Omega bowed. “Greetings, Master. We are grateful that our failure to complete our mission at the Senate did not disappoint you. As you generously said, the intent to disrupt and demoralize was achieved. The Senate is more divided than ever. It gratifies us that you have decided to entrust us with your secret. We have received the coordinates for our meeting. At last you will reveal yourself to us. We will then truly be able to further your cause throughout the galaxy.” Omega bowed again. “Until we meet, I, Granta Omega, and Jenna Zan Arbor, servants to no one in the galaxy, remain servants to the Sith.”
The hologram fragmented into a shimmer.
“Whew,” Anakin said. “What a toadying dungcreeper.”
“So they came here to meet the Sith, just as you thought,” Siri said. “He’s going to reveal his identity to them.”
“Which means if we can find out where the meeting is, we’ll find out as well,” Obi-Wan said.
Siri pressed her lips together. “We have a whole planet to search.”
A faraway look was in Obi-Wan’s eyes. “No. There is only one possible place for them to meet,” he said softly.
Soara and Darra appeared. “We found the landing platform,” Soara said. “It’s still completely functional. We found new access controls hidden in the ruins. Works like a charm. There’s evidence of a recent takeoff. By the looks of the scorch marks, I’d say it was a small airspeeder.”
Obi-Wan looked back at Auben’s body sprawled on the ramp. He tried to reconstruct what had happened. “He’s been using this place as a hideout. He bumped into Auben - and he killed her. Then he left the cruiser and took the airspeeder. More maneuverable. Harder to track.” And the airspeeder, Obi-Wan thought, would get him where he needed to go.
Obi-Wan felt a tug, as though a string had been tied to his breastbone. He walked down the ramp, across the remains of the hangar, and stood out on the landing platform Soara and Darra had found.
The chill wind knifed through his clothes as he stood outside. He was deep in the mountain. He could see the valley far below, and a vast expanse of gray sky.
He felt Omega. For the first time, he felt his energy. Though he wasn’t a Sith, Omega had sought out the dark side of the Force. He had been unable to harness it for himself, but he had lived in it. Obi-Wan was tied to him, energy to energy. He could track him now without instruments. He didn’t need clues, or tips.
“Master?” Anakin drifted to his side. “What is it?”
“I know where Omega is,” Obi-Wan said. “He’s in the Valley of the Dark Lords. And the Sith has gone to meet him there. We can uncover them both.”
CHAPTER SIXTEEEN
Obi-Wan contacted Jocasta Nu. They needed more information on the Valley of the Dark Lords. Superstition, legend, anything that could help give them an edge. The problem, of course, was that no one had dared to enter the valley for centuries. Or, at least, had lived to report on it.
Soara and Darra saw to Auben. They couldn’t move her yet, so they wrapped her carefully in the thermal capes.
Anakin looked for Tru. He had disappeared, and so had Ferus. Feeling uneasy, Anakin headed off to see what they were up to. Would Ferus try to steal his best friend? He might fill Tru’s mind with his version of why Anakin had left them to fight the droids alone. He would twist the facts to make Anakin look bad.
Tru and Ferus were sitting in one of the service bays, talking quietly. Ferus was busy working on Tru’s lightsaber. Anakin paused in the shadows. Were they discussing him? He thought he heard his name. He concentrated fiercely.
“I noticed it,” Ferus told Tru “That droid must have pulverized your power circuit.”
“It slips back into half-power without warning,” Tru said in a worried voice.
Tru’s lightsaber must have been damaged in the battle. But why hadn’t Tru told Ry-Gaul? An apprentice was obligated to tell his or her Master if a lightsaber was damaged.
As if Tru had overheard Anakin’s question, he said, “I know I should have told Ry-Gaul. But he’s so correct. He might leave me out of battle situations, or even send me back to the Temple.”
“If your lightsaber is permanently damaged, Ry-Gaul would be right to do so,” Ferus said.
Typical, Anakin thought. Ferus always had to inform you of rules you knew by heart already.
“After all,” Ferus continued, “you don’t want to meet a Sith without a lightsaber.”
“No kidding,” Tru said. “This mission is crucial. That’s why I can’t be sent back. I just thought if I could fix it without having to tell Ry-Gaul…” Tru wound one flexible arm around his back to hug his opposite elbow, a gesture Anakin knew well. It was something Tru did when he was especially nervous. “Look, I know I wouldn’t be the first or second candidate to enter the acceleration program - you and Anakin will be the first. Maybe Darra would be third. But I don’t want to be left behind.”