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Anakin's fingers itched for his lightsaber. The last time Sebulba had threatened him, he'd been just a child and untrained. Now he could dispatch Sebulba before the Dug could manage to blink.
But he saw immediately that Sebulba didn't recognize him. His gaze was hostile, but the hostility wasn't personal. He had no idea that Anakin was the young slave boy who had humiliated him in a race years before.
Anakin smiled again.
The smile infuriated Sebulba. "What are you smiling at? And how dare you bully my son!"
"He's wasn't bullying me, Father," Hekula whined in Huttese. "I am bullying him!"
"You were doing a very poor job of it," Anakin answered in Huttese.
"But that doesn't surprise me."
"How dare you!" Sebulba roared. "Prepare to die!"
Deland quickly moved between them. "Who's talking about dying?" he said in a jovial tone. "Let's save that for the Podrace. Right, Hekula?
I'd worry about cras.h.i.+ng more than spies, if I were you. I've seen you race!"
Hekula's long head thrust toward Deland. "You'll choke on my dust, son of a Raft!"
Sebulba was more clever than his son. He grinned craftily and shot a look at Djulla, who was standing by Hekula's Podracer, preparing a snack for the two Dugs. "I hope you're alive to see your sister wipe the floor under our feet," he hissed. "For the next fifty years!"
Anakin and Deland both tensed, ready to strike. In Sebulba's taunt Anakin heard every cruelty he and his mother had ever endured.
Doby grabbed the hems of Anakin's and Deland's tunics. "Just let them go," he murmured. "We'll win the race. That is our better best revenge."
Anakin saw Deland's hand clench and unclench. His own fingertips burned to slip his lightsaber from its sheath.
"Let's leave the cowards to their play," Sebulba sneered. He and Hekula slithered off, their footfalls clattering on the stony ground.
Deland wiped his oily hands with a rag viciously, as though wiping away the memory of Sebulba's taunt. "We've got to beat them. We've got to."
"He's fast," Doby said, watching Hekula and Sebulba return to their entourage. A look of pain crossed his face as Djulla handed Hekula a cup of juma juice and Hekula spat it out while shouting an insult. "He's just as cruel and dangerous as his father. Maybe more so, because he takes more chances."
Temptation loomed before Anakin. He could help Doby and Deland beat Hekula. He knew it. It was not part of his mission here. But Obi-Wan had allowed him to have free time. What better way to use it than free a slave from the grip of a harsh master?
"Sebulba taught him how to cheat, too," Deland said worriedly.
"Come on, Doby. Let's get back to work."
"You can beat him." The certainty in Anakin's voice made the two brothers turn to face him. "With my help. Hekula has my old Podracer. I built it with my own hands. They may have painted it and buffed it, but I still know those engines. I know its weaknesses. I know how Sebulba cheats. I can help you win."
Doby and Deland exchanged a glance. "We can't ask you to do that,"
Deland said.
"You're not asking."
"We can't pay you," Doby said. "All of our credits are tied up in the Podracer. We barely have enough to get home."
"I don't need credits. And I don't need thanks," Anakin said. "I just need you to win."
CHAPTER SIX.
"So you promised me inside information," Obi-Wan said to Didi. They could not locate an air taxi, and all the Transits were full, so they had to walk to the swoop seller. Obi-Wan didn't mind. It gave him a chance to get a feeling of the streets. He reached out to the Force and received nothing alarming back.
"My son-in-law is an idiot."
"That's not exactly the kind of information I had in mind," Obi-Wan said mildly.
Didi sighed. "You'd think Astri would have more sense. Did I raise her to fall for the first tall, handsome idiot who walked through my door? I did not! Is it my fault she picked such a stiff-necked, rule-following, small-spirited, mid-Rim, mid-minded, puffed-up bonehead?"
"Well, at least he's not a criminal," Obi-Wan said. "Maybe Astri wanted a quieter life. Maybe she was tired of dealing with a rule-breaking, truth-stretching, scam-running scoundrel of a father."
"So it is my fault," Didi sniffed.
"Astri has always made her own choices, Didi. And they are hers to make. Now, you said you had insider news on the Games."
"Bog thinks that by serving on the Council for the Games, he'll get the backing of some important beings in the Senate, and that he'll be a.s.signed important committee a.s.signments. All he does is talk, talk, talk about how important his role is and what it will mean for his future."
Didi mimicked a snore. "Honestly, I don't know how Astri stands it. His big job has been arranging the seating for some big-shot Senators. Hoo diggety-hoo. "
"Didi, you said you had information," Obi-Wan said. "This is complaining."
"I have plenty of information," Didi said. "How can I not? Bog never stops talking. But he never says anything worth listening to. Oh, look, here we are." Didi paused in front of a shop with closed durasteel shutters.
"It doesn't look open," Obi-Wan observed.
"Oh, it is. The seller just doesn't want to attract too many customers."
"Really. That doesn't sound typical."
"It's a very exclusive shop." Didi turned to him. "Remember, you don't have to say anything. Just stand there and give that Jedi-ish look."
"I think I can manage it," Obi-Wan said dryly. "Tell me something, Didi. If you want to return a swoop, shouldn't you have brought it with you?"
"I can fetch it in moments. No need to worry."
Didi rapped a rhythmic knock on the door. Several seconds later the door slid open. Obi-Wan realized that the pause of the few seconds meant that they had just undergone some sort of security check. Was the shop-owner concerned about vandalism or theft? It was possible, since Eusebus was crowded with strangers.
But the security measures seemed excessive for a swoop seller. Obi-Wan stepped into the dim interior, fully aware that Didi could be leading him into his usual swamp of deception. Didi didn't so much lie as leave crucial pieces of information out.
You owe me one, Qui-Gon.
"Good afternoon, good afternoon," Didi said to a ma.s.sive creature who suddenly loomed out of the shadows in the shop. The being was two meters taller than Obi-Wan. Each fifteen-fingered hand was the size of a bantha haunch.
There were six swoops parked in a random fas.h.i.+on around the open s.p.a.ce. There were no other customers and no sign of business that Obi-Wan could see.
"You may remember me," Didi said. "Didi Oddo. I was in yesterday."
The ma.s.sive creature said nothing, just watched Didi with flat eyes.
"Then again, you may not," Didi said nervously. "This is my very good friend, the great Jedi Knight, Obi-Wan Ken.o.bi. Obi-Wan, this is the swoop seller, Uso Yso."
The creature did not s.h.i.+ft his gaze from Didi's face.
"Obviously you are a creature of action and I should get right to the point," Didi said. "The swoop I bought yesterday... I have changed my mind. "
A flicker of alertness lit Uso Yso's opaque gaze.
"I would like my money back," Didi said, trying to sound forceful.
"The swoop is not... not what I expected. No doubt I will return another day to buy a... different swoop, but not this one."
Finally, Uso Yso spoke. "No."
Didi took a delicate step backward. "One moment."
He leaned back and whispered to Obi-Wan. "Can't you draw your lightsaber or Jedi-move something? You don't have to kill him."
"No," Obi-Wan said.
"A deal is a deal," Uso Yso said, crossing his huge arms. "You are insulting me with your presence. I do not like to be insulted."
"Ah, no insult intended. None at all," Didi said rapidly. "Just a polite request. Surely there beats a heart underneath that . ah, magnificent physique."
"Two hearts, actually," Uso Yso said. He withdrew an electro-jabber from his belt. "Would you like to continue the argument?"
Didi froze, staring at the weapon. He took another step back. "No argument. Just a thought. Such a pleasant afternoon. We must be going."
Didi almost ran from the shop. Obi-Wan followed. The door slid shut behind them, and Obi-Wan turned to Didi disgustedly.
"That was no swoop seller," he accused him.
"An unusual type, yes," Didi said. "Most helpful. Well, it's been such an unexpected pleasurable experience to see you, my friend, but I must be going - "
Obi-Wan stepped into his path. "Explain."
"Most happy to oblige, Obi-Wan," Didi said. "It is possible that the swoop seller might have an additional business."
"Ah," Obi-Wan said.
"Perhaps he sells swoops - I am sure he does, in fact, a few here and there - but that was not my business with him," Didi said evasively.
His eyes darted about as if trying to find an escape route.
"Your business with him was?" Obi-Wan asked.
"A small bet," Didi said. He held up his hands as Obi-Wan glowered at him. "Such a tiny bet! On one of the events. Even the Jedi must realize that such an opportunity exists here on Euceron and there will be many who wish to place a wager."
"Certainly we realize that," Obi-Wan said. "It is also illegal. The Senate has banned gambling on the Galactic Games, and for good reason. It attracts criminals." He underlined the last word, giving Didi a sharp glance.
Didi nodded, frowning. "True. It would attract the wrong sort.
Unlike me, who only places a bet now and again for the fun of it."
Obi-Wan sighed. "So why did you try to get your money back?"
"I was too impulsive," Didi confessed. "One of my faults, along with my generosity, that gets me into trouble. I made a wager and then my guilt overwhelmed me."
"Since when have you felt guilty about breaking the law?"
"I prefer to think I bend it, Obi-Wan. But that's not what caused my great guilt. It is because the credits I used were not mine."
"Whose were they?" Obi-Wan sensed he was nearing the real story at last.
"Bog and Astri's." Didi hung his head. "It was wrong. You cannot reproach me more than I have reproached myself. But they have a little wealth hidden away for some land Bog wishes to purchase, and this purchase will not be made for some time. The credits were just lying there! Such a waste. I a.s.sumed I could take the credits, make the bet, collect my winnings, and return the credits I borrowed without Astri knowing."
"And what if you lost?"
"I had such a sure tip, I did not think it possible."
Obi-Wan tapped a finger on his belt. Drawing information out of Didi was like trying to siphon water from sand. "If it is such a sure thing, why do you want your money back?"
"My guilt happened!" Didi said, his brown eyes wide. "I can't do that to Astri."
"And you also discovered that Bog and Astri would need the credits sooner than you thought," Obi-Wan guessed.
"Well, they happened to meet the owner of the land they want to buy here at the Games, and he is willing to sell at last..."
"So they will find the credits missing." Obi-Wan sighed. "There is only one thing to do. Confess what you've done to Astri. She will forgive you. She always does."
"Yes, doesn't she? That is a good idea, my friend. That is exactly what I will do."
Obi-Wan knew perfectly well that Didi would do nothing of the kind.
"And do not involve me any further in your schemes," he said sternly.
"You are on your own from now on. You cannot use the Jedi Order to threaten others."