Outbound Flight

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Outbound Flight Page 20

by Timothy Zahn


  He gazed at her, his expression a mix of uncertainty and awe. "Are you really a Jedi?" he asked.

  "Yes, indeed," she assured him. "I'm Jedi Jinzler. Can you say that?"

  He pursed his lips uncertainly. "Jedi Jisser?"

  "Jinzler," his father said. "Jinzler."

  "Jedi Jissler," the boy tried again.

  "Or we could just make it Jedi Lorana," Lorana suggested. "You have a question for me?"

  The boy threw an uncertain look up at his mother's face. Then, steeling himself, he looked back at Lorana. "Master Ma'Ning said only the people he called were going to be Jedi," he said. "I wanted to know if I could be one, too."

  Lorana glanced up at the woman, noting the tight lines in her face. "I'm afraid it's not something any of us has a say in," she said. "If you aren't born with Force sensitivity, we can't train you to be a Jedi. I'm sorry."

  "Well, what if I got better?" Jorad persisted. "He said the rest of us were close, and it's been a long time since they tested us. Maybe I got better."

  "Maybe you did," Lorana said. In theory, of course, he couldn't. Force sensitivity could be nurtured, but not created.

  On the other hand, C'baoth had said these were the families who had low but non-negligible sensitivity. It was at least theo­retically possible that the boy's testing had been inaccurate. "I tell you what," she said. "I'll talk to Master Ma'Ning about hav­ing you tested again, all right? If you've gotten better, we'll see if we can get you into the program."

  Jorad's eyes lit up. "Okay," he said. "When can I do it?"

  "I'll talk to Master Ma'Ning," she repeated, wondering if she'd already promised more than she could deliver. "He'll set it up with your father."

  "Jorad?" the boy's mother prompted.

  "Thank you," Jorad said dutifully.

  "You're welcome," Lorana said, standing up and looking at the baby in her mother's arm. "Is this your sister?"

  "Yes, that's Katarin," Jorad said. "She mostly just cries a lot."

  "That's what babies do best," Lorana agreed, looking at the mother and then Dillian. "Thank you all for coming."

  "No problem," Dillian said, taking his son's hand and step­ping to the door. It opened, and he ushered the boy out into the corridor. "Thank you again, Jedi Jinzler."

  "Jedi Lorana," Jorad corrected him.

  Almost unwillingly, Dillian smiled. "Jedi Lorana," he amended. Holding out a hand to his wife, he led her out behind Jorad‑

  "There you are," an irritated voice called down the corridor.

  Lorana stepped out into the corridor behind the others. Striding toward them was a young man with dirtwater-colored hair, his mouth set in a thin line as he glared at Dillian. "What the brix are you doing here, Pressor?"

  "It was a special meeting," Dillian said, gesturing toward Lo­rana. "This is Jedi Lorana Jinzler—"

  "Since when do you skip out in the middle of a duty shift for a meeting?" the man cut in. "In case you've forgotten, it's a lit­tle difficult to do a hyperdrive reactor communication deep-check without the hyperdrive man actually being there."

  "I know," Pressor said, giving Jorad's hand to his mother. "Sorry—I thought we'd be done sooner than this."

  "Well, you weren't." The man shifted his glare to Lorana. "Is this going to be a regular occurrence around here, Jedi Jinzler?"

  "What do you mean, ah . . . ?"

  "Chas Uliar," the man said shortly. "I mean you Jedi coming in and messing with our work schedules."

  "I'm not sure what you mean," Lorana said.

  "Two days ago Master Ma'Ning pulled everyone off systems control for a coolant-leak drill," Uliar said. "Never mind that we've already done five of them in the past month. Now you're calling special bounce-of-the-moment meetings that pull people off important duty stations. What's on line for tomorrow? Es­cape pod practice?"

  "Is there a problem, Uliar?" Ma'Ning's voice came from be­hind them.

  Lorana turned as Ma'Ning stepped out into the corridor. "I just want to get my day's work done in peace so that I can sleep the sleep of the virtuous," Uliar said with a hint of sarcasm. "Or do I need to make a formal requisition for that?"

  "Not at all," Ma'Ning assured him. "Pressor, you're free to return to your station."

  "Thank you," Pressor said.

  "And in the future we'll try to be more considerate of the various work schedules," Ma'Ning added to Uliar.

  "Fine," Uliar said, a little less truculently. "Come on, Pres­sor. Let's try to get this done before the next shift comes on."

  He headed back down the corridor at a fast walk. "See you later," Pressor said, touching his wife's arm and then hurrying after him.

  "Good-bye, Jedi Lorana," Jorad said gravely, looking up at her. "I hope we'll see you again."

  "I'm sure you will, Jorad," Lorana said, smiling at the boy. "You take good care of your little sister, okay?"

  "I will." Holding his mother's hand tightly, he headed the other direction down the corridor.

  "Sounds like an irritable sort," Lorana commented to Ma'Ning.

  "Who, Uliar?" The Master shrugged. "A bit. Still, he's got a point about us changing things around with no notice. You might want to speak to Master C'baoth about that."

  "I thought he said you'd called for the coolant-leak drill."

  "Under Master C'baoth's orders." Ma'Ning smiled wryly. "And he's right—we do have an escape pod drill scheduled for later this week."

  Lorana nodded. "I'll talk to him," she promised.

  They were six standard days out of Yaga Minor and had stopped for a routine navigational check in Lonnaw system when the trouble started.

  A crowd had already gathered in the Dreadnaught-2 aft pas­senger section when Obi-Wan arrived. "Let me through, please," he said, starting to ease his way through the mass of people.

  "Look—there's another one," a Rodian voice muttered.

  "Another one what?" Obi-Wan asked, turning in that direc­tion.

  "Another Jedi," the Rodian said, looking him square in the face.

  "Easy, Feeven," a man nearby cautioned. "Don't start point­ing blame."

  "Can you tell me what happened?" Obi-Wan asked.

  "What happened is thieves in the night," the Rodian bit out. "Thieves with robes and lightsabers."

  "Feeven, shut up," the man said. He looked at Obi-Wan, lowered his eyes. "They came for someone's kid, that's all."

  "In the middle of the night," Feeven insisted.

  "What night?" the man scoffed. "This is space. It's always night here."

  "The family was sleeping," Feeven countered. "That makes it night."

  "Thank you," Obi-Wan said, easing away from them and continuing on through the crowd. Middle of ship's night or not, perhaps he ought to give C'baoth a call.

  There was no need. He reached the open area in the center of the crowd to find that C'baoth was already there. "Master C'baoth," he said, taking in the rest of the scene with a glance. Standing in the doorway to one of the rooms was a hulking figure of a man, his hands gripping the sides of the doorway as if daring anyone to pass. Behind him in the room was a frantic-eyed woman kneeling on the floor clutching a young boy tightly to her. The child himself looked frightened but also oddly intent.

  C'baoth half turned to frown at him. "What are you doing here?" he demanded. "You should be sleeping."

  "I heard there was some commotion," Obi-Wan said, cross­ing to the doorway. "Hello," he said to the man.

  "You're not taking him," the other said flatly. "I don't care how many of you there are, you're not taking him."

  "You have no choice," C'baoth said flatly. "As Jedi Master Evrios explained to you nearly a week ago. Your son is a poten­tial Jedi, and he's agreed to enter training. That means he comes with us."

  "Says who?" the man retorted. "Ship's law says decisions about children are made by their parents. I looked it up."

  "Ship's law wasn't written to cover this situation," C'baoth said. "It therefore doesn't apply."

  "So no
w you just throw out the law when it doesn't suit you?"

  "Of course we don't throw it out," C'baoth said. "We merely rewrite it."

  "Who does?" the man demanded. "You Jedi?"

  "Captain Pakmillu is the final legal authority aboard Out­bound Flight," Obi-Wan put in. "We'll call him and ask—"

  "He may be the final legal authority," C'baoth said, cutting him off with a warning glare. "That remains to be seen."

  Obi-Wan felt an uncomfortable tingling across his skin. "What do you mean?"

  "Outbound Flight is first and foremost a Jedi project," C'baoth reminded him. "Jedi requirements therefore supersede all other authority."

  Obi-Wan took a careful breath, suddenly aware of the people silently pressing around them. "May I see you for a moment, Master C'baoth? In private?"

  "Later," C'baoth said, craning his neck over the crowd. "Captain Pakmillu has arrived."

  Obi-Wan turned to see the crowd opening up to let Pakmillu through. Even dragged out of bed as he must have been, the Mon Cal's uniform was still immaculate. "Master C'baoth," he said, his voice even more gravelly than usual. "Master Kenobi. What is the problem?"

  "They want to take my son away from me," the man in the door bit out.

  "The boy is to enter Jedi training," C'baoth said calmly. "His father seeks to deny him that right."

  "What right?" the man snapped. "His right? Our right? Your right?"

  "The Jedi are the guardians of peace," C'baoth reminded him. "As such—"

  "Maybe in the Republic you are," the man cut in. "But that's why we're leaving the Republic, isn't it? To get away from arbi­trary rules and capricious justice and—"

  "Perhaps we should wait until morning to discuss this," Obi-Wan interrupted. "I think we'll all be calmer and clearer of mind then."

  "There's no need for that," C'baoth insisted.

  "Master Kenobi speaks wisdom," Pakmillu said. "We'll meet tomorrow after morning meal in Dreadnaught-Two's forward command conference room." His eyes rolled to first the man and then C'baoth. "There you'll both have an opportunity to present your arguments, as well as relevant articles of Republic law."

  C'baoth exhaled loudly. "Very well, Captain," he said. "Until tomorrow." With a final look at the man and boy, he strode off, the crowd opening up even faster for him than it had for Pak­millu. Obi-Wan followed, making it through the gap before it closed again.

  For the first hundred meters they walked in silence. Obi-Wan was starting to wonder if C'baoth even knew he had tagged along when the other finally spoke. "You shouldn't have done that, Master Kenobi," C'baoth rumbled. "Jedi should never argue in public."

  "I was unaware that trying to clarify a situation qualified as arguing," Obi-Wan said, stretching to the Force for patience. "Though if it comes to that, a Jedi should never deliberately antagonize the people he's supposed to be serving, either."

  "Taking a child into Jedi training is not antagonism."

  "Doing so in the middle of the night is," Obi-Wan coun­tered. "There's no reason that couldn't have waited until morn­ing." He paused. "Unless, of course, you were deliberately trying to force the issue of control."

  He'd hoped the other would instantly and hotly deny it. But C'baoth merely looked sideways at him. "And why would I do that?"

  "I don't know," Obi-Wan said. "Particularly since the Code specifically forbids Jedi to rule over others."

  "Does it? Does it really?"

  Obi-Wan felt a tingling at the back of his neck. "We've al­ready had this discussion," he reminded the other.

  "And my position remains the same as it was then," C'baoth said. "The Jedi Order has accumulated many rules over the cen­turies that are clearly erroneous. Why should this not be one of them?"

  "Because Jedi aren't equipped to rule," Obi-Wan said. "Be­cause seeking power is the dark side."

  "How do you know?" C'baoth demanded. "When was the last time we were ever given the opportunity to try?"

  "I know because the Code says so," Obi-Wan said flatly. "We're here to guide, not become dictators."

  "And what is the purpose of rules and regulations if not to guide people into the behavior that will best serve them and their society?" C'baoth countered.

  "Now you're playing with semantics."

  "No, I'm speaking of intent," C'baoth corrected. "Rule is of the dark side because it seeks personal gain and the satisfaction of one's own desires over the rights and desires of others. Guidance, in any form, seeks the other person's best interests."

  "Is that truly what you're seeking here?"

  "That's what all of us seek," C'baoth said. "Come now, Mas­ter Kenobi. Can you truly say that Master Yoda and Master Windu couldn't run the Republic with more wisdom and effi­ciency than Palpatine and the government bureaucrats?"

  "If they could resist the pull of the dark side, yes," Obi-Wan said. "But that pull would always be there."

  "As it is in whatever we do," C'baoth said. "That's why we seek the guidance of the Force for ourselves as well as for those we serve."

  Obi-Wan shook his head. "It's a dangerous course, Master C'baoth," he warned. "You risk bringing chaos and confusion."

  "The confusion will be minimal, and it will end," C'baoth promised. "Whatever authority we're granted, rest assured that it will be with the support of the people." He lifted a finger. "But never forget why most of them are here in the first place. You heard that man: they joined Outbound Flight to escape the cor­ruption of the worlds we're leaving behind. Why shouldn't we offer something better?"

  "Because this is skirting perilously close to the edge," Obi-Wan said. "I can't believe that the Code could be as wrong as you seem to believe."

  "Not wrong, but merely misinterpreted," C'baoth said. "Perhaps you should focus your meditation on this question. As of course I will myself," he added. "Together, I'm sure we'll ob­tain the insight to find the proper path."

  "Perhaps," Obi-Wan said. "I'd like to come to the meeting tomorrow morning."

  "No need," C'baoth said. "Jedi Master Evrios and I will han­dle things. Besides, I believe you're scheduled to help with the shielding of Dreadnaught-One's new auxiliary navigation room at that time."

  "I'm sure that could wait."

  "And now you'll want to return to your rest," C'baoth said as they reached the pylon turbolift lobby. "You have a busy day tomorrow."

  "As do we all," Obi-Wan said with a sigh. "And you?"

  C'baoth gazed thoughtfully down the corridor. "I believe I'll wait for Captain Pakmillu," he said. "Sleep well, Master Kenobi. I'll see you tomorrow."

  At the meeting the next morning, after all the various argu­ments had been presented and the discussion had wound down, Captain Pakmillu sided with C'baoth.

  "They took the boy away three hours later," Uliar said, scowling across the table at his friends.

  "What do you expect?" Tarkosa asked reasonably from across the table. "Jedi are as rare as dewback feathers. I can understand why they wouldn't want anyone with the talent to slip through their fingers."

  "But before it was always just infants," Jobe Keely reminded him, his face puckered with uncertainty. "Kids who don't even know they're alive yet, much less knowing who Mom and Dad are. These kids have all been much older."

  "But they've all been willing to go, haven't they?" Tarkosa countered. "Even the boy this morning. He was scared, sure, but he was also pretty excited. Face it, Jobe: most kids think it would be really cool to be a Jedi."

  "My question is what they're going to do with all of them," Uliar put in. "They going to throw everyone off one of the Dreadnaughts and build their own little Jedi Temple there?"

  "I'm sure C'baoth has some ideas," Tarkosa said firmly. "Seems to me he's pretty much on top of things."

  "Yeah," Uliar grunted. "Right."

  For a few minutes none of them spoke. Uliar let his eyes drift around the number three messroom, as sterile and military look­ing as everything else aboard Outbound Flight. The people eating their dinners looked steri
le and military, too, in their jumpsuits and other operational garb.

  What the place needed was some character, he decided. Maybe he should get some people together and see if Comman­der Omano would let them redecorate the messrooms with dif­ferent themes. Maybe a nice upscale Coruscant dinner club for one, a MidRim tapcaf for another, something really sleazy look­ing for a third, with people encouraged to dress the parts when they went to cat or drink

  "What do you know?" Keely said into his thoughts, nodding behind Uliar. "There's one now."

  Uliar turned. Sure enough, there was that Jinzler woman who'd dragged Dillian Pressor to a meeting when the man was supposed to be working. She was standing just inside the mess-room doorway, her head moving slowly as she scanned the occu­pants. A couple of the diners looked up at her, but most didn't even seem to notice she was there. "Trolling for more Jedi?" he suggested.

  "Don't seem to be many kids here," Keely pointed out, look­ing around. "You suppose they're going to go after the adults next?"

  "Maybe C'baoth's given them a quota to fill," Uliar said. "You know, like CorSec and traffic tickets."

  "CorSec patrollers don't have quotas," Tarkosa said scorn­fully. "That's a myth."

  "Well, if she's got one, she's not going to fill it tonight," Keely commented as Jinzler turned and left the room. "C'baoth's not going to be happy with her."

  "If you ask me, I don't think C'baoth's ever happy with any­thing," Uliar said, picking up his mug. "I've never met anyone so full of himself."

  "I had an instructor at the institute just like him," Tarkosa said. "One night some of the students sneaked into his office, disassembled his desk, and reassembled it in the refresher station down the hall. I thought he was going to pop every blood vessel in his face when he saw it."

  "But I'll bet it didn't solve anything," Keely commented. "People like that never learn." He turned to Uliar. "Speaking of solving things, Chas, did you ever figure out that line fluctuation problem you were having yesterday? We had to shut down the whole portside turbolaser system."

 

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