"Michael Stackpole "The Bacta War"" - читать интересную книгу автораto offer you the chance to pilot the Mimban Cloudrider on the run to Thyferra."
Booster sat back and brushed the fingertips of his left hand over his chin. The Mimban Cloudrider was one of the Thyferran tankers. Wedge had pulled the crew from it and, with Booster's help, had gotten identification files sliced to-gether that listed Mirax, Corran, Elscol, Sixtus, and Iella Wessiri as the crew under various pseudonyms. Once in orbit at Thyferra, they could make planetfall in a shuttle and hook up with the Ashern. Wedge still needed someone to command the mission and thought Booster would be invaluable in that position because of his experience and instincts. Booster lowered his left hand to the arm of the chair. "No." "No? You'll be able to chaperone your daughter." "She can take care of herself." "You'll get to pilot a ship again." Booster smiled and his body convulsed with silent laugh-ter. "Closer, but still off the mark. The Cloudrider is too small. Too little to do." Wedge frowned. "Wait a minute. When I got my freighter and started hauling cargo, weren't you the one who told me that being the master of my own ship and fate was the greatest thing to which I could aspire?" Booster nodded and sat forward. "I did, but that was before Kessel. Five years in the spice mines changed me." "Five years spicing would change anyone." Wedge frowned. "Don't tell me Kessel broke your spirit, because I flat refuse to believe it." Booster's booming laughter filled the office. "Broke me? It would take more than no air and lots of work to break Booster Terrik. The mines could be a brain cracker for a lot of folks, especially the pols the Empire tossed in there. very patient, which makes him very dangerous. We knew the Empire would never let him out, but he was confi-dent he'd be out someday. I knew I would get out, but the time there still ground on me." The flesh around his eyes tightened, leaving the red light in his left eye burning like a laser in the darkness. "The time I spent in Kessel was unbelievably boring, Wedge. Monotony. Day after day the same things would happen with the same people. There was no night, no day, just shift after shift after shift. Prisoners might come and go, but that was it. Pain I could handle and fight against, but boredom? It was the en-emy, and it had me mashed flat." Wedge winced. "I can't imagine . . ." There certainly were times when Wedge would have welcomed less excite-ment in his life, but not year after year of it. I'd have gone out of my mind. "When I got out, I made one trip on the Pulsar Skate, but the solitude of hyperspace reminded me too much of Kessel. That's why I retired and gave Mirax the ship. Now I travel and do deals for friends because it means I'm constantly meeting folks and getting to know them and learn about them. I'm trying to fill the void that Kessel left in me, and piloting Cloudrider isn't going to do that for me." Wedge nodded. "I understand, though I wish it were oth-erwise. You've got skills I need." He sat back in his chair. "Having someone I can rely on doing a job that badly needs to be done would be a big help." A smile slowly grew on Booster's face. "I have an idea for you that might serve both of us and cover up some loose ends." "What do you have in mind?" |
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