Read The False Peace Page 6


  If Omega was behind this Senatorial effort, he had already succeeded

  in disrupting the Senate, demoralizing the Jedi, and distracting everyone.

  But if that was truly the case, what was the coming devastation he was

  planning?

  Obi-Wan didn't know. But suddenly he knew in his bones that his

  earlier instinct was dead-on. Omega was behind this.

  ".. and I'm sorry to be the one to tell you this," Tyro was saying,

  "but it was inevitable given the circumstances, I suppose."

  Obi-Wan wrenched his attention back to his friend. "What is it?"

  "Bog Divinian's committee has taken an unusual step. Instead of a

  recommendation, it has just entered an official petition to ban the Jedi

  Order from any Senate action. This was clever... but not clever enough.

  Senator Organa found a clause that allowed him to appeal directly to the

  Chancellor in a separate closed-door session. Palpatine is scheduled to

  decide on the matter later this afternoon in a meeting with both Senators."

  "This has all just happened since the hearing? I thought the Senate

  was supposed to be slow."

  "Only when real things are getting done," Tyro said drily. "When it

  comes to political maneuvering, you have to move fast." Tyro gave him a

  keen look. "What is it, my friend? The Jedi Order is in trouble, but we

  will find a way to fight, I promise you. You have more friends than

  enemies. You just have to remind your friends that they are your friends.

  It's the Senate way."

  "The Senate way," Obi-Wan pronounced in disgust. "And what is that?

  Talk. Deals. Bribes. Corruption."

  "Obi-Wan." Tyro silenced him gently. "I agree with you. All this is

  true. But I still believe in the Senate. It is the living symbol of the

  Republic. Until it was formed, the galaxy boiled with chaos. It is our only

  chance to bring peace to the thousands of worlds that cannot manage alone.

  There are good beings in the Senate, like Senator Organa. Many of them.

  They will win in the end."

  Obi-Wan had never heard Tyro defend the Senate so passionately before.

  Usually, he railed against it. But of course that was why he continued to

  toil down in his little office, searching for ways to make it better. "What

  amazes me is that you keep your faith in the Senate, no matter how many

  times your heart is broken."

  "Oh, my heart may break from time to time, but never my will," Tyro

  said lightly. "In that way we are alike. Now, tell me what worries you."

  "It's not so much the petition, but what the petition might conceal,"

  Obi-Wan explained.

  Tyro shook his head. "I don't understand."

  "What if this action to discredit the Jedi is just a diversion so that

  something worse could occur?" Obi-Wan said.

  What he liked about Tyro was that his friend did not waste time. His

  small, furred face grew intent. "Ah. Of course. Continue."

  "I have been tracking Granta Omega and Jenna Zan Arbor, both of whom

  are familiar to you," Obi-Wan said to Tyro's nod. "What if they were behind

  this latest scheme? What if it is merely a smokescreen for their real plan?

  "

  The possibilities clicked through Tyro's brain. "Of course if it is

  true that they're involved, this would be more than possible - it would be

  likely," he said rapidly. "It fits with the way Omega operates. And it

  makes sense, since Sano Sauro is involved." Tyro's face contracted into an

  expression of distaste. Sauro was his enemy, too. "That would explain why

  he has remained in the background. He doesn't want us to connect him to

  this campaign, because he knows we will immediately make the connection to

  Omega."

  "There is something we're not seeing here," Obi-Wan said.

  "The Chancellor is, of course, a big supporter of the Jedi," Tyro

  said, thinking. "It's unlikely that he will approve the petition. Bog and

  Sauro could then manipulate this defeat into a call for a no-confidence

  vote. That would allow them to propose Sauro as Chancellor. I know that is

  his ultimate ambition."

  "Then Omega would control the Senate," Obi-Wan said slowly.

  Tyro tapped his tapered fingers on the manuals. "But Palpatine is too

  powerful and too skilled to be outmaneuvered. And I doubt even Sauro could

  muster enough support for a vote of no confidence. Let's see, he controls

  the Viga alliance, and the planets in the Commerce Guild, and... yes, he

  could get several systems in the Mid-Rim. But in the Core? No. He's

  powerful, but he's actively disliked, and there is a strong opposition

  faction headed by Bail Organa that can't be discounted."

  Tyro ended his speculation, realizing that Obi-Wan had grown impatient

  with the details of Senate politics.

  "In conclusion," he said, sighing, "I have no conclusion. I can't see

  them trying such a thing. You don't try something like that unless you're

  sure you can succeed. Palpatine is tremendously popular, especially at the

  moment. Tomorrow there will be a ceremony for the opening of the All

  Planets Relief Fund. A huge group of supporters will be attending-including

  many Jedi. This is Palpatine's pet project, and it's a good one. He's

  worked his way through the tangled bureaucracy to get it off the ground.

  Now any world in peril can petition the Senate directly for funds through

  one central account. Palpatine claims this will stop the bureaucratic

  slowdown for relief to troubled worlds. You see, before this, a world would

  have to petition the committee for Relief, which would then turn the matter

  over to a specially appointed investigatory committee, which would then - "

  Obi-Wan's comlink signaled, and he held up a hand to interrupt Tyro.

  He had to admit he was relieved not to get a crash course in the now

  outdated procedural details of Senate relief efforts.

  Siri's crisp voice came through the comlink. "We found something.

  Possibly Omega and Zan Arbor's hideout. We need backup. They could be

  inside."

  She gave him the coordinates. Obi-Wan stood as he flipped his comlink

  closed and put it back in his belt - at last, action and not meetings. "I

  have to go."

  "And you will take care, I hope. I think you are right. Our enemies

  are hidden, and that makes them more dangerous." Tyro held his hand out,

  fingers spread. Obi-Wan pressed his own spread-fingered palm against it. It

  was the gesture of good-bye that the Svivreni made to only those closest to

  them.

  The Svivreni did not say good-bye. They considered it bad luck.

  "So go," Tyro said in the Svivreni farewell.

  CHAPTER TEN

  Obi-Wan was well acquainted with the many exit doors of the Senate

  complex, and he hit the streets of Coruscant in minutes. He took a vertical

  monorail down a hundred stories to the business district where Siri and

  Ferus were located, near the bank of Aargau. On the way, he contacted

  Anakin.

  As he rounded the last corner he saw his apprentice streaking down

  through the air. Looking up, Obi-Wan could see that Anakin had made the

  jump from a platform twenty stories up.

  "I'm sure there was a lift tube," Obi-Wan said as Anakin ran up. "Or

  even
stairs."

  Anakin grinned. "Too slow."

  Together, they ran up to Siri and Ferus, who had taken up a position

  behind a jumble of airspeeders parked in front of an interior mall of

  popular shops and restaurants.

  "We got a tip from an informer," Siri said. She pointed to a small

  white building across the way. A blinking sign said VIRTUAL HAPPINESS.

  Another sign, smaller and clumsily handwritten said: OUT OF BUSINESS.

  "It was one of those sim-voyage places," Siri said. "You know, where

  you can go and have a simulated vacation experience to the luxury worlds of

  the Core. But our source says a couple moved in a few days ago. They said

  they were starting a business, but nothing has been done, and they only

  exit the building at night."

  "It could be anyone," Obi-Wan said.

  "Ferus did a quick check of the airspeeders parked here," Siri said,

  with a look that told Obi-Wan he should wait for her to finish. "Nothing

  unusual came up. Then he did a check with Coruscant security and went

  through the tickets for illegally parked airspeeders, cross-checking with

  known IDs used by the Slams. A standard Ralion B-14 that was recently

  bought at a speeder lot twenty levels down matched one of the false ID docs

  the Slams had on their master ship."

  "Good work," Obi-Wan said to Ferus. "I say we go in. We don't have

  time to waste."

  They strode to the door. As soon as they did, a buzzer sounded, and a

  light flashed. An automated female voice said in a pleasant tone, "Welcome.

  We're not home. If you wish to leave a text message, use the keypad."

  "I have a message, all right," Obi-Wan said, drawing his lightsaber.

  "We're coming in."

  He plunged his lightsaber through the door. It disintegrated from the

  center out.

  The house was dark inside. Obi-Wan stepped in.

  Immediately, lights blazed. Sound blared. He heard the sound of

  rockets, and he fell to the ground and rolled, lightsaber ready to deflect.

  Behind him, the Jedi moved in to flank him.

  The walls flickered and pulsed with sound and light. It took a few

  seconds for Obi-Wan to make sense of it, then he realized every wall held a

  moving image, a holoprojection of a separate scene. One was a field with

  exploding novas in the sky - the famous shooting stars of Nantama. Another

  was of the mountains of Belazura. Another showed fireworks exploding over

  the translucent seas of Dremulae. All were popular vacationing spots.

  The noise was at full volume - surf, fireworks, wind. So loud that at

  first he didn't hear the whirr of the seeker droids.

  He was leaping before the others, cutting down two in a perfect swoop

  of the lightsaber. The droids peppered the walls with blaster fire. Smoke

  rose and the noise was deafening. The images flickered in beautiful colors

  of blue and rose and green while the shadows of the droids moved in

  menacing circles. The electric ping of the blaster fire crisscrossed the

  space, and each Jedi had to jump, whirl, and slash at the droids as they

  dived and circled.

  Within minutes, the dozen or so droids were reduced to smoking scrap

  on the floor. Obi-Wan strode over to a panel behind the door and shut down

  the holoprojection system.

  "Careful, that might be - " Siri started, as a secret blast door

  opened and three combat droids, the deadly droidekas, wheeled out and

  clattered to life. Blazing blasterfire raked the area where Obi-Wan had

  stood. Anyone but a Jedi would have been instantly annihilated.

  "Booby-trapped!" Siri yelled, as she dodged the blaster bolts.

  With deflector shields in place, droidekas were difficult to stop.

  While the rest of the Jedi took a step backward, Anakin moved forward. He

  had studied the droids ever since learning about them, and knew the precise

  spot where their generators lay. He rolled onto the floor, for only an

  upward stroke could disable them.

  The Force hummed in the room as Anakin deftly inserted his lightsaber

  once, twice, three times. The roar of blasters ended.

  Now the floor was littered with droids. Other than that, the house was

  empty.

  "Let's search," Obi-Wan said. "They might have left a clue."

  Siri moved past a table. "The only thing they left was dirty dishes,"

  she said, disdainfully pointing to several greasy plates on the table.

  Other than the signs of a hastily abandoned meal, there wasn't a trace

  of the occupants to be found.

  "We've come up empty again," Siri said in disgust after a few minutes

  of searching.

  "It's Omega's style," Anakin said. "He knows how to leave without a

  trace."

  Ferus nudged a half-open closet door with his foot. "Nothing."

  Obi-Wan drifted to the table. He bent over the dishes. There was a

  scrap of roll on one plate, and a puddle of sauce on the other. He bent

  closer and sniffed.

  "Gotcha," he murmured.

  "What is it, Master?" Anakin asked, turning. Obi-Wan pointed to the

  plate. "That's Dexter Jettster's slider garnish. I'd know it anywhere."

  Siri strode over and looked at the plate. "Congratulations. Our best

  clue is a garnish."

  "It's a place to start," Obi-Wan said.

  Siri nodded. "Why don't you and Anakin head over to Dexter's Diner and

  ask some questions. I think Ferus and I should study the water delivery

  system here on Coruscant. We know they're here. We'd better have a good

  idea of what damage they could do."

  "Good idea. We'll be in touch."

  Obi-Wan signaled to Anakin, and they left the house. Dexter's Diner

  wasn't far, lying in nearby Coco Town. They hurried through the crowded

  pedestrian ramps. The monorails were packed, and it was faster to walk.

  They crossed through the plaza on the way to the diner. The buildings

  ringing the plaza were a mix of low-rent business and dilapidated

  industrial warehouses. Dexter's Diner crouched between the bigger

  buildings, its bright sign casting a red glow through the gray day.

  Anakin started toward the door, but Obi-Wan stopped him. "Wait. Look

  who's inside."

  Anakin peered into the window. Sitting alone in a booth, both hands

  cupping a mug, was Astri.

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  Astri looked up, surprised, when Obi-Wan and Anakin slid into her

  booth. She had been so lost in thought that she hadn't seen them enter the

  diner.

  "It's funny to see you here," she said to Obi-Wan. "Like a dream. I

  was just thinking of the old days. Everything is so different now. Even

  here." She looked around. "Dexter actually made it into a profitable

  enterprise."

  "Well, he doesn't give away meals and drinks the way Didi did," Obi-

  Wan said.

  She smiled. "That's true." She held up her empty cup. "He doesn't even

  give refills. But I like it here."

  "Yes, those were good days," Obi-Wan said. "Things are more

  complicated now. Like the fact that your husband is trying to destroy the

  Jedi Order."

  Astri's hands tightened on her cup. "I long ago made it a policy not

  to discuss Bog's politics."

  "So what do you think about, then?" Anakin as
ked. His question wasn't

  confrontational. It was easy, interested. Obi-Wan was relieved that his

  Padawan had interfered so gracefully. He realized that he was deeply angry

  with Astri. He had expected better of her.

  No expectations. Acceptance.

  It was the Jedi way. And sometimes, so very hard to follow.

  "My relief work," Astri responded promptly. "The economy of my adopted

  world, Nuralee, is failing."

  "I didn't know that," Obi-Wan said. "The last time I was on Nuralee it

  was prospering."

  She looked down into her empty cup. "That was probably some time ago."

  Before Bog took office, Obi-Wan guessed.

  "There are many too poor to buy food. I'm here on Coruscant briefly,

  just to attend a meeting to ask for help from the new All Planets Relief

  Fund and attend the inaugural ceremony. A Jedi team is acting as couriers

  and protectors for a shipment of food and medical supplies to Nuralee, and

  I must return to ensure it gets in the right hands."

  "Do you know who they are?" Anakin asked.

  "Soara Antana and Darra Thel-Tanis," Astri said. "I am grateful for

  their help."

  You are grateful for the help we give you, but you will not help us.

  Obi-Wan had the thought but would not say it aloud.