Following up with Alex's Becker's answer, you can turn your equation into an equation of the form $ y^a + y^b = c, $ which, for $a$ and $b$ distinct positive integers with one of them greater or equal to $5$, we know by Galois theory that there exists no solution in terms of traditional arithmetic (i.e. addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and taking $n^{\text{th}}$ roots) to this polynomial equation. I've tried to find a website that speaks about it but a quick look over google and wikipedia gave me nothing ; this is a very well known result though. Therefore we expect no general solution to your equation, because it would imply very specific results for which we know there exists no general method to solve.
Hope that helps,
EDIT : There wasn't enough space in the comment box to detail this.
If you want computer accuracy, you can use numerical methods. Find a root of $f(x) = c - e^{ax} - e^{bx}$ using, for instance, Newton's method. But analytically I have not much hope. There is one thing you could do though : using the Taylor expansion of $e^x$, $ 0 = e^{ax} + e^{bx} - c \ge (1 + ax) + (1 + bx) - c = (2-c) + (a+b) x, $ which gives you a rough upper bound on $x$ like this : $ x \le \frac{c-2}{a+b}. $ I have no idea how to get a lower bound though. Note that this bound feels very crappy after you give some though about it ; fix $a=b=1$, which means you're trying to solve $2e^x = c$, which means $e^x = c/2$ and $x = \log(c/2) < \frac{c-2}2$. Here's an idea of how crappy this bound is :

We see that for $c > 4$, it's already very crappy. Anyway.