The Cestus Deception (13 page)

Read The Cestus Deception Online

Authors: Steven Barnes

Tags: #Fiction, #SciFi, #Star Wars, #Galactic Republic Era, #Clone Wars

For the rest of the day Nate attempted to focus his attention on the trainees. He kept a wary eye on how they did on the obstacle course, discerning which of them were in the best physical and mental condition, which ones had the best emotional control, which might have leadership potential.

But every few minutes he broke concentration and scanned the entire craggy area, as protocol directed. And he noticed that no matter when he did so, his eyes sought the face and form of the infuriating Sheeka Tull. Sometimes he found her beneath a rock overhang, sometimes helping with the food. Once he glimpsed her interacting with General Fisto, and pointing in the direction of her ship. And once, when he didn’t see her at all, he felt a strange disappointment.

That lasted but a moment: Nate wrested his attention back to the task at hand.

As the day rolled on, trainees were presented with an endless series of sweaty, torturous obstacles. Invariably the clones negotiated the tests first, with a level of agility and effortless ease that made the Cestus volunteers shake their heads in disbelief.

Child’s play, for one who spent his childhood in the training rooms of the Kamino cloners.

By the day’s end, 40 percent of the volunteers had quit. Those remaining were a hard, tough lot who glared at each other and cursed under their breaths at the troopers, but they cursed as a group. They had survived the best that these armored sadists from Coruscant could offer. They were ready for the next level.

Nate organized his thoughts and made his report to General Fisto. As he approached the back of the cave a meter-long thread of light blazed briefly, snaked and coiled through the air, then died again. The strange phenomenon repeated. His nose itched with the stink of burning metal, and the glare of the flexible line hurt his eyes until he had to turn his head away.

When General Fisto heard his approach, the light disappeared, and he pivoted with a loose-limbed adroitness so smooth that he might almost have turned inside out, seemed to flow
through
himself.

“Yes?”

“We’ve concluded the day’s testing.”

“And?”

“I believe that we have forty-eight good recruits.”

Something like light glowed in the depths of the general’s unblinking eyes. “This is good. And tomorrow?”

“We’ll pick up a few more. I can either accompany you in recruitment, or stay here and continue training.”

“Continue the training,” General Fisto said after a moment’s consideration. “Divide them into groups according to day and time of initial recruitment. Allow those who enlisted first to have the greatest status.”

“Yes, sir,” Nate said. The general was underestimating ARCs if he thought that such a hierarchy was not already part of their command structure. On the other hand, it was not his place to educate or correct Jedi.

For some reason, that thought made him think of Sheeka Tull again, and her insolent evaluation of him. There was something about her he found almost unendurably irritating.

He wandered back outside the cave, and without telling his feet what to do, they headed in the direction of Sheeka Tull’s ship. After all, the day’s work was completed. His three brothers would take care of any cleaning of weapons or policing of the obstacle course area. He could take a few minutes.
Just a stroll,
he lied.

He found Sheeka at a folding table outside her ship, scrubbing at the rust on one of
Spindragon
’s Corellian flux converters and enjoying the stars. She didn’t seem surprised to see him, but didn’t hail him until he came closer. “Nate,” she said.

“And how do you know that it’s me, and not one of the others?” he challenged.

She laughed. “You walk a little differently. By any chance have you got a leg wound?”

He stopped for a minute. A broca, a huge reptilian creature that haunted the swamps of a misbegotten black hole called Altair-9, had nearly torn his hip away. He had thought the damage healed. Interesting. This woman was as observant as a trooper!

“Yes,” he said, but kept the rest of his thoughts to himself.

She smiled at him, went back to her cleaning. “How did the day go?”

“Some good prospects. We pushed them hard and lost only forty percent. Strong stock on Cestus.”

Sheeka smiled again, evidently pleased with his answer. She went back to her cleaning, and he just sat, watching the stars. He knew that many of those blazing orbs had planets of their own, and wondered how many would be embroiled in battle before the Clone Wars ended.

After a time her attention returned to Nate. He felt content merely waiting for her to speak. When she did, her question surprised him. “What do you see when you look at me?” She chose that moment to yawn and stretch a bit, and for the first time he felt the impact of her as a woman, and was surprised at the fierceness of his reaction. Nothing male and humanoid could fail to notice her mesmerizing meld of strength and softness, the long elegant lines of her legs, the delicate arch of her neck…

Nate stopped himself, remembering that she had asked him a question. He searched, found one answer that bordered on the obscene, and subsequently edited himself. Finally he said, “A human female whose skin tone matches that of General Windu.”

“Who?” She laughed. It was rich and deep, and he realized that his first sense of being mocked was completely wrong. He found that he admired her laugh; it was warming to him in a way that let him reduce emotional control for a few precious minutes. Interesting.

He found himself asking a question before he had stopped and evaluated it. “And what do you see when you look at me?”

Almost instantly he regretted saying it, because that smile softened, became wistful and a bit sad. “The shadow of the best—” She paused, as if changing a word in midsentence. “—best
fighter
I ever knew.” She reached out and brushed her hand along his jaw, then rose as gracefully as a sunblossom spinning in the solar wind and returned to her ship.

Chapter Twenty-One

After the first few days, the stream of newbies had slowed to a trickle. Therefore, Nate was surprised to see a group of lean, dirty men and women approach. They arrived in a motley variety of battered hovercarts dusty enough to suggest they had hauled far more ore than passengers. Their apparent leader was a tall old red-bearded human male who looked wide across the shoulders and loose in the gut, well weathered and deeply tired. “We want parley with your leader,” he said.

Sirty looked him up and down. “And who makes this request?”

“Name’s Thak Val Zsing,” the newcomer said.

“You’re looking for me,” Nate said, stepping forward.

Thak Val Zsing looked from Sirty to Nate, and a humorless grin split his face. His teeth were broad, cracked, and brownish.

“Recruits, sir?” Sirty asked.

Val Zsing ’s expression soured. “Didn’t say that.”

“Well then—?”

“We’re Desert Wind, and if we like what we see, we’re here to fight.”

So.
These
were the anarchists who had been so brutally crushed by Cestian security forces just months ago. If they were even a quarter of their former strength, he was a Jawa. And they were ready to fight again? Brave if not smart. “Even Coruscant has heard of your courage.”

Thak Val Zsing nodded, satisfied by that answer. “You know who we are. We’re not so sure about you yet.” The men and women behind him nodded. Nate scanned their clothing and armaments. Old. Badly patched. Their skin was ragged from fatigue and malnutrition. It looked as if their weapons were in better shape than they were. Still, tired and half broken they may have been, but these were people holding a serious grudge.

“Every one of us is prepared to die to overthrow this decadent system.”

Ah, then. They had every reason to blame the government for their problems, but he couldn’t use Desert Wind in its present form: they were too brittle and angry. This was a delicate situation, and he had to play it carefully. “Maybe you’ve misunderstood our intentions,” he said. “We’re not here to overthrow the legal government. We are here to ensure that that government obeys the Republic’s rules and regulations. As citizens of the Republic, you have full right to redress of grievances.”

Thak Val Zsing pulled at his crimson beard with his fingers and spat into the dust. “The Families couldn’t care less about your rules. You talk pretty, and offer us nothing.”

That was a perfectly accurate answer, and Nate felt a bit flustered.

The Jedi suddenly appeared behind him. “I offer the opportunity to serve your Republic,” General Fisto said. Nate had been so fixed on the members of Desert Wind that he hadn’t heard a sound.

The vast dark pools of the Nautolan’s eyes captivated the anarchists. Thak Val Zsing was the first to break out of the trance; the others followed swiftly and began to grumble. “Serve how?”

“Come,” the general said urgently. “Fight with us.”

“In other words, take your orders.”

“Be our comrades.”

The sincerity in his words was mesmerizing, his Nautolan charisma doubly effective on this desert world. Most of Desert Wind’s ragged members seemed to feel it like a blow to the chest.

Most, but not all. Thak Val Zsing shook his head. “Nope. Don’t like this. We’ve heard enough promises, and taken enough orders. We’ll win our own freedom.”

“If you act on your own, you become common criminals,” Fisto said. “With us, you are patriots.” Hard words, but these folk were at the end of their resources. They had nothing to lose.

The ragged members of Desert Wind looked from Thak Val Zsing to Kit Fisto and back again. One devil they knew, one they didn’t. Like most creatures, they went with what they knew. They would continue to harry the government, and they would be eventually caught, or jailed, or killed.

And that was the end of it, with nothing that anyone could really do to stop it.

General Fisto extended his hand to Thak Val Zsing. “Wait,” he said.

“What?” Val Zsing was tired, but also proud.

“I could offer your people clemency if they work with us. When our job is complete your crimes will be expunged, and you’ll return to your mines and farms and shops. I would not have you throw your lives away.”

Nate knew Val Zsing had to be warring with himself. This was a good man, but too weary to have much optimism left in him; he had been told too many lies to believe a Jedi, or a Jedi’s clone soldiers. He could hear the old man’s thoughts as clearly as if he spoke them aloud.

“What do the others say?” General Fisto asked.

“They say they trust
me,
” Thak Val Zsing said, puffing his chest out. “And I don’t trust you. I only came here because they asked me to. But now that I’ve seen ya…”

The general gazed across the faces of Desert Wind, then turned back to Thak Val Zsing. “These are your people. How did you win their hearts?”

“By blood,” he said. Nate could see it in Thak Val Zsing’s eyes. Despite his bravado the man wanted to believe, but couldn’t.

“I see,” the Nautolan replied.

“There might be another way,” Thak Val Zsing said slowly. The battered warriors straightened and stared at him.

They looked at each other as if the confrontation was about to turn into something physically unpleasant, and then Thak Val Zsing’s shoulders slumped.

Once, perhaps, the old man had been a great fighter, but those days were long past. Still, the members of his group looked up to him, and respected him as they would a father. Doubtless he’d shepherded them through more than one tight squeeze.

How could the dynamic be altered? What resolution could there be?

More than anyone else, Thak Val Zsing seemed to understand the stakes. One last action. One last judgment. It might mean destruction or salvation for his ragtag band. But what to do?

“Thirty years ago I took command of this group,” Val Zsing said, his eyes locked with the general’s. “You could guide them, if you were willing to pass the same test.”

“Test?”

He nodded. “Brother Fate?” he said quietly.

A gray-tufted old X’Ting male in brown robes walked over. He was accompanied by a somewhat bulkier X’Ting female, also in brown robes. They carried a woven reed basket suspended between them.

The basket was large enough to hold a human infant, and that was what Nate initially supposed it held. He had heard of extremist groups who worshiped some child or infant, supposing it the avatar of a god, or the reincarnation of some sacred soul.

But a moment later he realized he had made an error. Whatever lay in that basket was nothing human. It weighed more than an infant as well: perhaps ten kilos. And it hissed. The basket wobbled slightly, and from their efforts to keep it balanced, he knew that there was something moving in there, something serpentine.

“Will you trust us as you ask us to trust you?” the old X’Ting female said.

“What would you have me do?”

“Place your hand inside,” she said.

“And?”

“And then we will see.”

General Fisto looked at her, and then at Thak Val Zsing.

Nate held his breath. This was a test of both courage and intuition. Trust and common sense. What was in the basket? The woven sand-reed container was large enough to hold any of a thousand venomous creatures. And if it bit the general, what then? Was Kit Fisto supposed to magically transform the poison within his body? To charm the beast so that it would not bite? Or was this entire thing some kind of an elaborate assassination plan? Whatever it was, he could not repress a hint of apprehension. What would the Jedi do?

General Fisto’s expression didn’t change, but he nodded his head. “Yes.”

The old X’Ting couple laid the basket down. The cover still obscured whatever was inside. The general rolled up the sleeve of his robe and extended his hand into the container. Nate noticed that the pace of entrance was neither slow nor fast, but continued at a single unvaried medium rate.

General Fisto’s eyes never left the old woman’s. His arm had disappeared up to the elbow, and the witnesses watched carefully.

And yet… what was he missing? There was something happening here that defied definition.

Finally one of the other old females nodded, and the general, using the same slow, steady pace, withdrew his arm from the basket. Its underside glistened with something wet. He rolled his sleeve down without wiping the wetness away. The Nautolan’s face was impassive.

The two brown-robed X’Tings retreated to a neutral position and sat cross-legged, primary and secondary arms folded in a prayer position, foreheads leaning against each other. The others formed a wall between the clones and General Fisto and the basket. They were hunched over and seemed to be studying something.

Then they returned. “He tells the truth,” the woman said. And the others nodded.

Thak Val Zsing exhaled mightily. Nate could tell that he was relieved, but his pride wouldn’t let him speak it.

“Very well, then,” Thak Val Zsing said. “The Guides… have never been wrong before. All right. I yield the leadership of Desert Wind.” He paused. “And I hope I’m not making the biggest mistake of my life.”

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