Star Wars: A Penumbral Path

She stared at him, Force presence practically vibrating with outraged anger, and with something else underneath it he couldn't identify. "Whups? WHUPS?" she repeated.
As long as we're asking awkward questions, why the hell does all the prisoners have knives and wires and hold out pistols for days without anyone discovering it?

Also how did they get out of their cells!? What kind of pathetic makeshift prison is this!? They could have escaped at any time, accomplice or no, and overwhelmed the one guard outside! If anything, they are either lucky or being driven by the force to ensure that all of this went down when there was someone to stop it!
 
Also how did they get out of their cells!? What kind of pathetic makeshift prison is this!? They could have escaped at any time, accomplice or no, and overwhelmed the one guard outside! If anything, they are either lucky or being driven by the force to ensure that all of this went down when there was someone to stop it!
I guess they were waiting for a good opportunity. Then they got told 'time's up'.
 
I thought this was a crossover between Endless Space 2 and Star Wars at first. It would have been cool if it was, but this story is good too.
 
Chapter 14
Chapter 14

He hadn't been joking about the itching powder.

At first it was as part of a lesson, a 'mild irritant' to practice both her concentration and how to Force Heal, just a little, without sinking into a trance. "You'll rarely have time to heal in a fight, and if you have the opportunity to, it can be better spent elsewhere," her master had told her. Some Jedi dealt with things like gas by slowing down their biological processes, or using the Force to aid them, and she'd be learning that too but 'Every technique has its place' had been another lesson.

By training the specific uses of the Force one could learn, in a variety of simulated situations, Master Lucian had shifted the exercises she'd completed previously from the theoretical, which she still sometimes had trouble with, to the practical, which she found much easier to grasp.

She could recite the Temple lessons taught to her about the uses of the Force, but, as she was learning, reciting lessons and understanding the lessons were two very different things. Turning a skill practiced on its own, at her own pace, with no distractions, into something that could be used in combat was not easy. However, being thrust into the situations where she needed to, instead of merely imagining it, was an excellent way to learn.

Anais had been working on evading blaster-fire from automated turrets, really devices that aimed and fired blaster rifles, when he'd called her to halt. She'd been using small barriers to try to block the shots, but was still tagged by every ninth shot or so. "What now?" she'd asked, annoyed, familiar with the pattern.

"Good use of shields, but why aren't you stopping the shots?" her master had asked, curious.

She'd waved towards her lightsaber, hanging at the entrance of training hall. She'd left it behind in her room, once, when he told her she wasn't going to use it, only for him to tell her to always carry it unless she had a good reason, and not using it in that day's lesson wasn't a good reason.

"Because you aren't letting me use my saber?" she'd asked, incredulously. With it, and her Soresu training, this would be easy, and, at the rate they were firing, she'd be hit by one shot in forty, if that.

Waving her to the side, he'd taken her place, and started the turrets. At first he'd just. . . stepped. An odd, almost drunken looking dance as he weaved back and forth, shots missing him by inches, but missing him all the same. Then he'd started to use barriers, the black, wispy circles of Force at first just appearing before he'd be hit, standing still and letting them take the shots, but appearing less as he started to move, mixing the two defenses.

Then he'd seemed to grab the shield, using them to deflect the shots, and she stared, his presence in the Force unusually open, showing her how he did it. However, even this direct instruction, useful as it is, wouldn't be enough to use the shields as he was, though, she had to admit, it did help. Then the shields disappeared, and he gestured, forcing the turrets to point down, servos working as they tried to pull the rifles back up. Then another gesture, and they were let go, re-aiming at him only for the safeties on all the weapons to be flicked on, triggers pulling uselessly.

"Every technique has its place," he'd reminded her for what felt like the hundredth time. "Focus on one, and you will be skilled with it, but unless you are a true master of it, that will not be enough. Learn a few, with pre-determined uses, and things suddenly become a great deal easier."

Flicking the safeties off, he leapt away from the barrage of blaster fire, moving back and forth, but without the highly-controlled, precise movements he'd had before. He looked to be dodging a bit like Jorel might move, or like she had. Shields popped into place, just long enough to catch a bolt, but not strong enough to deflect them fully, and he didn't stop moving, staring at the turrets. A flick of the fingers, and one of the turrets, the one she'd felt with Force-born certainty would hit him, was turned to the side, the shot going wild. Finding a moment of peace between volleys, he pushed in the Force, a tighter, more concentrated movement than the turning of the barrel, switching the safety of one rifle off. This, in turn, had made it easier to dodge the others, and he kept that pattern going until they were all off, and he stood, calmly. "Now you."

It'd taken her over thirty tries to do it without getting hit more than once.

That said, the feeling of victory she'd felt, a pure and heartfelt happiness, had been worth it, as had Master Lucian's honest praise. Then he'd asked her to do it again, and halfway through her run, he'd tossed a handful of itching powder at her.

Needless to say, she didn't repeat her previous performance.

And thus her days went. Seemingly impossible task, explanation, exhibition, success, complication to make the task seemingly impossible once more. Rinse, praise, get covered in oil, repeat. The tasks varied, but the structure did not. Like holding a handstand with one arm, Force Control keeping her body supernaturally strong and steady to let her do so with ease, but then she needed to use the other hand to lift a weight with Telekinesis, and then thread it through a series of floating hoops. Then she was timed. Then the hoops moved. Then she had to balance a weight on her feet. Then the disk she was holding herself up on started to move. And then the itching powder came.

She'd managed to find where he'd stored it, and dust his robe with it when he'd taken it off to fix a turret she pulled a bit too hard to the side. He'd put it on, looked her right in the eyes, not said a word, and continued the lesson as normal, which wasn't fair at all. The fact that, anything he asked of her, he was more than willing to show her after she'd tried at least once was the only thing that made it bearable.

But, she couldn't deny it was working.

Running through the track, which seemed to change every day, she kept a low level of Force Control going, her steps almost unnaturally long and loping, but letting her move with deceptive speed. Turning a corner, wires stretched all across the hallway, each one, if pulled, would set off a puff of flame. Not enough to do more than hurt a moment, but enough to indicate an otherwise debilitating injury.

She knew she couldn't thread them all, but her task wasn't to do so, it was to get to the other side. Stopping for a moment to gather herself, knowing if she waited too long a hidden trap would activate to keep her moving, to better simulate the 'you're being chased' aspect of the test, she gathered the Force around her. Thrusting her hands out, she let out a great wave of Telekinesis. It wasn't focused, she still couldn't do that with both strength and precision, but this one didn't need to be.

The hallway lit up with flame, a barrier pulled up in front of her, the 'blast' pushing harmlessly past her, leaving the hallway free. Dashing down it, she turned the corner, starting to move down it as gravity inverted, and she smoothly turned with it, running along the ceiling. Two thirds of the way down, the floor crumbled, revealing a cushion lined pit. The first time it'd been terrifying, the fifth time it'd been annoying, now it barely registered as she blasted down and back with telekinesis, like she would for a jump. It wouldn't be enough to rise high into the air, especially without solid ground to jump from, but with the push angled backwards to move her forward, and pulling her legs up to clear the gap, she made it across, standing up straight as she ran. She was still moving with Force-granted speed as gravity switched back and she hit the far wall, pushing off of it into a large room full of training drones.

She'd frozen the first time she'd seen them, which was a mistake, and this time she kept moving, the droids trying to acquire her as a target, their tiny processors only able to handle so much information. As artificial beings, they had no minds to Confuse with the Force, but their movements were simplistic, only their flights around a target chaotic. Pushing her senses out, combining the two disciplines (though her master would call them one) of Force Sense and Farsight, she took in the room as she ran, and started to dodge, already two fifths of the way across the room when they locked onto her.

The dozens of training droids started to fire, and she saw the paths the bolts would take a second before they did, a pattern of criss-crossing red lines centered on her and her path. She dodged, never taking to the air, not committing to the arc that would've locked her into, shoving a few droids away without turning to look at them, though still needing to wave her hands, the paths of their low-powered bolts spinning away and opening up paths.

She knew it would be a hundred times harder with living opponents, who could react and work together, but her current level of skill was just enough to reach the other side, half-formed barriers blocking the few shots she couldn't dodge, only receiving a glancing blow to her forearm. From the lack of the buzzer, her Master decided it wouldn't be enough of a strike to cause her to fail, and she pressed on.

More and more rooms she pushed through, dangers avoided or countered, only the barest of 'damage' taken, before she turned the last corner and entered the training hall they normally used, where Master Lucian stood, waiting, his metal sword in one hand, her saber in the other.

"What?" Anais asked, not sure what this meant. "Did I pass?"

"Not yet," he informed her, a small smile on his lips, as he tossed her the lightsaber. Reflexively checking it, she saw it was set for it's full cutting power. He held his sword in front of himself, "Fight," he commanded, dashing forward so fast he was almost a blur.

Without thinking she activated her blade, catching the blow with her own, already moving as the massive power behind the slash wasn't something she could match. Locking her arm she used it to push herself away, flying back a dozen feet even as he closed again, sword coming high in a sideways cut that she knew would take her head off if she didn't stop it.

Blocking it, this one didn't have the massive power behind it, not throwing her to the side, as she was prepared for, but knocking her to the side, his sword twisting down to slash her side. He knew if she wasn't careful he'd actually slash her, having done so before. It would end the fight, and she'd be tasked to stabilize herself, her master stepping in if she couldn't. Even if she could, he'd still heal her completely, so that she didn't even have a scar, the only thing left was her experiences

With her free hand, she created a Barrier, not perpendicular, to block the blow, but angled, to defect it.

"Good," he smiled, his slash sent off to the side, his free hand coming in for a punch, her own blade arcing in to hit him. He spun away rather than get hit, turning the spin into a more powerful blow, but she was already moving out of range, darting back in to stab him when his sword went wide, hitting nothing but air.

She missed, barely, as he turned the missed spinning strike into a jump to the side, landing and re-setting his guard. She took the offensive, and he let her, either because he knew it was her weak-point, or because he was testing her.

She slashed out, not stopping to strike, already away when his return strike came, leaning on her Master's specialty of Ataru to cover her natural hesitancy to strike with her own style. He followed, and she twisted, leaning back into defensive Soresu she favored, his first two blows normal, but she felt the disturbance in the Force as he empowered his body, ducking under the normal seeming third blow. She came in for a low stab to his stomach, catching an empowered knee to the chin for the attempt, the man having seen it coming, stepping around the lunge and hitting her.

Her vision blurred for a moment as she went high into the air, reflexively jumping with the blow to lessen the damage, but she re-focused, and twisted mid-air as he moved to where she was set to land. A blast of telekinesis diverted her path, pushing him off-center for a step, and she hit the ground, twisting around even as her Master charged for her, stumbling half-way.

He'd feigned injury before, to help him train against 'those who'd use deceit instead of skill', and she jumped on him, saber flashing out to both strike and avoid a possible counter-strike, only to be bodily picked up and tossed, Master Lucian easily bypassing her Force Presence, which normally kept Jedi from affecting each other directly, and sent her tumbling.

"Not now," he told her, and springing to her feet, she hesitated. He'd feigned physical injury or weakness, but hadn't told her to stop as part of her sparring. Not dropping her guard, she waited, feeling outwards into the Force, and almost stumbled herself. She had a sense of something else, something massive around her, only seen in how it pressed against her Master's presence, the horizon hemming in a storm, if the horizon could move.

"What. . .?" Anais asked, knowing she likely wasn't going to get an answer.

The Presence passed, and her master sighed, muttering, "At least we got this long," to himself.

"What was that?" she reiterated, now that he wasn't concentrating on whatever that was.

"That, my Padawan, was the Will of the Force," the young-looking man informed her with a resigned sigh. "Or at least how I perceive it. And we are leaving tomorrow morning."

"The. . . what?" she questioned. "Isn't the Will of the Force supposed to be quiet, soft, only the masters able to hear it deep in meditation?" It's what she'd been told, over and over again. That her teachers, her 'betters' a dark part of her whispered, had been able to hear it when she obviously could not, being a mere Initiate, and that was why she must obey them.

However, he nodded, "And to most, it is. But to those strong enough, with a solid enough. . . let's say connection, it can be clear as the spoken word. Or as loud as a shout in one's ear. What it rarely is, however, is informative. 'Go here', 'talk to this person', 'get involved in this war', never 'Here's what's going on and here's what I need you to do to avoid catastrophe!'" he complained, with the air of an old complaint.

"Um. . ." Anais said, not sure how to respond to that.

He shook his head. "You've gotten better, good enough I feel comfortable taking you out of here, though. Probably why it waited this long to ask, so I guess I should be grateful."

She had to ask, "So, how good am I?"

"Combat wise? You'd probably rank among what passes for a Knight nowadays," he replied casually, walking for the door, waving for her to follow.

Her first instinct was to repress the thrill of pleasure that assessment sent through her, but, remembering her training here, she didn't shove it down, letting it pass over her, noting it and what it meant, and let it go in its own time, not clinging to it. "And in other ways?"

"Dark Side Resistance of modern Knights, at least I hope it isn't higher than that. Modern Knight level healing, again possibly more," the centuries old man listed off. "Everything else, from negotiating, to stealth, to piloting, and more you're still a Padawan, Padawan."

She nodded, expecting that from his comments. "And by your standards?"

"Shift Knight to mid or high Padawan, the others to low Padawan or high Initiate. Given I haven't done more than give you the barest of training in most fields, and we have been together for only months, that's to be expected," he shrugged. "But I only rate a Knight at negotiation, or leadership, or large-scale strategy. Enough to get by on my own, but no more. Those were always the Little One's forte, more than mine. But, while being well rounded is good, you only need to pass the Trials to be a Knight, after all."

"And would I?" she asked, nodding at his immediate, "No," but surprised at the added, "Nowadays, though, you might come close. If circumstances permitted."

She hesitated, speeding up to come up next to him. "R-really?" she questioned, incredulous.

"If you were anyone else's apprentice," he nodded. "The Trial of Skill you'd pass," he stated, motioning towards the track she'd just finished. "The Trial of Courage? Likely, depending on the method. Anything Dark Side related, at least the kind of thing they would normally give a prospective Knight? Absolutely. More often that not, though, from what Er'izma says, it's really just a more complex Trial of Skill half the time," he shrugged.

"The Trial of Flesh?" she asked, not surprised when he turned to toss a small handful of itching powder at her. It splashed against a barrier she threw up in an instant. A touch of Healing, all she could do without concentrating, cut the feelings from the irritant in half, and the rest she ignored. "Is that a yes?" she questioned, deadpan.

He smiled, "Between that, and the fact that you can heal a sliced stomach on your own? Yes, Anais, if things were fair, you would."

"Spirit?" she continued, noting his words.

He hesitated, grimacing, as if the words he was about to say annoyed him. "I don't know. Not yet. And likely not for a bit. I'd say yes, but I've been. . . wrong before. If they use something as simple as a Dark Item, low to mid-range, then probably, but there are more ways to test one's spirit than merely facing the Dark, and against a true Dark Artefact? No, but they shouldn't be testing you with one of those. Not that that's stopped them before."

"And Insight?" Anais asked, already knowing the answer.

Her master agreed, laughing, though it was gentle, "You'd fail, Padawan. Even if they only tested you like they would others, you would fail."

Out of all the Trials, the one that tested 'Insight' was the newest. 'Newest' being a general term, as it was almost a thousand years old. The Trial of Insight was one of intelligence and perception, added when Jedi could fight the Sith, complete dangerous assignments, withstand physical hardship, and face the darkness that dwelt within their own spirits, only to find themselves robbed by common thieves, or taken in by conmen, the lack of true Darkness within the criminals hearts obscuring the Knights to the all-too-real danger they could pose. However, the other things her Master said stood out to her.

"And they'll test me more than they would others?" said Padawan prompted.

He laughed again, this time not nearly as nice. "They'll be looking for a reason to fail you. Given who I am. Given who my previous apprentices were. Given how they feel about me. No, you'll be a Master, by their standards, before they'll let you be a Knight. And they won't accept battle-field Trials either, insisting on doing them where they can watch, and where they can stack the deck against you."

She nodded, having expected that, but he wasn't done, "You'll be a Knight, before they'll let you be a Knight, and by the time you're a Master, like the Little One, you won't care what a bunch of wizened, out of touch, arrogant, self-important, hypocritical busybodies 'declare' you," he frowned, something between anger, disgust, sadness, and resignation in his tone. "Then again, the only difference is in the permissions you have in the temple and the esteem that those who do not know you hold you in. The approval of the Jumping Bean and his lackeys mean very little to the greater galaxy, you'll find."

". . . Not a fan of the High Council, are you Master?" she had to remark, smiling a little.

The returning dry look was completely deserved, "Padawan, your powers of observation are great indeed. Maybe you truly can pass the Trial of Insight after all!"

The returned to the common area in silence, the feelings of. . . almost melancholic nostalgia building, though she didn't know why, and she hesitated, not going to her room to shower. Her Master started to amble over to the kitchen to make dinner, cooking being yet another skill he'd insisted she'd learn the basics of, but in which he'd outstripped her, and she was glad to let him take the lead on. "Master Lucian?" she asked.

He stopped, turning, as if he'd expected the question. With the Force Bond between them, he might've, able to feel whatever it was that she was now. "Yes, Padawan Anais?"

It was hard to put into words, but even as she gave to it, she thought she understood what she was feeling. "Are we ever coming back here?"

Pausing, he cocked his head, as if listening to something only he could hear. "Not for a while, Anais. The future, despite what some might suggest, is not set in stone. However it runs in certain. . . paths, the trail fainter and fainter the further one looks. It splits and forks, but, if we were to follow the Will, at least as I understand it, we won't return soon, possibly for years, possibly at all. I'll leave a note for her, in case I miss our meeting," he said, more to himself than Anais.

"Her?" she asked.

Her Master's eyes went distant. "A childhood friend, from my time as a Padawan." His eyes sharpened, almost too much, and his presence in the Force, the dark storm, seemed to freeze, crystallizing into obsidian shot through with glowing veins of dark lightning. He looked to her, then down to her breast, where her pendant hung, underneath her shirt, instructing in quiet tones, "Keep that, and it may help you one day. In many ways." His voice hung in the air for a moment, seeming to reverberate in the air.

"Master?" she asked, suddenly unsure of what was happening, repressing the urge to reach up and touch the metal-encased, bloody talon.

He shook his head, blinking, and his presence returned to normal, a hint of something else peeking from inside the maelstrom, but quickly covered once more. "Just do so, Padawan," he said, turning away. "Wash up, and start packing. We leave at dawn."
 
Chapter 15
Chapter 15

When they'd arrived back at Delle, it'd felt like it'd be months, but it had barely been one. The blue and orange sphere popped into existence as the stars contracted from streaks to bright points, the bridge crew busy at work.

"We've been hailed, forwarding codes and reports," one of the officers announced, the others monitoring the situation. "Planetary Defense Force is requesting to speak with you, General."

"Put them through," Er'izma commanded, turning to look at the holoprojector.

The image of a uniformed man, older, with a shaved head but full white beard appeared. "What is the meaning of this? Who are you?"

"General Er'izma, of the 7th Judiciary Legion of the Republic. We've apprehended some pirates, and wish to turn them over, as well as unload confiscated goods," he stated with a smile.

"Then those ships are captured?" Jorel's Master nodded at the PDF commander's question. "Then we'll be accepting them."

The Jedi smiled, though there was no good humor in it. "We'll be sure to consider your offer, Admiral Tanau," he noted, tone durasteel-hard.

"They're targeting our ships," one of the crew announced.

"I don't think you understand," the general replied. "We will accept your captured ships, or you are obviously the pirates you appear to be. Power down and prepare to be boarded."

Erizma nodded, casually unhooking his lightsaber, and activating his blade. "You may try."

The communication was cut, and Er'izma turned to his crew. "Mass broadcast our credentials, and our status. Then prepare for combat."

"But. . . we're with the Republic," Jorel stated, not prepared for the sudden whiplash of mood. This should've been a routine hello, even if strained by them arriving with a small fleet, but was going horribly wrong.

"And general Tau is in league with the pirates in our very brig," his master replied. "Do not worry Padawan, this was not unplanned, and things are not as dire as they appear.

Jorel stared at the display, as the planetary defense force ships started to move, only for them to slow, one after another, weapons powering down. The capital ship was the last one to do so, and, moments later, the comms officer announced, "We're being hailed again, sir."

Er'izma nodded as he looked back to the holo-terminal where a different man, in a uniform that was about two-thirds as fancy as the last one, appeared. "Our deepest apologies, Master Jedi. Please move to the coordinates we're sending. Would you like us to send shuttles to remove the prisoners, or would you prefer to drop them off directly into holding?"

The Jedi Knight smiled, and this one was warm, as he holstered his saber. "We'll deliver them to you directly. And what of Mr. Tanau?"

"Arrested, sir. We don't kill Jedi, sir," the man replied firmly. "Some of us remember the last time you came through, sir, and know you're who you claim to be. Thank you for your service, sir."

"It is my duty to assist," Er'izma noted. "We'll move there now."

The connection was cut, and Jorel had to look to his master. "That was planned?" The implied, why didn't you tell me was pretty clear.

"It was one of several plans," the older man noted, "Only a fifth of them would involve fighting. And even with skeleton crews, we would have been able to rout Delle's PDF fairly easily. You will find such things are often weakened by laziness, politics, and sometimes, outright corruption, in the case of Mr. Tanau. Against a unified force? They lose. Against a unified force of approximately equal strength? They lose, badly."

With that menacing statement hanging in the air, the holo-terminal flickered as another connection was established, a harried looking woman appearing. "Master Jedi, I didn't expect you to return so soon, or with so much. . . product."

Jorel was confused, until he remembered the woman's previous agreement to buy everything they brought back at market price. His master replied smoothly, with none of the hardness he'd had a moment ago, "Oh, I understand your worry, madam. Our efforts were unexpectedly fortuitous, so shall we say, eighty percent market price, seventy for the ships? We'll be around for three weeks, so you can arrange for buyers at a more. . . reasonable pace."

Relief blossomed across the woman's face, and, as she considered his offer, and a gleam of greed crept into her eyes as she smiled. "Oh, I'm sure I can find someone who would be willing to purchase from someone of your esteemed station. Send me the databases, and we'll get started."

"I will," he promised, the call ending, and turning to Jorel. "Now, I believe it's time for more of your favorite activity. Paperwork."

The padawan froze. "What."

"You heard her," the sadistic Jedi prodded. "She'll need an accounting of every weapon, every trade good, every valuable, every single thing we recovered. That shouldn't take too long now, should it?"

Jorel felt his stomach sink. "No Master, I'll go get started," he sighed, wondering what he'd done to deserve this fate. Oh. Right. He'd started the pirate revolt by accident. This was fair. A lieutenant walked over, handing him a datapad, which would undoubtably hold the files he'd need to collate.

Looking at it, there was a prompt which only asked if he wanted to send the document.

"Master?" he asked, confused, glancing over as a few of the bridge crew sniggered.

"Go ahead," his master instructed. Jorel, looking skeptical, pressed the send button. It took a few moments to process, and then it cleared. "Very good, that's the paperwork done."

The same lieutenant took the datapad, attempting not to laugh, several of the others not even trying.

"Master?" Jorel repeated.

"I believe you requested to know why we were spending 'so kriffing long' cataloging everything?" the Jedi Knight noted. "This is why, so we don't need to do so every time we move things. Now, take the rest of the day off. You'll learn how to do this," he waved at the planet, "with time, but for now I'll be dealing with the negotiations. I do believe you've earned yourself some shore leave. That said, you will be taking Sergeant Hisku'biatha'pusi with you, and you will be with her at all times. Understood?"

Given what had happened the last time he'd slipped away from her, all Jorel could do was nod, pointedly ignoring Sergeant Hisku's stare.



<SWPP>​



It wasn't until the next afternoon that Jorel boarded the shuttle to go planetside, along with Sergeant Hisku and two dozen other crewmen. The shuttles the Dove used were, just like the fighters, custom built, and with purple accents. Because of course they were. More like flying tanks than the graceful personnel carriers he'd trained on in the simulators at the Temple, they were armored, and, like the fighters, were fast, but lacked more than token weapons, and had no viewports at all.

The delay in going down had been due to the need to set up local accommodations, as each of the crew would get three days off, with rooms set up for them in a pair of local hotels. Jorel had helped set that up, if only to have something to do, and in doing so had learned how to avoid some of the traps that could be encountered by someone 'helping' with the paperwork, and thus hiding extra charges.

Even with the Lieutenant in charge of it all telling him it wasn't malicious, more akin to a standard 'if you fall for this you deserve to lose money' move, he'd felt it was still wrong. He had, however, understood why they shouldn't then feel bad for countering with a push for discounted rates, additional privileges, and the like for the large amount of rooms they were 'requisitioning'. Requests that were, due to negotiating, referencing local laws and customs, and once asking the General to off-handedly mention one of the other hotels in the area, all quickly agreed to.

Now though, for the first time since he'd gone to get his lightsaber crystal, he was going to be setting down on another world. The Pirate asteroid didn't count. He tamped down on the childish excitement he was feeling, but also on the underlying sense of unease. The last trip he'd been on before becoming a Padawan had gone. . . badly, really the return from it, but their shuttle wouldn't be passing, on its own, through supposedly hidden hyperlanes, but would just be going to and from the surface, with a ship larger than any other in orbit around Delle watching them carefully.

But feelings so rarely cared about facts.

Looking around, his command of Mental Shielding only able to do so much to help him ignore his emotions, he tried to find something to distract himself with. The other crewman were a mix of rowdy, being just as excited as he was, and calmly satisfied, and were made up of a mix of races, a third of them sporting the same blue skin and red eyes as his attaché. Sergeant Hisku, in uniform and with her sword, jogged over to the loading ramp, nodding to him as she took a seat next to his. "Padawan Jorel," she nodded. "Do you have any plans I should be aware of when we set down?"

He paused, thinking, but shook his head. "No."

She looked at him with a raised eyebrow. "Do you have any plans you don't think I should be aware of?"

He shook his head again, smiling this time. "No."

"How many planets have you been on?" she questioned, dancing around whatever it was she obviously really wanted to ask.

"Three," he smiled. "Kuat, Coruscant, and Ilium."

Sergeant Hisku frowned, "Kuat? The driveyards?"

"Yeah," he agreed. "My mother's a project manager for the shipyards, and my Father is her assistant." His smile dimmed a bit, as he thought of them again for the first time in close to a year. He'd considered leaving the order, better to try and find them then work in the dirt, but now he wouldn't need to. "At least, they were twelve years ago."

He hadn't looked them up, afraid of what he'd find. It hadn't been a Jedi-like emotion, but, well, that was part of the problem, wasn't it? However, he was a Padawan now, and had to look forward. Maybe he'd try to look them up, but later. Maybe, with Er'izma's permission, he could send them a message. He'd been told he couldn't at the Temple, but, well, Knight Er'izma was nothing like the Temple Masters.

"Twelve. . . you last saw them when you were five?" she asked, doing the math. "I thought Jedi were Jedi since birth?"

"Some are, or close enough," he agreed, as their shuttle took off, aware of the other crewman not-so-subtly listening in. "In the Core the midichlorian blood test is pretty standard, but it's so rare that someone gets a positive that a lot of people don't bother. My parents didn't, since it cost extra. That means some Force Sensitives fall through the cracks. If I'd been a year or two older when Master Lineas found me, I would've been turned away, as I'd be too old."

One of the others, a blue-skinned man, the same species as Sergeant Hisku, questioned in disbelief, "Six is too old for humans?"

Jorel, however, didn't quite repress his wince. "Well, normally, but there was an exception pretty recently. A few years after I arrived, there was a boy who was forced into the program late. Poor kid was rushed through the entire thing, the Padawan of the Master who sponsored him, after he became a Knight, took the boy as his Padawan when the kid was twelve. I heard the kid had barely passed his Initiation, and there were some people who said he only did because he had a Master waiting for him."

"That doesn't sound. . . proper," his attaché commented, making Jorel laugh, as of course that was what she'd latch on to. "Well it doesn't!"

He shook his head. "It wasn't. I was jealous of the kid, at first," he admitted. "Not very Jedi-like, but the kid wasn't either and he got to be a Padawan. But I talked to Anaïs, and she helped me understand. Rushed through like that, the kid's gonna have a hard time of it, without the time he needs to train. He got techniques like that," Jorel said, snapping his fingers, "but he was even worse with his emotions then I was. Still kind of am, to be honest. I just hope he's okay," he said, shaking his head, not having heard of what happened to Skywalker since he left with Knight Kenobi.

He'd be fifteen now, if he was still alive. It wasn't uncommon for Padawans to die, especially if they weren't ready. Most survived, but finding out that a couple of his Initiate Clan had perished, while hard to hear, was something the Temple Masters had admonished him for being upset over, and weren't surprised at finding out themselves. The kid was annoying, and arrogant, but he didn't deserve that fate.

"Anaïs?" Hisku asked, breaking Jorel out of his thoughts. "You've mentioned her before."

"My. . . friend," he said, realizing he could admit it here without censure. "Apprenticed the same time I was, to Er'izma's old Master." While Sergeant Hisku nodded, the oldest of the crewman's faces tightened, and he could almost feel the dark current of fear that came off them, though they controlled it quickly enough. He turned to the nearest one, an older woman, blonde hair shot through with white and wearing a lieutenant's badge. "What? Is there something I should know?"

The woman shook her head. "No, Padawan. Only. . ." she looked around, "your friend. How good is she at resisting. . . temptation?" The way she said the word was laced with meaning that he was surprised to hear from a non-Jedi.

"You mean the Dark Side?" he asked, and the woman nodded. "She's far better about it that then I am. At least, that's what the Temple Masters said. Repeatedly."

There was an awkward silence at that, until one of the other crew, a Human, asked the blue skinned man next to him, "So, what's this place like? Hot, cold, wet, dry?"

"It's another oven," the private sighed.

"A desert?" a Twi'lek woman asked, perking up.

"I said an oven, not a hellscape," sniffed the second man.

The Human just laughed, "You think anywhere you can't see your breath is an oven, so it sounds like a good time? Maybe go out for a hike?" The blue skinned man glared, and the human looked to the Twi'lek. "How 'bout it, Aolu?"

"You just want to get lucky," the orange-skinned woman commented dismissively, but with an undercurrent of amusement in her tone.

Jorel sat back, glad to not be the center of attention, even as the other man commented, "I'll definitely be lucky if I get to spend the evening with you," prompting a laugh and a nod from the other woman.

It was very different from the Temple, Jorel noted, but that wasn't necessarily a bad thing.



<SWPP>​



They sat down at a café, after having spent some time wandering around the city, the two of them having split off from the group after a quick 'don't pick fights, sleep with married people, or do too many drugs' speech from the Captain managing the hotel they were staying at. Jorel had been surprised when his sergeant had handed him a credit chit, informing him that it was 'his pay'. He hadn't really thought about it, everything having been provided by the Temple for over a decade, but, the more he considered it, the more obvious it was that he was going to need money to do anything.

He'd been apparently given a Lieutenant's pay for his time on the ship, and would get a higher 'position' as he settled in and did more. As he hadn't expected any payment, except for in experience, it was a surprise, but not an unpleasant one.

Now, after having wandered around for a while, it was time to take a break. He wasn't oblivious to the sheen of sweat that glistened on his attaché's skin, having rolled up the arms of her uniform after the first hour. They'd both ordered cool local drinks, made from some local fruit, and relaxed indoors, the air conditioners making the place almost frigid.

It wasn't that bad outside, though not nearly as comfortably cool as Coruscant, but more like the botanical gardens that he'd had to work in, where the Temple grew medicinal herbs that would not survive transit. The fact that Master Halrol had repeatedly informed him that doing so would 'be good experience for your eventual placement' had soured any enjoyment he might've had in the task though. The fact that such annoyance had then been used as further proof of his dirt-filled 'destiny' hadn't helped either. However, that shook loose something that had been bugging him for a while.

"Sergeant Hisku, what are you?" he questioned, genuinely curious.

She blinked, surprised, having been mid-sip. Setting down her drink, she frowned. "Excuse me?" she asked, sounding offended.

"Like, I'm Human, but I've never seen someone like you before," he quickly explained. "Before I became Er'izma's Padawan."

"General Er'izma," she corrected automatically, as she looked at him. "You. . . haven't?" she asked, confused, and he motioned around them, the only other blue-skinned, red-eyed humanoid in the café another member of the Dove's crew, in her off-duty uniform. The other crewmember shot Hisku a wink, and then went back to chatting with a blonde Human woman.

"No," Jorrel agreed. "Whatever you are wasn't listed under the common, or even uncommon species. But I've been inside the Temple for most of my life, so maybe their databas-"

"No," the Sergeant disagreed, "That. . . that makes sense." She paused and he could, at the edge of his perception, feel her inner conflict as it made small eddies in the Force.

Actually, as he sensed out in the Force, he was surprised that he could pick her out as clearly as he could. More than that, though, he could somewhat pick out the crewman across the room from the dozens of others, something he, at least with his current level of skill, shouldn't be able to do. Stretching out, he could get a sense of others that stood out a bit more clearly from the masses. Not enough to identify them all individually, but they all had a sense of familiarity to them that made them feel a bit like the Dove.

"I'm," Hisku said, again pausing, before grimacing and stating, quickly, "I'm Chiss."

Jorel took the declaration with a nod. "Okay. I have no idea what that is. Sorry," he offered, at her annoyed look. "So, from a cold world?"

"How did you know that? You just said you didn't know what I was," she accused.

He pointed to the fact that she'd already finished her drink. "Plus, the other guy was complaining about the heat. It's not that bad."

". . . Yes, I guess you could say that, if you think this is normal. Kinoss was cold. Not as cold as Csilla, but not as sweltering as this place," she admitted, motioning to the waiter for another iced beverage.

Jorel nodded, having never heard of either of those places, "Ah, yes, Csilla. That explains everything."

She glared at him, "Wait, how have you heard of our capitol, but you've never heard of our people?"

"I haven't," he shot back with a smile, getting an exasperated groan from his assistant. "So, Outer Rim?"

"I think so?" she replied with a shrug, paying for her second drink and taking a long sip from it. "I haven't taken Republic Astrogation training yet."

Jorel sighed, "That'd explain it." He only knew of the Mon Calamari because there were thirty-four Jedi from that insular race, their homeworld right on the edge of the border of the Outer Rim, beyond which just lay Wild Space. "So, anything I should know about the Chiss? Hidden claws? Water breathing? Acid spit? Pheromones that drive other species mad with lust?"

"What? No!" Hisku sputtered. "Nothing like that! Um, compared to humans we're a bit stronger and …," she told him, mumbling the last bit.

"What was that?" he asked, wondering what she was trying to hide, getting a vague sense of embarrassment from her.

She stared at him, then looked to her glass and took another long sip. "How old do you think I am?"

Not having expected the question, he took a moment to stare at her. Sergeant Hisku, while shorter than him, didn't look particularly young or old, her vivid blue skin making determining age by complexion a bit harder, especially when she blushed purple at his stare, before meeting his eyes challengingly. Shrugging he answered honestly, "Twenty-three, four, maybe five? So, what, are you actually eighty or something?"

She broke eye contact, looking to the side, and muttered, "I'm fourteen." He blinked, having to take a moment to reassess what he knew of her with this new information, something that she was able to read as she sighed, "This is why I didn't want to tell you. Chiss reach physical maturity at age ten. I am still your senior on the Dove, even if you're technically older."

The defensiveness in her tone, as well as the vague sense of hurt-frustration-embarrassment through the Force, helped him figure out exactly how to respond. "That makes sense."

"Just because you're. . . what?" she questioned, confused, having taken a moment to really hear him. "But humans always. . ."

He shrugged, "So you learned to use a fresher in one year instead of two. I bet my parents wished I was Chiss, just to save on the diapers. That means you spent less time getting the basics, like 'how to walk', and had more time to learn the fun stuff, like how to field-strip a blaster, because your brain wasn't mush for the first five years. Must've eaten like a Wookie, though, for all that growth." At her stare, he smiled. "Like I said, makes sense."

She met his look, before glancing away, cheeks purpling once more. "Most people aren't as logical as Chiss," she commented, and he took that as the compliment she intended it to be. "I think we've been sitting around for long enough," she said, grabbing her drink and slamming it back, before standing up.

Rolling his eyes at the blatant change in topic, he finished his own, got up, and followed her out. "Sure Sergeant Hisku. Where to next?"

She looked around once they exited onto the street, the sun having passed its zenith. "I. . . don't really know. Normally, I'm with a group, and just follow them. We could go see a show, tour any art exhibitions, see what sports they play on um, Delle," she listed off, forgetting the name of the planet for a moment. The teenager, woman, Jorel corrected, didn't seem to have any preferences for him to agree with.

It was actually rather interesting to see her this way, the Padawan thought. On the Dove they had always been on a very regimented schedule where what they were going to do was already set. Now, though, she actually acted her age a little, as unsure as he was about what to do next. Jorel was about to suggest looking up the local shows when he had an odd feeling.

He didn't know why, but he felt like he should head over to the eastern district of the city.

It wasn't a thought of his own, but it didn't carry the slick, oily feeling of, as the lieutenant had called it, temptation. It was almost like a friend had suggested he go there, and then walked away before he could ask why. Jorel knew he didn't have to go there, and that he could easily go with his original thought, but, well, now he was curious.

Looking off in that direction he suggested, "How about we walk around a little bit more, see what we find? And we'll stop for another drink if you start to overheat again, Sergeant," he offered with a wink.

"I'll be fine," she informed him primly, blushing once more, and the two of them took off, as Jorel wondered what he'd find.
 
Chapter 16
Chapter Sixteen

Anaïs blinked blearily as a cup of caf was shoved into her hands by her master, along with the statement, "You can nap on the ship, but I need you to make sure you've gotten everything, and you can't do that asleep."

She accepted it, taking a sip, her nose wrinkling at the bitter beverage. She'd never had it before leaving the Temple, but as part of her master's normalization training, or, as he'd put it, 'How not to out yourself in four minutes as a monk', she'd had to at least get used to it a little.

She didn't really enjoy the artificial wakefulness it instilled, though had been told that higher end versions were much more natural in their effects. Her question of 'Then why can't we use that', had been answered with 'outing yourself as rich is almost as bad as outing yourself as sheltered, now drink.'

Cheating a little, using a bastardized version of Tutaminis, the Jedi technique that let one dissipate the energy of flames, or even blaster bolts, she forcibly cooled the drink to let her slug it all back in one go. The first time she'd done so in front of her master she'd frozen, the Temple teachers having informed her how the techniques that she was being taught were perfected by a long lines of Jedi Masters, but Master Lucian had just chuckled, nodded, and gone back to what he'd been doing.

Drinking the vile, near chemical concoction, and eating the ration bar she'd been tossed, she looked around, to realize how much the space had changed, even since last night. The numerous crates, a previous fixture of the main hall, were gone, though she could spot a couple in rooms down a hall. The meditation space had been cleared, and even the seating area, where he'd set up a holoprojector to have her familiarize herself with 'Republic culture' which was quite a bit cruder than she'd been led to believe, was missing.

The fact that Jedi were always depicted as distant figures, either solving things instantly, or making everything worse by their actions but thinking themselves just and righteous before leaving and making the protagonists to pick up the pieces, annoyed her. Respect and fear were the two constants of their appearances, as the Jedi showed off powers that weren't possible, like jumping a hundred feet in the air, read minds like datapads, or turning invisib. . . okay, the examples in holodramas were shown to have powers that most Jedi didn't have, her master notwithstanding.

Now, though, the area looked almost. . . military. There were positions where someone could take cover, metal on the previously exposed cabling, even the odd device on the ceiling, which her Master steadfastly refused to explain but kept out the Dark Side, now housed in a shroud of durasteel. "Did you do all this last night?" she asked, looking around as her Master walked in and out, carrying things around, pulling out an actual heavy repeating blaster of all things and setting it up, pointed towards the entrance. All of the defenses were pointed that way, actually, as if worried what might come down the elevator.

"And this morning. Don't know why though. Crinking Force," he grumbled, metal strips shifting, tearing, and interweaving seemingly on their own to secure the weapon. "But I'll need it to be like this the next time I'm here, probably, so now it is."

That was another thing she had to get used to in a hurry. Ever since last night, Master Lucian had seemed, not really angry, just annoyed at, of all things, the Force itself. "But," she finally pointed out, having come to a realization last night as she tried to get to sleep but only now getting the chance to ask, "you said the feelings one gets from the Force is a reflection of what you want to happen. So shouldn't you be happy you're receiving direction to assist you in achieving that?"

The slim man paused, nodding, as he sighed. "In theory, yes, but just because you know that by suffering you will achieve your ends, it doesn't make the suffering any less. And what I want is. . . complicated, Padawan. The Force sets you on a path, but not necessarily the only path, something that took me a few centuries to understand. And sometimes. . . sometimes it would be kinder to take the long way." He shook his head, "But are you packed?"

She tapped the belt pouch containing her lightsaber, and where the emberdrake talon hung on her neck. "I only own two things, Master."

He looked at her, before shaking his head once more, muttering, "Right, Temple Initiate." The way he put it sounded like an insult, but with an odd fondness underlying it, and before she could reply, he gestured to the repulsorlift trolly, loaded with boxes. "Take that to the ship, I'll clean up here and meet you there."

She nodded, moving the cargo up, the transfer between Force-shielded sanctuary and Dark Side tainted planetoid barely noticeable to her nowadays. Trying to unload the trolly, she found they were a great deal heavier than they looked, par for the course with her Master, and focused on maintaining Force Control to strengthen her body, allowing enhanced muscles to move the tightly packed crates.

She was almost done when Lucian arrived, stopping at a hidden panel and powering down the complex, coming aboard and tossing her a bag. "Your clothes," he told her, and she blushed, having forgotten about taking them, some part of her still not thinking of the outfits she'd been given on Fabrin as 'hers'.

In minutes, they were lifting off of the planet, and she could spot the blue shapes of ember drakes on the distant horizon. It felt odd, that she somewhat regretted leaving the place behind. Her time wasn't exactly happy, but it had been. . . productive, in a way that only her early days in the Temple had been before.

However, she was a Jedi, and while she resisted the urge to shut out the emotions, as the Temple instructors had instructed, she acknowledged them, understood why she was feeling them, and let them flow past her, like water in a shower.

Joining Lucian on the bridge, they were on their way to the north-western part of the system, to get away from the gravity wells and make a clean hyperspace jump. Her master merely nodded to her, as he stared at the navcomputer display, as if trying to divine secrets from a crystal ball, like the Force-sensitive fortune teller in that holodrama she rather enjoyed.

"So, where are we going next?" she asked, getting a grunt of annoyance from him.

"Ultimately, no idea. For now, Adin, but that place is competently run, so I doubt we're doing more than making a pitstop," he said, fingers dancing over the console, manually putting in the astrogation information, handling the calculations it should've taken a dedicated droid to compute and looking bored by it. "And, we're off," he declared, activating the hyperdrive, a momentary backwards push as the stars streaked to lines, before the shifting, swirling tunnel of hyperspace replaced it.

He sighed, leaning back in his chair, "Alright, something you're eventually going to have to learn, Padawan, is how to plan around the Force. You never have to, but more often than not, listening to it helps. There are some high level Dark Side techniques that can mimic the call of the Force, leading you astray, but they're always tainted, even if only a little. Recognizing those corrupted thoughts is step one in learning to avoid them, which is something you've got an acceptable foundation in."

"Really?" she asked, perking up. Master Lucian was sparse with praise, complimenting her, but he never said she had enough to-

"Really," he nodded in affirmation. "You're now at base Padawan level, on par with someone else who has just been selected by a Master, at least by the standards I was raised to match."

And there it was, she thought. "Oh."

"Oh?" he echoed, smiling. "Did you think you'd somehow reached a Knight's level in a few short months of training?" She had, and he read her embarrassment, laughing, "These skills take time and effort, Padawan. Did you think a pep talk, a few training sessions, and some progress meant you were done?"

"Not done," she argued, pausing. "Um, Master Lucian?"

"Hmmm?" he replied, watching her bemusedly.

"What level, at least in that skill, would you say, for example, Master Halrol is at?" she inquired with forced casualness. The standards he held were. . . extreme, but if she had a comparioson, she could work backwards to figure out where she was by the standards of everyone that wasn't a centuries old master of the Force.

The Jedi Master got up, stretching. "Do not measure yourself by others, Padawan," he chided. "Go take a nap, or meditate, or whatever else you want. In four hours, we'll start your training again. You've been developing power, but we can practice your fine point control while we travel."

She sighed, having expected that. "Yes, Master."

Lucian paused at the doorway, "And as to you other question, I'd put Hali at about mid."

"Mid-master?" Anaïs clarified, getting a snort from the man.

"Really, Apprentice?" he asked incredulously. Shaking his head, he left, calling over his shoulder, "The poor fool hasn't dealt with so much as a whiff of true Dark in decades, and it shows. No, I'd rate him at mid-Padawan."


<SWPP>


"Oh. Oh no," Lucian muttered to himself, once more looking over the Navcomputer as he put in the coordinates manually. "Stupid, omniscenent, too clever for its own good, Nerf-herder! Why do we need to go this way?"

"Um, Master?" Anaïs asked, concerned, not having actually seen him this upset before, but. . . "Are you. . . are you insulting the Force?"

"It knows what it did," the Jedi Master informed her primly, even as the ship, re-cloaked after their stop for supplies, went to the northern edge of the Adin system. "Can we go a different way?" he asked, but not her, and she felt the barest ripple in his Force presence, even pulled in and hidden as it was, a distant storm instead of the all-encompass tempest it could be. "Fine," he sighed, hitting the button to start the hyperdrive, the stars streaking once more.

Not knowing what had him so worried, she pulled up the star charts, and tried to plot their jump, only to find that not only were they, once again, not using any charted route, but more than that she found that there was nothing in the direction they were going.

Oh, there was, eventually, but was this another hidden planet, like Uphrades? That one hadn't been hidden, just forgotten, but she had no idea where they were going, but her master obviously did.

"Master Lucian?" she prodded, the man practically glaring at the computer. It was times like this that she could forget how old he truly was, and he seemed more a newly minted Knight, only a few years older than herself, then a centuries old Jedi Master.

"Okay, Padawan, time to shift the lesson plan up a little," he sighed, standing and walking out of the bridge. "We've got a couple hours before this can go wrong, so there's time, but not enough to put it off."

Following him to the galley, he got to work making lunch, tea already steeping when she sat down. "All right, what do you know about Interplanetary Force Dispursement?" he asked.

"I know those are all words," Anaïs replied, having absolutely no clue what he was talking about..

"Yeah, that's what I thought," he sighed. "Okay, you know how everything has a bit of Force to it. Living things have more, but even rocks have a Force Presence, and those of us strong in the Force have it most of all," he explained, motioning between Master and Padawan, waiting for her to nod. "That means even a barren, lifeless rock that's never had a single living thing visit it has a Force Presence. Theoretically. Visiting it to observe it would change things, so there's no way to actually know."

He paused, shrugged, and continued his explanation, "On the other end, those who have trained, and are strong, can feel each other even at interplanetary distances, or even from several light years away. Once you factor in Force Bonds, it gets even easier. Out there in the Void, in null-space, in whatever you want to call it, there is nothing. There is still the Force, but it is thin, a few inches deep as opposed to the lakes of most planets, or the sentinel tidal waves that are Jedi, and other strong Force users."

"All right," she nodded, fitting that in with what she'd been taught. It actually worked well, both with her old lessons, and the ones from her master, which often clashed. "So, it will be harder to use the Force out there?"

"No, in many ways it'll be easier, and that's the problem," Master Lucian disagreed. "And no, you won't have to worry about damaging the ship, you just won't have to push through the. . . inertia of others in the Force. No, the problem is that you'll go from a beacon in the Force, easily detected from several hundred clicks, to a star shining brightly in the dark seen from interstellar distances. And there are things that take exception to that. Things that are in the Void because they don't like the Force."

What he was saying. . . "But, the Force is in all living things," she objected. "How can something not like the Force?"

"One thing you'll learn, if you survive long enough, which you hopefully will, is that superlatives like 'all', or 'never', or 'only', are more suggestions than rules," he advised. "Ninety nine point nine nine, and maybe a few more nines after that, percent of living things 'like' the Force. Some repel it, stupid tree lizards, some don't exist in it, that wasn't fun either, and some things actively hate it. Thankfully, they're rarer than an original thought in the Temple, but odds mean nothing to Jedi as the Force actively pushes us into situations, rendering statistical modelling moot. Trust me, I spent over a decade trying to account for it."

Learning from her Master, Anaïs had found, involved following the important bits, while still somewhat remembering the other things he'd said, as there was a good chance it was all important, and he'd consider off-handedly referring to such things as 'mentioning it' if it were to suddenly become relevant. For this, though, her response was, "So the things that hate the Force. They live out between stars? So they might attack the ship?"

"No, Padawan, they might attack us," he corrected, and likely read her confusion, either in her face or in her Force presence. "This particular brand of nastiness doesn't physically effect matter under a certain degree of Force Presence, so the ship might as well not exist, but anything living does, and us most of all. However, this cuts both ways," he grinned, before shaking his head, growing serious once more.

"Now, you're nowhere near ready for some of the offensive uses, as that's very much a Knight-level skill, but you have a particular talent for the most important technique used when dealing with them," he informed her.

It took her a moment, before her eyes widened in realization. "Force Barrier! I could stop them, and it's made of the Force, so they'd hate it!"

"Burns them like fire," her Master agreed, "though only if they touch it directly, and they have to physically break through it to get past it. So, if you hear shrieking, put up a full body bubble, just like you trained. You can create an air-mesh, but only one, and, this is the most important part, you do not drop it until the shrieking stops."

He looked her in the eye, dead serious. "I don't care what you hear, I don't care what you see, I don't care what you feel like is happening, you do not drop the barrier until the shrieking stops. I don't care if Master Yoda and I both burst into the room, bleeding and dying, begging for you to let us in, or to heal us, you keep it up. They can't control the shrieking, so they can't stop it, but from when it starts, you have ten seconds to throw up your defenses. I don't care if you're asleep, or on your way somewhere, or naked and showering in the fresher, you have ten seconds and you do not stop until it's over. Do you understand me?"

"I. . . yes, yes, I do," she replied, a little shaken by the sudden intensity in his gaze and Force Presence. "Wait, they can use illusions? How, if they hate the Force?"

"Most can't, but the really nasty ones can, and I lost a few Force Sensitives I was. . . watching that way, along with the supposed Knight with them," he told her grimacing at the memory. "They stay out of the main hyperspace lanes, too much Force Presence from all the traffic, but on the backwater routes you get them sometimes, and where we're going. . . I'd say a one in five chance we find at least one, but, again, probability means nothing to the Force."

Master Lucian took a sip of his tea. "That means, until I say otherwise, no Force training, no mental resistance training, and no hard physical training. I should be able to handle it, but this'll be good practice for awaiting conflict, and I'm not going to risk you against something you might not be able to handle. And if, for whatever reason, you're somewhere I'm not around, wait it out. Being around a Jedi using the Force, especially one of our power, is like being around an unshielded power core. They can do it for short times, but even if they have a bit of distance, enough time and they start to burn regardless."

"So, no training? That's going to take some getting used to," she laughed, trying to make light of the situation.

"I never said that," her Master smiled, sitting back and relaxing, though she could still feel an undercurrent of worry in his Presence. It was a subtle thing, not showing on his face at all, but just a hint through the Bond they shared. "That just means we're going to shift to something more intellectual. Now, it's more the Little One's specialty than mine, but what do you know about 'Forensic Accounting'?"

"I know that those are both words?" she offered. "And I'm probably going to hate it?"

"Probably," he agreed, calling a datapad over to his hand. "Force knows I do."

Anaïs groaned, hoping the monster attack could happen already, and save her from whatever new skill her Master was going to force into her skull this time.
 
Chapter 17
Chapter 17

Jorel woke with a groan, head pounding, regretting his life choices.

His muscles ached, his throat felt like it had glass in it, and, as consciousness slowly spread, he found his arms were raised, shackles around his wrists holding them raised above his head, metal pressing into his skin. Opening his eyes and looking around, he found himself in what looked to be a jail cell right out of the Outer Rim, not something in the Colonies.

Dark and dingy, the only light came in from a barred window set into a metal door at the far end of the room. There was no bed, no toilet, and Jorel didn't like what that implied.

"Good, you're awake," came a familiar voice to his side, and, swinging his head over, he saw Sergeant Hisku was similarly restrained. She didn't appear happy. "I told you we should have left."

"That you did," Jorel agreed, nodding, head swimming, even as he turned his thoughts inward, connecting to the Force to help heal himself in preparation of whatever came next.

Following that odd thought, the one he hadn't been able to shake, the two of them had found themselves wandering deeper and deeper into the city. Their surroundings had gotten dirtier, the buildings in increasingly poor repair, and everything all around worse, but something had pushed him to go deeper.

Then, suddenly, outside of a building that practically glowed with the Force, with the Dark Side subtle, but present, he had stopped, having arrived at his destination. The Sergeant, a little unsure, had asked if he'd wanted to go inside

However, before they could, the sound of blasterfire had rung out from within the building, causing her to draw her sidearm, and for him to pull his saber. He had faintly been able to feel the small, black blossoms of death from inside, though they were weak, small disturbances in the Force instead of the in-your-face blast of malevolence he'd felt when killing someone himself. Those still on the street fled, except for a Rodian from across the way, who'd pulled a blaster pistol and started to walk for the building, but had hesitated, before striding towards them.

"Leave," the gunman had ordered in Huttese, language of criminals everywhere, weapon waved in their direction.

Sergeant Hisku, looking him over, had replied in Basic. "No." Then, when the, likely criminal, Alien had pointed his weapon towards her, she shot him, the blue ring of a stun-bolt dropping him. "We should leave," she had urged Jorel, still mostly calm, as if what she'd done was perfectly normal. "That man wasn't law enforcement, and we don't-"

More gunfire had rung out, followed by an explosion, which blew out the fourth story windows. However, Jorel had still had a feeling they should stay, and had shaken his head no. More gunfire had been heard, then a window had broken, two people falling from the third floor as glass rained down on the street below.

Following his instincts, the Padawan had grit his teeth, thankful for his master's training as he was able to slow both of them, having to firm his stance to keep them from hitting the glass-covered ferrocrete. He managed it, barely suspending both of them a couple feet off the ground.

Pulling them over to safe ground, he'd twisted them about, so they could stand, and got a look at them. One had been an older woman, wearing a large coat that was peppered with blasterburns, and with an empty bandolier over body armor, a blaster pistol in her free hand, the other holding onto a young girl. The girl, closer to the Sergeant's real age, and dressed in rags, had been shaking like a leaf, holding onto the older one, both of them looking at him with wide eyes, though the older woman got a hold of herself, shock quickly fading.

Trusting his instincts, he had pointed down the street as he commanded, "Sergeant, fire," even as he turned on his lightsaber, blocking a bolt from the window the pair had just left, protecting them. Turning to look at the rough looking man who'd tried to kill the pair, Jorel hadn't trusted his proficiency with Shien to send his next bolt back at the attacker with his saber, so had merely pulled the man, who fell out the window, and lacking Jorel's assistance, hit the ground that might've well have been covered with knives with a wet crunch.

His death was not muted in the Force, but Jorel, knowing it was coming, allowed the feeling to pass by him as if he wasn't there.

The Sergeant had fired, non-lethally at first, before switching to normal bolts, killing a few more who shot at them. From the other side, a speeder had rounded the corner, the older woman saying, "No! He's with us!" as Jorel had turned to face the new attack.

It had been driven by a man, maybe Jorel's age, maybe older, with a nasty scar across his face that almost formed a pattern. He had pulled up, glancing at Jorel's saber, before his eyes went to the pair. "Mom! Did you, Kandra!"

"Ga-Gavin?" the girl had asked, the first words she'd spoken, her voice high, but hoarse.

The older woman had helped the girl into the back seat, nodding to Jorel. "You have my thanks, Master Jedi."

"Mom, what about the others?" The man, Gavin, had asked.

"I could only get your sister," she had said, taking the passenger seat. "Now go!"

The speeder had taken off, leaving a very confused Jorel, who had mumbled, "But, I'm just a Padawan. . ."

"We need to go," Sergeant Hisku had insisted, once more by his side, shooting another man who'd moved to the open window, killing him before he could shoot them.

Jorel, however, had hesitated. The feeling that he'd followed? It was gone, but. . . but the woman had said there were others. She might not've been able to save them, but. . . but Jorel had thought that he possibly could. The building was well and truly on fire by that point, and he had felt death, and fear, from within it.

He had searched for that feeling, that suggestion of what to do next, but it had left along with the woman, leaving just him, and him alone.

"We're going in. If there's someone we can save, we should," he had decided, striding forward. He wished he could've gone through the window, to save time, but that kind of forty foot jump was something only a Master could do.

"This is a bad idea," Sergeant Hisku had declared, but had followed him anyways.

What had followed was a flurry of fire, both blaster and the burning kind, that led to them finding others locked in rooms as the fire raged, both of them getting the prisoners, mostly teens, out. Whatever had happened beforehand had left most of the criminals inside injured or dead, and some of the ad-hoc prison cells had been opened, those inside having escaped, but the older woman had obviously, after finding the girl she'd been looking for, left without saving the others.

He would make sure to save them all.

Jorel didn't have any talent in the rare pyrokinesis, so had been forced to fall on Tutumenis to brave the flames, furiously diverting the thermal energy from his own body, while Sergeant Hisku had stuck to the areas not yet on fire. Those on the top floors were dead, but they'd free'd nearly three dozen, getting them away, before they'd been forced to flee as well, the Force clear in its warning that they were out of time.

Staggering out as the building finally collapsed behind them, both of them carrying a prisoner that'd been burned and unable to leave themselves, coughing, they came face to face with the local law enforcement.

"Thank the Force you're here," Jorel had wheezed, lightsaber in his free hand waving towards the stunned criminals. "We've taken down a few kidnappers, and these kids need hel-"

He'd had a moment of danger, as one of them had raised a blaster rifle and fired, deflecting a bolt, while one had called, "No, stun!" and a barrage of stun shots had washed over them, Hisku killing one before they fell, blue-lined darkness enveloping them.

And now they were in what was very obviously not the local jail cell, captured by what was just as obviously not the local law enforcement. He knew their capture was his fault. That they should've left earlier, or gone out the back, or something, but. . .

"I'm not going to regret saving those kids," Jorel rebuffed, no longer feeling like he'd gargled nails. "Though I have no idea what they were even doing here."

"Trafficking, most likely," the Sergeant shrugged, chains jingling. "There was a nearby pirate stronghold, and slaves were one of their products, as you know. It's very likely the people we pulled might not even be locals. That is why I instructed them to go to our rally point if they needed somewhere safe."

He hadn't heard what she was saying to the ones they'd saved at the time, focused on getting the others as he was, assuming she was just telling them where the exit was, but that had been. . . "Smart," he nodded. "Do you think they could point Er'izma to us?" He could feel his Master's presence, far away, though it was faint. While the man didn't feel happy, he didn't seem worried, or as angry as he'd been when Jorel had gone to talk to the pirates. He tried to reach out, through the Force, but it was like trying to speak with a numbed tongue. The Padawan knew he got his master's attention, or at least he was pretty sure he had, but that was all.

She shook her head. "No. Whoever was running that either had coopted the police, or had the planning and resources to pretend to be the police. We're probably far away from where they stunned us." The Chiss woman sighed. "Not even on leave for a day before we almost get ourselves killed."

"But we're not," Jorel offered with a smile, causing her to shoot him a cross look. "From what the records say, this is, well, not that out of the ordinary for Jedi. Sorry," he offered with a half shrug.

"Should've never taken this job," Hisku muttered, but he could tell she didn't really mean it, she was just annoyed. "So, 'Master Jedi', what does the Force say we should do now, after it got us here in the first place?" she requested, a little mocking.

"It wasn't the Force that got us here, just a feeling," the Padawan replied. Only Masters heard the Force give them warning past the next few seconds in combat, after all. The Temple teachers had told him so. Repeatedly. It was only as the Sergeant stared at him, unamused, that he realized how dumb that sounded, now that he'd said it aloud.

"Oh, um, I guess it was the Force," he admitted, not sure what to do with that information. He'd known they'd been wrong about his Mental Shields, or at least Er'izma had said they were. He wondered what else they were wrong about. But that was for later, for now, they needed to escape. Closing his eyes, he searched for that feeling, that thought-not-his that suggested a course of action, only to come up empty. "Yeah, I got nothing."

With her completely red eyes, it was harder to tell when she rolled them, but the head motion was enough for Jorel to pick up on the gesture anyways. "Of course." Grunting a little, she pushed herself up against the wall, until she could reach her head with a chained hand. Leaning forward, she pulled something metallic from her dark hair, and dropped back down, holding the thin, black device.

As he watched, she manipulated it, the item extending slightly, as she tried to maneuver it into the keyhole of her manacle. "Are you. . . picking the lock?" he asked, unsure.

"I'm trying," she bit out, brow furrowed in concentration, before it slipped from her hand, clattering on the ground. "Oh, Sithspit," she swore, muttering to herself, "This is what I get for not practicing since basic."

Jorel, pointing towards the item with his bound hands, lifted it up with the Force, once more thankful of Er'izama's training, manipulating those large iron rods. Compared to those, this was as easy as lifting a pen, and he easily moved the device to the lock she'd been working on. He wasn't familiar with the lock itself, but, as he tried to visualize how he remembered they worked, it reminded him a little of the training tool the Temple Initiates used, moving components in a glassteel encased box. He couldn't see the lock, but used the tool to feel around the insides to get a sense for them.

Concentrating, it was harder than doing it physically, lacking the direct tactile feeling of his own hands as he rummaged around, but the Force had a feeling of it's own, and he got a sense for them. Removing the pick, Hisku instructed, "Just give it to me, so I can-"

With a twist, the components of the lock turned, and it popped open.

Assuming the locks were mass produced, he tried the same thing on his own right hand. It opened easily. Attempting the same pattern of movements on the left shackle, it just rattled, until he flipped the motions, mirroring what he'd done on the right, and his left manacle popped open as well, repeating the process with her left shackle as well.

She rubbed her wrists, which had started to chafe, and he poked her in the shoulder with her lockpick. Giving him an unamused look, she took it, folding it back up, and clipping it to her hair, parallel to the strands, causing it to practically disappear.

"So. That was a useful little thing. . . Did you expect for this to happ-" Jorel started to ask, only for the woman to sigh.

"No. It's standard kit for anyone with hair long enough to hide it," she informed him primly. "Nothing of today has been expected. So, 'Master Jedi', what now?"

Jorel stood, stretching, warming up muscles that'd stopped aching, but had started to set. "You're not going to let that go, are you?"

Her look, even as she subtly stretched herself, could've frozen a reactor. "Should I?"

"I mean, I'd prefer if you did," he offered, trying to joke, walking over to the door. They were in a hallway, the far wall bare. A dirty lighting strip ran the length, and he was pretty sure that was a bit of dried blood where the floor met the wall. "So, ideas?"

The Sergeant patted herself down, which he did as well, finding his saber gone, which made sense, as well as his identification and credit-chit. "They've taken all our gear," she announced. "Even my holdouts. Can you open the door with the Force?"

"I can't see the lock," he said, shaking his head, trying to stand up on his tiptoes and get a better angle, only to have nothing. "If there was another across from us, I might, but it's like typing on a datapad you can't see, only in three dimensions."

"And you can't tear the door off?" she suggested. At his flat look, she shrugged. "General Er'izma could."

He wanted to say that was doubtful, but, having felt the man's full Force Presence on the pirate base, maybe it wasn't. The man's Master had been able to hide his Presence to the point that he disappeared, the fact that his student held back around the Temple, while pretending to be just another Jedi, when he was anything but, made sense. While not on the level of Master Yoda, he was close. "I'm not a Master, or even a Knight. I'm just a Padawan, and this," he knocked on the metal door, "is more than I can handle."

"Know your limits, I suppose," the Chiss muttered, as she paced the room, examining the dirty, bare walls.

Jorel started to respond, but the sound of footsteps drifted down the hall. Unsure, he looked to the Sergeant, who sharply motioned him to the back of their cell. Grabbing the manacles, she almost clipped them back on, her hands 'forced' at waist level as she stood, and he followed suit.

"Do we have to kill 'em? The blue one looked like she'd be fun," a man's voice grumbled.

"You heard Jido," a woman's voice responded. "They're vigilante's, and we can't let 'em get away. Safer just to put a bolt between their eyes. And the boy doesn't look half bad either. Pity."

The man, a human with shaggy blonde hair, didn't even glance inside as he tapped something, showing the door's lock to be electronic. Opening it, he walked through the door, looking over his shoulder, even as the woman behind him, a yellow-skinned Twi'lek, looked at them, eyes widening as she looked at them, hand going to her side. "Nej, they're awa-" was as far as she got as Sergeant Hisku launched herself off the wall at a sprint, manacles popping off her arms easily.

Jorel followed half a second behind her, Force Control giving him supernatural speed and strength, slamming into the man as he reached for Hisku, trying to stop her. This allowed the Sergeant to tackle the other woman as she pulled a blaster. The Twi'lek reflexively fired, the bolt going wide, as Hisku slammed a flattened hand in her throat, cutting off her cry of alarm.

The man Jorel had hit was bigger, but that meant nothing when one had the Force. While not as proficient with hand-to-hand as he was with a Lightsaber, Jorel had wanted to be a Guardian, and that mean knowing how to fight. The man tried to slam a fist into Jorel's head, opening his mouth to yell, only to find the blow blocked, his breath forced out as the Jedi slammed a fist into his solar plexus, making his cry of "They're escaping" a weak, nearly unintelligible, wheeze.

Taking a half step back, the Padawan gave the man room to double over, easily dodging the weak grab he tried, slamming a haymaker into the man's head, knocking him out cold. Feeling the Dark Side bloom of a nearby death, Jorel's head snapped over to see the Sergeant getting up from the fallen Twi'lek, a knife buried in the dead woman's neck.

Dusting herself off, Hisku started to check the dead woman's pockets, grabbing everything she could. Glancing over at the fallen man, she asked, "You didn't kill him?"

"I didn't have to," Jorel replied. "He'll have a headache, and maybe some temporary short term memory loss, but he'll live." He hadn't done it consciously, it'd just been how he trained, and how the Force had guided him. He also didn't hold Hisku's actions against her. She wasn't a Jedi, she couldn't do what he could do, so holding her to the same standard would just be wrong. Hesitating, he started to search the large man's pockets, taking his holdout blaster for his own.

While some considered the weapons uncivilized, Jorel knew you could defend yourself almost as well with a blaster as a saber, and it was better than nothing. Dragging the man over, he locked him in the manacles, Hisku dragging the dead woman and doing so as well, pausing before taking the knife, wiping it clean on the man's clean-ish shirt, and pocketing it.

"All right, now what?" she asked archly. "I'd suggest we exfiltrate as quickly and quietly as possible, but you haven't cared for my suggestions very much today." she checked the small datapad she'd taken from the dead Twi'lek. "Make that yesterday."

He knew he shouldn't be arguing, but he had to respond, "I had to save them, alright? I'm a Jedi. It's what Jedi do."

"Even if it gets you killed?" she questioned sharply. "If we'd waited and called for reinforcements, they would've been able to protect us."

"We didn't have time!" he shot back. "And you had a commpiece too, why didn't you do it?"

That caused her to pause. "I. . ." she looked away, "I didn't think of it."

"And neither did I, so we're both dumb, but we saved those people. And if we died, then, fine, but we would've done so helping people, instead of wasting it working in the dirt!" he declared, aware he wasn't remaining calm, not keeping proper Jedi decorum. Seeing those blasters firing at him, some part of him, a part of him he hadn't been aware of, had been alright with it, and that scared him. Taking a centering breath, he continued, repeating what he'd been taught, "Jedis, they are guardians of the Republic. If we die, then we are returned to the Force. If we live, we keep helping."

Sergeant Hisku looked at him in confusion. "I wasn't aware that you were suicidal," she finally commented sarcastically, but obviously still unsure.

He sighed. "I'm not," he said, while wondering if that was a lie. "It's, just. . ." he tried to parse it in a way a non-jedi would understand. "Sometimes, you try your best, and your best isn't enough, and you die. But, if you are following the Will of the Force, then it's because your death is what is needed. It sucks, but, well, that's how things are."

"You're a soldier, you should know," he tried, as she still wasn't getting it, though he was processing it as well. "Sometimes you lose people to win. It's unfortunate, but you trust your commander. A Jedi's commander is the Force itself."

Again, she stared at him, before shaking her head. "That's. . . You know what? I don't care. My mission is to protect you, and if the Force says it's time for you to die, I'll stun you and carry you to safety myself. Regulations state that we are to ensure the survival of our squadmates, unless orders from on high state that the mission priority trumps that general order. If the Force disagrees, it can file a complaint with the General," the Sergeant stated, standing up straight, and looking at Jorel challengingly. "And that means we need to leave, before someone discovers these two haven't come back." She thumbed the blaster-pistol to its stun setting. "Does the Force have a problem with that?"

"No Ma'am," the Padawan replied, finding himself smiling, and a little bit intimidated, which just made him smile more for some reason. Once he focused on leaving, though, he got the barest of feelings. "Though I think it does suggest we go a certain way." She gave him an aggrieved look. "But that doesn't mean we can't be stealthy."

"Do you even know how to use stealth?" she demanded, exasperated, "Because all I've seen is you blundering into trouble."

Jorel smiled. "You wouldn't say that if you knew in the Temple. Trust me, if I can sneak by the Masters, I can sneak by some thugs. How about you, Sergeant? Do you think you can walk without proper, marching form?"

Giving him a flat look, she, nearly silently, stalked out of the room, walking almost on the balls of her feet. Grinning, glad to have a way forward, something to focus on, and the Force to guide him, the Jedi followed, even quieter.
 
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Chapter 18
Chapter Eighteen

Anaïs had never been happier to stand on solid ground in her life.

Nothing had happened, which, if anything, had made it worse. Nothing but nonstop studying, for a solid week, Master Lucian sticking closer to her than he normally did, and they had studied everything, from local starcharts, to how to slice basic electronic locks open, to how to spot basic traps. Much of it was review, as she had studied how to be a Sentinel at the Temple, but there was enough new information that she still felt like she was drowning in it by the time he had paused, nodding, and told her to get some rest, as the danger had passed.

Now, they were on Noonar, the only populated world in the Noonian system, right on the inner edge of the Outer Rim, further away from Coruscant than she'd ever been before. On the hyper-route called the Celanon Spur, it was a waypoint and a small trading hub, but otherwise not noteworthy, at least on the galactic scale.

With the (still unnamed) ship's hyperdrive, rated at 1.5, they'd cut the time it would've taken to get there through normal means nearly in half, which, from what her Master had said, would make all the difference. Grimacing at the speeder bike in front of her, she wasn't looking forward to their trip into the city. With the wildlife around the Uphrades base, it would've been incredibly dangerous to use a speeder, so she hadn't been able to practice.

"Can you, um, drive?" she asked, getting on board, feet leaving blessed ground. Their ship was behind them, parked on a rocky outcropping so as not to give away its presence by depressed plants on the grassy plain, once more invisible.

Master Lucian, who'd been waiting for her on his own speeder bike, shook his head, motioning to the grassy plain around them. "No. We have time, and there's no trees for you to hit. If you need to, I'll take over, but you have to learn, Padawan."

"Yes, Master," she grumbled, hesitantly taking hold of the controls. Slowly, very slowly, she pushed the handles forward, the bike inching along the ground.

She got it up to a jogging pace, the controls very sensitive, and was starting to feel a bit more comfortable. Until, that is, she heard her master announce, "We don't have that much time. Use the Force, Anaïs."

With worry squirming in her gut, she closed her eyes, feeling the Force around her. Picking up a bit of speed, she felt more comfortable, turning left and right, swooshing through the tall grass, the repulsorlifts of the bike parting them like water off a boat's prow.

"Good," Lucian announced. "Now let's actually get going."

She had a half-second of warning, as the Force urged her to hold on tightly, before the handlebars slammed forward seemingly on their own, pulling her down tight against the bike as she clamped with her legs, the entire thing blasting forward at eye-watering speeds.

"MASTER!" she yelled, in shocked anger, only for him, laughing, to pull up next to her, the sound almost lost on the wind.

"Use the Force, and copy me!" he instructed, voice carrying over the wind, pushing himself even faster, and pulling ahead.

Trusting that he'd stop her from hitting anything, she closed her eyes, and felt out with the Force. Her master was there, but his Presence had spread out a little, stretching more forward than anything, almost feeling out the area in front of him. More than that, she could sense the bit of condensed energy that suggested a Force Barrier in front of him, acting as a shield, protecting him from the wind.

Concentrating, she tried to copy him, her Force Sense, which now always was active, if only a little, spread out, letting her almost feel the area in front of her as if she was lightly running her hands along it. She lost herself in the sensation, the parting of the grasses almost like fingers brushing through her hai-

"Anaïs," her master's voice snapped, and she almost overturned the bike, jerking on one of the handles, only for the controls to stick, not moving at all, keeping her bike moving straight. "Focus," he called, coming up next to her. "Just because it isn't Dark, doesn't mean it won't affect you." With his somewhat obvious reminder delivered, he pulled ahead of her again, disappearing into the tall grasses once more.

She blushed, hands shaking a little as her controls were given back to her, able to be moved once more. She'd gotten so used to pushing out anything with the taint of the Dark Side that she'd forgotten that other things could be just as distracting. She was reminded of the club, which had swirled with both Dark and Light, and which had taken her completely off guard.

She wondered how she'd do now.

Trying again, she sensed the world around her, but kept focus on her goal, namely not hitting anything. She could feel her master in front of her, see him, despite being out of visual range, staring at her, brow furrowed in concern, before nodding and looking forward once again.

It was odd, in this sense the dirt was indistinct, there, but blurry. The grass was clearer, but still not quite in focus. Master Lucian, however, was like a living statue, ever inch of him sharply defined in a way that seemed. . . too real, like a drawing where every minor feature was emphasized. She wondered what she looked like, but let the thought pass, refocusing on her goal before her master could chide her again.

Stretching her own Presence in the Force out, to match the distance her master was sensing in front of himself, she moved on to the other part of what he was doing. Thankfully, the forming of the barrier, sloped and close, was easier, and she let out a small sigh as she was no longer feeling like she was getting weakly punched in her face with air. She couldn't move her barriers, not yet, but she'd figured out how to anchor them to large enough objects.

It made sense, as everything in the universe was moving, so there was no reason for them to remain around a spinning, orbiting planet, or even a starship, and not something else that was smaller. She couldn't anchor them to herself, but she could to the speeder bike, the translucent screen, tinted gold, having formed and now blocking the wind.

Balancing maintaining the Force Barrier, her stretched Force Presence, and flying the speederbike was difficult, but thankfully when she dropped either of the Force techniques, she was in no danger of hitting anything, and when she'd started to drift to the side she could practically feel her master's disapproval, though it held a faint undercurrent of concern, and soon she was doing all three. Only once did she need to dodge, some large cat thing suddenly in her path, but it only took a slight motion to skim right past it, blasting past the striped, beige, six legged creature who stared at her, shocked, as she passed by it mere inches away. She almost lost the techniques as she giggled at its expression, but held on, still following the Master Jedi.

They travelled for a little, with occasional starships flying by in the distance, heard, but rarely seen, until her Master slowed down slightly, pulling up next to her. "Good," he nodded. "Now see if you can follow me."

Nodding confidently, though knowing it wouldn't be easy, as it never was, she prepared herself. Waiting a moment for him to pull forward again, keeping track of him through the Force, Anaïs starting to pursue him, as he moved back and forth, always in the direction of their destination, but with increasingly complex twists and turns, always keeping a couple dozen meters in front of her no matter how much she pushed herself to catch up.

Only once did he need to help, when she took a turn a little too sharply, the repulsorlifts breaking contact with the ground and sending the bike falling, only for it to suddenly, as the Force around her shifted, right itself even as she desperately threw up a Barrier below her to absorb the force of her fall. The barrier had broken as the sense of danger had shut off in an instant, the speederbike once more securely under her.

"Good recovery, but know the limits of your tools," he told her, coming up out of the grass beside her.

"But this is the first time I've ro-driven this, she tried to argue, quickly correcting herself, having ridden the bike once before.

Lucian, however, shook his head. "And you will rarely have the luxury of practicing what you'll be using in the moment, or else you will seriously limit yourself. No, you need to listen in the Force. As a user of the Light, it will look out for you, and warn you right before you do something that will harm you. Or did you not feel it?

Anaïs paused, trying to think of what she felt right before she'd almost fallen. "There was. . . maybe something? But I thought it was another rock!"

"And that is why you are a Padawan, and not a Knight," her master noted, though he smiled as he did so, and his tone held no condemnation. "The warnings are subtle for subtle harms. You would've survived that, with some scrapes, maybe a broken bone, but you can heal those. No, those blaring, Force clearly speaking to you, moments are when death is imminent, Anaïs."

She blinked. "Is. . . is that why we went to Uphrades? So I could get used to it where things weren't subtle?" She supposed it had worked, even if it went in the face of the slow, gentle progression of the Temple. Then again, much of what her master did went in the face of the Temple, so that made sense.

"I can do something for more than one reason," Lucian smiled, which wasn't a no. "And please do not refer to that place by name, lest someone overhear, but yes, that was one of them. Though, remember, I was on hand to make sure nothing happened, but the Force didn't know that."

". . . what?" she asked, thoroughly confused, only for her master to disappear seemingly from the Force entirely, even though he was seated on his bike, right next to her. "You mean, when you're like that, the Force. . . it doesn't, um, account for you?"

"More like you don't account for me, as I have disappeared from your knowledge of the Force, though," he shrugged, "maybe you're correct. Deep investigations into the nature of the Force have long been Taboo in the Temple, long before even my time, branded the practice of a Sith, and thus forbidden. One would think they would claim the drinking of water to be forbidden, if enough Sith did so," he sighed, rolling his eyes. "I understand their underlying reasons, but they truncated their explanations, and thus accidentally led others astray who did not understand implicitly as they did. The numbers of those who actually understand, rather than those who were blindly obedient, shifted with time. Once all those that understood had passed, and no one knew the true reasons, only the shortened explanations, giving even further abridged explanations to their own Padawans, the cycle of ignorance began anew."

Anaïs couldn't help herself. "And you believe that the Jedi should talk more, and give longer explanations?" She'd sat through more lectures in a week with Master Lucian then she normally did in a month or two back at the Temple, even during her early Initiate days, when attending classes took up almost all of her time.

Rather than take offense, the Jedi laughed, "I see you've been paying attention, Padawan. Now, let us continue, and do, if you are trying something tricky, pay attention to those 'rocks' in your path, to make sure they're actually stones, and not signs.

She reddened a little, hanging her head with a, "Yes, Master," as he laughed again, taking off at a slower pace, and she started to follow once more. They quickly sped up, and once again she was immersed in the chase, getting much closer this time, only to have him suddenly pull away from her at the last moment, blasting forwards, then coming to a stop.

Slowing herself, Anaïs pulled up next to him, wondering what she'd done wrong, only to realize they were on a hill, from which she could see houses and farms in the distance. Had his senses extended out that far? she wondered, as he'd started to slow down before they'd crested the ridge. "Good job," Master Lucian told her, and she couldn't deny the spark of pride in her chest at the praise, "But now we're going to move at a more. . . sane, pace, at least to non-sensitives. Keep your senses up, but be aware that reacting too quickly, or cutting things too closely, may draw attention from the Force-blind."

She nodded, and once more followed him down towards what started as farms, but shifted to villages, then towns, and then the edges of the city in slowly increasing density and complexity. Pulling up beside her master, the traffic getting heavier, she had to ask, "No checkpoints?"

Master Lucian shook his head. "This is the Outer Rim, Anaïs, and a colony instead of a carefully controlled enclave. No, there is security at key places, like the spaceports, but much of the city is open."

However, as if in direct contradiction of his statement, they turned a corner, only to see a blockade, men in uniforms, and with blaster rifles, waving some speeders through, but checking others. "Or not," he mused. "This is new." The unsaid 'I don't like it' came through loud and clear.

"Master?" Anaïs asked, knowing they had none of the identification that the others were showing when stopped, only for him to point to a satchel on her bike. Opening it, there was a small wallet, which, when she opened that, displayed her picture, along with her planet of origin, Thorgeld I, and her city of residence, Fabrin.

"And call me Lucian, Anaïs," her master told her. "Slavery is frowned upon in this sector, and I'm too young looking to be your superior in a trade."

She nodded, and, letting her anxiety pass her by, remained calm as the two of them joined the queue, which was moving along fairly quickly. However, she still felt a bit of un-Jedi like worry when, after she presented her identification to the guard, he called another over. "Hey, this look a bit off to you?" the armed man asked. "I think we'll need to. . . interrogate this one."

The other guard frowned, and started to shake his head, before his eyes opened wide and an unpleasant smile spread across his face, while he looked her up and down. "Yeah, Rix, a thorough investigation."

Anaïs was dismayed at how quickly she'd been found out, only to realize the Dark feelings coming off the pair, her hand unconsciously drifting towards her saber, hidden in its pouch. "Is there a problem with my friend's identification?" Master Lucian asked politely, only for one guard to motion at him with his blaster rifle.

"Move along, kid," one told him. "This is official business."

"Ah, my apologies," the Jedi Master smiled, putting his hands up as one of the other guards, out of earshot on the busy street, glanced at them. "I'm sure you'd both agree though, that You're both free to go."

"You're both free to go," both guards in front of her echoed, in chorus, handing Anaïs her identification back and waving them away.

Part of her wanted to say of course they were, but she shrugged off her master's Mind Trick, following him out, where they proceeded calmly, turning down an alley. "Mas-Lucian?" she asked, "I thought you said that my identification would help me blend in."

"Oh, it will," he noted dryly, frowning as he looked deeper in the city. "But you could've been granted papers from the Senate itself and there's a good chance it wouldn't matter. Actually," he corrected, "That would be worse, as no one would believe them. No, for the rank and file to be like this. . . tell me, Padawan, what do you feel from this city?"

She looked at him, confused, as he'd just said that she shouldn't call him Master, so him calling her Padawan would be even worse if they were trying to blend in. However, she did as she asked, feeling out. In the wild, it'd been free, and peaceful, and Light, but here the jumble of feelings pressing in on her was difficult to sort through, though the emotions from deeper in seemed to wash outwards, oozing over the city.

There was a mix of everything, joy, anger, sadness, excitement, lust, curiosity, but under all of it was a current of Fear that tainted all other emotions. Fear for oneself, fear for others, fear of others, all so strongly present that the differing kinds, like different flavors of fruit that had all gone to rot, could be picked out cleanly, the sensations seeming to crawl up her skin now that she reached towards them.

Uphrades had been worse, but the Dark Side there had been. . . purer, cleaner, more calm and less personal than what was coming from the city. It had been stronger, but it had been easier to both sense and deal with, instead of the almost sticky sensation she now felt, tinged with a thousand different personalities, like a sugary drink that had been spilled, then not cleaned, left to congeal and unexpectedly sticking to one's skin.

However, she had trained, and pulled back, mentally scraping away the lingering traces of Darkness, opening her eyes to look at her master, who nodded to her unsaid question. "Yes, Padawan, something is wrong here. I think it best if we see my contact straight away. She owes me no favors, but she will be able to help. Come, let's not waste time.

Following him out of the alley, they moved deeper into the city, and through another checkpoint, this one without issue. They stopped, parking their bikes and paying the attendant, continuing on foot even deeper, finally coming to an antiques store.

Walking up to it, something felt. . . wrong, and she couldn't say why. The feeling from before, the stone in her path ready to send her flying if she blundered into it, was present in the building they approached. And it wasn't faint. "Lucian?" she asked as they reached the door, but he shook his head.

"I know, but we need to see regardless," he informed her, trying the door, only to find it locked. "If we don't, things will go worse." With a flick of the Force, it opened, revealing a dark shop. The air tasted stale, and was warm, the air conditioner inactive, a layer of dust over everything. "Oh, this isn't good," he added as they stepped inside, closing the door behind them, to which she had to agree.

Striding over to behind the counter, he turned on the computer, pausing for a second before typing in the password, unlocking it. There was a single file open, a notepad program set to display as soon as one logged in, upon which were two words.

Trap Run

"Sithspit," he swore, looking towards the street, before glancing at her, eyes narrowing. "Padawan, I do believe it's time for your first solo assignment. I hadn't planned on it this early, but apparently the Force thinks it's time. I'm going to be busy, but while eyes are on me, you can be the Sentinel you wish to become. Find Malea Vondarr, the owner of this shop, and get her to safety. Bring her to the ship if you need to, just make sure you aren't followed. If I try, she will die, and worse will happen to this world, but if you do so, she might yet live. However, remember this: your life is not worth hers. If it comes down to you or her, save yourself. If the only way you can save her is the Dark Side, let her die. Do you understand me?"

"I, what? Anaïs asked, surprised, though she could feel something, ever so slightly, pushing her to say yes. "I, yes. But, how am I going to find her? I don't even know where to start!"

"COME OUT WITH YOUR HANDS IN THE AIR!" a voice called from outside.

Lucian pulled a pad of paper over to himself, along with an ornate pen. "Last known address, but she might've moved," he told her, writing it down. "Likely passwords." Several more lines. "Known family as of thirty-two years ago." Several names and addresses. "That's all I have time for. Be careful, Padawan. This time I won't be watching while you fight the ember drakes. Now stand there until I close the door," he directed, pointing to the side.

She quickly moved over, waiting as her master turned and walked out, tense but calm demeaner flowing into innocent nervousness. Opening the door and slipping out, he shielded her from view, and closed it behind himself.

"I'm sorry, I'm looking for a friend," she heard him call out. "Um, have any of you seen her? Also, um, is something wrong? It's, just, wow. That's a lot of guns." He sounded. . . wrong. No, not wrong, he sounded natural, but she knew what her master sounded like, and he almost sounded like Jorel when he talked, though with his own voice.

"Under orders of the Baron, you are under arrest for colluding with rebels!" the same voice as before called. "Submit and you will not be harmed!"

"Baron?" the Jedi asked, still playing dumb, but sounding increasingly worried. "I'm sorry, there must be a misunderstanding. I'm from off planet and just arrived, you see. I thought you all had a president. I'll just go, as I'm very busy, so-"

The sound of a blaster rang out, followed by more blasterfire after a moment, a few bolts hitting the windows, not breaking but only leaving dark spots, showing the frosted panes to be glassteel, before there was only silence, even the normal ambient noise of the city abating.

"Well, that was just rude," Master Lucian said, once more himself, with calm control, sounding just like he did right before he added some new twist to her training, but with an underlying edge she hadn't heard from him. There was the Snap-hiss of a lightsaber, and a nearly inaudible murmur of 'Jedi!' from several other. "Someone really should teach you all some manners."

"FIRE!" the other voice called, "KILL THE JE-GHUGH!" and then the sounds of combat, of a small war, came from outside, more stray shots hitting the windows, which still stayed intact. She could feel the swirl of the Force as her Master did something, his Presence expanding to encompass the street, with a pressure that was almost physical, then the city block, a feeling of comfort and confidence wrapping around her, of belief that she could do her task, but also of worry for her safety.

As those outside started to scream, she had to assume they felt something very different.

Explosions started to sound, as the Force twisted in ways she didn't recognize, shaking the windows, as she could sense the Jedi Master run. The sound of violence followed him, leaving her alone in the abandoned shop, silence descending once more.

You know, studying wasn't so bad, she decided, as she took a seat at the computer, and tried to figure out her next move.
 
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Chapter 19
Chapter Nineteen

The door out of the 'prison' had been left open, and there wasn't a guard, which let them escape all too easily. The door had no handle on their side, which would've made escape impossible without the force, and the electronic lock meant that, while he could probably have forced the mechanism open, he also very likely would've set off an alarm.

A quick check of the other cells showed almost all were unoccupied. He darted inside the one that wasn't, containing the girl Jorel had carried out of the burning building. It'd complicate their escape, yes, but he'd gotten captured trying to save her, he wasn't just going leave without her.

However, even as he got close, he knew it wouldn't matter.

She was dead.

Her burns had been bad, but, with even the tiny medpack he'd had in his belt, he could've stabilized her long enough to get help. Hell, with how well his healing had progressed under his master, he could've done so without it, if they'd found transport and Hisku had driven. However, left untreated for hours, she'd died, long enough ago that there were no ripples of it in the Force, at least nothing discernable past the general malaise that hung in the air of the prison, worse than the slums, but not by much.

However, that thought made him turn to his minder, companion, partner, whatever. "Hisku, you need healing?" he asked, already hallway into the mental state required. From his fingers, beads of blue phantom dew formed, real in the Force, if almost entirely intangible otherwise. He wasn't very good at the technique, thoughts tending to slip if he wasn't careful, but they both needed to be at their best.

"No, I'm fine," she deferred, and he shot her a disbelieving look. "Chiss are hardier than humans," she commented, with some pride, and, looking more closely at her, he noted that, past the soot and grime, she didn't actually appear injured. His skin, however, was still a little red, and, focusing the healing inwards, he finished up bringing himself back to, if not perfect health, then close.

The bit of fatigue from using the Force quickly faded, and, looking over her once more, he found she was, indeed, completely healed. He'd thought, given how cold-aligned her species was, fire would affect her worse than humans, but that apparently wasn't the case.

"Are you going to keep staring, or are we going to leave?" the Sergeant asked, looking past him to the dead girl. "There's nothing more you can do for her, unless Jedi can bring the dead back to life."

"They can't," he said, reaching over and closing the dead girl's sightless eyes, hoping she'd been unconscious when she died, not knowing enough about medicine to determine how she died. It was all Jorel could do to hope she found peace in the Force. "Alright," he agreed, standing, "let's go."

Very quickly, they found what kind of building they were in. It was a factory, and one that still seemed somewhat active, though at a much-diminished capacity. Passing through another door, they entered the working area, Jorel taking the lead while Sergeant Hisku followed behind him. Slinking past workers, at first, they found suitable, if bare, disguises. With those, the two of them picked their way through the complex. The windows, high and out of sight, were all shuttered, and, lacking a saber and time, would not make for good exit points, even if they could get to them, which they could not easily.

More important than the factory itself though, was that the compound full of what were obviously gang-members, more organized than he'd expected. Thankfully, the building wasn't packed, and moving carefully, they were able to avoid detection.

Stealth, while not exactly his forte, was not the act of moving unseen, but unnoticed. Almost no one, not even most guards, paid attention to everything around them, at least for not any length of time. An enemy's attention could be roused, in a state where they, for a minute or two, became hyper-aware, knowing something was wrong. But for a dozen? For an hour? For eight? No, it was only things that looked out of place that attracted attention.

The most skilled infiltrators could walk into a place without so much as raising an eyebrow, so obviously belonging there that even the most secure door could be bypassed as someone else held it open for them. A less trained agent would have to observe an area, figure out patterns, derive strategies.

Jorel was barely trained, only having his own experiences to fall back on, as well as the Sentinel classes he'd attended with Anaïs, if only to stave off boredom. A not very nice part of him also liked the fact that, while she could master the Force techniques faster than he could, and use them more effectively, this kind of mundane use was something that escaped her, and was one of the few areas, other than direct combat, where he proved her better.

A master infiltrator could have ghosted out without anyone the wiser, and, while he lacked the training and experience of such a person, he had the basics, and he could cheat.

"I look ridiculous," Sergeant Hisku muttered, wearing the same smock as he was, as he handed her a large, empty box, grabbing a couple of smaller ones he stacked in front of him, a whisper of the Force guiding him.

"You look annoyed, which works," he shot back. "Now follow me."

Carrying the boxes, their faces, especially hers, were blocked from the line of sight of most of the workers and some of the gang-members. The overgarment they both ware broke up the form of her uniform, just as it helped hide his padawan garb, the boxes adding to that effect. Most of all, though, was the subtle veil he drew about them in the Force.

Not exactly a Mind Trick, it followed the same principles, only instead of taking a battering ram to another's Presence, forcing it, in a way, to conform to the will of the user, this was more a starship's prow, diverting attention around oneself. The part of someone that would go 'you aren't supposed to be here', which reached out towards the user, in a manner of speaking, would be turned aside, and then rationalized away.

True Mind Tricks required words because of how specific they were, with greater control reducing the need to say exactly what one wanted. He was pretty sure a Master at the Temple was so skilled she could do so with just a look and a raised eyebrow.

Or Master Wayam was just that good at disapproving stares. Despite having no eyes.

However, weakened as the veils were compared to a true Mind Trick, they could be more easily pierced, something compounded by Jorel's lack of skill with the technique. That's why he took the other steps, as the less out of place they were, the less the veil had to do.

They made their way across the production floor, unremarked upon, until one man, without looking at them, yelled in their direction, "Calren, that you?"

Jorel didn't miss a beat, knowing the veil remained intact, grunting, and shaking his head as he continued to carry the boxes.

"Well, tell him his break's been over for ten minutes!" the random, strong-willed man directed, and Jorel grunted noncommittally, carrying the boxes to the doorway.

Exiting, they smoothly, but unhurriedly, made their way down a hall, past several armed men who were lounging around, stepping, not with purpose, as that would attract attention, but with the bored, almost slow steps of someone who knows that, the second they put down their current cargo, they'll just have to go get more.

His destination was deeper in, two of them, now that they were closing in on them. However, they had to stop, turning to enter a storage room, and drop their boxes off first. He did so, coming face to face with a brown haired boy smoking a death stick, sitting in the back of the room, staring at him as he did so.

"Who the crink are you?" the boy demanded, trying to sound tougher than his immature voice would allow, the veil breaking as they were both focused on fully. Jorel subtly reached over to keep Hisku from putting her own boxes down, her distinctive appearance the exact opposite of what they needed.

"You Calren?" Jorel asked, sounding bored.

The boy scowled, "What's it to you, nerf-herder?"

"Your break's over," the padawan told him.

"So? Why should I care? And who are you?" the kid asked, louder.

"I'm the one passing on the message," Jorel replied, looking unimpressed. "And Bi, put those down over there," he directed, pointing to a far corner, making her look less conspicuous as she was no longer just standing there with the box. "So you gonna go, or should I go back and tell him you aren't coming?"

The teen scowled dropping the mostly burned narcotic, and stomped out, slamming his shoulder against Jorel's as he passed and muttered, "Don't need to be a drukhead 'bout it."

The jedi, following his instincts, resisted slightly, but let the kid go, the room empty. Looking to the Sergeant, she waited in the corner, blaster out. "You didn't need that," he said, moving over to the boxes, opening them up, looking for something, though he didn't know what.

"I wasn't sure he was going to leave," the Sergeant replied levelly.

"And when the sound of Blasterfire drew the rest?" Jorel asked, causing the Chiss woman to pause, scowling.

"Stupid stealth ops," she muttered, holstering it and moving over. "So, why aren't we leaving. We passed an exit."

Jorel shook his head. "Trapped, or something." It'd just felt. . . off. Like the doors in the Temple from behind which a Jedi Knight waited, when he was sneaking around after curfew. "Bingo," he smiled, finding a box full of random junk, including a face-covering helmet, tossing it to her. "Wear this."

She hesitated, but did so, complaining, "It stinks."

"What's wrong, Sergeant, not used to a little smell?" he smiled, finding a cloak and tossing it to her as well. "Over the smock."

She complied, and he grabbed a datapad. It had random stuff, a list of prices for various goods, and a mail program, full of junk messages. "When I say, 'Can't I just,' take your pistol out and motion at me with it, but keep the smock hidden. Other than that, follow me," he instructed, coming up with a plan on the fly, the Force not objecting, or not caring, he really didn't know which. All of this 'trusting in the Force' thing left him flying blind, but if it got him into this mess, it could get him out of it.

". . . Fine. But someone shoots at us, we're leaving," she agreed, after a moment of consideration.

Knowing that was the best he was going to get, he shot her a grin full of confidence that he didn't feel, and nodded. Taking a second to center himself, closing his eyes, he tried to change mindsets. Not a bored worker, but a somewhat nervous one, not sure why he was being called. Nodding to the Sergeant again, he walked out, none of the thugs hanging in the hallway looking their way as they walked away from them, turning a corner into another hallway, at the end of which was a doorway with a guard.

They approached, the guard, a wrinkled Weequay man, looking up at them, eyes focusing on Jorel. "Workers not allowed in," he commanded.

Jorel laughed nervously, not exactly faking it, holding up the datapad, flashing the screen to quickly to be read. "I was told there's a problem with the report. That I need to talk to the boss. If you want to take it, that works, but they've got questions. Trust me, if I could stay outside, I would."

Hisku stared impassively at his back, not saying anything, just as he'd asked, while the other alien stared at them with narrowed eyes. "No workers allowed in," the guard repeated.

He'd hoped he could save it for later, but Jorel used his trump card, glancing back to Hisku, plaintively asking, "See? I can't go in. So can't I just lea-"

His partner pulled out her blaster pistol, pointing it at him.

"Okay, okay," he said quickly, turning back to the Weequay. "Come on man, I don't want to get shot."

The guard stared, before reaching over, putting in the code, and opening the door for them. "Good luck," he commented maliciously as they walked in.

The door closed behind them with a slam, and the guard's chuckle, and the pair found themselves in a much nicer looking hallway. "I can't believe that worked," the Sergeant announced quietly. "But now we're locked in. In a base full of criminals. With Blaster Pistols."

"We're not locked in with them, they're locked in with us," Jorel quipped, but even with a helmet, his partner's unamused stare was just as potent as normal. "Right, this way."

Moving down a hallway, walking past doorways, a few open, with normal strides, Jorel felt a sense of danger from around the corner. Infusing his body with the Force, he turned the corner, practically running into another man, supernatural strength allowing him to not break stride, slamming a palm into the man's chest, knocking the breath out of him. A second blow to the man's his head knocked him out. Jorel caught him smoothly, footsteps regular, not the panicked shuffle that would draw attention from nearby rooms.

Shaking a little, not having expected that, Jorel carried the now unconscious criminal, wearing body armor, and with a familiar looking blaster pistol, but, thankfully, no helmet, along with them. Making their way to a particular doorway, the Force indicating it was their destination, they entered what was very obviously a waiting room. Dropping the body off inside, stripping Sergeant Hisku's confiscated pistol from the criminal and returning it to her, he took in the room. It was empty, thankfully, and there was a door on the other side of the space, ajar, voices coming from within.

"Now, what is it you think'll make up for our training house getting torched," a woman's voice, harsh, and very annoyed, questioned.

With the sense it wouldn't matter anymore, Jorel motioned for his partner to take off her helmet, creeping forward to listen.

"It'll more than make up for it, boss," a man's voice, smooth and sly, replied, raising goosebumps as he remembered the last time he'd head such a voice.

"And that would be? It's not good to keep a lady waiting," the woman, presumably the leader of these criminals, almost purred, though it was a predator's sound, not happy, but waiting.

Focusing in the Force, he could feel Hisku's presence behind him, not quite as clear as he could feel his Anaïs', wherever she was, but still better than most. She was full of trepidation, fear, but also curious interest as she crouched down behind him, along with a smidgen, so small it could be overlooked, of trust in him.

He hoped it wasn't misplaced.

On the other side of the door, there weren't two presences, but three, a guard standing not even a few feet away from them, his presence low, and muted, at the ready, but not engaged.

Of the other two, the man's Presence, who he assumed was closer to the door, felt a little like Puckrev's, though not nearly as infused with Darkness. Whether that was because the man hadn't done as much, hadn't had the opportunity to commit the same acts as the pirate leader, or possibly was just not as bad as that man, Jorel didn't know. However he was still touched by the Dark Side, his Presence not standing as strongly, but with an oily, slippery feel to it.

The woman's Presence, however, was worse. Like a predator, one that could never be sated, but still cautious. Her presence was sharper, more defined, nothing on Hisku's, but he instantly knew she was the greater threat.

"Well, I have this," the man commented, the Guard's Presence defining itself a little as it firmed slightly, ready to strike at a threat, before calming down.

"A lightsaber? I know they're hard to come by, but that's not quite enough," the woman commented, the distinctive snap-hiss of Jorel's saber activating.

"Not a lightsaber, a Jedi," the man pressed. "We caught him there, carrying one of the girls out and everything! Think about it! Slap a slave collar on him, or a transmitter chip, and we could make more than everything we've lost combined!"

The woman sighed, "That's what I liked about you, Julmat. Your ambition. You were a real go getter. Never knowing when to stop."

"Uh, just tryin' to help, you know?" the now named Julmat laughed nervously. "But think of it!"

"Do you know what happened to our normal middleman, Julmat?" the woman asked idly.

Jorel could feel the fear, Dark and stinking, in his Presence as he replied, "Um, he pissed off some Republic bigwig? Someone with his own fleet?"

"No, Julmat, he 'pissed off' a Jedi. One that doesn't match the description of the one you've somehow managed to capture," she informed the man, his fear deepening. "Yes, Julmat, you managed to capture his Padawan. And you've seen the holos, they can find their 'Padawans', like they're living trackers. You managed to bring a tracker into my operation. Now, what kind of person would do that?"

"I, but, those are just stories!" the man objected, fear growing. "Jedi can't actually do that! Besides, he's my cousin's age! Baby Jedi are, like, brats!"

The woman tsk'd, "Some are your age, Julmat. But don't worry. He's already dead, along with the other one you brought. He'll still be of some use. We'll drop their bodies in Redclaw terrirory. With any luck, that'll take care of them completely."

It wouldn't work, Jorrel thought. A Jedi's death created a ripple in the Force. It wouldn't be where his body ended up that Er'izma would hone in on, but the location where he died.

"Oh, okay, see! That still helps!" the man announced, desperate. "I didn't mean to put you in danger, I'm not a traitor, I could deliv-" snap-hiss "gurk."

Jorel winced at the death, full of panic, fear, repressed anger, and more Dark feelings, billowed out with more force than he was used to. Feeling a momentary warning, he turned, seeing Hisku looking just as surprised as he was, and he grabbed her, a hand over her mouth, as he was directed.

"This was some time coming, Julmat," the woman commented, smile evident in her tone. "Though I do thank you for the wonderful toy." She waved it a few times, before deactivating it. The Sergeant gave Jorel an angry look as the boss said, "Come, Xudarr. You know how killing gets me going."

A leonine voice, inches away from them, rumbled, "That I do, Adossa."

Without Jorel holding her, Hisku's shocked gasp would've alerted them, but, covered as she was, it was only a momentary suction against his palm, and a small vibration completely smothered. Someone large, but with a soft tread, walked away from them, following the woman away, a door closing elsewhere in the room after they left.

Carefully letting the Sergeant go, she slowly, and silently, took a few deep breaths of air. "Why did you bring us here!?" she hissed quietly.

Trusting his instincts, he opened the door, revealing a very nice office, the smell of burned meat in the air. Still, with half his attention in the Force, he could feel the twin spikes of Lust that poured off from the other room, and the sound of something hitting the wall. He quickly payed more attention to the here and now.

A man, who still wore the uniform of Law enforcement, sat, dead, in a chair, a hole burned through his heart, with the wound track moving upward to take out his throat. Looking around, on shelves sat what could only be described as trophies, from scraps of flags, to weapons, some half-destroyed, to a couple well preserved organs. Jorel spotted what looked like a thermal detonator, a weapon that would set off a magnetically bound nuclear reactor that'd destroy everything in a perfect sphere, and had a thought about grabbing it, priming it, and tossing it into this 'boss's' bedroom, but had a feeling that would be bad.

Instead, he left them alone, grabbing his saber, and checking the dead man's pockets, finding among other things, a keycard. With that in hand, he felt he had no reason to stay here.

This time, he went with the feeling.
 
Chapter 20
Chapter Twenty

Going through the terminal in front of her, Anaïs realized just how screwed she was. The owner of this antiques store, who was really an intel broker, had been deep in the middle of this entire thing.

And now she had to save her.

Melea Vondarr, who was in her eighties, had sat in the middle of a network of spies, helping the criminal underworld and city government function in tandem, both going after each other, both making some gains, some losses, but never any real progress in either direction.

Searching for her master's name, the Padawan found a list of non-acceptable crimes and practices. No rape was allowed. No going after someone's children. No using children to do your dirty work. No torture lasting longer than a week, which she thought was an oddly specific time-frame, and other things like that. But, according to Ms. Vondarr's notes, enforcing those rules had kept things. . . fair, and when one side, either criminal or governmental, stepped over the line, certain pieces of information would then find their way to the opposite side.

That was, however, until someone strong enough to ignore the rules had arrived. The 'Baron', had, in fact, been a Baron, just not on this planet. He'd been running a criminal empire on Chrellis, before a Jedi had rallied the people to rise up against him, and he'd escaped, along with his personal guard. He'd touched down on Noonar a few years ago, and had seemed to, after some difficulty, adapted to the rules.

But he hadn't.

Three years ago, after having gathered the worst of both sides, criminal and governmental, to his cause, he'd staged a coup, killing the president, and taking over everything. A few had escaped, and gone to the Republic Senate, but the Baron had been planning this for a while, and they'd never made it to Coruscant.

Now, instead of helping to keep the peace, Ms. Vondarr had worked to manage the resistance, after a first failed counter-attack. They'd managed to get some people to Coruscant, but by then the story of the 'revolution' against the 'mad leader' had already been spread, and how the 'honorable Baron' had stopped the bloodshed, allowing the government to take over and submitted himself to their 'judgement'. Instead of punishing him for murder, they'd instead passed a law to make him the monarch of the planet, and he'd graciously accepted.

Anaïs had written better stories when she was nine.

However, the right bribes had been given, so the people that'd tried to ask for help had been arrested for perjury and shipped back to Noonar, where they were tortured for weeks, ending in their public execution.

The resistance had tried, over and over again, to get help, and to try to reclaim their world, and each time they had failed, losing more of their people.

And this was the state of things when her and her master had entered the city.

Well, Anaïs thought with grim humor, this is definitely the kind of situation that needs a Jedi.

As of a week ago, about the time that the Force had talked to Lucian, which she'd only been on the edges of, the resistance had failed in their very last attempt, the last of their assets spent, and the last of their fighters and agents killed or captured. Ms. Vondarr had known they were coming for her, and had tried to cut and run, leaving the note, and the recounting of events that Anaïs was currently reading, before she tried to escape.

That her and her Master were here probably meant the old woman hadn't succeeded.

However, that didn't tell Anaïs if Ms. Vondarr had been captured, or had made it to a safe-house. Unsurprisingly, on a terminal that was expected to be unlocked, given the warning, there wasn't a handy list of safe-houses to check, even an encoded one, or at least not one she could find. She wasn't a slicer, couldn't take apart the terminal's very programming to find hidden files, only having slightly more training than the average Padawan, with her master's hurried instruction not being enough to close that gap.

Searching other files, they were accounts of the Baron's atrocities, the crimes he'd committed, and the crimes he'd condoned. She shivered now understanding exactly what the guards had wanted to do when they said they'd 'question' her. There were dozens of reports, and even a few recordings she dared not watch, of what would have happened, had her master not stepped in.

No, she told herself, that wouldn't've happened, though I would've outed myself as a Jedi when I stopped them.

But, damning as it would be in the eyes of the law, that didn't help her now.

Closing her eyes, she tried to reach out with the Force, tried to have it guide her. She wasn't so arrogant as to believe it would talk to her as strongly as it did her master, or how it did other Jedi, but she was lost, dead in space, drifting without something to guide her.

She could feel her master in the distance, his presence unbound, for possibly the first time, clearly visible in the Force. He was already halfway across the city, leading the Baron's forces far from her, the deaths he was causing so numerous that, even with the storm of his presence, she could feel them like a black comet arcing across the landscape.

But that wouldn't help her, so she centered her mind, not opening herself fully as the Temple had taught her, becoming one with the Force without distinction, but remaining, not still, but present. She was her, and while the Force ran through all things, trying to match it completely would see her influenced by all aspects of it, the Light and the Dark, and she was sitting in a thick mist of evil.

Instead of becoming the Force, she calmed herself, her desires, save one. She wanted to save Melea Vondarr, and focused on that bright spark of hope, of her desire to protect, and cast it out like a fisherman would a tackle, baited with a wish for the Light to prevail, where the Dark had metastasized.

Nothing happened.

Frustrated, and worried, the metaphorical line almost snapped as the Dark emotions spread from her, her fear of failure straining her connection to the Light.

Centering herself again, she tried to let it go, though it was difficult. She had a task. She would do her best to complete it. Her master believed in her. She could do this.

Nothing continued to happen.

Her thoughts drifted to the list of addresses she had. Maybe she should start there?

She refocused, trying to feel the Force, instead of her own guesses.

Maybe she should start at Ms. Vondarr's secondary address? Anaïs hadn't actually found that address in the terminal, only on the list that her master had left her.

Shaking her head, she cleared her mind once more. There were a dozen addresses on that list, and she couldn't rely on sheer chance, not when a woman's life was on the line! She centered herself, focusing on her desire to protect Ms. Vondarr, calming every other thought in the Force, straining herself to-

Secondary! Address!

The thought hit her, like a thrown stone to the head, and she tried to push it out, no matter how much she thought it might be correct, so that the Force could show her. . . . .

I'm an idiot, she thought with a sigh, grabbing the paper and looking up the secondary address, and how to get there.



<SWPP>



As she ran across the rooftops, she let out a sigh of relief, almost there, feeling that she was running out of time.

The shop had a back-door, of a sort, which, after going through a small tunnel, had let her walk out several streets away from where she'd entered, avoiding the death and chaos that her master had left in his wake. However, there were several checkpoints between where she emerged and the secondary address, and, had she'd gone the normal way, she would've ran afoul of them. Even if she hadn't been. . . questioned, she had a feeling it'd still be too late, so she'd gone elsewhere.

Stealth, as she'd learned, was the art of not being seen. Easy in theory, hard in reality, but that was before she'd started training with her master. Maneuvering down a city street, making sure to stay in your target's blind spot, or screened by others, required a level of Force Sense she still had trouble with. However, she now could take advantage of one important fact.

People rarely looked up.

With soft steps, nowhere close to her master's silent stride, she ran across a rooftop, Force singing through her body, and, with one foot on the ledge, pushed, sending herself hurtling the forty feet across the wide boulevard, hands out to catch the edge of the windowsill, the building on the other side being several stories taller.

Far easier to climb then the wrecks and courses Master Lucian had set up on Uphrades, if only for the fact that no one was shooting at her, she lifted herself up it, pausing right before the edge, the sense of danger swinging about the top. Waiting for it to pass, she crested the ledge, and saw an armed man, blaster rifle in hand, at the other end of the rooftop, sitting back down as he watched the next street over, the street where Ms. Vondarr's secondary address sat.

Taking care to move carefully, she lifted herself fully onto the roof, glancing over the ferrocrete surface, noting the parts where it had started to crumble into gravel. Not enough to threaten structural stability, but enough to make noise if she stepped on it.

Letting out a silent breath, she centered herself. Collecting live mine-scorpions on the moon of Uphrades had been tricky, especially with the Lamp-hares harassing her. This should just be a little difficult. She stalked forward, silently, breath steady and inaudible. The sun was setting, but it was doing so in front of her, so the long shadows it cast wouldn't give her away.

She stopped two feet behind him, confirming that he was, in fact, watching the very apartment building she needed to get to. The man sighed, and she felt the danger sweep across the rooftop once more, as he sat back and started to turn.

With quick, quiet steps, she moved to his right as he looked to his left, reaching down into a bag and taking out a can of beer. As he leaned over to do so, she moved, quietly, and flicked the safety of his rifle on, just in case.

Stepping back around him, waiting, he flicked the tab with one hand, the other holding his weapon and took a deep sip, the sense of danger flicking upward. Squatting down as he looked up at the sky, missing her, the man sighed again, shook his head, and went back to watching his target.

Okay. . . now what? Anaïs thought. She knew the palace was being watched, and, while not in uniform, the badge that all the soldiers carried had been pinned to the front of the sniper's chest. Did she knock him out? People only stayed out for a few minutes, unless you had some way to drug them, and she didn't. Did she try to Mind Trick him? Those worked best when they made sense, when they were something the person would normally do, and being told by a random girl on a rooftop to ignore his duties didn't seem to be either of those things.

The man was drinking on the job, but he didn't seem drunk, so did she try to whisper in his ear to get drunk? Mind Tricking someone without them knowing you were there was another Knight-level skill, according to the Temple, and Lucian had agreed, though he had disagreed with the standards of 'not knowing you were there' that the Temple used, because he had to find some reason to complain.

Before she could decide, though, the sniper sat up, grabbing a datapad, putting his beer down to open a file and scroll through a list of names and pictures, stopping on three, a Rodian, a woman with ginger colored hair, and a boy, maybe her age, with dark hair and a nervous smile.

"Gotchya," the Sniper told himself, voice rough, leaning the rifle on the ledge, pointing it down towards the pedestrians on the street, aiming right for, now that Anaïs looked, a boy, maybe her age, with dark hair. The same boy as on the datapad.

Struck with indecision, not sure the correct course, the Force silent, her thoughts froze as the Sniper pulled the trigger, only for nothing to happen. "What?" the man in front of her asked, leaning back and looking over his weapon, flicking the safety off.

As the Sniper started to sight in, and with her mind screaming at her that she had to do something, Anaïs struck out, not with her lightsaber, but with the palm of her hand, muscles enhanced with the Force, striking the back of his head.

It wasn't a lethal blow, though, without treatment, it would leave the killer with brain damage, but the man was shoved down as if thrown from the force of the impact, neck hitting the edge of the ledge with a sickening crack, the black bloom of the Dark Side making his death unmistakable.

No! she thought, I didn't mean to kill him! She hadn't really killed anyone before, not on purpose! Yes, she'd deflected some blaster bolts, but that'd been accidental. And she'd killed animals, but this was different! He was sentient!

Her mind was in turmoil, but the lessons her master had drilled into her head kicked in, her now instinctual reaction to the Dark Side causing her to center herself, pushing out the spiraling Dark and letting her stand as she was.

Yes, she had killed him, but he was about to kill someone else. Someone that, as far as she knew, had done nothing wrong. What she had done was, if not right, than at least not evil.

And it wasn't like Master Lucian didn't kill people all the time.

Knowing it was a slippery slope, but also that, in this case, from what she'd read, she wasn't wrong, she moved past it. Yes, she killed a man. She would likely kill more before tomorrow. Her master was still killing them, though the chaos had died down, and the rate had dropped enough so as to be barely noticeable underneath the miasma of Darkness that hung over the city. Now was not the time to get lost in deep thoughts. She had a mission to accomplish.

However, that left her with the issue of what to do next.

Well, I'm already here. Might as well go in,
she thought, looking at the apartment building across the street. The gap was only twenty-five, maybe thirty feet across, and the apartment building was as tall as the building she was now on. Taking a few steps back, she ran, launching herself across the space, and easily landing on the other side, trying the door on the roof, and finding it locked.

With a quick application of her lightsaber, she was in, the weapon off, but held at the ready, as she quickly headed down the staircase, hearing someone slowly tromp up them. Getting to the third floor, she ducked inside, silently running down the dirty, but empty, hallway, finding her way to the correct doorway.

Looking at it, something seemed. . . wrong to her, her lessons from her Master allowing her to spot the small laser tripwire that had been installed, flush with the doorframe, that would activate something as soon as it was tripped. Working quickly, she reached inside her belt, bringing out a bit of metal, and using the Force to warp it in just the correct configuration.

Leaning down she quickly fit it over the laser, completing the 'circuit', and making it think it was still going strong, despite being broken. If it were a higher-quality trap, this wouldn't work, but the mass-produced models had 'tolerances' built into them so that even street-thugs could set them up.

Standing back up, hearing someone about to enter the hallway, she quickly put in the code for the door that Lucian had left her, only for it to flash red, not unlocking. With no time left, she darted backwards, hiding around a corner as someone walked into sight of the door and went "Huh?" The voice was young, and almost sleepy.

Remaining still, Anaïs watched as the person was shown to be the same boy that'd almost been shot, who walked up to the very door she'd been at, and, not even looking around, input the correct code. With it memorized, she watched in disbelief as he walked inside, and would've tripped the alarm had she not disabled it.

Did he already see it was taken care of? she thought, before shaking her head, moving forward, not even needing to put the code in again as he'd left the door open a crack. Following in silently, she saw that, taped to the ceiling, was an incendiary grenade, the cord from the laser tripwire running through the doorway and up to it.

So not an alarm, Anaïs noted with some trepidation, ghosting forward even as the boy had walked further in, and was going through cabinets, obviously searching for something. Without so much as a hint of a warning of danger, he turned, spotting her, and let out a yelp, stumbling backwards, tripping over a box and falling over with a loud, carrying crash.

She just froze, staring, wondering why the Force hadn't warned her.

"Who-Who are you?" the boy demanded, scrabbling upright, reaching inside his jacket to pull a blaster pistol, only for it to slip from his fingers and go skidding across the floor, both of them standing as they watched it slide to a stop next to her feet.

Anaïs hesitated, not having thought this far ahead. Did she give her name? That she was a Jedi? That she was a Jedi Padawan? "I'm. . . I'm someone that was hired to find Melea Vondarr by an old friend of hers, and get her to safety," she went with, which was true, from a certain point of view.

"I, I'm not gonna tell you where Grandma is!" the boy declared, identifying himself instantly. "How do I know you're not working with. . ." he trailed off, eyes going to the unlit lightsaber in her hand, and she berated herself for not storing it. "You-You're a Jedi!"

Kriff it. "I am," she said, activating it with a snap hiss, the green blade extending, not threateningly, just to prove what it was, "which is why you need to help me."

"I, she said she knew a Jedi, but, you're just so young. And hot," the teenager replied.

Anaïs nodded, "That would be my Master, but I need you to. . . wait, what?" she asked in turn, processing what he said, before shaking her head. "That, um, that doesn't matter," she deflected, trying to refocus on her task. "Why are you here?"

At the question, the teen reddened. "I, um, I'm here to get Grandma Melea. Everyone else got off planet, but she didn't, so I came back to help get her out. Mom said it was too dangerous, but it hasn't been that bad. I'm pretty good at this entire spy thing!" the boy bragged.

"No. No you aren't," she had to disagree, pointing to the pistol at her feet, causing the boy to frown.

The boy reddened, blustering, "Well, it's a good thing I didn't. I might've shot you or something!"

"And the sniper?" Anaïs questioned, deactivating her lightsaber, pointing out the window, then pointing at the doorway. "And the bomb?"

Blinking owlishly, the teenager moved over to the window and looked out, causing the Padawan to sigh, deeply, and, seeing the gun propped against the ledge, he jumped back. Moving to the entryway, he called to her, "I don't see anything!"

Picking up the blaster pistol, wondering if this was why Knights didn't like to work with non-Jedi, she called back, "Look up."

There was another yelp, but at least this time he didn't fall over, and he rushed back to her. "There's a grenade in the hallway! Was it supposed to blow me up!?"

"It's an incendiary. It would've burned you to death," she corrected. "Just leave the doorway alone."

He nodded rapidly. "Oh. Okay. So, you're a Jedi," he declared, as if that wasn't obvious, and she nodded when it became clear he was waiting for confirmation. Again. "And you're looking for Grandma Melea?" She nodded, wondering where this was going, as she'd already said that. "Oh, okay. Good. Bye!" he said, turning and starting to walk away, without his blaster.

"Wait!" she called, and he stopped turning around. "Where is she?" Anaïs asked.

"What?" the teen asked in turn, confused.

Motioning around herself, the Padawan stated, "I'm trying to find her. You're here to get her. Where is she?"

"Oh, um, I don't know?" the boy more questioned than said. "But, you're a Jedi. You'll figure it out. You can just use the Force and stuff, so I can just go home. Thanks!"

Anaïs had to remind herself that using the Force to strangle innocents was wrong.
 
Chapter 21
Chapter Twenty-One


Jorel, lightsaber in hand wanted to leave. He'd managed to, with Sergeant Hisku's help, escape his cell, right before he was going to be killed, sneak through a factory/gang headquarters, and make his way to the leader's office. A leader who was now. . . preoccupied, but Jorel had a feeling that trying to take advantage of that to cut the head off this metaphorical snake would only end badly for him, so he was perfectly fine to cut and run.

However, the slight, insistent suggestion he was coming to realize was the Force had a different idea.

"Trust in the Force, Jorel. It will never lead you astray as long as you follow it's Will, Jorel," he muttered to himself as, instead of going the way they came, he was directed down a different hallway.

"Is that really necessary," his attaché asked, red eyes darting around as she followed him near soundlessly.

Jorel had thrown up another veil around them, something to tell others 'nothing's out of place here', but it was draining, and while he'd mostly recovered from doing so earlier, the faint sense of tiredness that had nothing to do with his body told him it hadn't been enough.

They moved carefully, not darting by doorways, but walking as if they belonged, the better to not draw the eyes of others. Even then the padawan could feel pressing on them, pushing him to have to hold up the Veil, which was tiring, to make the gaze of others slide off them as they continued. Down one hallway, then another, then up a set of stairs and down a third corridor, they walked past a pair of gang members that looked more like mercenaries, with how much weaponry was on them.

The Veil nearly broke, Jorel's disguise as a worker hurting more than helping where they weren't supposed to be, but Hisku's heavy cloak and unholstered blaster held in his direction balanced it out, and other than a curious look, the pair moved on, Jorel having to fight to keep his breathing even as he felt like he'd run a marathon.

Their destination couldn't come too soon, and they stopped in front of an unremarkable door in a hallway of seemingly unremarkable doors. "Is this where you use your lightsaber to cut your way in," the Chiss behind him asked, trepidatious, but with the tiniest hint of anticipation.

"No, I shall use an even more powerful Jedi technique," Jorel replied, with grave seriousness, taking out the key-card he'd pulled off the corpse of the man who'd captured him in the first place. Sliding it through the lock, the door unlatched, and he held it open. "It's a secret whose origins have been lost to the annals of history," he informed her, smiling, trying to find the humor of the situation where he could.

". . . You're an idiot," the Sergeant replied, deadpan, though the corner of her mouth quirked upwards before she forced it back down. He just grinned at her, and she walked inside the room, letting his shoulders drop and allow him to suck in large, silent lungful's of air when she wasn't looking.

Following her, recovering slightly the two of them found themselves in a bedroom, a terminal on a desk to the side, and a door leading to a fresher in the back. Looking around, he asked, "Do you know how to slice? I've had a little training, but it's not my thing." She shook her head, and he winced. "Okay, I guess it's me. Can you check the room while I do this?"

When Hisku nodded, Jorel took a seat at the desk, activating the terminal, and not looking forward to his task. Without a way in, it was very hard to get into a secure terminal, and, as a criminal, this was guaranteed to be one. When the screen flickered to life, Jorel sighed, the prompt indeed locked, and, trying the basic methods, he got nowhere.

He needed to find a way through the first layer, but the Force was silent, having brought him here, and no farther. Looking around the desk, he looked for clues that would help him figure out. A picture of a loved one, a sports affiliation, even a preferred model of ship, anything. Spotting a model of an old Kandosii-class dreadnaught, the kind the Mandalorians used in the Mandalorian wars of conquest, Jorel tried using the name of the ship type as a password.

It was incorrect, and he was told he only had two more attempts.

Closing his eyes he tried to reach out with the Force, trying to find something with a hint of meaning. He couldn't read the history of objects, no Jedi without the innate talent for Psychometry could, but things that people paid attention to, things they cared for, picked up a little bit of their Force Presence.

The model did have a touch of the now dead man's Presence, but so did a few other things, no one item more than the others, but the fact that the Jumat wasn't a Force user made the traces much, much harder to spot. The glop grenade in the corner, in a display, had received some more attention than the others, but not enough to stand out starkly, and that didn't really help him. Jorel only had two tries left and he needed to make them count.

"Found his passwords," Hisku called from over his shoulder, almost causing Jorel to jump.

Instead, the padawan turned around in his chair, asking, "Passwords?"

"Yep," the woman nodded. Holding open a flimsiplast notebook, and snorted. "For the terminal it's 'Mando4ever'," she instructed, spelling it out.

Sure enough, it worked.

Staring in disbelief at the now unlocked terminal, Jorel turned back to the Chiss. "What, did he have it under his pillow or something?" he demanded. She returned with a flat look. "Seriously?"

"Under the bottom sheet, but, yeah," she shrugged, motioning over to the now disassembled bed. "Here, for the rest," she directed, tossing the notebook at him.

Catching it, he turned back to the terminal, and, poking around with passwords in hand, found a wealth of data. Accounts, evidence, rosters, details of crimes committed by other gang members, everything you'd need to take down the criminal organization. For a few moments Jorel thought Julmat might have been working for the local law enforcement, gathering what was needed, until he stumbled across the man's 'grand plan', which had been written out in a bulleted list. Jorel found that the dead criminal wasn't a good man, caught in over his had and trying to do the right thing, but having made the wrong moves while attracting too much attention.

No, Julmat was an idiot.

He was planning on 'turning in' his boss, giving just enough evidence to put her away and prune the parts of the organization that he didn't like, which, as it turned out, were just the parts that happened to be legitimate businesses. Jorel hadn't planned to be a Sentinel like Anaïs, but he'd sat in on some of the lectures she had, and even he knew a criminal organization needed some mostly clean business to hide behind, like the factory they were in right now.

But Julmat thought it was noisy. And messy. And below him. And he'd thought they could do better by replacing them all with more criminal enterprises, which, as the leader, he'd obviously take a bigger cut of.

No wonder she killed him, Jorel thought darkly, before shaking himself out of those thoughts. Refocused, and shaking off the tiredness his consistent use of the Force had resulted in, he plugged the mem-stik he found on the desk into the terminal, downloading everything. Once they were out, they'd give it to Er'isma, who'd know what to do with it, and hopefully the Jedi Knight wouldn't be too mad at his apprentice for getting jumped by slavers.

Twice.

In two months.

He's gonna kill me, the apprentice thought morosely, still transferring every datafile he could.

"Found the rest of our gear," his partner announced, walking to Jorel and looking over his shoulder. "This is. . . records? How did you know this'd be here?" she asked, glancing down at him.

Jorel just shrugged. "Didn't."

Handing him his utility belt, which he quickly slipped on, the soldier shook her head. "You know, you're nothing like the holodramas say Jedi are," she commented with a sigh, and the padawan realized this was the first time the two of them had been planetside since he'd joined. More than that, though. . .

"You watch holodramas?" Jorel asked, trying to picture the severe young woman curled up with a bowl of popped grain and watching 'Stars of our Lives'. It didn't compute. At her glare, she wasn't going to admit to it, which was probably better for his sanity anyways, and he just shrugged. "Is Master Er'isma? 'Sides, I've been a real Jedi for a couple of months. Before that I was just an Initiate."

From her look, she didn't get the difference, and Jorel almost started to explain before a ripple of something set his teeth on edge. "It's time to leave," he announced, getting the last of the files and pulling out the mem-stik, stowing it in a protective case on his belt, and, on a whim, grabbing the grenade.

Moving to the door, he felt the on-edge feeling get worse, and activated his lightsaber. "Jorel?" Hisku asked, both pistols out and ready. "Aren't we sneaking out?"

"Might not be an option," he replied, opening the door with a wave of the hand holding the grenade.

As it swung open on its own, and someone in the hall shot the door, in a way that might've caught him if he'd just stepped out after opening it. An angry voice could be heard, kept low, but the tone of 'you idiot' came through clearly, even if it was in huttese.

Oh sithspit, Jorel swore to himself, realizing what the Force was trying to warn him about. They'd taken too long, and someone had found either the two sent to kill them in the jail, or the random thug he'd left in the boss' waiting room. He hoped their leader had only ordered a few to Julmat's quarters 'just in case', or this was going to get a lot harder.

Taking a deep breath, letting the Force infuse his body, he primed the glop grenade in his hand and leapt out into the hallway, dodging as more blasters shot were he would've been if he stepped out, taking in the five thugs who'd come to stop them. Five? He thought. I can handle five.

Tossing the grenade, it slammed into the chestplate of a Tradoshan in the middle, the lizard-man's eyes going wide in surprise before the nozzles in the sphere started spewing liquid that hardened into foam in less than a second, trapping them and sealing that end of the hallway.

Hisku followed him out, took in the captured goons, and seeing the front one was only half-trapped, trying to force his arm up to shoot the, put three blaster bolts in his chest, killing him. "Now what?" she demanded, an alarm starting to sound.

"Now, we get out of here," he replied, running off in the other direction with Force-assisted speed, the woman trailing behind him, giving him enough time to check the corner of the T intersection instead of barreling around it.

Sure enough, there were a few thugs waiting, but, knowing where they were, he was able to spring out, hitting the other wall and, kicking off it, his lightsaber flashed out, knocking aside the bolt that would've struck him as he closed.

With two swings, they fell, dead, and Hisku rounded the corner at a full sprint, just trying to keep up. He nodded to her, charging forward himself, no longer trying to keep his footsteps silent. Running down the hall, he got the faintest hint of danger, like his Master's feint, hiding his true strike, and a door opened, a woman with a vibroblade lunging out to stab, only to have her blade severed by his own, then her head, as he didn't stop, following his instincts.

Three more hallways, and two more ambushes, later they were at the entrance of the reinforced section, where a dozen armed gunman stood, and the same Weequay door guard who'd sneered at him stared at Jorel's saber with widened eyes.

Five, he could take, but this many he wasn't so sure about, but as far as he could tell this was the only way in or out, at least the only way he knew of. Rather than hesitate, which would get him killed, Jorel attacked. The padawan did let the feeling of vindictive pleasure at this turnabout pass him by, as he thrust a hand out at the door-guard, the Weequay trying to slam the portal shut.

It wasn't up to Er'izma's level, but the alien was blasted backwards, his grip on the door wrenched free and slamming it open, as the other gunman staggered back, the shove unfocused and catching them in its passage, which worked just fine for Jorel. Pushing past what the Force Push had taken out of him, leaping forward, the Jedi slashed almost wildly, trying not to let his fear corrupt his focus, cutting down his foes as they recovered.

Three dropped in an instant, but he'd been right, there were too many, and, unlike the pirates, they knew what they were doing. Pulling backwards, they all drew down on him, and fired their blasters.

Jorel ducked behind one gunman as he sent the thug's aim wide, and let the other man absorb the shots, but a bolt grazed his thigh. It burned with pain, but it wasn't enough to stop Jorel, who moved to the next group, cutting down too more, and trying to block the shots from the others. He could sense where the shots were going to go, more a feeling than any actual second sight, and tried his best to mitigate the damage, when two bolts flew down the hall, hitting two of the gunmen, giving Jorel enough of a window to avoid being hit.

More fell, as Hisku charged, sending a stream of bolts at the attackers, even as three of the remaining gunman turned to fire at her.

No! Jorel thought, knowing she couldn't see the shots coming like he could. He shoved himself forward, cutting down two before they could fire, one of the ones that'd been aiming for him grazing his arm, and the third shooter pulling his trigger before Jorel could stop him.

The man died the next instant, but his shot sped towards the padawan's partner, who, twisting, barely dodged out of the way, but kept focus downrange as she shot the one who'd shot Jorel.

The Jedi cut down the ones left, even as the soldier fired past him, dropping the Weequay who'd been staggering to his feet, pulling a blaster of his own. "You're hurt," she stated, looking at his burned flesh.

"I'll heal, we need to keep going," he shot back, feeling danger coming for them.

She hesitated, then nodded, and he lead the way, a claxon going off as more people ran about. A few thugs stopped, spotting his lightsaber, and tried to shoot him, only to be put down either with the blade that drew their attention, or by Hisku's blasters.

Shutting it off, hoping it was the right thing to do, he tried to join the chaos, and slip out along with the other workers. Jorel was tired, having pushed himself with the Force, from the energy intensive process of healing himself, to the even more tiring act of using the Veil, to those minutes of combat, farther than he had in training, but they were almost done.

Not having to fake his worried expression, they followed the workers, who were heading for some large loading bay, shepherded by the gang-members who were themselves looking around nervously.

They made it past the entrance, spotting repulsortrucks half loaded with goods, red, yellow, grey, and blue, before they were outed. One of the workers looked past Jorel at Sergeant Hisku and called out, "Who are you!?" The gunmen turned, her distinctive appearance making her easily visible, and one stepped forward yelling, "Get on the ground!"

Their cover blown, she glanced at Jorel, who activated his saber, drawing attention like a loadstone, even as he shouted, "The yellow one!" He cut down the first gunman, which was started the others into motion, shooting in his general direction, many of them hitting the other workers, who in turn stampeded in every direction in a blind panic.

Hisku bolted, threading through the others to secure their escape, while Jorel leapt over the heads of the gang members, the shots from the thugs going wild as they tried to sight in on a target that moved far faster than they were obviously used to. Falling down on another pair of shooters, he dispatched them, barely ducking out of the way of a bolt that would've taken his head, and turning for the dozen or so that still remained, scattered about the hanger, the initial shock wearing off as their blaster-fire starting to get more precise.

Blaster bolts were fired across the space, the Sergeant taking a few pot-shots as she reached the truck, trying to take the pressure off him. Taking advantage of hit, he dashed forward with Force fueled steps, cutting down another half dozen, only a few attackers remaining. However, more reinforcements ran in, and Jorel wished he still had his grenade, clumped up as the new arrivals were.

The area was rapidly clearing of workers and, as much as he hated getting non-combatants involved, they had served as cover. Jorel also realized just how little the Temple had trained him for this situation. You'd think, given the Jedi fought criminals, dealing with mass-fire would be on the syllabus, but all of his combat lessons had either been fighting a couple of gunmen, a single shooter, or other Jedi, and he was paying for it now.

Cutting down one of the last of the original gunmen, the others poured fire wherever he ran, forcing him to run, and he dodged around the space, trying to give Hisku time, as the new arrivals didn't know about her. He took another couple shots in the process, the painful burns eating away at his focus, but he did not let himself be slowed down. Thankfully all were glancing blows, hot lances of pain that didn't slow him down, and as even more attackers arrived the repulsortruck sputtered to life, the Chiss woman called out, "Come on!"

Gathering the last of his strength, Jorel used half of it to send one more Push at the now twenty-odd gunmen, sending them falling like cut grass, the other half spent for one last infusion of speed as he streaked across the hanger, vision narrowing, leaping for the truck's open door.

One of the gunmen, still on the ground fired, and he twisted mid-air knocking it away with his saber even as an enormous Catar charged through the door and raised a bowcaster, firing the Wookie-sized weapon right at Jorel.

Out of position to block the blow, and without the strength left to try to make a barrier, the Jedi saw death coming for him as the plasma-covered metal quarrel streaked straight for his chest.

However, it did not hit him.

The Force twisted, as Hisku, arm outstreached, yelled, "No!" Jorel felt a crushing pressure seize him and pull, cracking ribs as he was yanked towards the truck. The bolt missed him by inches as he slammed into the vehicle, hard, and out of position, his left arm breaking even as his training pushed him to swing into the door, closing it behind him, shutting off his saber.

Hisku, eyes wide, hands shaking, panting as if she'd run a marathon, stared at him. The sound of blasterfire, as well as the louder noise of the bowcaster striking the durasteel, snapped her out of her haze, and she, almost drunkenly, tried to use the controls, lifting the repulsortruck and sending it hurtling for the exit. As they passed the gunmen, who were still firing, the Catar reached back and pulled out a concussion missile launcher of all things, sighting it on their ship, preparing it to blast it to pieces.

They'd come all this way, gone this far, and they were going to die, because he was too weak to protect his partner. If it was just Jorel that would've died, he still would've been mad, but that was the Jedi way. But his stupidity had dragged her into this, and because of him she was going to die.

Something in Jorel snapped.

Snarling, the Force-user reached out to the tumultuous blackness around him. It welcomed him back, the pure Darkness that only a sudden, violent death could give thick in the air, most of which he'd put there himself. As before, it filled him, embraced him, willing to serve him, if he but asked.

The pain he felt deadened, though Jorel knew it wasn't gone, and was careful to wave his good arm, palm out as he focused. The missile fired, and made it only a foot before it froze, firm in his grip. It's thruster tried to push it forward, but against his might it was nothing.

Curling his fist closed, the missile exploded, the Cathar already running, but it wouldn't be enough. Pushing his Will into the Flames, Jorel shoved the blast backwards, multiplying it until it was an inferno that incinerated all in his path, their deaths sweet to him as they paid for attacking their betters. The Cathar coward dove through a door, shoving another in the way of Jorel's crimson flames, and the Force-User felt a deep desire to order his subordinate to turn around, so none would escape his judgement.

They flew out of sight of the hanger, though, rising high and fast, one of the repulsors smoking, and Jorel resisted the urge to pick up the truck to move it by the force of his will, might, and power alone.

Because that was dumb.

With a shuddering breath, the factory starting to disappear and Jorel let go of the darkness, even as it whispered that it didn't need to go. That he was stronger with it. That if he used it, he could make these slavers pay in a way his master never would.

Thankfully, but unfortunately, Jorel knew what he was doing, and even though it felt like he was tearing off his own arm, he let the power go, though he knew bits of it had stained him in the process, never truly gone.

Everything hurt but he knew it would. Part of him was tempted to reach for the Dark again. It was thinner here, though enough still wafted up from the city they flew over it would be enough. Even out in nature, the Dark existed, if one knew how to look, and all he needed to do was to be strong enough to get to safety. It'd been stupid to release it as quickly as he had, he thought, and if he just-

No.

Taking a deep, shuddering, but still calming breath, he tried to turn to the Force, though, as if knowing what he'd done, it stubbornly resisted his call.

Stomping on the thought to make it come to him, Jorel tried again, not demanding, but asking for help. Not for himself, but for Hisku, as she was looking little better than he was. If she passed out, he needed to be strong enough to get her to safety.

He put himself in the Force's hands. Being killed by those soaked in Darkness? That was one thing. To die because they were too tired and passed out? That, in a way, seemed much more in line with the will of the Force, causing Jorel to laugh, then wheeze, his ribs shot through with pain even as Hisku tiredly glanced over at him, before, with a start, she focused forward as they tried to figure out where they were.

A hint of a thought, almost beyond perception, a whisper in a storm, said, that way.

"That way," the Jedi repeated, pointing with his right hand, and the soldier complied without a single word.

Thank you, he thought, trying to stay awake, and, barely, felt the Force. Where it would normally be a stream, it was a trickle, but it was enough for him to work with, and he was grateful for that much.

On his good hand, the barest blue condensation formed, a whisper of water, and he reached over to work it into his broken arm, his training the only reason he didn't black out from the pain. It was going to be slow, but it gave him something to do, and he already felt the edges of his vision, which had started to blur, clear ever so slightly.

"So, about what happened-" he started to say, trying to make conversation, surprised as she interrupted him.

"I don't want to talk about it," she snapped, and he paused in his healing, surprised.

Starting the process again, the Force maybe a fraction clearer to feel now, he tried again. "But, you used the For-"

"What part of 'I don't want to talk about it' don't you understand?" she practically yelled, and while he wasn't as surprised, the vehemence of her reaction still shocked him.

"But," he countered, "It's amazing!" The fact that she, out of all people, was a Force User like him, even if she was untrained was incredib-

"It's cheating," she hissed, as if it were a curse, and her hands started to shake again.

Deciding that maybe now wasn't the time, Jorel instead replied, "Are you injured? I could heal you. A little. I'm kinda tapped, but if you're hurt. . ."

The Sergeant was silent for a long moment, before she let out a tense sigh. "I am uninjured, Padawan Jorel. I am only tired," she stated with icy formality, even as her voice shook with fatigue. "I apologize for my outburst. It was unprofessional. Please see to your own injuries while I return us to our Rally Point."

Not knowing what he'd done wrong, but also knowing he couldn't force her to tell him, even as part of him suggested he could, he sat back in the repulsortruck's seat and focused on healing himself. It was almost ten minutes later that the city below them started to look familiar, and the flashing blue and white of Law enforcement could be seen on hover cars en-route to them. A lot of them. They flew up and surrounded the repulsortruck, a speaker blaring their demanding that Hisku land immediately.

Hisku ignored them, only holding out a hand and requesting, "Comm unit." He pulled it out from his belt and handed it to her, and, not looking anywhere but straight ahead, announced, "This is Sergeant Hisku'biatha'pusi, attaché to Padawan Jorel Drettz, driving a yellow damaged repulsortruck. We have exfiltrated from the stronghold of a local criminal element that captured us. Priority personnel is wounded, though. . . self-repairing," she paused, glancing over to him, just for a minute, "but is mission killed. Local law has been compromised, and are demanding we surrender to them. Please advise."

"Sergeant," an older male voice replied immedietly. "We were starting to wonder where you were. Make for the hotel. We'll call them off, and send an escort to avoid any misunderstandings. You aren't the only ones to have some trouble last night."

The speeders on either side of their truck threatened to shoot them down if they didn't comply, and Jorel glanced nervously at Hisku, who stared straight ahead, flying towards the hotel. Three of the now nine speeders turned away, but the other half dozen, if anything pulled in tighter. One of the speeders pulled back behind them after a few seconds, and Hisku, before Jorel could even warn her, pulled the truck up, the ion-bolt from the speeder passing under them.

With the howl of engines, three Cranes, hulls glowing slightly from the speed of reentry, descended on the gathered speeders, some of whom scattered, though most stayed in firing range. One turned and shot the incoming starfighters, but its shields tanked the blow, and the Crane returned in kind, destroying the Law Enforcement speeder in an instant as the other two turned towards the other law enforcement vehicles.

The other speeders fled.

"Hey Hissy," a familiar man's voice called over the Comms. "Thought you said you were gonna be careful. Heard you were injured."

The blue skinned woman twitched, the repulsortruck dipping for a moment, before she took several calming breaths and murmured, "not now," under her breath. "Sergeant Zisk'tiashi'logha," she replied. "I am uninjured, though Padawan Jorel Drettz has been shot. Repeatedly."

"Oh, well that's okay then," Zisk, who was almost certainly flying one of the Cranes, replied easily.

"Agreed," Jorel couldn't help but add, getting a laugh out of the pilot, starting to relax for the first time, instead of just pretending to. They had a fighter escort, and he could see the hotel. They'd made it.

"boys,"
Hisku hissed, before they were at the landing pad, where she carefully put down the ship. A dozen soldiers, in full kit, waited for them, and Jorel waved jauntily, dizzy with relief.

Or blood loss and tiredness.

Probably relief.

Pushing the slow trickle of Force into reinforcing his body instead of healing it, Jorel carefully opened the door and clambered out, two soldiers quickly moving forward to help him, which he appreciated, as, even enhanced, he wasn't exactly stable.

Glancing back, he smiled broadly, head swimming slightly, as he another soldier move to help Hisku, who, after a moment of hesitation, allowed them to support her. They were ferried indoors, carried really, then down an elevator, and into a very large room, far larger than Jorel's own, not that he'd been in it for more than a few minutes. He wondered how comfy the bed would be in his room.

Inside, at a desk, and sipping something from a glass, Knight Er'izma sat, looking very, very displeased. The two of them were deposited into very comfortable chairs, and a cup of water was pressed into Jorel's hand, which he smiled at, and greedily drank down, not realizing how thirsty he'd been until just then. And had they added something to it? The water tasted really good.

Er'izma waited, before looking at the two of them. "You were on your first shore leave Padawan, with instructions to relax. I awoke to find you and your attaché missing, reports of a Jedi fighting a dozen criminals before storming a burning building, and I was about to instate a full deployment. Then you arrive, beaten, blasted, burned, with a squadron's worth of corrupt law enforcement trying to corner you to kill you, and. . ." Er'izma sniffed, "reeking of the Dark Side. I hope you have a good explanation for all of this."

The Padawan thought about it, and shrugged. The chair was really comfortable, and Hisku was safe, even if she was mad at him for some reason, and she could use the Force! What was he doing? Oh, right.

"I have an explanation. Not sure if it's good," he offered, having proven not to be a good judge. Or good. Or a judge.

"And that explanation would be?" his Master pressed, and Jorel blinked as his Master seemed to suddenly be one person, then several hundred, then several thousand, then more, and then one again, with thousands of branches reaching around and up into the sky, like a really really weird tree made out of souls.

Jorel shrugged again. "The Force told me to."

And then he passed out.
 
Chapter 22
Chapter Twenty-Two


Rather than strangle the idiot in front of her, no matter how much she wanted to, Anaïs called out, "Wait!"

"What?" the boy, apparently the grandson of the woman she was supposed to rescue, asked in turn.

"You're saying, you have no idea where your grandmother could be?" she questioned. The Force had directed her to this location, presumably to save his life, but she'd wanted to save Melea Vondarr, as Master Lucian had ordered, and she had to assume that her being here would accomplish that.

The man in front of her, though she found herself thinking of the six-foot-tall moron as a boy, hesitated. "Well, I mean, maybe she's at her other apartment?"

Pulling the flimsy from her pocket, she showed. . . "What's your name?" she asked, realizing she had no idea.

"Oh! Oh, I'm Crix!" the boy smiled, standing up a little straighter and. . . was he posing?

"Anaïs," she replied blandly, trying to get the pleasantries over with so she could go back to her mission. "Now can you look at this list and tell me which one's her second apartment?"

Taking the list, Crix smiled even broadly. "Sure thing, Ana!"

"Anaïs," she corrected, hoping to get the info so she could leave this idiot behind.

Crix looked over the list, frowning. "Are you sure these are right? I don't know what most of these are."

No surprise, she thought. No, you're being mean, she corrected. He's naïve, but that isn't his fault, you're just frustrated you keep hitting walls and not knowing where to go. "I just need to know which one's her other apartment."

"None of them are," he finally announced, handing the list back to her.

". . . then what's the address of her apartment, if it isn't one of these?" she asked after a moment.

"Oh, it's-" he started to say, but a sudden feeling of danger lit up the entire space, and Anaïs was moving before she fully understood what was happening. With a twist of the Force she pushed the boy down the hall with a Force Push, pulling the fallen blaster to her as, infusing the Force throughout her body, she launched herself down the hall, the muted sound of something roaring growing ever louder.

Behind her, the apartment exploded, the blast chasing her, and she started to form a barrier at the front door, keeping it permeable to let her through as she jumped in a half somersault, twisting so her eyes were on the barrier as it formed, ignoring the impact of her back on the far wall, flaring the shield into being as it held back the inferno that raged where they'd just stood.

She fell, upside down, down the wall, one arm reaching out to catch herself as the shimmering golden barrier almost broke, but held firm. As the flames cleared, she saw something flying outside, lifting up out of her line of sight, hopefully having missed the glow of her Force Barrier.

"Wow!" Crix marveled at the Force construct, walking over and poking it seemingly without a care in the world. Thankfully, Force Barriers didn't heat up or cool down, or else he very likely would've just burned himself.

Letting it fade, the boy flinched backwards as the heat of the burning apartment hit him in the face, and Anaïs allowed herself a small smile as she righted herself, working one shoulder and letting the Force fade from her muscles, thankful for it. "Alright," she said, trying to play it off like what'd just happened was no big deal. If he wasn't going to freak out, she wasn't going to either. "The address?"

"Oh, sure. . . wait, they just tried to kill me!" the boy started to agree, eyes widening in horror, only know realizing what'd just happened.

"Yes?" she replied, hoping to just get through this conversation quickly. "That's what the sniper was for. And the grenade."

"But those were different!" Crix disagreed, and then promptly didn't explain why. "No, no, I need to come with you! Grandma Melea's in trouble!"

Anaïs looked to him, then the burning apartment, the building's durasteel frame and ferrocrete walls such that it wouldn't spread to the other units, then back to him. "Yes?" she repeated. "That's why I'm here. To get her to safety."

"I. . . I'm coming with you!" the boy declared, expression firming.

"what."

Ignoring her incredulity, seemingly off in his own little world, Crix nodded to himself. "Yeah. I'll help you save her! You're a Jedi, but I can help too! Like. . . oh, where did I put my blaster?" he asked, looking around. "Oh, thanks!" he said, taking it from her unresisting fingers, as she stared with increasing horror. "Okay, Ana, let's go!"

Having apparently made his decision, without any need for her input, the boy started to walk away.

Anaïs stood there, not sure what just happened, feeling generally distressed. Through the Force, she could feel her Master's presence, far away and either he'd stopped fighting, or was far enough away that the small Dark Side blooms of violent death couldn't be felt through the miasma that covered the city. Regardless, he was able to feel her, and she got a sense of. . . concern. Not in words, but just feelings.

"Master," she said, trying to project her thoughts back to him, "I'm dealing with an idiot."

She wasn't sure if he could actually hear her, but in return she got a sense of confidence in her, but, under it, was an unmistakable feeling of amusement.

"Thanks," she replied, deadpan, shaking her head. She had a mission, now she just needed to do it. Yes, it wasn't going to be easy, but if it were, then she wouldn't be needed, would she? Moving quickly, she strode down the hall towards the stairwell, where she could hear Crix heading towards the ground floor.


<SWPP>>


She caught up with the boy, and convinced him to take the back entrance. As there were several soldiers waiting at the front, so focused that they didn't notice the pair coming out of an alley several dozen feet away, this was a good move. From there, they started the slow, slow process of moving across the city. Taking the roads, they slowly wound their way across the city, having to pass through several checkpoints.

Thankfully, despite Crix being on at least one list the enemy had, they weren't stopped, the rank and file soldiers working off of an entirely different database. However, there was danger elsewhere, Anaïs several times having to force the boy to follow her down back alleys and to take the long way around several roads, the sense of danger laying thickly down them.

She couldn't say why it was dangerous, or even where the danger was coming from, as Master Lucian had told her she would eventually be able to, only that going down those roads was a bad idea. The danger so great that it might result in her death, which made those areas stand out starkly, but the fact that so many places were so dangerous put her on edge. Put her on edge.

"Oh come on, Ana, the street's empty! It's right around the corner! Why can't we just go down this one?" Crix whined.

His statement made her pause, as she was so focused on trying to feel the Force that she'd not been paying attention to why they were dangerous. Looking around, he was right, the street was empty. Completely empty.

"And the fact that everyone's avoiding it isn't a clue?" she asked, a touch sardonically, having tried, and failed, to ignore her tag-along's complaints.

". . . Oh. Well, I don't see anything," the boy grumbled, and Anaïs was tempted to let him walk down it.

Be calm, she told herself, centering herself in the Force. You've trained for this. You're better than this. But she hadn't prepared herself for this kind of trial. Fighting creatures, while difficult, held a certain degree of purity and simplicity to it. They tried to kill you, you tried to stop them, end of story. In the Temple things had been clear. Listen to the Masters, know they were wiser and thus almost certainly correct even if you didn't understand, end of story.

But relying on someone who knew something you needed, but was Force-blind and didn't listen?

I need to learn how to pull information out of people's heads like Master Lucian.


However, she didn't know that now, and trying to Mind Trick him into giving her the information, with how bad she was with that technique, was likely to backfire on her. She didn't have the deft hand with it that Jorel had, and Crix was her only source of the information she needed.

"It's a Jedi thing," she told him for the. . . she'd lost count how many times she had. "And you said we're almost there?" she pressed, trying not to sound too hopeful at being able to leave him behind.

"Yeah," he smiled, misinterpreting her good mood. "My feet were starting to hurt, so I'm glad we're almost done. It's that way, Ana" he directed, and she looked around, trying to get a sense of which way to go.

No, no, there! she thought, putting forward the idea of going down different alleys, only to get a sense of danger from two out of the three. Heading towards that one, he followed, and it was another few twists before she froze, the street she was about to step onto awash with bad ends if she did so.

Behind her, Crix tried to step past her, blocked by her arm. "But Ana, it's right there," he said, not bothering to whisper, as the Danger around them started to increase. "Hey!" he objected as she grabbed him, and, with a touch of Force, picked him up, carrying him back and around a corner.

Before he could say anything else, she, following her instincts, jabbed him in the chest knocking the wind out of him, causing him to drop to his knees and quietly wheeze as the sound of boots came down the alley, though he didn't seem to notice, doubled over as he was.

"Nothing here," a man's voice called, "Probably someone opening a window."

"Next open window you see, send a blaster-bolt in, that'll teach 'em to keep their heads down," a different man's voice replied, followed by the sound of a person walking back out. The danger abated, but wasn't quite gone, so she waited, and heard a lighter flick on, then a deep inhale, followed by a moaned exhale.

"Ahhh, that's the stuff," the first man sighed, and Anaïs peered around the corner to see a guard smoking something, eyes closed.

Moving silently, leaving Crix behind to continue wheezing, she stalked forward, reaching out in the Force to warn her, and approaching the guard. Stepping carefully around a bit of trash, the man took another pull on his cigarra, letting out a blue-tinged cloud of smoke that dissipated into the dirty air of the city.

Getting the stirrings of danger, she was already in position, so, as his eyes started to open, she launched herself forward with a set of paired strikes, one meant to knock the breath out of him, the other to knock him out.

Both hits landed, and he dropped, caught by her as she carried him back to Crix, who was only now recovering. "You hit m- is he dead?" he started to object, voice rising slightly at the unconscious form of the guard.

"No. Now come on, and be quiet!" she hissed, thoroughly annoyed at the boy.

For once, though, he did like she asked and followed her to the mouth of the alleyway, the danger still present, but less, the guard that likely would've detected them now unconscious. Blaster-marks dotted the buildings all around, and walls had been blown apart, as if by explosives, but it was a battle that was long over. There were over a dozen guards present, blocking the street off, and from the uncleaned pools of dried blood, a lot of people had died here. It had happened long enough that whatever traces of the Dark Side such a thing would create had faded, likely days ago, possibly even when her Master had been directed by the Force to come here.

Feeling an oncoming sense of danger, she shot Crix a warning look as he opened his mouth, and it abated, as the two of them pulled back, down the alley and around the corner, before they could talk.

"That's why we couldn't go down the street," she noted, giving the boy a significant glance, though, given his shell-shocked appearence, she felt a little guilty. He looked, physically, to be her age, but emotionally he acted more like a child. Lucian had been clear that Jedi were warriors, despite the airs they put on, and that their training, while sheltered in many ways, exposed them to other things they would not be if they lived peaceful lives.

"Y-yeah," he said haltingly. "Was that. Was that blood?"

It took her a moment to realize what he'd been focusing on, as she was thinking on what she needed to do next. "Yes. At least twenty people died there, maybe more. Do you have any other places to go?"

Mutely, he shook his head.

"Okay, we'll do this the hard way," she sighed, shooting him a questioning look as he took a few, frightened steps back. Ignoring him, she turned to the guard, stripping him of his comm-piece, his weapon, and considered using his own cuffs to bind him, but the Mind Trick was going to be hard enough to do without a physical indication that something was wrong.

Thinking better of it, she picked him up, carrying him further away from the others, down a couple more alleys and, hopefully, away from alert ears. Dropping the man back down, she reached over and, carefully, healed him of the concussion she'd given him minutes before, stopping as the thug moaned slightly, his eyes slowly opening. "Wha?"

Sinking into the Force, she tried her best. "I'm calm," she instructed, voice resonating with the Force. "You are my-" she paused, trying to figure out how to word it. The more believable the truth, the more easily it would be believed, and she hadn't seen any female soldiers, so she couldn't be sure just claiming to be a superior officer would work. "You are an assistant to the Baron's general."

The man's eyes turned glassy, his will buckling under hers. "I'm calm. You are an assistant to the Baron's. . ." he paused, resisting the command slightly, but as she pressed down on him with the Force, he gave. "the Baron's general." Dazed, the soldier stood and gave a sloppy salute, "Ma'am? What brings you. . ." he looked around at the alley in confusion, "here?"

In the corner Crix made a fearful noise, but Anaïs paid him no mind, struggling with the technique. In the hands of a properly trained Knight, the man's mind would be theirs to control, but she wasn't a Knight, and, while Lucian had trained her in a number of techniques, this wasn't one of them.

"I've been pulled to the side to report away from the others. This is unusual, but not that odd," she stated, once more pressing down on his will, glad for that last few months training that let power through this, patching inexperience with power without completely tiring herself out.

"I've been pulled to the side to report away from the others. This is unusual, but not that odd," he repeated, another sign of her lack of skill, as that should've been an internal thought of his own, but it was one he accepted. "Sorry Ma'am, it's been a. . ." he trailed off, noticing the burning embers of his cigarra and quickly dropping it in what he probably thought was a subtle manner. "long day," he finished lamely.

And now for the other part. Selling my end, she thought. Anaïs looked at him imperiously. "Tell me soldier, the area you're guarding. What happened there?" Wait, was that too direct?

It was, as he blinked, frowning, "You don't know, Ma'am?"

Think! "Of course I know. The question is do you soldier?" She wanted to say more, but Jorel had talked to her, repeatedly, about not including too many details when Mind Tricking someone, unless you were sure of them. Every single one you got wrong, like the Baron having 'generals', stressed the technique, requiring more raw power to overcome. Maybe the Baron had captains, or lieutenants, or something else, but her misnaming them had cost her, requiring her to exert herself to make him accept that what she was saying was true. No, the vaguer you were, the more your target would fill in on their own.

The man glared, not at her, but off to the side, but the technique wasn't stressed as he muttered darkly, "Said I was listening with my eyes closed. Piece of Trvak poodoo."

"Soldier," Anaïs stressed, playing the role and trying to get to what she needed to know. Even without it being stressed, keeping the Mind Trick going was tiring, and she didn't know what else she'd need to do today.

"Yes, Ma'am," the man replied, straightening. "We rooted out the last bit of the resistance. Their last base in the city, but some of them got away. We're waiting to see if any more showed up. We've already got a couple."

Crix gasped, and the soldier glanced over at him, brows drawing together as he considered the boy. "Who are you?" he started to ask, but Anaïs dragged his attention back to her.

"What about Melea Vondarr," she asked, the soldier looking back to her.

"Captured, along with some of the others, in the initial raid," he repeated, frowning at her. "But everyone knows that."

"Where? And what's going to happen to her," the padawan pressed, commanding, "Answer" when he stayed silent, her control over him fraying.

"She's at base," the soldier replied instantly, even as he fought her mentally. "She's going to be executed at sunset. She's the last leader, and when she dies, we'll have this city."

Her Mind Trick broke, snapped like struck glass, as his head snapped over to Crix, "And you're going to die with her!" he declared, hand going for an empty holster. "Wha-gurk!?"

He looked down, where the green, glowing blade pierced his heart, then at Anaïs who, shaking held the saber steady.

The Dark Side pulse of his violent death was far, far worse than the man she'd killed earlier, threatening to overwhelm her. Shaking she held herself still, as the man that would've kill them both dropped to the ground, the saber cutting through him as he fell to the alley floor.

The Darkness surged around her, up her, as if to smother her, and she tried to remain firm, her training with that stupid Sith saber of Lucian's helping her keep her head above the tide of blackness, not allowing the tainted energy access to her mind. Why? she thought. Why is this so bad? I've killed before!

But she knew the answer. In the Force, intent mattered. The men she'd killed at the club in Fabrin had been trying to kill her, their own bolts deflected back at them, and their deaths had been accidental. The man she'd killed earlier had been an accident as well, as she just tried to knock him out. But the man, the corpse before her?

She'd meant to kill him.

She'd known she'd have to, from as soon as she woke him up, knowing that to let him go would mean that, as soon as someone found her, they'd be hunted. If she was Lucian's level, that wouldn't matter, but she was barely making it as is. He was her enemy. He'd tried to kill Crix. But even before he had, she was planning on killing him, and that mattered to the Force.

Maybe the Temple was right and the Force judged one's intentions. Maybe Lucian was right and the reasons why you did something, your state of mind as you acted, resonated more in the Force than the act itself. Maybe they were both wrong. But she'd murdered this unarmed man, no matter her reasons, and she had to deal with that.

Staying strong through that unexpected deluge of Darkness, she stayed whole, but felt. . . dirty, tainted by it, like she'd been splattered with his blood that'd stained her like ink in a way that would never wash off, and, suddenly, a few offhand, angry comments that Jorel had made, years ago, suddenly made sense.

No one said what happened, when his Clan left on the Gathering, but she'd known they'd lost people.

Shaking her head, she turned off her saber, looking at her pristine hands, the self-cauterizing wounds from her weapon ensuring there would be no blood splatter, and felt that they should be coated with red.

It'd be easier, the next time.

She knew it on a bone-deep level. Even if it felt just as bad the next time, she'd be prepared for it, though part of her thought it wouldn't be, and that scared her. She could sense her Master's presence, despite him being far away, wrapped around her comfortingly, and she leant into that feeling, taking strength from it.

Stowing her weapon, she took a deep breath, and let it out, shuddering slightly as she collected herself. "Well, that happened," she said, more to herself then Crix. "Alright. We know where she is, and sunset is in. . five hours," she stated, checking the slim datapad in her belt pouch. "And we need a plan."

Before the boy, who was looking at her fearfully, could respond, her stomach grumbled, loud and rumbling, and she was reminded that, with everything that happened, she'd skipped both breakfast and lunch, the Force urging Lucian on so they'd made do with a ration bar while they'd landed.

"Also, lunch," she amended, blushing a little, and the boy, laughing a little, nodded, though he still seemed scared, not coming any closer to her. "Come one, we'll find somewhere we can talk."

They left the alley, and the dead body, and she tried not to look back at what she felt was yet another step down a dark road, further away from the Temple, and towards what she didn't know.

She failed.
 
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I have really enjoyed this fic, and I think the thing I've liked the most has been getting a look at a potential Jedi "career Path" that I could see Anakin actually enjoying. The Jedi are supposed to be peacekeepers, but the one example of them trying to actually do that which we see results in the disaster that was Phantom Menace.

Anakin was never going to be the kind of Jedi happy to spend his time around a negotiating table trying to resolve "taxation disputes" and frankly I don't blame him. In the EU at least though, the Judicial Forces do exist as the Republic equivalent of the military / FBI, and I don't see them turning down the opportunity if a Jedi volunteered to ride along and help out.

Anakin seemed way more in his element as a general then anything else. I could definitely see him charging to and fro across the galaxy to uphold justice with a shipload of military police.

Thanks for writing this!
 
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Three

Jorel woke, slowly, mouth dry, body hurting, with a sense of filth that he remembered from years ago, and had hoped to never feel again.

There wasn't some moment as awareness returned, as memories flooded in. He knew exactly what he'd done, why he'd done it, and was well aware his Master was well within his rights to dump him on an Agri-corps world and never look back.

Force knew he'd been threatened with that enough in the Temple.

However. . . he couldn't bring himself to regret it. He knew, knew, that if he hadn't reached for the Dark, not only would he have died, but Hisku would've as well. His own death. . . he was prepared for. He'd been told enough times that even dying wasn't as bad as using the Dark, and he was prepared to do so before he reached for it again, but he was prepared for himself dying because of his mistakes, not Sergeant Hisku, who hadn't done anything to deserve his fate.

With a groan, he sat up, to see he was in a hotel room. The same hotel room he'd only looked into once, before he and Hisku had left to go. . . exploring. Standing, he prepared for the pain of dozens of half-healed blaster wounds to scream in objection, but he felt nothing. More than that, he felt. . . good?

He still felt the taint of using the dark mirror of the Force, but he remembered it being worse. Much, much worse.

"It really does get easier," he grumbled, almost disappointed he didn't feel as bad as he'd feared. After what he did, he deserved to feel that sense of being stained, and thus felt almost. . . cheated.

Regardless, a sniff proved he reeked, and so it was to the fresher he went. Coming out, feeling better, though still with that thin layer of oily grime on his soul, he found a fresh set of clothes on his bed, as well as a note to tell the door guard he was 'ready' when he was done.

Door guard? he thought as he dressed, and closed his eyes, reaching out. Sure enough, he could feel two presences outside of his door, the slightly brighter than normal signatures in the Force he was coming to associate with his master's men.

Sure enough, opening it up there were two soldiers, both in the light purple uniform of the Flock. "Um, the note said to tell you I'm ready?" Jorel questioned.

Nodding to him, the Human started to walk away, obviously wanting the Padawan to follow, while the other soldier, a Twi'lek, fell in behind him. It was a quiet walk, taking a lift up to the top floors, and being led back to the same room he'd met his Master in before.

Dawn was breaking through the large windows in the back of the room, which seemed to be transparisteel instead of mere glass. Er'izma worked at a desk, perpendicular to the sight, not paying the vista any mind. "Good to see you're finally awake, Padawan," the large man commented blandly, not looking up. The two soldiers left, leaving the pair of them alone in the room. "Have a seat, I'll be done in a moment," the Jedi instructed when Jorel stood awkwardly, unsure, and the padawan cautiously moved to do so.

The Knight continued to work for a long minute, before tapping in the way Jorel recognized from practice meant he was filing a report. Putting the datapad down, the dark-skinned man turned to regard his padawan, though I might not be his padawan for long, Jorel couldn't help but think.

"Before we get started, would you like anything to drink? Caf? Water?" Er'izma inquired.

"Um, both sir, if that's alright," Jorel requested. Er'izma didn't move, but a moment later a lieutenant came in from a side door, placing two waters down, one on the desk and the other on a small side table Jorel hadn't noticed. When she returned a moment later, she dropped off the dark, bitter stimulant, still steaming.

Without a word, the woman left, leaving only the two of them, but also leaving Jorel with the knowledge that they weren't alone. Not that that fact changed anything.

"Now, last time I asked for an explanation for your actions," Er'izma asked, taking a sip of the scalding beverage without care. "And you informed me that 'The Force' told you to do it. I would appreciate a more complete explanation, Padawan."

Jorel hesitated. "Well, it started when we were deciding where to go," he began, the explanation of everything coming, often haltingly, over nearly an hour. "And then I passed out. I'm sorry, Master, it'd been a long day. Night. Whatever. I'm actually surprised I'm feeling as good as I am, given. . ." he cut himself off, lest he damn himself further.

"Given you used the Dark Side of the Force?" Er'izma asked, with an arched eyebrow, and Jorel had to nod in agreement. "That is because I removed the remaining energies, as best as I could."

"Master?" Jorel asked, confused, not having heard of such a thing even being possible.

The large man sat back in his chair. "I am not as accomplished as my Master is, but it is possible to drain the bits of Force clinging to one who has fallen. It is not a pleasant experience, for either participant, but you were unconscious, which simplified things.

"But, what about you?" the Padawan had to ask, not wanting his master to be hurt just because of him.

The tip of the man's mouth twitched upwards, the only bit of levity on his otherwise stony expression. "I have suffered far worse, in my several centuries of life. That said, do not make a habit of reaching out to that which you cannot handle."

"Master?" Jorel repeated, thoroughly confused, but with a glimmer of hope. "I, you still want me as your Padawan?"

"Is there some reason I should not?" Er'izma asked in turn.

The Padawan looked at the much, much older man incredulously. "But. . . I used the Dark Side!"

"And?" the Knight asked, as if that wasn't the gravest sin a Jedi could commit. "Are you planning to do so again?"

"No!" Jorel nearly shouted. "But, that doesn't matter. I fell. You don't come back from that! I was only allowed to stay before because I wasn't-" he cut himself off.

"Because you weren't a Jedi yet?" his master completed. "Why should I believe you can't 'come back from that?' After all, I did."

The young man couldn't help but stare. "You. . . what?"

"I fell, and found my way back to the light," Er'izma noted, as if that were normal, as if that were even possible. "Let me guess, the Masters in the Temple said that was an impossibility? That even to think such things was the first step to falling?"

Numbly, Jorel nodded.

"Countless have strayed, and returned. Some of them work humbly, like Master Beholl, Master Trayku, Master Focyol, Knight Ierus, Knight Diwuks, and Knight Holtadiz," his Master listed off, Jorel only recognizing the second name as the other man continued, "to some of our of the orders most powerful members in history. A certain Prodigal Knight comes to mind. But the Order does not want to admit such examples exist. After all, if a Jedi falls, it is easy to tell oneself that they were never a true Jedi to begin with, and thus the concept of their redemption is impossible as how can you return to what you never truly were?"

Er'izma shook his head. "Let's ignore the fact that, by the standard they often apply, Master Windu on the Jedi council has fallen at least once. To suggest such a thing of a member of the High Council is so obviously untrue, to do so would be tantamount to an admission that one had fallen themselves, and is working to 'undermine' the Jedi Order. No, Padawan Jorel, it is much easier to teach younglings that to dip a toe into the Darkness is to be forever stained by it, making the purity of being that which is a 'true' Jedi always closed to any who make a single mistake. It is also much easier to tell oneself that, and kill those who have lost their way, than walk the treacherous path that is to bring one lost to Darkness back to the Light."

Jorel didn't know what to say to that, flying as it did in the face of everything the Temple Mastr had taught him. But, then again, didn't the Temple say we were to defer to our Jedi Masters once we were Padawans? the young man thought wryly. Doubt they expected this. Then again, Jorel knew precious little of how other Jedi acted. He thought he had, he'd read the Archives, but he'd never- no, he realized. He'd read the portions of the Archives that younglings were allowed to access. How much had been locked away, the 'dangerous' knowledge merely an idea that opposed what the Temple Masters had claimed was true, unassailable because those they instructed had no knowledge to counter it with.

"Then. . . what I did. It was. . . alright?" Jorel asked hesitantly. The flat look his Master gave him spoke volumes. "Ah. That's what I thought."

"You erred, Padawan, of that have no doubt," Er'izma informed him. "But why did you do so?"

"Because I wasn't strong enough," he replied instantly, the answer obvious.

From the dark-skinned man's unimpressed look, it apparently wasn't. "Then should I expect you to call upon the Dark again in training, when you are not strong enough to match the goal I set you?"

"What? No!" Jorel sputtered, but realized what his Master was really asking. "No, it wasn't because I wasn't strong enough, it's because. It's because I was about to die. No. No, it was because His- Sergeant Hisku was going to die if I didn't. That. . . am I getting to attached, Master?" he asked, suddenly unsure of himself. "The Temple said attachments were wrong. Is this what they meant?"

The Jedi Knight nodded. "That is what they meant. That does not make them correct. You fell, yet I did not find you knee deep in the corpses of those that pushed you to that point. Why?"

He turned that over in his mind. "Because of Sergeant Hisku," the young man finally said. "We were getting away, and if I did that, and I kind of wanted to, I'd be putting her in danger."

"So, what I hear you saying, is that your attachment to your attaché is both what led you to use the Dark Side, but what also led you back to the Light?" his Master inquired, and when he put it that way, it didn't sound nearly as bad.

Jorel knew what his Masters at the Temple would say, that it didn't matter if she helped him back, the fact that he called upon the Dark because of her made his caring for her life wrong. But they also said Jedi didn't recover from falling. Once more, he wondered what else they were wrong about.

Speaking of Hisku, though.

The padawan looked up, to ask about her, but he already knew, somehow, she was alright. She was. . . above him?

Looking up even higher, he could feel the Dove in geosynchronous orbit over the city, the crew a second, smaller sun, but one present only in the Force, and one made up of several thousand lesser fires. Of those flames, he could easily pick out Hisku, though not enough to know what she was doing, only that she was. . . alright.

"Master. Why didn't you tell me Sergeant Hisku was Force Sensitive?" Jorel asked instead.

"She is?" the old man asked, mock surprised, but his faux shock so blatantly fake it was almost insulting. The Padawan gave his Master a flat look, returning the one from earlier. "Force Sensitives exist, Padawan," the Knight offered. "Is it really so surprising that you would run into one?"

"She was strong enough to pick me up and throw me," Jorel argued. "I think she broke my ribs. And I didn't 'run into' her, she was assigned to me. You knew." A thought occurred to him. "Is that. Is that why you have me teaching her? You, she's too old to be a Jedi, Master!"

Rather than argue, or deny the accusations levelled against him, Er'izma just nodded. "She will never be a Jedi," he agreed. "But she will be able to learn some of our ways."

"She doesn't want to learn," the padawan disagreed. "Said it was cheating."

"She told you that much? Hmmm," the Knight noted, pleased. "Tell me, what do you know of Chiss society?"

Jorel stared at the other man, feeling a headache coming on. "I didn't even know what the Chiss were until yesterday! Two days ago! This week!"

"You didn't ask?" Er'izma questioned, surprised.

Giving his master an annoyed look Jorel shot back, "I didn't want to be rude! She didn't like me that much without me prying!"

"Doesn't. . ." the older Jedi echoed. "Young man, she was. . . no. No you'll find out later," he stated, unhelpfully. "To put it simply, the Chiss Ascendency is a hard-line meritocracy. On the surface it is an Oligarchic Autocracy, but adoptions happen so often they do not mean what you would think." The Jedi paused, "or what you would think if you grew up outside of the Temple. Position is determined by skill and ability, the difference in inborn traits slight enough to render them inconsequential, given the Chiss' quick maturation and logical nature. With that in mind, how do you think such a culture would take those who have the overwhelming advantage that Force Sensitivity can impart?"

"They'd think it was cheating," Jorel replied, the answer obvious. "But, the universe isn't fair. Some species are faster, stronger, more perceptive."

Er'izma nodded. "Among the greater galaxy, yes, but in the Chiss Ascendancy there is only the Chiss. Not in that way, Padawan," he chided, as Jorel wondered if they killed outsiders, "Only that Chiss make up over ninety-nine percent of the population of their systems, and those who are not tend to gather together. Located, in the Outer Rim as they are, like the Hapes Consortium, they are mostly left alone."

The Padawan remembered the Hapes Consortium from his lessons at the Temple. A collection of over a hundred systems in the Inner Rim, they closed their borders a thousand years before the New Sith Wars, itself nearly two thousand years in the past. Some still left that area of space, or entered, but they were few in numbers, and only a small handful of Jedi were permitted to work in their territory. If this Chiss Ascendency was in the Outer Rim, long past the edge of what was considered civilized space, it was no wonder he'd never heard of them.

"Then, how do I convince her using the Force isn't 'cheating'?" Jorel asked, at a loss for what to do next.

"Isn't it cheating, though, from a certain point of view?" his Master asked in turn.

"Well, yes," the Padawan admitted. "But why does that matter?" The other man was silent. "Okay, it does, but why?"

"Isn't using the Dark Side of the Force cheating, from a certain point of view?" Er'izma questioned.

Jorel reeled back. "Using the Force, and using the Dark Side, are two completely different things!"

Instead of arguing, the Knight nodded. "They are. Why?"

"They just are!" the young man insisted, but paused at his master's unamused look. "Okay, okay. Using the Force. It's natural. No, no, evil things are sometimes natural too," he quickly stated, before Er'izma could do more anything more than open his mouth to object.

Turning over the problem, he proposed. "Using the Force, it's. . . helpful. Yes, you can do more than others, but it's not a competition. You aren't trying to beat others, you're trying to help them. Well, unless they're criminals, then you're trying to beat them to help others," Jorel joked, getting a dry look from his master that clearly said 'yes, yes, you're very funny, get to the point'.

"Even when I was sparring with Anaïs," the padawan started to say, and paused, wondering how his only friend was. He might've included Hisku in that category, but he'd already accidentally set that relationship on fire, only he was now tasked with rebuilding it. "When I was sparring with her, I didn't want to beat her. I mean, I did, but I also didn't. I wanted to get better, but I also wanted her to get better. That and I, um, enjoyed spending time with her," he admitted, expecting a recrimination from his Master that never came. Right, he reminded himself, attachments aren't evil. Still getting used to that one.

"How, um, fiercely do they compete, the Chiss?" the Padawan asked.

With a sense of approval at his student for asking the right question, Er'izma revealed, "Fiercely. The only reason that assassinations and the like are not commonplace are that it would both weaken the Ascendency, and reveal weakness in those who use them, as one who does is obviously not able to succeed on their own merits. Such cultural beliefs are why they take a dim view on most outsiders, be they statesman, salesman, smuggler or soldier. In a way, they might deal well with the Jedi, if our very existence wasn't anathema to their 'fair society'."

"But, there are Chiss on your ship, Master," Jorel felt inclined to point out. "A lot of them."

"The Chiss are also fond of exile as a punishment for those who disagree with their ways," the Knight stated. "For what could be a worse punishment than being expelled from paradise, one made by their own hand?"

That made a certain kind of sense. Sergeant Zisk and Sergeant Major Gars both weren't nearly as serious as Hisku. But, in a way, they were both prideful of their abilities in their field, not their just their rank or species. "Sergeant Hisku doesn't disagree with that way of thinking, though. So why is she here?" Er'izma didn't respond, forcing Jorel to re-examine what he knew.

"She didn't have a choice, did she?" he asked, knowing the answer. "If having the Force is cheating. . . with how strong she is, she could've been a Jedi. she couldn't not use the Force. It'd come out eventually." When she felt a strong enough emotion. Did that mean she cared about him? Or was it just her not wanting to fail, and being angry at him for almost dying on her? "What were her options? Exile or. . ."

"Death," Er'izma replied. simply "Those who cannot abide by the Ascendency's rules have no place within its borders. I believe you can understand why she might not be the most accepting of her position. Why she might not turn her back on the way she was raised, despite it turning its back on her."

Jorel did, in a way. Technically, he could have chosen not to go to an Agri-world, if he wasn't chosen as a padawan. He could've walked out of the Jedi Order, exiling himself, but he hadn't. If the choice was exile or death? He wouldn't've been happy about it, probably even years later. But he also would still have tried to be a Jedi, even if he wasn't allowed to call himself one.

"What you're saying," the younger man said slowly, "is that, while the Ascendancy forced her to leave, they couldn't force her to stop being Chiss? Then how am I supposed to teach her she's wrong?"

"Is she?" Er'izma asked, completely unhelpfully. "Whatever you choose to do, you have several years, Padawan. There is no need to rush things now. No, there is one other matter that needs to be addressed."

And this is it. My punishment, Jorel thought. Given what his Master had said, he wasn't going to reject him as a Padawan, but the older man also hadn't said he wasn't going to punish his student for what he'd done.

"What do you wish to do about those that had captured you?"

. . . or not? "What do you mean, Master?" Jorel asked, confused.

"With the information you brought us, you have left us with three options," Er'izma laid out. "The first is the easiest. The common option, the one the Temple would suggest. We do nothing. We turn over the information to the local authorities, not having been invited here to help, and thus having no obligation to do so. The locals will make a few arrests, put pressure on the criminal organizations that acted freely, but the rot runs deep in this system, padawan. Deeper than it had the last time we were here, a few years ago. It will make things better in the short term, but nothing will change. However, there will also be no further risk to us and ours. In fact, as long as the gang remains, they will know better to harass us when we come here again."

The padawan could see the logic of it, but he didn't like it. "The second option?"

"We go to war," the General stated blandly. "We treat this as the Jedi of old would, and we fight the issue head on. The local government has fallen. While they may make a show of what they do, the leaders will go unmolested, and those high enough in positions of power will arrange for others to take the fall instead. Aids and secretaries, well paid to accept responsibility, leaving the corrupt free to continue. We have the force to stop that. It will take a month, possibly two, but we will pacify this system. Then another two months to set up another government that can function on its own. We will lose people, however. Pacification is a messy ordeal, and our troops, while trained, are a strike force, not a guard. However, the work we do will last for years, decades, or maybe even a century before the rot starts to set in once more."

As a Jedi, the bringers of order, the answer was clear. While costly, it was better to clean out Darkness then leave it to fester. That was what the Temple taught, though the fact that Er'izma said the first option was what the Temple would approve of, it concerned him. "You're really giving me this choice?" Jorel asked, incredulous. Completely serious, his master nodded. "Are there other options?"

"There is one. My master's preferred method," the Knight nodded. "We continue as we meant to before your. . . adventure, with one change. When we leave, we eliminate a few key figures, the lynchpins upon which the rotten structure rests. There will be chaos, and death, but it will give those here a chance. If they are strong enough, they will rise to the challenge. If they are not, another corrupted system will take its place. We won't be able to return for several years, and even then, our reception might be less than pleasant. However, the risk to us will be minimal, and will allow us to continue."

"Which do you suggest?" the padawan asked, unsure. None of the options were good, but they were all bad for different reasons. The other man just stared at him. "If we go through option three. The lynchpins you'd remove. Those wouldn't be innocent people, would they."

"They might consider themselves innocent," Er'izma noted. "But they are, only in that they have not done anything wrong, merely refused to act when their position, the very oaths they took, demanded they stop evil from acting itself. They honestly do not see the corruption, because they refuse to look, which they would only do if they knew what they would find."

"Which option would the Chiss choose?" Jorel questioned, trying to get a better handle on the social structures he only just learned about.

His master raised an eyebrow. "All three. The Ascendency would choose the first, as this system is not their territory. The Chiss people would press for option two, as they cannot abide such weak and dishonorable practices. The Exiled Chiss would likely choose option three, having learned how much option two costs, or would do nothing at all, not caring about what pathetic scum does to each other, believing if they wanted things to be better, they should do it themselves instead of relying on others."

That. . . didn't help. However, the Knight likely knew that, which is why he'd answered. If this was his first week away from the Temple, Jorel would've chosen option two. If he was Anaïs, he'd pick option one, his friend always deferring to the wisdom of the Temple's teachers. As for him, he knew his choice. "Option three. If the system is that bad, it needs to collapse. If another Jedi wants to help them build back up, they can, but I'm sick of Delle, and I've only just got here."

Er'izma nodded, and looked to the back of the room. Suddenly, something shifted, the light bending as six figures stepped forward, the refractions outlining their forms showing them to be humanoid. Their presence in the Force, like the Cathar, had been so low that Jorel hadn't even realized they were there.

There was a ripple in the Force, and the warped light faded, showing the squadron clearly. Three men and three women, they removed their helmets. One of the men and two of the women were Chiss, and the others were human. No, one of the men was Miralukan, blind but able to see through the Force, the slightest pressure coming from him distinctive.

"Geist Squadron, you have your targets," Er'izma ordered, tossing the Chiss man a datastick. "We leave in three days. Meet us at the edge of the system in four."

"Yes, sir," the soldier nodded, his voice sliding on the edge of Jorel's perception, forcing him to pay attention, lest his mind ignore the armed men right in front of him. The Chiss noted Jorel's struggle, and nodded at the Padawan. "See you around, newbie."

Putting his helmet back on, the leader tapped something on his belt, and the light bent around him once more, the others following suit. The Force rippled, in a way reminiscent of Jorel's own veil, but now that he knew they were there, he was able to concentrate, the subtle push against his mind sliding off, and he tracked them as they walked to the door. One of the two Chiss women, seeing him watching turned and gave him a cheery wave before they walked out.

Turning back to his Master, he had to ask, "How many Force Sensitive Chiss are in the Flock, sir."

Er'izma just smiled. "A few. Now, you'll be returning back to the Dove on the next shuttle. I shudder to think of what you'd get up to if I allowed you another day for the Force to direct your actions, especially without young Hisku'biatha'pusi to reign you in."

Jorel couldn't really argue with that.
 
Chapter 24
Chapter Twenty-four

Despite the small war intermittently going off in the distance, large portions of the city were relatively untouched, people still going on with their lives. That made it child's play for Anaïs, along with Crix Vondarr, to find a small, out of the way café, in which to grab a late lunch and plan.

They only had four hours until Crix's grandmother, Melea Vondarr, was to be executed, nearly an hour already spent making their way across the city towards the military complex where she was kept, the center of the Baron's power, with the planet's capitol building only a few streets away. While it might have originally been nearby as a way to remind the president that he was not a dictator, a way to remove him or her if need be, now it was the opposite, a protective force nearby to defend his regime.

But they were now in a café, with some of the local food that Crix had suggested, a kind of noodle soup with crunchy spiced somethings floating on top. "What are we gonna do?" the boy whined loudly, not for the first time, while Anaïs quickly ate, not knowing if they'd be compromised and have to leave quickly. "You wouldn't say anything all the way here-"

"Because I was thinking," she cut him off between bites. "Now be quiet, we don't want to attract attention." The farther they'd gotten away from that trapped street, the smoother their trip had been, areas where the Force subtly warned danger becoming less and less frequent, however, casting her attention towards their destination, the small uneasiness once again sprang up. Not as obvious, but still a feeling that she needed to be careful.

However, despite the time she'd had to plan, she still had nothing. "I need to sneak in, get her, and get her out. But I don't know the layout of the place. I don't know how many people there are. I don't know anything."

"You mean we need to sneak in, right?" Crix asked, and she shot him a look. "I can help!"

Knowing this was going to happen, and half the reason she hadn't said anything until now, Anaïs sighed. "How fast can you run? How high can you jump? If things go bad, we're going to need to leave in a hurry. I can carry your grandmother, I can't carry both of you."

"But, can't you just do what you did before, and let us in?" he asked, clueless. "Just 'I'm going to let you in!'" he said in a horrible approximation of her voice. "And then they'd go 'I'm going to let you in' and then we're in?" he finished, trying, and failing, to sound like the guard she'd killed, no, the guard she'd murdered, she thought with a wince.

Glancing around without moving her head to show she was checking, no one was listening, so she felt safe asking, "What do you know about Jedi?"

"I know a lot!" Crix protested, quieting down as she subtly waved her hand. An older man, reading his datapad, glanced over at the two, read her annoyed expression, and smiled to himself, shaking his head as he went back to reading. "I know you're magic, and help people, and have laserswords," her tag-along pronounced.

She waited, but that was it. "Okay. That's. . . practically nothing. We're not 'magic', we use the Force, an energy that runs through all living things-"

"Sounds like magic," the boy huffed, and Anaïs considered Mind-Tricking him into just staying here for the next few hours, so she could pick him up on her way out. A strong mind could break free of a Mind-Trick in an hour or two, but she had a feeling he'd stay in one for days.

"And using the Force takes energy," she tried to continue.

Crix nodded. "Like Magic."

Magic doesn't exist, she wanted to say, but they only had so much time, and she only had so much patience. "And with training a Jedi can do more, with less energy, but there's still a limit. I'm a Padawan, an apprentice Jedi, and while I'm better than most Padawans, I'm still limited," she admitted freely. It wasn't arrogance, she knew she was better than most, the only ones more skilled were Padawans who'd been with their Masters for years, visiting the Temple for one reason or another. Jorel was almost as good as she was, and the other Padawans, who hadn't yet had masters, hadn't been able to hold a candle to her.

"But you were awesome, with the boom, and pshhhh, and the 'you'll tell me what I want to know'!" he argued, and it took her a moment to realize the first two were him making sound effects for the attack on the apartment. "Are you telling me that real Jedi are better?"

"I am a 'real Jedi'," she disagreed, annoyed. "But, yes, Master Lucian is much better than I am."

Crix frowned, "Then why can't he help?"

She motioned towards the sounds of distant explosions. "Because he's busy."

"Wait, those aren't fireworks?" the boy asked, and Anaïs just stared at him. "Oh. Ohhh. But, um," he paused, glancing about, looking incredibly suspicious as he did so, "why aren't people freaking out?"

She shrugged. "Because they're used to it? Because they're hoping if they don't react, the government won't think they're involved? It doesn't matter, what matters is it's just us, and I don't even know the layout of the place I'm supposed to sneak into. I don't need it, but it'd help. My point is that, every time I use the Force to capture someone in a Mind Trick, it's like you've. . ." she paused trying to scale the example to the boy's fitness. "Ran down half a street. One, fine. Two, okay. Thirty at once? And it's more tiring the harder it is to believe."

The boy across from her frowned, before reaching into his pockets, taking out what looked like several small datapads, fitting them together, individual screens lighting up. "I, um, go ahead and eat. It's not as good cold. I guess I should too. Just. . . gimme a minute."

With nothing else to do, she turned her attention back to her food. Reaching outward with the Force, there was a low level of danger, but that was true across this entire city, only having been in it so long she'd started to notice. It was like being outside on a day that was only somewhat warm. At first, you might not realize it was, but after a few hours, when you started to sweat and tire, you realized it was actually a little bit hot.

Focusing on the bits of shadowy Presence that enfolded hers like a cloak, she followed the connection back to her Master. He seemed. . . amused? Amused, and slightly annoyed, though she could almost feel him as he felt her feeling him, the energy of him shifting to something that would be hard to put into words, but held a general sense of. . . concern.

I'm fine,
she tried to push to him, unable to convey it effectively, doing the exact opposite of her training to resist the Dark Side, pushing a bit of herself out from behind her defenses, and sending to Master Lucian. I'm trying.

Anaïs wasn't sure if he understood what she meant, but a sense of confidence/caution/worry came back to her, and she supposed that was all she was going to get, and tried to take comfort in it.

"Got it!" Crix crowed, breaking her from her thoughts, and she realized she'd finished eating. The boy removed part of his rig, flipped it over, and pushed it to her. The small screen flickered, showing a wireframe map that spun, showing first the outside of the complex, then started to zoom in on individual sections. "Okay, prison, prison. Probably here?" he questioned, the screen moving to one of the larger side buildings, showing hallways twisting back and forth.

"How did you get this?" the padawan asked. She tried to settle her mental image of the idiot she'd been dragging along with her, attracting attention and stumbling into ambushes left and right, with someone who had the capability to pull this information out of seemingly nowhere.

The boy looked up, slurping his noodles, which, oddly, helped. "Building plans," he answered, mouth still somewhat full, as if that explained anything. Swallowing, he continued, "Government keeps records of everything. Grabbed a pic of the place, searched, there it was. Looks like there's a secure elevator though. It'll need a code."

Anaïs frowned. Her master could somehow use the Force itself to just put in the numbers needed, but she had no idea how he did so. Maybe she could try and find a guard, drag him to the side, and Mind-Trick him into giving it to her. But could she leave him alone, or would she have to kill him too. She'd seen what they'd done, they deserved it, but she still didn't want to-

"Four-Seven-Three-Six-one," Crix said, breaking her from her thoughts.

"Uh, what?" she asked, her training letting her remember the numbers, but she had no idea what they meant. Unless. . .

"The elevator code," the apparent slicer informed her, confirming her thoughts.

She had to stare at him. "How? How did you find that?"

Shrugging, the boy replied, "Found the login on the local holonet for the military's interior portal to their programs. Most have a default login for admin privileges, and a lot more people than you think never change it. Got in, looked up the scheduling compiler they used to manage their duty roster, found who was on 'prisoner duty', found their login, logged in, sent a message to his boss 'double checking' the code, and got the real one. Also, got him punished with extra duty next week, but, we'll be gone before that's an issue."

"I. . . only understood about half that," Anaïs admitted. "But. . . okay."

"So I can come with you?" Crix pressed.

The Jedi shook her head. "What, no!"

"But I got you what you needed!" he whined.

She sighed. "And thank you, but that doesn't let you move like I need to. If you can somehow watch and help from a couple streets over, sure, but not with me." She paused, thinking, Actually. . . "New plan. We're gonna buy two comm-pieces, and get a speeder. When I get your grandmother, we're going to need a fast way out, and if you're waiting that'll make things much easier."

Crix nodded, "Oh. . . okay. But, how are we going to buy a speeder that fast?"

Anaïs smiled at her helper, and couldn't help but channel her teacher. "Who said anything about buying one?"


<SWPP>


Anaïs waited on the rooftop overlooking the military complex. Three streets away, Crix sat in the closed-top speeder, watching the area through the interior cameras. He could help, but while the Baron's forces hadn't closed up the loopholes in their network to let information slip out, they had made it so the boy couldn't remotely overload systems.

She had two hours before execution, so she had time as she crouched, watching the area she was about to try to sneak in to. The entire complex was surrounded by a perimeter fence, fifteen feet high and topped with razor sharp wire, with thirty foot tall watchtowers overlooking the interior courtyard, but their attention was focused outwards currently, to the streets surrounding the military base.

Inside was an impressive display of force, with over a dozen hovertanks prepared and ready to be deployed, soldiers moving back and forth, military speeders arriving and leaving. Anaïs had been daunted by the task ahead of her, but her Master, and the Force, thought she could, so she obviously had the capability to do so.

She just didn't know how.

Meditating, almost reflexively, she centered herself in the Force, ready for a suggestion on what to do. The Force was silent, as if this was a test, or maybe it was because she already know she needed to do. Focusing, the area in front of was alight with danger, so thick it might've been a wall that extended a hundred feet tall.

Then the wall rippled.

Frowning, she started to focus more. Not harder, as trying harder would just disrupt her focus, counter-intuitively, but stilling herself even further. Blocking out other distractions, she focused on the danger ahead of her, more than just as feeling, but trying to see it.

It took several minutes, but she did.

The obstacle course.
she realized. It's just like the obstacle course! Specifically, the drones, seeing where they'd fire a moment before they did so. This was more diffuse, not a firming path of definite probability but a sweeping mist of possibility. The more she concentrated, the firmer it became, until she saw not a morass of danger, but the same sweeping sense of warning she'd gotten from the Sniper, only from a hundred different sources.

Each soldier's attention shifted, changed, sometimes in wide-sweeping arcs, sometimes in minute adjustments. The shifting, interlocking, dancing patterns played out in front of her eyes, some vaguer, where a moment of slow movement wouldn't be noticed, some more defined, where to be caught inside would lead to injury, if not death.

It was beautiful.

"Ana? Ana, are you there?" Crix's voice crackled over her earpiece, a cheap thing with only a couple of miles of range, but enough for their purposes.

"What is it?" she snapped, her focus wavering for a moment, at first struggling to keep it, destabilizing it further, before calming herself, allowing it to reassert itself.

"Oh, um, are we going to start?" he asked, unsure.

Anaïs sighed. "Yes, I'm looking for an opening."

"Oh. Okay. We've only got two hours," he reminded her, and she promptly ignored him.

Letting out a long, slow breath, she let herself fall into the Force, watching the patterns of danger, looking for a corridor she could pass through. A couple were incomplete, but. . . there.

Taking off at a run, Force singing through her body, Anaïs reached the edge of the rooftop, shoving herself with a Push that blasted the roof behind her clear of debris. Surging forward, she flew in a flat arc, crossing the seventy feet to the edge of the complex, clearing the fence and dropping in a roll into the courtyard. Ignoring Crix's voice in her ear, she silently followed the shifting, unfolding path in front of her, a bubble of safety as dozens upon dozens of soldiers went about their duties.

Not quite at a run, Anaïs passed between tanks, around patrols, ducking and sliding behind a speeder for a moment as the bubble of safety suddenly shrank, the driver glancing her way as she wasn't quite quiet enough, her own actions shifting the fabric of what would be that she was trying to ride.

The patterns shifted, but a new way opened, and she took it, moving further around, but still with a way to her target building. More soldiers, moving around, allowed her to dash around their vision lines, getting closer and closer, before she hit an area of unsurety that she couldn't avoid, slowing to a calm, relaxed walk, even as internally she was chanting please don't notice, please don't notice, but the field of danger never tightened, and she was once again able to dash forward, the muscles in her legs straining just a little.

She was at the last part, which would require her to scale a watchtower, and leap from that into an open window, but she wasn't moving fast enough, the back of the bubble of safety nipping at her heels. Instead of climbing it, Anaïs launched herself upwards in a Force Jump, getting ready to hit the side of the tower, the guard looking the other way.

But she pushed too hard.

Instead of softly landing on the watchtower's metal wall, hand lightly grasping as feet gently pressed down to let her jump again, she hit the side with a loud, ringing thunk, the metal deforming slightly under her enhanced physique, her palm slamming into the top of the waist-high wall, the bones in her hand aching as they grounded her momentum.

The waves of danger suddenly shifted, a dozen different people turning to look at the sudden sound. With no way out, she jumped higher, flipping herself on top of the watchtower's roof, going prone as she tried to be still, and make no sounds. Jorel had a technique that would let him divert attention, even if someone looked directly at him, but she'd never learned it, never getting the hang of it, and hating herself for not working harder at it now.

"What was that?" the guard asked, turning and walking over to where she'd hit. "The hell? What dented it?"

"Hey!" someone else called, one of the soldiers on the ground. "What was that? A bird?"

The man below her gave a carrying, disbelieving snort. "Kriffing big bird if it was. You see anything?"

As she laid there, the danger started to firm around her, more and more, descending down on her like a crushing stone trap like the stories of old. From her position, all it'd take is for the guard on the next tower over to look her way, and, as the guard held a yelled conversation with the soldiers below, he was going to. "Help!" she hissed. If she got spotted, she might be able to get to Melea, but if they locked down the elevator, she was kriffed.

"Got it!"
Crix replied, followed by the sound of furious typing. She could see the guard that would spot her glance her way, look away, stop, and start to turn.

From the other side of the complex, an alarm started to sound, and the patterns of possibility shifted, everyone's attention forcefully diverted. After only a moment's hesitation, to make sure, she rolled to her feet, took two loud, booming steps, and leapt once more, arrowing in for the empty window.

This time, she made it.

The guard of the watchtower was looking up in confusion, not at her, and, letting out a deep breath, she looked around the empty room, and the door which felt safe, taking it down into a hallway. Knowing where she needed to go, it was easy enough to go down the right hallways, only once having a sense of danger, with a safe doorway that let her duck inside until a man, striding with purpose, passed her by.

Soon enough, she was at the elevator, which itself wasn't guarded. The fact that it looked like a normal wall might've been part of it, but with the blueprints, as well as the Force guiding her, she was able to flip open the hidden number pad in seconds.

Putting in the code, 4-7-3-6-1, she held her breath, not getting a sense of danger, but that didn't mean it would work, only that it wouldn't lead to her being at risk of injury.

It didn't work.

"The code's wrong!" she hissed, panicking a little, not sure what to do next.

Crix's reply of, "No it isn't!" was just oh so helpful.

Feeling the vague sense of danger start again, someone coming, Anaïs told him, "I put in the code. Nothing happened."

"Did you put it in ri-" he started to ask.

"Yes I put it in right!" she snapped in a whisper, looking over the numberpad, seeing a pair of red and green buttons labelled 'Clear' and 'Enter'. Taking a risk, she hit the green 'Enter' button, only for the wall to smoothly open, revealing an elevator.

Without a word, she slipped in, and hit the down button.

"I don't know what's wrong," Crix said, worried.

". . . I figured it out," she admitted.

"Ah. Didn't put in right the first time, did you, Ana?" the boy asked, far more smug than he had any right to be.

Anaïs sighed. "Do you know what cell she's in?" she questioned trying to change the topic.

"No, but it's pro-shhhhh" the boy's voice faded off in a hiss of static.

"Okay, just me, then. I can do this," she told herself, pulling her saber. Centering in the Force, she felt the danger settle around her, but lightly, telling her she'd have a moment to act. Prepared, the doors opened, and three soldiers, one with a blaster at rest, two more behind a desk, all looked at her.

"Freeze," she commanded, darting forward, activating her lightsaber. All three did, and she could feel the effort it took pull at her waning reserves of strength, but her training allowed her to move without stumbling, cutting down one of the desk-guards, and then the armed soldier. The third, seeing his oncoming death, yanked free of her control, hand starting to come down on a large red button.

"No!" Anaïs yelled, and Pushed, throwing him backwards away from the controls. The guard hit the back wall with a thud, but landed, lunging for the button once more. She darted forward as well, saber leading, and caught his arm, cutting right through it, body-checking him as he dropped, screaming, holding what remained of his mutilated limb.

With another flick of her saber, she ended his suffering, the Dark once more flowing up and around her, but compared to her murder, it was practically nothing.

Looking at the console, there was a list of prisoners, which was useful, showing Ms. Vondarr was in cell 16. Moving down to it, she slid open the thin metal viewport, revealing a sad old woman, sitting on a cot, gazing back at her.

The door had a heavy lock, and none of the guards had worn anything that'd looked like it could open it, but Anaïs had a master key.

"Stand back," she warned, and flicked her saber back on, melting through the metal, letting her easily swing the door open. "Melea Vondarr?" the padawan asked.

"Yes, Jedi?" the woman asked in turn.

Smiling, glad she'd finally found her target, Anaïs stored her saber. "I'm afraid your execution will have to be cancelled. I'm here to get you out of here."

Mrs. Vondarr stood a little stiffly, and smiled back. "Well, let's get going then." Following Anaïs out, she commented, "Hmm, you look a little young to be a Knight. I didn't know that Master Daljend had taken a Padawan."

"Who?" the padawan asked, not recognizing the name.

Melea paused, seeing the dead bodies of the soldiers. "Oh, I suppose you're not. Knight Rhos, then?" Anaïs shook her head, having at least heard of the Bith Jedi. "Master Eddels?" Another head shake. "You are a Jedi, correct?" the old woman asked, moving to the controls.

"Yes?" Anaïs replied, waving to her saber. "Master Lucian sent me to get you to safety."

"Master. . . oh. I suppose it's too late to return to my cell," Mrs. Vondarr sighed, and the padawan hoped she was joking. "Explains the corpses, at least."

Blinking, affronted, Anaïs, objected, "What was I supposed to do?"

"That mind control you Jedi are so fond of," the geriatric shrugged. "Though I suppose, with your master, even after years of training you'd not choose that option."

Taking a moment to center herself, thinking why did I save her again? Right, Master Lucian asked me to, Anaïs stated, "I've been an apprentice for months. I'm sorry I didn't save you the way you wanted. Now, let's go. Your grandkid's got a speeder waiting for us."

"Oh?" the old woman perked up. "Grafan's here?" Anaïs shook her head. "Daro?" Another head shake. "Rieva?" another. "Who?"

"Crix," the Jedi told her, and was only somewhat mollified by the look of dawning horror on the older woman's face.

"I'm. . . I'm so sorry my dear. He's my grandchild but, well, he's not exactly competent," the information broker stated, and, while generally true, Anaïs felt the need to defend the boy.

A few hours ago, she'd agree freely, but Jedi needed to be fair. "He found the blueprints for this place, and the code for the door," she offered, nodding at the look of disbelief on the other woman's face. "Now, what are you doing, because we need to leave."

"Setting the other doors here to open in half an hour," the information broker informed her. "And, while you're here, there's somewhere I need to visit."

Anaïs felt worry at that, but she had no idea if that was her own trepidation or a distant warning in the Force. Immediate problems, she could differentiate, but this? "Did you not hear me? We need to go," she emphasized.

"Young lady," Mrs. Vondarr stated in a chiding tone which reminded Anaïs far too much of the Temple Masters. "The Baron's records are in this very building. If I can access them, my people can show the Republic what's really going on here. Getting that data is more important than my life."

Master Lucian's words, about what her priorities needed to be, echoed in the padawan's mind. How, if it came to her life, or Mrs. Vondarr's, or even using the Dark Side to save Mrs. Vondarr, the padawan was to let her die. That was the only reason she nodded, hesitantly. If this woman thought this was worth her life, it very well might be, and, just as she would for the Temple Elders, Anaïs would take her at her word.

"Fine," she sighed, moving to the closed elevator and putting in the code, remembering to hit the enter button, the door sliding open. "I'll hold you to that."

The other woman joined her, and they waited, awkwardly, as it rose, the sense of danger sharply rising. Preparing her saber, she saw the path of the bolts before the door opened, pushing Vondarr to the side, her own saber flashing out, intercepting the fire of the three guards waiting for them, sending their bolts back at them.

Two dropped, one dead and one injured, and the third flinched, which gave her enough time to dart forward and kill him with a single stroke, blade dipping down to terminate the guard that hadn't died to his own attack, struggling to raise his weapon to shoot her. "Alright, now where?" the Jedi demanded.

"Ana!" Crix's voice came over the comms. "I thought something happened to you! Did you get Grandma?"

"I did," Anaïs replied, just wanting today to be over. "But can you tell us how to get to. . ." she trailed off.

"I already know where it is," the older woman told her, stooping down to grab a blaster rifle from one of the dead guards without seeming bothered in the slightest, and bustled down the hallway.

Taking off after her, the boy asked, "How to get out? Weren't you going to leave from the roof?"

"No, your grandmother has decided we're not leaving yet," Anaïs sighed, tensing as she started to feel someone coming, only for the older woman to turn around the corner and, without breaking stride, fired her weapon, the faintest sense of violent death showing she'd hit her target.

Thankfully, with whatever else was happening, there were very few people around. They're more concerned with what my Master is doing, she realized, the infiltration she'd tried likely being impossible if the military's attention wasn't focused elsewhere.

"Yeah, she does that," Crix sighed, and the Padawan wondered how she was going to pull this off. The two of them found themselves in a small room, a large terminal at one end, what looked like a bastardized ship's computer set up as a processor.

"What is this?" Anaïs asked, closing the door behind them, thankful of the lack of any sign they'd come here particularly to lead soldier to them.

Melea Vondarr ignored her, striding up to the terminal, leaning over to start typing, data-feeds scrolling past faster than the Jedi could follow. Nothing happened for a long moment, before Anaïs heard the pounding of feet down the hallway, knowing an enemy was coming.

Centering herself, she waited, but they stopped on the other side of the doorway, and did nothing else. "What are you doing?" the Jedi asked again, with a bit more force.

"This holds the interior records for the Baron, at least some of them," Mrs. Vondarr finally responded. "They aren't connected to the outside, so they can't be sliced. I'm connecting it, and telling a few of my friends the door's open. You just do your Jedi thing, and stop the boys outside, will you?" the older woman asked, and Anaïs frowned, having the distinct feeling that she was being talked down to. The woman's presence in the Force, faint as it was, was not a clean one, though she still better than most of those outside.

Speaking of those outside, the locked door was slammed open, the man who did so jumping out of the way, as two more tossed grenades inside the room. Tried to, before a pair of Force Barriers sprung up, bouncing the explosives back into the hallway. Another Barrier covered the door, as the soldiers tried to run, but the twin spheres erupted into fire, the flames splashing harmlessly against the construct even as the effort of keeping it up made the Padawan take deep, gasping breaths. Instead of into the room, the blast was funneled down the hallways, eliciting pained screams.

Anaïs winced, their continued agony not as sharply Dark as deaths, but spreading outwards like an oil-slick, staining the Force around them as she let the barrier drop the scent of roasting meat and burned hair billowing into the room. It took an effort to let both pass by her, but she did so, asking, "And how long is this going to take?"

Mrs. Vondarr tsk'd, "Children. So impatient."

Resisting the urge to use the Force to get some answers the Jedi demanded. "How. Many. Minutes?"

"Just three more," the information broker sniffed, as if even answering the question was something she shouldn't have to do, and, once again, Anaïs found herself preferring Crix, something she hadn't expected she'd ever do.

Moving to the doorway, she looked outside, a vague sense of danger telling her she could, ducking back in as blaster-bolts fired down towards her.

They have us surrounded, she realized, trying to think about where they were. "Crix, are we close to any exterior walls?" Anaïs asked, though she had a feeling she knew the answer.

"No. Ana, you need to go now," the boy replied, sounding panicked.

Nodding, she turned back to the broker. "We need to go," she insisted, only for the old woman to wave her away, not even looking in her direction.

And with that, Anaïs had a choice.

As a Jedi, she could outfight a dozen opponents, but she was only a Padawan. The fact that she'd gotten this far was amazing, and she knew that without her Master's training, she never would've been able to. However, she was already tired, though she was still able to go for one last burst.

It was time to leave, but she'd be leaving the woman to die.

Concentrating, she reached out to the whisps of shadowy Presence that was her connection to Master Lucian. Need help, she sent, trying to convey her frustration, her position, her everything. If he told her to go, she would, but she didn't trust her own judgement here. The sense of danger was slowly increasing, but not sharply, and she could cut her way through the floor to get out if she needed to.

Wait. Coming.

It came, strongly, tinged with shadows, but not the Dark, and clear as if he'd been right next to her.

Relieved, she nodded, opening her eyes as she waited. Looking at the wide-open doorway, she took her time reforming the Barrier across it, the gold-tinted rectangle much easier to put up and maintain when she wasn't reacting in near panic.

In the distance, her Master's Presence, less hidden than it normally was, started to quickly approach. Very quickly approach. "Ana, there's something in the sky," Crix said, voice shaking, though he was trying to hide it.

"Just wait for us, we'll be there in a few," she smiled, not even bothering to get annoyed at her shortened name. Just glad this was almost over.

She expected Master Lucian to tear through the defenses in between them, and help the pair of them get out. Or maybe draw attention away from them, letting them escape. What she didn't expect was the ground to shake so hard she almost fell, Mrs. Vondarr holding onto the console for dear life as the ground seemed to buck, and for her Master's Presence in the Force to explode outwards in an all encompassing maelstrom that howled around her, swirling peacefully tight against her skin, but tearing into everything else.

Turning, she saw Melea had frozen at her console, eyes wide in terror, and, following her instincts, Anaïs extended her own Presence in the Force to encompass the other woman's. The pressure on Mrs. Vondarr seemed to ease, the information broker shaking her head and getting back to work, though her fingers shook.

The sound of weapons fire came through the walls, but explosions and impacts followed immediately, and Anaïs kept herself centered, her Barrier up, and waited. The ground shook a few more times, though never as much as the first, the weapons-fire starting to trail off, and she could see the soldiers that'd taken up positions at the hall run past, weapons abandoned, fleeing as fast as they could.

The fighting slowly faded, and Master Lucian's Presence pulled back, the city-destroying tempest banked to a mere raging thunderstorm, and he left, heading in the direction of the Governor's palace, thankfully in the opposite direction of Crix.

"I. . . I'm done," Melea Vondarr announced, no trace of the smug superiority that'd been underlying her every statement. "My memory of that. . . man seems to have been kinder than it should have. I did not remember. . ." The woman, looking her years, glanced towards Anaïs. "Thank you, young Jedi, for. . . whatever you did. I think. I think it's time we leave."

Too happy to do so to remark that she'd wanted to do that very thing minutes ago, the padawan merely nodded, leading the woman up the deserted halls, the men immediately outside of their room having died while her Master attacked, and to the roof.

"How-" Mrs. Vondarr started to ask, giving out a yelp of surprise as Anaïs, infusing the Force into aching muscles, picked up the broker and ran for the edge, leaping, clearing the wall and getting to safety.

The streets were similarly deserted, not a soul in sight, though, thankfully, Crix was still in the driver's seat of the enclosed landspeeder they'd 'procured'. Putting the other woman down, the Jedi knocked lightly on the window, as the boy was staring straight forward, seemingly in a trance. His cry of shock and surprise was muted, thankfully, and as he looked fearfully up, it took him a moment to realize who she was.

"Ana!" he nearly yelled, still muted, before he realized what she needed and unlocked the doors.

She opened his, and told him, "I'm driving," as the older woman moved to take the passenger seat. After a moment of hesitation, he got up, moving to the back, as she slipped inside, starting the engine, and pulled it out of its space, With the streets empty, it was easy to begin down the path they'd charted to avoid most of the checkpoints.

Explosions could be heard in the distance, causing the young man behind her to flinch, but Anaïs just focused on the last part of their plan, getting out. Falling into a near-trance, her companions blessedly silent, she was able to change their route on the fly, avoiding a few dangerous streets, coming across one that should've been blocked by a checkpoint, but instead the road was full of destroyed fortifications, wrecked speeders, and corpses.

Soon enough, though, they started to reach the outskirts, for once without issue, and she pressed on, ignoring Crix's "Um, where are we going?" as she took the landspeeder into the tall grass, picking up speed as she cast her attention forwards. The sea of yellow parted inches in front of their vehicle, and fell back behind them just as quickly. "Ana?" he squeaked.

"Shush, boy. It's a Jedi talent," Mrs. Vondarr chided, once more falling silent.

Soon enough, she neared the hidden ship, the Force signature of her Master lingering on the vehicle he spent most of his time on a beacon to her, until she slowed, emerging from the grass. Letting out a low sigh, she brought the landspeeder to a stop, getting out and stretching limbs that had started to stiffen, as she'd pushed herself as hard as she had on the worst days of her training, but that same training is what'd told her that she could push herself this hard.

And, in the distance, but leaving the city, she could feel Master Lucian.

She'd done it.

"Um, did someone steal your ship?" Crix asked, looking around nervously, starting to walk around before bouncing off thin air with an "Ow!" falling backwards onto the grass. "It's. . . invisible?"

"You could say that," Anaïs grinned, using the Force to open the ramp, watching in amusement at the dumbstruck look on both her companions' faces. "Come in, let's get ready to go."

They followed her aboard, looking around, and she led them to the bridge, taking her secondary seat and starting to spin up the engines. With how. . . loud they'd been, Master Lucian would probably want to leave as soon as possible.

The other two took seats, both looking at their screens, the old woman muttering to herself, "So that's how he did it."

The padawan, seeing that the boarding ramp was closing, nodded to herself, completing the pre-flight checks, since they had time, and her Master had made clear how, while you could trust in the Force if you were in a hurry, running checks stopped minor problems before they became big enough for the Force to warn you about in the first place.

She could feel Master Lucian's Presence, once more hidden away as it normally was, enter the bridge, even though she couldn't see anything. Putting her hands on the controls, she felt a sense of affirmation/amusement/approval from the man, so started to lift the ship up, charting a course to leave, navigating the orbitals in a way unique to piloting an unseen ship.

"Are we leaving your Master behind, Padawan?" the information broker asked, confused, but also seemingly relieved. A feeling that quickly reversed itself.

"No," Master Lucian intoned, seeming to appear in his chair as if from thin air, "she is not. Now, Melea Vondarr, I believe we need to have a chat."
 
Well that was all kinds of badass and your nailing the old republic vibe very well I really feel and see the corruption griping the republic and how the Jedi are for the most part ignoring it and worse actively stoping other Jedi from trying to fix it. Thanks for the chapter
 
Chapter 25
Chapter Twenty-Five


Returning to the Dove, Jorel had mixed feelings. One component of the twisting mass of emotions in his chest was relief, at being away from a place where people might attack you just for trying to help others, one component was trepidation, at how Sergeant Hisku would react given how she took his discovery of her Force sensitivity, and one component was confusion, as he was coming to realize just how little he knew about his master, and the ship he'd spent over a month on already.

The shuttle that took him up, loaded with crewman coming off leave, had quieted when he'd gotten on-board. From the familiar looks, what he'd done had spread around, but thankfully no one talked to him about it, just watching. He'd like to know what people were saying about him, but he was also thankful he could just close his eyes, lean back into his seat, and try to center himself in the Force.

I'm meditating without being told to. Anaïs would never let me live this down, he thought, bringing the hint of a smile to his face, which helped. Extending his senses inwards, he could tell he was still tainted. However it was a fraction of what it should've been, given what he'd done. Yet another talent that his Master had pulled out of nowhere. Another thing that the Temple had said was impossible.

Only, they didn't really outright say it, did they? he thought darkly, remembering sleepless nights as the Dark called to him, and he tried to ignore its many, many offers. No, the Temple Masters implied a great deal, but they very rarely outright said something wasn't possible. In a way, it gave a bit more weight to the outright declarations they had made, like his never truly coming back if he Fell. Only, those pronouncements weren't as unimpeachably true as he'd once thought.

He'd fallen to the Dark again, to save another, again, and come out, again, but he did not want to do so a third time, even as he knew he might. In a way, he could almost see the Temple's position, as a fear of Falling, if that meant a fate worse than death, might stop others from believing that they were the special ones, the ones who could tip a toe into evil and be fine for it, when in reality it stained your very soul, if only for a while.

But Jorel had long since learned he wasn't special. A lesson the Temple Masters had ground into him, over and over again.

But, thinking about that didn't help, and the same fear, ironically, made Falling that much easier, that anxiety opening the door for. . . worse things. Turning his gaze outwards instead of inward, he could feel the other members of the Judiciary Legion, Er'izma's Flock. They stood out in the Force, more. . . real than most people, and Jorel didn't know enough to know what that meant. Looking even further out, he could feel his master, the Knight doing something that involved negotiations, but seeming to notice his Padawan's ephemeral gaze, and almost nodding back in the Force to his student before continuing his task.

In the other direction, was Hisku. Standing, waiting, Jorel could practically feel her annoyance, her anger, but also her. . . fear? What did she have to be worried about? he wondered, as the shuttle left atmosphere, streaking up towards the Dove, waiting in geosynchronous orbit, weapons at rest, but able to rain death and destruction the second they chose to.

Whoever was piloting the Shuttle was good, very good, lifting and spinning the craft smoothly, so the shift of the transport's artificial gravity to the capital ship's generator was only noticeable because he knew the exact moment it happened, senses heightened with the Force and able to use his attaché as a positional reference.

With the doors swinging open, the soldiers filed out, while the padawan waited, following them and smiling to a hard-faced Sergeant Hisku. "Hey, long time, no see!"

"Padawan Drettz," she nodded, not even using his first name. "Please follow me. General Er'izma has decided that, given your proclivities towards stumbling into live-fire situations, you are to be fitted for armor."

"Um, okay?" he replied, not having expected that, trailing after her as she turned and started to stride away with stiff, regular steps. If anything, the negative emotions he was feeling from her deepened, and he frowned, trying to figure out why. "By the way, thanks for saving my life," he offered, a bit lamely.

Her stride faltered, before she sped up, leaving the hanger, and only muttering firmly in the empty hallway, "I said I did not wish to discuss that, Padawan Drettz."

"I'm not just talking about you using the Force," he disagreed, honestly, and she turned to look at him, face still kept in check, but eyes searching. "I mean all of it. Without you there, I couldn't've saved as many people from that building. Or made it as far as I did. Or gotten away," he finished quietly.

His words, which he meant as comforting, to show that the skills that she was proud of were valuable as well, only served to send her emotions into a confusing, riotous mess. "I. You. I spent most of my time following you around like a lost Tilk hound! I'd hardly say I was useful in our, your . . . excursion!" she admitted, the particular flavor of anger that indicated self-loathing prominent. Jorel, having felt it enough himself, recognized it easily, and as such knew that telling her that she was wrong would just be dismissed out of hand.

Instead, the jedi merely shrugged. "If you think so, I might be wrong. That's just how I feel. So, thanks."

"I. . . let's just get you in armor," she sighed, turning and starting to walk again. Knowing he was pushing things, he stayed silent, as doubt spread across the woman's mind. Normally, doubt was a bad thing, always was a bad thing according to the Temple Masters, but when someone was convinced of something that wasn't true, like Hisku's belief that she wasn't half the reason they'd both survived, a little doubt could be exactly what someone needed.

They were shown to the armorer, an older Chiss woman, who had him strip down to his underclothes and took his measurements, making him stand in all manner of poses as a droid recorded what he was doing. Finally, positioned with his legs so wide he was practically doing a split, he inquired why this was needed, never having to do this with his clothing for the Temple, or even his uniform for the ship.

The Lieutenant just smiled, "Took you long enough. I almost thought you'd never ask. Armor needs to move with you. Your clothing does, a little, but with plastoid plates the tolerances are measured in centimeters. Now, up on one leg, and kick out with the other, while holding your hands above your head please."

After a couple hours, where Sergeant Hisku watched, at first with frosty indifference, then, as the poses became more and more ridiculous, concealed amusement, they were finally done. "I think that should be everything," the armorer stated, putting the measuring tape of to the side, as Jorel, doing a one-armed handstand, pushed himself off with just a touch of the Force, landing on his feet with a long sigh.

"How long until it's ready?" he asked, getting a single arched eyebrow over deep red eyes. "No rush, but, well, with how much work that's going into this, I'm looking forward to it."

"Good recovery," the older woman noted blandly, turning her back on him to head towards a desk in the corner. "It'll be a week, maybe a little more. The base construction for it is the same as ours, but the General is very particular about several aspects of his Padawan's armor. I'll have to build it from the ground up." She glanced up, smiling slightly, continuing before he could apologize for the extra work, "I have the time. We're between recruitments, and it's been a while since the last firefight. Now get, and let me work."

"Thanks," he smiled, feeling as, behind him, Hisku's amusement dropped back under her mask of professionalism. Following her once more, she didn't say a word, and soon enough they were back at his room.

"This concludes our tasks for the day," she announced, turning to leave, but paused at his hurried "Wait!" Turning back, she asked, voice cold, "Yes, Padawan Drettz?"

"I just have one question," he said, having spent his time trying to put what he thought might be the core issue between them into words. "Do you dislike me because I'm 'cheating'?"

She blinked, her surprise clear, as she tried to answer his question, "I, I don't understand Padawan. What do you mean?"

That's not a yes, but it's not a no, he thought, pressing onward. "You said using the Force was cheating, but, well, using the Force is what I do. Do you think I'm just, I don't know, cheating all the time?"

Sergeant Hisku paused, visibly working her way through his statement, and sighed. "No, Padawan Drettz. You are not Chiss, and thus to hold you to Chiss standards would not be fair. Chiss are many things, but fair is chief among them. You will never see a Chiss utilizing the Force," she declared.

Now it was his turn to be confused, frowning. "But, I already have," he disagreed.

"Who?" she demanded, anger flaring up around her.

"Geist squadron. They used something like my Veil. The thing I pulled around us to let us not be noticed when we snuck around," he explained, as Hisku just looked confused. "They were better at it than I am, and half of them were Chiss."

"That's-" she started to say, before biting back whatever her response was going to be. "I have not heard of any 'Geist' squadron," she admitted. "But this is a large ship, and there are several thousand of us here, so it is possible we haven't met, at least officially. Though, if that's true. . . They might be racially Chiss, but they are not Chiss," she emphasized, and Jorel somewhat understood, the biological classification distinct from something that seemed more philosophical in nature. "Regardless. . . I could see how that might create misunderstandings. No, Pad- Jorel, I do not look down on you for not meeting a standard you didn't agree to follow. Now, if that is all, good night. Tomorrow is our rest day, and then we will be back to progressing your training."

"See you then. And, again, thanks," the Jedi smiled. "I might not agree with you on the Force, but, I can kind of understand where you're coming from. We're still going to spar, though. Right?"

"Padawan Jorel," Sergeant Hisku chided him, though there was an undercurrent of teasing humor in her formal words, a little bit of the tension she'd held taught across her frame easing, "I do not need magic to challenge you in combat. I'll see you in thirty-six hours."

And with that, she turned and walked away.


<SWPP>


It was several days later that he saw his Master again. Jorel had started to wonder if the Knight's absence was another form of punishment. He'd been told he wasn't going to be sent to the agricorps, but there was still a wide range of 'trouble' that he could be in. However, the man's greeting eased those fears.

"Ahh," the large Jedi sighed, as the Padawan was seated, twisting the two iron bars through the air, trying to make them move independently of each other, but usually failing, Sergeant Hisku watching from her position against the wall. "While necessary, negotiations take far too much time, as does preparing things for what is to come. I let you escape that tedium this time, young man, due to your injuries, but next time I'll be dragging you along," he smiled, bright white teeth contrasting with his dark skin.

Him ignoring me was him being nice? Why didn't he just say so! Jorel thought, one of the bars dipping as his focus slipped. He caught them, and put them away as smoothly as he could, though they still clanked a little. Standing, the younger man echoed, "Preparations?"

Er'izma smiled, nodding. "Yes. I do not have my Master's talent for finding the. . . specific points that need to be pressed to cause the change I desire, but I've learned to make do with my meager skills."

The padawan looked at the Jedi General, who was nothing like he'd been told a Knight should be, not buying the man's humility in the slightest. Still a bit annoyed at being kept in the dark, and wondering what was going on here, as sometimes Er'izma liked to. . . take his time explaining things instead of getting right to the point, Jorel slowly nodded, "Uh-huh. What with you being so inexperienced and all." His sarcastic agreement just caused the Knight to smile wider.

"I bring my own military, and do not rely solely in the Force," the older man argued, obviously not meaning a word of it, and just as obviously trying to lead Jorel to some sort of conclusion. "That must mean that I am weaker. After all, does a Jedi not work alone? Or with a Padawan learner, at most?"

Jorel exaggeratedly looked around at the ship, returning to his Master with a disbelieving look. "But, with others, aren't you able to do more?"

Er'izma laughed, "And thus you find the core of the disagreement I have with my Master, and those of the Temple. The core of one of my disagreements, but the history of the Jedi Lords can wait for another day," he deferred, as the padawan thought, The What? "But I realize that our debriefing was somewhat one-sided. With the events you went through, I'm sure you had questions, and while I addressed some, others might remain."

The statement was left, an invitation to ask, and Jorel took it. "I, why did it even happen in the first place?" he questioned, something that'd bothered him for a while. "I know, the Force told me to, but, why?"

"Starting with an easy question, I see," the Knight teased, causing Jorel to flush. "But a good one nonetheless. Tell me, what did the Temple teach you about the Force?"

Expecting the question, his master having repeatedly asked Jorel about what he'd learned previously, to examine it and build up from it, the Padawan instantly replied, "It's an energy field, that binds and penetrates everything. It has a will, which is to help, and can assist us when we call us. And, if you follow the code, it will do so."

"And the code?" Er'izma prompted.

Jorel knew it by heart. Every Initiate did, as reciting it was one of the Trials needed to become eligible for being accepted as a Padawan. "There is no emotion, there is peace. There is no ignorance, there is knowledge. There is no passion, there is serenity. There is no chaos, there is harmony. There is no death, there is the Force."

"Absolute load of bantha poodoo, isn't it?" the Jedi smiled, causing Jorel to look at him, shocked, and a little off kilter by the casual dismissal, coming out of nowhere as it seemed to.

"I, um, what?" the young man sputtered, not having expected such a thing to come from a Knight of the Order.

Despite the complete, well, heresy of his statement, the general looked unperturbed by his apprentice's reaction. "There is no emotion? What kind of statement is that?" Er'izma questioned, as if discussing a bad joke. "How can there be 'no emotion'?"

"I, um, I think they mean not to let emotions control you," Jorel explained, repeating the Temple's lessons. "And, um, be at peace?"

"And what does that mean? What does it mean to be 'at peace?'" the Knight pressed. "And, 'There is no ignorance, there is knowledge?' Does that mean to be a Jedi is to know all things?"

Feeling increasingly confused, Jorel tried to argue, "It means to not let ignorance dictate one's actions, and to seek knowledge. Or, um, something like that," he added, realizing he was correcting a centuries old Jedi.

Noting his apprentice's confusion, Er'izma nodded, but then asked, "And how is the third line different than the first? Isn't lacking passion lacking emotion, and aren't peace and serenity synonymous? It's only five lines long, why is twenty percent of it redundant? Did they think a four-line code wouldn't be accepted, but a five line one would be?"

"I don't kriffing know!" Jorel shot back, wanting the Knight to get to the point, not liking at all the feeling that he was being made fun of for reasons he didn't understand. "Maybe my Master could tell me?"

"Why do you think I would know?" Er'izma parried, in good humor.

Throwing his hands up, the padawan sarcastically exclaimed, "I don't know. Because you're a Knight? Because your my master so it's your job to tell me? Because you've been doing this for literally hundreds of years? And because maybe, just maybe, the hundreds of generations of Jedi before me might've known something I didn't?"

Rather than be offended, said Jedi just laughed. "And that makes them correct?"

"It means there's a good chance they might be!" Jorel practically yelled, embarrassed and annoyed at the constant, circling, useless questions. "And maybe, if you just told me whatever it is you're trying to teach me, I'd know if they were or not!"

"They were, but they also were not," Er'izma stated with authority.

"Oh! That explains everything!" the padawan retorted acidly, noting as Hisku shifted uncomfortably in the corner, drawing back his own anger. Why was he so angry? He thought, before realizing that he still was not better from his dip into the Dark. Taking a calming breath, he saw Eri'zma's smile widen a fraction. Understood, I'm not better yet, he realized, but he also wanted to know where the older man was going with this. "Yes, Master, it makes no sense as it is. And it takes a lot of explanations to make them make sense. What's your point?"

The Knight regarded the younger man, "My point, is that the Code is so vague that it's practically meaningless. I've been training Padawans for quite a while, and have personally seen the 'correct' interpretation shift several times. Even something so simple as 'What is the Force?' is still uncertain, so how could a code detailing it be so unquestionably correct as the Temple pretends it is, let alone their ever-shifting interpretations, all of which are presented to younglings as if the current version were the one, true reading?"

"It isn't, I guess," Jorel sighed. "So, what, it's all druk?" Er'izma just gave him a look, that said 'you know that isn't true'. "Fine. Okay, I really have no idea. As far as I can tell: Death bad, helping good?" the young man shrugged.

"But is killing those who wish to harm others not a good and righteous act?" the Knight asked, and laughed at the unamused look his student sent him. "Let us start at the basics, padawan. The Force is alive. It can sense us, just as we sense it, and it does have a will. It is an organism, but one of a galactic, possibly universal, size. It does want to help, and it cares, but it has a different sense of. . . scale then you or I, given its reach."

Jorel's brow furrowed, not quite following. "What do you mean, 'given its reach'?"

"You are aware that moving your muscles damages them, on a very, very small level?" Er'izma asked in turn, and his student nodded. "And how you can hurt yourself pushing your limits, but sometimes that is needed?"

"Are. . . are you saying we're the Force's muscles?" the younger man asked, his master giving a slow nod. "But, we have a will of our own. Muscles don't," he argued.

The Knight nodded once more. "We do. Now, with that in mind, consider the Code."

Jorel did so, but, from that perspective, what he saw wasn't good. "It's. . ." he paused. "It's about submission, isn't it? No emotions, no passions, just doing what the Force is telling you? And the ignorance line, it's not about you knowing things, but trusting in the Force, which is supposed to know everything." And something about that rankled the Padawan, disturbed him, deeply, in ways he hadn't really thought about in a long time.

He was many things, but a slave was not one of them, even though he had come close. Letting that indignant anger flow out of him, knowing why he was upset, and in so also knowing it served no purpose, he ignored the whispers, on the edge of his hearing that promised him power, to dominate, to never be controlled again, if only he had the will to take it. "The code, looked at that way, what it's asking is to. . . just, give up? Do whatever the Force wants? I know it's supposed to be all knowing but. . . it just seems too. . . easy? If that makes sense?"

In a way, it was a seductive thought, just as much as anything the Dark offered. Not having to worry about making the wrong decision, about making mistakes, just let go of the controls and let something else take over? If it were that simple, well, Jorel had had days that such a choice would've been very tempting. All the work learning control, learning how to act without being influenced, only to give oneself up entirely to a different influence? Jorel knew that he would no more do that then he'd willingly submerge himself fully in the Dark instead of the shallow dips he'd done out of necessity.

"That's because it is," Er'izma replied simply. "The Force wants to help, but its actions are that of a half-blind Dejarik-master, playing a thousand games, all at once, with pieces that do not listen, and against opponents of a thousand different skill levels. Some matches are easy, some difficult, but it will often sacrifice pieces in the best move if it's correct about everything, when a lesser move could pay off more if things go awry. I've read your report, and Sergeant Hisku'biatha'pusi's, and found something that needed to be addressed."

"Master?" Jorel asked, wondering what it could be, though glad they were finally getting to the point. There wasn't anything in the after-action report he'd had to write that he didn't already tell the Knight, so it must've been something that Hisku mentioned.

The well-built man stepped close, one large hand reaching across, and slightly down, to grasp his apprentice's shoulder with a firm grip. "Your life is worth more than a building full of civilians," he stated with absolute certainty, as if declaring that durasteel was hard, or water was wet. "Had you died saving them, it would've been a poor trade."

That. . . was not what Jorel had been expecting, and he didn't know what to say for a moment. However, when putting that in context with what they'd just been talking about, he had to object. "The Force didn't make me save them, only the people that were escaping. It didn't make me do even that, it just kind of, you know, suggested I do so. I could've ignored it."

Not removing his hand, the Knight asked, "Did it tell you not to go in and save them?" Jorel shook his head. "So it brought you to a place where you would help, made sure you saved the high-priority targets, and gave you no warning of the ambush waiting for you? It led you there, Padawan, have no doubt. And that is why the Force is dangerous, even when it seems to help," he stressed, taking a step back.

"But, it gave me hints after I was captured! And I got out!" the padawan argued. "So the Force must've known I woul-"

"The Force did not know you would survive," the Jedi intoned, deadly serious, all trace of joviality gone. "The Force can give insights, young man, glimpses of likely futures, many times of the future that it wants, but prophecy is not destiny, no matter what some may believe. The stronger the feeling, the higher your chance of succeeding, but also the higher necessity of that action in the Force's plans and you cannot tell the difference. You had a good chance of surviving. You had a good chance of succeeding. However, by your own admission, you had to use the Dark Side to do so. That means one of two things, padawan. The first is that you failed, and needed to use the Dark Side to survive a situation that would have otherwise led to your death. The second, that the Force itself counted on you using the Dark Side, which is something that it does not do. No, padawan, the Force directs you to what it thinks is the best action, but you have free will, which also means you can fail."

Jorel blinked, trying to process that, and feeling as if the floor had dropped out from under him, that it had quite a while ago, and it was only when he noticed the void below him that he was going to fall. "You mean, I could've died for nothing?" he choked out.

"Not nothing, you would have been attempting to follow the Will of the Force, but the Force, while wise, is not all knowing, or the Dark Side, and its users, would never succeed," Er'izma corrected. "That family you saved? They were important to the Force. The Force needed them to survive, and without you they almost certainly would not have. You may never see them again. You may never even find out who they were. That is the life of a Jedi, to, for one crucial moment, be there to tip the scales for the benefit of all who are just and good. Then it is your place to move on to do it again somewhere else, and again, and again. Without us, the galaxy would be a much, much darker place, but we are not gods, no matter what some think, and can fail like any other man."

"So, if I died saving them, the people I was called to save instead of the others that were there, it would've been worth it?" the young man asked, trying to hold onto some small bit of what he'd had pounded into his skull by the Temple Masters in general, and Halrol in particular.

However, Er'izma shook his head. "Probably not. There are times when giving up one's life for others is worth it, but those situations are few, obvious, and very, very far between. Would you helping them allow them to help others? Yes. However, you, who can hear the Will of the Force more clearly than most, are almost certain to do far more good than those who are Force-blind can. It is not fair. It is not equal. It has nothing to do with your merits, only your birth. However, it is what is, and nothing will change that."

While the Knight didn't look to Hisku, Jorel could still feel her surprise, though he did his best not to look in her direction either. "So, what," he asked rhetorically, "I'm better than them?"

"Yes."

The statement took him back. "But, we were told that all life is equal!"

"Really?" The large man asked. "You think yourself merely equal to any of the pirates we captured? You think you are of comparable value to the cattle that died for your breakfast? No, Jorel, you are not their equal, but far surpass them in every evaluation. Every member of my crew does, but to varying degrees. Have I had Padawans that have had greater value than you? Currently, undoubtably, but you have been with me for less than a year. Have I had Padawans with lesser value? Also yes."

Jorel held up a forestalling hand, "Wait! How? You just said I've barely trained under you."

"You had the wherewithal to come back from the Dark. Others have not, with several times your training," Er'izma said simply. "Your ability with the Force is greater than some, less than others, but ultimately it is just a gift, similar to being born taller, or tougher, or faster, if far greater. Do nothing with it, as many often do, and it is of small value, your total worth remaining low, your potential never fulfilled. Train it, enhance it, become skilled with its use, and your value grows. You have shown promise Jorel, and have started the long journey to better yourself. If it is cut short, your value ends there. If that trade is worth all of the value you would continue to accrue, assisting the galaxy, then by all means, make it, but it had better be worth it."

The old man looked to the side, and the Jedi's presence in the Force rippled, the normal restrained aura of power suddenly starkly standing where before it was only a small core of strength, even to Jorel's poorly trained skills. It extended outwards, connecting to every member of the crew of the Dove, uniting them, and the Padawan's developing senses were able to tap into that shining network in the Force. Each member of the Flock had a clear idea of their capabilities, of their worth, and of the fact that they might be called upon to sacrifice their lives, but with the bone deep knowledge that their commander wouldn't do so unless the trade was more than equal.

"Jedi assist the Force, carrying out its will, knowing they might die in the process," the Knight intoned. "But the Force, for all it cares for us, for all it wants to help us. Does. Not. Understand. Us. It is a trusted advisor, a companion that will always support you, but it is a poor master, and the price it demands may very well be more than you are willing to pay, even should you succeed. You are born with a Will of your own, and the intelligence and wisdom to direct it, should you survive that long. It is my task to see that you do."

Turning back to face Jorel, the man seemed to be made out of steel, his gaze sharp, hard, and determined. "You've taken your first steps towards being a true Jedi, but they are only your First steps. You have failed, but survived, and so are able to learn and better yourself so you do not fail again, and lose Everything. Not everyone is skilled enough to do so. To work with the Will of the Force is to walk with danger, and those who grow lax, who stop improving, Always Fall, one way or another, the challenge more than they can handle."

"Even you?" Jorel asked, waving hands around them, though it felt like he was arguing with the very sort of god Er'izma claimed not to be. "Even with all of this?"

The centuries old Jedi nodded, once, his Presence fading back to what it normally was. "The galaxy is more dangerous than you know, young Jorel, and there are many reasons that most do not leave well-travelled routes. In time, you will learn them. We'll resume your training tomorrow." The Knight walked towards the door, and paused. "While you have stumbled here, young Jorel, make no mistake, you have also succeeded. Take pride in your achievements, and use your failures to grow ever stronger, so as to better protect those who deserve it, or to be able to save those you can, should you find yourself faced with trials you could never hope to overcome."

With that, he exited, leaving Jorel with quite a bit to consider, and with no idea what to do next. The sound of Hisku's footsteps caught his attention, and he turned to face her. "Spar?" she asked, practice weapon already drawn.

Smiling, grateful for the distraction, he nodded, pulling his lightsaber and dialing down the intensity to training strength. "Sounds good."
 
Chapter 26
Chapter Twenty-six

Melea Vondarr paled, eyes wide at the sudden appearance of Master Lucian, calmly waiting in the captain's seat. "You. How?" she questioned, as Anaïs felt herself relax fully, finally safe.

"With the Force, many things are possible," the short, ancient man smiled, looking over to the display and putting in a flight plan, one that would take them away from the light traffic in the system and head to a position just to the side of the hyperspace point. Their jump input, if she read it right, would set them running parallel to the real hyperspace route. Normally such a thing would be incredibly risky, but Anaïs had gotten used to her master doing so, to the point she didn't even feel worried anymore. "So, tell me young lady," the man prompted the information broker, tone cool, and speech far more formal than Anaïs had gotten used to during their training, "just what exactly do you think you were doing?"

"I, what?" the old woman sputtered, trying to wrap offense around herself as a shield, to allow her to look down on the Master Jedi, just as she'd looked down on Anaïs, "Who do you think you are, to question me?"

The Force-user turned away from the elderly woman to give a look of wry amusement to Anaïs, before his expression turned cold once more. "I believe, that I am a Jedi. I believe, that I and my apprentice are the ones that ensured that you and your grandson did not suffer certain death. And, I believe, that I am the one who now holds your life in my hands." His gaze shifted slightly, "And if you try to gain access to my ship's systems again, boy, I'll crush your rig, and possibly your hands."

"Yes sir!" Crix said, quickly turning off the modular datapad he'd slipped out of his pockets, disassembling it and storing it rapidly.

"At least one of you realizes the gravity of the situation. Amusingly, it isn't the person in danger," the Jedi Master drawled, standing. "Come with me. If we're going to have this conversation, we might as well do it away from a place where someone might do something. . . rash."

Wan, and with a stiffness to her movements that she hadn't had a moment ago, Mrs. Vondarr followed him out the door, Crix and Anais bringing up the rear. "He wouldn't really crush my hands, would he?" the young man whispered, sweating.

"No," the padawan started to reassure, before her master's lessons about not making promises she couldn't keep, one of dozens he'd tried to teach her on Uphrades, made itself known. "Okay, probably not," she corrected, and could practically feel the boy's spike of fear. "If you don't try to fight him, and you haven't done anything really bad, you'll be fine," she stated with authority, though at her declaration she felt a faint swell of worry from the woman in front of her. "And if he does crush them, he'd probably just make me heal them as training," the padawan sighed, remembering her own training injuries, and his proclamations of 'Jedi, heal thyself'. "Though if I didn't do it right, he'd do it correctly instead."

"Oh. . . okay," Crix muttered, and, though he still was worried, she could practically feel the relief her words brought him, despite her poor job at trying to calm him down. "I wasn't trying to hack the ship, I just wanted to tap the collection program I put on the holonet to look for trouble."

"Then you should've asked," Master Lucian, leading them into the meditation room, called back, having heard the boy's quiet statements, and causing Crix to stiffen. "I'm not a slicer myself, but I know you don't need to access the ship's main data-core for that." The man waved into the air, and added, "Use that connection point."

The young man hesitated, looking to Anaïs, who nodded, her Master not the type to set people up that way. Pulling out a small datapad, he started to work on it, even as they entered the mostly empty room, cushions moving on their own to form four seats, two apart from each other, and two together off to the side. The Padawan headed to the paired seats, Crix following, nose already down in the data, and they sat, while the older two faced off against each other.

"Alright, you wanted to talk. So, talk," Melea Vondarr ordered with a challenging air, having regained her composure.

In response, Master Lucian stared at her for a long moment.

"Well?" she demanded, almost glaring at the younger-looking man.

After a pause, the Jedi asked, "What were you hoping to accomplish, young one? While I was keeping attention on myself, I did have moments to conduct my own interrogations. You were a major mover in the resistance on Noonar, but your actions seemed. . . ill-informed."

"Ill-informed?" the information broker repeated, offended. "We were trying to stop a brutal regime from corrupting our government and taking power!"

However, instead of disagreeing, the Master Jedi nodded. "Yes, but that's an idea, a philosophical goal. And one you very obviously failed at. What were you trying to do. In real terms. What were you physically trying to achieve?" he clarified.

"We were trying to remove the Baron from power, obviously!" Melea practically spat, as if he was an idiot for even asking. Beside Anaïs, Crix reflexively flinched, but kept his face down to read the streams of information on his datapad. The woman in front of her sneered, "What do you think we were trying to do, support him?"

Again, the Jedi nodded. "That is what you appeared to be doing. By concentrating the resistance into easily attacked cells, while holding back the more ambitious of your members. And, again, I have to ask how you were trying to do that?"

Mrs. Vondarr scowled, obviously not used to being treated in this manner, in some ways reminding Anaïs of Master Halrol, and, like the Jedi Master, the old woman was losing the seemingly unflappable superiority she'd displayed to Anaïs a mere hour ago in response to a small handful of Master Lucian's words. "We were trying to do things the right way, by getting undeniable proof to the Senate of the Baron's crimes so they'd be forced to act and remove him from power! And, no thanks to you, we will! My comrades will have the information they need, now, and our case against him will be so great that the Senate will have to act! The people of the Republic will demand no less! This time next month, the Baron will be where he belongs, behind bars!"

The centuries old Jedi Master looked at her before he started to chuckle, descending into full bellied, hard edged laughter. The old woman glared hatefully, feelings so deep that Anaïs felt the dark ripples clearly despite the woman's lack of talent in the Force, while from her master came a twist of his presence in the Force that reminded Anaïs of when the padawan quoted the Temple without truly considering what she was saying.

"Um, Grandma?" Crix said, looking up from his datapad. "He's dead."

The woman's head snapped over, as, scowling, she demanded with a bark, "Who?"

The boy beside Anaïs cringed, but still answered, "The Baron. Ana's master killed him."

Mrs. Vondarr looked back at the Jedi, rage burning in her stare. "What did you do!? Now his second in command will take over-"

"He's dead too," Crix interrupted, prompting more laughter from Lucian, and Melea's furious, unspoken rebuke. "Sorry."

"Don't apologize for telling the truth, young man," the Jedi informed him, as the Anaïs' master continued to regard the information broker. "Did you think me that foolish, youngling? Or did you believe that you, and only you, could have solved that problem?"

"It. Would have. Worked," the old woman bit out, and the good cheer on Lucian's face evaporated.

"In point of fact, no, it wouldn't," the Jedi Master replied, with calm words that carried equal force, along with an undercurrent of contempt. "You started small Melea, or, as I met you, the slicer known as Cut-Queen. When I sorted out the underworld of Noonar, half a century ago, you were nothing but a two-bit datapad jockey, lesser in skill than even your grandson. I gave you a taste of power, and a task. A task that you failed at, I might note."

The woman, who had flinched at her old moniker, glared at him, but didn't say a word as he continued, with a sigh, "But I had hoped you would grow into your position, and now see that you only did a lazy, half-hearted job of it. Maybe success made you sentimental, and with the power you gained you allowed yourself the kind of illusions you promised me you would not fall prey to," he suggested, the darkness of his presence spreading, the shadows in the room deepening. "I remember your words well: 'I'll stop this from happening again. I'll make sure there isn't someone like Trigger, or Destron ever again!'" he recited, mimicking an impassioned tone before he dropped back down to serene disappointment. "What would the friends you've lost say to what you've become, CQ? Sitting back and hoping for someone else to save you, instead of doing it yourself?"

"It's their job! It's why they exist!" the old woman shot back.

"They do not care!" Lucian returned with equal fervor, a ripple of anger running through the space, the shadows shivering. "You started small, and I told you to focus on your world! I did so, because that you could understand, that you could handle. It takes time and training and experience to understand the scale of the systems in which we live, so divorced are they from anything easily observable, but you thought your tiny world important, and tried to bend the greater galaxy to your will, because you believed yourself just. Do you think you are the only world with problems? Do you think you are the only world that is being oppressed? Do you have any idea how truly large the Republic is?"

But the woman would not be deterred. "And they are big enough to do what is right!"

"Padawan, how many planets are there in the Republic?" The Jedi asked with ice cold calm, not breaking his gaze.

Startled, Anaïs quickly replied, "One point four million, though a hundred thousand or so of those aren't full members."

Lucian nodded, "Yet there are only just over a thousand seats in the Senate. But let's suppose they are being fair, and looking out for planets that aren't represented fully. Let us suppose that a mere five percent of worlds in our government have issues that might, might require Republic intervention, such that they would need to have their evidence of such reviewed in a senatorial session. That is only seventy thousand," he pronounced.

Waving a hand, he continued, "That would mean, if a mere ten minutes were given to each, a paltry sum of time to decide such things, it would take almost five hundred days to address them all, assuming the senators did nothing but listen to them all day, every day, forgoing sleep, food, or any break at all. If you consider the Senate meets a mere nine hours a day, to handle all of the issues out there at ten minutes per world, it would take them three and a half years to hear them all. And that's assuming that no other issues come up, and then, that is with them doing nothing but listening to calls for aid. And you think the Senate itself would hear your plea? That it wouldn't be thrown to a sub-committee that would spend five seconds on it in private, see that you are an Outer-Rim territory, and ignore you? Do you understand just how incredibly small you are?" he asked scornfully.

"We pay our taxes so that-" Melea tried to argue, interrupted as a ripple of power came from the Jedi, enough so that the others could finally feel it.

"You pay tribute, girl. This is not the Core, or even the Colonies. They may call it by a different name, but that is what it is," the Jedi Master sneered. "That is why I told you, I told you, that you could only rely on yourself. That you may receive help, but you were to never, never, depend on it. But you received help from my brothers and sisters over the last few decades, who traveled the major trade routes to suss out trouble, and came to think you were owed it."

The old woman sneered right back, "Brothers and sisters? They didn't even know who you were! I asked, and do you know how they reacted to your 'code'? They were repulsed by it, and by you!"

Anaïs blinked, surprised at the statement, the woman's smug certainty hiding pain and anger of uncomfortable truths, but also showing that she at least believed what she said. However, the padawan also was surprised by the fact that the woman hadn't addressed her master's accusation at all, only attacking his character instead.

There was a flash of sadness across her master's face, and an answering smirk on the information broker's over damage done, before the man sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. "I talk of the problems of scale, and you try to throw how individuals in an organization of thousands react to my practices, and individuals of lesser experience and power at that. So, what, because a few Jedi disagreed with the code you gave your word you would follow, you thought yourself no longer bound?"

Mrs. Vondarr froze.

"Oh, did you think I wouldn't know?" the man asked mildly. "A code that repelled the Jedi in its looseness, in what it permitted, by your own admission, and you couldn't even follow it. Pray tell, 'respected elder', what does that say about you?"

In the ringing silence, Anaïs considered that revelation, and wondered which crime the information broker had committed. Or, from the way her Master had said it, which crimes, plural.

"He broke your rules first!" the old woman declared, probably referring to the Baron, though it sounded almost childish.

"I fail to remember the part that said the code had to be followed, 'unless the other side didn't'," The Master Jedi commented, eyes hard. "It was for your defense as much as theirs, or do you honestly believe the Baron would've started his purges if you hadn't killed his infant children."

"They weren't supposed to die!" Mrs. Vondarr argued. "Once we had them, we could have forced him to-"

"To what? To give up? To bow to your wishes? And how long would you have held those children hostage, to prevent him from going back on his word the second they were safe?" Lucian demanded. "In one breath, you tell me how you couldn't fight because you were following proper Republic channels, and in practically the next you defend crimes that would have that very same Republic execute you. Only if I hadn't mentioned it, you would've pretended yourself without sin. Wouldn't you?"

The woman scowled, "With what you've done, you're in no position to judge me!" she declared, sitting back as if she had somehow won. "You talk as if you haven't done worse than I have, but my trade is information, 'Jedi'. What is anything that I've done, compared to what you did to Ka-"

DARKNESS flooded the space causing the woman to choke, the air toxic, as shadows leapt forward with razor edged teeth, ready to rip and tear. Around Anaïs they were calm, eddies of shadows standing ready to defend instead of rend, and she quickly reached out, both physically and in the Force, wrapping an arm and her Presence around a terrified Crix.

And then, in the space between moments, it was gone, as if it had never existed, the shadows innocuous, the air clean, only a slight reverberation in the Force the only hint that anything had happened at all, only for a different presence to fill the space, not a storm, but something resolute, and invincible.

"If you know that name, you know it was my failure, quite possibly my greatest," the Jedi spoke, eyes supernaturally shadowed, voice reverberating with the Force, not to trick the mind, only ringing with Truth. "And it is because of that, and things like it, that gives me the right to judge you, Melea Vondarr, failed, disgraced, and fallen guardian. Every promise you made to me you have broken, every duty you have abandoned, all in the pursuit of foolish ideals and power over those that would fight and die to protect the innocent. I will not give you the death you crave, standing tall at the apex of your so-called victory. No, I am not that merciful."

"What are you going to do?" Crix croaked, shaking as Anaïs released him.

The Master Jedi turned his gaze towards the boy, who shivered, but tried to meet it, quaking in his seat. For a moment, Anaïs could see the young man, not as she had seen him, but as her Master saw him. Wounded, and scarred, but not broken in spirit. Naïve, but not stupid. With the potential for great good, or great evil if pressed in the right or wrong ways. Weak in the Force, but with a spark of something else entirely, though it was little more than a dying ember. More than that, there was something deeper, points of possibility, almost like she'd seen on her run into the Baron's base, but infinitely subtler, and infinitely more complex, tied into every aspect of what made Crix, Crix.

And, a shadowed tendril of force, shot through with gold, that reached and out and pressed just so.

"I am going to pass judgement, for it is not from moral superiority that such a capability comes, but from the strength to enforce it. There is no quality of 'good' or 'evil' inherent in a person, only power, or the lack of, and how one chooses to use it. She has mis-used hers, in the pursuit of good, so I will give her one last task, and reward her accordingly," the Jedi stated, looking back to the old woman, who was still breathing in ragged gasps.

"Melea Vondarr, your time as a warden of your people is over. Within six months, you will retire, having given over the reins of whatever power you've gained, and whatever networks you have constructed, along with a warning to follow the code, and what will happen if they do not, to your chosen successor. You may advise them, but only for an additional six months, after which you will divorce yourself from that engine of power completely. You shall spend your last years how you wish, but they will not be in the pursuit of power. Spend it with your family, try your hand at an art or craft, relax, I do not care, but you have proven yourself unworthy of power, and will not take it again," The Jedi pronounced.

The woman coughed, biting out, "And if I don't? What then?"

"Then, in a little over a year's time, I will kill you, and destroy everything you have built," he stated, not a threat, only a statement of fact.

Letting out a long breath, the solid presence retreated, and he sighed. "I gave you a second chance. By your own agreement, I should kill you for what you have done, Cut-Queen. I so rarely am in a position to be merciful, please, allow me to be this time. Unless you are so wrapped up in your pride that you care nothing for your people, for your family," he said quietly, waving towards Crix. "Be there for them, and don't vanish without a trace, as you will if I must return you to the Force. You have until we arrive at Ithor about this time tomorrow to make your decision. Padawan, show her to the first guest room, where she will stay until dinner, then return. We need to have a word with Crix. A much nicer one, young man," he added a little louder, as the boy stiffened, "don't worry, but her presence here will do more harm than help."

Anaïs nodded, and stood, motioning for Mrs. Vondarr to follow. The older woman stood, but glared at the ancient man. "Anything you have to say to him, you can say in front of me!" she spat.

"And this is why you can't handle power, Cut-Queen," Lucian sighed. "For you grasp for it even when it does you no good." This time when he spoke, it was with the pressure of a Mind Trick. "Follow the young woman back to your room, think about my offer honestly, and wait to be called."

The Information Broker's face went blank, and she turned, almost mechanically, walking towards Anaïs, who shivered at the casual display of power, so far beyond her own capabilities. Still, she had her task, and showed the woman to the first guest room, whose door automatically locked if you weren't keyed into the ship's systems. Leaving the woman there, the padawan returned, hesitating, before sitting next to Crix in a small show of support.

"What do you want with me, um, sir?" the boy asked, the Jedi obviously having waited silently until she'd returned.

In response, Master Lucian sighed. "Kid," he stated, dropping the formality, the image of the unimpeachable, unapproachable Jedi shattering and just leaving a tired man, "I'm angry at your grandma for breaking her word, ignoring her duties, and using what help I gave her to make things worse while claiming to make things better. From what I can tell, you actually tried to help. So, I'm offering you a job."

Crix stared, unsure what to make of the suddenly un-Jedi like Jedi. "Like you offered Grandma Melea?" the boy finally asked, and the man shook his head. "Then what?"

"You're skilled, but I know CQ's type. I'd hoped she would've turned out better, but now? You saw her humbled, kid, and she's not going to forgive you for that. Also, I'd say there's a. . . seventy percent chance I'm going to have to kill her, purge her organization, and dismantle a good bit of it in a year's time."

"But, but then, if she's probably going to do that, why let her live?" the young man asked, quickly adding, "Not that I want you to kill her, just. . ." he trailed off. To be fair to the young man, it was a question Anaïs had as well, and she looked at her master inquisitively.

The Jedi shrugged. "Because I might be wrong. Because there's a thirty percent chance she'll do the right thing, instead of what she tells herself is right to appease her own ego, and the network she's built can be turned to help people. That's also why she can only advise until this time next year, so she doesn't try to run it from the rear, when she has time to convince herself that it could never work without her."

Crix winced. "You'll. . . you'll probably have to. . ."

"I know, young man," Lucian nodded, sadly, but understandingly. "But she deserves that chance. You, though, you could help elsewhere. Three organizations could use your help, actually. One is safe, and deals with financial problems. One is somewhat dangerous, and deals with intelligence gathering on potential trouble spots. One is very dangerous, and would be a bit like what you did today, though only once every month or so, but their work is always important. If you had more talent in the Force, there's a fourth place you could go, but while you have both talent and potential, Crix Vondarr, Force Sensitivity is not one of your gifts. Like your grandmother, you have until we arrive on Ithor to decide, or you could choose none, and go back to the life you've lived up until now. As with her, I offer choices, though, given how unstained your hands are, they're much nicer choices. Anaïs, if you could show him to the second guest quarters?"

The padawan nodded, showing the young man to his room. For once he was silent, deep in thought. It was only when they got to the door, this one without the auto-locking feature, that he spoke. "Ana, which one do think I should do? I liked helping people, but. . . today was scary."

"One, my name isn't Ana, it's Anaïs," she noted, a little coldly, though at his apologetic wince, she warmed somewhat. "It sounds like you want the spy job. But, you can think about it, and maybe you can get the contact details of the others, if it doesn't work out for you?"

He blinked, smiling at her. "Thanks. Yeah. I think I'll do that. And, thanks for helping me Ana-Anaïs. I. . it wasn't until your Master came down, and then started to. . . yeah, I could've died. I could've died a lot today. And. And you stopped me from. . . thanks," he stressed, heartfelt, and despite his stumbling words she understood what he meant, Gratitude singing brightly in the Force from him, his weak presence making the sensation a faint whisper, but the purity of the emotion making itself known regardless.

"It's what Jedi do," she smiled back, shrugging. "But you're welcome, and you helped save me too. Master Lucian isn't offering because he's nice, he's doing it because he thinks you could help other people. Kind of like we do."

Her words had a bolstering affect on the young man, who hesitated, before taking an awkward, almost lunging step forward, hugging her, before stepping back just as quickly, face bright red, and closing the door with a swoosh.

. . . um, okay? Anaïs thought, a little nonplussed, but still returning back to her master, feeling him waiting through their bond. She. . . wasn't really sure what to do with that. Did she have to do anything with that? She knew the Temple would say to ignore it, attachments bad, yada yada, but she'd never asked Master Lucian about it, and. . . she kind of didn't want to.

Yep, ignoring it, she decided, re-entering the meditation chamber, the other seats pushed away, only the one opposite her master still there, though it was the same cushion she'd sat on before instead of the one Mrs. Vondarr had used.

She sat, not sure what to say, and Master Lucian let out an almost explosive sigh. "Well, that was a shab-show," he swore, getting her attention, as while he spoke plainly, she didn't remember him swearing.

"Master?" she asked, unsure.

The man just shook his head. "When the Force calls you, really calls you, nine out of ten times it's throwing you into something bad, but something that only you can really fix. It's not nice, it's not peaceful, but it's what's needed. Speaking of which," he looked up, locking eyes with her. "Padawan Anaïs, today you made me proud."

What? "I, um, the Temple says pride is unbefitting of a Jedi," she threw out in a bid for time to settle suddenly chaotic thoughts.

Sure enough, her master snorted. "Then the entire Temple is unbefitting of the Order," he shot back. "Having pride isn't bad, being controlled by pride is. But you already knew that, didn't you."

"I, yes," she admitted. "It's just, I failed!" she objected. At this, her master raised a single brow. "I was caught, trying to get in. Well, not caught, but I was about to be!"

"And the reason you weren't?" Lucian prodded.

She waved in the direction of the guest quarters. "Crix set off an alarm, which opened up a safe channel and let me escape."

"Safe channel. . . ahh, figured out that have you?" he smiled, shaking his head. "Of course you did. Regardless, what makes you think you failed, if you succeeded in your task? And you did succeed, Padawan, more than I expected. Not because I doubted your abilities," he added, as she felt hurt at her Master's lack of faith, "but because I had no idea the difficulty of your task. And, with what you did, that was a very difficult task indeed, more worthy of a practiced padawan, or Knight by the current 'standards', instead of someone less than a year into their apprenticeship."

That. . . helped. "But," she started to say, and hesitated, looking down, already starting to feel out the edge of the rebuttal her master would give her. "You don't need extra help. But, you do, don't you. You just set them up, so they work without us needing to meet them. But there was the man on Fabrin. You went directly to him for what you needed for me. The Temple says a Jedi should accept the help of others, but never depend on it. But. . . you're not doing either. You don't depend on it, but you don't just accept it, you seek it out, but could work without it. You just. . . wouldn't be able to do as much, would you?" she asked, looking up, to see her master's easy grin.

"Exactly," he smiled. "Some of the most stagnant of our Order, which is a sizable percentage, believes that 'when the Force, your ally is, need more assistance, you do not'," he quipped. "The Force is a great help, but if you have allies, what you can do with the Force grows. However, one Jedi can do what a thousand Force-blind soldiers cannot, because the Force is a tremendous 'ally', though 'ability' would be closer to the truth."

"Because the Will of the Force is just your own desires reflected back, and the guidance it gives you is just the way to accomplish them?" Anaïs questioned, remembering the lesson, months ago, on their way to Uphrades.

"Got it in one," the Master Jedi nodded. "Today, you trusted in the Force, you listened to it, followed its directions, and accomplished what you set out to do, didn't you?"

She frowned, starting to argue, "It took me a while to hear it-"

"Padawan," her master noted, a reminder of her skill level, not a rebuke.

"Alright, yes, I did listen to it. And it led me to Crix. And he led me to a way to get in. But. . . without your help, I would've had to leave Mrs. Vondarr to die," she pointed out.

Lucian regarded her, "But you would have, if I couldn't've come?" She thought about it, before nodding, once, solemnly. "Then you listened to the Force, and it did not lead you astray. You set your priorities, and the Force guided you to fulfill them. That, at its core, is what being a Jedi is about. Wanting to help others, and getting out of your own way enough to follow the Force to do so."

"If that's true. . . the failure she mentioned. The one that you. . . reacted to. What happened then?" Anaïs asked, hesitantly, not wanting to upset the man.

The shadows stirred slightly, but there was no other indication other than the shift in her master's presence, Sadness, Regret, Loss, and Grief swirling about him tightly.

However, as he had promised, Master Lucian did not lie to her, did not tell her it was nothing, but picked his words carefully. "That is what happens when you don't understand the Force, Anaïs. When you think it has a Will of its own, when you think you must suborn your own desires to follow it, you do not take care of your feelings, other than suppressing them. That is what happened when the distinction between 'I must stop him' and 'I must save them' is a screaming gulf of. . ." he trailed off. "I believed teachings that were flawed, and it cost me everything."

The old man, for a moment, truly looked his age. Though his skin still held the smooth texture of youth, his eyes, while note supernaturally shaded as they were before, looked ancient. "In part, that was the fault of my own Master, who fell to the Dark, and of the others to whom I turned for advice that did not correct me. In part, that was my own, for not questioning, only believing, as is and was Temple doctrine. In part, that was the fault of the Sith who I stopped, damn the cost."

The Master Jedi looked at her, gaze piercing her very soul. "Anaïs, that is why I am so insistent you question, you understand, you pay attention, while trying to share my centuries of experience, and the 'unerring' teachings of the Temple can rot in their stagnated arrogance for all I care."

He scowled, the merest whisper of hate in his presence, but it vanished in an instant. "However, I am well aware that I might still be wrong. That, despite what I have learned, I'm just as mistaken now as I was before that day. But all I can do is keep going forward, keep trying, keep trusting in the Force, knowing that it doesn't have a Will to put faith into, and knowing that, while I might not mean for what happens to occur, it is still my responsibility for making it happen in the first place."

He laughed, a little bitterly, though there was a note of humor in it. "The Force, it is a gift both great and terrible, like giving a child command of an army. They could do great things with it. They could do terrible things. They could do things they never meant to. But, at the end of the day, it is them that has accomplished those things, for good or ill, and they need to accept that." He sighed, "And something no thinking being is naturally good at, is taking ownership of their mistakes."

Anaïs sat, completely still, unsure of what to say. Did she agree? She had asked, but as usual, wasn't prepared for the answer she received. "So, what mistakes should I take responsibility for?" she finally questioned.

"As far as I can tell, there aren't any," her master offered, to her complete disbelief. "I'm sure there are things you could've done better, and you know what they are, but in the larger scale of events, you succeeded completely. I'm sure it was messy, and scary, and felt like you were inches away from failure, but all that means is that the Force pushed you right to the edge of your skills, and you rose to the challenge. For now? You see what skills that need to be worked on, so next time you don't need to kill anyone in cold blood."

She felt her heart skip a beat at that off-handed statement. "I, you know about. . ."

Her master nodded, but his gaze was sad, not judging. "It clings to you, and will continue to do so for the next few days, but it will fade, and your meditations will cleanse it from you further. Your mental shields need work, and there are techniques to remove the taint faster, but over-reliance can cause. . . catastrophic failures when you face true Darkness. But you did not call upon the Dark, Anaïs, of that I can tell, and in doing so you were able to succeed. Remember, Padawan, while the Dark can give you a moment of power, it destroys any ability to navigate the future, the Sith version of the same technique being very different, and the two completely incompatible. It makes hunting Fallen Jedi much easier, robbed as they are of the ability to move before they even detect your presence, but that is all the more reason to avoid falling oneself."

"Are we going to. . . hunt Fallen Jedi?" she asked. Dealing with opponents who couldn't sense the Force was bad enough, but to-

"No," her Master stated vehemently. "No, Anaïs, you are not ready, as it would not be a Padawan you pursued, but a Knight, or greater, and I have no desire for your death, for the Force to guide us in that direction." The young-looking man smiled fondly at her. "Go, rest, you've done well, and come far, Anaïs Vand-Ryssa, but your journey has just begun. Take this victory, and use it to grow every greater, for, as your skills rise, so will the challenges, and the good you can do in this galaxy."

Walking back to her room, she wanted to feel happy, wanted to feel proud, but all she could think of were the people she'd killed. They were bad people, absolutely, and all of her training was clear that sometimes you had to kill bad people, but her success, for all her Master had praised her, felt hollow. Is this what's it's like to be a Jedi? she wondered. If Lucian was going to kill the Baron, and might kill Mrs. Vondarr, what was the point of her doing any of what she'd done today?

Unbidden, a face rose up out of memory. Small, dirty, tired, and hopeful. The girl she'd healed on Fabrin, and who Master Lucian had arranged to take care of. And of Crix, who'd walked into the jaws of death over and over, only trying to help his family, and pulled out at the very last minute by her fumbling efforts.

That's it, isn't it? Anaïs thought, thinking of her master's words. The galaxy is huge, and it takes effort and experience to think that large. And I have neither. But without me, both of them would've died, and now they can live, and help others, even if it's not right now.

She knew Jedi weren't supposed to have attachments, but these weren't attachments these were. . . accomplishments. Something she could point to and go I did this. The Temple would disagree, and say she should help just to help but. . . what did that even mean?

No,
Anaïs thought, I've done well. I've gotten stronger. And, as Master Lucian says, this is just the beginning.
 
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Interesting very interesting I'm honesty surprised the rest of the order even let him get a paddawan then again they didn't make it easy did they. What year is this story taking place in any plans to handle the whole order 66 business or will this just because these
Two learning to be real Jedi?

Story's like this show how great Star Wars can be sadly most of the Star Wars content is horrible.
 
Interesting very interesting I'm honesty surprised the rest of the order even let him get a paddawan then again they didn't make it easy did they. What year is this story taking place in any plans to handle the whole order 66 business or will this just because these
Two learning to be real Jedi?

Story's like this show how great Star Wars can be sadly most of the Star Wars content is horrible.

Episode 1 was 32 BBY

Current Year in story is 26 BBY (Before the Battle of Yavin)

Episode 2 was 22 BBY

The story is on a timer until the Clone Wars start, and given both Masters' dislike of the core worlds, especially Coruscant, they're not going to be getting intertwined with Palpatine and the entire plot to destroy the Jedi. Hell, Palpy doesn't even know they exist, as they're both considered black sheep of the Order (but not in a 'hey, this guy could turn traitor' way the Sith are on the lookout for), and the Temple doesn't even like to admit Lucian is still alive. Now, Er'izma turns out Knights like clockwork, every five years, which means that, if nothing happened, Jorel would become a Knight in the middle of the Clone Wars. How that all actually turns out is up for speculation.

And if 4 years seems like a lot, remember that the Padawan's stories aren't exactly synced up in time, as Jorel's only been a Padawan for ~ 2 months, tops, while Anais has been one for closer to 5 (Half a year, as the SW Calendars have 10 months). There will be a good deal of timeskips, only the important events covered in details, so 'Er'izma and Jorel go to three different planets over the course of a month to be a military presence but nothing happens' will be mentioned off-handedly, while moving the clock forward.
 
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