âExcellent, Master Durron!â he boomed. âI will commit fleet resources to this, including interdictor shipsâenough to assure that this so-called fleet canât escape! Fifteen squadrons of starfighters! Three squadrons of capital shipsâweâll outnumber the enemy three to one!â He held up a white-furred hand and then drew the fingers together, as if capturing an enemy fleet in his fist. âAnd then weâll sit above the enemy and obliterate their capital from orbit.â
Jacen felt a mental hesitation from every Jedi in the room. Even Kyp Durronâs face reflected uncertainty.
Tahiriâs voice piped up instantly. âWhat about civilian casualties?â
Kreâfey made a deprecatory gesture. âThe population of Ylesia is very scattered,â he said. âThe civilians were slaves of the Hutts, working in glitterstim packing plants scattered over the countryside, and now theyâre slaves of the Vongâor of the Peace Brigade, itâs hard to say which. The town the Peace Brigaders are using as their capital used to be called Colony One, but now itâs Peace City, and there are few slaves there. Most of the cityâs inhabitants are collaborators, and theyâre guilty by definition.â
Kyp Durron gave a solemn glance to his datapad. âThe latest reports have slave barracks all over Colony One. Theyâre constructing palaces for the leaders of the Peace Brigade, and a building to house their Senate.â He paused. âAnd they were excavating one very large shelter, just in case someone tried orbital bombardment.â
âDestruction would be awfully random,â Tahiri said.
Kreâfey nodded, then stepped toward her and looked at her with what seemed to be great respect. âI esteem the Jedi traditions of compassion for the innocent, and of precise personal combat with an enemy,â he said. âBut my own people donât have your training. It would be too great a danger to send them to the planet to sort out the innocent from the guilty, and I donât want to lose good troops in a ground fight when I could accomplish the mission from orbit in safety.â Kreâfey turned to Kyp. âAll that shelter would require is increased firepower, and then we get
all
of them in one go.â His eyes traveled from one Jedi to the next. âRemember who weâre dealing with. They destroyed entire worlds by seeding alien life-forms from orbit. Just think what they did to Ithor. What weâre doing is merciful by comparison.â He shook his head sadly. âAnd those slaves would be dead anyway, within a year or two, just from overwork.â
Jacen could see the logic in Kreâfeyâs argumentâand he had to admire a powerful, important fleet admiral who would bother to engage in a serious debate with a fifteen-year-oldâbut he could also see the reverse of Kreâfeyâs position. Killing civilians was something
the enemy
did. The fact that the civilians were slaves made their deaths even more unjustâthe New Republic forces should be
liberating
the slaves, so that even if the Hutts returned they would have no workers for their wretched factories . . .
âLetâs capture the government instead,â Jacen said, the idea occurring to him even as he spoke it aloud.
Kreâfey looked at him in surprise. âJacen?â he said.
Jacen turned his face up to Kreâfey. âIf we
captured
the Brigadersâ government, and put them on trial and exiled them to some prison planet, wouldnât that be more of a propaganda coup than simply bombing them?â He forced a smile. âTheyâll all be in one shelter, right? As you say, that should make it easy.â
âJacen has a point,â Kyp said, from over Kreâfeyâs shoulder. âIf we destroy Peace City, we make an announcement and then itâs forgotten. But if we put the traitors on trial, that