Part 7 (1/2)
”No one knows how to do the impossible,” Q9 said, rather tartly.
”They do seem to have a talent for trouble,” Ebrihim conceded.
”That,” said Q9, ”is one of the great understatements of all time.”
Jaina, Jacen, and Anakin lay flat on their backs in their beds, cooped up in one of the Falcon's tiny cabins. They were all properly belted in, doing their best to lie still and behave. At least the twins were doing their best.
Anakin was having a bit more trouble repressing the impulse to squirm and fidget.
”Gotta get up,” he announced.
”No, you don't,” Jacen said, more than a little tired of being in charge of his little brother. He and Jaina were taking turns being responsible for him. In another ten minutes Anakin would be her problem, and for that, Jacen was thankful.
”I need to get up,” Anakin said again.
”Why?” Jacen asked, calling his kid brother's bluff.
”What is it you need?” He knew perfectly well that what Anakin really had in mind was rus.h.i.+ng to the Falcon's cabin to help push the b.u.t.tons. Of course, the scary thing was that he'd probably push all the ght b.u.t.tons.
Anakin's skill with electronics and machinery was more than a little disconcerting, even to Jacen. It was like Anakin's Force skills had taken some sort of weird hard left turn. But, all that being said, ”probably” wasn't good enough on a s.p.a.ces.h.i.+spedally one as wonked out as the Falcon usually, was.
”Well, urn, I gotta”And don't tell me it's the bathroom,” Jacen said, guessing what was going to come next. ”You just went.”
”Oh, yeah,” said Anakin. ”Well, urn, I gotta get up and-and-find my bookchip. I need it to read.”
”Oh, brother,” Jaina said. ”How dumb does he think we are?
Jacen, did we used to do this?”
”We must have,” Jacen said. ”I just hope we were better at it.”
”Better at what?” Anakin demanded. ”What?”
”Being sneaky,” Jaina said. ”If you're going to tell a fib, at least think up the whole thing before you start.
No one believes you when you stop halfway through like that. And besides, the bookchip is a really bad excuse.
You can barely read yet.”
”I know my letters and numbers.”
”But you can't read a whole book to yourself yet, can you?”
”Almost,” said Anakin, but even he seemed to realize he wasn't very convincing. ”But I still need to get up.”
Jacen let out a sigh. ”Anakin, you can't go to the c.o.c.kpit.
Period. That's it. If we let you go, Chewbacca would just throw you right back out, and you'd be in trouble and we'd be in trouble, and it all would be for nothing.”
”Well, okay,” Anakin said. ”But would it be okay if I just got up and looked for my bookchip?”
”Na You can't get up. None of us can. The grown-ups are all busy, and we can't interrupt them, and we can't be wandering around, in case the Falcon hits a b.u.mp. I can't get up, you can't get up, no one can get up until Ebrihim says we can. All right?”
”All right.” Anakin said, his voice turning sulky. ”But can I just- ”.
”No!” Jacen said. ”Just lie still and be quiet” He waited a minute to see what his little brother would do next. It would either be a tantrum or a sullen silence with occasional mutterings about the injustice of the universe. Jacen devoutly hoped for the latter. It was a lot quieter.
After a minute's silence he heard mumbling from the bunk below his, and breathed a sigh of relief. Now the trick was to be quiet until Anakin forgot he was mad, or else Anakin would get mad all over again that he had to be quiet while the other kids could talk.
Not for the first time in the last few days, Jacen found himself beginning to appreciate just how much his parents had to put up with.
He and Jaina had been forced to do a lot of growing up in the last few days. The escape from Corona House had been chaotic and terriying, and the flight to Drall had seemed to have consisted of terror, tension, tedium, and low comedy. The terror had come early, when the Corellian PPBs had attacked them and done some damage before Chewbacca could shoot them down. The tension had come in waiting to see if Chewbacca's improvised repairs would hold together long enough to get them to Drallr anyplace at all, even at the minimum power levels that were all the Wookiee was willig to risk. Thdium barely described the long dull days it took to get to Drall. As for the low comedy-well, it came along more or less automatically whenever Chewbacca, Q9, and Anakin were in the same compartment.
It didn't help matters that no one had had a chance to pack anything in the frantic rush to escape the havoc on Corellia Each of them had exactly two sets of clothe whatever they had happened to be wearing at the moment the attack started, and one set of cut-down s.h.i.+p's coveralls each, scrounged from whatever their parents had happened to leave on board. Q9 had proved surprisingly skillful in cutting children's clothes out of adult ones, but the coveralls didn't fit properly, and it was a perfect nuisance the way Ebrihim insisted that they wash everything out between wearings. Seeing how he didn't wear any clothes at all, it hardly seemed fair. In any event, considering that they had almost no clothes, there certainly a lot of laundry to do.
And then there was Anakin.
It had fallen to Jaina and Jacen not only to take care of themselves, but to keep Anakin in line as well-and the twins had learned very quickly that keeping their kid brother Out of trouble was a lot less entertaining-and a lot more difficult-than helping him get into it.
But learning how to do laundry and baby-sitting were far from the only growing up they had done. There were more serious problems as well.
There was the question of secrets, for example. Back on Corellia, before the trouble started, Anakin, somehow, had sensed the presence of a huge, ancient, underground facility of unknown purpose, and led Jacen, Jaina, and Q9 straight to it. The children had told their parents, Ebrihim, and Chewbaeca about it, but no one had the slightest idea what the installation was. All anyone knew for sure was that the Human League was looking for it, though no one knew why. It seemed obvious to Jacen that something had to be done about the place Anakin had found, but he could not think of what.
It was starting to dawn on him that grown-ups had to deal with that kind of ambiguity a lot.
And that was not all that had happened on Corellia The night before the attack on Corona House, all three children had eavesdropped on a meeting between their parents, Governor-General Micamberlecto, and Mara Jade, and overheard a lot of top-secret things about the starbuster plot, stuff that had not gotten out to the general public.
The children hadn't meant to hear such vital information, but they had.
Jacen was virtually certain that Ebrihim, Q9, and Chewbacca knew nothing about that meeting.
And that made the three children the only people off the surface of Corellia who knew about the plotxcept the bad guys, of course.
And what they were supposed to do about that, Jacen had not the faintest idea.
Ebrihim looked through the viewport at the surface of Drall, compared it against the map display, and then nodded. ”This is approximately the right position,” he said. ”You may begin your descent from orbit.”
Chewbacca grunted unhappily, but worked the controls and started bringing the Falcon in.
”I still don't see how we are reduced to navigation by dead reckoning,” Q9 said. ”How could this s.h.i.+p have such primitive location equipment?”
Chewbacca looked back over his shoulder at Q9 and bared his fangs.
”If you wish to place blame, Q9, place it with me and with my Aunt March a. I did not memorize the precise coordinates of her estate last time I visited, and it would seem she has never gotten around to installing a landing beacon in her back garden.”
For once, Q9 had no reply.
The Millennium Falcon moved down from orbit as she had moved into it-stealthily and slowly as she could, doing as much of her maneuvenng as possible over run populated parts of the planet, where detection would be more unlikely.
The s.h.i.+p drifted into atmosphere and the night sky over Drall, cruising silently along. Ebrihim did not much like the idea of coming in during local night. It would be difficult to find his aunt's home even in broad daylight.