The Force warned Obi-Wan of the attack a split second before, or he would have run into
the end of Bruck’s lightsaber. Bruck came at him with a two-handed sweep.
Obi-Wan had time for a flashpoint of unreality, as though he were in a dream. His old adversary advanced, a light of anger and rivalry in his eyes. Everything was so familiar - Bruck’s aggressive stance, his small, angry eyes, the way his fingers gripped the hilt of the lightsaber.
But this isn’t training. It’s real. He wants to kill
me.
Obi-Wan deflected the blow and whirled to take the offensive. But Bruck had gained in strength as well as strategy. He blocked Obi-Wan’s blow and struck again.
“I’ve learned well, haven’t I?” he asked, his pale blue eyes fierce. “Xanatos showed me what true power is. The Jedi will regret that they held me back!”
“They never held you back,” Obi-Wan said, parrying Bruck’s strike. He stayed on the defensive, waiting to turn into the aggressor. If he kept Bruck talking, perhaps he could spot Bant. While he parried and struck, his eyes darted around, searching for a glimpse of her under the still surfaces of the pools that surrounded
him. “No one chose me as Padawan!” Bruck cried,
grunting as he swung a brutal blow toward Obi-Wan’s legs.
Obi-Wan danced backward. “Then you were not ready.”
“I was ready!” Bruck screamed. Then his expression grew crafty. “More ready than you, Obi-Wan. You’re the one who disgraced the order.”
Obi-Wan knew that Bruck was trying to get him to lose his temper. But the words still hit their mark. His next blow had anger behind it. He saw Bruck’s satisfied smile.
Yes, Bruck had learned well from Xanatos.
“I was always better than you,” Bruck taunted him. “Now I am even stronger.”
But Obi-Wan knew that he, too, was stronger. Thanks to Qui-Gon he was a smarter fighter, cooler, with better strategy.
As long as I don’t give in to my anger.
Obi-Wan remembered how Qui-Gon had pointed out that in the battle on the platform, Xanatos had subtly kept them away from what he was trying to conceal: the airspeeder. Now Obi-Wan wondered if the apprentice had learned from the Master: was Bruck pushing him back slowly in order to keep him away from seeing Bant?
With a great leap, Obi-Wan suddenly launched
an offensive. His furious blows sent Bruck backward, and he kept up the assault, driving him down the path. Sweat poured from his body as he swung the lightsaber in a ceaseless motion, attacking Bruck from all sides.
The highest waterfall loomed ahead. Normally the cascading water flowed into a deep pool, but since Miro had turned off all systems, the waterfall was dry.
But the pool was not. Obi-Wan felt his heart stop as he glimpsed a flash of a lighter blue underneath the deep sapphire of the water. Bant’s tunic! His fear threatened to choke him, but he willed it to calm. He drove Bruck before him relentlessly until they reached the edge of the
pool.
Bant lay on the bottom. Her ankle was securely chained to a heavy anchor. Obi-Wan felt relief course through him as tiny bubbles rose to the surface of the water. She was still alive.
Bant could last underwater for long periods of time, but she needed oxygen to breathe. How long had she been under?
“She doesn’t look too good, does she?” Bruck remarked as he took advantage of Obi-Wan’s distraction to administer a two-handed blow toward his midsection.
Obi-Wan raised his lightsaber and deflected the blow. As he staggered from the impact, he
screamed Bant’s name, calling on the Force to help him reach her.
Her eyelids opened slowly. She blinked. But she seemed to barely register his presence. Her eyes closed again.
Hold on, Bant!
But Obi-Wan did not feel an answer. Her living Force was ebbing. He could feel it. Bant would die.
“That’s right, Obi-Wan,” Bruck taunted him. “Bant is dying. I won’t have to do a thing. I’ll just make you watch it. We would have freed her if we got the treasure. But another person will die because of you. Right in front of your eyes. Just like your friend Cerasi. I overheard the other Jedi talk about how you failed her.”
At the sound of Cerasi’s name, something shattered inside Obi-Wan. The composure he’d fought for was gone now. He attacked Bruck in a fury, not caring about strategy or finesse.
Startled, Bruck backed up the hill that formed the waterfall. It was a rocky slope, the footing treacherous. Ruthlessly, Obi-Wan pressed Bruck, driving him up, keeping him off-balance. Their lightsabers
tangled. Obi-Wan’s arm muscles ached as he swung with all his might with each stroke. He felt clumsy in Garen’s too-small boots.
Bruck reached the top of the hill. He took the