenobi countered. The first new list
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contained four names; the second, nine. Only the last of these
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comparative lists also contained death's red notation. "These
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injury rates are typical for every squadron in this division,
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except for yours."
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"Are you saying I deliberately injure my charges? Come on,
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Ben, you know me better than that. I'm just trying to teach them
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everything I know."
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"We've had this discussion before, I believe." Kenobi shook
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his head. "Some things cannot be taught. For example, not
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everyone can sense the angle of enemy fire quickly enough to
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react. Perhaps you can, but you must respect others' limits.
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"I'm giving you a month's leave from your duties as squadron
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leader." As the younger man's expression shifted from shock to
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anger, Kenobi continued, "I'm doing this for your own good,
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Anakin. Believe me, the Republic needs your skills as a pilot and
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leader. But if it comes down to a question of losing other pilots
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because of you--"
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"My squad won't stand for this. They're proud to serve under
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me; they know I have higher standards than the others--"
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"And you make them pay dearly for it. Remember Ismar Kevvat?
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He survived the battle of Gefras, and died in one of your
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training drills. Or Asde Varine-- she was killed in combat
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attempting some damn fool evasion tactic you taught her, when a
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less... spectacular move could have saved her life." The General
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pronounced the adjective with distaste.
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Arcadia moved away as if balancing on a narrow ledge beside
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the wall, and began to add Cadet Maris Rouvel to the casualty
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lists. Her usual measures to screen out sensory input were not
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working; Anakin Skywalker's anger slashed through the haze like
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icy sleet through fog. "Are you asking me to resign my
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commission?" he said in dangerously calm tones.
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"I'm asking you to reconsider your methods. When the month
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is over, I'll return your command to you, but if you continue to
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maim and kill good warriors at this rate...."
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Skywalker said nothing. "Very well," Kenobi said at last.
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"Lady Arcadia, my apologies for our disruption. Anakin, would you
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care to dine with me?"
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"I would not."
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"Then you may tell me your plans tomorrow." The outer door
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panels slid together in Kenobi's wake.
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* * *
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Arcadia completed the record entry and glanced up at
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Skywalker. He was gazing at the lists still on the screen, and
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the new entry flashing at the bottom. His anger began to fade
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from her senses as he traced a hand down the display. As he
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neared the end of his squadron's list, he asked, "Did you treat
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all of my wounded?"
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"Some of them. There are three other Jedi healers on base,
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and medical droids and technicians for lighter injuries."
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"Did you bring this to Ben's attention, or did he already
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know?"
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"General Kenobi reviews casualty reports on a regular
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basis." She began to key up random file headings, biting her lip.
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"Yes, I know, but I didn't think it was time for review yet.
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Or has he halved his review period?" He was regarding her with a
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cryptic half-smile now, like that of an ancient mask. Arcadia
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noticed uneasily that he was resting his right hand very near his
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blaster.
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"Oh, truly now," he responded. "Do you really think I'd
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shoot a healer? I'm simply curious why you might've informed on
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me-- unless you haven't."
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Switching off the record display, she turned to look
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directly at him. "My younger brother has been assigned to this
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base. General Kenobi is a friend of the family, and gave him a
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choice of squadrons to join. Denis chose yours."
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"How protective of you." Skywalker paused, evidently
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considering his squadron roster. "This would be Cadet Denis
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Colton?"
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"Or Antilles. Our naming conventions can be confusing."
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"As in the Alderaani Princess-Dowager Danah Antilles?"
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"She's my mother's aunt."
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"I see." He began to stroll around the perimeter of the
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room. "You knew about my squadron's casualty rates before now,
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but weren't disturbed by them until your brother thought to join
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me? The Alderaani noble houses train their children well in
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politics."
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"We're no longer a noble house."
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"Not even Danah?"
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"She was the only one of the Antilles to salvage any status
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from the ascendancy dispute. You heard General Kenobi call me
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'Lady Arcadia,' but my family has no power on Alderaan. Danah
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made certain of that." She looked away.
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"Denis and I have no hopes on Alderaan, and the General has
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helped us secure positions. I understand he's done the same for
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you."
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"The two of you appear to be helping me out of my position
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at present."
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"I didn't want Denis' death on your hands."
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"I don't kill my pilots," he snapped. "I train them to be
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the best squadron in the Republic. And if you think I--"
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The outer door slid open again. "Arcadia, has Anakin--"
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General Kenobi began, then stopped. Anakin compressed his mouth
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tightly. "Perhaps," Kenobi resumed, "it might be advisable for
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you to dine with me instead, Arcadia." He turned back to Anakin
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and studied him carefully. "Or have you changed your mind yet?"
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Anakin lingered only long enough to outstare Kenobi before
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moving toward the door.
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"Perhaps not. I'll expect to hear from you tomorrow," Kenobi
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said at the closing panels. "Arcadia, are you off duty now?"
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* * *
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The officers' mess was nearly deserted at this hour. Arcadia
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had stayed on duty late, and so service for the evening meal was
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nearly finished. She and Kenobi ate quickly, more from a desire
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to get it over with than from any real enthusiasm. Most of the
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food was the same nondescript dun color as the general's hair.
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Taking a second bite of the crushed-fruit paste, Kenobi
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reconfirmed his opinion of the first bite. He did not venture a
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third. Without looking at Arcadia, he asked, "Have you
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reconsidered my offer?"
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"I gave it more thought. But I haven't changed my mind."
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"So what do you think of him?"
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She regarded Kenobi, her brown eyes perplexed. "Lieutenant
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Commander Skywalker? In what sense? You weren't matchmaking
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again, were you?"
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"Again? Heavens, no." His tone of wounded astonishment was
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marred only by his grin. Both were abandoned as he leaned closer
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over his meal. "You felt his strength in the Force, didn't you?
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He isn't aware of it himself, but it's part of what makes him a
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brilliant pilot."
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"Is he? I wasn't certain where his balance lay between truth
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and pride."
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"He's the best warrior I've ever known," Kenobi said
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quietly. "Almost impossibly proficient, courageous to the point
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of recklessness-- if he learned to keep a better watch on
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himself, there would be no limit to his career.
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"But he is not aware of how strong a role the Force has had
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in his success. Many of his combat strategems are only possible
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with the help of the Force. I've been reviewing his squadron's
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records again, and those members who have survived and prospered
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under his leadership have all tested well for Force-sensitivity."
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"And those who cannot sense the Force have died." Arcadia
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pushed her own plate aside. "How can he not know? And have you
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told him this?"
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The General's pale eyes were uneasy. "His home system had no
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place for Jedi. Not only has he never been formally tested, but
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he knows almost nothing of us. At this level, testing is scarcely
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necessary; I know he has the strength. But if I tell him of his
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powers, he'll ask for training as a Jedi Knight. Now, if you'd
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been willing, I could have sent you to Pyret to train with Master
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Tegie or Mistress Tamra.
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"But as for Anakin--" He broke off, shaking his head. "I
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can't transfer him to another base while he has teaching duties
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himself, and there are no full Jedi Masters here. I'm not certain
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I can keep him under rein, but I fear his actions should I
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refuse. His pride would drive him to seek training from another,
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and he may not choose wisely.
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"But if I tell him nothing, his casualty rates will continue
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at their present rate. Neither alternative is ideal."
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"I see," said Arcadia, although she was not certain she did.
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She picked up an eating utensil and briefly fiddled with it. "But
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why tell me of this? There's no advice I can give to you."
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"Not to me, no. To him. Anakin does not like to be
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instructed by superiors. I thought that you might be better
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suited to lend him moderation."
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At the far end of the hall, a few more late stragglers
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arrived and disappeared into the meal service corridor. Arcadia
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absently watched their progress while considering his words. "But
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we scarcely know one another, and he does not appear to like me.
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Why should he listen to me? Why not use one of his subordinates
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as your vehicle?"
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"Perhaps I should adjust my earlier statement." Kenobi
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grimaced. "Anakin listens to no one, except in cases of military
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necessity. He has been known to ignore combat orders when he has
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other plans, although I must admit his alternate methods have had
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good results so far. But that's irrelevant for now.
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"I would like you to befriend him. He knows and likes me,
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but I doubt he'll take my advice in this matter. But I think he
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might heed you. You're not a fighter pilot, so he'll feel no
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sense of rivalry with you. Your military ranks are approximately
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equal, so he won't engage in snobbery in either direction--"
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She shook her head. "He asked about my family. He didn't
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like what he heard, even though I told him about...."
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"About the ruin of your house?"
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"Except for Princess Danah." The name was imbued with a soft
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weariness that surpassed malice. "She could have rescinded our
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exile, once she and the Viceroy had an heir for House Organa. And
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that condition was fulfilled nearly fifty years past."
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"She still has no trust in her sister or her descendants.
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Helice was a savage adversary during the Alderaani vendettas, and
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your mother--" He surveyed Arcadia's features as he considered
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his words. "Liane had certain disputes with House Organa as
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well."
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"And it gained us nothing." With an effort, Arcadia moved
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her gaze from her tightly clasped hands to an indefinite distance
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behind Kenobi. Blanking her expression, she said, "It seems that
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your friend Skywalker has decided to join us after all."
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"Good. I rather thought he might." Kenobi's expression had
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certain undertones that disquieted her-- a fractionally raised
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eyebrow, a twist to his smile. She suddenly realized how her
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appearance had changed since her last encounter with Anakin
|
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Skywalker. She had left her voluminous healer's robes in medical
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quarters, revealing the narrow tunic and leggings she wore
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beneath them, and she had freed her hair from its coiled plait.
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In a quick, nervous gesture, she gathered her hair at one side of
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her neck and began to twist it into a loose citrine skein.
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Meanwhile, Kenobi had turned about. "Anakin?"
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Anakin presented Arcadia with a smile that was astonishingly
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sweet and guileless, considering that he was completely ignoring
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Kenobi. "I owe you an apology for my earlier remarks, my lady.
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How may I best express it?"
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Kenobi merely shrugged and resumed eating. After a moment,
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Arcadia relinquished her grasp on the rope of her hair, which
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promptly unwound again. "Why this change of heart? Did you
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consult the records files to corroborate me?"
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"Well, perhaps so--"
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With admirable economy of motion, she shoved her hair back
|
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over her shoulder, pushed her chair away, and rose. "I decline
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your apology. I am sorry you cannot trust my word." She left the
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table and the hall. Anakin was on the verge of following her when
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Kenobi tapped his sleeve.
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"What is it?"
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"Forget the quarrel with me for a moment. Do you agree with
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what I said of her?"
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"No. She'd never make a pilot; she doesn't have the right
|
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bearing for it. May I go now?"
|
||
"I haven't formally dismissed you, Skywalker. Now sit down."
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The younger man's posture seemed to momentarily crystallize,
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bristling with razored edges and angles at every side. "I wasn't
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aware I was in parade formation, sir."
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"Just sit."
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Anakin sat. "Well, sir, I'm afraid your exact words slipped
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my mind, sir. But if you weren't speaking of piloting skills,
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sir, I don't think I have much to say, sir."
|
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"Oh, stop it," Kenobi said mildly. "Don't try this with
|
||
other superior officers, or they'll have your head. I'm sorely
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tempted to, despite the fact you're my protege."
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||
"I don't feel particularly protected."
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"Do you know what would have happened if your casualty lists
|
||
had gone unreviewed until the end of the year? They'd be much
|
||
longer by then, and I'm not the only one who inspects them. High
|
||
casualty rates are bad enough, but in your first year as squadron
|
||
leader? You'd receive a formal reprimand, and possibly be
|
||
demoted. As difficult as it may be for you to believe now,
|
||
Arcadia and I have done you a favor."
|
||
After a moment, Anakin dropped his gaze into Arcadia's
|
||
abandoned cup. He lifted it and idly tasted the rim. "One month.
|
||
What am I supposed to do for a month? And who'll take over my
|
||
command while I'm away?"
|
||
"Aren't any senior cadets in your squad fit to lead yet? I
|
||
thought you were training them, not taking them nut-gathering."
|
||
The return smile was automatic, but like its accompanying
|
||
words, it seemed to lack Anakin's full attention. "Oh, Anset
|
||
might do, or maybe Damesta." He surveyed the cup in his hand
|
||
again before draining it. "So what did you have in mind for Lady
|
||
Arcadia? I think I'll have to apologize to her by proxy."
|
||
"I was attempting to judge whether she has the potential to
|
||
train as a combatant."
|
||
"If not a pilot, what sort? She doesn't have the physique
|
||
for armored shock troops, and I don't know whether healers have
|
||
enough experience with machinery to handle combat walkers."
|
||
"Actually, I was considering her for training as a Jedi
|
||
Knight."
|
||
Anakin slowly put the cup down. It made a hollow clink as it
|
||
met the table surface. "A Jedi Knight."
|
||
"Yes, I said that."
|
||
He leaned over the table, pushing the cup aside. "Ben,
|
||
you're an intelligent man, aren't you?"
|
||
With a wry smile, Kenobi said, "I like to think so. Why do
|
||
you ask?"
|
||
"You don't really believe in all this Force nonsense, do
|
||
you?"
|
||
The general's smile peeled away. "I take it that you don't."
|
||
Anakin snorted indulgently. "I've seen this sort of thing
|
||
before. The system where I grew up-- there weren't any Jedi, but
|
||
there was a priesthood with total authority. The temples had the
|
||
most ridiculous rules about keeping this or that goddess happy--
|
||
what colors you can wear, how many times to chew your food, what
|
||
you can't do with your sister-- but all of them were just ways of
|
||
controlling people who don't know any better.
|
||
"I got off-planet as soon as I could. The sweetest sight I
|
||
ever saw was Leucothea disappearing down that hyperspace funnel,
|
||
and I hope I never see that place again. But the entire Jedi
|
||
organization reminds me of that priesthood-- a lot of talk about
|
||
the supernatural, and not much to show for it except a lot of
|
||
rules."
|
||
The older man set his utensils down and closed his eyes.
|
||
Arcadia's cup popped into the air and hovered in front of Anakin.
|
||
After a moment, Anakin shrugged and flicked the cup with a
|
||
finger, setting it spinning. Lowering his own lids, he pulled the
|
||
cup back down. His hands remained loosely clasped on the table.
|
||
Impatiently, he said, "Yes, I know. But I don't see why you
|
||
Jedi make so much fuss about a little psychokinesis. All that
|
||
talk about center and balance makes it sound like a circus
|
||
routine. Why should it make any difference to the universe
|
||
whether you pick something up with your hand or your mind?"
|
||
Kenobi had opened his eyes and was steadily gazing at
|
||
Anakin. "It doesn't, much. But the Force flows through all life
|
||
and all matter, and the mind is both. When you use the Force,
|
||
your intent can be as important as your actions."
|
||
"You're spouting dogma, Ben." Anakin leaned back in his
|
||
chair. "And get out of my mind, will you? I thought we could talk
|
||
frankly."
|
||
"Aren't we?"
|
||
"You see, I was thinking about what you said earlier. I
|
||
suppose I've never really realized that other people couldn't
|
||
sense some of the things I can. It's the Force, isn't it?"
|
||
"Yes."
|
||
"Well, I was hoping you could teach me how to use it without
|
||
stuffing me full of religious propaganda."
|
||
Dropping his gaze, Kenobi began to assemble his utensils on
|
||
his empty tray. "Do you know, I was going to ask you to train as
|
||
a Jedi? But if you don't want to learn about the Force itself, I
|
||
don't think we should speak of this matter any further."
|
||
"Oh, come on, Ben. You really believe the Jedi doctrines?"
|
||
"They're not just doctrines. I'm not a Master, and I don't
|
||
know much about Force theory, but I can feel the way it works."
|
||
"You mean you've been told they work."
|
||
Kenobi stood up, tray in hand. "I don't think we should
|
||
discuss this any more. Ask Arcadia about the Force. Maybe she can
|
||
convince you." Tardily, Anakin began to gather up Arcadia's tray,
|
||
preparing to follow, but Kenobi sharply motioned him back. "No.
|
||
If you're ready to listen tomorrow, come back. But no more talk
|
||
tonight."
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
"But Dia, why shouldn't I come to Ikatya now? Even if
|
||
Commander Skywalker is taking leave, I can still use the time to
|
||
get settled on base. I'll be able to learn where everything is by
|
||
myself, so you won't need to show me around."
|
||
Seated before the comm panel in her private quarters,
|
||
Arcadia closed her eyes and tipped her head back against her
|
||
chair. "Denis, it's not too late to change cadet assignments. Are
|
||
you certain you want to join Crescent Squadron? I'll admit it has
|
||
the best combat record on this base, but there are starship
|
||
assignments that have similar records-- the _Ravage_, the
|
||
_Frenzy_..."
|
||
When she opened her eyes again, her brother's hand-sized
|
||
holo image was shaking its head. Although both siblings had the
|
||
fine-boned Alderaani build, only Denis had the dark hair of the
|
||
Antilles. He brushed this out of his eyes as he answered. "I
|
||
think Ikatya base is the only real option. Both you and General
|
||
Kenobi are there, and...." He tilted his head, considering, then
|
||
shrugged. "Well, our dear Aunt Danah--"
|
||
"Great-aunt, twice maternal."
|
||
"Whatever. She's made it known that she'd appreciate the two
|
||
of us staying in a single location, so as to both be monitored
|
||
with less effort."
|
||
"Denis!"
|
||
"Well, we both know that Danah's been keeping watch on us,
|
||
and she certainly knows it. So," he took on unnaturally emphatic
|
||
tones, "I doubt this news will come as a surprise to her when she
|
||
reviews this tapped transmission."
|
||
"Don't bait her. We're living on her sufferance."
|
||
"And that's why I have to train at Ikatya, unless you want
|
||
to be on a medical frigate at the battle frontiers." He paused
|
||
uncertainly. "Is something wrong with Crescent Squadron? Or with
|
||
Commander Skywalker?"
|
||
"There was some... statistical irregularity. General Kenobi
|
||
is smoothing things out. As for the commander, I only met him
|
||
today, and that by accident. He's self-assured, but I don't know
|
||
anything about his real skills." Arcadia glanced at the small
|
||
state portrait beside the comm panel. "But why has Princess Danah
|
||
tightened security?"
|
||
As Denis made a vague, noncommittal response, he blinked in
|
||
a familiar message-pattern: one blink, two. One blink, two. _I'll
|
||
tell you the truth when we can speak in private._
|
||
Arcadia sighed. "In private" meant in person, in a location
|
||
too public or too distant from Alderaan to be tapped by its royal
|
||
house. In this case, it would have to be both. "So when are you
|
||
planning to come to Ikatya?"
|
||
This time, his reply was undercut by chime-tones from
|
||
Arcadia's apartments. "Next week, if the route stays safe," Denis
|
||
said. "But someone's at your door. Should I sign off?"
|
||
She frowned. "No; I'm not expecting anyone. This should only
|
||
take a moment." She stood, lightly stretched, and crossed the
|
||
chamber to the entrance portal.
|
||
As it slid open, Anakin Skywalker chuckled. "You step away
|
||
every time we meet. May I come in?"
|
||
"You already have. I'm sorry, but I'm otherwise occupied at
|
||
the moment. If I could contact you later--"
|
||
Denis could hear the tension in her voice, but was unable to
|
||
see anything but the chair on the comm transmission tile. "Dia,
|
||
is something wrong?"
|
||
"'Dia'? A family nickname, I take it-- is that your famed
|
||
brother Denis?" When she reluctantly nodded, Skywalker moved to
|
||
the transmission tile, resting his forearms on the back of
|
||
Arcadia's chair. "Hello there. Your sister has told me so much
|
||
about you."
|
||
The boy's voice nearly cracked. "Commander Skywalker? Is
|
||
that really you?" Remembering himself, he pulled himself into
|
||
some semblance of military posture. "I mean, it's an honor to
|
||
meet you, sir. I hadn't expected it until I got to base-- but are
|
||
you really going on leave for a month?"
|
||
Skywalker cast a sideways glance at Arcadia, who had seated
|
||
herself with a data pad on a wall-mounted bench. She looked up at
|
||
him, then back down to the pad as he sat down in her chair. "I
|
||
will soon, but I may stay on base. Next training rotation doesn't
|
||
start for a month anyway, so you'll only have your first few
|
||
weeks with my replacement. Your academy records are quite good,
|
||
by the way. Do all cadets start multiphase tactics that early
|
||
now?"
|
||
"A lot do, ever since you used them at Raek Starfall. How
|
||
did you ever..." Arcadia closed her eyes again, stifling a yawn
|
||
as Denis continued effusing. She had worked long hours today, and
|
||
her evening meal, although not especially good, had been filling.
|
||
Denis's and Skywalker's voices blurred into alternating washes of
|
||
sound.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
Anakin grinned foolishly as he powered down the comm panel.
|
||
Even after several years, he still had not lost the thrill of
|
||
being a hero. His flight and fighting performance in his first
|
||
battle, the seige of Ysdaa, had propelled him into the notice of
|
||
General Kenobi, who had been coordinating planetary and fleet
|
||
maneuvers there. His squadron's strategy at Raek Starfall had
|
||
become legendary. His success had become so spectacular that
|
||
Kenobi had transferred him out of danger to a training position,
|
||
in hopes of teaching his skills to other pilots.
|
||
Leaning back, he steepled his fingertips, still smiling.
|
||
When Ben had made him a trainer, he had resisted fiercely,
|
||
resentful of being pulled from combat. But he had since learned
|
||
the advantages of this post. Granted, it lacked the electric
|
||
delirium of real warfare, but he enjoyed shaping the reflexes of
|
||
his students. Some were cadets just out of the first-level
|
||
academies; some were already veterans of several campaigns. All
|
||
of them looked to him as a master of the craft.
|
||
His reverie was broken by a small noise behind him. He had
|
||
half-forgotten Arcadia; when he turned to look, he saw the data
|
||
pad finish slipping from her hand. She lay curled on her side,
|
||
her feet still shod and hanging off the bench toward the floor.
|
||
She woke after he had already carried her around the room
|
||
once, and was considering another circuit. Without moving, she
|
||
tried to decipher her situation-- she was bunched up in the air,
|
||
her hair smeared across her face. When she opened her eyes and
|
||
tried to see through her hair, she could see a broad uniform-clad
|
||
chest pressed against her nose. She remembered that vantage point
|
||
from earlier in the day. "What are you doing?"
|
||
He nearly dropped her. "Oh-- you're awake. I was going to
|
||
put you to bed, but I can't find any doors beside the main one.
|
||
Where are you hiding them?"
|
||
"Put me to bed?"
|
||
"I couldn't leave you sleeping on that bench."
|
||
"I've only this one room; there are no other doors. And that
|
||
is my bed."
|
||
He looked at the bench again. It still looked like a bench,
|
||
cloth-surfaced and unpadded. "How can you sleep on that thing?"
|
||
"Usually quite soundly. May I request that you put me down
|
||
somewhere?" He placed her on the bench again, in a half-seated
|
||
position from which she immediately slid down the wall onto her
|
||
side again. With an effort, she levered herself back up. "Thank
|
||
you for your concern, really, but--"
|
||
"It's nothing," he said modestly. "But as long as we're
|
||
exchanging courtesies, would you like me to apologize for this
|
||
afternoon now or tomorrow?"
|
||
"Whichever more pleases you."
|
||
"In that case, it can wait 'til tomorrow. I'll need a few
|
||
more hours to get into a properly groveling state anyway." He
|
||
saluted, pivoted with military precision, and left.
|
||
She watched the door owlishly for a while, to make certain
|
||
he wasn't coming back in. With a sigh, she dropped the data pad
|
||
under the bench, pulled a mantle from a wall hook behind her, and
|
||
lay down wrapped in it. After a moment, nearly asleep again, she
|
||
nudged her shoes off.
|
||
On his way back to his own quarters, Anakin whistled softly
|
||
to himself, carefully considering what he had learned from Denis.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
"...And if it requires a war to bring the Republic back to
|
||
its former glory, then perhaps we should be grateful for war."
|
||
Palpatine ignored the shock around him in the Senate, raising his
|
||
resonant voice to drown out dissent. "We have spent the last
|
||
century bickering and feuding amongst ourselves. Before the
|
||
Nechti came to our borders, each system fought against its
|
||
neighbor, in armed combat or with economic strangulation. The
|
||
galaxy wasted many lives and credits in these struggles for petty
|
||
advantage.
|
||
"But since the arrival of the Nechti, we have ceased our
|
||
internal quarrels. If we can retain this solidarity after the
|
||
Nechti are defeated, our combined power will be greater than ever
|
||
before."
|
||
A gaunt woman near the front said bitterly, "You are quite
|
||
blithe about the Nechti. You would be less so if you had seen the
|
||
border systems: Avisa stripped to magma; Martelle reft of its
|
||
atmosphere-- my diplomatic suite and I are all that remain of the
|
||
people of Erenat."
|
||
Senator Palpatine lowered his eyes. Knife-edged crescents of
|
||
gold gleamed from beneath his lids. "I do not wish us to forget
|
||
the many innocents who have lost their homes, their families, or
|
||
their lives to the Nechti. But think of all the similar losses
|
||
our internal battles have claimed. If we can eliminate such sad
|
||
waste from our Republic by remaining united, then the Nechtian
|
||
victims will not have died in vain.
|
||
"But let us forget the future for now. We must deal with the
|
||
present. It is true that relatively few systems have met with the
|
||
enemy to date, but is there any doubt we must unite now to drive
|
||
them out?"
|
||
Castra Gatou yawned flamboyantly. She was a tawny-haired
|
||
young woman with pale green eyes; seated in Bail Organa's empty
|
||
chair, she was in the first tier of seats, in excellent view of
|
||
the council. Almost as an afterthought, she lifted one languid
|
||
hand to conceal her mouth. "Why?" she asked.
|
||
The Erenatese senator lunged to her feet. "Why? You've seen
|
||
the comm holos sent by the Nechti, and you ask why?"
|
||
"Why not?"
|
||
Palpatine turned a speculative eye on the young princess,
|
||
while waving the Erenatese back to her seat. "Your Highness of
|
||
Alderaan, do your people have so little compassion on those less
|
||
fortunate than themselves?"
|
||
Castra smiled, showing all her teeth. "Less fortunate? The
|
||
border systems brought this war upon themselves. Avisa and
|
||
Martelle were the planets that first met with the Nechti; they
|
||
made secret trade agreements with them for their technology. They
|
||
willfully violated the laws of the Senate and the Republic by
|
||
keeping knowledge of the Nechti civilization a secret. And you of
|
||
Erenat--" she gestured at the livid ambassador-- "in fact, your
|
||
very family signed the Nechti pact with full intention to violate
|
||
it.
|
||
"And once you did... well, small wonder that the Nechti
|
||
sought revenge on you. What concern are your border squabbles to
|
||
the rest of the Republic?"
|
||
"The Nechti have advanced far past the border by now,"
|
||
Palpatine began, but Castra flicked her nails at him.
|
||
"Past the borders of your own summer planet, you mean.
|
||
Leaving my own opinions aside, you can hardly expect my people to
|
||
support armed intervention in your internal affairs. If you can't
|
||
maintain civil relations with your neighbors, why should we
|
||
enforce them for you?"
|
||
"Civil relations?" Palpatine elevated a dark golden eyebrow,
|
||
smiling warmly. "Oh yes, Alderaan has always been known for its
|
||
peaceful self-government, especially as carried out by its web of
|
||
noble kinsmen who are all--" his smile attained angelic
|
||
proportions-- "terribly civil to one another."
|
||
"Enough of this squabbling!" In the open center of the
|
||
chamber, the President of the Senate lashed the rostrum with her
|
||
gavel. She was a stately Twi'lek, whose cranial appendages were
|
||
shifting like cats' tails under their wrapping of silk. "Senator
|
||
Palpatine, the Alderaani vendettas are not the subject of this
|
||
debate. And if I may say so, Your Highness of Alderaan, the
|
||
diplomatic failings of the border systems are irrelevant as well.
|
||
Avisa and Martelle have already been destroyed."
|
||
"And Erenat," the gaunt woman whispered.
|
||
"And Erenat. Whatever their complicity may have been, the
|
||
Nechti have surely taken vengeance. But now other systems are
|
||
being attacked, ones with no prior involvement whatsoever. These
|
||
are the peoples whose aid we are determining. The period for
|
||
debate has ended. May we call the vote?"
|
||
As the Senators drew together in small groups, Palpatine
|
||
stepped down from the central dais. A Senate page with two bowls
|
||
of pebbles passed through the chamber, giving every Senator a
|
||
stone from each bowl, one black and one white. Leaning on the
|
||
rail near Castra's seat, Palpatine jounced the pair of stones in
|
||
his hand. "Which one do you plan to cast at me?" he asked her.
|
||
"Surely you're planning to cast yours first."
|
||
"It's the President who gets to throw the first stone of the
|
||
season, my dear." They watched a second page approach the Twi'lek
|
||
with a tall, opaque urn, into which she inserted her hand wrist-
|
||
deep to conceal the color of the pebble she released. The
|
||
remaining one was dropped into a disposal chute beneath the
|
||
rostrum, for later collection from a common receptacle. "But here
|
||
comes the press, I believe."
|
||
As the page passed by, they dropped their respective pebbles
|
||
into the urn, then the chute in Castra's desk. The remote comm
|
||
camera in the corner lingered on Castra and Palpatine after the
|
||
page had moved on. In a leisurely fashion, she spat on her hand
|
||
and slapped him.
|
||
"Your Highness, desist," the Twi'lek snapped. "I will not
|
||
permit physical assault of other Senators. If you should become
|
||
President, you may change policy to suit yourself. But as long as
|
||
I hold office, I will not allow it."
|
||
Palpatine dismissed the guards who had hurried to him from
|
||
the Coruscanti suite. "I doubt intervention is necessary, unless
|
||
Her Highness plans to escalate. Have you any weapons?"
|
||
"Regrettably, no." Castra rose, gathering her train over one
|
||
arm. "But you may yet persuade me to give a different answer."
|
||
Tracked by the comm recorder, she left the Senate chamber before
|
||
the tally was complete.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
In his private apartments, Palpatine keyed the holoprojector
|
||
to replay the day's events. He leaned back and watched himself
|
||
complete his speech. "...But let us forget the future for now. We
|
||
must deal with the present. It is true that relatively few
|
||
systems have met with the enemy to date, but is there any doubt
|
||
we must unite now to drive them out?"
|
||
His companion touched her goblet to his. "Marvelous arm
|
||
gesture. Think it'll catch on?"
|
||
"I hope to gain followers for more than a gesture." After a
|
||
few sips, he reliquished his wine for a wafer of mycotal pate.
|
||
"How do you think the rebuttal was received?"
|
||
They watched Castra flick her nails. "If you can't maintain
|
||
civil relations with your neighbors, why should we enforce them
|
||
for you?"
|
||
|
||
|
||
Story written by: lim@merck.com
|
||
|
||
The first guard staggered back and collapsed. As the
|
||
intruder prepared to engage the second guard, the doors slid
|
||
open. The white luminescence of the corridor tarnished to dark
|
||
gold, reflected from the hair and robes of the man who stepped
|
||
forward. Senator Palpatine took a sip from the jewelled goblet in
|
||
his hand. "Good evening, Lady Arcadia. Would you care to join me
|
||
for dinner?"
|
||
Backed against the wall, the second guard gasped out, "My
|
||
lord, this woman has infiltrated the palace somehow, and--"
|
||
"In fact," Palpatine continued, "I was expecting you
|
||
somewhat earlier. This excellent Fentaraj vintage has been
|
||
warming for a half-hour now. Do come in before its bouquet
|
||
deteriorates further."
|
||
"But my lord!"
|
||
His voice took on a harder edge. "Have the next shift
|
||
relieve you from your posts for the night. You are dismissed."
|
||
The guards limped away, one half-dragging the other. Before
|
||
they had gone two meters, Palpatine drew a blaster from his
|
||
sleeve and shot them both. The blade of Arcadia's lightsaber
|
||
flashed up like indigo dawn. "What do you want from me?"
|
||
The Senator graciously extended his blaster, grip first.
|
||
"Your company at table, of course. Once you have obliged me with
|
||
that, we may discuss other matters. For example, your reasons for
|
||
coming to Coruscant in this way, or at all." She hesitantly took
|
||
the blaster from him, shoving it into her belt with a stare of
|
||
disbelief.
|
||
A momentary shudder of indecision rippled through Arcadia.
|
||
Her blade flickered and went out as she dropped out of defensive
|
||
stance. "I never wanted to set foot on Coruscant again. But you
|
||
refused every petition I sent, and you made it impossible for me
|
||
to seek justice in your courts. This was the only way left."
|
||
"Yes, I intended it so. But come now, you must be hungry
|
||
after your jaunt through my security perimeter." He stepped back
|
||
into his chambers, obliging Arcadia to follow him. The bodies of
|
||
the guards continued to smolder in the empty corridor.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
The oval table had been set with two places. Palpatine
|
||
resumed his seat and filled Arcadia's goblet. She hesitated on
|
||
the iridescent tiles, her dusty grey fatigues out of place in the
|
||
rich surroundings. He motioned toward a chair so intricately
|
||
worked that it seemed made of silver lace. "If I'd wanted you
|
||
dead, I'd've called an armed detachment, don't you agree?"
|
||
"Perhaps. But that might've denied you the pleasure of
|
||
killing me yourself."
|
||
He leaned back and smiled. "Ah, but I had far more
|
||
entertaining alternatives in mind. Believe me when I say this
|
||
meal is unpoisoned and undrugged."
|
||
Although she could sense a concealment of truths in his
|
||
words, there was no falsehood. She ate slowly, waiting for him to
|
||
speak. Instead, he simply watched her, his topaz eyes dark in the
|
||
dim light. The tension made the complex sauces and gels taste
|
||
like ashes.
|
||
When she could no longer bear the silence, she asked,
|
||
"Anakin is alive, isn't he?"
|
||
"Certainly."
|
||
"Then why have you indicted General Kenobi and me for his
|
||
murder? And where is he?"
|
||
"All in good time. I, for one, find that a short stroll
|
||
after dining helps my digestion. Let us walk in the gardens, for
|
||
now."
|
||
He led her to an enclosed courtyard adjoining the chamber.
|
||
Espaliered branches pressed against the walls, vainly reaching
|
||
toward the glass dome high above. Palpatine chose a path enclosed
|
||
by thick-foliaged trees, their branches interwoven and grafted
|
||
together overhead. The darkness would have been near-absolute
|
||
without the small utility lamp clipped to Arcadia's belt. "I
|
||
would make a bargain with you," he said.
|
||
"What bargain?"
|
||
"Tell me, have you any interest in becoming Vicereine of
|
||
Alderaan?"
|
||
She stared back at him, at the pleasant, unreadable
|
||
expression on the handsome face. As the implications of his
|
||
question struck her, she recoiled. "I don't understand your
|
||
meaning, my lord."
|
||
"You lie, Arcadia. And do call me Palpatine."
|
||
"I would prefer not to, my lord."
|
||
He snorted. "Very well. Your kinsman Bail Organa has been
|
||
troublesome to me in the Senate. His position as Viceroy gives
|
||
him a great deal of authority against me. As I understand
|
||
Alderaani politics, the title is hereditary, and is granted for
|
||
life. Other than his infant daughter, you are his nearest kin,
|
||
and therefore his next heir."
|
||
An image of Leia flashed before her. She forced the thought
|
||
to the back of her mind. "And what if I am? The rank was granted
|
||
to the Organas. If they should perish, the Antilles family has no
|
||
greater odds of ascendency than several others: House Gatou,
|
||
House Liachne--"
|
||
"The odds can be altered. Are you content with your life as
|
||
a simple healer, Arcadia? You've travelled with the fleet; you've
|
||
seen the damage that the Republic's internal feuds can cause. But
|
||
if you were Vicereine, you could join your faction to mine.
|
||
Instead of healing mere individuals, you could heal the wounds of
|
||
the Republic. The combined strength of Alderaan and Coruscant
|
||
could unite the galaxy, and bring peace to all our quarrels. What
|
||
is the life of one man, compared to that?" The jewels of his
|
||
rings glittered as he spread his hands.
|
||
The tiny reflections from the facets etched into her
|
||
eyesight; she could feel her vision and her mind beginning to
|
||
fade into a dark golden haze. Yet there had been no tampering
|
||
with her meal-- with an effort, she said, "But I don't...why not
|
||
ally with Bail?"
|
||
Palpatine shook his head sadly. "He and his followers dote
|
||
on anarchy and call it freedom. But your influence could make
|
||
them see reason. The Senate and the Republic have too much of
|
||
this anarchy already, and I intend to restore order."
|
||
The last sentence slashed through his spell on her, and she
|
||
stopped walking. "Your order."
|
||
"Not mine alone. As Vicereine of Alderaan, you would be my
|
||
equal. Join me as my consort, and we shall rule the galaxy
|
||
together."
|
||
"Why should I wed you? Anakin still lives--"
|
||
"At present, yes."
|
||
She caught her breath. "And if Bail is killed, I will know
|
||
it as your doing. If you force me to become Vicereine against my
|
||
will, you will find no ally in me."
|
||
"Not even for Anakin's sake?"
|
||
Arcadia's fair hair fell down across her face as she jerked
|
||
her head away. "You're holding him prisoner, then. If you harm
|
||
him, I'll tell the Senate of your plans, and--"
|
||
Almost gently, he said, "But you have no proof. Fully-
|
||
trained Jedi might draw the knowledge from your mind, but most of
|
||
these are in your kinsman's faction. The majority of the Senate
|
||
supports me, and would most likely see your claims as mere
|
||
Alderaani slander.
|
||
"Furthermore, I am scarcely holding Anakin against his will.
|
||
General Kenobi left him near death, and my physicians and healers
|
||
have been treating him. But since you are averse to the first
|
||
bargain I suggested, I have another you might prefer."
|
||
She looked back up at him, her brown eyes bitter. "And if I
|
||
do not agree, you'll let him die. What is the life of one man,
|
||
compared to the good of the galaxy?"
|
||
"Tush. As I said, he was badly injured. A meeting at this
|
||
point might be a shock to both of you. But if you will administer
|
||
a short test for me, I will let you take your Anakin wherever you
|
||
desire."
|
||
"What would you have me do?"
|
||
"I have recently taken on a new student, and would like to
|
||
test his mettle. Cross sabers with him for a time. If you defeat
|
||
him, he will be no student of mine, and I will give you Anakin
|
||
Skywalker. I will even remove all mention of my previous offer
|
||
from your mind, since it so distresses you."
|
||
"And if I lose?"
|
||
"That depends on his whimsy." Palpatine plucked a green-
|
||
petalled flower, twirling the bleeding stem between his fingers.
|
||
"I fear that this lad dotes on duelling to the death.
|
||
"He may reconsider the matter, if you ask. If he defeats and
|
||
spares you, I think I can still arrange for you to join Anakin.
|
||
But as for my would-be student, I'll divulge that I've not yet
|
||
begun his training, while you've been taught the skills of a Jedi
|
||
Knight for...three years now, perhaps? By General Kenobi?" When
|
||
Arcadia remained silent, Palpatine tsked and dropped the flower
|
||
underfoot.
|
||
"May I see Anakin before the duel?"
|
||
"Alas, no."
|
||
"Then what proof can you offer that he still lives?"
|
||
"Lady Arcadia, you surprise me. You can sense the truth; do
|
||
I lie?"
|
||
"You're holding something back."
|
||
"But do I lie when I say your consort lives?" He observed
|
||
her with great interest. Her gaze was softly unfocused as she
|
||
raked her lips with her teeth.
|
||
"You do not," she murmured at last. "I will accept your
|
||
conditions, but I refuse to kill."
|
||
Just as softly, he replied, "Your vow may not be necessary."
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
Having escorted Arcadia back from the gardens, Palpatine
|
||
keyed her prospective opponent on the comm, voice only. "I have a
|
||
visitor who wishes to bargain for a former comrade's custody.
|
||
Come to my quarters through the hidden passage, and be ready for
|
||
a duel." He did not wait for a response before keying off. "He
|
||
should arrive shortly. I have a suit of protective armor you may
|
||
wear, and I do suggest you use it."
|
||
"But why? I've never used armor before."
|
||
"My student does. I wouldn't want you to accuse me of
|
||
setting this duel up on unjust terms."
|
||
She put the troop armor on, inspecting each piece for
|
||
structural flaws. "Why not test him yourself? And am I to fight
|
||
him here?" The sweep of her white-gloved hand encompassed the
|
||
wealth of the chamber's furnishings: carved wood and stone,
|
||
Cheline mirror tapestries, lamps hung with amber drops, flame
|
||
sonnets from Reseau.
|
||
"Why not here? As for testing, I prefer to observe combat
|
||
from a distance, rather than in flagrante delicto." He watched
|
||
her make a face at the helmet, checking the fume filters before
|
||
lowering it over her head and carefully tucking her hair inside.
|
||
"Is your helmet firmly secured? Good. I believe I hear his
|
||
approach now." He moved to the wall mosaic and pressed several
|
||
tesserae in sequence. One panel sank a hand's depth into the wall
|
||
and slid back to reveal opening blast doors. Unhurriedly, he
|
||
moved a chair onto an opaline carpet and seated himself,
|
||
arranging his robes in flowing folds.
|
||
Arcadia froze as her opponent entered the room, sealing the
|
||
blast doors behind him. "What is that?" she breathed.
|
||
Even distorted by her helmet, her voice was audible to
|
||
Palpatine. His eyes ignited with savage amusement as he nodded
|
||
across the room. "Introduce yourself, my friend."
|
||
The armored figure turned toward Arcadia, breath hissing
|
||
through its black mask. "I am Darth Vader. Whom do I face, my
|
||
master?"
|
||
Even as Arcadia opened her mouth to speak, Palpatine made an
|
||
airy gesture. "The name is unimportant. This person wishes to
|
||
spar with you, Lord Vader."
|
||
Vader took his lightsaber from his belt, activating it and
|
||
holding it ready before him. The red light of the blade spilled
|
||
over the floor like blood. He waited.
|
||
"This is your student?" Her incredulity survived the passage
|
||
through the helmet filters.
|
||
"Why, you disappoint me. But if you wish to cancel our
|
||
agreement and leave alone, I'm sure your former comrade will
|
||
understand." He was answered by the whiplash flare of Arcadia's
|
||
lightsaber. Bracing herself, she moved warily toward Lord Vader.
|
||
The two sabers crossed, red against blue-violet, barely touching.
|
||
"You are the challenger," the obsidian mask rasped.
|
||
"Commence."
|
||
"Senator Palpatine has said you often fight to the death.
|
||
Will you ease your terms?"
|
||
"If I find you a worthy opponent. Now will you begin, or
|
||
must I?"
|
||
She darted forward and swung her blade low, toward his legs.
|
||
He blocked the blow easily and carried the motion up to throw her
|
||
back. As he lunged in attack, his cloak billowed behind like
|
||
black wings.
|
||
Vader's reach was greater than hers, she saw. Ordinarily,
|
||
she would have had an advantage in speed and agility over this
|
||
armor-clad giant, but her own armor impeded her. She stepped
|
||
aside more slowly than she should have, and the blood-hued saber
|
||
bit into the carpets centimeters from her moving feet.
|
||
She evaluated her adversary as they fought. Like herself,
|
||
his movements were stiffened by the armor; despite Palpatine's
|
||
words, Vader seemed scarcely better-accustomed to it than she
|
||
was.
|
||
Dodging behind a tall stone screen, she drew him behind it
|
||
then leapt over to the other side to wait for his return around
|
||
the edge. The crackle of vaporizing amethyst warned her to wheel
|
||
about as Vader slashed through the screen and advanced through
|
||
the severed halves. She was still able to strike his thigh,
|
||
leaving a dull melted smear on the surface of his cuisse, but he
|
||
moved away before she could reach the weakened spot again.
|
||
He inclined his head. "First blood," he said, and thrust at
|
||
her again.
|
||
By implicit pact, they both avoided the lethal targets of
|
||
head and torso. But the narrow beams of energy could cripple as
|
||
well as kill; a blow from Vader skittered down Arcadia's
|
||
reflective vambrace and fell aside, removing a thin shaving of
|
||
plasteel. It would have taken her arm off at the elbow had she
|
||
been unprotected. She parried his next blow, and the next,
|
||
turning her damaged side away each time, then drove him back
|
||
until he stumbled on a fragment of the felled stone screen. He
|
||
fell heavily, jarred enough to lose his hold on his saber. The
|
||
blade hissed and winked out as the handle rolled away.
|
||
Palpatine stretched out his hand, to which Vader's
|
||
deactivated lightsaber obligingly flew. Arcadia lowered her own
|
||
weapon, releasing the activation stud. "Have I fulfulled our
|
||
bargain, my lord?"
|
||
His expression was beatific. "I believe so, my lady--
|
||
provided, of course, that Lord Vader agrees. Do you concede the
|
||
match, my friend, or do you wish to demand lethal terms? I think
|
||
our visitor would like to take her friend back to Alderaan as
|
||
quickly as possible."
|
||
Vader, who had been regaining his footing, froze in place.
|
||
Fleetingly, Arcadia thought the joints of his armor might have
|
||
been damaged by the fall. "Alderaan?" he repeated.
|
||
"Why, yes," Palpatine said brightly. "Did I neglect to tell
|
||
you before?" He tossed the lightsaber back to Vader.
|
||
Vader straightened and stood up with savage abruptness. He
|
||
crushed his gloves around the saber handle as he spoke, stepping
|
||
slowly toward her. "I would yield to an equal, but I will enjoy
|
||
your death, Alderaani bitch!" His blade ignited and slammed down
|
||
at her as he charged.
|
||
She barely reactivated her own saber in time. Crimson
|
||
reflections from Vader's glinted on her armored wrists, just
|
||
before her eyes, as she blocked the vicious swing at her head. He
|
||
forced the blade down at her until she could feel her gauntlets
|
||
scrape against the mask of her helmet.
|
||
Stunned by the suddenness and strength of his attack, she
|
||
dropped to the floor and rolled aside. Scrambling upright, she
|
||
ducked under another swing and struck his side. The blow cut away
|
||
a great swath of his cloak, but did little damage to his body.
|
||
He snarled and kicked out at her shoulder. Arcadia cried out
|
||
as the blow connected, flinging her back, but somehow retained
|
||
her balance. Out of his reach, she struggled for air and
|
||
composure. _He's in a killing rage_, she thought. _He'll
|
||
overreact to any moves I make, if he notices them at all. All or
|
||
nothing_.
|
||
A few feints confirmed her conjecture. She led him forward
|
||
into the glass-domed courtyard, then leaped into the shadowed
|
||
colonnade. As he followed her, the iolite gleam of her lightsaber
|
||
vanished. Enraged, Vader ran ahead into the darkness.
|
||
Just around the bend, Arcadia slipped out of the colonnade
|
||
between two trees and looped back, reentering behind him. Vader
|
||
had slowed, looking before him in the dim red illumination from
|
||
his blade, when she leaped up at his back, catching one arm
|
||
around his neck and dragging him down. The light for which he had
|
||
been hunting now flashed up across his vision.
|
||
"I have no wish to kill you. Will you yield?"
|
||
He caught her by the wrist, forcing her saber away from his
|
||
mask as he spun and struck at her one-handed. "You are a fool,
|
||
Alderaani."
|
||
She tossed her saber to her free hand, catching it before he
|
||
could call it to himself. But she was unable to parry at full
|
||
strength; his slash tore partway into her neck armor before she
|
||
could stop it. Her flesh was barely touched, but she could hear
|
||
the vapor seals giving way. He flung her back, and she fell onto
|
||
the paving, saber handle flying.
|
||
The loosened helmet tilted up, obstructing her vision. She
|
||
threw it off to see Vader's blade poised over her heart. Her own
|
||
saber was in his other hand. She closed her eyes, waiting for the
|
||
searing blow.
|
||
It did not come. When she opened her eyes again, Vader was
|
||
still standing over her. His voice sounded as if his breath had
|
||
been struck from his body. "Dia. What are you doing here?"
|
||
That diminutive, coming from that black skull-mask, struck
|
||
her much as his saber would have done. The shock rippled through
|
||
her body from the heart outward. "Anakin?" Arcadia levered
|
||
herself up on her elbows, but the red blade flicked up to aim at
|
||
her throat.
|
||
"Why are you here? Was Kenobi not enough to satisfy you?"
|
||
Light poured over them as Palpatine approached, a lamp in
|
||
hand. "Ah, I see you two have met."
|
||
Her fair hair had come undone when she removed the helmet;
|
||
it poured down now in a smooth, vermilion-lit flow. "Why didn't
|
||
you tell me the truth about him? Anakin, I-- I came to bring you
|
||
back from here. I didn't know--" She turned toward Palpatine
|
||
again, straining back from the awful soft sound of the
|
||
lightsaber, an electric purr like cloth being torn.
|
||
"When did I lie to you? Your friend Kenobi fought Anakin
|
||
Skywalker and left him for dead. My people found him laid out
|
||
like bracken on the edge of a lava pit, and for a long time, his
|
||
survival was an exceedingly tenuous matter-- hence the indictment
|
||
of you and General Kenobi."
|
||
"But I didn't--"
|
||
"Anakin was quite emphatic that you'd planned his death with
|
||
Kenobi." Palpatine polished his nails against his sleeve. "I just
|
||
wanted to ensure justice was done, in the event of his death."
|
||
"If he's survived, why haven't you withdrawn the
|
||
indictment?"
|
||
"Survived?" Palpatine turned wide golden eyes to the
|
||
motionless black figure. "Anakin Skywalker no longer exists. You
|
||
face Darth Vader now. Is this not so, my friend?"
|
||
"It is, my master."
|
||
"Well, that settles that. You have lost, Arcadia. And now I
|
||
will keep my promise and let you join Anakin. If you would step
|
||
back, Lord Vader?" Vader backed away, saber still in hand. When
|
||
he had retreated to a safe distance, Palpatine unleashed his
|
||
power.
|
||
He shaped his hands as if holding a soft, flat box with his
|
||
fingertips, and blasted her with pure hell. The lightning wrapped
|
||
around her and through her. Through the appalling pain, she felt
|
||
her throat shredding raw from the screams forced from it. Her
|
||
lungs filled with the thick, corrosive scent of ozone struck from
|
||
the air. When the pain stopped, a fine froth of blood oozed from
|
||
her mouth as she gasped through it.
|
||
"When I am done with you, my lady, my medics will devise
|
||
life-support prosthetics for you like Lord Vader's. And you will
|
||
infiltrate the court of your cousin Bail for me and do as I bid,
|
||
or I will halt your prosthetics by remote and let you drown in
|
||
your own blood." The ice-blue bolts licked out again. At the next
|
||
respite, she could only whimper, weakly coughing spume onto her
|
||
cheek. Her convulsions had thrown her to Vader's feet, and she
|
||
looked up to see the impassive mask gazing down at her.
|
||
"Anakin, please," she whispered. "If any part of you is
|
||
truly still alive, then please kill me. Kill me now."
|
||
"Move away from her." Slowly, Vader moved back a pace, still
|
||
looking at her. She was curled on her side, her eyes fixed on
|
||
him. THe last time he had seen her like that was the morning
|
||
Kenobi had confronted him-- no, when Kenobi confronted _Anakin_.
|
||
He shook his head to clear it. Inside one glove, on his intact
|
||
right hand, he could feel the marriage ring press against his
|
||
finger, where it had been moved from the remains of his left hand.
|
||
But on that morning, her face and hair had been luminous in
|
||
the morning sunlight, not shadowed and flecked with blood. Anakin
|
||
would not want her to suffer like this, Vader thought.
|
||
"A little farther, if you please." Palpatine gestured
|
||
impatiently.
|
||
Arcadia looked away from the blank eyes of the mask. Within
|
||
seconds, incandescent brilliance streaked back into her vision,
|
||
but red instead of blue. She saw the lightsaber slash down across
|
||
the white armor over her chest, then nothing.
|
||
Palpatine exhaled sharply. "I thought you had learned
|
||
obedience. It seems I must remind you again. But first, I must
|
||
implement my alternate plan." He stalked back to his main
|
||
quarters and keyed the comm. "Guard captain, a Jedi assassin
|
||
disguised as a stormtrooper entered my apartments less than an
|
||
hour ago. I was saved only by the fortuitous presence of Lord
|
||
Vader, with whom I had been dining. I want the Senate informed
|
||
about the true aims of these Jedi-- they're dangerous religious
|
||
fanatics, and the tools of unscrupulous politicians like my
|
||
enemies. Bring holocams to record the scene when you fetch the
|
||
corpse from my garden. I will take Lord Vader to have his wounds
|
||
treated by my own physicians."
|
||
He turned in irritation when he realized Vader had not
|
||
followed him. Keying off the comm, Palpatine went to the
|
||
courtyard doorway. "If you do not come now, I assure you that you
|
||
will regret this day's work even more."
|
||
Vader walked out of the colonnade, his rent cloak fluttering
|
||
behind him. Palpatine gave his mind a touch like hands shaping
|
||
clay. "Forget everything she said. Think only of her deeds. She
|
||
colluded with Kenobi against you. She tried to kill you herself."
|
||
"Yes. She tried to kill me herself," Vader dully repeated.
|
||
In the deep shadows beneath the trees, Arcadia lay sprawled,
|
||
half-severed by the saber blow that had killed her. Her body
|
||
gleamed twice in the faint, distant light. One reflection was
|
||
from her lightsaber handle, which Vader had tucked back into her
|
||
hands. The other was from the half-melted ring he had placed on
|
||
her finger.
|
||
|
||
|