course,” he said. “Sorry, pal.”
“Is that your daughter?” Vrath asked, nodding at Arra.
“Yes,” Zeerid answered, and the hint of a smile curled his lips.
“She seems very happy,” Vrath said. “Have a great day, sir.”
Vrath walked past Zeerid and fell in with the runners, bikers, and other sentients using the park. As he did, he chided himself for taking his eyes off Zeerid. The man clearly had a nose for trouble.
ZEERID TURNED TO WATCH the man walk away. Something about him felt off, but Zeerid could not quite put his finger on it. He’d seemed overly interested in Arra and Nat, and he’d had a coldness to his eyes, despite the stupid grin.
“Daddy! It’s melting!”
Arra steered the chair over to him and he handed over the sweet ice, wiping his hands clean on his jacket.
“Thank you,” she said and took a bite. “Mmm. Deeeeeeelicious!”
He smiled at her, and when he looked back, he could not spot the man anywhere.
“Who was that?” Nat asked when she walked over.
Zeerid absently offered Nat the other sweet ice, still looking in the direction the man had walked. “I don’t know. Nobody.”
Nat must have picked up on Zeerid’s concerns. “Are you sure?”
“Yes,” he said, and forced a smile. “I’m sure.”
Only he wasn’t.
“I think I’ll walk you both home, okay?”
“Hooray!” Arra said.
“What is it?” Nat asked. She still had not taken the sweet ice.
“Nothing,” he said, not wanting to alarm her. “Can’t I walk my girls to their door?”
“I’m not walking,” Arra said, grinning. “I’m flying.”
ARYN’S RAVEN CAME OUT of hyperspace. She’d left her robes and her regrets back on Alderaan.
“Straight on to Vulta, Tee-six.”
The astromech took over the flying and the Raven knifed through space. Vulta appeared through the canopy, a lone planet circling its star. The sun’s light glinted off the many artificial satellites in orbit and the space traffic moving to and from the planet.
“Ping planetary control with our official Republic credentials,” she said to T6. “Request a pad at the Yinta Lake spaceport.”
The droid whistled an affirmative.
Aryn would soon know if her absence had been noted. If so, her credentials would probably be no good.
T6 gave a satisfied series of beeps as landing instructions scrolled across Aryn’s HUD.
“Take us down, Tee-six. And also link into the planetary directory and find me an address for Zeerid Korr.”
She had not seen Zeerid in years. He could be dead. Or he might be unwilling to help her. They’d been good friends: Aryn had been the only person Zeerid had told about his wife’s death before he’d mustered out. Aryn had helped him come through the initial shock. And she could still feel the intense grief, the despair he’d endured upon hearing the news. It was similar to what she’d felt when Master Zallow had died. Zeerid had been grateful for her sympathetic ear, she knew. But she was going to be asking him for a lot.
T6 beeped a negative. No Zeerid Korr in the directory.
Aryn clenched a fist as the planet grew larger.
“His wife had a sister. Natala … something. Natala … Yooms. Try her, Tee-six.”
In moments T6 had an address. She lived near the lakeshore in Yinta Lake and had legal guardianship over a nine-year-old girl named Arra Yooms.
“Arra?”
Aryn knew Arra was the name of Zeerid’s daughter. If Natala had custody of the girl, then Zeerid could very well be dead. Her plan began to crumble. She had no one else to whom she could turn. If Zeerid was dead, then so, too, was her opportunity to avenge Master Zallow.
She had no choice but to try. She did not know how she could get through the Imperial blockade at Coruscant without help.
The Raven descended through the atmosphere in a shroud of heat and flame. When she emerged into the blue sky of Vulta’s stratosphere, she could see below them the large blue oval of Lake Yinta and the ring of urbanism that surrounded it.
T6 put them into the flow of the sky traffic, and they headed for their landing pad in Yinta Lake. From there, she’d find Natala.
ZEERID FELT LIKE A FATHER as he walked Nat and Arra back to their apartment near the lake. He felt like a failure when he saw what a hole it was. They lived in one of the mansions converted to subsidized housing by the planetary authority. Rust, broken glass, chipped stone, addicts, and drunks seemed omnipresent.
“It looks worse than it is,” Nat said to him, softly enough that Arra could not hear.
Zeerid nodded.
“Did you hear what happened on