The attacker slipped beneath the surface of the water, then emerged, treading water. He shook the hair out of his eyes and gazes at Obi-Wan with a hostile look.
Obi-Wan stood at the edge. He held out a hand. "You have about ten seconds."
"Yes."
The attacker knew the extreme heat would cause a fusion reaction. The thermal detonators would blow.
His eyes were a vivid color between silver and lilac. There was a scar on his upper lip. His hair was long and tied back with a silver cord.
"Come on," Obi-Wan said, keeping his hand steady. We won't hurt you."
"Not you, but another," the bounty hunter said. "If I return to him without you, he will kill me anyway. I will have an easier death this way. You don't know his power. It comes from the pyramid itself."
"You don't have to return to him," Obi-Wan said.
"Ah. But he will find me." The bounty hunter closed his eyes.
Obi-Wan reached out over the water. "You must give up!"
"I cannot," the bounty hunter replied, his eyes still closed. "And I must tell you this — neither will he."
Obi-Wan leaped into the pool. But it was too late. The thermal detonators exploded. Water rose and hit Obi-Wan in the face. He choked and slipped beneath the water, then surfaced, struggling against the waves created by the explosion. Smoke rolled toward him.
The smoke cleared. Deep below the clear surface of the water, he saw the bounty hunter's body spiral down, down, to a bottomless pool beneath.
Chapter Fifteen
Anakin hurried over to the thermal pool. His Master had hauled himself out and stood at the edge. The steaming water pooled at his feet, melting the snow.
Through the smoke and the steam, he could see the sadness on his Master's face. The Force was strong here. His Master was reaching out to it and gathering it around, as though warming himself. Obi-Wan's gaze was far away.
"Master? Are you all right?"
"I am saying good-bye to a being I did not know," Obi-Wan said softly.
The reverence in his tone surprised Anakin. "He could have killed you."
"Yet he did not. There is always a need for grief when a being dies, Padawan. Qui-Gon taught me that." Obi-Wan looked down into the steaming pool. "I saw someone take his own life in a pool like this one. It was Xanatos, Qui-Gon's greatest enemy. A being who hated Qui-Gon and who would stop at nothing to destroy him. Still, when he took his own life, Qui-Gon stopped to mourn his life's passing. I will never forget it."
Anakin nodded, though he did not understand. His greatest enemy so far in his life had been a slave trafficker named Krayn. When he had died, Anakin had not paused to mourn. Far from it. He had rejoiced in his death. It could only be good for the galaxy that such a terrible being had ceased to exist.
Something to meditate on in my next session, he thought. I'll add it to the list. The difference between Anakin's thoughts and Obi-Wan's lessons was sometimes more than he wanted to examine. It was a struggle to reconcile them.
"Why do you think the bounty hunter did that?" he asked.
"That is the crucial question," Obi-wan said. "He preferred to end his life rather than meet his fate with Granta Omega. That should tell us something."
"It tells us that Omega is very powerful," Anakin said. "And very cruel."
"Yes, but there is more," Obi-Wan said, as though to himself.
Anakin wanted to stamp his foot in frustration. What? What are you thinking? But Obi-Wan did not add to his statement. He just looked wise and thoughtful, as usual.
"There must have been six bounty hunters, then," Anakin said. He counted them off on his fingers. "the bounty hunter with the Stokhli stick. Floria and Dane together. Mol Arcasite. Teleq. Hunti Pereg. And now this one. That makes six. Floria and Dane were wrong."
"Perhaps," Obi-Wan said in the same thoughtful tone.
Annoyed, Anakin spun on his heel and trudged off to find Floria and Dane. They had gone off the trail and had hiked up a small rise, where a space cruiser was nestled in a small hollow.
"We have to get off-planet," Floria said excitedly. "This must be his ship."
Anakin nodded. "Who was he? Do you know?"
Dane shook his head. "We were positive there were only four other bounty hunters. It was important for all of us to know exactly how many bounty hunters were involved. We all insisted on that. If Granta Omega had lied to us, we wouldn't have been happy. Even Omega wouldn't want beings like Hunti Pereg and Mol Arcasite as enemies."
Obi-Wan walked up. "It's time to leave Ragoon-6."
"The best word I ever heard," Floria said with a shiver. Night was falling. Blue shadows smudged the snow.
Anakin swung himself aboard the cruiser. He searched the cockpit, then motioned to Obi-Wan.
"Master, I found something strange. This cruise belongs to — "
"Hunti Pereg," Obi-Wan finished.
"Yes," Anakin said. "But why is it up here, at the peak? Why isn't it the last bounty hunter's ship?"
"It is the last bounty hunter's ship," Obi-Wan said. "That bounty hunter was Hunti Pereg. I am sure of it."
Anakin looked at him, puzzled. "Then who was the bounty hunter with the paralyzed legs?"
"It was not a bounty hunter. It was Granta Omega," Obi-Wan said softly.
Anakin was stunned. "How do you know?"
"Floria and Dane never met him, so they would not recognize him," Obi-Wan said. "Even so, he was in disguise. That synth-flesh I took for repair of an injury was designed to conceal his face. I realize that now. He does not want us to know what he looks like because he plans to meet us again."
"So he wasn't really paralyzed," Anakin said.
"No," Obi-Wan said. "that was also a ruse. He somehow knew that Floria and Dane had lied to him. He knew they were trying to trap him. So he came down to see for himself. He needed to be sure. When he saw us, he was."