One pair of eyes was not closed; one heart beat not slow, steady. He was sleeping on a cot, outside the makeshift library that had been designated for the wealth of books retrieved from the Iron City.
Tobal lay looking up at the stars. Back on solid ground, finally. The Iron City had been solid, but the concept of floating about in the stars was not one that appealed to this man. With a mutter Tobal turned, to rest on his side. The cot was far from comfortable. It was the right length, but it had no width to it. His arms continued to fall off, and dragging his blanket with them.
A sight of frustration escaped his lips, and he stood. The moonlight bathed the rooftops with an unnatural blue glow. This moon was not a normal red, it was almost white; and the brightness bothered him.
Was not much he could do about it though, couldn’t change the past, or a moon’s color. Tobal moved into the library, almost ghosting. Books were piled in towers everywhere, a futile attempt at order. Vyktor and Dak had been going through the volumes one by one, each marveling at the words contained there in. Tobal was left out in this, for the gift of reading had not been bestowed upon him.
Navigating his way through the spires of paper, Tobal finally found the center of the library. Here a tall iron box with three locks stood, three bands of durasteel holding it shut. Tobal reached out, and touched the box experimentally. Vyktor had worked the box over several times, testing it for any weak spots; neither Vyktor nor Dak wished anyone to be taking what was held inside.
Tobal frowned, as he held one of the locks. It was large, with two fingerprint scanners and three tranquilizer dart holes. Vyktor said that if the lock was fiddled with twice, the darts would go off, thus knocking out whoever was messing with it. Carefully allowing the lock to drop back into place, Tobal walked around to the back of the box. Here there were no locks, simply three durasteel bands.
He knew what was in here, five holocrons to be exact. Dak and Vyktor had managed to get one to operate. They seemed frustrated with the other four however. Holocrons, ancient Jedi “diaries” of a sort. Dak had said that sometimes a Jedi would record a holocron as a teaching tool for when the Jedi was long dead. Perhaps one of these holocrons could teach Tobal to read, so that he could study the books with the other Shadow Jedi.