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    The Cestus Deception


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      THE CESTUS

      DECEPTION

      STEVEN BARNES

      BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK

      Star Wars: The Cestus Deception is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents

      either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.

      A Del Rey® Book

      The Random House Publishing Group

      Copyright © 2004 by Lucasfilm Ltd. & ® or ™ where indicated.

      All Rights Reserved. Used Under Authorization.

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright

      Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine Publishing Group,

      a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by

      Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

      Del Rey is a registered trademark and the Del Rey colophon is a trademark of

      Random House, Inc.

      www.starwars.com

      www.delreydigital.com

      The Cataloging-in-Publication Data for this title is available from the Library of

      Congress.

      ISBN 0-345-45897-4

      Text design by Susan Turner

      Manufactured in the United States of America

      First Edition: June 2004

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      For my new son, Jason Kai Due-Barnes.

      Welcome to life, sweetheart.

      D R A M A T I S P E R S O N A E

      CORUSCANT GROUP

      Obi-Wan Kenobi; Jedi Knight (male human)

      KitFisto; Jedi Master (male Nautolan)

      Doolb Snoil; barrister (male Vippit of Nal Hutta)

      Admiral Arikakon Baraka; supercruiser commander (male Mon

      Calamari)

      Lido Shan; technician (humanoid)

      CLONE COMMANDOS

      A-98, "Nate"; ARC Trooper, recruitment and command

      CT-X270, "Xutoo"; pilot

      CT-36/732, "Sirty"; logistics

      CT-44/444, "Forry"; physical training

      CT-12/74, "Seefor"; communications

      CESTIANS

      Trillot; gang leader (male/female X'Ting)

      Fizzik; broodmate of Trillot (male X'Ting)

      Sheeka Tull; pilot (female human)

      Resta Shug Hai; Desert Wind member (female X'Ting)

      ThakVal Zsing; leader of Desert Wind (male human)

      Brother Nicos Fate (male X'Ting)

      Skot OnSon; Desert Wind member (male human)

      FIVE FAMILIES OF CESTUS CYBERNETICS

      Debbikin; research (male human)

      Lady Por'Ten; energy (female human)

      Kefka; manufacturing (male humanoid)

      Llitishi; sales and marketing (male Wroonian)

      Caiza Quill; mining (male X'Ting)

      CESTUS COURT

      C'MaiDun's; Regent (female X'Ting)

      SharShar; Regent Duris's assistant (female Zeetsa)

      CONFEDERATION

      Count Dooku; leader of the Confederacy of Independent Systems

      (male human)

      Commander AsajjVentress; Commander of the Separatist Army

      (female humanoid)

      THE CESTUS

      DECEPTION

      V O L U M E 5 3 1 N U M B E R 4 6

      H 0 L 0 N E T N E W S

      1 3 : 3 . 7

      Baktoid Closes Down

      Five More Plants

      TERMIN, METALORN—In a statement issued to shareholders, Baktoid

      Armor Workshop confirmed that it will close down five more plants in

      the Inner Rim and Colonies as a direct result of Republic regulations

      that have hindered its battle droid program.

      Baktoid plants on Foundry, Ord Cestus, Telti, Balmorra, and Ord Lithone

      will close by month's end. An estimated 12.5 million employees

      will be laid off as a result.

      Legislation passed by the Senate eight years ago forced the disbanding

      of the Trade Federation's security forces, the largest single consumer

      of Baktoid's combat automata and vehicles. Further licensing

      restrictions on the sale of battle droids made the purchase of such

      hardware prohibitively expensive for most of Baktoid's clientele ...

      1

      For half a millennium Coruscant had glittered, a golden-towered

      centerpiece to the Republic's galactic crown. Its bridges and arched

      solaria harked back to ages past, when no leader's words seemed too

      grand, no skyscraper too spectacular, and titanic civic sprawls boldly

      proclaimed the rational mind's conquest of the cosmos.

      With the coming of the Clone Wars, some believed such glorious

      days were past. Whether the news holos spoke of victory or defeat, it

      was all too easy to imagine flaming ships spiraling to their doom beneath

      distant skies, the clash of vast armies, the death of uncounted

      and uncountable dreams. It was almost impossible not to wonder if

      one day war's ravening maw might not envelop this, the Republic's

      jeweled locus. This was a time when the word city symbolized not

      achievement, but vulnerability. Not haven, but havoc.

      But despite those fears, Coruscant's billions of citizens kept faith

      and continued about their myriad lives. A flock of hook-beaked

      thrantcills flew in perfect diamond formation through Coruscant's

      placid, pale blue sky. For a hundred thousand standard years they had

      winged south for the winter, and might for yet another. Their flat

      black eyes had watched civilization force Coruscant's animal life into

      inexorable retreat. The planet's former masters now scavenged in

      her duracrete canyons, their natural habitats replaced with artificial

      marshes and permacrete forests. This, others argued, was a time of

      marvels and marvelous beings from a hundred thousand different

      worlds. This was a time for optimism, for dreams, and for unbridled

      ambition.

      A time of opportunity, for those with vision to see.

      The red-and-white disk of a two-passenger Limulus-class transport

      sliced through Coruscant's cloud-mantle. In the morning sun it

      glittered like a sliver of silvered ice. Spiral-dancing to inaudible

      music, it had detached its hyperdrive ring in orbit, slipping through

      wispy clouds to land with a shush as gentle as a kiss. Its smooth, glassy

      side rippled. A rectangular outline appeared and then slid up. A tall,

      bearded man wrapped in a brown robe stepped into the doorway and

      hopped down, followed by a second, clean-shaven passenger.

      The bearded man's name was Obi-Wan Kenobi. For more years

      than he cared to count, Obi-Wan had been one of the most renowned

      Jedi Knights in the entire Republic. The second, a startlingly

      intense younger man with fine brown hair, was named Anakin Skywalker.

      Although not yet a full Jedi Knight, he was already famed as

      one of the galaxy's most powerful warriors.

      For thirty-six hours the two had juggled flying and navigational

      duties, using their Jedi skills to hold their needs for sleep and sustenance

      to a minimum. Obi-Wan was tired, irritable, famished, and

      felt as if someone had poured sand into his joints. Anakin, he noticed,

      seemed fresh and ready for action.

      The recuperative powers of youth, Obi-Wan thought ruefully.

      Only an emergency directive from Supreme Chancellor Palpatine

      himself could have
    summoned the two from their assignment on

      Forscan VI.

      "Well, Master," Anakin said. "I suppose this is where we part company."

      "I'm not certain what this is about," the older man replied, "but

      your time will be well spent studying at the Temple."

      Obi-Wan and Anakin continued down the skywalk. Far beneath

      them the city streets buzzed with traffic, the walkways and groundlevel

      construction occasionally interrupted by wisps of cloud or stray

      thrantcills. The web of streets and bridges behind and below them

      was dazzling, but Obi-Wan noticed the beauty little more than he

      had the height, the fatigue, or the hunger. At the moment, his mind

      was occupied by other, more urgent concerns.

      As if his Padawan could read his thoughts, Anakin spoke. "I hope

      you're not still annoyed with me, Master."

      There it was, another reference to Anakin's rash actions on Forscan

      VI. Forscan VI was a colony planet at the edge of the Cron drift, currently

      unaffiliated with either Republic or Confederacy. Elite Separatist

      infiltration agents had set up a training camp on Forscan, their

      "exercises" playing havoc with the settlers. The most delicate aspect

      of the counteroperation was repelling those agents without ever letting

      the colonists know that outsiders had assisted them. Tricky.

      Dangerous.

      "No," Obi-Wan said. "We contained the situation. My approach is

      more . . . measured. But you displayed your usual initiative. You

      weren't disobeying a direct order, so . . . we'll mark it down to creative

      problem solving, and leave it at that."

      Anakin breathed a sigh of relief. Powerful bonds of love and mutual

      respect connected the two men, but in times past Anakin's impulsiveness

      had tested those bonds sorely. Still, there was little doubt

      that the Padawan would receive Obi-Wan's highest recommendations.

      Years of observation had forced Obi-Wan to grant that

      Anakin's seeming impetuosity was in fact a deep and profound understanding

      of superior skills.

      "You were right," Anakin said, as if Obi-Wan's mild answer gave

      him permission to admit his own errors. "Those mountains were impassable.

      Confederacy reinforcements would have bogged down in

      the ice storm, but I couldn't take the chance. There were too many

      lives at stake."

      "It takes maturity to admit an error," Obi-Wan said. "I think we

      can keep these thoughts between us. My report will reflect admiration

      for your initiative."

      The two comrades faced, and gripped each other's forearms.

      Obi-Wan had no children, and likely never would. But the unity of

      Padawan and Master was as deep as any parent-child bond, and in

      some ways deeper still. "Good luck," Anakin said. "Give my regards

      to Chancellor Palpatine."

      A hovercar slid in next to the walkway, and Anakin hopped

      aboard, disappearing into the sky traffic without a backward glance.

      Obi-Wan shook his head. The boy would be fine. Had to be fine. If

      a Jedi as gifted as Anakin could not rise above youthful hubris, what

      hope was there for the rest of them?

      But meanwhile there was a more immediate matter to consider.

      Why exactly had he been called back to Coruscant? Certainly it must

      be an emergency, but what kind of emergency . . . ?

      The appointed meeting place was the T'Chuk sporting arena, a

      tiered shell with seating for half a million thronging spectators. Here

      chin-bret, Coruscant's most popular spectator sport, was played before

      hundreds of thousands of cheering fans. Today, however, no expert

      chin-bretier leapt in graceful arcs across the sand; no pikers

      vaulted about returning serves. No cerulean-vested goalkeepers

      veered like mad demicots, hoisting their team's torch aloft. Today the

      vast stadium was empty, cleared and sequestered, hosting a very different

      sort of gathering.

      As he emerged from the echoing length of pedestrian tunnel, Obi-

      Wan scanned the tiered stands. Most of the rows were as empty as a

      Tatooine desertscape, but a few dozen witnesses were gathered in the

      box-seat section. He recognized a scattering of high-level elected officials,

      some important but ordinarily reclusive bureaucrats, a few

      people from the technical branches, and even some clone troopers.

      Instinct and experience suggested that this was a war council.

      Over time the Clone Wars' initial chaos had settled into a tidal

      rhythm; loyalties declared, alliances formed. The galaxy was too vast

      for war to touch all its myriad shores, but at any given time battles

      raged on a hundred different worlds. While that number represented

      an insignificant fraction of the billions of star systems swirling about

      the galaxy, due to long-standing alliances and partnerships, what

      happened to millions of living beings had the potential to affect trillions.

      Already kingdoms, nations, and families had been ravaged by the

      wars. As the numbers grew and weapons inevitably became more

      and more powerful, devastation might well spiral out of control, offsetting

      the countless eons of struggle that had finally birthed a

      galaxywide union. The labor of a thousand generations, vanished?

      Never!

      Lines had been drawn: Separatists on the one side, and the Republic

      on the other. For Obi-Wan as well as many others, that line

      was drawn with his own life's blood. The Republic would stand, or

      Obi-Wan and every Jedi who had ever strode the Temple's halls

      would fall. It was a simple equation.

      And in simplicity there was both clarity and strength.

      2

      T'Chuk arena's sand-covered floor was empty save for a pale, slender

      humanoid female. She wore a white technician's cloak, and her

      black hair was cropped short. She stood tinkering with a gleaming

      chrome hourglass-shaped construct that Obi-Wan found a bit puzzling:

      it looked more like an edgy work of art, a Mavinian clusterwedding

      organ, or perhaps a Juzzian colony marker, than anything

      dangerous enough to concern a Jedi. Rows of narrow pointed legs at

      the base were the only apparent means of locomotion.

      What in the thousand worlds was this about?

      The technician fiddled with the device, running various wires from

      it to a pod at her waist. Perhaps it was some sort of advanced med

      droid?

      The audience grew increasingly restless as she detached the wires,

      then turned and addressed them.

      "My name is Lido Shan, and I thank you for your patience," she

      said, ignoring their obvious lack of same. "I believe that our first

      demonstration is ready for your graces." Shan gave a little bow and

      swept her hand toward the gleaming construct. "I present the

      JK-thirteen. To demonstrate its prowess, we have selected a Confederacy

      destroyer droid, captured on Geonosis and reconstructed to

      original manufacturer specifications."

      The JK stood chest-high with a glassy finish, aesthetically pleasing

      in ways few droids ever managed. A child's toy, a museum display,

      a conversation piece, some fragile and delicate bit of electronics,

      perhaps. On the other hand, the black, wheel-like destroyer droid


      looked comparatively primitive, battered and patched, but still as

      menacing as a wounded acklay.

      With a hiss of compressing and decompressing hydraulics, the destroyer

      droid rolled forward, crunching the sand into tread ridges as

      it did. The JK model hunched down, gleaming, but in a strange way

      seemed oddly helpless. It seemed almost to quiver as it crouched. The

      impression of helplessness was reinforced by the size differential: the

      JK was perhaps half the battle droid's mass.

      At first Obi-Wan wondered if he was simply to witness another

      demonstration of destroyer droid power and efficiency. Hardly necessary:

      he still carried scars from the blasted things. No, that was an

      absurd assumption: Palpatine couldn't possibly have summoned him

      from Forscan for so mundane a purpose. In the next instant the destroyer

      droid rolled within five meters of the JK, and all questions

      were answered.

      In a single moment the JK divided into segments, assuming a

      spiderlike configuration. In that instant its pose seemed less of a

      cowering leaf eater than one of those cunning creatures that mime

      helplessness to lure their prey into range.

      The destroyer droid spat red fire at its adversary. The sand rippled

      as the JK projected not a single force field, but a series of rotating energy

      disks that absorbed the blasts with ease. That was a surprise:

      typically a machine required less sophistication to deflect energy than

      to absorb it. This display implied some kind of advanced capacitance

      or grounding technology. The attacking droid continued its rain of

      fire, unable to comprehend that its pure-power approach had proved

      inefficient.

      Like most machines, it was powerful but stupid.

      Obi-Wan's eyes narrowed. Something . . . something unusual was

      happening. The JK sprouted tentacles from the sides and top, tendrils

      snaking out so swiftly that the destroyer droid had not the

      slightest chance of evasion. Now Obi-Wan, and indeed most of the

      witnesses, leaned toward the action as the war droid struggled helplessly

      in the JK's tentacled grip. Initially the tendrils were thick and

      ropy. Even as he watched they grew thinner, and then thinner still,

      webbing the attacker with fibers that finally reduced to an almost invisible

      fineness.

      The tendrils chewed into the destroyer droid s casing like hundreds

      of silk-thin fibersaws. The droid finally seemed to comprehend

      its peril and commenced a desperate struggle, emitting disturbingly

     


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