USH'S STAR WARS GAME- CAMPAIGN II EPISODE VI (LIGHT SIDE)- Missing Links

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Can Gallagher talk to Master Korth? After his encounters on Mandragos and Thalos with the Dark Side, Gallagher is nervous about what is likely to bring them into further contact with it. He is concerned about how he himself will handle it.

He also wants to see how D'an feels about things- how Saar was detained, what he thinks of the Bureau, how he feels about the group going to talk to Saar.

Okay I am satisfied that for now, the Bureau is a great little niche operation that is an excellent aid to any force throughout the Republic. Most especially the Jedi.

Korth says that conquering your past is an essential part of your understanding of the Force. It didn't end with Sienar's death- it will likely never end. You should see Saar as an opportunity, not a worry.

D'an can't think of any better solution- what else could be done with a monster like Saar?

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Elzair didn't really have any objection to Saar's plan because his reasons for it seemed good- he just wanted a look. She wasn't meant to stick with him when he went to check things out but she heard a noise and went to investigate, worried about him. That's when she saw him kill the guard. The alarm was raised by that point and if he hadn't needed to escape, she guesses he would have killed her as well.

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They've barely encountered the Bureau, Xeth, so they have no opinion.

How did he kill the guard?

Did she find out afterward if anything had gone missing from Lennah's collection?

He throttled him.

Well she knows something was, but she was out of a job after that, and Lennah took it up from there.

Did Saar ever mention that he was working with others? Or what he planned to do if he "found" what he was looking for in Lennah's collection?

Well, he said he was planning to repatriate it, but she knows in retrospect that wasn't true.

Unfortunately.

Did he mention anything in particular that he was looking for, or did he keep everything veiled under that lie?

No- Saar was an exceptionally careful speaker. He constructed a fiction when talking to her and never deviated from its internal logic for one moment. He was entirely different from the Saar she saw later at the trial.

What was he like at the trial?

"Silent," she says. "He offered no defence., He just sat and watched the entire time through- until the very end, after he was sentenced."

"How did he react to his sentence?" Jelena asks.

"He didn't change hos composure at all. He just stood up, and spoke. He didn't sound angry. He spoke very matter-of-factly."

"What did he say?" Jelena asks.

"He said he was going to kill everyone there. Everyone responsible for that day. The lawyers, the judge, the clerks, the jury. The witnesses. Everyone."

Jelena raises an eyebrow at that.

"A rather bold claim to make when you're on your way to prison, likely for the rest of your life," Jelena says.

"But he meant it," she says. "And there's no stopping it. He knew it would come true."

"What makes you so sure?" Jelena asks.

"Isn't that what you people can do? You see the future. He wasn't asking a threat. He was stating a certainty."

She downs her drink- some equivalent of tea.

"All I can do is enjoy what time is left."

"We can glimpse into the future, yes," Jelena says. "But it is not always a certainty. The future is always in motion. I don't think you have much to fear from Alik Saar."