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Chapter Sixteen
Never had Obi-Wan seen such a display of the Force from a Padawan.
From the great Jedi Masters, yes. From Qui-Gon, near the end of his life.
But from someone so young? Anakin's power astonished him. He had glimpsed it before, but now he had seen it unfurl, and it staggered him.
He had not had a chance to move, to help. Anakin had been a blur. He had seemed to be everywhere at once. He had destroyed ten attack droids, disarmed his aggressors, and disabled two laser ca
He could see that Siri and Ferus had been just as astonished at Anakin's deep co
Unease settled into Obi-Wan's bones, joining his disappointment and the anger he had tried to eliminate from his heart. To have a Padawan so gifted who was capable of being so wrong — it was his gift to be able to teach him. It was his burden as well.
At first he could not even look at Anakin. He had to concentrate on the matter at hand.
Rana Halion tried to glide away from him, but with a lifted lightsaber he stopped her. "How dare you!" she cried. "I assure you, I have no idea what this renegade band is doing here. My security team alerted me that there was a break-in and I arrived to see a battle." Her eyes swept the secret squad as if she had never seen them before.
"And why did you send in droids to attack a Jedi?" Siri asked.
"How ridiculous. I didn't know there was a Jedi here," Rana Halion said. "We sent in the droids because it is the usual procedure when there is a security breach."
The girl called Marit raised her chin and fixed Rana with a contemptuous stare. "She is lying," she said. "About everything. I'm not a student anymore, but I can see I've learned my first real lesson today.
Betrayals are the way the galaxy works." She looked at Anakin.
He shook his head at her, as if to apologize. "I believed in what you believed," he said.
"Then you were as foolish as I was," Marit said softly.
"You'll take her word over mine?" Rana Halion huffed.
"This is a matter for the Senate to sort out," Siri said. "These students will testify, no doubt. They've already been expelled, so they'll certainly be available."
"Expelled? I don't think so," Gillam said. "I want to talk to my father!"
"Your father might not want to talk to you after he discovers that you were trying to set him up for murder," Obi-Wan said.
"Who told such lies?" Gillam asked. "I barely escaped my captors with my life. She kidnapped me!" he shrilled, pointing at Rana Halion.
"You scrawny brat!" Rana cried.
Ferus held up Gillam's datapad. "You might want to reconsider what you're saying, Gillam. Do you recognize this?"
Gillam went pale, but only for a moment. "I don't know what he's talking about. I don't even know him. I've never seen that datapad. He's just another jealous student, no doubt."
"No, he is a Jedi," Siri said.
Gillam looked alarmed. "He's a Jedi, too?" "They're everywhere," Tulah said, dazed.
"I never realized how much you lie," Marit said to Gillam. "You breathe, you lie. This squad was never about us. It wasn't about banding together to do something good. It was really all about you. And if you think the rest of us are going to support your lies, you're not only a liar, you're crazy. Like you said, Gillam, we all have nothing left to lose."
"Affirmatively true," Ze said, and Tulah nodded.
Gillam looked flustered. He opened his mouth and then clamped it shut.
He crossed his arms. "I want to see my father," he repeated.
"You'll see him soon enough," Siri said. "We're taking you all to Coruscant. The Senate authorities can straighten out this mess."
Siri led a protesting Rana Halion away. Ferus herded the squad toward the open doors of the hangar.
Obi-Wan was left alone with Anakin. At last it was time for him to speak to his Padawan. Yet he could not find the right words. He knew, glancing at his Padawan's eager face, that Anakin meant well from the bottom of his heart. If Obi-Wan saw a shadow on that heart, he knew it would pain his Padawan to know it. In many ways, Anakin was still a boy. A wounded, loving, anxious boy with great gifts he did not fully understand.
Yet he was also a young man, close to maturity, who could do great harm. To others, yes. To himself, most of all "They were going to conduct a raid on Andara," Anakin said, tired of Obi-Wan's silence. "But first they were going to kill me — "
"I know," Obi-Wan said. "Everything was on Gillam's datapad. Which you would have known if you had searched for Ferus."
Anakin flushed. "I didn't know where he was." "You did not look."
"I thought perhaps he was on leria or Andara. I thought the secret squad knew where he was — "
"You did not even look!" Obi-Wan shouted. "Your fellow Jedi was missing, and you did not even look!"
"I thought it best to continue under cover," Anakin said. His face showed his surprise at Obi-Wan's harshness. Obi-Wan never raised his voice.
"I had infiltrated the squad. I thought my best chance of finding both Gillam and Ferus was to continue."
"You were willing to participate in a raid that would have started a war," Obi-Wan continued. He had to struggle to keep his voice level. He needed to keep as calm as possible.
"I didn't know about the raid!" Anakin protested. "I mean, I knew they were going to do something, but it was a dry run, designed to show the Andarans that they had the capability of invading their airspace. I didn't know they had plans to destroy their fleet. As soon as I did, I sabotaged the laser ca
"Anakin, you left your fellow Jedi imprisoned and went off on a mission with a group of beings who you had no reason to trust," Obi-Wan said. "You were wrong at every point. Can't you see that?"
Anakin said nothing.
"You did not contact me to tell me Ferus was missing — "
"I would have compromised our cover — "
"You had a responsibility!" Obi-Wan's voice cut like a laser whip.
"Just as I had one to Siri. You betrayed me and the Order by your actions.