Chapter Five
Anakin waited. The Force was around him, rising up from the ground beneath his feet and the forest below. It was not strong in the girl. Anakin guessed she was close to his age. She was afraid, he suddenly knew. He felt her fear ripple out and touch him, as clearly as if she had pout out a hand.
And he felt something else — his Master was near. Obi-Wan was above him. He needed to keep the girl's attention on him.
"Why do you want to shoot me?" he asked in a reasonable tone.
"Do not try to trick me," she said. "I know you've been following me. I know you killed my friends and my teacher." Now her voice wobbled slightly. "I won't let you kill me too."
Anakin saw a blur above. It was his Master, leaping down from the sheer cliff above.
Obi-Wan dropped behind the girl and disarmed her in a move so fast she did not have time to turn or even take a breath.
Obi-Wan tossed the weapon to Anakin.
"You know how to use a hydrospanner?" Anakin asked in disbelief.
"I didn't have a real weapon," she said in a small voice.
"Were you threatening to kill me, or fix my speeder?" Anakin asked. He couldn't believe he had been fooled by a hydrospanner. What kind of Jedi was he?
In answer, the girl suddenly whirled and tried to throw herself down the sheer drop. Obi-Wan had anticipated the move and simply reached out with one hand and stopped her.
"That's not a solution," he said. "We're not going to hurt you. Maybe we can even help you."
Anakin took a few steps closer. "What happened? What do you mean, somebody killed your friends?"
The girl pulled her cloak around her. Her hood fell back, and waves of long blond hair spilled down her back.
"My name is Floria," she said. "I'm from the planet Aaeton, only half-day's journey from here. Young people from my planter often go on survival camping trips on Ragoon-6 when we reach fourteen years of age. We have a special allowance from the Senate because we gave the elders of Ragoon refuge when they handed the planet over to the senate. My group arrived yesterday. I was separated from them. We were on a hike and I got lost." Floria's eyes suddenly filled with tears. "When I returned. I. the ship. "
"Go on," Obi-Wan prompted.
She swallowed. "Was completely burned," she said in a whisper. "I knew we were supposed too meet back there for evening meal. I am afraid my friends and my teacher were in it. Someone blew it up."
"You're sure they were inside?"
She twisted her hands together. "How can I be sure of anything? Everything was smoke and ash and fire. Maybe they escaped. Maybe they are lost. I've been searching ever since. But lately I am positive that someone has been following me. They were keeping just out of sight."
"More than one being?" Obi-Wan asked.
"I–I'm not sure," Floria stammered. "I don't know what's wrong. I just know that something is. And I'm all alone!"
So I was right about the darkness in the Force, Anakin thought. Something is wrong on this planet.
"Dry your tears," Anakin said gently. "You're not alone. We will help you."
"Who are you?" she asked. "And why would you help me?"
"Because we can," Obi-Wan said. "Now, the first thing we do is examine your ship."
The ship was just as Floria had described it — a charred hulk.
"Stay her with her," Obi-Wan told Anakin. He disappeared inside the remains of the ship.
He emerged a few minutes later, his face streaked with ash. "There are no remains of beings aboard," he said.
Floria closed her eyes in relief for a moment. "Thank you for looking."
"This is a small cruiser," Anakin said, looking at the ship. "It's for travel within a planetary atmosphere. How did you get here from Aaeton?"
"We have a space cruiser in orbit," Floria explained. "We're supposed to rendezvous with then in three hours. But I have no way to contact them to tell them we won't be there." She brightened. "Can you take me? I can tell them what happened, and they'll send a rescue party down."
"Of course," Obi-Wan said. "We'll have to hike to out cruiser, but it's not far."
"Thank you," Floria said. "I feel certain now that my friends are alive. But they could be in danger. We must find them."
Obi-Wan drew Anakin aside. "Something dark is present on this planet. Can you feel it?"
Anakin nodded. "Yes, Master. But it is unclear."
"There seems to be different energies operating," Obi-Wan said. "It is unclear to me, too. We must be on guard." He frowned. "I have been thinking about Wren."
"What about him?" Anakin asked.
"The clues we have been following. something is wrong. They are too easy, and they lead us to danger. Maybe Wren isn't the one leaving them." Obi-Wan gazed up at the mountain. "Something might have happened to him."
Chapter Six
You never tell me what you're thinking.
Why hadn't he answered his Padawan? Instead, he had corrected him. Obi-Wan's mind churned, and his heart felt heavy. He did not know why he had deflected Anakin's feelings, but he knew he had been deeply unfair to his Padawan.
Anakin could speak so easily of his feelings. He often spoke without thinking, often spilled out exactly what was in his heart. It was behavior that was not like a Jedi.
And I correct him. Is that right?
Obi-Wan knew why Anakin was this way. It was because of Shmi. Anakin's mother had given him a great gift. She had given him an open heart. His feelings were deep and spontaneous. That was a good thing. But they sometimes led him to act too fast, the make quick judgements.
He is the opposite of me, Obi-Wan thought. It has always been difficult for me to speak what is in my heart.
Anakin had been wrong to say he never told him anything. Obi-Wan only held back what he thought Anakin did not need to know, just as Qui-Gon had done with him. Obi-Wan had begun to suspect that Wren's clues were not right, but he felt it was better for Anakin to discover this on his own. He could see that Anakin's eagerness the find Wren was clouding his judgement. Perhaps Anakin was being less careful because he was not on a mission, but an exercise.
These were things it was not proper for a Master to share with his Padawan. Yet Anakin wanted Obi-Wan to share everything.