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    The Fight to Survive

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      bang and crash, day and night. Kamino is called the "Planet of Storms."

      Boba hung onto the railing and leaned over the edge of the platform.

      He looked down, waiting for a lull in the waves.

      Finally, there it was - a long green stretch of smooth water. It

      looked perfect for a little sea-mouse!

      "You're free, little buddy," Boba said as he dropped the tiny creature

      into the water. The sea-mouse stared up as it fell, as if it wanted one

      last look at its benefactor, its protector, the great giant Boba who had

      rescued it from its bowl....

      It hit the water with a little plunk.

      Then Boba saw a dark shape in the water, and a flash of teeth from

      below.

      And the sea-mouse was gone.

      Not even a stain on the water was left.

      Boba spent the rest of the day playing hologames and staring out the

      window into the rain. He was tired of books. He was tired of reading about

      happy families and kids with friends. And pets.

      He was tired of being home alone.

      He missed Zam's jokes (even the dumb ones). He missed his father's

      sayings (even the ones he had heard a million times).

      The next morning he picked up the last sea-mouse out of the bowl.

      "Sorry, buddy," he said as he dropped it into the eel's tank. "It's just

      the way the world works."

      Then he sat down to eat his own breakfast and wait for his father and

      Zam to get home.

      CHAPTER FOUR

      All day Boba was excited, waiting for a certain sound.

      Or a bunch of sounds.

      Finally, late in the afternoon, there they were: a symphony of little

      clicks and clacks, all coming from the locks that hung on the apartment

      door.

      Then the door slid open, and there was Jango Fett, looking strong and

      bold in his Mandalorian battle armor, standing in a puddle of rainwater in

      the hall.

      "Dad!" Boba said. "Where's Zam?"

      "Later," his father said.

      Jango Fett took off his battle armor and laid it out on the floor of

      the bedroom while Boba watched. He called it "the suit." He was much

      smaller without it.

      Jango's face under the helmet was sad and grooved with old scars. The

      face on his helmet was ruthless and cruel. Boba never wondered which was

      his father's "real" face. Both were real to him: the worried father, the

      fearless warrior. "Where's Zam?" Boba asked again.

      "Why are you asking all these questions, son?"

      "I have a joke to tell her." He didn't really, but he figured he could

      always think of one.

      "You'll have to save it for somebody else."

      Somebody else? There wasn't anybody else! But Boba knew better than to

      argue with his father.

      "Okay," he said. He hung his head to hide his disappointment and

      started to leave the room. He could tell his father wanted to be alone.

      "Zam won't be around anymore," Jango said. Boba stopped at the door.

      "Ever?"

      "Ever," said Jango.

      Only the way he said it, it sounded like never.

      When Jango Fett wasn't wearing the Mandalorian battle armor, he wore

      regular clothes. Without the helmet, few recognized him as Jango Fett, the

      bounty hunter.

      The armor was old and scarred, like Jango Fett himself. He always took

      it off and cleaned it after returning from a job, but he never polished it.

      He left the scratches alone.

      "You don't want it to shine," he told Boba as they worked together

      cleaning the armor later that afternoon. "Never call attention to yourself.

      "

      "Yes, sir," Boba said.

      Jango Fett's face seemed even sadder and older than usual. Boba

      wondered if it had to do with Zam.

      Finally he got up the courage to ask.

      "She was about to betray us," Jango said. "It couldn't be allowed.

      There are penalties. She would have done the same if it were me."

      Boba didn't understand. What was his father trying to tell him? "Did

      something bad happen to Zam?"

      Jango nodded slowly. "Being a bounty hunter means you don't always

      make it home. Someday the inevitable will happen. And when it does.."

      "What does inevitable mean?" Boba asked.

      "Inevitable means a sure thing. Death is a sure thing."

      Suddenly Boba got it. "Zam is dead, isn't she, Dad?"

      Jango nodded.

      Boba fought back tears. "How - how did it happen?"

      "You don't want to know."

      Boba felt sadness wash over him like a wave. Followed by a colder wave

      of fear. If it could happen to Zam, could it happen to his father?

      Boba didn't want to think about that. His dad was right: He didn't

      want to know.

      After he had finished helping his father clean the battle armor and

      reload the weapons systems, Boba went out and walked all the way down to

      the end of the street and back.

      Zam, dead. No more dumb jokes. No more bright laughter. Boba Fett's

      lonely world had just gotten even lonelier.

      Kamino is a good planet for feeling sad because it's always raining.

      When you've been in the rain, nobody can tell you've been crying.

      When Boba got back to the apartment, he saw that his father had been

      walking in the rain, too.

      Funny, thought Boba. I didn't see him out there.

      After supper, Jango Fett said, "Boba, listen up." Boba listened up.

      "What happened to Zam could happen to any of us. To any bounty hunter.

      Do you understand?"

      Boba nodded - but his nod was a lie. He was determined not to

      understand. He had promised himself not to think about it. He couldn't

      imagine it, anyway. Who or what could get the best of his father in a

      fight?

      "Good," said Jango Fett. "So, son, I want you to take this."

      Jango handed Boba a book.

      Boba was shocked. My dad?! A book?!

      Jango seemed to know what Boba was thinking. "It's not a book, son,"

      he said. "It's a message unit, from me. For you, when the time comes."

      Not a book? It looked like an ordinary book, about two fingers thick,

      with a hard cover. It was black, with nothing on the cover. No words, no

      pictures. Nothing, front or back.

      Boba tried to open it but the pages seemed stuck together. He pulled

      harder on the cover, and his father shook his head.

      "Don't open it," Jango said. "Because when you open it, your childhood

      will be over. And it is too soon for that. I want you to have what I never

      had: a childhood."

      Boba nodded. Though he was confused. Why had his father given him a

      book if he didn't want him to open it?

      Then his father told him:

      "If something happens to me, you should open it. It will tell you what

      you need to know. Who to ask for. Who to avoid. What to do. What not. Until

      then, keep it closed, and keep it hidden. Understand, son?"

      Boba nodded. He tossed the black book (that was not really a book)

      into the pile with his library books. He wasn't going to need it. Ever. No

      way. Like, something bad was going to happen to his father, the fiercest,

      fastest, most fearless bounty hunter in the galaxy?

      No way. Unthinkable. Which simply meant that Boba was not going to

      think about it.

      CHAPTER FIVE<
    br />
      The next day, Boba and his father went fishing. The rain was light, so

      they sat on a rock at the edge of the sea. Boba took potshots at rollerfish

      with his pocker, a laser-aimed spear-thrower. Jango made him turn the laser

      off and sight by eye.

      Boba knew that the fishing trip was his father's way of trying to make

      him feel better, so he'd forget about Zam's death. Boba did his best to

      concentrate.

      He kept on fishing even when Taun We, one of the Kaminoans, stopped by

      to talk with Jango. She was tall and white, like a root that has just been

      pulled out of the ground. Her dark eyes were as big as saucers, her neck

      long and thin.

      Boba usually liked Taun We, but today it was business, business,

      business. Something about the clones. Boba tried not to listen. He didn't

      want to hear about the clone army - his ten thousand twin brothers. It made

      him feel creepy just thinking about it.

      He was glad when Taun We left, and to prove it, he speared a few more

      rollerfish. He tried to act excited to please his dad, but the fun had gone

      out of it.

      Boba couldn't stop thinking about the clones. He couldn't stop

      thinking about Zam.

      Boba did get excited again, though, when they passed the spaceport on

      their way back to the apartment. There was a new ship on the landing pad.

      It was a sleek starfighter he had only seen in pictures before.

      "Wow!" he said. "It's a Delta-7!"

      "And what of the droid?" Jango asked, pointing to the nav unit behind

      the cockpit.

      "It's an R4-P," said Boba excitedly. While his father listened, he

      listed the starfighter's features. Extra armaments, extra speed - the

      Delta-7 with the R4-P was the kind of ship only a few, select pilots could

      handle.

      "Like who?" Jango asked.

      "Like you!" Boba said as they hurried home in the rain. He was happy

      to show off what he had learned from his reading. And even happier to bring

      a smile to his father's face.

      But the smile didn't last. Jango seemed thoughtful. Preoccupied. Even

      worried.

      He went into the bedroom to take a nap while Boba sat down with a

      reference - Starfighters of the Galaxy. He was curious to know how such a

      sleek ship as the Delta-7 had found its way to out-of-the-way Kamino, where

      nothing important or exciting ever happened.

      Boba had barely started to read when he heard the door buzz. He and

      his father didn't have any friends, especially with Zam gone, so he was

      surprised.

      It was Taun We again. And this time she wasn't alone. The man standing

      next to her wore a simple robe and no jewelry. Under his robe Boba could

      see the outline of a lightsaber.

      A Jedi.

      All of a sudden, Boba knew where the star-fighter had come from.

      Cautiously, he opened the door.

      "Boba, is your father here?" Taun We asked. "Yes."

      Say no more than necessary. That was a favorite saying of Jango Fett.

      And Boba knew that it especially applied when the Jedi were around.

      "May we see him?"

      The Jedi said nothing. Just stood there, watching and listening. Cool

      and collected. But also a little scary.

      Boba tried to be cool himself. "Sure," he said. Always be polite.

      Especially to your enemies.

      And the Jedi, as keepers of the peace, were the natural enemies of

      bounty hunters, who operated outside the law.

      Boba stepped back to let them in. The Jedi was looking around as if he

      had never been in an apartment before. Nosy! Boba thought. He decided to

      ignore him.

      "Dad! Taun We's here!"

      Jango Fett came out of the bedroom. He looked at both of the visitors,

      and he didn't seem to like what he saw.

      "Welcome back, Jango," Taun We said, pretending she hadn't just seen

      him. "Was your trip productive?"

      "Fairly."

      Boba listened carefully. Taun We was sounding friendly, as usual.

      Meanwhile his father was looking the Jedi up and down. To say that Jango

      didn't seem to like what he saw would be obvious, like saying Kamino is

      rainy. It was more than that.

      Boba wondered if they had met before. He wondered if the Jedi had

      anything to do with the death of Zam.

      "This is Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi," Taun We said. "He's come to

      check on our progress." "That right?" Jango said.

      The two men stared at each other. It was like a battle fought without

      words or weapons.

      Boba watched, fascinated. It was obvious to him that his father could

      have whipped the stupid Jedi with one finger. But something was holding him

      back.

      "Your clones are very impressive," said the Jedi with a slight bow.

      "You must be very proud." "I'm just a simple man," Jango Fett said, bowing

      back. "Trying to make my way in the universe." "Aren't we all?" said the

      Jedi.

      It was like a fight to see who could be most polite!

      Meanwhile, the Jedi was looking into the bedroom, where the

      Mandalorian battle helmet and armor were lying on the floor.

      Jango moved in front of the door to block the Jedi's view.

      "Ever make your way as far into the interior as Coruscant?" the Jedi

      asked.

      "Once or twice," Jango answered coolly. "Recently?"

      This is one very nosy Jedi! Boba thought. He wondered why his father

      was talking to him at all. "Possibly," said Jango, and Boba knew from the

      tone of the answer that his father had been to Coruscant.

      And the Jedi knew it, too.

      Now Boba knew for sure that the Jedi and Jango had encountered each

      other before, and that the Jedi had had something to do with Zam's death.

      How he hated the Jedi's smug little smile!

      "Then you must know Master Sifo-Dyas," the Jedi said.

      "Boba, close the door," said Jango in Huttese, a language they both

      knew well.

      Boba did what his father asked, never taking his eyes off the Jedi. He

      wanted him to feel his hate.

      Meanwhile Jango Fett was fencing. Using words instead of a sword to

      block the Jedi's moves. "Master who?" he asked.

      "Sifo-Dyas. Isn't he the Jedi who hired you for this job?"

      "Never heard of him," said Jango.

      "Really!?" said the Jedi. For the first time, he looked surprised.

      "I was recruited by a man called Tyranus," said Jango. "On one of the

      moons of Bogden." "No? I thought..."

      Taun We stepped in then. "Sifo-Dyas told us to expect him," she said

      to the Jedi, pointing to Boba's father. "And he showed up just when your

      Jedi Master said he would. We have kept the Jedi's involvement a secret

      until your arrival, just as your Master requested."

      The Jedi seemed surprised by all this. And trying not to show it.

      "Curious," he said.

      "Do you like your army?" Jango Fett asked. His cold smile seemed to

      Boba like a sword thrust straight toward the nosy Jedi's heart.

      "I look forward to seeing them in action," said the Jedi. A pretty

      good parry, Boba had to admit.

      "They'll do their job well, I'll guarantee that," said Jango.

      The Jedi gave up. "Thanks for your time, Jango." "Always a pleasure to

      meet a Jedi," said Boba's father with a sl
    ight, sarcastic smile.

      The door slid shut and the locks began to snap closed. Boba was

      thrilled. After winning an encounter like that, he figured his father would

      looked pleased, even triumphant. Instead, Jango Fett's face was creased

      with lines of worry, and he seemed deep in thought.

      Boba began to wonder if his father had really won the battle. "What is

      it, Dad?" he asked. "Pack your things," Jango said. "We're getting out of

      here for a while."

      CHAPTER SIX

      While Jango Fett put his battle armor on, Boba threw everything the

      two owned (which wasn't much) into an expandable flight bag.

      "Get a move on, Boba!"

      Boba knew his father wasn't afraid of anything. But after the

      encounter with the strange Jedi, Jango seemed nervous. Worried. Not

     

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