This book consists of two stories, the eponymous Honor and Duty taking up the most of it. In an odd (probably marketing-related) choice, the cover of the book features Darth Vader, who only appears in the second story and is hardly prominent enough to deserve such a placement, though Anakin Skywalker is still around in the main body of Honor and Duty. Set before the Clone Wars, this story revolves around an important vote in the senate (ah, more prequel era politics! Riveting, isn’t it?) and the assassinations of senators whose votes are expected to go the wrong way. One of them is killed right off the bat to get the ball rolling, after which his murder is being investigated by the Senate Guard, the person leading said investigation is guardsman Sagoro Autem, the protagonist of this book. To protect Simon Greyshade, the replacement of the dead senator, two Jedi are brought in: Obi-wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker. We follow the efforts of both as they try to get to the bottom of the assassination plot.
Some spoilers to follow.
Sagoro Autem has a complicated and difficult family situation. His marriage seems happy enough, but his children are causing him trouble and his brother is a criminal who betrayed the Senate Guard. His children are caught at an illegal sporting even, pit diving (something imperial agent Jahan Cross apparently practiced himself! the pieces are all coming together, somehow…), leading to resentment and a subplot about one his son’s friends getting arrested. Meanwhile this brother, Venco, turns up to announce he’s dying. Attempts at reconciliation are rejected however, as Sagoro Autem is a hard-ass as both father and brother, apparently.
Of course, since the story only has three issues in which to be told, none of the characters may be wasted. Venco Autem is the assassin after Greyshade, obviously. This is no secret or mystery. He manipulates his nephew into helping him with the attempt, making him an accomplice, which eventually leads to the whole family falling apart and really, Sagoro has no one but himself to blame for alienating them all.
The two brothers on opposite sides reminds me a little of Ostrander’s absolutely amazing DC western The Kents, but with only three issues to tell the story, there’s hardly room to explore the family tension. In the pages of The Kents, one brother consistently made all the wrong decisions in life, but here both have gone down paths they should’ve avoided. The irony here is that the villain is once again completely correct: the Republic is corrupt, the Republic is an unwieldy behemoth, slowly dying. Venco is speaking the truth when mocking Simon Greyshade:
“This maggot sold himself to me and then tried to resell himself to a higher bidder! And they’re all like that in this chamber! And that’s what you would die to protect?! That’s what you will kill your own brother to defend?”
Sagoro speaks nobly of defending not the people running the Republic but the ideals it stands for, yet only a few pages later his tune has changed:
“The Republic’s not worth it. Maybe it never was.”
Maybe it was, a long, long time ago. But in your lifetime, Autem? No. He takes the fall for his son and allows himself to be arrested.
The second story, Loyalties, is set after the Clone Wars, following the same Sagoro Autem, now an officer in the newly formed Empire, standing in a crowd of people who have the dubious honour of being among the first to meet Darth Vader. As his introduction, Lord Vader kills Jace Dallin, one of the storytellers from a previous book (The Stark Hyperspace War, recognizable by the scar he received there), establishing the long tradition of Imperial officers being executed on the spot. Poor guy, the man was a war hero in several wars and died simply for talking out of turn to the wrong man.
Loyalties is only a single issue long and pretty inconsequential. Moreover, I can’t figure out why Darth Vader personally pursued Autem, his importance or the reason he was on the Imperial purge list is never explained. The Emperor even reprimands Vader for making him more important than he is, so maybe Vader was just being overzealous? Another point of contention: Vader can tell if people are lying to him, right? Then why does he not call out “Evan Hessler” for his lie when questioned on why he wears a mask? The issue was probably a bit of a rushed job. Looking at the artwork for both it and the previous one, that seems to hold true. After getting spoiled by so many of Ostrander’s Star Wars books being drawn by Jan Duursema, this rougher work seems jarring. in Honor and Duty there’s even a panel where a person has their eyes open, but the eyes have been filled in with the same colour as her skin. They can’t all be winners, I guess.