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The Moment of Truth

Page 9

by Jude Watson


  aside. Now Obi-Wan could see Mezdec in the middle of the group. When he saw

  Obi-Wan and Anakin, he paled.

  "This is a high-security meeting," he said. "You have no clearance."

  "Mezdec, these are Jedi," Binalu said. "We asked the Senate for help."

  Obi-Wan gave Mezdec a cool glance, then ignored him. He glanced at the

  strategy map. He saw that the Typha-Dor had massed all their weaponry and

  their fleet to the south.

  He and Anakin had studied the invasion plans during the flight.

  Shalini had been right. Mezdec had given the generals false plans. They

  were massing troops and ships to meet an invasion that would not arrive.

  Meanwhile, the Vanqors would take over the capital cities in one thrust,

  unopposed.

  "I have met Mezdec before. We were the team that was sent to rescue

  the crew at the outpost," Obi-Wan said. "Have you moved your ships to

  attack?" he asked the generals.

  "We are moving them now," one of the generals said grudgingly, as

  though she saw no reason to tell the Jedi. "The Vanqors will attack our

  factories in the south."

  "Is it too late to recall them?"

  "Why should we?" the general answered. "With all due respect to the

  Jedi, we did ask for your help, and we are grateful for your response. But

  we can handle this. We are going to surprise the Vanqors when they invade

  our airspace."

  "You, generals, will be the ones who will be surprised," Obi-Wan said.

  "That is not the true invasion plan," Anakin said. He set Shalini's

  holofile spinning. It unfolded in pulses of light, showing detail after

  detail of the Vanqor invasion. "This is the real invasion plan. If you mass

  your forces there, the Vanqors will simply sail in and take over without a

  fight."

  "But the Vanqors have already sent their ships," Binalu said,

  indicating the map.

  "I see evidence of only two destroyers in the south," Obi-Wan said.

  "Mezdec explained that more are coming. The crew intercepted the

  Vanqor invasion plans," a general said. She was tall and imposing, with

  multicolored medals on her shoulders. "He came to me personally. I am the

  high general of Typha-Dor, General Bycha."

  "That's right," Mezdec said. "We have the plans. I was the only one to

  make it out alive."

  "On the contrary," Obi-Wan said. "The others made it out, too. You'll

  be sorry to hear that, Mezdec."

  "Mezdec is a spy, General Bycha," Anakin said. "I suggest you give an

  order for his immediate arrest."

  The generals exchanged glances. Talus and Binalu looked at the Jedi.

  "This is a grave charge," Talus said.

  "They are lying!" Mezdec cried.

  "You must trust us," Obi-Wan said. "The fate of your world lies in

  your hands. The Vanqors are not going to attack your factories. They are

  moving to attack the twin capital cities. Can you move the fleet to these

  positions?" He took a laser pointer from a general and indicated the map.

  "Look. The Vanqors are invading through this corridor. I've studied the

  star charts. Your moons will align to give them cover, but it will also

  create a window for you to attack. You can trap the majority of the fleet

  between the two moons. Even with a smaller force, you could defeat them.

  They will be vulnerable right here."

  The generals looked at the map. They looked at each other.

  "Don't listen to them!" Mezdec cried again. "They are lying!"

  Slowly, General Bycha turned to him. "And what reason would the Jedi

  have for lying?" She held Mezdec's gaze. "I hereby issue an order for

  Mezdec's immediate arrest."

  Then General Bycha turned back to the Jedi. "We don't have much time,"

  she said.

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  Mezdec was taken away. The room exploded into activity. Obi-Wan was

  impressed with how quickly the generals grasped the situation and

  formulated a response. The fleet sped to the other side of Typha-Dor and

  lurked behind the string of moons, effectively concealing themselves and

  ready to attack.

  General Bycha spoke to the Jedi. "We were unprepared for war. Our

  planet has no planetary defensive shield, and only one planetary

  turbolaser. It's all up to our fleet."

  "You have the strategic advantage," Siri said.

  "Which means there is another option," Obi-Wan pointed out. "Within

  seconds of the Vanqors invading your airspace, you will be able to surprise

  and surround them. They know their entire fleet can easily be destroyed. It

  is a perfect opportunity for you to force a surrender without losing lives.

  "

  General Bycha looked interested. "Most generals are primed to fight. I

  will do so if necessary. But on Typha-Dor we always seek to avoid conflict

  if we can."

  "A truce would make sense for Vanqor as well as Typha-Dor," Obi-Wan

  pointed out. "Typha-Dor has vast resources. Vanqor has factories and

  technical innovations. The other planets in your system each have something

  unique to contribute. If there was a strong alliance between your planets,

  you would all be interdependent. You would learn and profit from one

  another."

  "You could become one of the strongest systems in the galaxy and a

  boon to the Republic," Siri said.

  Binalu shook her head. "But we don't trust the Vanqors. How could we,

  after what they have done?"

  "Alliances are rarely built on trust," Clee Rhara said. "They are

  built on mutual advantage."

  "One of your conditions would have to be complete disarmament," Garen

  said. "Vanqor might choose that rather than complete annihilation."

  "It all depends on you," Obi-Wan said. "You have the advantage of

  surprise. When you don't fire on the Vanqors, they might hesitate to fire

  on you. You'll need to speak to the ruler of Vanqor and explain that you

  have his fleet surrounded. The Vanqor fleet captains will confirm. You have

  a chance to win a war without a battle."

  Binalu and Talus gazed at the blinking lights on the holomap, each

  representing a ship with hundreds of lives aboard. They had a wordless

  communication with each other, then nodded.

  "Tell the fleet to get into position but not to fire a shot unless

  ordered," Talus said.

  "We will talk to Van-Ith, the ruler of Vanqor," Binalu said.

  It was a tense time in the operations room. The generals, the Jedi,

  and the rulers watched the blinking lights on the map. They saw the Vanqor

  fleet approach. At the last possible moment, General Bycha gave the order

  for the Typha-Dor coalition forces to surround the Vanqor fleet. The

  movement was executed perfectly.

  "Arrange for a comm transmission to the head of the fleet," General

  Bycha ordered.

  While General Bycha spoke to the Vanqor captains, Binalu and Talus

  spoke to the Vanqor leader. The Jedi watched and waited. After a long

  negotiation, the Vanqors agreed to surrender and enter peace talks.

  The Vanqor fleet slowly followed the Typha-Dor escorts to the surface

  of Typha-Dor, where they would remain for the duration of the talks.

  "This will take some time to accomplish," Talus said to the Jedi.

&nbs
p; "Thank you for your help. We are in your debt."

  "Shalini and her crew were responsible for obtaining the invasion

  plans," Obi-Wan told them. "They risked their lives. They entrusted the

  disk to us while they were interred in a prisoner-of-war camp."

  "Are they in danger?" General Bycha asked.

  "Anakin was also a prisoner," Obi-Wan said. "There's a camp in the

  Tomo Crater region on Vanqor."

  General Bycha focused her intense gaze on Anakin. "We've heard of this

  camp. Rumors have reached us of medical experiments being performed on

  prisoners. This is against Republic law. If we knew this for certain, it

  would help us in negotiations with the Vanqors. Did you see anything like

  that?"

  Obi-Wan saw Anakin hesitate. Why? What had happened to him? Why hadn't

  he told Obi-Wan? He'd had plenty of opportunity aboard Garen's ship.

  "I underwent the procedure," Anakin said. "It is called the Zone of

  Self-Containment."

  He saw the Jedi turn and look at him. Ferus's gaze was sharp. He had

  seen that Obi-Wan hadn't known this.

  "What happens to you?" General Bycha asked. "You become... content,"

  Anakin said. "You have complete mobility and your thought processes are

  sharp. It doesn't feel as though you're drugged. But the things that

  normally torment you don't bother you at all."

  "Crowd control," General Bycha said. "It's a way to subdue

  populations. I can't believe we must form a partnership with those who

  would do this."

  "The partnership will ensure that they won't," Clee Rhara said.

  "How was the substance administered?" Obi-Wan asked.

  "I don't know," Anakin said. "That was the strange thing. We weren't

  injected. And we ate with the med care workers and personnel, fed from a

  communal pot. Our water source was the same as theirs, too."

  "It is possible they were all drugged," General Bycha said.

  "I don't think so," Anakin said. "I felt that they were... envious of

  the prisoners."

  "When did you first feel the effects?" Obi-Wan asked.

  Anakin thought back. "They gave us a paralyzing drug, but that didn't

  make a difference to my mind. It was after a bath."

  "It was transmitted through water," Obi-Wan said. "That is a very

  difficult way to transmit a drug," General Bycha said. "Water transmission

  hasn't been perfected." He frowned. "These are dark days. There are too

  many scientists with no scruples, willing to poison bodies and minds."

  Obi-Wan suddenly leaned forward toward Anakin. "Did you ever see the

  doctor in charge?"

  "Yes," Anakin said. "I was brought to her because in the beginning I

  was able to resist the paralyzing drug somewhat, with the help of the

  Force."

  "Do you know her name?"

  Anakin thought back. "She never told me." Odd. He hadn't noticed that

  at the time.

  "Do you remember what she looked like?"

  "A woman in late mid-life," Anakin said. "Light-colored hair.

  Distinctive green eyes. She had a strong face." He thought back. "The

  strange thing was that she guessed that I was Force-sensitive. She seemed

  to know a great deal about the Force."

  Obi-Wan closed his eyes. "Jenny Zan Arbor," he said.

  Clee Rhara, Ry-Gaul, and Garen looked at him in surprise.

  "She is on a prison planet," Clee Rhara said. "So we thought," Obi-Wan

  said.

  "Who is she, Master?" Anakin asked.

  "Someone who has hurt the Jedi and the Republic in the past," Obi-Wan

  said. "She kept Qui-Gon prisoner in order to study the Force. She was a

  brilliant scientist who began her career after she found cures to several

  plagues and saved whole planets. But then she grew corrupt. She began to

  introduce plagues or viruses so that she would be hired to cure the

  populations. She was adept at using water systems or air systems. She made

  a great fortune. But the Jedi caught her in the end." Obi-Wan turned to

  General Bycha. "May I use your database?"

  General Bycha showed him to the console. Obi-Wan did a quick check of

  the prison world he knew Zan Arbor had been exiled to.

  He whirled around in his chair. "Escaped. She is now a wanted

  criminal." He stood. "We must get to the Tomo Crater Camp right away."

  "You will meet resistance," General Bycha warned him. "The surrender

  is not complete."

  Obi-Wan looked at Clee Rhara, Garen, Siri, and Ry-Gaul, a question in

  his eyes.

  Ry-Gaul nodded. "We are at your service, Obi-Wan."

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  After receiving clearance from the Senate for their operation, they

  flew to Vanqor. They met no resistance from the Vanqor ships. The Jedi

  cruiser flew over the rugged landscape of the Tomo Craters, and then the

  camp appeared ahead. Then resistance exploded in the form of laser-

  cannonfire. Apparently General Bycha had not underestimated the resistance

  they would meet on the ground.

  Garen dived and twisted, piloting the ship expertly through the fire,

  never wavering from his destination.

  They landed amid heavy fire and charged out, lightsabers at the ready.

  The security droids were taken care of with quick thrusts and backhanded

  swipes. The Vanqor guards were armed with blaster rifles, wrist rockets,

  and stun batons. The Jedi advanced as a solid flank that broke and re-

  formed as they leaped and twisted, using their lightsabers and occasionally

  Force-pushing a Vanqor guard who decided today was his day to seek glory.

  Instead he ended up with a throbbing skull as he was thrown against a wall.

  It was at times such as these that Anakin felt something close to what

  he'd felt in the Zone of Self-Containment. It was not that he enjoyed

  battle. Battle was a necessity to an end. It was that battle filled his

  mind in a way that other things could not. Focus was absolute. He felt in

  the midst of the Force. With the other Jedi around him, the Force was

  especially powerful. It made every decision easy, every move fluid.

  He even felt a kinship with Ferus. He did not want to be Ferus's

  friend, but he was glad to have him at his side during a battle. Ferus was

  known for his strength and agility. His moves were flawless. Yet he did not

  fight only for himself, but cast his battle mind like a net, ready to

  respond to the others if they needed him. When four sentry droids bore down

  on Anakin, it was Ferus who leaped, smashing two of them to the ground with

  one stroke.

  Soon the droids had been reduced to scrap and the Vanqor guards

  decided that facing a squad of Jedi had not been in their job descriptions.

  They threw down their weapons and surrendered.

  "Zan Arbor," Obi-Wan said to Anakin.

  "We'll free the prisoners," Siri said. "You might meet more resistance

  there. Ferus, go with them."

  The three Jedi raced to the medical building where Anakin had been

  held. No ships had taken off since they arrived. No doubt Zan Arbor had

  heard the battle. She could be hiding. Or she could decide to make a last

  stand. Anakin was prepared for anything.

  The halls were empty. Doors were flung open, and there were signs of

  disarray in the trailing linens on the slee
p couches and the discarded food

  on trays. The warming lights in the courtyard had been turned off, and the

  leaves looked shrunken and yellowed. It appeared that the entire operation

  had been hastily abandoned.

  Anakin led the way to Zan Arbor's office. They did not need to break

  in. The door was wide open. Drawers hung open, empty. Her desk had been

  cleared. Even her septsilk curtains had been taken down.

  Anakin felt relief move through him. But why? He wasn't sure. He only

  knew that he did not want to face Zan Arbor again. Especially not in front

  of his Master. It was as though she held a secret to a part of him he did

  not want to share.

  When he turned, he saw that Ferus had seen his relief. Anakin hid his

  exasperation. No matter where he turned, Ferus was there, eager to see what

  Anakin wanted to conceal. Ferus's ability to tune in to his fellow Jedi

  might have been helpful in battle, but Anakin found it deeply annoying at

  other times.

  "Too late," Anakin said to Obi-Wan. "She must have heard about the

  thwarted invasion."

  "She couldn't have hidden all the evidence," Obi-Wan said. "We'll need

 

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