Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The False Peace

    Page 9
    Prev Next


      where it is most needed. Thank you all."

      Palpatine, at least, had learned the value of brevity and modesty,

      Obi-Wan noted.

      He watched as the Supreme Chancellor stepped back and entered his

      personal transport. He sped off toward the Senate. The others Senators

      followed. There was a debate to attend.

      The Blue and Red Guards, Palpatine's personal guards, slowly guided

      the vehicle to the great open doors of the vault of the Core Bank. Obi-Wan

      felt a murmur go through the crowd. Dex was right. There was nothing like a

      huge fortune to cause beings to swoon.

      And still there was no sign of trouble. Obi-Wan saw Siri through the

      crowd. She shrugged. Anakin had his gaze fixed on the vault.

      Obi-Wan's comlink signaled. It was Tyro. "Anything?" Obi-Wan asked.

      "That speech he's practicing... did you get to that yet? Any

      impressions?"

      "He needs a speechwriter."

      "Yes, it's awful, but did you get the subject?"

      "No, I couldn't figure out what he was talking about. It didn't make

      sense."

      "That's what worries me."

      Obi-Wan watched the Guards move into the building. "So what's your

      point?"

      "Well, what's his point, that's the question. Obi-Wan, this may be

      off-base, but..."

      Obi-Wan noticed that one of the Blue Guards had a torn hem. Unusual

      for these guards. They took their position as personal guards to Palpatine

      seriously.

      Torn hem. Blue thread.

      "Later, Tyro." Obi-Wan snapped his comlink shut and vaulted through

      the crowd. Anakin caught his movement.

      "The guards!" he bellowed.

      And then they were all moving - Anakin, Siri, Ferus, as the durasteel

      doors began to slide shut on the vault.

      Obi-Wan leaped. He slammed against the vault door, then squeezed

      himself inside, nearly leaving his foot behind as the door clanged shut.

      Anakin was above him, timing his own leap to slither through the doors as

      they closed.

      Obi-Wan landed on the floor and tackled the Blue Guard in front of

      him. The helmet was knocked off, and he looked into the face of Roper Slam.

      "Not you again!" Slam groaned.

      Anakin tackled the next guard. It was Slam's sidekick, Valadon.

      "This was supposed to be easy!" Slam yelped.

      Valadon struggled to release herself from Anakin's grip. "What

      happened to that Zone? We weren't supposed to meet any resistance!"

      "We've been double-crossed," Slam said. He didn't struggle with Obi-

      Wan. He sat cross-legged on the floor, then tried to rip off the robe in

      angry frustration.

      Siri and Ferus ran in through the interior door of the vault, followed

      by anxious-looking officials and part of the security force.

      "It's all right," Obi-Wan said. "You can take them into custody."

      "There wasn't even an attempt to hit the water system," Siri said.

      "You see? Double-crossed," Slam said, slumping down.

      "Another two minutes and we would have been out of here with the

      vertex," Valadon said.

      "Everything depends on minutes, Val," Slam said. "We live and die on

      minutes."

      Minutes, Obi-Wan thought.

      Bog is going to be six minutes late for the debate.

      To make himself more important? Or was there another reason?

      Now only one of us can lead us through the valley of fear to the

      mountaintop of solidarity..

      It doesn't make sense. That's what worries me...

      The truth blazed a path inside his brain. Bog was practicing a

      nominating speech. A speech he would deliver sometime today.

      The heist was yet another diversion.

      The nominating speech was for Sano Sauro to take over as Supreme

      Chancellor.

      The real mission was to assassinate Supreme Chancellor Palpatine.

      CHAPTER SIXTEEN

      Anakin's head whipped around. One moment Obi-Wan was there, standing

      over Roper Slam, and the next, he was gone.

      Anakin whirled and charged out the door of the vault, into the Core

      Bank building itself. He was just in time to see his Master racing out the

      front door.

      Anakin put on a burst of speed. Obi-Wan was doing three things at

      once. He leaped over four chatting security officers straight onto an

      unattended swoop, even while he slipped his comlink out of his belt and

      spoke rapidly into it. At the same time, he started the swoop engine.

      Anakin jumped onto an empty swoop and revved the engine, lifting into

      the sky just as a security officer yelled, "Hey!"

      Within seconds, he had caught up to his Master.

      "What's up?" Anakin asked easily, even though they were going the

      wrong way down a space lane.

      Obi-Wan went into a screeching dive to avoid a crowded airbus. When

      Anakin caught up, he said, "I think Omega's real goal is to use the Zone at

      the Senate and assassinate Palpatine. I've already tried to call Senate

      security, but I can't get through. All of security is caught up in the

      ceremony."

      "Which is probably what he's counting on. We'd better hurry, then."

      Anakin pushed the speed on his swoop. Obi-Wan did the same.

      They looped, dove, and flew flat-out, dipping out of the space lane to

      do some highly illegal flying over the pedestrian walkways leading to the

      Senate. Obi-Wan leaped off the swoop as it was still flying and held out a

      hand, using the Force to guide it to a safe stop. Anakin followed.

      They ran into the Senate building, past the enormous statues. As he

      ran, Obi-Wan contacted Siri and told her what he suspected. ,

      "I'll contact Master Windu and head to the Senate. We'll need backup.

      The head of security is here, I'll talk to him."

      "Do what you can." Obi-Wan shoved his comlink into his belt.

      "How do you think they'll do it?" Anakin asked as they ran along the

      elevated walkway leading to Palpatine's private office.

      "They'll use the Zone to impair the opposition Senators. They will

      have figured out a way to target them somehow, maybe by inviting them to

      the meeting first. That's why Bog is going to be late. Then they'll call

      for a vote and oust the Jedi Order. In the meantime, they'll assassinate

      Palpatine."

      "So they will have eliminated Jedi interference and Palpatine in one

      day," Anakin said.

      "And Sano Sauro will be Supreme Chancellor."

      They raced into Palpatine's outer office. Sly Moore gazed at them

      forbiddingly, her pale eyes showing her disapproval. "Not another emergency

      meeting. The Supreme Chancellor is busy."

      "This is life or death," Obi-Wan told her.

      She hesitated a fraction of an instant. "He has already gone to the

      Jedi vote in the Senate. He took the South Corridor!" she shouted after

      them as they ran.

      They raced down the hallways. They couldn't be too late. They couldn't

      let Omega win.

      Ahead they saw Palpatine walking. Obi-Wan skidded up to him and pushed

      him into an empty meeting room. When he touched his arm, he was shocked at

      how thin the Supreme Chancellor was. Yet his arm was like a braiding of

      durasteel, ropy and strong. Something clanged along Obi-Wan's nerves, some

      feeling, some instinct that made h
    im want to recoil. He felt dread well up

      in him, and he wondered if he was too late, after all. Perhaps there was

      something he had not seen. Was he missing something? Obi-Wan felt suddenly

      confused.

      "Master Kenobi, what is it?" Palpatine asked. He had moved his arm

      away quickly and was now adjusting the high collar on his cloak.

      "An assassination plot against you, Supreme Chancellor," Obi-Wan said.

      "Granta Omega is behind it. I am sure of it. Sano Sauro would be nominated

      by Bog Divinian as your successor."

      Palpatine thought this over. A small smile crossed his thin, bloodless

      lips. "Of course. That would be the inevitable next step."

      "You don't seem very concerned about your potential assassination,"

      Anakin said.

      Palpatine waved a hand. "My personal safety ceased to be an issue the

      moment I took on this position."

      An odd thing to say, Obi-Wan thought, for a man who had developed his

      own security force, the Red Guard, whose masked members used force pikes as

      weapons.

      "I'll order a lockdown," Palpatine said. "That means every door will

      open only with a retinal scan."

      "Omega and Zan Arbor are probably already in the building," Obi-Wan

      said. "My guess is that Teda got them past security."

      "I have monitors on the water system," Palpatine said. "There are no

      reports of sabotage."

      "I advise you to shut down the entire system," Obi-Wan said. "We can't

      take a chance."

      Palpatine hesitated. Then he got out his comlink, notified Mas Amedda,

      and gave the order.

      "And now I will go to the assembly," he said.

      "But Supreme Chancellor, you can't," Obi-Wan argued.

      "But Master Kenobi, I must," Palpatine said softly. For the first time

      in his acquaintance with the Supreme Chancellor, Anakin sensed something

      underneath his composure - just a hint of anger, striking as fast as a

      serpent, and then gone.

      A red light began to glow on Palpatine's comlink.

      "The most serious alert," he murmured, and accessed it. He listened

      for a moment, then shut it down.

      "It could be nothing. A valve in a water tunnel won't function. They

      wouldn't have noticed it, but when they shut down the water system, the

      valve came up as non-functioning."

      "Where?"

      Palpatine gave him the coordinates, and Obi-Wan turned to Anakin.

      "Stay with the Chancellor."

      "But Master - "

      "Anakin, stay! Don't leave him!" Obi-Wan's order floated back to

      Anakin as his Master ran off.

      CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

      Stay.

      Obi-Wan was off to face Granta Omega, and Anakin was now just a

      bodyguard.

      Palpatine's pale gaze studied him.

      "You can go."

      "I can't disobey my Master. I can't leave you alone." "If I call my

      Red Guard they can be here in three minutes. Less."

      "It would not matter," Anakin said miserably. "Obi-Wan told me to

      stay."

      "Well, let us walk, then. I am scheduled to preside over the vote on

      Senator Divinian's proposal."

      "But my Master told you not to go."

      "True. But unlike you, I do not have to obey an order of caution."

      Caution. Obi-Wan's caution drove Anakin crazy.

      "The work of the Senate goes on," Palpatine continued as they began to

      walk. "To keep going on, no matter what the obstacles - that is what a

      leader must do. I have learned, Anakin, over the course of my political

      career, one important thing: I cannot let anyone get in the way of my

      service. In the beginning, I doubted myself. Who am I, I asked myself, to

      decide fates, to make rulings? Then the answer came to me. I must do it

      because there is no one else who can do it better." Palpatine chuckled.

      "Oh, I'm not saying I'm keeping the Republic together single-handedly. But

      fate has thrust me into this position - and I would be untrue to myself as

      well as the galaxy if I did not utilize everything I have and everything I

      am in order to succeed at it."

      Palpatine's serenity was almost eerie. It was as though, Anakin

      thought suddenly, Palpatine was above this, looking down. As though

      criminals like Granta Omega were merely toys to be observed. Where did he

      get that confidence? Anakin was reaching out blindly, trying to probe the

      Supreme Chancellor, but his powers were not that developed. He kept meeting

      a wall.

      "What I wish," Palpatine said, "is that you will realize this one day,

      too. That it is right to use every means at your disposal. I'm sure your

      Master would agree."

      Anakin had his doubts. He saw Siri and Ferus pounding down the

      hallway.

      "Ah," Palpatine said. "Reinforcements."

      Siri halted in front of them. "Where is Obi-Wan?" "There was a

      security breach and he went to check it out," Anakin explained.

      "Coordinates," Siri rapped out.

      Anakin gave them to her, and she turned to Ferus. "Stay here with the

      Supreme Chancellor. I'll contact you if you're needed."

      Ferus nodded. He did not seem to have the same conflict about the

      order that Anakin did. Siri raced down the hall.

      "You go, too, Anakin," Palpatine urged him. "One Jedi is enough

      protection."

      Anakin hesitated. He would be disobeying a direct order from Obi-Wan.

      But Obi-Wan had given the order before Ferus had shown up. And even though

      Palpatine had dismissed the idea that the water valve malfunction could be

      a security breach, Anakin felt in his bones that it was Omega, just as Obi-

      Wan had.

      "If it is Omega, he is too dangerous an opponent to allow to escape,"

      Palpatine said. "The future of the Senate is at stake."

      Ferus said nothing. His dark eyes moved from Palpatine to Anakin. He

      knew that whatever he said, Anakin would not take it into consideration.

      Anakin made his decision. He turned to Ferus. "I have to go. Don't

      leave his side."

      He didn't have time to wonder if Ferus was annoyed that he had given a

      fellow Padawan an order. He felt the urgency of his mission. Everything in

      him pointed the way to a showdown with Omega. And it was just as Palpatine

      had said: Only he knew what he was capable of. Only he knew the right thing

      to do.

      CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

      Obi-Wan splashed through the water tunnel. There were only a few

      centimeters of water on the bottom, but the tunnel was sweating water, and

      it dripped steadily on his head and down his neck. He had examined the

      valve that caused the malfunction alarm, and he was almost certain it had

      been caused by a blow, probably from a tool. There was a deep, fresh

      scratch on the valve, and part of the edge of it was bashed in, lying flush

      against the tunnel itself, making it impossible to open it. Had Omega and

      Zan Arbor attempted to open the valve and failed? Was the damage a result

      of frustration, or miscalculation?

      It didn't matter. What mattered was that they were here.

      The sound of dripping water magnified in his ears until the soft

      plinks sounded like loud clangs. There were so many branches of the tunnel

      that he wasn't even sure where the main tunnel ran. He wasn't lost, exactly


      - not yet - but he wasn't terribly comfortable with his sense of direction

      at this point. Obi-Wan splashed down another quarter-kilometer. He had to

      go slowly, for fear of making too much noise, but at this rate, he'd never

      find them. The Senate complex was as large as a mid-sized city on some

      planets. If Omega and Zan Arbor decided to hide, it could take some time

      before he could find them.

      Obi-Wan's comlink signaled, and he grabbed it. It was Tyro. The

      reception was poor, and the corn line crackled.

      "Obi-Wan, I must meet with you. Where are you?"

      "In the water tunnels. Tyro, I don't have time - "

      "Listen to me. I've dug back, looking for links. And I stumbled on

      something. Something... much more... terrible."

      Even through the poor connection, Obi-Wan heard the fear in Tyro's

      voice. "I know about the assassination plot on Palpatine," Obi-Wan told his

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026