Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

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Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Page 27

by Matthew W. Stover


  When the survivors of the first wave of clones hit the deck, the next wave was right behind them.

  Grievous turned back to Obi-Wan. He lowered his head like an angry bantha, yellow glare fixed on the Jedi Master. “To the death, then.”

  Obi-Wan sighed. “If you insist.”

  The bio-droid general cast back his cloak, revealing the four lightsabers pocketed there. He stepped back, spreading wide his duranium arms. “You will not be the first Jedi I have killed, nor will you be the last.”

  Obi-Wan’s only reply was to subtly shift the angle of his lightsaber up and forward.

  The general’s wide-spread arms now split along their lengths, dividing in half—even his hands split in half—

  Now he had four arms. And four hands.

  And each hand took a lightsaber as his cloak dropped to the floor.

  They snarled to life and Grievous spun all four of them in a flourishing velocity so fast and so seamlessly integrated that he seemed to stand within a pulsing sphere of blue and green en­ergy.

  “Come on, then, Kenobi! Come for me!” he said. “I have been trained in your Jedi arts by Lord Tyranus himself]”

  “Do you mean Count Dooku? What a curious coincidence,” Obi-Wan said with a deceptively pleasant smile. “I trained the man who killed him.”

  With a convulsive snarl, Grievous lunged.

  The sphere of blue lightsaber energy around him bulged toward Obi-Wan and opened like a mouth to bite him in half. Obi-Wan stood his ground, his blade still.

  Chain-lightning teeth closed upon him.

  This is how it feels to be Anakin Skywalker, right now:

  You don’t remember putting away your lightsaber.

  You don’t remember moving from Palpatine’s private office to his larger public one; you don’t remember collapsing in the chair where you now sit, nor do you remember drinking water from the half-empty glass that you find in your mechanical hand.

  You remember only that the last man in the galaxy you still thought you could trust has been lying to you since the day you met.

  And you’re not even angry about it.

  Only stunned.

  “After all, Anakin, you are the last man who has a right to be angry at someone for keeping a secret. What else was I to do?”

  Palpatine sits in his familiar tall oval chair behind his familiar desk; the lampdisks are full on, the office eerily bright.

  Ordinary.

  As though this is merely another one of your friendly con­versations, the casual evening chats you’ve enjoyed together for so many years.

  As though nothing has happened.

  As though nothing has changed.

  “Corruption had made the Republic a cancer in the body of the galaxy, and no one could burn it out; not the judicials, not the Senate, not even the Jedi Order itself. I was the only man strong and skilled enough for this task; I was the only man who dared even attempt it. Without my small deception, how should I have cured the Republic? Had I revealed myself to you, or to anyone else, the Jedi would have hunted me down and murdered me without trial—very much as you nearly did, only a moment

  ago.”

  You can’t argue. Words are beyond you.

  He rises, moving around his desk, taking one of the small chairs and drawing it close to yours.

  “If only you could know how I have longed to tell you, Anakin. All these years—since the very day we met, my boy. I have watched over you, waiting as you grew in strength and wis­dom, biding my time until now, today, when you are finally ready to understand who you truly are, and your true place in the his­tory of the galaxy.”

  Numb words blur from your numb lips. “The chosen one...”

  “Exactly, my boy. Exactly. You are the chosen one.” He leans toward you, eyes clear. Steady. Utterly honest. “Chosen by me.”

  He turns a hand toward the panorama of light-sprayed cityscape through window behind his desk. “Look out there, Anakin. A trillion beings on this planet alone—in the galaxy as a whole, uncounted quadrillions—and of them all, I have chosen you, Anakin Skywalker, to be the heir to my power. To all that I am.”

  “But that’s not... that’s not the prophecy. That’s not the prophecy of the chosen one ...”

  “Is this such a problem for you? Is not your quest to find a way to overturn prophecy?” Palpatine leaned close, smiling, warm and kindly. “Anakin, do you think the Sith did not know of this prophecy? Do you think we would simply sleep while it came to pass!”

  “You mean—”

  “This is what you must understand. This Jedi submission to fate... this is not the way of the Sith, Anakin. This is not my way. This is not your way. It has never been. It need never be.”

  You’re drowning.

  “I am not... ,” you hear yourself say, “... on your side. I am not evil.”

  “Who said anything about evil? I am bringing peace to the galaxy. Is that evil? I am offering you the power to save Padme. Is that evil? Have I attacked you? Drugged you? Are you being tortured? My boy, I am asking you. I am asking you to do the right thing. Turn your back on treason. On all those who would harm the Republic. I’m asking you to do exactly what you have sworn to do: bring peace and justice to the galaxy. And save Padme, of course—haven’t you sworn to protect her, too... ?”

  “I—but—I—” Words will not fit themselves into the answers you need. If only Obi-Wan were here—Obi-Wan would know what to say. What to do.

  Obi-Wan could handle this.

  Right now, you know you can’t.

  “I—I’ll turn you over to the Jedi Council—they’ll know what to do—”

  “I’m sure they will. They are already planning to overthrow the Republic; you’ll give them exactly the excuse they’re looking for. And when they come to execute me, will that be justice? Will they be bringing peace)”

  “They won’t—they wouldn’t—!”

  “Well, of course I hope you’re correct, Anakin. You’ll forgive me if I don’t share your blind loyalty to your comrades. I sup­pose it does indeed come down, in the end, to a question of loy­alty,” he said thoughtfully. “That’s what you must ask yourself, my boy. Whether your loyalty is to the Jedi, or to the Republic.” “It’s not—it’s not like that—”

  Palpatine lifted his shoulders. “Perhaps not. Perhaps it’s sim­ply a question of whether you love Obi-Wan Kenobi more than you love your wife.”

  There is no more searching for words.

  There are no longer words at all.

  “Take your time. Meditate on it. I will still be here when you decide.”

  Inside your head, there is only fire. Around your heart, the

  dragon whispers that all things die.

  This is how it feels to be Anakin Skywalker, right now.

  There is an understated elegance in Obi-Wan Kenobi’s lightsaber technique, one that is quite unlike the feel one might get from the other great swordsbeings of the Jedi Order. He lacks entirely the flash, the pure bold elan of an Anakin Skywalker; there is no­where in him the penumbral ferocity of a Mace Windu or a Depa Billaba nor the stylish grace of a Shaak Ti or a Dooku, and he is nothing resembling the whirlwind of destruction that Yoda can become.

  He is simplicity itself.

  That is his power.

  Before Obi-Wan had left Coruscant, Mace Windu had told him of facing Grievous in single combat atop a mag-lev train dur­ing the general’s daring raid to capture Palpatine. Mace had told him how the computers slaved to Grievous’s brain had appar­ently analyzed even Mace’s unconventionally lethal Vaapad and had been able to respond in kind after a single exchange.

  “He must have been trained by Count Dooku,” Mace had said, “so you can expect Makashi as well; given the number of Jedi he has fought and slain, you must expect that he can attack in any style, or all of them. In fact, Obi-Wan, I believe that of all living Jedi, you have the best chance to defeat him.”

  This pronouncement had startled Obi-Wan, and he had protested. After
all, the only form in which he was truly even proficient was Soresu, which was the most common lightsaber form in the Jedi Order. Founded upon the basic deflection prin­ciples all Padawans were taught—to enable them to protect themselves from blaster bolts—Soresu was very simple, and so restrained and defense-oriented that it was very nearly downright passive.

  “But surely, Master Windu,” Obi-Wan had said, “you, with the power of Vaapad—or Yoda’s mastery of Ataro—”

  Mace Windu had almost smiled. “I created Vaapad to answer my weakness: it channels my own darkness into a weapon of the light. Master Yoda’s Ataro is also an answer to weakness: the lim­itations of reach and mobility imposed by his stature and his age. But for you? What weakness does Soresu answer?”

  Blinking, Obi-Wan had been forced to admit he’d never ac­tually thought of it that way.

  “That is so like you, Master Kenobi,” the Korun Master had said, shaking his head. “I am called a great swordsman because I invented a lethal style; but who is greater, the creator of a killing form—or the master of the classic form?”

  “I’m very flattered that you would consider me a master, but really—”

  “Not a master. The master,” Mace had said. “Be who you are, and Grievous will never defeat you.”

  So now, facing the tornado of annihilating energy that is Grievous’s attack, Obi-Wan simply is who he is.

  The electrodrivers powering Grievous’s mechanical arms let each of the four attack thrice in a single second; integrated by combat algorithms in the bio-droid’s electronic network of peripheral processors, each of the twelve strikes per second came from a dif­ferent angle with different speed and intensity, an unpredictably broken rhythm of slashes, chops, and stabs of which every single one could take Obi-Wan’s life. Not one touched him.

  After all, he had often walked unscathed through hornet-swarms of blasterfire, defended only by the Force’s direction of his blade; countering twelve blows per second was only difficult, not impossible. His blade wove an intricate web of angles and curves, never truly fast but always just fast enough, each motion of his lightsaber subtly interfering with three or four or eight of the general’s strikes, the rest sizzling past him, his precise, mini­mal shifts of weight and stance slipping them by centimeters.

  Grievous, snarling fury, ramped up the intensity and velocity of his attacks—sixteen per second, eighteen—until finally, at twenty strikes per second, he overloaded Obi-Wan’s defense. So Obi-Wan used his defense to attack. A subtle shift in the angle of a single parry brought Obi-Wan’s blade in contact not with the blade of the oncoming lightsaber, but with the handgrip. —slice—

  The blade winked out of existence a hairbreadth before it would have burned through Obi-Wan’s forehead. Half the sev­ered lightsaber skittered away, along with the duranium thumb and first finger of the hand that had held it.

  Grievous paused, eyes pulsing wide, then drawing narrow. He lifted his maimed hand and stared at the white-hot stumps that held now only half a useless lightsaber.

  Obi-Wan smiled at him.

  Grievous lunged.

  Obi-Wan parried.

  Pieces of lightsabers bounced on the durasteel deck.

  Grievous looked down at the blade-sliced hunks of metal that were all he had left in his hands, then up at Obi-Wan’s shin­ing sky-colored blade, then down at his hands again, and then he seemed to suddenly remember that he had an urgent appoint­ment somewhere else.

  Anywhere else.

  Obi-Wan stepped toward him, but a shock from the Force made him leap back just as a scarlet HE bolt struck the floor right where he’d been about to place his foot. Obi-Wan rode the ex­plosion, flipping in the air to land upright between a pair of super battle droids that were busily firing upon the flank of a squad of clone troopers, which they continued to do until they found themselves falling in pieces to the deck.

  Obi-Wan spun.

  In the chaos of exploding droids and dying men, Grievous was nowhere to be seen.

  Obi-Wan waved his lightsaber at the clones. “The general!” he shouted. “Which way?”

  One trooper circled his arm as though throwing a proton grenade back toward the archway where Obi-Wan had first en­tered. He followed the gesture and saw, for an instant in the sun-shadow of the Vigilance outside, the back curves of twin bladed rings—ganged together to make a wheel the size of a starfighter—rolling swiftly off along the sinkhole rim.

  General Grievous was very good at running away.

  “Not this time,” Obi-Wan muttered, and cut a path through the tangled mob of droids all the way to the arch in a single sus­tained surge, reaching the open air just in time to see the blade-wheeler turn; it was an open ring with a pilot’s chair inside, and in the pilot’s chair sat Grievous, who lifted one of his body­guards’ electrostaffs in a sardonic wave as he took the scooter straight out over the edge. Four claw-footed arms deployed, dig­ging into the rock to carry him down the side of the sinkhole, an­gling away at a steep slant.

  “Blast.” Obi-Wan looked around. Still no air taxis. Not that he had any real interest in flying through the storm of battle that raged throughout the interior of the sinkhole, but there was cer­tainly no way he could catch Grievous on foot...

  From around the corner of an interior tunnel, he heard a res­onant honnnnk! as though a nearby bantha had swallowed an air horn.

  He said, “Boga?”

  The beaked face of the dragonmount slowly extended around the interior angle of the tunnel.

  “Boga! Come here, girl! We have a general to catch.” Boga fixed him with a reproachful glare. “Honnnnnk.” “Oh, very well.” Obi-Wan rolled his eyes. “I was wrong; you were right. Can we please go now?”

  The remaining fifteen meters of dragonmount hove into view and came trotting out to meet him. Obi-Wan sprang to the saddle, and Boga leapt to the sinkhole’s rim in a single bound. Her huge head swung low, searching, until Obi-Wan spotted Grievous’s blade-wheeler racing away toward the landing decks below.

  “There, girl—that’s him! Go!”

  Boga gathered herself and sprang to the rim of the next level down, poised for an instant to get her bearings, then leapt again down into the firestorm that Pau City had become. Obi-Wan spun his blade in a continuous whirl to either side of the dragonmount’s back, disintegrating shrapnel and slapping away stray blasterfire. They plummeted through the sinkhole-city, gaining tens of meters on Grievous with every leap.

  On one of the landing decks, the canopy was lifting and part­ing to show a small, ultrafast armored shuttle of the type favored by the famously nervous Neimoidian executives of the Trade Federation. Grievous’s wheeler sprayed a fan of white-hot sparks as it tore across the landing deck; the bio-droid whipped the wheeler sideways, laying it down for a skidding halt that show­ered the shuttle with molten durasteel.

  But before he could clamber out of the pilot’s chair, several metric tons of Jedi-bearing dragonmount landed on the shuttle’s roof, crouched and threatening and hissing venomously down at him.

  “I hope you have another vehicle, General!” Obi-Wan waved his lightsaber toward the shuttle’s twin rear thrusters. “I believe there’s some damage to your sublights!”

  “You’re insane! There’s no—”

  Obi-Wan shrugged. “Show him, Boga.”

  The dragonmount dutifully pointed out the damage with two whistling strikes of her massive tail-mace—wham and wham again—which crumpled the shuttle’s thruster tubes into crimped-shut knots of metal.

  Obi-Wan beckoned. “Let’s settle this, shall we?”

  Grievous’s answer was a shriek of tortured gyros that wrenched the wheeler upright, and a metal-on-metal scream of blades ripping into deck plates that sent it shooting straight toward the sinkhole wall—and, with the claw-arms to help, straight up it.

  Obi-Wan sighed. “Didn’t we just come from there?”

  Boga coiled herself and sprang for the wall, and the chase was on once more.

  They raced t
hrough the battle, clawing up walls, shooting through tunnels, skidding and leaping, sprinting where the way

  was clear and screeching into high-powered serpentines where it was not, whipping around knots of droids and bounding over troopers. Boga ran straight up the side of a clone hovertank and sprang from its turret directly between the high-slanting ringwheels of a hailfire, and a swipe of Obi-Wan’s blade left the droid crippled behind them. Native troops had taken the field: Uta­paun dragonriders armed with sparking power lances charged along causeways, spearing droids on every side. Grievous ran right over anything in his path, the blades of his wheeler shred­ding droid and trooper and dragon alike; behind him, Obi-Wan’s lightsaber caught and returned blaster bolts in a spray that shat­tered any droid unwise enough to fire on him. A few stray bolts he batted into the speeding wheeler ahead, but without visible effect.

  “Fine,” he muttered. “Let’s try this from a little closer.’’ Boga gained steadily. Grievous’s vehicle had the edge in raw speed, but Boga could out-turn it and could make instant leaps at astonishing angles; the dragonmount also had an uncanny in­stinct for where the general might be heading, as well as a seem­ingly infinite knowledge of useful shortcuts through side tunnels, along sheer walls, and over chasms studded with locked-down wind turbines. Grievous tried once to block Obi-Wan’s pursuit by screeching out onto a huge pod that held a whole bank of wind turbines and knocking the blade-brakes off them with quick blows of the electrostaff, letting the razor-edged blades spin freely in the constant gale, but Obi-Wan merely brought Boga alongside the turbines and stuck his lightsaber into their whirl. Sliced-free chunks of carboceramic blade shrieked through the air and shattered on the stone on all sides, and with a curse Grievous kicked his vehicle into motion again.

 

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