Read The Final Showdown Page 2


  made a serious mistake. He should be the first apprentice to move up to

  Jedi Knight. He knew it. And soon everyone else would know it, too.

  He would make them know it.

  CHAPTER THREE

  The Jedi assembled in the vast hangar in front of the two Republic

  cruisers they would take to Korriban. They split up the teams, with Siri

  and Obi-Wan in one cruiser with their Padawans, Soara and Ry-Gaul and their

  Padawans in the other. That way, the two best pilots in the group - Anakin

  and Ry-Gaul - would be in different ships.

  Obi-Wan wished it could be otherwise. He didn't think it wise to put

  Anakin and Ferus together in a small cruiser until Anakin had cooled down.

  He had no choice, however; every decision they made from now on could be a

  crucial one. They had to think every step through. It was entirely possible

  that they would be attacked on the journey. They couldn't take anything for

  granted anymore.

  While Anakin and Ry-Gaul did a flight check on their vehicles, Obi-Wan

  studied his fellow Jedi. It had been six years since they had all been

  together on a mission. The past years had been long and hard, and they all

  looked more focused, more intent, than they had all those years before when

  they went to patrol the Galactic Games.

  Obi-Wan knew that Tru and Ry-Gaul had been on a series of highly

  dangerous missions and that Soara and Darra were recently caught in the

  middle of a fierce interplanetary war. He saw the changes in all the

  Padawans, how their faces reflected the seriousness of their purpose and

  the things they had seen. He saw in them the same recognition that he had

  once faced, as he had come to the end of his years of apprenticeship. You

  started out as a Padawan thinking you would lead a life of service and

  adventure, and you pictured your successes to come, not your failures.

  Successes could be daydreamed about in a vague way, but failures were more

  particular. They couldn't be envisioned. With the years you accumulated not

  only satisfactions but also disappointments and heartbreaking losses.

  Imprinted in your memory were things you wished you had not seen. The Jedi

  path was more complicated than you'd ever dreamed as you polished your

  lightsaber hilt and yearned to be chosen.

  Siri was leaner, if that was possible. Her edge was sharper. Obi-Wan

  saw less of her humor and more of her frustration.

  Ry-Gaul's bleached gray eyes seemed even paler, as if his experiences

  had leached out the color. Now they were almost white. He spoke even less

  now. When Obi-Wan had asked him about it, Ry-Gaul had fixed his moon-

  colored eyes on him and said, "There is less to say."

  Soara Antana, oddly, had grown softer, almost tender, with Darra.

  Darra herself seemed the same, though the exuberance that danced in her

  unusual, rust-colored eyes would sometimes shift to a shadowy sadness.

  And what of himself? What did his fellow Jedi think of him? He caught

  sight of his bearded face in the reflection of the windscreen. He was not

  old. He was younger than Qui-Gon had been when he took him on as a Padawan.

  Yet he felt old. In his bones, he felt a strange weariness. It was the

  concentration of all the effort he placed in vigilance. In watching.

  Waiting for something he could not name.

  They all felt it. A gathering of the dark side of the Force. They held

  out their hands, pushing against the darkness, the chaos. They were tired,

  and they had so much farther to go.

  And now, Anakin. He had to count on Anakin's maturity, the integrity

  of his core. Anakin would forgive him for supporting Ferus. It had been

  difficult for Obi-Wan himself to admit that Ferus was the best candidate.

  Naturally he'd wanted Anakin to be chosen, but something had held him back.

  He couldn't have done it if he hadn't felt the times were too perilous for

  the Jedi to make a mistake.

  In time, Anakin would find acceptance. Obi-Wan was confident this was

  so, because he knew Anakin so well. He knew that Anakin was struggling now,

  and he knew that he could not help him. He knew Anakin's better side would

  win.

  To Obi-Wan's surprise, Yoda himself suddenly appeared, gliding in his

  repulsorlift chair from the turbo-lift. Obi-Wan walked forward quickly to

  greet him on the landing platform.

  "Master Yoda, is something wrong?"

  Yoda did not answer him. Instead, Obi-Wan watched as Yoda's gray-blue

  eyes moved from one Jedi to another in turn, lingering on the faces of the

  Padawans.

  "Felt I did that look upon you all before you left I must," Yoda said.

  "And tell you..."

  "Yes, Master?"

  Another pause. Then Yoda leaned on his gimer stick and frowned. "Like

  Ry-Gaul, I have become. Nothing to say, I have." Now he gazed with great

  affection at Obi-Wan. "What I would say, know you do already."

  And Obi-Wan did. A great dread lay inside Yoda. He needed to look at

  them in case they did not all come back. He needed to stand here and watch

  them go so they would know how deeply he felt for them. He wanted to see

  them off, see the last glint of sun on a wing as they flew.

  Obi-Wan nodded.

  "Checks completed," Anakin called, and Ry-Gaul gave a thumbs-up.

  The Jedi turned to board.

  "May the Force be with you," Yoda said. He lifted one three-fingered

  hand in good-bye.

  CHAPTER FOUR.

  Obi-Wan sat in front of the nav computer. There was nothing to do;

  they had been in hyperspace for days now, and they were approaching

  Korriban within the Horuset system. He knew their position exactly, and how

  far they needed to go. Still he continued to check coordinates and try to

  foresee potential problems. It was what he'd always done, even as an

  apprentice. He found comfort in the routine of it.

  The journey had passed without incident. Ferus had kept a delicate

  distance between himself and Anakin, delicate because he gave distance

  without seeming to. Obi-Wan appreciated this effort. Ferus had given Anakin

  space, and that was not easy on such a small cruiser.

  Siri came up behind him. "If you check that space chart once more,

  you're going to burn out the screen."

  Obi-Wan spun around in his chair. "It never hurts to triple check."

  "It hurts me," Siri said. Her keen blue eyes glinted at him. "All that

  precision gives me the shivers."

  Obi-Wan grinned, then pressed the button for holo-mode. The star chart

  hovered in the air. "There it is," he said, indicating Korriban. "So

  isolated that it makes up its own system. Marooned in space, as though the

  other planets have chosen to hide from it."

  Siri sat astride a chair, planting her hands on her knees. "Don't be

  so poetic. It's just a planet."

  "More than a planet," Obi-Wan said, gazing at the chart. "A source of

  evil that still calls evil to come meet it."

  "I don't believe that," Siri said. "It's just a place where some old

  Sith bones lie."

  "The Valley of the Dark Lords," Obi-Wan said. They had heard of the

  valley from their earliest days as students at the Temple, had used tales

  of the valley to sca
re each other as younglings. "The dark side of the

  Force still lives in that valley. Korriban has never recovered from the

  Sith occupation. That was thousands of years ago, and yet the planet has

  never formed a government or attracted settlers. It's not part of the

  galactic alliance. It has never joined the Senate."

  Siri rose to study the holo-chart more closely. "Even freighters won't

  stop there," she murmured. "And freighters stop everywhere." As she moved

  to the opposite side of the chart, briefly, the image of Korriban was

  reflected on her face. She shuddered and moved away.

  Siri sat back down opposite Obi-Wan. "The Commerce Guild has opened an

  office there," she observed.

  "They're offering incentives to get corporations to open branches in

  the Dreshdae spaceport," Obi-Wan said. "I've been studying the files. Of

  course it is a world with no taxes, and that's a Commerce Guild issue, but

  it's still strange."

  "They are just trying to gain influence on major corporations," Siri

  said. "Keep them in their backyard so they can control them. It's the same

  old dance."

  "But Korriban?" Obi-Wan mused. "There has to be a reason... the Sith

  might be behind it, even if the Commerce Guild doesn't know it."

  Siri waved a hand. "Then they'll get what they deserve."

  While they were talking, the Padawans slowly drifted closer to join

  the conversation.

  "So who is living on Korriban?" Ferus now asked.

  "Three types of beings," Siri replied, checking them off on her

  fingers. "One, those who are forced to live there because of work. Two,

  those who have been stranded there. Three, those who choose to be there."

  "Those are the dangerous ones, no doubt," Obi-Wan said

  "How are we going to find Omega?" Anakin asked. "Dreshdae isn't large,

  but he and Zan Arbor will be in hiding. And Korriban is huge. They could be

  hiding out anywhere."

  "I don't think he's come to Korriban to hide," Obi-Wan said. "He's

  come for a reason. My guess is that he's been invited. He's succeeded in

  his goal - he's attracted the notice of the Sith. He's going there for his

  reward."

  "More wealth?" Siri asked. "He certainly doesn't need it."

  "Maybe help with his next plan," Ferus said. "He could need weapons,

  ships, droids... we don't know." Obi-Wan nodded. "True."

  The instrument panel showed they were about to come out of hyperspace.

  It was time to enter the coordinates for landing at Dreshdae.

  Obi-Wan drifted to the front of the cockpit and the others followed.

  They stood, looking out into dark space. There were few stars out here, and

  no planets. Korriban loomed in their vision, a large planet with blood-red

  clouds obscuring its surface.

  "I've heard it called the cradle of darkness," Obi-Wan said. He

  realized that he had lowered his voice.

  He felt it now, the dark side of the Force emanating from the planet's

  surface. Looking at the faces of the Jedi, he knew they felt it as well. It

  had a sick sweetness to it, something that seemed to pour through his

  veins, attracting and repelling him at once. It was the most complicated

  surge of the dark side he had ever felt.

  He struggled to meet it, struggled to clear his mind.

  Warily, Obi-Wan moved forward and entered the coordinates into the nav

  computer. His fingers hesitated even as they entered the data. It was as

  though making the commitment to land was sealing their fate.

  He stood and joined the other Jedi at the cockpit windscreen. They

  couldn't turn away. The ship flew into the atmosphere, straight through the

  blood-red clouds, and dread entered their hearts as the surface of the

  planet grew closer.

  CHAPTER FIVE

  He would have to wear a mask. A mask of friendship. Anakin had decided

  this before he'd left the Temple. Ferus could never know his true feelings.

  He would defeat him without Ferus ever knowing they were in competition.

  That had been his plan, but it was hard to follow through when faced

  with Ferus himself. Anakin could feel his resentment leaking out like a

  gas. It was only a question of time before he exploded.

  No. I will prove I am a better Jedi. I will not explode in anger.

  They flew over the planet, over mountain ranges and desert and deep

  canyons.

  "Where is the Valley of the Dark Lords?" Ferus asked.

  "Invisible from the air," Obi-Wan told him. "The valley is narrow, a

  slit hidden in the mountains some distance from Dreshdae. Plus it is

  constantly under heavy cloud cover."

  "There's the spaceport," Siri said, as it loomed closer.

  Dreshdae had been built on a plateau in the middle of the largest

  mountain range on the planet. From the air, the Jedi could see a huddle of

  buildings cramped together with no effort at orderly design.

  The landing platform was deserted except for a small number of

  cruisers behind an energy fence. There was no one to check them in and no

  one to care. The landing area itself had been recently refurbished, but it

  had been a hasty job and already the platform was pitted and scarred.

  Soara, Darra, Ry-Gaul, and Tru came over to Anakin's ship once they

  had landed. The Masters huddled in the cockpit, going over some last-minute

  details. The Padawans stood on the ramp, looking out over the spaceport and

  preparing their equipment. Dreshdae looked as grim at ground level as it

  had from the air.

  "Not exactly Belazura," Darra said as she stuffed her thermal cape

  into her survival pack.

  "I've seen worse," Ferus said. "I hope."

  Ferus might have meant the remark as a joke, but Anakin took it as a

  challenge. Ferus was showing off again.

  "We all have," Anakin pointed out.

  "I don't think so," Tru said. "I'd say we've finally made it to the

  worst the galaxy has to offer." He said this cheerfully as he wound one

  flexible arm around his back to fasten the strap on his survival pack. As a

  Tee-van, Tru could bend his limbs backward and twist them in surprising

  angles. It was one of the things that made him such an excellent fighter.

  "I don't think you'll be finding any Terratta strips here," Darra

  teased Tru. "I have a feeling we'll be living on food capsules. I wouldn't

  trust the food on this planet."

  "I never get the good planets," Tru whined, making a comical face.

  They were joking now, wanting to displace the odd tension they all

  felt.

  "We've come a long way from the Galactic Games, that's for certain,"

  Ferus said. "Remember how nervous we were on our early missions?"

  "Sure," Tru said. "I still am." He looked out at Dreshdae, and the

  humor drained from his face. "Especially here."

  "What about you, Ferus?" Anakin asked as he bent over to tighten a

  strap that didn't need tightening. "Nervous? Or is that not allowed for a

  Jedi Knight?"

  "I'm not a Jedi Knight yet," Ferus answered.

  "But you're closer than any of us," Anakin said, straightening. "Does

  that make you more nervous or less? I mean, let's face it, the Jedi

  Council's eyes are on you."

  Ferus frowned as he picked up the taunt buried in Ana
kin's easy tone.

  "I'm not thinking about that. I'm thinking about the mission."

  "We're all thinking about the mission, Anakin," Darra said.

  "Of course, we all want to capture Omega," Tru added. His eyes told

  Anakin to back off.

  "But Ferus wants to be the one to do it, I'll bet," Anakin said. "Once

  you start impressing the Jedi Council, you have to keep on doing it."

  "It doesn't matter who does it," Ferus said. "It matters that it's

  done."

  "Spoken like a true Jedi Knight," Anakin said. Ferus's neck flushed

  red. "Just what are you trying to say?"

  "Anakin - " Darra murmured warningly.

  Anakin took a step closer to Ferus. He couldn't help himself. Despite

  his best intentions, the words spilled out in a torrent. "That you'll do

  whatever you can to succeed on this mission, but not because you want to

  catch Omega. You want to be a Knight."

  "Anakin!" Tru exclaimed.

  But Ferus and Anakin were past listening to their fellow Padawans.

  They were careful to pitch their voices low, however, to avoid attracting

  the attention of their Masters.

  Ferus's dark eyes flashed with anger. "That's a serious charge, and an