Web of Deceit
by Meercat (padawan88@hotmail.com)
ARCHIVE: M/A, Yes. All others, please ask.
CATEGORY: Drama
RATING: PG
DISCLAIMER: They belong to Sir George of Lucas, lord of the
Sacred Realm of Star Wars and all the awards, titles, lands,
and words pertaining thereto. Just think of me as Robin Hood,
borrowing from the rich to give to the poor, huddled,
fic-starving fanfic masses - Okay, I wouldn't buy that, either,
if I were you. No harm done (much, anyway, and what I broke, I
fixed).
No money no foul, okay?
SYNOPSIS: Obi-Wan is poisoned while he and Qui-Gon are
performing trade negotiations. Is it related to the dispute, or
is the motive something much more personal?
SPECIAL THANKS to my betas, Iroshi and JaxxB!
/ thoughts [ ] telepathy \\ the "unseen" end of an audio
communication
Chapter 1
/By the Living Force, but he is beautiful. And he is mine./
Qui-Gon Jinn leaned against the lichen-smooth archstone and
watched his apprentice with an expression that was equal parts
possessive and prideful. The Jedi Master found little fault in
his padawan's movements through The Dance.
The blend of acrobatics and fluid, dance-like movements
entwined the younger man in a multi-hued cocoon of power lines
and light. To the non-Force sensitive, it was nothing more than
a display of physical skill and grace - impressive and
beautiful but nothing to gape over. To Qui-Gon, The Dance was
so much more: a delicate connection between the physical world
and the comforting, familiar energy fields of the Living Force.
Force willing, they would finish the diplomatic negotiations on
Urath within a week, ten days at most. Once the new
interplanetary boundary treaties were signed, master and
apprentice would return to Coruscant, where a string of tense,
often dangerous duties had earned the pair a long-overdue
period of rest. Once he had his young lover away from the
pressures and trials of his studies, Qui-Gon would join his
Dance with Obi-Wan's, and together they would weave a tapestry
the likes of which neither one had ever seen.
Early morning sunlight painted the young man's bare chest a
burnished bronze and gave a brilliant golden sheen to his
red-gold padawan braid. Perched on a decorative,
floral-bedecked platform some twenty feet above the garden
pathway, he moved with the sinuous grace of a jungle cat,
boneless and smooth, muscles rippling under a growing tan.
Strong hands opened and closed, fingers combing the delicate
threads of power into a seamless web of living colors. Qui-Gon
shivered as delicious memories of the night before rose to the
forefront of his thoughts.
/Ohhh, the wondrous things that boy could do with his hands./
A wave of love rippled along their bond. His attention drawn
from his lover's hands, Qui-Gon looked up and met Obi-Wan's
brilliant smile. The Dance completed, the younger man gently
released the power back into the Force, stroking each thread as
it pulled free, as if in tender thanks. Qui-Gon nodded,
pleased.
"You've been practicing, I see," Qui-Gon called. "Nicely done,
Padawan."
A shining patina of perspiration glistened on the young man's
skin as he sailed through the air, flipped four times before
landing soundlessly on the spongy loam only three feet in front
of his Master.
Qui-Gon gave his companion a teasing buffet against his head.
"Show-off."
"One should show off what one has, Master."
Obi-Wan grinned impudently as he bent over to pick up his
tunic, belt and lightsaber from a nearby bench, incidentally
presenting well-defined hindquarters for his Master's view and
earning him a growl of delightful promise. Side by side, the
pair turned and headed back towards the Ambassador's Wing of
the Urathian Negotiations Consulate.
"Unlike some who are - shall we say - chronologically
challenged in such matters?"
"You wouldn't by chance be insinuating that I am old?"
"I, Master?" Obi-Wan asked as he slipped his tunic over his
head and belted it in place around his slender waist. "Never. I
have but to recall your performance last night to be assured
that you are by no means ancient. Extremely experienced,
perhaps. One might even say well seasoned, but never ancient."
"Should I thank you or toss you across my knee for a
well-deserved spanking?"
"Either would do, my Master." Obi-Wan's eyes glittered with
mischief. "But the latter sounds much more interesting."
Qui-Gon narrowed his eyes and growled again, drawing a relaxed
laugh from his young companion.
"Ahhh, to have this tedious round of negotiations behind us,"
Qui-Gon sighed as he fingered the ivory-and-teal blossom of a
flowering imachi bush, releasing a burst of sweet fragrance,
"or at least a free segment of time to spend together."
"How do you do it, Master? Deflecting the tensions of the
ministers is hard enough. Their Faithful make it doubly
difficult. Which one funnels which emotion, and for whom did
they channel it? We have fifteen people to keep track of at any
given time, yet we can treat only with the three at the table."
"It does have its advantages," Qui-Gon said. "In all my years
I've never seen negotiations like this go so smoothly. We've
accomplished in weeks what normally would require months of
heated, sometimes physical debate."
"True, Master, but how do you stay focused in a room where a
dozen various emotions come at you from people you have to
basically forget are even there? I can see how having the
Faithful channel away intense emotion leaves the negotiators
better able to stay to the task at hand, but isn't part of our
job to discover the source of the discontent and find a way to
settle it to everyone's advantage? Having to track second-hand
emotions back to their source in a timely enough manner to
deduce their cause makes that very hard to do!"
"It's not necessary to keep track of which Faithful is loyal to
which minister. The transfer of emotion is instantaneous. All
you must do is see who speaks and who answers, and put the
Faithfuls' reactions in the same order."
Obi-Wan blinked in surprise, then found himself laughing at the
simplicity of the tactic. Qui-Gon wrapped his arm around his
lover's shoulders and squeezed.
"Don't feel bad, Obi-Wan. It took me two weeks to figure it
out, and I've had many hours' more exposure to the ministers."
"Speaking of exposure to ministers, which of us is scheduled to
arbitrate today?"
Qui-Gon sighed. "I am, I fear. Which leaves you free to enjoy
the morning."
"If you can manage a brace of free hours directly after the
noon meal, I will prepare a basket and arrange for transport.
One of the servants made mention of a silver-sand beach north
of the city, where one can go when one desires...seclusion. Hot
sand, warm breezes, cool waters, and privacy. How does that
sound to you?"
"It sounds wonderful." As the pair approached a vine-draped
bend in the pathway, Qui-Gon sighed, "Until then . . ."
Sensing no presence in their close proximity, Qui-Gon stopped
his lover and pressed him back against the living wall. Fingers
entwined in his hair, gently tugging on his que as Obi-Wan
pulled his lover's face closer against his own, deepening the
kiss.
Love had a taste all its own - sweet, deep, and rich. Obi-Wan's
lips still bore the rich aftertaste of the fruits upon which
they'd broken their fast, the rosy flavor of ju'ishin nectar
and yivin, the bitter brew served at the morning meals. The
salt sweat of his morning exercises seasoned the blend, and
made Qui-Gon yearn for more.
Their bodies pressed together, each fitting perfectly against
the other. Heat and passion, fueled by love, flowed between
them, around and through them.
Belatedly sensing the approach of several people, Qui-Gon broke
the kiss with the greatest reluctance. He stared into Obi-Wan's
passion-dilated eyes, drank in the view of flushed cheeks and
swollen, pink lips. Qui-Gon closed his eyes against the siren
lure of passion and leaned away.
"Silver sands, you say?" Qui-Gon whispered.
Obi-Wan's voice was equally breathless. "Warm breezes and
privacy."
"Yes. Privacy. Something we sorely lack here in the capital
city."
"Privacy. Very important, Master."
Chapter 2
Obi-Wan Kenobi closed the door behind him - a ridiculous thing
made of orange-hued wood and copper decoration, with no sensors
or mechanics, requiring manual attention to open and close -
and engaged the locking mechanism. As added security, he
activated a small portable flat-shield, which would delay
anyone attempting to blast through the fragile portal. Only he
and his Master knew the Force pattern that would disengage the
mechanism and lower the field.
Not that an ambush would likely happen here on Urath, Kenobi
reasoned. Yes, the planet possessed the knowledge of
space-travel, as did their sister-planets of Romanth and
Doolinar, enough to gain admittance into the Republic and
result in the three-way space boundary disputes that required
arbitration by a Jedi Master.
Yes, all three planets had weapons and wars, criminals and
dissidents - Obi-Wan had yet to see a world that did not, but
he had little fear of attack, especially here, in their
personal quarters. The Negotiations Consulate was one of the
few buildings in the capital city where security and technology
were Republic-standard, wooden doors notwithstanding. Master
Qui-Gon had inspected the security features their first day
planetside, upgrading a few systems to insure the safety of the
delegates and the privacy of their own personal quarters. He
had, overall, seemed satisfied.
Obi-Wan put aside further thought on security. First order of
business was a long, luxurious soak in the suite's tub. Perfect
for drawing out the ache of workout-stiffened muscles and
removing the stink of sweat. As he settled back into the water
with a grateful sigh, Obi-Wan had to admit to a twinge of
satisfaction that his Master was handling the more stressful
points of negotiation and not himself. Qui-Gon's trick to track
Faithfuls back to their lords would make Obi-Wan's next session
easier, but he still had no desire to arbitrate matters that
had everyone running on high emotion.
Clean and relaxed, Obi-Wan left the tub only when the water had
cooled. A glance into the mirror wall revealed four oval
love-marks on his chest, left during the previous night's
rather energetic activities. He smiled. Qui-Gon was most
experienced. Well-seasoned. And in no possible way old.
Obi-Wan Kenobi's body was visible proof of that.
Enjoying the cool drafts across his skin, he decided to dry the
natural way. He put away his dirty clothes for later laundry,
and laid out clean ones in preparation for the beach trip. He
should arrange the meal and hire the transport now, then sit
back and anticipate the afternoon. The thought alone was enough
to rouse his interest and certain soon-to-be-involved body
parts. Hoping for a distraction, he looked around the room
until his attention focused on a chilled pitcher and glasses
set on a nearby table.
/Ahhh, ju'ishin nectar./
The servants had quickly come to realize how much the younger
Jedi representative enjoyed the mildly alcoholic beverage. Each
morning they'd made certain to leave a full, chilled carafe in
their quarters, along with two golden goblets. Obi-Wan grinned,
recalling Qui-Gon's comical expression upon first tasting the
nectar. He'd complained that the best way, indeed the only way,
to accept the overly sweet, fruity taste was to sip it from
Obi-Wan's own lips. Since then, the padawan drank the beverage
as much for personal enjoyment as from a desire to hold the
taste on his lips, ready for his Master's pleasure.
As was customary when participating in delicate negotiations,
where threats against the arbitrators were not uncommon,
Obi-Wan dropped an anti-poison tablet into his glass before
filling it with the thick lavender liquid. Goblet in hand,
Obi-Wan stepped out onto the balcony and surveyed the city, his
modesty protected from distant prying eyes by a waist-high
stone wall. His eyes moved beyond the boundaries of
civilization, to the sparkling waters of the distant ocean. He
sipped his drink and envisioned the pleasures of the afternoon.
Lost in daydreams, he was a moment slow to sense that something
was wrong. A vague shudder flowed through the Force. A
prescient wave of cold raced across his flesh.
He whirled around, but saw no one. Though no immediate threat
revealed itself, Obi-Wan's Master had taught him well. Mental
shields raised, body fluid but ready, he set down the cup and
"searched" for the wrongness. His vision misted then cleared.
Obi-Wan shook his head and queried his body. The answer both
alarmed and frightened him.
The pain was as intense as it was sudden. One moment he
suffered only from a vague dizziness. The next his body
exploded into a million microscopic pinpoints of agony.
Obi-Wan swayed, tried to catch himself on the small table, but
missed. Both he and the table toppled over. He struggled to
overcome the rising flood of pain that stole the very breath
from his lungs. Gasping, he writhed in agony, too agonized to
even cry out.
Qui-Gon. He had to warn his Master.
"I understand your position, Minister Verosri," Qui-Gon said
with a respectful bow to the tall, sun-browned statesman on his
left, "as I do that of Matron Domna," another bow to the
willowy woman on his right.
"Your arguments have merit, and I do not see why both cannot be
implemented. Romanth's position on asteroid mining should not
interfere with Urath's desire for trade routes through the
system. I am sure schedules can be implemented to insure that
both mining operations and shipping lanes do not hamper one
another."
"And how would this benefit Romanth?" Matron Domna asked.
"Or Doolinar," the portly, ancient Minister Feroi added. His
Third Faithful, a young woman named Belina, paced in agitation,
continually casting distrustful looks at the other ministers'
Faithfuls. Matron Domna's Second Faithful, a tall, dark male
named Zenon, glowered back a look hot enough to burn. "Our
sovereignty must be protected."
Qui-Gon adjusted his robe around his body. A distinct chill
hung in the air despite the bright rays of light coming through
the skylights above. "Urath has the interstellar fleet and
Republic contacts that Romanth lacks. Romanth, on the other
hand, possesses minerals and mining experience uncommon here on
Urath, yet overpopulation has left them with little in the way
of viable land. Doolinar has a small population and no shortage
of natural resources but little in the way of trade goods with
which to barter. They do, however, have great expanses of land
suitable for agriculture and tourism." He paused, knowing that
no one could dispute these facts.
"I propose a type of three-way symbiotic arrangement, " Qui-Gon
continued. "Urathi ships carry Romanthin ores to market, in
exchange for passage through Romanthin space. Doolinar provides
agricommerce to both worlds, and reaps rewards from tourism and
vacation resorts, not only from their sister planets, but
outsystem, as well. This will result in increased demands for
mining materials and interstellar transport of life forms and
commerce. All sides will benefit."
From the corner of his eye, Qui-Gon kept track of which
Faithfuls reacted at which point of his statement. The
emotion-focus seemed fairly evenly mixed between distrust and
anger. Then why was Matron Domna's First Faithful, a round,
quiet woman named Edina, staring dreamily out a nearby window?
"A possibility," Verosri ceded the point and drew Qui-Gon's
attention back to the matter at hand, "if sufficient safeguards
can be put in place to insure - "
[Master!]
Qui-Gon held up his hand to silence the Urathi minister.
Obi-Wan knew better than to interrupt delicate negotiations
without reason.
[Padawan? What - ]
[Master...danger!]
By all outer appearances, Qui-Gon was quite calm, even as his
hand settled on his lightsaber's hilt. He automatically
strengthened his shields, but the bond between them remained
open.
"Master Jinn?" Matron Domna moved as though to lay a concerned
hand on his arm. "Is something wrong?"
"A moment, Minister." Qui-Gon held up a quieting hand. When he
put his arm back down, it was well out of Domna's immediate
reach.
[What is it? What's happened? Obi-Wan!]
[Qui-Gon...Master...I...poison!]
The Jedi Master's brow furrowed with concern. "Obi-Wan. [Answer
me!]"
Unmindful of the delegates' polite demands for an immediate
explanation, echoed by the indignant curses and protests from
several of their Faithful, Qui-Gon raced from the negotiation
chamber, down halls that had never seemed so long, past
uniformed guards standing station at regular intervals along
the corridor. Behind him, guards, servants and dignitaries
shouted their startlement at the Force-sped blur left by his
rapid passage.
His concern mounted as his mindcalls went unanswered. His
lightsaber hilt rested in his hand, ready to be used.
Qui-Gon at last reached the door to their quarters. A flick of
his wrist, a sharp point of Force-energy, deactivated the
flat-shield and threw back the locking bolts. He held his
lightsaber before him, ready to activate it if any threat
presented itself. His eyes swept the room in a swift,
all-encompassing glance. Nothing appeared disturbed except for
an overturned table near the balcony doors, a lone goblet, its
contents staining the brightly colored rug and the naked,
feebly twitching form of his padawan sprawled nearby.
"No."
Qui-Gon belted his weapon and gathered Obi-Wan into his arms.
He breathed a swift prayer of thanks to find a spark of life in
his love's aqua eyes, pain-filled though they were. A hurried
examination confirmed his padawan's warning - somehow, for an
as yet unknown reason, he had been poisoned. His eyes fell on
the goblet. Qui-Gon reached for it, only to feel the man in his
arms tense and struggle.
"No...don't...touch. Outside...poison on...outside. Ah!
Master...hurts!"
Koom, head of Urathi security, pushed himself to the forefront
of the gathered crowed, and asked, "Master Jinn, what's going
on here? Is your Faithful ill?"
"Clear this room! Get everyone out!"
With a raised arm and a Force-powered shove, Qui-Gon Jinn
bumped everyone into the corridor, then quickly re-shielded the
portal. As secure as he could make them for the time being, he
gathered Obi-Wan into his arms and hurried into the adjoining
chamber. He laid his padawan on their shared bed and quickly
examined him.
Pain ravaged his young lover's face, draining away every trace
of healthy color. Muscles convulsed throughout his body. His
breaths came short and sharp, each shuddered gasp fought for
with rapidly depleting strength. His skin was ice to the touch.
"Obi-Wan, listen to me. You've been exposed to a neurotoxin. A
powerful one by the feel of it."
"A...painful one...at least."
The bedside table comm buzzed, throwing an irritant into the
charged chamber.
\\"Master Jinn,"\\ Duen, Minister Verosri's First Faithful,
roared through the connection, \\"on behalf of my lord I demand
an explanation for this atrocious breach in protocol! This
gross insult to my planet and its government will be reported
to the Senate at the first - "\\
Qui-Gon slammed his fist down on the controls, killing the
incoming comm system. At the moment he could not care less
about indignant planetary representatives or their overzealous
servants. He did not trust the local medical facilities - he
wouldn't trust anything or anyone on this Force-cursed planet
until he found the person or group that had dared attack his
padawan.
"Hold on, my love," Qui-Gon pleaded. "Obi-Wan! You must fight
it!"
"I...I will...Master, but you must...guard
y-yourself...target...t-too."
Qui-Gon cradled his apprentice close to his chest and
ruthlessly shoved away the dread that gnawed at his heart. He
gathered the Force, channeled it, guided it, commanded it.
Fight the poison. Cleanse and heal. The toxin resisted, as if
with a mind all its own. Obi-Wan's body convulsed, locked in a
rictus of agony. Sweat broke out on Qui-Gon's brow. He poured
more Force energy into the healing. Find that which does not
belong. Destroy it. Protect the life.
Try though he might, the poison continued to steal his love's
living Force, stubbornly resisting his every attempt at
cleansing. One seizure after another struck the youth's body.
His heart rate soared and grew increasingly erratic. His living
Force flickered, dimmed, flared, and faded again. Qui-Gon
refused to yield. He cast every spark of love and compassion
into the healing flow. He would not lose his padawan, his soul,
to a faceless, insidious drug.
[Love you...my Master.]
A pulse of love stuttered through their bond. Obi-Wan seized
one last time, released a ragged breath, and slumped back
against the mattress.
Chapter 3
Duen paced back and forth in front of the Jedi's door, leaving
his lord free to calmly discuss the morning's events with the
other attendees. Beside him, the anger Faithfuls for the other
lords were similarly occupied. His lord's resentment swirled
around Duen like a blistering cloud. Powerful emotions were
mirrored by all of the Faithfuls who congregated close by - how
dare he - his lord, that is - be ignored in this fashion. The
midday meal was long past, and still the Jedi remained locked
behind a closed door, unresponsive to any form of
communication.
Driven by Verosri's funneled frustration, the Faithful slammed
his fist against the closed portal. The locking mechanism
released with a sudden snick. Duen stumbled forward when
the expected resistance disappeared. Flushed with satisfaction,
he strode three steps into the chamber, determined to tell the
Jedi exactly what his lord thought of this shoddy treatment.
His anger, and that of his lord, dissipated without being
voiced. One look at the Jedi Master silenced all who entered
the room.
Qui-Gon Jinn sat in a chair near the door into the sleeping
chambers. Body slumped, the image of someone beaten and in
agony. Grief. All-ensuing. All-encompassing. Leaving a bleeding
wound visible to anyone with the slightest shred of compassion.
Radiating forth in waves that could be felt even by those with
not the slightest shred of Force-sense.
"Master Jinn?" Verosri found himself whispering, deeply moved
by the Jedi's pain and for once not willing to let his Faithful
deal with the powerful emotion.
"What has happened? Your Faithful One, is he...?"
"He is dead. Poisoned. Murdered."
Verosri's gasp blended with a dozen others. All eyes followed
the Master as he forced his body to rise. He walked, weaving on
unsteady legs, into the sleeping chambers. Verosri and the
others followed only as far as the doorway.
The young knight lay on the bed as though in sleep, a
blue-and-silver resting cloth draped across his body. Qui-Gon
sat on the bed beside the still form. With aching tenderness he
stroked the padawan braid that lay across the still chest.
"We grieve with you, Master Jinn," Matron Domna crooned. With
misty eyes, she looked toward Edina, standing patiently at her
side. "To lose one of your Faithful is the greatest pain one
can know."
Verosri nodded, and offered loving smiles to Duen and Keppis,
his own First and Second. "We can only imagine how it must be
for you, a Jedi Master, to lose one so dear to you."
"I...appreciate your words, Matron Domna," Qui-Gon said, though
his eyes never left the unmoving form beside him. "And yours,
as well, Minister Verosri. Likewise do I accept your
sympathies. But...I fear that I am...overcome...at the moment."
"We understand, Master Jinn," Minister Feroi motioned for his
Faithful to withdraw. "We will leave you to grieve in solitude.
Po-Riya give you comfort."
Domna stepped forward to rest a gentle hand on his shoulder.
"My First is skilled with medicinals. Should you need anything,
you have but to ask."
Qui-Gon stroked the smooth cheek of his padawan, then rose and
followed the delegates into the common room. Ministers, their
Faithful, uniformed guards and servants moved silently out of
the Jedi's quarters. Last into the corridor, Domna turned back
to close the door. Her final sight of Qui-Gon Jinn was of the
Jedi Master sinking to his knees, his back cast in shadow by
the sunlight that streamed through the terrace doors, his head
bowed in misery.
Chapter 4
The instant the door closed behind the last local, Qui-Gon rose
from his kneeling position. His movements fluid, he righted the
overturned table, careful not to touch the toxin-coated cup,
and reactivated the flat-shield. On silent feet, he strode back
into the sleeping chamber.
"They are gone."
A deep sigh of relief arose from his bed-ridden padawan.
Obi-Wan shifted and moaned, his entire body a solid mass of
aches, pains and pockets of fever. Qui-Gon smiled. Distressing
though the sounds might be, they were beautiful music to his
ears.
"Nothing is harder," Obi-Wan sighed, "than playing dead while
every molecule of your body hurts!"
Qui-Gon knelt beside the bed and rested his hand on Obi-Wan's
bare shoulder. "Would you be more comfortable on your side?"
"I...think so, yes."
With infinite gentleness, Qui-Gon helped his lover turn onto
his left side. He uncoiled the long padawan braid from around
Obi-Wan's throat then tucked a mountain of covers around the
younger man's naked, shivering body.
"That was far too close," Qui-Gon sighed, taking a moment to
bow his head in thanks.
"You saved my life, Master. Again. Thank you."
"It's no more than you have done for me countless times over
the years," Qui-Gon said.
Obi-Wan bit back a groan and shifted, searching for a less
painful position.
"We've bought ourselves some time," Qui-Gon said, "though how
much I cannot say for certain."
"I don't understand what happened," Obi-Wan sighed. "It just
doesn't make any sense. Is the poisoner's grievance
professional or personal? Against us both, or only one, and if
so, which? Why attack us at all? And why choose poison as a
weapon? Why strike today, when we have been here for weeks!"
"As to motive, reasoning or timing, I cannot even speculate at
this point, but I think we can safely say that you, my
trouble-magnet of a padawan, were the intended target."
"How so, Master?"
"I was clearly scheduled to handle negotiations today.
Likewise, it is common knowledge that you, and not I, prefer
ju'ishin nectar. I only enjoy it in a more...intimate
container."
He smiled down on his lover and was rewarded with a wan,
understanding grin.
"Could it have anything to do with the negotiations?" Obi-Wan
asked, even though he truly expected no answer from his Master.
"I confess that I do not see how. The parts for which I served
as mediator were too minor to draw an assassin's attention,
surely. Trade concessions, guild points of note, that type of
thing."
"Any jealous, jilted or insulted women..." Qui-Gon grinned, "or
men?"
"One alone, and that only if you count yourself in the number."
Qui-Gon stroked his hand in soothing circles above the
blanket-draped back, trying to ease his pain with a gentle
Force massage. New puzzle lines appeared on the younger Jedi's
forehead. "I have a new thought, Master. How do we even know
for certain we're the intended targets? Maybe that pitcher was
delivered here by mistake."
"That is a possibility, yes," Qui-Gon admitted, "but I am going
to assume otherwise, at least for the time being. You must stay
here, out of sight. Our poisoner, whoever he is and whatever
his motive, believes he has succeeded. I do not want to draw
attention back to you until you are strong enough to protect
yourself. I'll come up with a story that will keep servants and
guards out of these chambers - there are some advantages to the
Jedi mystique, after all - and the flat-shield will remain in
place. Short of using a hover bike to reach the balcony
windows, there is no way to either climb up or rappel down that
face of the building. If anything should happen while I'm away,
you will have adequate warning, enough to call me if you need
me."
Worry lines formed between Obi-Wan's eyebrows. "And where will
you be?"
"Someone wants you dead. Our brief performance just now should
convince him that he has succeeded. He will go forward with
whatever designs or plans required your removal. I intend to
watch for that move and track it back to its source."
Qui-Gon reached out and brushed light fingertips across his
padawan's cheek. His voice took on a teasing lilt. "I have
grown rather fond of you, Padawan Kenobi, and I do not care to
go to the expense and time necessary to train another, as
pleasant a prospect as that might be."
Obi-Wan tried to laugh but was instead caught by the clench of
abused muscles that left him gasping and weak.
"Rest, my own," Qui-Gon leaned over and kissed Obi-Wan's
temple, grateful once again for the living warmth that pulsed
beneath his touch. "You must heal, and I must plan."
The Jedi Master slid onto the bed beside his apprentice, and
took the shivering, sick young man into his arms.
Chapter 5
Qui-Gon Jinn stepped through the lichen-draped archway and
entered the garden where, earlier that day, he'd taken such
sensuous pleasure in watching his padawan. He pulled his brown
cloak tighter around his body, tucked his hands into the folds
of its full sleeves, and pondered the events of the day.
The garden looked drastically different. The alteration had
nothing to do with the lateness of the hour or the soft light
of Urath's three moons that bathed the area in silver
streamers. It wasn't the fine sheen of mist that clung to the
ground, or the natural perfumes of night-blooming flora. A Jedi
was attuned to the Force; upon arriving at a place, he
instinctively mapped its innermost feel . That impression
remained, no matter the time, weather, or season.
No, the difference was subtle, an alteration of perception
rather than environment. By day, carefree and relaxed, the
garden had been a tranquil oasis of color and life that
encouraged romantic thoughts and fantasies. To the eye, nothing
had changed that might alter that impression; if anything,
moonlight and mist should have amplified the effect. To explain
the shift, he had only to recall those few frenzied moments
when Obi-Wan's very existence teetered on the edge.
Qui-Gon closed his eyes and sought the calm center within
himself where he could soothe away the tendrils of fear and
dread that still clung to his heart. His padawan lived. Qui-Gon
had no reason to grieve. Alerted to the danger, they would
avoid further assaults, whether they be covert or overt. They
would find the origin of the attack and end the threat.
His love lived.
Qui-Gon recalled his padawan's unanswered questions - who
desired his death? Why him, why here, and why now? Somewhere
close were persons as yet unknown who had the answers; he just
had to find them. Sensing another presence in the garden,
Qui-Gon paused in the walkway, unmindful of the way the moons'
light played across his strong face and danced along the silver
strands of his hair. Or the teasing way the gentle breeze
played with his robes, revealing then concealing the tall,
muscled form beneath. Silent and still, he seemed more a statue
chiseled from moonbeams and dreams than a flesh-and-blood man.
He saw her there, seated at the edge of an ornamental pond, to
all appearances lost in dreaming. Matron Domna studied the
water, fingers drawing idle ripple patterns on its surface. As
though she at last sensed his presence, Domna looked up and
caught her breath - out of surprise at his sudden appearance,
Qui-Gon assumed, though that did not explain the rush of color
that stained her pale skin from hairline to shoulders.
The Minister from Romanth stood, her silken robes shimmering a
rich green and gold in the moonlight. Qui-Gon pictured her as
an elemental part of the garden landscape. She was still a
beautiful woman, he was male enough to admit that, of an age
with himself, willowy of form and borne of a natural grace. At
one time, before discovering his soul-love - and without the
obligations of his position as arbitrator - he might have
enjoyed spending time with Domna.
"Master Qui-Gon," Domna said in greeting. She stepped forward
and laid a hand on his folded arms. "Please accept my sincerest
sympathies on your loss."
"I thank you, Minister." Qui-Gon bowed his head in thanks, even
as he wished that her mind shield was not so powerful, that he
could skim her surface thoughts for any hint of deception or
guilt. Studying her expression carefully, he found only genuine
concern. "It was so sudden, so...unexpected."
"Come. Sit." She urged him toward the nearest bench.
Qui-Gon did not resist, nor did he shift away when Domna seated
herself close enough to brush their knees together. Mindful of
possible danger, the Jedi Master scanned the area with every
sense, physical and Force. A ripple pinpointed another person
close by, on the far side of the hedgerow that ran behind the
bench upon which they sat. One of Domna's ever-Faithful
servants? Another insomniac seeking solace in the garden? An
assassin or spy?
Deciding to test the situation, Qui-Gon asked as if making idle
conversation, "I see no sign of your Faithful. Have you
dismissed them for the night?"
"Yes. They served me well during this most trying of days. I
felt no need to ask that they share my sleeplessness, as well."
"Is that wise, Matron?" Qui-Gon asked. "We know there is at
least one person here who condones murder. The body of my
padawan lies in cleansing solitude in our rooms, awaiting the
pyre that will release his essence into the Force. Surely it is
not wise to be wandering secluded garden paths without some
form of escort."
"You are here with me," Domna said. "And I am here with you. We
shall protect each other."
Qui-Gon looked at the hand she'd laid across his upper thigh.
An innocent gesture of comfort, possibly, though he sincerely
doubted it. The suggestion was there, as it had been in her
body language and bearing since first being introduced to the
Jedi. He could be wrong.
"I could...comfort you...if you like."
Or not.
Her fingers rubbed the inside seam of his trousers,
suggestively close to body parts that, though she did not know
it, belonged to someone else. Qui-Gon sighed and fought the
urge to knock her hand away. He couldn't afford to alienate
anyone, even a lustful planetary minister, until he'd found the
persons responsible for Obi-Wan's poisoning, and until he'd
completed the negotiations. He patted her hand, supposedly in
thanks. In truth, he stilled her roving digits before they
sought out things they had no right touching.
"Again, Matron Domna, my thanks for you concern. The bond
between a Jedi Master and his padawan learner runs very deep.
The break was so sudden, and with no time in which to prepare
myself...I fear the wound is such that I cannot accept your
offer at this time, tempting though it may be. Please accept my
apologies if this causes any undue offense or ill feeling."
Domna nodded and withdrew her hand with a slowness that made it
a most definite caress. "I understand, Qui-Gon Jinn. No offense
is taken or perceived. I only ask that you remember my offer
should you change your mind."
"I most certainly will, Matron Domna."
"I do understand the pain you are feeling," she said. Her voice
fluttered with emotion. "I recall the day, only one short year
ago, when my First Faithful, my confusion focus, died in a
street riot. Kima, my current confusion/fear focus and Third
Faithful, is wonderful. I love her dearly; we work quite well
together. But Rese had been with me for over 20 years. Losing
him was...devastating. And as you say, the unexpectedness of
it, the violence...they are crippling, aren't they?"
Qui-Gon nodded. "That they are, Matron."
Domna nodded. "I shall go, then, and intrude no further into
your mourning seclusion."
Qui-Gon sat there for a full hour beyond Domna's departure,
meditating and planning his strategy. The faceless person
behind the hedge row had likewise disappeared. He suspected the
watcher was one of Domna's Faithful, zealously protecting his
or her lord.
Meditation had eased, if not entirely erased, the disquiet in
his soul. At regular intervals, he "felt" through the bond.
Obi-Wan slept fitfully, kept from a full, deep, healing sleep
by remnants of pain left in his muscles by the rigid spasms. He
sensed no one close enough to their quarters to pose any threat
to his sleeping apprentice, no hint of mechanical or droid
surveillance. Still, he didn't want to stay away too long for
fear something would happen.
Qui-Gon rose from the bench and walked down the pathway, bound
for their quarters. Another check showed his apprentice very
close to waking. Qui-Gon wanted to be at his side when he did
so, to assure him that they were both still relatively safe. He
drew his attention back to his immediate surroundings. His
"near-sense" pinpointed the four stealthy figures in the bushes
lining the walkway, and the fifth who crouched atop the lichen
arch, ready to either drop a net or pounce on him as he walked
under.
The Jedi Master continued forward. No hint of alertness or
concern altered his stance or speed, yet still he knew every
movement made by his stalkers. Rather than wait for their first
move, Qui-Gon reached behind the nearest bush, caught the
hiding figure by the scruff of the neck, and yanked him into
the open. A fog of rancid body odor and alcohol fumes tickled
his nose and made him want to sneeze. A single fist to his jaw
removed the man from any further consideration.
Two figures closed in from his left, a third on his right.
Qui-Gon ducked beneath their outstretched arms. Two kicks and
another punch later, they finally realized where he'd
disappeared to and resumed their attack. A capture-net dropped
over his head. Lead weights dragged at his head and arms and
hampered his movements. Three moonlit forms closed in, only to
leap back with shouts of surprise and fear. A bright green beam
appeared, almost as if drawn from their victim's heart. It
sliced through the net as though it were made of paper. An arm,
draped in a dark brown, full sleeve, caught the net's casting
rope, wrapped it twice around a thick wrist, and pulled.
The attacker perched on top of the arch hit the ground and
didn't get up again. Two men flew through the air, landing
against the ground with a breath-jarring whumps. A last bounced
off the trunk of a nearby tree and collapsed with a groan.
Qui-Gon filled his lungs with air and released it, slowly,
through his nostrils. He thumbed off his lightsaber and studied
the groaning figures scattered along the no longer quite so
pristine garden path. He chose the net-caster, whom he
suspected to be the leader of the group.
"Why did you attack me, try to kidnap me? Who hired you?"
The man shook his head to rid it of dizziness and instantly
wished he hadn't. "No one...no one told us...you were Jedi.
Wouldn't have...if we'd aknown."
"Who hired you, and why? I will have answers, willing or no."
"I dunno. Someone...came to the tavern, a few minutes ago. He
offered up a thousand cred chips if we'd capture the man
walkin' in the garden and put him in a safe place. He skipped
the locks on the gates for us."
Which meant it was someone from within the delegation, or a
member of the building's staff. Too many suspects to question
individually.
"How was he dressed? Did he speak with any noticeable accent? I
need details."
"He - he wore a cloak, never saw his face. His voice was jaked
with some kinda box. But...his shoes...red velvet, they were.
With gold trim and little studs ac - across the arches. Pretty
things...thought to take 'em but he had a grip on a blaster,
like queen ladies carry that can blow a good-sized hole in a
man."
"How were you to receive payment if you had no way of
contacting your employer?"
"We got half pay...the rest when he came to get you. It seemed
like easy money."
"Be warned in future: easy money usually isn't."
Qui-Gon considered the matter carefully. Guided by
Force-inspired instincts, he implanted his plan into the
would-be kidnapper's mind. Years of chemical and alcohol abuse
had destroyed what little shielding the would-be kidnapper
might once have possessed. Qui-Gon found it very easy to slip
through his weak protections and influence his thoughts.
"You came to the garden but found no one. If anyone asks about
your bruises, you will explain them away as the result of a
street fight. When you meet your employer again, you will say
that, while you missed the man tonight, you overheard a servant
state that he would be there again tomorrow night after the
funeral pyre, to meditate and grieve in private. You plan to go
back and capture him then."
He implanted similar thoughts into the other men's minds, then
left them to gather themselves up and leave the garden.
Chapter 6
"And just where do you think you are going?" Qui-Gon asked as
he reset the flat-shield and turned towards the bedroom door.
Obi-Wan leaned against the jam, his clothing half-on, his
lightsaber hilt gripped tightly in his hand. Too weak to even
stand straight, he still struggled to move forward.
"Must...help you...danger."
The Master shook his head and stepped forward. He took
Obi-Wan's shoulders in his hands and held him steady.
"There is no danger, Obi-Wan."
"But...I felt...."
"There was a fight, yes, but hardly any danger."
He gently uncoiled his padawan's fingers from around the saber
hilt and steered him back to bed.
"Lie down and I will tell you everything. Under the covers.
There. Comfortable?"
"I awoke. The room was empty. I felt you in battle."
Qui-Gon gathered energy and channeled it into Obi-Wan,
replacing lost strength and cleaning out the last small pockets
of fever. He did what he could to ease his pain, distracting
him with touch as well as speech.
"Our mysterious adversary appears to have made his first move,"
Qui-Gon reported, "though it was one I freely admit I never
expected. He hired five tavern toughs to kidnap me and hold me
in a secure location until he could come for me."
"But why? Why kill me, kidnap you? My head spins with ideas and
theories yet none of them fit the entire picture. We don't have
any guarantee that the two incidents are even related."
"Let's not confuse the issue any more than it already is,"
Qui-Gon cautioned. "Two major crimes so closely timed with no
connection would stretch the bounds of coincidence, I think."
"But we can't know for sure until we find out who is behind
it."
"I've laid the first piece of bait to trap our mysterious
mastermind, and it won't be long until I lay the second,"
Qui-Gon said. "I only hope one or the other serves to smoke him
out of hiding."
Qui-Gon stood at the head of the negotiating table, his hands
lightly resting on the back of his own seat. Before him, the
three Ministers had already taken their places. Their Faithful
sat in three distinct groups behind their chosen lord. Seven
guards stood station around the room.
"The purification rituals are completed," he said, "and I have
mourned the sun around, as is required by the Jedi Code. Only
one step remains - fire to release my padawan's essence into
the Force."
"Arrangements are already underway, Master Jinn," Verosri said.
"Please inform Koom if there are any special items or materials
that you will require. With your permission, we will delay
resumption of the talks until day after tomorrow."
/Ahhh, just the kind of opening I was hoping for./
"I fear I cannot continue the negotiations, Minister Verosri. I
have informed both the Senate and the Jedi Council of this, and
have requested another Knight to complete the talks between
your three worlds."
"But...we are so very close to an agreement," Verosri said. "To
change arbiters at this point could carry the talks all the way
back to the beginning."
"Again, I apologize. The death of my padawan has made it
impossible for me to maintain an objective viewpoint. I am
unable to perform the task for which I came." Qui-Gon met the
three ministers' stares and bowed to each.
"Forgive me, but I will be leaving tomorrow, at first light."
Qui-Gon turned and left the room, unfazed by the riot of noise
that burst out behind him. The second piece of bait was now in
place. It only remained for their mysterious assassin to take
it.
Chapter 7
Obi-Wan stood in deepest shadows behind Qui-Gon in the
musician's alcove high above the Grand Chamber. In the oval
room below, a flower-bedecked pyre had been set up atop a wide
heatstone base. A safety ring, in the form of a slender velvet
rope, cordoned off the floor around it. The skylight in the
great dome had been removed, leaving them with an unobstructed
view of the late afternoon sky.
"Are you sure about this, Master?"
"As sure as I can be, given what little information we have. If
our bait has worked, our villain will be desperate. If he wants
me, he'll have to take me tonight, in the garden."
Qui-Gon sighed and looked away, disturbed by the false pyre set
out below them. They had come so close to the real thing. "Are
you positive you're up to this?"
Obi-Wan met his Master's concerned gaze with a stubborn glare.
"I will not let you face danger alone, Master."
Qui-Gon studied his companion carefully, seeking any sign of
hesitancy or weakness. Though not completely recovered from his
near brush with death, the healing trance had removed much of
the physical debilitation left in its wake. Given the element
of surprise his sudden appearance would cause, he should be
able to handle anything to come his way. Qui-Gon meant to deal
with anything that might possibly tax the younger Jedi's
strength.
"One thing yet puzzles me, Master."
"And what one thing is that?"
"Why didn't you let the men take you last night? On the surface
it seemed a perfect opportunity to learn the identity of our
enemy."
"How strong were you last night, Obi-Wan?"
Obi-Wan frowned. "Master?"
"How strong were you? Were you recovered enough to fight off an
attack? To move with stealth through a strange city in search
for me? To even leave your bed? That is why I did not take last
night's opportunity. In order for it to work, I need you strong
enough to come to my aid should something go wrong." The fact
that he would not, could not, leave his love unprotected was
accepted but not voiced aloud.
His Master trusted him this much? Obi-Wan smiled.
Qui-Gon cleared his throat and turned his attention back to the
pyre below. "The wooden dummy is in place, as are the raw
animal skins for a realistic scent and a pocket holo-mask for
the head. The cloak and hood should hide the fact that you are
not physically present, but with the breeze coming through that
opening," he pointed toward the skylight, "I don't want to take
any chances."
"And if the fire or heat should short out the theatrical
projector before the flames obscure the facial features?"
"Then we will have some serious explaining to do, won't we?"
The first visitors appeared below, entering the chamber through
a set of double doors on the western wall.
"You'd better find your place in the garden," Qui-Gon said. "As
soon as the ceremony is over, I will excuse myself. If anyone
asks, I will say I need a final evening of solitary grief and
contemplation before I seek my bed. I will come straight to the
garden. If all goes well, you'll be able to follow me.
Together, we will find the mind behind this mystery."
Obi-Wan laid a hand on Qui-Gon's back, between his shoulders.
"Be careful, Master. I could no more stand to see you on one of
those things," he jerked his head toward the pyre, "than you
could to see me there. Be mindful of that, and take no foolish
risks."
"You, counsel me, on caution? Are you sure that
toxin did nothing to your head?"
"Who better to caution against recklessness than one who is
himself reckless?"
"Away, puppy, and find your place. I will be along shortly."
The Jedi Master turned his eyes back to the gathering. Even as
Obi-Wan turned to leave, Qui-Gon caught his shoulder and pulled
him back.
"Master?"
"I thought I saw - yes, there!"
Obi-Wan followed his Master's pointing finger.
"Matron Domna?"
"No, beside her. Her First Faithful. The shoes, just as the man
last night described."
"Do you believe she acted on the Matron's orders? I know Domna
of Romanth is determined to get you into her bed, but
kidnapping a Jedi Knight, a Jedi Master, in the middle
of delicate negotiations?"
"It would explain a great many things. Lust and desire are
powerful motivators. To get to me, first you must be removed.
During my moment of grief, she would slip in and console me."
"And...did she...console you, Master?"
Qui-Gon struggled to hide a smile at his lover's ill disguised
jealousy. "No, Padawan Kenobi, she did not. But not for lack of
trying. Still, I did not feel much of an urgency to her
advances."
"Consider, Master, the function of the Faithfuls. To funnel off
excess emotions. And during my 'my final performance,' Matron
Domna mentioned Edina's skill in medicinals. She could very
well have the knowledge necessary to create the neurotoxin that
almost killed me."
"True. And it would explain Edina's odd behavior in the
negotiations room even as you were being poisoned. There is at
least one piece of the puzzle still missing. Hopefully, by this
time tomorrow, we will be able to see the entire picture."
Chapter 8
Qui-Gon timed his entrance most carefully. The westering sun
flowed through the rooftop opening, casting the pyre in
blinding, bright light and deep shadow. The dignitaries in
attendance were gathered, speaking in low murmurs amongst
themselves. He stepped into the room, his dark brown robes
billowing around him. His form radiated a dignified strength
and purpose. He looked neither left nor right, but strode
forward until he stood at the base of the heatstone. The Master
sank to one knee, both hands braced atop the other, back
straight.
Behind him, the watchers had fallen silent. Certain at last
that he had everyone's attention, Qui-Gon bowed his head in
homage, then rose and withdrew a tar-soaked torch from a nearby
stand. He dipped the flammable end into the fire, then raised
the burning brand, as if in tribute.
"Be one with the Force, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and know that you are a
Full Knight of the Jedi, today and forever."
The flames caught quickly on the pre-soaked tinder. Within
moments, they spread all around the rectangular pyre. Master
Qui-Gon fought down repeated shivers. He had to constantly
remind himself that this was not his lover's body being
consumed. A gentle breeze fluttered the hood to one side.
Before Qui-Gon could use a subtle finger of Force energy to
nudge it back in place, a stronger gust rushed in and removed
the hood completely. Any attempt to put it back would be noted
as unnatural. Thank the Force for the holo-projector. To be on
the safe side, however, he Force-nudged the flames to greater
heights on the forward end of the pyre. The holo-projector
flickered. Within seconds it would stop working.
The fire would require only a few minutes more to completely
obliterate the facial features of the dummy. He couldn't
implant the images without breeching the ministers'
mind-shields; they would instantly sense the intrusion. How to
buy time, to keep the attendees from realizing the hoax?
Qui-Gon took a deep breath...and sang.
"Gone is my spirit,
Gone is my love.
Gone is my last hope,
Flown away.
Gone where I can see you no more,
Leaving me lonely, aching, cold.
Yet still I feel you
Deep in my heart,
And taste your kisses
So tender and sweet.
Yet do you travel
Through wondrous climes
Filled with love and smiles -
A lifetime of dreams.
Dreams are all that is left to me
Now that you are gone.
Taken, cruelly snatched from me,
Never to love you more.
Gone is my spirit,
Gone is my love.
Gone is my last hope,
Flown away.
Gone where I can see you no more,
Leaving me lonely, aching, cold."
By the time he finished the dirge on a grieving, sorrowful
note, smoke and flames had obliterated any trace of the model's
face. Qui-Gon bowed his head. As a final distraction, he wove
the thick tendrils of smoke into a vaguely humanoid form, arms
rising, reaching toward the heavens. The effect lasted a few
moments then dissipated skyward.
One by one, the silent watchers slipped into the gloaming,
until only Qui-Gon remained beside the pyre. He turned and
walked towards the garden exit. Obi-Wan would be in position by
now. If all went well, they would have the answer to all their
questions within a few hours.
The dart pierced the back of his leg, just above the knee.
Qui-Gon stumbled and fell. Survival instinct overpowered his
conscious thoughts, overrode their own capture plans. He fought
the drug, rallied all his strength of Force and will to
counteract it's effects. To no avail. Qui-Gon Jinn, Jedi
Master, pitched forward onto his face, unconscious before he
hit the tiles.
Chapter 9
Obi-Wan searched for his Master's thoughts until the pain in
his head grew too strong and disrupted his concentration. For
Qui-Gon not to answer, he must be unconscious or...no, he
refused to even consider that grim option. He would know if his
Master had died. He would know.
What had gone wrong? Had their enemy suspected a trap? How had
they managed to slip him out of the Grand Chamber without
anyone noticing? Dozens of guests, soldiers, and Chamber
attendees, and no one saw a thing. He had but one clue: a
certain pair of red velvet slippers, gold braided, with a
pattern of stones across the arch.
Night had settled over the Urathi Negotiation Consulate. No
alarm had been raised, since no one except Obi-Wan knew of his
Master's abduction. No additional security had been posted, no
guards instructed to be extra-alert. Obi-Wan slipped past them
all, evading humanoid, droid and mechanical surveillance until
he stood in the corridor leading to Matron Domna's personal
wing. From working with Qui-Gon on security, he knew which
suite accommodated the Faithful and which housed the Matron
herself. The Faithfuls' suite of rooms were connected by a
common antechamber.
Obi-Wan found each of the five rooms empty. Conducting a quick
search of each wardrobe, he located the shoes quickly enough.
The gun took slightly longer to find, discovered in the same
room as the shoes, hidden in a security box attached to the
underside the bed.
A Force-check of the Matron's room revealed only two people
inside. Hopefully, one would be the minister's First Faithful.
He stepped through the door, and came face-to-face with Edina.
"Po-Riya defend!" The First Faithful threw her arms over her
head and cringed in terror. "A spirit!"
"Where is my Master? Where is Qui-Gon Jinn?"
"What is going on here? Edina, what is all the noise?" Matron
Domna appeared through a connecting doorway; her eyes grew
round at sight of him in the foyer.
"The person responsible for poisoning me wore these shoes." He
threw them to the floor. Edina gave a sharp bark of fright;
both women leaped back as though escaping a venomous reptile.
"And carried this."
He held the small projectile weapon up for their inspection
before he laid it on a nearby sideboard. "That same person
ordered the abduction of my Master. I will have his location
before I leave this room."
Time. He was running out of time. If he meant to find his
Master, he would have to resort to drastic measures. With
deliberate slowness, he picked up each shoe and laid it neatly
beside the gun. Before either woman suspected his purpose, he
leaped forward, caught Edina by the arm and slammed her against
the wall.
"The shoes are yours. I saw you wearing them at the ceremony
tonight. You will tell me where you've hidden my Master, or by
the Force, you will regret your silence."
"But...I am innocent. I know nothing of this!"
Matron Domna stepped forward to intervene. "Jedi Kenobi, you
cannot - "
A crackling blue beam appeared to block her way and shock her
into silence. Edina sobbed and cringed, kept from falling by
Obi-Wan's bruising grip on her arm.
"Tell me!"
"But I do not know where he is! Po-Riya strike me dead if I
lie! I do not know!"
Obi-Wan stood there, light saber poised before Edina's
terrified eyes. The hissing, blue blade cast macabre shadows
across her bloodless face. Never had the Dark Side beckoned him
so seductively. His Master's voice flowed through his mind in a
lesson given long ago.
/The boundary between threat and promise is very thin, Obi-Wan,
and as fragile as a puff of smoke. Do not summon the former
unless you are willing to accept responsibility for the
latter./
To make a threat, one must be prepared to carry it through to
the end. Was his willing to do so? To take responsibility for
his current actions?
A flick of a switch - the blue blade disappeared. The
deactivated saber slipped from numbed fingers and sank into the
plush green rug. Obi-Wan fell to his knees before Edina, bowing
low enough for the fibers to tickle his forehead. A hoarse sob
escaped his throat.
"Forgive me."
Edina backed along the wall until she moved beyond his
immediate reach, then dashed to safety behind her Matron. Domna
hesitated an eternal moment, then moved a single step closer.
"Explain yourself to me, Jedi. Help me to understand the cause
of your 'resurrection' and the basis for your wild accusations
against Edina. Your words will decide if forgiveness will be
forthcoming."
Obi-Wan recited the entire tale, up to and including Qui-Gon's
description of the person who hired his attackers. He pointed
to the damning evidence laid out on the sideboard. "The shoes.
The gun. Your interest in my Master. Your knowledge of his
presence in the garden just before he was attacked. Edina's
skill with medicinals made her suspect in regards to the
neurotoxins which almost killed me. All of these point to you,
Matron Domna," Obi-Wan finished, "and to your loyal First
Faithful."
Domna settled into a nearby chair. Her slender body trembled as
though unable to hold her upright. "Yes, I can see how you
arrived at your suspicions. I had not known that my interest in
Master Qui-Gon was quite so obvious." She closed her eyes and
swayed back against the headrest. "What have I done? Sweet
Po-Riya, what have I done?"
Edina hovered over her, distressed. "Matron!"
"Matron Domna, I beg of you," Obi-Wan said. He rose and came to
kneel before her. "If you have any knowledge that would help me
find my Master, tell me."
"Would that I did, young Jedi. My heart tells me I am somehow
involved in this tragedy. That it in some way revolves around
me. But I have no knowledge that could possibly help you. If I
did, I would certainly share it without reservation."
"The knowledge is there," Obi-Wan insisted. "We must find a way
to bring it to the light."
"Then we should approach it as we would a negotiation. One
point at a time."
Obi-Wan stood and moved to the sideboard. He stared down at the
shoes and gun. "The shoes. If your First Faithful did not wear
them that night, who did?"
"My Faithfuls share a suite of rooms across the hall," Domna
said. "Anyone would have access to their wardrobe. It would be
the same with all of the Faithfuls."
Edina, hands wringing her full skirt, added, "The rooms are
never locked until all of us retire for the night. Anyone might
have entered the rooms and borrowed the shoes."
"And the gun?"
Both Domna and Edina shook their heads.
"That I do not recognize," the Matron said. "It is small,
light-weight, and easily concealed inside layers of clothing,
yet streamlined to permit rapid withdrawal during an emergency.
It is the type of weapon most often possessed by female
bodyguards or female Faithfuls."
"Though I have heard of occasions," Edina reported, "when males
have carried such a weapon."
"I am confused beyond measure," Domna said. "How would
poisoning you, kidnapping your Master, and framing my First
Faithful possibly help either Verosri or Feroi gain concessions
in the negotiations?"
"It would not, and therein, Matron Domna, lies the truth behind
this mystery. My Master believes it to be personal, not
political. So we must determine who amongst all possible
suspects has the most to gain."
Domna rose and slowly paced, her hands rubbing together. "Cause
and effect. You, Jedi Kenobi, are dead. Poisoned. Your Master
is stricken with grief, off-balance. Unable to prevent himself
from being captured and detained, and most probably taken
off-planet before a thorough search could be organized. And
you, his apprentice, would not be around to organize that
search or to use your mysterious Jedi powers to find him."
Obi-Wan took over the thread of reasoning. "Negotiations would
be suspended until such time as another Jedi negotiator
arrives. The talks, though rife with suspicion, would then go
forward until an agreement is reached."
"But how do I come into this?" Edina asked.
"My death and my Master's disappearance would raise a hue and
cry within the Order. An investigation would be launched. The
fact that Qui-Gon Jinn apprenticed under Master Yoda would
guarantee Council interest in his fate. The tavern trash who
attacked him in the garden would eventually be found and
questioned. Sooner or later, the finger of suspicion would
point to Edina."
"Thus diverting suspicion from the real culprit." Domna paused
her pacing next to the refresher bar. She poured herself a
generous amount of amber kmati wine. Obi-Wan declined her offer
of a drink.
"A fiendish plan. And one that might have succeeded, had you
not survived, Jedi Kenobi."
"I do not believe the plan stops there, Matron Domna."
She paused mid-sip. "Why so?"
"We still have not found a single person who would gain from
all these events. Diverting suspicion is all well and good, but
there must be something more, some other tangible benefit. Why
point toward Edina? Why not to any of the other Faithful?"
A tickle of intuition, possibly Force-guided, led him to ask,
"How are the Faithful promoted to their positions? Say that
Edina is accused of this crime. Who would benefit? Is there a
protege or replacement who would advance into her position?"
"No. Zenon would then become First."
Obi-Wan frowned. "But wouldn't you replace them according to
their number? A First anger focus replaced by the same?"
Domna shook her head and said, "The Faithfuls advance according
to their seniority in my service. As I told Master Qui-Gon last
night in the garden, my First Faithful, Rese, died last year in
a riot. Edina then became First, Zenon Second, and Geona Third.
After some months of testing, Kima assumed the confusion/fear
focus and become my Fourth. Geona retired, thus moving Kima to
Third, and allowing Joon to become my light focus. Were Edina
to leave my service for any reason, Zenon would become First,
and so on."
"Then Zenon, Kima or Joon would have the most to gain by
Edina's removal. If we assume for a moment that Rese's death
was not entirely an accident, Zenon is the only one of your
Faithful who would benefit from every incident."
"Sweet Po-Riya. Please do not let this be true. Never in all
the known histories of our three worlds has a Faithful ever
betrayed their position for selfish gain. In a misguided
attempt to serve their lord, perhaps, but never for personal
gain!"
Obi-Wan bent over and wrapped his fingers around the metal tube
of his light saber. His palm tingled, chilled by the touch of
metal. When he spoke, his voice was far, far colder.
"Where is Zenon?"
Chapter 10
Obi-Wan Kenobi crouched in the deepest shadows of the dingy
alley. He waited, dark cloak pulled close around him, hood
drawn forward to hide his face, invisible to anyone who might
look his way. Dawn was approaching, but for the moment,
darkness was his ally. A three story building rose out of the
trash and filth halfway down the block. The tumbling structure
cut in half what little moonlight managed to penetrate into the
Urathi slum. Qui-Gon was there, on the topmost floor. He could
feel it.
Finding Zenon had been almost absurdly simple. Matron Domna had
contacted him on his personal receiver, supposedly to confirm a
meeting prior to the next morning's talks with Verosri and
Feroi. Obi-Wan had tracked the signal. Having found the
traitorous Faithful nursing his drink in a bar, the Jedi had
but to wait and follow Zenon when he went to pay off his hired
help.
Convinced that he'd at last found his Master, the young Jedi
left his watch post and moved forward. His toe bumped something
in the greasy sludge of the alley floor. A flash of stray light
off polished metal caught his eye. Qui-Gon's light saber. Final
proof that his instincts were right. He clipped his Master's
weapon to his sash and eased forward again.
A wet, hacky cough and the slam of an inside door drove him
back into the shadows. The man emerged from the building
through the same side door Obi-Wan intended to use. The
newcomer cursed as a dark apparition flowed out of the darkest
night.
Unwilling to risk a noisy fight until certain of his Master's
exact whereabouts, Obi-Wan waved his hand and influenced the
man's thoughts, saying, "You will go straight to the nearest
guard station." The man murmured the instructions back to him.
Obi-Wan waved his hand once more. "You will tell them
everything you know about the Jedi Master's kidnapping. You
will lead them back here."
Under the Force's influence, the man stumbled down the alley
and disappeared around the corner. Obi-Wan palmed his weapon
but did not activate it as he slipped through the door and
entered the tumble-down structure. The second man, encountered
in a narrow stairwell, received the same instructions.
Hearing voices, Obi-Wan slowed his approach and crouched
outside a half-rotted door. He eased the portal open, flinching
at the grind of unoiled, rusty hinges. The sound, though it
seemed unnaturally loud, went unnoticed by the men arguing in
the room beyond.
Obi-Wan looked into the room. A hooded, masked figure in an
expensive cape stood in the center of the room, arguing with
three ruffians. The man he took to be Zenon did not appear to
be armed, but the other three definitely carried blasters and
at least two knives. He suspected they all carried hidden
weapons, as well; their kind usually did. Qui-Gon lay against
the far wall, face-down in a pile of scrap cloth and rotten
bedding, blindfolded and bound hand and foot.
[Master? Can you hear me?]
[I thought you might arrive soon, even if things didn't go
entirely according to our plan.]
Despite his certainty that Qui-Gon lived, hearing the
confirmation of his mental voice along their bond left the
younger Jedi momentarily weak with relief.
[That it did not, Master, but we did succeed in rooting out the
mind behind it all.] He sent a burst of thoughts and images to
update Qui-Gon on the happenings since his disappearance.
[Ah, I never would have suspected him. Well done, my Padawan.
Now then, what do you say to clearing up this mess and getting
back to our nice, warm bed?]
[I obey, my Master.]
"I tell you," the ruffian leader demanded, "you owe us 20,000
more creds for this one. He's a gods-cursed Jedi Knight, and we
brought him down!"
"We agreed on a price," the figure said in an electronically
altered voice, "and that is what you'll take. It'll be enough
credit chips for you to spend the next five years in high
style."
A gloved hand held out a small sack of credit chips which
Obi-Wan could see, even from his location, bore the embroidered
sigil of Matron Domna's clanhouse. Obi-Wan threw the door open
wide and stepped through.
"The only thing they - or you - will be spending is the next
twenty years in the nearest Republic prison."
"You!" Zenon yelled, falling a step back. "But - you' re dead!"
The three thugs grabbed for their blasters. Obi-Wan leaped and
rolled, landing twenty feet to the left of their first shots.
Even as his light saber sprang to full, hissing blue life, he
unclipped his Master's weapon and tossed it across the room. A
Force-stream guided the saber hilt directly into Qui-Gon's
upturned palm. The Jedi Master set the beam at its lowest
setting and quickly sliced through the bonds around his wrists.
He cast the blindfold away and freed his ankles with a single
swipe of the minute green beam.
Obi-Wan parried four blaster bolts in succession. One reflected
back and hit the smallest man, who fell back with a cry. The
other two scattered to opposite sides of the room to take cover
behind old furnishings or boxes. Qui-Gon's blade leaped to full
power. The two light sabers filled the air with an angry insect
hum. Every time a bolt was fired, a blade intercepted or the
target flowed to one side.
Zenon didn't bother to wait and see how the fight would end.
The instant the Jedi Master gained his feet, the traitorous
Faithful turned and ran out of the room.
"I'll get these two, Master," Obi-Wan called, even as he danced
around in an elegant half-circle and backhanded a blaster bolt,
reversing its trajectory. The shooter fell back with a scream
of pain.
Qui-Gon reached the top of the stairway in time to see Zenon
race across a lower landing. A leap up, over and out, a brief
tug of Force support for balance - the larger man settled on
the bottom landing, in front of his quarry. Zenon traveled too
fast to stop in time. The hilt of Qui-Gon's saber caught his
head as he tumbled forward into the Jedi's powerful body. The
traitor moaned and collapsed to the ground. Blinking the stars
from before his eyes, Zenon stared up - and up - at the Jedi
Master whose crackling blade pointed to his neck.
"I surrender!"
The green blade held steady.
"Did you hear me? I surrender!"
The saber wavered. The Jedi's eyes, twin shards of ice, stared
down on him with dark promise.
A soft voice whispered, "Master?"
Qui-Gon fought himself. Fought the fear. Fought the anger.
Fought the hate. The one responsible for poisoning his mate lay
helpless before him. He had only to lean forward the slightest
bit to end the threat once and for all.
[Qui-Gon. Beloved.]
Warmth and love filled him, soothing the dark edges. Qui-Gon
stepped back from the temptations of the Dark Side and
deactivated his weapon.
Chapter 11
"So," Obi-Wan sighed as he rolled over to grin down at his
bedmate. "I am now and always will be a Full Knight of the
Jedi. Pity I had to die first."
Both of Qui-Gon's eyebrows shot up in mock dismay. "Where did
you hear such a scandalous rumor? Surely not from my lips." He
added a theatrically overdone stroking of his lover's padawan
braid for effect.
"I cannot reveal my source," Obi-Wan drew idle circles around
his lover's naked belly, "but I heard it was said at a most
solemn and momentous occasion."
"Will you leave my bellyhole alone? There wasn't anything the
least bit momentous about it." Qui-Gon swatted at his mate's
mischievous hands. "I said, will you stop? That tickles! Obi -
oh, all right. I might have mentioned something along those
lines. But only as part of the deception."
"Hmmmm."
The comm buzzed. \\"Master Qui-Gon,"\\ Edina's voice came
through the speakers. \\"Matron Domna and the Ministers of
Doolinar and Urath have prepared a celebration in your honor,
to celebrate the health of your Faithful. It is hoped that we
may in some way atone for the harm done to you both through our
blindness and complacency."\\
Qui-Gon sighed and closed his eyes.
"Please, Master, no parties tonight. Nothing diplomatic or
formal."
"We could always go to the beach. The one you heard the
servants mention."
"Silver sands," Obi-Wan whispered.
\\"Master Jedi, are you there?"\\
Qui-Gon kissed his lover's throat and purred, "Warm breeze and
privacy."
\\"Hello? Hello!"\\
"Privacy. Very important, Master."
{FINIS}