Star Wars_ Darth Bane 02_ Rule of Two - Drew Karpyshyn [106]
“What are you doing here?”
“I came to—” He stopped midsentence, suddenly realizing the danger Rain was in. The danger he had brought upon her.
“Rain, we have to get out of here! The Jedi are looking for you!”
“Tomcat, what are you talking about?”
“A Jedi came to Ruusan. I told him about you and Bane. That’s why they brought me here!”
The young woman’s eyes glowed with pure hatred and anger, and for a second Darovit thought she was going to kill him in the middle of the Jedi Archives.
“How much do they know?” she demanded. “Tell me everything you told them!”
“Rain, there isn’t time,” he protested. “I’m just waiting here for them to come get me. They could be here any minute. You have to get out of here or they’ll find you!”
She turned and punched a key on the terminal; a small datacard popped out. She snatched it up and stuffed it beneath her clothes. Then she grabbed him by the wrist and dragged him back down the aisle toward the central rotunda. She moved as quickly as she could without drawing attention, her pace something between a brisk walk and a run.
Darovit made no move to resist, though he did ask, “Where are we going?”
“Tython,” she whispered. “I have to warn my Master.”
They reached the rotunda, but instead of turning down the first hall and heading toward the exit, she led him into the third hall.
“What are you doing, Rain?” Darovit asked, his voice rising slightly. “We have to get going!”
One of the other scholars—an older woman with coppery red hair sitting at a nearby terminal—turned to stare at them, her attention drawn by Darovit’s exclamations.
“Quiet, Tomcat,” Rain shushed him, nodding apologetically in the woman’s direction. “You’re disturbing the other patrons.”
The old woman turned back to her viewscreen, dismissing them. Darovit’s companion gave his arm a rough shake.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered, just loud enough for her to hear. “But you have to get out of here. Leave for Tython before they find you here.”
“I don’t know where Tython is,” she snapped back through clenched teeth. “We need to find a hyperspace route.”
Taking the terminal one down from the red-haired old woman, Rain punched a series of buttons. A second later the screen came to life with a list of reference numbers.
“Got it,” she said, shoving Darovit into the seat by the terminal’s viewscreen. “Wait here.”
She disappeared into the stacks, moving with the same half-walking, half-running stride. As Darovit waited for her to return, it occurred to him that his loyalties had suddenly shifted. He had been lured to Coruscant with the notion of helping the Jedi wipe out the Sith and prevent a war. But the abstract concept of widespread galactic suffering meant little when he had come face-to-face with his childhood friend. Now all he could think about was what would happen to Rain if she was caught, and he realized he was willing to do whatever it took to keep her safe.
Less than a minute later she returned and slapped a datacard into the terminal. Leaning across Darovit, who was still seated in the chair, she tapped away at the controls until an image of a cloud-covered world appeared on the screen.
“I need to copy this,” she said, pulling out the datacard she had been using when he first saw her and jamming it into another slot on the terminal.
“Why not just take the original?” Darovit asked.
“Sensors on the Archive doors,” she explained. “Removing an original will set off alarms.”
The terminal beeped and the datacard popped out, the copying complete. Zannah stuffed it into her robes, then hauled Darovit up by his elbow.
“Let’s go. Before your friends show up.”
Not bothering to return the original back to the stacks, she half-led, half-pulled him away from the terminal. She whisked him to the rotunda, then down the main aisle of the first hall and out the exit, leaving the Archives behind them.
20
I don’t understand, Master Valenthyne,” Johun said, casting his gaze from side to side as they made their way down the aisles of the Jedi