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    The Moment of Truth

    Page 7
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      Understand?" Obi-Wan kept talking as the security guard released the

      security shield. Obi-Wan activated the door and waited for Anakin to walk

      through. "He's going to say the same thing. You have to shut down the

      system...."

      The door hissed closed behind them. Obi-Wan headed down the path.

      Anakin strode next to him. He was content to follow his Master's plan.

      No one stopped them as they walked across the compound and moved onto

      the landing pad.

      "This looks fast." Obi-Wan climbed up on a small starship. "We need

      something that can get us to TyphaDor." He accessed the cockpit and jumped

      in. "Let's go, Anakin."

      Anakin leaped up on the starship and slid into the cockpit next to his

      Master. He looked at the controls. "I'm going to have to hot-wire it," he

      said.

      "That's the idea," Obi-Wan answered.

      Anakin opened the sensor panel. Even though he still existed in the

      bubble of his calm, he remembered exactly what to do. He switched wires and

      juiced the ignition. Then he closed the panel and slid back into the

      pilot's seat. The engine started on the first try.

      "Great," Obi-Wan said with relief. "Let's get out of here. Now," he

      added urgently, as a security officer began to wave frantically at them. No

      doubt he assumed they'd forgotten the departure check proceedings.

      Anakin eased the throttle. The graceful ship rose, and he shot away

      from the camp.

      Obi-Wan let out an audible sigh. "Things aren't usually that easy."

      Anakin glanced at the cockpit indicators. "They aren't this time,

      either. Apparently by hot-wiring the ship, we skipped an essential step in

      the procedure."

      A red light was blinking on the console. Obi-Wan leaned forward.

      "What's that?"

      "We should have entered a code on the ground. It's a system to prevent

      escapes, I guess."

      "And what is it?" Obi-Wan asked impatiently.

      "The ship is programmed to self-destruct," Anakin answered.

      CHAPTER ELEVEN

      "I'd guess we have about four seconds," Anakin said as he increased

      the ship's speed, heading toward the surface.

      "You guess?"

      Anakin cut back on the speed, almost throwing Obi-Wan to the floor. He

      leveled out the ship. "We'd better jump."

      Anakin's calm was getting to Obi-Wan. "Excellent notion." Considering

      that the ship is about to explode.

      Anakin raised the cockpit dome. They jumped to the top of their seats.

      Obi-Wan knew he had about two seconds to pick a place to land. Anakin had

      plotted the course well. They weren't over rocks, but a gradual slope.

      Still, landing would be tricky.

      "Jump!" Anakin shouted as the siren began to sound.

      They jumped. The Force pulsed around them. Obi-Wan looked down at the

      hard ground below. It became less than solid in his mind, an accumulation

      of particles and pebbles. It would yield to him. He would fall as lightly

      as a leaf.

      He landed hard for the second time that day. Obi-Wan groaned. The

      Force was with him, yes, but the ground was still hard. He landed more like

      a tree trunk than a leaf. He fell onto his shoulder. He felt his tunic rip

      and a rock scrape his cheek.

      Anakin landed more gracefully, seemingly without effort, and went into

      a roll to absorb the shock. Above them, the ship exploded.

      Now the danger was from the sheets of falling, flaming metal. Obi-Wan

      and Anakin kept rolling down the slope, gaining speed now. Obi-Wan saw a

      cluster of boulders ahead and simply rolled right up to it. Anakin did the

      same. They huddled in the shelter of the largest boulder, watching the

      metal fall to the surface and burn out.

      Obi-Wan leaned against the boulder. "That was fun." "Sorry, Master. I

      didn't realize."

      "Not your fault. There was no way to know." Obi-Wan sighed. "Without

      transport, we've got a problem," he said. "We're in the middle of a

      wilderness infested with gundarks."

      "We've got another problem," Anakin said. He pointed to the sky. A

      fleet of STAPs and two security transports with mounted laser cannons were

      headed toward them.

      "No doubt the self-destruct sensor sends a signal back to the camp

      that an escape is in progress," Anakin said.

      "No doubt," Obi-Wan said dryly. He scanned the area for cover. The

      only good cover lay in the deep craters. "Here's a question. Would you

      rather take your chances with a fleet of STAPs or a nest of gundarks?"

      The first laser cannonfire thundered. Obi-Wan and Anakin exchanged a

      glance, then began to run. They would take their chances in the craters and

      hope to avoid the gundarks.

      The cannonfire ripped the ground behind them as they ran. The air

      rolled into them with the shock of the blast. It was hard to stay on their

      feet as they dashed toward the deeper craters.

      "Not that one!" Obi-Wan shouted as blaster cannon-fire thundered past

      his ears. He recognized the prints of gundarks outside the crater.

      Anakin veered. He was running fast, moving and weaving, but Obi-Wan

      picked up no communion with him, no Force connection. It was as though he

      were running with a stranger.

      Anakin had lied to him. He knew that. Something had happened to him in

      that medical building. Did whatever it was somehow prevent Anakin from

      telling Obi-Wan about it? Or was it Anakin's decision to hide something

      from him?

      I don't know the answer to that. And that means I don't trust him. Not

      completely. Not anymore.

      One of the security transports dived toward him. Dual laser cannons

      blasted. Obi-Wan jumped, but the impact of the explosion against the rocks

      threw him further into the air. The next thing he knew he was falling,

      blasted headlong, deep into the black hole of a crater... and a gundark

      nest.

      CHAPTER TWELVE

      Obi-Wan landed on his sore shoulder inside the wall of the crater and

      ricocheted into midair again. He called on the Force to help him. He

      pictured a nest of gun-darks at the end of his fall. He felt time slow

      down. He was able to pick out a clear landing site below.

      He landed on a smooth stone floor and crashed up against a boulder,

      slamming his head. Relief coursed through him as well as pain. At least he

      had stopped in relative safety. There was no way to judge how big the

      crater was. He was more than a hundred meters into a pit left by an astroid

      thousands of years ago. He couldn't see through the black gloom. He could

      smell the gundarks, however, and hear them. They found the craters to be

      ideal nesting grounds, safe from other predators, and good bases from which

      to launch lethal attacks on their prey.

      It was said that the cry of a gundark could freeze a being's blood.

      Obi-Wan didn't know about that, but the sound of them didn't make him feel

      very comfortable.

      Gundarks had keen eyesight and good hearing. Their sense of smell was

      excellent. So far they had not realized an intruder was in their nest, but

      it was only a matter of time. He would have to use his cable launcher, and

      it would be a huge risk. The launcher would not reach high enough to get


      him completely out of danger. The sides of the crater were hundreds of

      meters high. Climbing out would be a long process, and would bring him into

      close proximity with the creatures.

      He looked around cautiously. Through the gray gloom he could see now

      that tucked into the sides of the crater were deep caves. That was the

      source of the gun-darks' noise. They were nesting there.

      He peered above. He wondered how Anakin was doing with those security

      droids. Had he found shelter?

      The roar of gundarks suddenly echoed in the crater. Obi-Wan began to

      quietly move away from the sound. He knew that if he was discovered, he

      could not fight the gundarks alone, even with his lightsaber and the Force.

      There would be too many of them. He would need Anakin.

      He couldn't risk a glowrod. He felt his way forward cautiously. If he

      could find some footholds in the wall, he could climb it. Climbing would be

      slower, but it would attract less attention. He would have to risk the

      journey.

      A roar and the sound of a gundark rolling over made him freeze. He

      could smell the creature. Surely the creature could smell him. Obi-Wan

      didn't move. He tried not to sweat. The gundark snorted, then rolled over

      again. Obi-Wan realized it was asleep.

      He moved carefully away. The ground was more uneven here. Several

      centimeters of fine dust covered some kind of rock shale. It was slippery

      and the rocks shifted under his weight. When a rock slithered and cracked,

      he held his breath.

      Nothing. The gundarks roared again, but their roars had covered up the

      sound of his movement. And the one in the cave to his left was still

      sleeping.

      Obi-Wan felt the side of the crater at last. He ran his hand along it.

      It was pockmarked with holes. Good. He should be able to climb it without

      the launcher.

      He put one foot in a cavity and tested it. Then he cautiously lifted

      himself up. So far, so good. He climbed up a few more meters.

      He was balanced to take his next step when he felt a soft breath

      tickle his ear. Now he knew what it meant to have his blood freeze. He felt

      as though his veins were clogged with ice.

      A baby gundark had snuggled into a deep cavity in the wall. It was

      sleeping only centimeters from him. Just... don't... wake... it up...

      He could not have been faced with a worse prospect. It was disaster to

      fall into a nest of treacherous beasts. It was a catastrophe to blunder

      into one of their young.

      Holding his breath, Obi-Wan began to ease his way past.

      RRRRAAAAWWWWKKK!

      The roar split the air. The crater shook with the impact of a

      gundark's running footsteps. The young gun-dark awoke. Rrrraaaaawwww!

      Obi-Wan dropped the distance he'd traveled back to the floor. He ran.

      The gundark let out a scream and leaped up, heading straight to its young

      to ensure it was safe. Then it leaped down to deal with Obi-Wan.

      The creature wasn't tall, but the strength of its four arms was

      immense. A common tactic was to grab prey by the claws of the massive arms

      that rose from the gundark's shoulders. Then the creature crushed the

      captured prey to death with the two slender arms that rose out of the

      muscled chest. The long, sharp claws could also rip a being to shreds. Of

      course, a gundark was also capable of simply tearing off the head of its

      prey with the large teeth that jutted out of its lower jaw. Once its

      bloodlust had been awakened, rare was the gundark that did not achieve its

      objective of rendering its victim into pieces of flesh and bone.

      Obi-Wan was completely exposed, and he knew that caves were all around

      him. He couldn't hide. He drew his lightsaber even as he backed up but held

      it by his side, trying to show the creature he did not mean it harm.

      But gundarks were not known to be reasonable.

      The attack was ferocious. The gundark made for him, all four arms

      reaching, trying to claw him. Huge teeth snapped and saliva poured out.

      Obi-Wan smelled heat and anger. He was forced to slash at the gundark as it

      came at him relentlessly, its howl filling the cavity of the crater.

      He heard the thump of footsteps. More gundarks were approaching. Obi-

      Wan fumbled for his cable launcher. He'd have to risk it. He sent it flying

      above. It hit something. He tested the line. He activated the launch, but

      the gundark grabbed him with one claw and threw him back down on the floor.

      He felt the jolt in every bone. He rolled away as the creature swung down

      to finish him off. The gundark missed, scoring the rock with deep grooves.

      Four more gundarks thundered into the space, snarling, ready for the

      kill. Obi-Wan felt his back hit the wall of the crater. Desperately, he

      looked above. He reached out to the Force even as he sent up a shout he

      knew had little chance of being heard.

      "Anakin! Anakin, I need you!"

      CHAPTER THIRTEEN

      If Anakin had felt that there was a veil between him and his

      surroundings before, he was now beginning to feel breaks in that veil.

      There were moments of clarity, brief flashes, in which he knew he was

      seeing reality. During those moments he felt something deep within him,

      like a hook lodged in his heart, and he was glad to slip behind the veil

      again.

      It was odd that he was able to achieve battle-mind, but he had. The

      movements were so ingrained in him that he leaped and twisted and ran

      without feeling the effort, much as he did when the Force was with him. He

      had taken down at least five security droids on STAPs, and maneuvered so

      that another two fired at each other. He still had three more STAPs to

      contend with, as well as the Vanqor guards on swoops. He was fighting as

      well as he ever had.

      When Obi-Wan had been blasted into the crater, Anakin hadn't had more

      than a second to react. He assumed that his Master could handle whatever

      was down there. Obi-Wan could get out by himself.

      Somewhere inside, Anakin knew this was a curious decision for him to

      make, one that he wouldn't have made normally. But it seemed logical, too.

      Obi-Wan was a Jedi, used to getting out of tight spots.

      Besides, Obi-Wan had always told him not to jump into things, to take

      his time. So why shouldn't he? His first priority was to take care of the

      droids and get the disk to Typha-Dor.

      Anakin felt the veil slip again. It was happening more frequently now.

      He missed his calm. He wanted to be back in the garden. He didn't want to

      feel fear, or apprehension, or pain. He wanted to feel serene, as though

      nothing could touch him. He wanted it so badly.

      Gundarks in the crater suddenly roared. Anakin fended off blaster

      rifle fire and drew closer to the crater. He thought he heard Obi-Wan

      calling him. The call came from within him, as though he heard it in his

      heart.

      Something tugged at him. The hook that was buried so deep that he

      could barely feel it. He did not want to reach for it. He wanted it to lay

      buried.

      Obi-Wan needed him.

      But I needed him. And when he came, he asked for the disk. He did not

      come for me.

      The pain this
    thought caused him to grab the remains of the veil. He

      wanted to wrap himself into its brand of unconsciousness.

      I don't want to feel anymore!

      Anakin leaped up and severed a droid in two that had the misfortune to

      pilot his STAP too close to the ground. Hunks of smoking metal clattered to

      the rocks below.

      He realized what was wrong, what the essential conflict within him

      was. To be a Jedi was to follow his feelings. But if his feelings tortured

      him, what was he to do with them?

      Grief.

      Guilt.

      Resentment.

      Shame.

      He had felt all of these things. Because of leaving his mother,

      because of Yaddle, because of Obi-Wan. I don't want to feel!

      He struck out savagely at a STAP that had come in low, its lone droid

      pilot firing dual blaster rifles. He cut the droid's head off.

      "Anakin!" He could hear Obi-Wan clearly now, his voice strained and

      desperate.

      I don't want to feel!

      The hook in his heart seared him, and he knew its name. It was love.

      The love he felt for his Master was lodged firmly within him. It was a

      connection that had grown from the first moment Obi-Wan had told him that

      he would take him and train him.

     


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