Star Wars_ Darth Maul 02_ Shadow Hunter - Michael Reaves [68]
Of course, he could not assume that this was the case, not until he found definite evidence. The human had certainly proven harder to kill than he had anticipated so far.
He pressed ahead through the everlasting night, alert for the possibility of more attacks.
As Lorn followed I-Five through the dark tunnel, he considered various possible solutions to his situation. There didn’t seem a lot of them. In all his years as a businessman, information broker, and even working for the Jedi, he certainly hadn’t come across anything this challenging before. Pursued by the Sith—who weren’t even supposed to exist—into the deepest pits of the city where flesh-eating cannibals stalked him … it was a challenge, no doubt about it.
Assuming that they made it back aboveground and were able to return to the civilized levels of society, what should his next move be?
He knew that the Padawan planned on taking him straight to the Jedi Temple so that he could share his information with Mace Windu and the other council members. But that event was not anywhere near the top of Lorn’s list of desires. Certainly the Jedi would be best at protecting him from the Sith—assuming their tracker had not been killed in the explosion—but as far as he was concerned it would be a solution almost as bad as the problem. To be a resource held and used by the Jedi? It was a sickening thought, one that awoke far too many memories Lorn had worked hard to put away. So instead of giving in to the feelings that threatened to overwhelm him, he considered his other obvious option: Run.
The key question was how to get on board a ship that could take him and I-Five far enough away to avoid being tracked by both the Sith and the Jedi. The spice transport I-Five had arranged passage on had already left, but there was certainly no dearth of ships at the spaceports. Once they were off Coruscant it would be easier. It was a big galaxy, after all. There couldn’t be that many Sith out there, or there would have been rumors that the Jedi would have picked up by now. And if there were only a few, Lorn reasoned, it wouldn’t really be in the Sith’s interests to spend much time tracking down one low-life information broker.
So that was the plan: get on a fast ship, maybe a smuggler, and leave Coruscant behind. He didn’t know how he was going to pay for passage yet, but he would figure something out. They could hightail it out to some backwater planet like Tatooine, hole up in the Dune Sea or the Jundland Wastes for a while, become part of the scenery. After a few years he could maybe open a tavern in some place like Mos Eisley. It wasn’t a particularly thrilling life to contemplate, but at least it was a life.
Of course, I-Five might not be too happy about all that sand. Droids tended to need a lot of oil baths in environments like Tatooine’s. Lorn looked thoughtfully at his partner walking ahead of him, the droid’s metallic shell catching the reflected light from his photoreceptors. He would need to discuss this plan with him, see if I-Five had any new angles about the money end of it. The droid always seemed to have the right idea to complement Lorn’s own. Of course, to do this he would have to get a few moments away from the Jedi.
Darsha. Her name was Darsha.
With an uncomfortable start, Lorn realized that he was feeling a little guilty at the thought of running out on her. He’d hated the Jedi with an all-inclusive passion for so long, it was hard to see any of them as individuals. After all, she had saved his life. It was difficult to get past the fact that she was a Jedi, but deep down he knew she was more than that: She was a person. Even likable, hard though that was to believe. And admirable in a number of ways, as well. Considering that her mentor had been killed in that explosion, she was carrying her grief