Page 6 of The School of Fear


  "Reymet keeps dropping hints," Ferus said without waiting for Anakin

  to speak. "He says he knows something about some secret goings-on at the

  school. He even has hinted that it has something to do with Gillam's

  disappearance. I know he's trying to impress me, but I still think he knows

  something. Maybe about the secret squad. If we could infiltrate it, we'd

  finally have something to tell Obi-Wan."

  "I did infiltrate it," Anakin said.

  Ferus looked startled. "Why didn't you tell me?"

  "You didn't give me a chance," Anakin said. As usual, Ferus got under

  his skin. "It just happened today."

  "How? Who is it? This is great news," Ferus said approvingly.

  Anakin wasn't sure what annoyed him more - Ferus's lack of envy at his

  progress, or the way his approval sounded just a bit condescending, as

  though Ferus was his Master.

  "I was approached by Marit Dice," Anakin said. "She and her friends

  are all scholarship students here at the school. That's the key. They feel

  that they won't be treated fairly when it comes to positions after

  graduation, so they decided to strike out on their own. The school doesn't

  help them. They only help the sons and daughters of the important people."

  "Sounds like an excuse to me," Ferus said.

  "No," Anakin said, annoyed. "I'm sure it's true. Haven't you noticed

  that the other students don't talk to the scholarship students?"

  "Not really," Ferus said. "After all, I talk to Reymet." "Only because

  you have to."

  Ferus sighed. "So they picked you because you're a scholarship

  student."

  "They picked me because they thought they could trust me," Anakin

  said. "I don't have a reputation as a snob."

  If Ferus felt the sting of Anakin's remark, he didn't show it. "Did

  they say anything about Gillam? Do you know if he was in the squad?"

  "They didn't say a word about Gillam," Anakin said. "That's strange,"

  Ferus said. "It's all everyone else at school talks about."

  "They have more important things on their minds," Anakin said.

  "Is Marit the leader?"

  Anakin gave this some thought. "She did most of the talking. But I

  didn't get the feeling that she was the leader. They say they vote on

  everything."

  "Do you know if they're going out on an assignment?" Ferus asked.

  Anakin shook his head. "Not yet I'll find out."

  Ferus frowned. "So do you think there's a connection? And if there is,

  what could it be?"

  "I don't know," Anakin said. "I can't imagine them kidnapping a fellow

  student. They seem straightforward. They take on good causes. They're

  almost like Jedi, in a way. Think about it, Ferus. Can you imagine being

  able to pick and choose your own missions?"

  Ferus looked at him curiously. "No. That's why we have the Council."

  "But if we didn't, we could use our skills on missions that we decided

  were important."

  "If we didn't have the Council, we wouldn't be Jedi." Ferus gave him

  the severe look that always got under his skin.

  Anakin decided to change the subject. "Do you know anything about the

  planet Tierell?"

  "There was a coup there. It was a repressive government. The leader

  was assassinated two weeks ago. The rebels are now in charge. Why?"

  "The squad said they were involved," Anakin said. "In an

  assassination? Do you call that a good cause?"

  "I didn't say that they assassinated the leader,"

  Anakin argued. "I just said they were involved." "Anakin, they are

  mercenaries," Ferus said, exasperated. "What exactly do you think they do?"

  "Not cold-blooded murder," Anakin said decidedly. "You've made a lot

  of conclusions considering you just met them," Ferus said.

  "It's an instinct," Anakin said. "That doesn't mean they can't be

  hiding something. I'm not totally in their confidence yet. I need to gain

  their trust."

  Ferus nodded slowly. "I agree. But be careful."

  Anakin said good-bye and was halfway down the hall before he wondered

  what exactly Ferus wanted him to be careful of.

  The secret squad had a secret signal, of course. Many of the students

  had holographic displays outside their doors. When a hologram of a detailed

  topographical map of Marit's homeworld of Hali was outside her door, a

  meeting was scheduled. If the moons of Hali were shown, the meeting was in

  the free evening hours. If the three suns were shown, the meeting would

  take place before the morning meal.

  They met almost every day. Anakin was surprised at the number of

  proposals for help they received, from groups and individuals all over the

  galaxy. The squad had only been in operation for six months, and the word

  of mouth had spread. Rolai received the requests on a datapad Ze had

  tweaked so that the routing system was too complicated to trace. Credits

  were deposited in a secret account in an Andoran bank known for discretion.

  Anakin admired the group's professionalism. They discussed the proposals

  seriously, and he was impressed at Marit's knowledge of galactic politics

  and history. It was obvious that they needed a mission soon, for their

  treasury was low and they needed supplies.

  Anakin was heading to his last class when he saw the signal for an

  evening meeting. As soon as the free period began, he headed for a

  storeroom located near the students' rooms. The storeroom wasn't used at

  such hours and they did not have to pass through security checkpoints to

  get to it from their rooms. It was a private place to meet.

  He slipped inside the room to find the others waiting. He got the

  sense that they had been talking before he entered. "Do we have a proposal?

  " he asked, sitting down on the floor next to Hurana.

  "No," Rolai said. "It's just a general meeting. Anybody have anything?

  "

  "Just stuff we can't afford," Ze said. "I haven't wanted to bring this

  up, but we've got to upgrade our comlinks. We've got to get some

  holographic capabilities pretty soon. And if we don't up-tech the drivers,

  we'll be blasting static when we go past the Core. I have an idea how I can

  do a basic upgrade without dipping into the treasury, but it's going to be

  complicated." Ze launched into a highly technical discussion that obviously

  left the rest of the squad behind.

  "So if I patch into the C-board here and steal some juice from the

  circuit, I can maybe extend the range from meta to mega if the systems

  don't chatter and I don't pulverize the school mainframe," Ze concluded

  cheerfully.

  "Affirmatively good work, Ze-tech." Tulah nodded his head in approval,

  but it was obvious he hadn't a clue as to what Ze was talking about. By the

  looks on the faces of the rest, they felt the same.

  "Don't forget to bypass the transit sensor when you patch," Anakin

  said. "Otherwise you'll end up with a cinder instead of a comlink."

  "An excellent point," Ze said, impressed.

  "I was going to say that transit thing," Tulah said. "I mean, I would

  have if I'd known what Ze was talking about.

  Marit gave Anakin a sidelong look. "You know comm systems?"

  "Some," Anakin said. As a slave at Watto's shop
, he had learned how to

  fix anything. He had kept up the hobby as a Jedi student. "I know droid

  circuits better."

  "That's good, because we might be in the market for an astromech,"

  Tulah said. "Love those little guys. Hurana has been shopping for a couple

  of used A-6 interceptors, and a couple of astromechs are key. By the way,

  we really need to get some starfighters soon. This hitching rides on

  freighters has got to stop."

  "I agree," Rolai said. "They're slow."

  "Right. But what I really meant was, the food is terrible," Tulah

  said. "Bleh."

  "What's the weapon capability of the interceptors?" Rolai asked

  Hurana.

  "Turbolaser cannons, very sweet," Hurana said. "Both ships are in good

  shape. The only problem is that one of them has a tendency to cut out

  during dives."

  "That could be a minor inconvenience," Tulah said. "Remind me to fly

  in the other one."

  Everyone laughed, but Anakin noted how their intent looks never

  changed. He was impressed with their focus.

  "I've gone on a couple of test flights and it's a pretty consistent

  problem," Hurana admitted. "Last time I came within twenty meters of

  complete annihilation on the p