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There was complete surveillance on Kegan. The skyhoppers overhead had to be equipped with listening and watching devices. It was the only explanation.
V-Nen and 0-Melie had asked for their help in the only way available to them: with glances and hints.
Qui-Gon and Adi did not dare speak, even in the open air. Without another word, they started toward the Communications Circle.
Qui-Gon's keen gaze swept across the round buildings in the Circle. He saw one open window in the building to his left. He indicated it to Adi with a tilt of his head. She nodded.
They walked into the building and quickly made their way through a maze of corridors toward the room with the open window. They were sure V-Nen and O-Melie would be waiting.
The door was slightly ajar. Qui-Gon hesitated outside.
"Come in quickly please," V-Nen whispered.
"And please close the door," 0-Melie added.
"This is a safe room," V-Nen said as soon as the Jedi entered and shut the door behind them. "Melie and I have installed anti-surveillance devices.
The skyhoppers you may have noticed overhead are actually unpiloted auto-hoppers that contain audio and visual surveillance devices. Everything we say and do is recorded. There are transmitters in our homes that beam up to them."
Qui-Gon and Adi exchanged glances. "We thought that might be the case,"
Qui-Gon said. "How did the citizens of Kegan allow this?"
"It began as an anti-crime measure," 0-Melie explained. "Society was stable, but petty theft and pilfering was common after we changed to a bartering system. V-Tan and O-Vieve proposed we use autohoppers as security devices, and we all voted on it. Originally they were supposed to patrol the market only. Then it was extended to the Dwelling Circle and beyond. No one expected that it would be used to monitor conversations and activities. It happened slowly, and now we are watched all the time."
"But if every citizen on Kegan gets a vote, couldn't you vote them out?" Adi asked.
V-Nen shook his head. "Every citizen gets a vote, but V-Tan and O-Vieve decide what we should vote on."
0-Melie gave a sad smile. "We have the illusion of democracy. Not the reality."
"Tell us how we can help you," Adi said gently. "What do you think happened to O-Lana?"
0-Melie and V-Nen exchanged a frightened glance. "We are worried about her safety," V-Nen said quietly. "There are whispers and rumors about children who vanish."
Qui-Gon recalled something that had bothered him at the time. "Is that what O-Yani meant when she said O-Lana would not disappear!"
0-Melie nodded. "Some children enroll at the Learning Circle and are never heard from again."
"The Learning Circle?" Qui-Gon asked quickly. "Where is that?"
"That Circle is not in the city of Kegan, but in an outlying area,"
V-Nen explained. "The Learning is a course of teaching developed by O-Vieve and V-Tan. It was introduced about fifteen years ago. Before that there was no central authority and children were schooled at home."
"We don't know where it is, only that it is in the open country,"
0-Melie answered. "It is thought better for the children if parents are not allowed there. Children attend the Learning Circle from the age of four.
There are no exceptions. Truants are dealt with harshly."
"That's why there are no children on the streets," Adi said.
"Obi-Wan and Siri!" Qui-Gon exclaimed. "Could they have been taken there by mistake?"
"It's possible," V-Nen said. "We hear that the Truant Guides take action first and ask questions later. And they might not believe your Padawans if they say they are not from Kegan. There are very few citizens who know the Jedi are here. O-Vieve and V-Tan thought it best if your arrival was kept secret."
"You see, we contacted you without V-Tan and 0-Vieve's permission,"
0-Melie said. "We took the chance that our Benevolent Guides would not dare refuse the Jedi. They did not. They allowed you to come. But they would not let us see you alone."
"They claim it is for our protection," V-Nen told them. "They believe that darkness surrounds the Jedi."
Qui-Gon was startled. "I don't understand."
"O-Vieve has prophetic visions," O-Melie explained. "V-Tan has dreams.
Many of their predictions have come true. That is why the people of Kegan trust them. O-Vieve had a vision of the Jedi. She claims that an evil force will engulf those who are close to the Jedi. All Keganites are afraid of the Jedi."
So Adi was right. That was what she had picked up from V-Haad and 0-Rina. Fear.
"But we doubt O-Vieve's vision," V-Nen said. "We want what's best for our daughter. We had to contact you. We know Lana wasn't taken for routine testing. We would have heard something by now."
A sob broke loose from O-Melie.
V-Nen put his arm protectively around his wife. He laid his hand on her hair, holding her head against him gently. He spoke with his cheek resting against her hair. "I'm sorry to say these things out loud, Melie, but I know you are thinking them, too. We must be strong for Lana's sake. We must allow the Jedi to help us. We can't do it alone."
Slowly, O-Melie raised her head. Tears sparkled in her eyes. "Men is right," she said shakily. "We need your help."
"And we are here to give it," Qui-Gon said.
V-Nen put his hand on Qui-Gon's forearm. O-Melie put hers on Adi Gallia's.
V-Nen said, "Now we are Nen and Melie to you. Our fate is twined with yours."
"We will find your daughter," Qui-Gon assured them.
"You must be careful," Nen told them. "We are part of a faction on Kegan that opposes O-Vieve and V-Tan. We believe that the isolation policy is wrong. Trade and exploration could be good for Kegan. The surveillance is what has made our anti-isolationist movement so difficult. It's not that we are arrested or forbidden to discuss things — on the contrary, V-Tan and O-Vieve insist that Kegan is an open society. Yet somehow those of us who ask why we ca
"But now they have gone too far. They have taken our daughter," Melie said. "I do not want to be careful any longer."