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[Legacy Of The Force] - 05(31)



You’re changing laws about changing laws. Think about that.

Jacen only had a vague idea about what use he might make of that beyond getting supplies moving, but it struck him as a promising area to address.

“What would I be limited to?” he asked.

“Well, there has to be a fail-safe in the wording or you’ll never get P and R to agree to it, but if I were to cap the scope of this, say that the existing budget can’t be exceeded, then that would satisfy them.”

Legislation was terminally boring. No, it should have been. But something in it was forming a hard ball of an idea in Jacen’s mind. “Would it be possible to word it so that if I come across any more stupid red tape in the process, I can change that, too? Even if I don’t know where I’m likely to find it? I don’t want some jobsworth holding up vital supplies because I didn’t specify the right subsection of some obscure regulation.”

“That would make it somewhat … open-ended.”

“But it’s just administration. It’s not the constitution or a common charter.”

HM-3 ground his gears quietly. “I’ll word it genetically so that you can change any administrative procedure you need to. The other fail-safe is that only authorized individuals can make use of this, and that can be limited to whomever the Chief of State decides. So there’ll be no spending sprees on secret armies, and only a few very visible, accountable people can make use of it. That will reassure the P and R members.” HM-3 went silent for a moment, consulting his agenda link. “I do believe the day after tomorrow is a very, very busy day for P and R, sir. I think the amendment will get through rather more quickly than usual.”

It was a good day to bury the Legislative and Regulations Statute Amendment. Jacen smiled.

“You’ll have to tell me more about how this fits in with the emergency measures legislation that Chief Omas already enacted.”

“Full explanation, or—”

“—the lay-being’s executive summary, please.”

“The three of you can do anything you need to for the duration of the war. With Admiral Niathal, you are effectively a triumvirate. I have yet to hear Senator G’vli G’Sil take note of that, despite his position as head of the Security Council. The Defense Council is simply nodding everything through—when it actually meets, of course.”

The thought took Jacen aback. He had his own plans for upending the galaxy, but they were large-scale, strategic, and focused on order, justice, and the benign application of military might. The petty minutiae of bureaucracy had never crossed his mind as a weapon in the battle for order.

He’d spent five years learning the most arcane Force techniques in the galaxy, but—again—he didn’t have to use a single Force skill to gain power this time. It was simply a matter of using psychology to manipulate people around him.

This is what makes Jedi weaker and lazier. They instantly resort to Force techniques, without thinking.

HM-3 didn’t have to remind him to look at the fall of the Republic. In his desire to understand the environment that had turned his grandfather from Anakin Skywalker into Darth Vader, he’d examined that final decade. Palpatine seemed to have grabbed most of his power by brilliant manipulation and understanding of people’s weaknesses, not simply by channeling the power of the dark side.

Jacen and the droid reached the mighty carved doors of the procurement center. They were almost as fine as the doors to Chief Omas’s office. No—they were actually more opulent. Jacen turned to his infallible legal adviser.

“Do you think it’s wrong that we’re effectively a triumvirate, Aitch-Em?” Jacen asked. “Undemocratic?”

“I’m not programmed for right and wrong, sir.” HM-3 sounded a little disappointed, as if Jacen hadn’t fully understood the complexity of his art. “I can tell you only what’s legal and illegal, because they have definitions. Right has no parameters. Justice doesn’t, either, nor good. Flesh has to make those decisions.”

“Flesh makes a different decision on those every day, my friend.” Jacen put his hand on the controls, and the splendid relief of an ancient Coruscanti cityscape split into two to admit him into the procurement offices.

I can change a law to let me change laws.

But can I use the law that lets me change laws to change that law itself?

He thought for a moment that he was enjoying a few childish seconds of playing at circular logic. Then it struck him he’d just had an insight of significant proportions.

“Colonel Solo,” said the head of the procurement agency. Tav Velio was an edgy human male who looked in need of a good meal. “I’ve tasked one of my assistants to investigate the shortages. It might simply be a case of delays in the process.”