Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

Home > Other > Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith > Page 10
Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Page 10

by Matthew W. Stover


  Gravity shear.

  Anakin’s jaw clenched. This just kept getting better and better.

  He unspooled a length of his utility belt’s safety cable and passed the end to Palpatine. The wind made it sing. “Cinch this around your waist. Things are about to get a little wild!”

  “What’s happening?”

  “The gravity generators have desynchronized—they’ll tear the ship apart!” Anakin grabbed one of the zero-g handles beside the hatchway, then leaned out into the firestorm of blaster bolts and saber flares and touched Obi-Wan’s shoulder. “Time to go!”

  “What?”

  Explanation was obviated as the shear-front moved past them and the wall became the floor. Anakin grabbed the back of Obi-Wan’s collar, but not to save him from falling; the torque of the gravity shear had buckled the blast doors—which were now overhead—and the hurricane of escaping air blasting from the corridor shaft blew the Jedi Master up through the hatch. Anakin dragged him out of the gale just as pieces of super battle droids began hurtling upward into the hangar bay like misfiring torpe­does.

  Some of the super battle droids were still intact enough to open fire as they flew past. “Hang on to my belt!” Obi-Wan shouted and spun his lightsaber through an intricate flurry to de­flect bolt after bolt. Anakin could do nothing but hold him braced against the gale; his grip on the zero-g handle was the only thing keeping him and Obi-Wan from being blown out into space and taking Palpatine with them.

  “This is not the best plan we’ve ever had!” he shouted. “This was a plan?” Palpatine sounded appalled.

  “We’ll make our way forward!” Obi-Wan shouted. “There are only droids back here! Once we hit live-crew areas, there will be escape pods!”

  Only droids back here echoed inside Anakin’s head. “Obi-Wan, wait!” he cried. “Artoo’s still here somewhere! We can’t leave him!”

  “He’s probably been destroyed, or blown into space!” Obi-Wan deflected blaster bursts from the last two gale-blown droids. They tumbled up to the gap in the blast doors and vanished into the infinite void. Obi-Wan put away his lightsaber and fought his way back to a grip beside Anakin’s. “We can’t afford the time to search for him. I’m sorry, Anakin. I know how much he meant to you.”

  Anakin desperately fished out his comlink. “Artoo! Artoo, come in!” He shook it, and shook it again. Artoo couldn’t have been destroyed. He just couldn’t. “Artoo, do you copy? Where are you?”

  “Anakin—” Obi-Wan’s hand was on his arm, and the Jedi Master leaned so close that his low tone could be heard over the rising gale. “We must go. Being a Jedi means allowing things— even things we love—to pass out of our lives.”

  Anakin shook the comlink again. “Artoo!” He couldn’t just leave him. He couldn’t. And he didn’t exactly have an explana­tion.

  Not one he could ever give Obi-Wan, anyway.

  There are so few things a Jedi ever owns; even his lightsaber is less a possession than an expression of his identity. To be a Jedi is to renounce possessions. And Anakin had tried so hard, tried for so long, to do just that.

  Even on their wedding day, Anakin had had no devotion-gift for his new wife; he didn’t actually own anything.

  But love will find a way.

  He had brought something like a gift to her apartments in Theed, still a little shy with her, still overwhelmed by finding the feelings in her he’d felt so long himself, not knowing quite how to give her a gift which wasn’t really a gift. Nor was it his to give.

  Without anything of his own to give except his love, all he could bring her was a friend.

  “I didn’t have many friends when I was a kid,” he’d told her,

  so I built one.”

  And C-3P0 had shuffled in behind him, gleaming as though he’d been plated with solid gold.

  Padme had lit up, her eyes gleaming, but she had at first tried to protest. “I can’t accept him,” she’d said. “I know how much he means to you.”

  Anakin had only laughed. What use is a protocol droid to a Jedi? Even one as upgraded as 3PO—Anakin had packed his cre­ation with so many extra circuits and subprograms and heuristic algorithms that the droid was practically human.

  “I’m not giving him to you,” he’d told her. “He’s not even really mine to give; when I built him, I was a slave, and every­thing I did belonged to Watto. Cliegg Lars bought him along with my mother; Owen gave him back to me, but I’m a Jedi. I lave renounced possessions. I guess that means he’s free now. What I’m really doing is asking you to look after him for me.” “Look after him?”

  “Yes. Maybe even give him a job. He’s a little fussy,” he’d ad­mitted, “and maybe I shouldn’t have given him quite so much self-consciousness—he’s a worrier—but he’s very smart, and he might be a real help to a big-time diplomat... like, say, a Sena­tor from Naboo?”

  Padme then had extended her hand and graciously invited C-3PO to join her staff, because on Naboo, high-functioning droids were respected as thinking beings, and 3PO had been so flustered at being treated like a sentient creature that he’d been

  barely able to speak, beyond muttering something about hoping he might make himself useful, because after all he was “fluent in over six million forms of communication.” Then she had turned to Anakin and laid her soft, soft hand along his jawline to draw him down to kiss her, and that was all he had needed, all he had hoped for; he would give her everything he had, everything he was—

  And there had come another day, two years later, a day that had meant nearly as much to him as the day they had wed: the day he had finally passed his trials.

  The day he had become a Jedi Knight.

  As soon as circumstances allowed he had slipped away, on his own now, no Master over his shoulder, no one to monitor his comings and his goings and so he could take himself to the vast Coruscant complex at 500 Republica where Naboo’s senior Senator kept her spacious apartments.

  And he had then, finally, two years late, a devotion-gift for her.

  He had then one thing that he truly owned, that he had earned, that he was not required to renounce. One gift he could give her to celebrate their love.

  The culmination of the Ceremony of Jedi Knighthood is the severing of the new Jedi Knight’s Padawan braid. And it was this that he laid into Padme’s trembling hand.

  One long, thin braid of his glossy hair: such a little thing, of no value at all.

  Such a little thing, that meant the galaxy to him.

  And she had kissed him then, and laid her soft cheek against his jaw, and she had whispered in his ear that she had something for him as well.

  Out from her closet had whirred R2-D2.

  Of course Anakin knew him; he had known him for years— the little droid was a decorated war hero himself, having saved

  Padme’s life back when she had been Queen of Naboo, not to mention helping the nine-year-old Anakin destroy the Trade Federation’s Droid Control Ship, breaking the blockade and sav­ing the planet. The Royal Engineers of Naboo’s aftermarket wiz­ardry made their modified R-units the most sought after in the galaxy; he’d tried to protest, but she had silenced him with a soft finger against his lips and a gentle smile and a whisper of “After all what does a politician need with an astromech?” “But I’m a Jedi—”

  “That’s why I’m not giving him to you,” she’d said with a smile. “I’m asking you to look after him. He’s not really a gift. He’s a friend.”

  All this flashed though Anakin’s mind in the stretching second before his comlink finally crackled to life with a familiar fwee-wheoo, and his heart unclenched.

  “Artoo, where are you? Come on, we have to get out of here!”

  High above, on the wall that was supposed to be the floor, the lid of a battered durasteel storage locker shifted, pushed aside by a dome of silver and blue. The lid swung fully open and R2-D2 righted itself, deployed its booster rockets, and floated out from the locker, heading for the far exit.

  Anakin gav
e Obi-Wan a fierce grin. Let someone he loves pass out of his life? Not likely. “What are we waiting for?” he said. “Let’s go!”

  From Invisible Hand’s bridge, the ship’s spin made the vast curve of Coruscant’s horizon appear to orbit the ship in a dizzy­ing whirl. Each rotation also brought a view of the lazily tum­bling wreckage of the conning spire, ripped from the ship and

  cast out of orbit by centripetal force, as it made the long burning fall toward the planetary city’s surface.

  General Grievous watched them both while his droid cir­cuitry ticked off the seconds remaining in the life of his ship.

  He had no fear for his own life; his specially designed escape module was preprogrammed to take him directly to a ship already primed for jump. Mere seconds after he sealed himself and the Chancellor within the module’s heavily armored hull they would be taken aboard the fleeing ship, which would then make a series of randomized microjumps to prevent being tracked before entering the final jump to the secret base on Utapau.

  But he was not willing to go without the Chancellor. This op­eration had cost the Confederacy dearly in ships and personnel; to leave empty-handed would be an even graver cost in prestige. Winning this war was more than half a matter of propaganda: much of the weakness of the Republic grew from its citizens’ su­perstitious dread of the Separatists’ seemingly inevitable victory— a dread cultivated and nourished by the CIS shadowfeed that poisoned government propaganda on the HoloNet. The com­mon masses of the Republic believed that the Republic was los­ing; to see the legendary Grievous himself beaten back and fleeing a battle would give them hope that the war might be won.

  And hope was simply not to be allowed.

  His built-in comlink buzzed in his left ear. He touched the sensor implant in the jaw of his mask. “Yes.”

  The Jedi almost certainly escaped the conning spire, sir.” The voice was that of one of his precious, custom-built IG 100-series MagnaGuards: prototype self-motivating humaniform combat droids designed, programmed, and armed specifically to fight Jedi. “We recovered a lightsaber from the base of the turbolift shaft before the spire tore free.”

  “Copy that. Stand by for instructions.” One long stride put

  Grievous next to the Neimoidian security officer. “Have you lo­cated them, or are you about to die?”

  “I ah, I ah—” The security officer’s trembling finger pointed to a schematic of Invisible Hand’s hangar deck, where a bright blip slid slowly through Bay One.

  “What is that?”

  “It’s, it’s, it’s the Chancellor’s beacon, sir.”

  “What? The Jedi never deactivated it? Why not?”

  “I, well, I can’t actually—”

  “Idiots.” He looked down at the cringing security officer, considering killing the fool just for taking so long to figure this

  out.

  The Neimoidian might as well have read Grievous’s thought spelled out across his bone-colored mask. “If, if, if you hadn’t— er, I mean, please recall my security console has been destroyed, and so I have been forced to reroute—”

  “Silence.” Grievous gave a mental shrug. The fool would be dead or captured soon enough regardless. “Order all combat droids to terminate their search algorithms and converge on the bridge. Wait, strike that: leave the battle droids. Useless things,” he muttered into his mask. “A greater danger to us than to Jedi. Super battle droids and droidekas only, do you understand? We will take no chances.”

  As the security officer turned to his screens, Grievous again touched the sensor implant along the jaw of his mask. “IG-One-oh-one.”

  “Sir.”

  “Assemble a team of super battle droids and droidekas—as many as you can gather—and report to the hangar deck. I’ll give you the exact coordinates as soon as they are available.” “Yes, sir.”

  You will find at least one Jedi, possibly two, in the company of Chancellor Palpatine, imprisoned in a ray shield. They are to

  be considered extremely dangerous. Disarm them and deliver them to the bridge.”

  “If they are so dangerous, perhaps we should execute them on the spot.”

  “No. My orders are clear that the Chancellor is not to be harmed. And the Jedi—”

  The general’s right hand slipped beneath his cape to stroke the array of lightsabers clipped there.

  “The Jedi, I will execute personally.”

  A sheet of shimmering energy suddenly flared in front of them, blocking the corridor on the far side of the intersection they were trotting across, and Obi-Wan stopped so short that Anakin almost slammed into his back. He reached over and caught Palpatine by the arm. “Careful, sir,” he said, low. “Better not touch it till we know what it is.”

  Obi-Wan unclipped his lightsaber, activated it, and cau­tiously extended its tip to touch the energy field; an explosive burst of power flared sparks and streaks in all directions, nearly knocking the weapon from his hands. “Ray shield,” he said, more to himself than to the others. “We’ll have to find a way around—”

  But even as he spoke another sheet shimmered into existence across the mouth of the corridor they’d just left, and two more sizzled into place to seal the corridors to either side.

  They were boxed in.

  Caught.

  Obi-Wan stood there for a second or two, blinking, then looked at Anakin and shook his head in disbelief. “I thought we were smarter than this.”

  “Apparently not. The oldest trap in the book, and we walked right into it.” Anakin felt as embarrassed as Obi-Wan looked. “Well, you walked right into it. I was just trying to keep up.”

  “Oh, so now this is my fault?”

  Anakin gave him a slightly wicked smile. “Hey, you’re the Master. I’m just a hero.”

  “Joke some other time,” Obi-Wan muttered. “It’s the dark

  side—the shadow on the Force. Our instincts still can’t be trusted. Don’t you feel it?”

  The dark side was the last thing Anakin wanted to think about right now. “Or, you know, it could be that knock on the head,” he offered.

  Obi-Wan didn’t even smile. “No. All our choices keep going awry. How could they even locate us so precisely? Something is definitely wrong, here. Dooku’s death should have lifted the shadow—”

  “If you’ve a taste for mysteries, Master Kenobi,” Palpatine interrupted pointedly, “perhaps you could solve the mystery of how we’re going to escape.”

  Obi-Wan nodded, scowling darkly at the ray shield box as though seeing it for the first time; after a moment, he took out his lightsaber again, ignited it, and sank its tip into the deck at his feet. The blade burned through the durasteel plate almost without resistance—and then flared and bucked and spat lightning as it hit a shield in place in a gap below the plate, and almost threw Obi-Wan into the annihilating energy of the ray shield behind him.

  “No doubt in the ceiling as well.” He looked at the others and sighed. “Ideas?”

  “Perhaps,” Palpatine said thoughtfully, as though the idea had only just occurred to him, “we should simply surrender to General Grievous. With the death of Count Dooku, I’m sure that the two of you can ...” He cast a significant sidelong glance at Anakin. “... negotiate our release.”

  He’s persistent, I’ll give him that, Anakin thought. He caught himself smiling as he recalled discussing “negotiation” with Padme, on Naboo before the war; he came back to the present when he realized that undertaking “aggressive negotiations” could prove embarrassing under his current lightsaber-challenged circumstances.

  “I say... ,” he put in slowly, “patience.”

  “Patience?” Obi-Wan lifted an eyebrow. “That’s a plan?”

  “You know what Master Yoda says: Patience you must have until the mud settles and the water becomes clear. So let’s wait.”

  Obi-Wan looked skeptical. “Wait.”

  “For the security patrol. A couple of droids will be along in a moment or two; they’ll have to drop the ray s
hield to take us into custody.”

  “And then?”

  Anakin shrugged cheerfully. “And then we’ll wipe them out.”

  “Brilliant as usual,” Obi-Wan said dryly. “What if they turn out to be destroyer droids? Or something worse?”

  “Oh, come on, Master. Worse than destroyers? Besides, se­curity patrols are always those skinny useless little battle droids.”

  At that moment, four of those skinny useless battle droids came marching toward them, one along each corridor, clanking along with blaster rifles leveled. One of them triggered one of its preprogrammed security commands: “Hand over your weapons!” The other three chimed in with enthusiastic barks of “Roger, roger!” anda round of spastic head-bobbing. “See?” Anakin said. “No problem.”

  Before Obi-Wan could reply, concealed doors in the corridor walls zipped suddenly aside. Through them rolled the massive bronzium wheels of destroyer droids, two into each corridor. The eight destroyers unrolled themselves behind the battle droids, haloed by sparkling energy shields, twin blaster cannons targeting the two Jedi’s chests.

  Obi-Wan sighed. “You were saying?”

  “Okay, fine. It’s the dark side. Or something.” Anakin rolled his eyes. “I guess you’re off the hook for the ray shield trap.” Through those same doorways marched sixteen super battle

  droids to back up the destroyers, their arm cannons raised to fire over the destroyers’ shields.

  Behind the super battle droids came two droids of a type Anakin had never seen. He had an idea what they were, though. And he was not happy about it.

  Obi-Wan scowled at them as they approached. “You’re the expert, Anakin. What are those things?”

  “Remember what you were saying about worse than destroy­ers?” Anakin said grimly. “I think we’re looking at them.”

  They walked side by side, their gait easy and straightforward, almost as smooth as a human’s. In fact, they could have been human—humans who were two meters tall and made out of metal. They wore long swirling cloaks that had once been white, but now were stained with smoke and what Anakin strongly sus­pected was blood. They walked with the cloaks thrown back over one shoulder, to clear their left arms, where they held some un­familiar staff-like weapon about two meters long—something like the force-pike of a Senate Guard, but shorter, and with an odd-looking discharge blade at each end.

 

‹ Prev