Dangerous Games (9781484719756)
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Obi-Wan’s voice was gentle. “Come, Padawan. There is a mission to complete.”
Chapter Twenty-One
The hearing was presided over by Ruler Three, Ruler Six, and Ruler Seven. The entire Games Council was allowed to attend.
Obi-Wan was not allowed to hear the testimony before his. It was how hearings were conducted on Euceron. He watched Maxo Vista emerge, then Liviani Sarno, then Bog. At last he was called.
Obi-Wan laid out the details of what he had discovered. He accused Liviani Sarno and Maxo Vista of conspiring to disgrace the Senators in order for the Commerce Guild to pass legislation that would earn them fortunes beyond measure. He accused Maxo Vista specifically of the murder of Aarno Dering.
“Have you evidence of this?” Ruler Three asked.
“The files on Liviani Sarno’s and Maxo Vista’s datapads were timed to erase themselves,” Obi-Wan admitted. “And no one saw Maxo Vista run away from Dering but me.”
“Did you see his face?”
“No,” Obi-Wan said. “He wore a concealing helmet. Yet I knew it was him.”
“So we have only your word that the hero of Euceron and the illustrious head of the Games are guilty,” Ruler Three said.
“My word is all you need,” Obi-Wan answered.
“Perhaps on Coruscant,” Ruler Three said coolly. “But not on Euceron. You claim that the Podracer was programmed to crash into a crowd. But it did not crash.”
“Only thanks to the skill of my Padawan.”
“You claim Aarno Dering fixed three events, yet Aarno Dering is dead. Maxo Vista and Liviani Sarno have denied all charges. The Games Council has backed them up.”
“Didi Oddo can confirm the events were fixed—”
“He has left the planet.”
That was not a surprise. “Bog Divinian saw the files on Vista’s datapad,” Obi-Wan said.
“He has denied seeing them,” Ruler Seven said.
Obi-Wan remembered Bog’s sad notes on how to succeed. NEVER CONTRADICT A SUPERIOR!! FOLLOW THE POWER!! He had been foolish to imagine that Bog would not give in to pressure from Maxo and Liviani.
He gazed at the faces of the Council. None of them met his eyes. No one wanted the scandal to see the light. Not the Ruling Power, not the Games Council. And no doubt Bog Divinian had just ensured that he would be elected Senator on his homeworld. The Commerce Guild would see to that.
This is what the galaxy is becoming, Obi-Wan thought with a sudden, sharp sadness. Those with power hide the truth, and the weak go along in hopes they will become the strong.
“I can see there is no more I can do here,” Obi-Wan said. He strode off the platform and left the room.
Anakin was waiting. When he told him what had occurred, his Padawan was furious. “How can they do this? Maxo Vista and Liviani Sarno are guilty! And they are going to walk free! This is an injustice!” Anakin’s words echoed off the hard plastoid walls of the Grand Court.
“It is a hard thing to see happen,” Obi-Wan agreed. “But sometimes even when the mission is successful, justice is not done. It happens. At least the Commerce Guild did not get what they wanted. No spectators were killed and their legislation may be defeated by those they wished to disgrace.”
“And Aarno Dering? Maxo Vista will get away with murder!”
“That is the hardest of all,” Obi-Wan said.
They walked down the hall toward the exit. As they pushed through the heavy metal doors, they saw Astri waiting, leaning against the rail. She came toward them slowly.
“I am sorry, Obi-Wan,” Astri said. “I offered to testify, but I didn’t see the datapad myself, so the Ruling Power would not allow me. It was my word against Bog’s. Didi wanted to help, but Bog said he would press charges for the theft of the speeder. So Didi thought it best to leave the planet. You know he has no moral courage.” Astri shook her head. “I seem to have married a similar man. Bog isn’t bad. He was pressured by Liviani and he worships Maxo Vista. He swears to me that when he becomes Senator he will do good.”
Obi-Wan nodded sadly. “I’m sure he believes that, Astri. But he is already in debt before he starts. He has done a favor for the Commerce Guild, but he has lied in a hearing. So they have something on him. That will corrupt him.”
“I am frightened for my future,” Astri said, her dark eyes bleak. “But I have no choice but to go on.”
Obi-Wan touched her cheek. “Your loyalty is what drives you, Astri. I would not like to see you lose that.”
“So we are still friends?”
“We will always be friends.”
Astri nodded and slowly walked down the steps. Soon she was lost in the swirl of the crowd. Obi-Wan felt a sudden pang. Would he ever see her again?
“Nothing has turned out as I thought,” Anakin said. “I was here to work on my Jedi lesson of connection to the Living Force. If that is true, I’ve failed. I judged everyone wrong. I did not see that Doby and Deland were using me. I trusted my instincts, and they betrayed me.”
“Do not judge yourself so harshly, Padawan,” Obi-Wan said. “Your mistake was one of the heart. You allowed your emotion to cloud your instincts. You allowed what your heart wanted to be true to make it true. Connections to other beings, good and bad, must be pure and free of one’s own desires. You wanted Sebulba to be the culprit, so you made him one.”
“I thought my connection to the Living Force was clear, and it’s not at all,” Anakin said moodily. “I have such a long way to go.”
“If it makes you feel better, I made the same mistake with Maxo Vista,” Obi-Wan said. “Jedi lessons are learned by Masters as well as Padawans.”
“Wisdom comes with time and missions,” Anakin said, repeating Obi-Wan’s own words.
Obi-Wan smiled gently. “And mistakes,” he said.
About the Author
JUDE WATSON is the New York Times best-selling author of the Jedi Quest and Jedi Apprentice series, as well as the Star Wars Journals Darth Maul, Queen Amidala, and Princess Leia: Captive to Evil. She currently lives in the Pacific Northwest.