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Lives & Adventures Page 15

by Ryder Windham


  When the pyre burned no more, Luke rejoined his friends. The Rebels were having a victory celebration with their new allies, the diminutive fur-covered Ewoks, at the Ewoks’ treetop village. Shortly after Luke arrived, he looked away from his jubilant friends to see the spectral, luminescent forms of Obi-Wan and Yoda appear nearby, against the darkness of the forest canopy. A moment later, a third spirit appeared beside the others. It was Anakin Skywalker.

  The Jedi had returned.

  Obi-Wan Kenobi saw Luke Skywalker standing a short distance from the entry dome of the Lars family homestead on Tatooine. The twin suns were closing in on the horizon and cast long shadows across the desert. Luke was facing the sunset, his back to Obi-Wan. A warm, gentle wind was blowing in from the west.

  But neither Obi-Wan nor Luke was really on Tatooine.

  It was five years after the Battle of Endor. Luke Skywalker was in his modest apartment at the former Imperial Palace on Coruscant, where he had reluctantly taken up residence after the Rebel Alliance defeated the Empire and formed the New Republic. Lying on his bed, he was sound asleep, and dreaming of Tatooine.

  Obi-Wan said, “Luke?”

  Luke turned away from the suns. “Hello, Ben,” he said with a welcoming smile. “Been a long time.”

  “It has indeed,” Obi-Wan replied. “And I’m afraid that it will be longer still until next time. I’ve come to say good-bye, Luke.”

  The desert landscape and the sky itself seemed to shimmer and shudder, and Obi-Wan realized that Luke was now suddenly aware of the fact that he was dreaming. Luke’s smile melted, and he looked at Obi-Wan cautiously.

  Sensing Luke’s thoughts, Obi-Wan said, “No, I’m not a dream. But the distances separating us have become too great for me to appear to you in any other way.” He gestured at the surrounding dreamscape and added, “Now, even this last path is being closed to me.”

  “No,” Luke said. “You can’t leave us, Ben. We need you.”

  “You don’t need me, Luke,” Obi-Wan said, lifting his eyebrows slightly as he smiled. “You are a Jedi.” Then his smile faded. “At any rate, the decision is not mine to make. I have lingered too long already, and can no longer postpone my journey from this life to what lies beyond.”

  Luke looked away from Obi-Wan, who sensed the young man’s thoughts had turned to Yoda. Despite all that Luke had learned about the Force, he remained deeply saddened by the deaths of his friends.

  “It is the pattern of all life to move on,” Obi-Wan said. “You, too, will face this journey one day. You are strong in the Force, Luke, and with perseverance and discipline you will grow stronger still.” Obi-Wan’s gaze hardened as he added, “But you must never relax your guard. The Emperor is gone, but the dark side is still powerful. Never forget that.”

  “I won’t.”

  “You will yet face great dangers, Luke.” Then Obi-Wan’s expression softened, and his smile returned as he continued, “But you will also find new allies at times and places where you expect them least.”

  “New allies?” Luke said, genuinely curious. “Who are they?”

  Knowing that it was best not to reveal everything to Luke, Obi-Wan chose to ignore the question. As he felt himself begin to slip away from Luke’s dream, he said, “And now, farewell. I loved you as a son, and as a student, and as a friend. Until we meet again, may the Force be with you.”

  “Ben—!”

  Obi-Wan’s form had vanished, but his psyche lingered long enough to sense Luke think to himself, Then I am alone. I am the last of the Jedi.

  “Not the last of the old Jedi, Luke,” Obi-Wan said, his voice trailing off across the dimension of dreams. “The first of the new.”

  And Obi-Wan finally moved on.

  It would be impossible to compile the adventures of Obi-Wan Kenobi in a single volume, especially because many adventures have yet to be written. But for readers who hanker to read more about Obi-Wan, I highly recommend the Star Wars serial novels Jedi Apprentice, Jedi Quest, and Last of the Jedi, all written by Jude Watson.

  While this novel introduces new details about Obi-Wan Kenobi, it also draws from various previously published Star Wars stories, including The Star Wars Radio Dramatization by Brian Daley; the novel Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire by Steve Perry; the novel Star Wars: Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader by James Luceno; the comic book Star Wars: Legacy #16 by John Ostrander and Jan Duursema; the comic book story “Luke Skywalker’s Walkabout” by Phil Norwood; and the novel Star Wars: Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn. I am indebted to all these talented writers, as well as to the screenwriters of the Star Wars films: George Lucas, Lawrence Kasdan, Leigh Brackett, and Jonathan Hales. Enormous thanks also to Annmarie Nye at Scholastic, and to J.W. Rinzler and Leland Chee at Lucasfilm, for their collective support and always valued input.

  In memory of Archie Goodwin

  “Do you ever wonder about our father, Leia?” Luke asked.

  “No,” Leia said without hesitation. “I never do.”

  Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia Organa were on board the New Hope, a Dreadnaught-class heavy cruiser that currently served as the flagship for Mon Mothma, the recently elected chief councilor of the fledgling New Republic. They were in a meeting room near the cruiser’s command deck, standing before a wide viewport that overlooked a small red planet orbiting a bright sun.

  “Oh,” Luke said. “I don’t know how to say this, but…well, it’s been months since he died, and I think there are some things we should talk about. I know you’re still upset about how he—”

  “Tortured me?” Leia interrupted. “Stood by and did nothing while Grand Moff Tarkin destroyed the planet Alderaan? Cut off your hand? Killed more people than we’ll ever know?” She gestured to the red planet outside the viewport and added, “Do you have any idea how many Chubbits died on Aridus because of Vader?”

  Luke knew a great deal about the unfortunate Chubbits, but he remained silent.

  As Leia gazed into space, she said, “It seems everywhere we go, we find more of Vader’s victims, more evidence of his horrific service to the Empire.” She shook her head. “Why would I even want to think about that monster?”

  “Because our father wasn’t just Darth Vader,” Luke said. “He was also Anakin Skywalker, a Jedi. I’ve tried to tell you what happened on the Death Star at Endor, how he saved me from the Emperor and—”

  “Saved you?” Leia said. “Luke, as I recall, Vader delivered you to the Emperor.” She sighed. “I know you believe that Anakin Skywalker returned in the end, and if that’s how you prefer to remember him, as the Jedi hero who destroyed the Emperor, that’s your decision. But you can’t expect me to do the same, because my father, Bail Organa, the man who raised me, he died on Alderaan.”

  “I’m sorry, Leia,” Luke said. “I just thought—”

  “You thought wrong, Luke,” Leia said. “I have more important things on my mind than this. In case you haven’t noticed, the Empire didn’t die with the Emperor. We don’t know how many Star Destroyers are still in service. Moff Harlov Jarnek has blockaded Spirador. Hundreds of planets still need our help.” She moved away from the viewport. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a meeting to attend. The Chubbits are justifiably cautious of offworlders, but I’m determined to convince them that an alliance with the New Republic is their best defense against the Empire.” She turned and walked for the meeting room’s exit.

  Alone in the room, Luke returned his gaze to Aridus. He’d visited the desert planet before. Except that it had a single sun, he’d found it very similar to his own homeworld, Tatooine.

  So much had happened since the day he’d left Mos Eisley Spaceport with Ben Kenobi on the Millennium Falcon. Back then, his greatest desire had been to have adventures on other worlds. He’d never imagined that he would eventually encounter the father he’d been told was dead, discover that Princess Leia was his sister, or become a champion of the Rebel Alliance.

  But despite his accomplishments and many good friends, Luke
sensed there was something missing in his life, as if part of him were somehow incomplete. The Empire had destroyed nearly all the records of the Jedi Order, including any information about Anakin Skywalker, leaving Luke with many questions about his place in the universe.

  Can I avoid my father’s mistakes?

  Are all the other Jedi Knights truly gone?

  How can I be a good Jedi when I know so little about them?

  Despite Leia’s apparent lack of interest, Luke believed it was important for him to find out more about the life of Anakin Skywalker.

  How can I know myself if I never really knew my father?

  He had no idea whether gaining such knowledge would make him feel wiser or more fulfilled. All he knew was that he still felt alone and out of place, just as he’d felt when he was a little boy, growing up on a desolate moisture farm in the desert wastes of Tatooine.…

  “Is someone seeing me, Aunt Beru?” Luke asked.

  Beru Lars was standing in her kitchen, making biscuits. She glanced at the four-year-old boy, her husband’s stepbrother’s son, who sat on the hard white steps that led up to the dining alcove, and said, “Your aunt Dama will be seeing all of us. She should be here any time now.”

  Luke frowned. “No. I don’t mean Aunt Dama. I mean, is someone watching me?”

  Beru smiled. “You’re right here with me, so I’m watching you.”

  The boy shook his head. “No. Not you or Uncle Owen. I mean someone else. Someone I can’t see.”

  Beru almost dropped the spoon she had just picked up. She set the spoon down beside a bowl with a gray mixture in it and tried to keep her voice calm as she asked, “What makes you say that, Luke?”

  Luke was holding a small toy landspeeder. As he turned the toy over in his hands, he said, “I just felt like someone else was close by. I thought maybe there was somebody behind me, but when I looked up the steps…” He turned his head to look back toward the dining alcove, then returned his gaze to his aunt. “No one’s there.”

  Beru sighed. “Living far from other folks like we do, it’s not unusual to get a bit jumpy. You feel a small shift in the air, or hear a slight noise, and your imagination starts playing tricks on you.”

  “Really?” Luke said. “But I didn’t hear the wind or anything this time.”

  Beru gripped the edge of the kitchen counter to steady herself. She said, “There’s been other times you thought someone else was watching?”

  “Sometimes when I play outside,” Luke said. “And every time we go into Anchorhead.”

  Beru stepped away from the counter to kneel down beside Luke. Gripping his upper arms gently, she said, “Luke, this is important. You’ve never, ever actually seen any man watching you, have you?”

  Luke cocked his head sideways as he held his aunt’s gaze. “You think it’s a man?”

  Beru shook her head. “No, sorry, I didn’t mean to say that. I meant anyone, any person. You’ve never noticed anyone?”

  Luke shook his head. “No, ma’am.”

  Just then they heard the sound of a landspeeder engine drift down outside, and Uncle Owen bellowed, “Beru! Your sister’s here!”

  Beru’s eyes flicked to the dining cove, then back to Luke. She said, “I think it’s best that we don’t mention any of this to your uncle. This feeling you get sometimes, it might worry him. You know how he is about strangers and trespassers. And we don’t want to worry Uncle Owen, do we?”

  “No, ma’am,” Luke said. “So, it’s only a feeling? There’s no one really watching me?”

  “That’s right,” Beru said. “Now, come on, let’s go greet your aunt Dama.”

  Luke got up, clutching his toy landspeeder in his hand.

  The Lars homestead on Tatooine consisted of various underground rooms that branched off a deep, steep-walled open pit that was the central courtyard. Beru took Luke’s free hand and led him out across the courtyard, up a flight of steps along the pit’s wall, and then up through an enclosed stairway. It was a long climb for a little boy, but Luke didn’t complain. He said, “Aunt Dama has a new landspeeder.”

  “How do you know that?” Beru asked.

  “Before Uncle Owen called you, I heard the engine coming. It sounds less rumbly than the old one.”

  The enclosed stairway delivered them to the arched doorway of the homestead’s pourstone entry dome. As Luke and Beru stepped out through the doorway and into the blazing heat of Tatooine’s twin suns, a smiling, round-faced woman walked up to them and said, “There you are!”

  “Hi, Aunt Dama,” Luke said. He held out his toy. “I have a landspeeder too!”

  Dama Whitesun Brunk was Beru’s younger sister. Like Owen, Dama’s husband, Sam, was a moisture farmer. They lived in Anchorhead, one of Tatooine’s oldest settlements, where they owned and operated a small hotel. Although Anchorhead was only twenty kilometers away from the Lars homestead, Dama and Sam seldom visited.

  “My, my, Luke,” Dama said as she bent down to give Luke a hug. “You’re growing faster than a ronto!” Releasing Luke, she stood up and embraced her sister. “I’m so happy to see you, Beru.”

  “You look well, Dama.”

  “Sorry we haven’t visited you in so long. Between managing the farm and the hotel, seems like we’re always busy.”

  Luke looked past Dama to see Sam Brunk and Uncle Owen standing beside a dark green landspeeder with a bubble canopy and three sleek thrusters on each side. Wanting a closer look at the vehicle, he began walking toward it. Owen and Sam were facing away from him, gazing at the tall moisture vaporator units that were neatly spaced away from each other across the surrounding salt flat, and talking about what most moisture farmers usually talked about.

  “How’s your crop?”

  “Can’t complain.”

  “I had to replace two vaporators.”

  “Broken?”

  “Stolen.”

  “Jawas?”

  “Probably.”

  Seeing that the two men were still so engaged in their conversation that they hadn’t noticed him, Luke moved up close beside the parked speeder and studied the emblem and Aurebesh lettering that were positioned below the canopy’s rim: Mobquet A-1 Deluxe Floater. He was proud that he’d learned how to read Basic from a set of old educational datatapes that Aunt Beru had given him, but wasn’t sure how to pronounce Mobquet.

  Luke moved around to the front of the speeder and was admiring the design of the inlet ports that ringed its rounded nose when he noticed Beru and Dama walking over toward their husbands. Dama rolled her eyes and said, “I suppose you two are talking about Tatooine’s rich, cultural history again?”

  Sam Brunk chuckled, then said, “No, but speaking of history…did you hear that the Empire outlawed Podracing?”

  Beru and Owen shook their heads.

  Sam continued, “Heard it on a HoloNet report. At first, I figured the Empire would affect Tatooine about as much as the Republic did, which was not at all. But there’s already talk that the Mos Espa Arena might be shuttin’ down. If that happens, there’ll be no more Podraces for.…” Sam’s gaze had drifted to an area beyond the homestead’s open pit. “Say, something’s different over there.”

  Beru said, “Where?”

  “There,” Sam said, pointing. “Didn’t you have some supply tanks, or some kind of…?” Sam stopped talking, and then everyone was silent.

  Luke noticed the sudden quiet and turned his head to follow the adults’ gaze to the southwest. Except for some moisture vaporators in the distance, there was nothing to see but scorched ground.

  “Sorry, Owen,” Sam said, finally breaking the awkward silence. “I just realized what was, uh, missing. It’s the headstones.”

  Owen said nothing, but just kept his eyes to the southwest.

  Sam said, “I, uh, hope it wasn’t vandals.…”

  “No,” Owen said. “I removed the headstones.”

  “Oh,” Sam said.

  Without any further explanation, Owen turned and headed for t
he entry dome. After he was gone, Beru said, “Please forgive Owen. He…he just didn’t see a need for anyone to know where Shmi was buried.”

  “But he removed all the headstones,” Sam said. “His parents and uncle were buried there too, yes?”

  Beru nodded.

  Luke said, “Who’s Shmi?”

  Beru jumped. She hadn’t seen Luke in front of the parked speeder and didn’t know that he’d been listening. She glanced at Dama, then back at Luke and said, “Shmi was your grandmother, Luke.”

  “Oh,” he said. “Is my father buried there too?”

  “No,” Beru said. “Your father didn’t die on Tatooine.”

  “Oh,” he said again. Then he looked at Dama and Sam and said, “My father was a navigator on a spice freighter. Uncle Owen told me so.”

  It had been a long time since Luke Skywalker had felt like someone was watching him. A few years, at least. But he felt it now.

  He jumped to his feet and looked around. He’d been lying on a blanket that he’d stretched out on the sand so he could be comfortable while he gazed at the night sky. Now he was anything but relaxed.

  He glanced back in the direction of his home. He half expected to see his uncle trudging toward him, but there was no sign of movement between his position and the winking lights on the distant security sensors that ringed the moisture farm’s perimeter.

  Like any seven-year-old child on Tatooine, Luke knew the dangers of straying too far from home at any time of day, let alone the middle of the night. Hidden sinkholes and sudden sandstorms were deadly threats, as were various nasty creatures always looking for a meal. Womp rats traveled in packs and had claws and teeth that could easily slice through flesh. Hulking krayt dragons roamed the mountains and canyons of the Jundland Wastes. Worst of all were the Sand People, the masked nomads also known as Tusken Raiders, who sometimes attacked and killed without any obvious motive or reason. More than once, Luke had heard his uncle say, “If the heat doesn’t kill you on Tatooine, everything else will.”

 

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