well done-no seams, no filling, very little patching inside. Just the usual non-Sekotan instrumentation to bring the ship up to Republic standards.'
'Where did you get the hyperdrive core?' Anakin asked after he had drained his glass of sweet water. 'Did you make it here? I've never seen another like it.'
'We have our sources,' Fitch said with a smile. 'The ship's speed lies in part in those cores, but also in how we connect them with the ship's heart-and with you. The next couple of days will be spent learning the ship. You'll be quartered here. You won't go far from the ship-not for the next forty-eight hours. If you did, the ship would die-she would rot from the inside out, just as if I would pluck your own brain from its pan.'
'But I'm not the ship's brain,' Anakin said. 'I can feel it- her thinking for herself. All the seed-partners have joined together and are thinking for themselves, aren't they?'
Fitch looked at Obi-Wan. 'Smart lad. He's going to be the pilot?'
'He'll be the pilot,' Obi-Wan confirmed.
'No,' Fitch said. 'You're not the brain, young owner, not in literal truth. The ship does think for herself, after a fashion, but she needs you while she's still young, and while she's being finished, or she gets, let's say, confused. Like a baby. You're her guardians now.' Fitch stood and walked back across the platform to the cradle, which had now lifted the new ship higher for inspection of her underside. Artisans scrambled in through the hatch, carrying bits of equipment familiar to both of the Jedi: subspace communications, compact instruction boxes for coor dinating with non-Sekotan repair droids, remote slaving and control systems required for arrival in orbit around the more crowded planets, transponders and emergency signaling, hyper-drive governors, control panels, two more acceleration couches for passengers, dozens of little bits and pieces apparently not relegated to the seed-partners and the Jentari.
With the ship lifted so high, they could now see all of her at once-and Obi-Wan was as lost in admiration as his Padawan was.
In his youth, Obi-Wan had been almost as fascinated with machinery as Anakin was. He, too, had built flying models of ships and dreamed of becoming a pilot, but with time and age, and under the guidance of Qui-Gon, he had integrated these impulses into a larger vision of duty and self.
But he had never truly lost the dream. His own twelve- year-old self, so long restrained by the rigors of being a Jedi Knight, joined Anakin on that platform, and together, master and Padawan walked around the Sekotan ship-their ship-and spoke in low, admiring tones.
'Isn't she the most beautiful thing ever?' Anakin murmured, his eyes wide.
'She's beyond any doubt the sleekest,' Obi-Wan said.
The hull was broad and low in the cradle, with three major lobes, like three smooth oval skipping stones joined and molded together. The leading edge of the hull was sharp as a knife, and the ship's internal glow still concentrated here, making the edge fluoresce in the evening air. The trailing edges were less sharp, and were divided along the two rear lobes by engine ports, heat exchangers, and shield ducts. There were no weapons. She measured about thirty meters across the beam and twenty-five from stem to stern, and seen from the front, her two rear lobes made a dihedral of about fifteen degrees.
As they completed their circuit, two wide viewing ports dilated, like slit eyes set in the forward lobe. A technician peered at them through one port and smiled at the new owners, lifting a thumb in approval.
'Think where we can go in this!' Anakin said.
'If the Temple lets us go anywhere,' Obi-Wan said.
'They will. They'll want us to let her out and see what she does. I know they will.'
Obi-Wan was less sure, but now was not the time. He had finished his inspection-the wondering part, at any rate-and stood directly before the Sekotan ship with arms folded. He tuned all his senses and let the Force resume its ascendancy.
'Anakin,' he said quietly.
His Padawan turned to face him, expression suddenly seri ous. 'I know,' he said. 'I feel it.'
'The middle of the wave,' Obi-Wan said. 'Your trial, I believe.'
The color drained from the Padawan's face. 'Couldn't it wait. . until we fly the ship?'
Obi-Wan did not answer. Anakin looked down at his hands, folding into fists, and relaxed them. 'All right,' he said. 'It is the way, and I accept it.'
'Do you, Padawan?' Obi-Wan asked gently.
'It is what we've prepared for.'
'Do you feel that as truth or… say it just to placate me?'
'I never lie,' Anakin said, looking him straight in the eye, color returning to his face.
'You have never lied to others. But even worse is to lie to oneself.'
'But the ship. . we're responsible for her! She's alive, Obi-Wan. She will die without us!'
A second transport passed low overhead and landed on a pillar nearby. As Fitch fussed about the new ship and conferred with his technicians, Obi-Wan saw Sheekla and Shappa Farrs, Gann, and Jabitha marching along a bridge to the platform.
Jabitha stood by Anakin and smiled at him, patting his shoulder proudly. 'She's beautiful!'
Anakin tilted his head to one side, nodding, then glanced anxiously at Gann.
'We've had difficulties,' Gann said, his expression dark and tired. 'A client has caused substantial damage at Middle Distance. He injured some of our people, and he escaped. But that's not the worst-there's an invasion squadron within our system. Four small craft are approaching Zonama. We fear they are fighters. Someone has followed you here. Or-you led them here deliberately.'