more rugged than earlier models,' Tarkin said with some irritation.
'Would you trust them to carry out a complicated battle plan on their own?'
'I might,' Tarkin said, sucking in his cheeks as he stared down the ranks of weapons and delivery vehicles. 'I must say, Raith, I don't prize complete independence as much as you seem to. The Neimoidians gave central control a bad name. The controllers on this ship are quite competent and flexible. Zonama Sekot is only lightly populated, as you well know. It is mostly forest. These should be more than sufficient.'
'Be honest with me,' Sienar said, stepping closer to his old classmate. 'For both our sakes. If Zonama Sekot were a pushover, as planets go, we could make do with a small expeditionary force. This squadron seems at once too much and perhaps too little, and that worries me.'
'It is the best I can put together. The Trade Federation squadrons are being handed over to Republic control day by day, and this is all that they could hold aside.'
'Perhaps it is the best you can persuade them to send, with your rank and the quality of your contacts,' Sienar said.
Tarkin gave him a surprised, mock-hurt look, and then chuckled. 'Perhaps you're right,' he said. 'When did a military man ever have everything his way? It's what you do with what you have that wins wars. We would both have preferred to design and build our own force, using more imaginative strategic thinking. But the Trade Federation has suffered from this economic downturn as much as the Republic has. A veritable swarm of petty villains have moved in with their old freighters to run the most lucrative goods illegally between systems. Fighting them and reclaiming trade routes and privileges was a matter of life and death for the Trade Federation. Now the Republic will have to police the trade lanes. And the Republic's armaments are, if anything, even sorrier. Frankly, I was lucky to procure even this.'
'Spare me the weepy details,' Sienar said coldly. 'You have put me in charge rather than go yourself, though you are the more experienced in battle tactics. Failure of this mission will taint the commander-will taint me- irrevocably.'
'Now who is engaging in weepy details?' Tarkin asked, even more coldly. 'Raith, for a decade you have sequestered yourself with your collections, executing small contracts, trying to promote a strategy of small, elegant weapon design long out of fashion, complaining bitterly about lost opportunities and unimaginative buyers. During that time, I have been working my way up a very long ladder. We must make do with what we have. I chose you. . because you are nearly my equal in tactics, and you will understand Zonama Sekot's factories better than I ever could.'
Sienar regarded Tarkin narrowly. The two were breathing slightly faster, as if they might go after each other with fingernails and fists at any moment.
But that was not likely. They were gentlemen of military bearing and training, of the old school. Their dignity, at least would not crumble under this pressure, even if other dustings of honor had long since been swept away.
'I swear, you've pushed me into this deliberately,' Sienar said quietly, breaking their gaze in a way that showed such a contest was beneath him. 'Looking at this equipment, I'm not at all sure of your motives.'
'There you go again,' Tarkin said, trying for a tone of amusement. 'You have a large-capacity and heavily armored flagship with three landers, and three utility vessels-a Taxon-class probe ship, a fleet diplomatic boat that can double as a decoy, and a mobile astromech repair station. Battle droids, sky mines. . Your squadron is more than sufficient to accomplish our mission.'
'And you'll be in just the right place to repair any damage my failure might cause?' Sienar asked.
'I am staying on Coruscant to support the effort politically. That is likely to be far more difficult than conquering a jungle planet.' Tarkin shook his head. 'We both of us have far to go up the ladders of this new way of life that is coming. You, my friend, need opportunities to shine. So I give this job to you, not without ulterior motives, to be sure. I am certain you will not fail. Now.' He drew himself up. 'I must return to Coruscant. Ah, here is Captain Kett.'
The captain of the Admiral Korvin approached Sienar and bowed his head quickly before speaking. 'We are to leave orbit in twenty minutes, Commander. There is one last load of weapons to take aboard. Droid starfighters, I believe. They will be stowed in ten minutes.' The adjutant glanced at Tarkin with a flicker of recognition.
'There, Raith,' Tarkin said. 'More than I hoped for. If you can't win this planet with droid starfighters. . Well.'
Sienar acknowledged Kett's message with a curt twist of his head. 'Allow me to escort you to the transport deck,' he said to Tarkin.
'No need,' Tarkin said.
'I insist,' Sienar told him. 'It is the way things are done on my ship.'
And it would also insure that Tarkin had no time to make last personal arrangements with any secret cadre inside the cruiser. Suspecting as much was churlish, to be sure, but this was rapidly becoming an age of churls.
Sienar felt very much out of place in this age, and on his own flagship.
He would have to do something about that, and quickly.
Chapter16
'Your ship is recognized,' the voice of orbital control from Zonama Sekot said-masculine and probably human, Obi-Wan judged. 'You have registered as an authorized client transport vessel. Yet the account of your last delivered client is in doubt.'
Charza Kwinn seemed to be cleaning his bristles before he spoke. He drew himself up to the full height of the cabin bulkhead, and a shower of food-kin spilled off him. Anakin shielded his face as they clattered and leapt around the cabin.
Obi-Wan did not shield his face and received a fair-size pink shell square across the lips.
'Apologies,' Charza murmured. Then he switched on the return link. 'This is Charza Kwinn, registered owner of Star Sea Flower. I do not recall personally guaranteeing client accounts.'