Star Wars_ The Dark Lord Trilogy - James Luceno [271]
Quite the contrary, in fact: she seemed to have fallen into his arms, and her voice was thoroughly choked with emotion as she expressed a possibly inappropriate level of joy at finding the Jedi still alive.
There followed some discussion that C-3PO didn’t entirely understand; it was political information entirely outside his programming, having to do with Master Anakin, and the Republic having fallen, whatever that meant, and with something called a Sith Lord, and Chancellor Palpatine, and the dark side of the Force, and really, he couldn’t make sense of any of it. The only parts he clearly understood had to do with the Jedi Order being outlawed and all but wiped out (that news had been all over the Lipartian Way this morning) and the not-altogether-unexpected revelation that Master Kenobi had come here seeking Master Anakin. They were partners, after all (though despite all their years together, Master Anakin’s recent behavior made it sadly clear that Master Kenobi’s lovely manners had entirely failed to rub off).
“When was the last time you saw him? Do you know where he is?”
C-3PO’s photoreceptors registered the Senator’s flush as she lowered her eyes and said, “No.”
Three years running the household of a career politician stopped C-3PO from popping back out and reminding the Senator that Master Anakin had told her just yesterday he was on his way to Mustafar; he knew very well that the Senator’s memory failed only when she decided it should.
“Padmé, you must help me,” Master Kenobi said. “Anakin must be found. He must be stopped.”
“How can you say that?” She pulled back from him and turned away, folding her arms over the curve of her belly. “He’s just won the war!”
“The war was never the Republic against the Separatists. It was Palpatine against the Jedi. We lost. The rest of it was just play-acting.”
“It was real enough for everyone who died!”
“Yes.” Now it was Master Kenobi’s turn to lower his eyes. “Including the children at the Temple.”
“What?”
“They were murdered, Padmé. I saw it.” He took her shoulders and turned her back to face him. “They were murdered by Anakin.”
“It’s a lie—” She pushed him away forcefully enough that C-3PO nearly triggered the security alert then and there, but Master Kenobi only regarded her with an expression that matched C-3PO’s internal recognition files of sadness and pity. “He could never … he could never … not my Anakin …”
Master Kenobi’s voice was soft and slow. “He must be found.”
Her reply was even softer; C-3PO’s aural sensor barely recorded it at all.
“You’ve decided to kill him.”
Master Kenobi said gravely, “He has become a very great threat.”
At this, the Senator’s medical condition seemed to finally overcome her; her knees buckled, and Master Kenobi was forced to catch her and help her onto the sofa. Apparently Master Kenobi knew somewhat more about human physiology than did C-3PO; though his photoreceptors hadn’t been dark to the ongoing changes in Senator Amidala’s contour, C-3PO had no idea what they might signify.
At any rate, Master Kenobi seemed to comprehend the situation instantly. He settled her comfortably onto the sofa and stood frowning down at her.
“Anakin is the father, isn’t he?”
The Senator looked away. Her eyes were leaking again.
The Jedi Master said, hushed, “I’m very sorry, Padmé. If it could be different …”
“Go away, Obi-Wan. I won’t help you. I can’t.” She turned her face away. “I won’t help you kill him.”
Master Kenobi said again, “I’m very sorry,” and left.
C-3PO tentatively returned to the sitting room, intending to inquire after the Senator’s health, but before he could access a sufficiently delicate phrase to open the discussion, the Senator said softly, “Threepio? Do you know what this is?”
She lifted toward him the pendant that hung from the cord of jerba leather she always wore around her neck.
“Why, yes, my lady,” the protocol droid replied, bemused but happy, as always, to be of service. “It’s a snippet of japor. Younglings on Tatooine carve tribal runes