Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

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Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Page 21

by Matthew W. Stover


  “It is said that if one could ever entirely comprehend a single grain of sand—really, truly understand everything about it—one would, at the same time, entirely comprehend the universe. Who’s to say that a Sith, by looking inward, sees less than a Jedi does by looking out?”

  “The Jedi—Jedi are good. That’s the difference. I don’t who sees what.”

  “What the Jedi are,” Palpatine said gently, “is a group of very powerful beings you consider to be your comrades. And you are loyal to your friends; I have known that for as long as I have known you, and I admire you for it. But are your friends loyal to you?”

  Anakin shot him a sudden frown. “What do you mean?”

  “Would a true friend ask you to do something that’s wrong?”

  “I’m not sure it’s wrong,” Anakin said. Obi-Wan might have been telling the truth. It was possible. They might only want to catch Sidious. They might really be trying to protect Palpa­tine.

  They might.

  Maybe.

  “Have they asked you to break the Jedi Code? To violate the Constitution? To betray a friendship? To betray your own values?”

  “Chancellor—”

  “Think, Anakin! I have always tried to teach you to think— yes, yes, Jedi do not think, they know, but those stale answers aren’t good enough now, in these changing times. Consider their motives. Keep your mind clear of assumptions. The fear of losing power is a weakness of both the Jedi and the Sith.”

  Anakin sank lower in his seat. Too much had happened in too short a time. Everything jumbled together in his head, and none of it seemed to make complete sense.

  Except for what Palpatine said.

  That made too much sense.

  “This puts me in mind of an old legend,” Palpatine mur­mured idly. “Anakin—are you familiar with The Tragedy of Darth Plagueis the Wise?”

  Anakin shook his head.

  “Ah, I thought not. It is nota story the Jedi would tell you.

  It’s a Sith legend, of a Dark Lord who had turned his sight inward so deeply that he had come to comprehend, and mas­ter life itself. And—because the two are one, when seen clearly enough—death itself.”

  Anakin sat up. Was he actually hearing this? “He could keep someone safe from death?”

  “According to the legend,” Palpatine said, “he could directly influence the midi-chlorians to create life; with such knowledge, to maintain life in someone already living would seem a small matter, don’t you agree?”

  A universe of possibility blossomed inside Anakin’s head. He murmured, “Stronger than death...”

  “The dark side seems to be—from my reading—the pathway to many abilities some would consider unnatural.”

  Anakin couldn’t seem to get his breath. “What happened to him?”

  “Oh, well, it is a tragedy, after all, you know. Once he has gained this ultimate power, he has nothing to fear save losing it— that’s why the Jedi Council brought him to mind, you know.”

  “But what happened?”

  “Well, to safeguard his power’s existence, he teaches the path toward it to his apprentice.”

  “And?”

  “And his apprentice kills him in his sleep,” Palpatine said with a careless shrug. “Plageuis never sees it coming. That’s the tragic irony, you see: he can save anyone in the galaxy from death—except himself.”

  “What about the apprentice? What happens to him?”

  “Oh, him. He goes on to become the greatest Dark Lord the Sith have ever known...”

  “So,” Anakin murmured, “it’s only a tragedy for Plagueis— for the apprentice, the legend has a happy ending...”

  “Oh, well, yes. Quite right. I’d never really thought of it that way—rather like what we were talking about earlier, isn’t it?”

  “What if,” Anakin said slowly, almost not daring to speak the words, “it’s not just a legend?” “I’m sorry?”

  “What if Darth Plagueis really lived—what if someone really had this power?”

  “Oh, I am ... rather certain... that Plagueis did indeed exist. And if someone actually had this power—well, he would indeed be one of the most powerful men in the galaxy, not to mention virtually immortal ...”

  “How would I find him?”

  “I’m sure I couldn’t say. You could ask your friends on the Jedi Council, I suppose—but of course, if they ever found him they’d kill him on the spot. Not as punishment for any crime, you understand. Innocence is irrelevant to the Jedi. They would kill him simply for being Sith, and his knowledge would die with him.”

  “I just—I have to—” Anakin found himself half out of his seat, fists clenched and trembling. He forced himself to relax and sit back down, and he took a deep breath. “You seem to know so much about this, I need you to tell me: would it be possible, pos­sible at all, to learn this power?”

  Palpatine shrugged, regarding him with that smile of gentle wisdom.

  “Well, clearly,” he said, “not from a Jedi.”

  For a long, long time after leaving the opera house, Anakin sat motionless in his idling speeder, eyes closed, resting his head against the edge of his mechanical hand. The speeder bobbed gently in the air-wakes of the passing traffic; he didn’t feel it. Klaxons blared, rising and fading as angry pilots swerved around him; he didn’t hear them.

  Finally he sighed and lifted his head. He stroked a private code into the speeder’s comm screen. After a moment the screen lit up with an image of Padme’s half-asleep face.

  “Anakin—?” She rubbed her eyes, blinking. “Where are you? What time is it?”

  “Padme, I can’t—” He stopped himself, huffing a sigh out through his nose. “Listen, Padme, something’s come up. I have to spend the night at the Temple.”

  “Oh... well, all right, Anakin. I’ll miss you.”

  “I’ll miss you, too.” He swallowed. “I miss you already.”

  “We’ll be together tomorrow?”

  “Yes. And soon, for the rest of our lives. We’ll never have to be apart again.”

  She nodded sleepily. “Rest well, my love.”

  “I’ll do my best. You, too.”

  She blew him a kiss, and the screen went blank.

  Anakin fired thrusters and slid the speeder expertly into traf­fic, angling toward the Jedi Temple, because that part—the part about spending the night at the Temple—was the part that wasn’t a lie.

  The lie was that he was going to rest. That he was going to even try. How could he rest when every time he closed his eyes he could see her screaming on the birthing table?

  Now the Council’s insult burned hotter than ever; he even had a name, a story, a place to start—but how could he explain to the archives Master why he needed to research a Sith legend of immortality?

  Yet maybe he didn’t need the archives after all.

  The Temple was still the greatest nexus of Force energy on the planet, perhaps even the galaxy, and it was unquestionably the best place in the galaxy for intense, focused meditation. He had much he needed the Force to teach him, and a very short

  time to learn.

  He would start by thinking inward. Thinking about himself...

  =13=

  THE WILL OF THE FORCE

  When her handmaiden Motee awakened her with the word that C-3PO had announced a Jedi was waiting to see her, Padme flew out of bed, threw on a robe, and hurried out to her living room, a smile breaking through her sleepiness like the dawn outside—

  But it was Obi-Wan.

  The Jedi Master had his back to her, hands clasped behind him as he drifted restlessly about the room, gazing with ab­stracted lack of interest at her collection of rare sculpture.

  “Obi-Wan,” she said breathlessly, “has—” She bit off the fol­lowing something happened to Anakin ? How would she explain why this was the first thing out of her mouth?

  “—has See-Threepio offered you anything to drink?” He turned to her, a frown clearing from his brow. “Senator,” he sa
id warmly. “So good to see you again. I apologize for the early hour, and yes, your protocol droid has been quite insistent on offering me refreshment.” His frown began to regather. “But as you may guess, this is not a social call. I’ve come to speak with you about Anakin.”

  Her years in politics had trained her well; even as her heart lurched and a shrill How much does he know? echoed inside her head, her face remained only attentively blank.

  A primary rule of Republic politics: tell as much truth as you -an. Especially to a Jedi. “I was very happy to learn of his ap­pointment to the Council.”

  “Yes. It is perhaps less than he deserves—though I’m afraid it may be more than he can handle. Has he been to see you?”

  “Several times,” she said evenly. “Something is wrong, isn’t it?”

  Obi-Wan tilted his head, and a hint of rueful smile showed through his beard. “You should have been a Jedi.”

  She managed a light laugh. “And you should never go into politics. You’re not very good at hiding your feelings. What is it?” “It’s Anakin.” With his pretense of cheer fading away, he seemed to age before her eyes. He looked very tired, and pro­foundly troubled. “May I sit?”

  “Please.” She waved him to the couch and lowered herself onto its edge beside him. “Is he in trouble again?”

  “I certainly hope not. This is more ... a personal matter.” He shifted his weight uncomfortably. “He’s been put in a diffi­cult position as the Chancellor’s representative, but I think there’s more to it than that. We—had words, yesterday, and we parted badly.”

  Her heart shrank; he must know, and he’d come to confront her—to bring their whole lives crashing down around their ears. She ached for Anakin, but her face showed only polite curiosity.

  “What were these words about?” she asked delicately.

  “I’m afraid I can’t tell you,” he said with a vaguely apologetic frown. “Jedi business. You understand.”

  She inclined her head. “Of course.”

  “It’s only that—well, I’ve been a bit worried about him. I was hoping he may have talked to you.”

  “Why would he talk to me about—” She favored him with her best friendly-but-skeptical smile. “—Jedi business?”

  “Senator—Padme. Please.” He gazed into her eyes with nothing on his face but compassion and fatigued anxiety. “I am not blind, Padme. Though I have tried to be, for Anakin’s sake. And for yours.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Neither of you is very good at hiding feelings, either.”

  “Obi-Wan—”

  “Anakin has loved you since the day you met, in that horrible junk shop on Tatooine. He’s never even tried to hide it, though we do not speak of it. We... pretend that I don’t know. And I was happy to, because it made him happy. You made him happy when nothing else ever truly could.” He sighed, his brows draw­ing together. “And you, Padme, skilled as you are on the Senate floor, cannot hide the light that comes to your eyes when anyone so much as mentions his name.”

  “I—” She lurched to her feet. “I can’t—Obi-Wan, don’t make me talk about this ...”

  “I don’t mean to hurt you, Padme. Nor even to make you uncomfortable. I’m not here to interrogate you; I have no inter­est in the details of your relationship.”

  She turned away, walking just to be moving, barely conscious of passing through the door out onto the dawn-painted veranda. “Then why are you here?”

  He followed her respectfully. “Anakin is under a great deal of pressure. He carries tremendous responsibilities for a man so young; when I was his age I still had some years to go as a Padawan. He is—changing. Quickly. And I have some anxiety about what he is changing into. It would be a ... very great mis­take... were he to leave the Jedi Order.”

  She blinked as though he’d slapped her. “Why—that seems... unlikely, doesn’t it? What about this prophecy the Jedi put so much faith in? Isn’t he the chosen one?”

  “Very probably. But I have scanned this prophecy; it says only that a chosen one will be born and bring balance to the Force; nowhere does it say he has to be a Jedi.”

  She blinked harder, fighting down a surge of desperate hope that left her breathless. “He doesn’t have to—?”

  “My Master, Qui-Gon Jinn, believed that it was the will of the Force that Anakin should be trained as a Jedi—and we all have a certain, oh, I suppose you could call it a Jedi-centric bias. It is a Jedi prophecy, after all.”

  “But the will of the Force—isn’t that what Jedi follow?” “Well, yes. But you must understand that not even the Jedi know all there is to be known about the Force; no mortal mind can. We speak of the will of the Force as someone ignorant of gravity might say it is the will of a river to flow to the ocean: it is a metaphor that describes our ignorance. The simple truth—if any truth is ever simple—is that we do not truly know what the will of the Force may be. We can never know. It is so far beyond our limited understanding that we can only surrender to its mys­tery.”

  “What does this have to do with Anakin?” She swallowed,

  but her voice stayed tight and thin. “And with me?”

  “I fear that some of his current... difficulty... has to do with your relationship.”

  If you only knew how much, she thought. “What do you want me to do?”

  He looked down. “I cannot tell you what to do, Padme. I can only ask you to consider Anakin’s best interests. You know the two of you can never be together while he remains in the Order.”

  A bleak chill settled into her chest. “Obi-Wan, I can’t talk about this.”

  “Very well. But remember that the Jedi are his family. The Order gives his life structure. It gives him a direction. You know how... undisciplined he can be.”

  And that’s why he is the only Jedi I could ever love... “Yes Yes of course.”

  “If his true path leads him away from the Jedi, so be it But please, for both of your sakes, tread carefully. Be sure. Some de­cisions can never be reversed.”

  “Yes,” she said slowly. Feelingly. “I know that too well.”

  He nodded as though he understood, though of course he did not understand at all. “We all do, these days.”

  A soft chiming came from within his robe. “Excuse me “ he said, and turned aside, producing a comlink from an inner pocket. “Yes... ?”

  A man’s voice came thinly through the comlink, deep and clipped: “We are calling the Council into special session. We’ve lo­cated General Grievous!”

  “Thank you, Master Windu,” Obi-Wan said. “I’m on my way.”

  General Grievous? Her eyes went hot, and stung with sudden tears. And so they would take her Anakin away from her again.

  She felt a stirring below her ribs. Away from us, she amended, and there was so much love and fear and joy and loss all swirling and clashing within her that she dared not speak. She only stared blindly out across the smog-shrouded cityscape as Obi-Wan came close to her shoulder.

  “Padme,” he said softly. Gently. Almost regretfully. “I will not tell the Council of this. Any of it. I’m very sorry to burden you with this, and I—I hope I haven’t upset you too much. We have all been friends for so long... and I hope we always will be.”

  “Thank you, Obi-Wan,” she said faintly. She couldn’t look at him. From the corner of her eye she saw him incline his head re­spectfully and turn to go.

  For a moment she said nothing, but as his footsteps receded she said, “Obi-Wan?”

  She heard him stop.

  “You love him, too, don’t you?”

  When he didn’t answer, she turned to look. He stood mo­tionless, frowning, in the middle of the expanse of buff carpeting.

  “You do. You love him.”

  He lowered his head. He looked very alone.

  “Please do what you can to help him,” he said, and left.

  The holoscan of Utapau rotated silently in the center of the Jedi Council Chamber. Anakin had brought the holoprojecto
r from the Chancellor’s office; Obi-Wan wondered idly if the pro­jector had been scanned for recording devices planted by the Chancellor to spy on their meeting, then dismissed the thought. In a sense, Anakin was the Chancellor’s recording device. And that’s our fault, he thought.

  The only Council members physically present, other than Obi-Wan and Anakin, were Mace Windu and Agen Kolar. The Council reached a quorum by the projected holopresences of Ki-Adi-Mundi, en route to Mygeeto, Plo Koon on Cato Neimoidia, and Yoda, who was about to make planetfall on Kashyyyk.

  “Why Utapau?” Mace Windu was saying. “A neutral system, of little strategic significance, and virtually no planetary defense force—”

  “Perhaps that is itself the reason,” Agen Kolar offered. “Easily taken, and their sinkhole-based culture can hide a tremendous number of droids from long-range scans.” Ki-Adi-Mundi’s frown wrinkled the whole length of his fore­head. “Our agents on Utapau have made no report of this.” “They may be detained, or dead,” Obi-Wan said. Mace Windu leaned toward Anakin, scowling. “How could the Chancellor have come by this information when we know nothing about it?”

  “Clone Intelligence intercepted a partial message in a diplo­matic packet from the Chairman of Utapau,” Anakin told him.

  “We’ve only managed to verify its authenticity within the past hour.”

  Obi-Wan felt a frown crawl onto his forehead at the way Anakin now referred to the Chancellor’s Office as we... “Clone Intelligence,” Mace said heavily, “reports to us.” “I beg your pardon, Master Windu, but that is no longer the case.” Though Anakin’s expression was perfectly solemn, Obi-Wan thought he could detect a hint of satisfaction in his young friend’s voice. “I thought it had been already made clear. The constitutional amendment bringing the Jedi under the Chancel­lor’s Office naturally includes troops commanded by Jedi. Palpa­tine is now Supreme Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic.”

  “Pointless it is, to squabble over jurisdiction,” the image of Yoda said. “Act on this, we must.”

  “I believe we all agree on that,” Anakin said briskly. “Let’s move to the operational planning. The Chancellor has requested that I lead this mission, and so I—”

 

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