the world. Third and finalâand the window Ganner was studying hardestâwas the image of a communications relay satellite that appeared, to Corran, to have lost its antenna array.
âThe satellite is damaged. The pulsar would make communications difficult under the best of circumstances. Without the satellite, though, messages arenât going to get out.â
Corran nodded. âDo we have the codes needed to interrogate the satellite and dump its message cache to us?â
The other Jedi punched a button on the communications console, then shook his head. âEither the codes donât work, or without the antenna the satellite canât hear us. We could recover it. I can use the Force to load it into a cargo bay. From there we can run a wire in and make direct contact.â
âNot that important at the moment.â Corran glanced at his navigational data. âThe satellite was placed in a geosynchronous orbit over their base camp, wasnât it?â
âRight. Theyâre down there, below it, on the northern continent.â
âWhat does the weather look like down there?â
Ganner frowned. âTail end of sandgales. The air will be full of dust, but definitely breathable, provided we use filtration.â
âNot like Belkadan?â
âNo indication of any atmospheric changes that are out of the ordinary. Bimmiel has an elliptical orbit, and weâre on the outward leg now. The Imp survey came on the inbound leg, so weâre not sure what to expect. The Imps reported very little in the way of life down there, but I can feel a fair amount, canât you?â
âI can, yes.â
âI get no evidence that the Yuuzhan Vong are down there.â Ganner peered at him ice-eyed through the satellite image. âAnd, before you ask, no indications if the damage to the satellite was caused by some coralskipperâs plasma blast or just a micrometeorite hitting the antenna.â
Corran took Gannerâs cautionary comment in stride. âI know, not all trouble can be or should be attributed to the Yuuzhan Vong. We donât know if they are here or not.â
Of course, since we canât feel them through the Force, the only way weâll know if they are is when we see them. Iâm not looking forward to any such encounter.
âOur mission is to find the academics and get them out.â
âSimple.â
âUnless we make it complicated.â Corran glanced at the forward viewport. âIâll take the ship in and try to land as close to their camp as is prudent.â
The freighter, which was a modified Corellian YT-1210, had a flat disk shape that enabled Corran to slide it into the Bimmiel atmosphere without a lot of difficulty. The freighterâs mass meant the dying storms didnât bounce it around too much. Corran had dialed the inertial compensator down to 90 percent, just to give him a better feel for how the
Dalliance
flew. The storm did manage to bump and drop the freighter a little, but Corran didnât mind.
The fact that the turbulence made Ganner a bit gray also worked for Corran. The trip out from Yavin 4 had taken a few days, and his relationship with Ganner had become more cordial as the garnant bites faded from the larger manâs flesh. Even so, it was readily apparent to Corran that Ganner wasnât going to back away from what he saw as the right method for projecting a powerful Jedi image, and Corran, on the other hand, wasnât going to embrace using fear as a tool to coerce cooperation from people.
As they got closer to reversion and landing, Ganner had begun to tighten up again. Heâd donned his blue and black robes, polished his lightsaber, and been very precise in combing his hair and trimming his beard. Corran did have to admit that the man looked every millimeter a recruiterâs dream and that, physically, the man was very impressive.
Heâs overconfident, overbearing, and
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