Star Wars - X-Wing 07 - Solo Command

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Star Wars - X-Wing 07 - Solo Command Page 19

by Aaron Allston


  Grumble.

  "Well, yes, technically, it is light rather than chronological markers for daytime that make it more likely we'll be seen, but my point still holds—"

  "Quiet," Wedge said. "We may have something."

  On his sensor screen, a small blip had just crossed, in a straight line, a portion of this belt of forest about a kilometer to their south. It had looped around and was now crossing the same forest a hundred meters or so north of its last passage. As they watched, it completed this crossing and looped back again.

  "A search grid?" Squeaky suggested.

  "Yes. But it's the only vehicle doing that in the area. So there's not a concerted search going on." Wedge read the text register on his sensor board. The vehicle was tentatively identi­fied as a sort of high-altitude floater routinely used by police forces on Imperial worlds. "Probably just a routine flyover of his territory. He should be here in about fifteen minutes." He dialed down the broadcast power of his comm unit and acti­vated it. "Two?" •

  "I see it, Leader."

  "Just checking. Begin your preflight preparations. Out." He brought the comm system up to full power and selected an encryption code, then transmitted one phrase: "In the green."

  A moment later, he received an answer, encrypted the same way. "Two lit." Kell's voice.

  "Drake Squadron is getting ready," Wedge said. "Now we wait for the locals to flush us."

  10

  In the graying hour of dawn, the police floater heeled over so far that Wedge was certain that its pilot would tumble out of his seat if not for strap restraints and the vehicle's bubble top. The pilot looked down at the Millennium Falsehood, reached for his control board as if to activate his comm system, then spotted Tycho's X-wing.

  Even with the distance between them, Wedge could read the shock on the pilot's face. "Let's go," he said.

  Rogue Two's nose elevated until the X-wing was pointed almost straight up, and then Tycho kicked in his main thrusters, shooting the snubfighter into the air straight past the police floater. He missed the smaller vehicle by less than two meters. The police pilot unnecessarily slid sideways to get clear of the X-wing's passage.

  Wedge duplicated Tycho's maneuver, putting the False­hood into a steep climb. Above, he could see the glow of Ty­cho's engines. "Chewie, the comm system is yours," he said.

  Chewbacca activated the comm unit. He grumbled and roared into it across an open channel. By agreement with Wedge, these would be insults and curses in the Wookiee's language.

  The Falsehood reached the altitude of the top of this sector's highest buildings. Wedge leveled off, still traveling in Tycho's wake, a sharp maneuver that brought a startled exclamation from Squeaky ... followed by a clatter of metal on metal.

  "Forget to strap in?" Wedge asked.

  "I never forget anything, sir," the 3PO unit said, his tone a bit miffed. "I merely failed to add 'strapping in' to my list of things to do. Could you hold her level for a moment?"

  "No." Wedge sideslipped to go around an aggressively tall skyscraper. There was another clash and scrape of metal from behind. Tycho rejoined Wedge from the other side of the sky­scraper, his X-wing dancing around the Corellian freighter with the nimbleness only a starfighter could manage.

  Chewbacca grumbled something and indicated the sensor board. Wedge spared it a glance. It showed a lot of air traffic, most of it moving in what appeared to be patterns unrelated to the Falsehood's flight. One group of signals, their number inde­terminate because of their proximity to one another, followed in their wake at a distance of more than two kilometers; they faded in and out of the picture as they dipped down below the level of ground clutter and emerged at intervals. "That's Kell and the Drakes," Wedge said. "We still need to be sure we've been spotted by the world authority—"

  A strong signal, a blur representing six or more starfight­ers, appeared to the north, closing fast.

  "There we go," Wedge said. "Let's bounce out."

  Tycho said, "Consider it bounced." His X-wing vectored straight for space.

  "Oh, no," Squeaky said.

  Wedge hauled back on the controls and the Falsehood followed.

  Kell saw Tycho and the Falsehood's sudden flight for space, and the signals from the distant pursuers just as abruptly showed altitude gains. He put his interceptor in an upward course—a near-intercept course aimed at a point not far behind the pur­suers of the Falsehood.

  As they climbed, he got a clearer look at the group behind the Falsehood. It was a full squadron, identified by the sensors as TIE fighters. They'd be on the top of Wedge and Tycho pretty soon, certainly before the Falsehood left the atmosphere.

  "Drake Squadron, this is Kidriff Primary Control. Please disengage pursuit of official government forces. This is an in­ternal matter."

  "Kay Pee See, this is Drake One. We've been hoping to evaluate your pilots. Rumor rates them pretty high. Shall I go back and tell the admiral that you wouldn't let us?"

  "That's affirmative, Drake One. Break off pursuit now or we'll have to view your action as a hostile one. We'll apologize very sweetly to the admiral and your survivors."

  Kell cursed. Not every aspect of Kidriff security was sloppy. He put all discretionary power to thrust and gained even faster on the Falsehood's pursuers.

  Just as the air thinned to the point that the stars shone with brilliant, unblinking clarity, the first laser blast sizzled past the Corellian freighter's port side. "A long-distance shot," Wedge said.

  Tycho's voice came back, "Easy to hit a flying bathtub like the one you're driving even with a long-distance shot. Permis­sion to engage?"

  "Not yet. Wait until it gets complicated." Wedge spared a moment to look at his sensors. The squadron of TIEs was only a kilometer back. Kell's Drakes were only half a klick behind them and closing fast. And a new signal was on the board—a second full squad of TIEs from the ground base. It was going to get complicated soon.

  Moments later, a shot hit the rear shields. On the sensors, Wedge saw two wingpairs of TIE fighters peel off and curve around toward Kell's group. "That's it," Wedge said. "Rogue Two, you are free to engage. Chewie, you have the controls." He unbelted and moved aft.

  "Sir?" said Squeaky. "You're not leaving this disagreeable ball of hair in charge of a whole ship? Sir?"

  Wedge clambered into the upper gunport turret and pow­ered up. His targeting grid immediately lit up with glows, most of them red—enemies. Two were out ahead of the others, firing as they came, probably aiming to overtake the freighter, turn, and fire from ahead, forcing Chewbacca to adjust the ship's shields on a constant basis.

  The first of the lead TIE fighters shot past, firing; a laser hit rocked the ship. Wedge let that one go, but timed its passage, then sent his gun turret swinging in its wake even before the sec­ond TIE reached him. That TIE flashed through his crosshairs and he fired.

  The TIE erupted in a ball of expanding gases. And abruptly Rogue Two was darting out from beneath the freighter, tucking into the lead TIE fighter's wake, firing quad-linked lasers. The TIE pilot, having lost sight of the X-wing on his sensor board, having assumed he was too far laterally for the Falsehood's guns to track him, wasn't maneuvering. Tycho's lasers chewed through his port solar wing and he tumbled—an uncontrolled roll that, if he were not rescued soon, might never end.

  Two down. Twenty-two to go. Wedge reset and waited.

  "Keep it slow," Kell said, "and keep it sluggish until we break. Remember, we're supposed to be hyperspace-equipped, less maneuverable—they'll already have been told what they're fac­ing." He sent his TIE interceptor into a comparatively gentle westward curve, drawing two of the fighters above into his wake, and was pleased to see Elassar mimicking his move. Janson and Shalla curved off eastward equally lazily.

  His sensor system shrilled, indicating an enemy laser lock, and he shouted "Now!" and cut hard to starboard. A green laser blast illuminated space where he'd been just a moment before, and two TIE fighters followed the blast, caught off guar
d. They began their turn, but Kell continued his ferocious maneuver, feeling his chest compress as the interceptor's iner­tial compensator failed to keep up entirely with the g-forces he was generating.

  His targets swung into view from the right side of his viewport. They, too, were now curving to starboard, but he'd caught them off guard, and had the advantage of a few seconds of controlled maneuvering. The leftmost of them jittered in his targeting brackets. He let it go—that was the easier target, and that was for his wingman. The second TIE now crossed into his targeting bracket and jittered, sign of a laser lock.

  He fired. His green lasers bit into the TIE's fuselage where it glowed brightest.

  Suddenly the TIE's engines glowed much brighter. Smoke and sparks emerged. The fighter banked to port and down, toward the planet's surface. As more and more sparks emerged, it looked like nothing so much as an artificial comet heading for its final resting place.

  The second TIE was still intact. It continued looping around to starboard, cutting its maneuver more tightly than Kell could, and was now well out of his targeting brackets.

  Then a barrage of lasers struck the fighter from Kell's left. The shots tore through its left solar wing array, turning the wing into a mess of shrapnel, then marching across to the fuse­lage. The fighter detonated, hurling speeder bike-sized pieces of itself in Kelt's path. He juked around the closest of them and reswallowed his stomach.

  Who'd fired that shot? He checked his sensors. "Drake Two? Where were you?"

  "Sorry, Drake One." Elassar's voice was sheepish. "When you broke to starboard, I made a mistake and broke to port. I had to loop around to rejoin you."

  Kell shuddered. His wingman had been gone for those long seconds, and his rear had been unprotected. He'd talk to Elassar about it later. "Nice shooting, Drake Two. Let's re­join General Solo," he added for the benefit of the planetary listeners who would someday soon crack this set of broadcast encryptions.

  "Yes, sir." Sensors showed Drake Two coming up in his wake, and Drake Three and Drake Four returning to the primary course with their targets now off the screen. But the second group of TIEs was much closer.

  That -trick, pretending to be heavily laden with hyper­drives, wouldn't work a second time, Kell knew. But it had helped even the odds. That was good enough for now.

  Another TIE had fallen victim to Wedge's guns by the time the leader of the first TIE squadron got smart. The five remaining TIEs drifted out of the engagement zone and dropped back toward the intact squadron that was rapidly catching up.

  Wedge deployed the Drakes behind him in two pairs and kept Tycho between them, giving him a five-pointed shield of fighters to his aft. They were well clear of the atmosphere now, outbound toward the planet's primary moon, but the remain-ing squad and a half of TIEs was gaining rapidly. "Chewie? How are we doing?"

  He received a long set of rumbling commentary in reply.

  "Squeaky?"

  "He says, in his almost proverbial fashion, that the shields are holding, but the relays that permit adjustment of the shields are, as he puts it, 'twitchy.' He thinks some of them may fail if he continues shunting power between them."

  "Wonderful. All right, Chewbacca, put them in their de-fault settings. We go with fixed shields for now."

  Another long-range shot struck the Falsehood, rocking the freighter. Wedge heard mechanical crashes as something was jarred loose from a corridor housing. "Break and fire at will," he said, and saw his escort move out and prepare to en­gage the enemy again.

  Then there was a sensor signal from ahead of the Falsehood—a big, complicated signal. And red lasers flashed from ahead, all around the freighter, into the ranks of the pur­suing TIE fighters.

  Chewbacca rumbled something.

  "He knows that, you walking dirt trap. It's the Rogues and the Wraiths."

  Wraiths, and they might cry. S-foils to attack position. Break by pairs and fire at will."

  Face immediately rose relative to the plane of their flight, heading up and away from the centerline of the conflict to come. He also decelerated, dropping behind the rest of the group. Confused, Lara stayed tucked in behind his starboard. "Wraith One? Two. What's our tactic?"

  Face was a moment in replying. "You'll see," he said.

  The other Rogues and Wraiths fired, a column of red lasers that passed harmlessly around the Falsehood and her es­cort but with less delicacy through the oncoming TIEs. Lara saw one fighter ignite and blow apart.

  But Face held his fire and so did she.

  A moment later, she thought she understood. The screens of TIEs and X-wings crossed, with pairs of starfighters maneu­vering wildly to get behind one another. A pair of X-wings shot out of the flurry of activity with a pair of TIEs in close pursuit. Face angled toward them and accelerated, diving opportunisti­cally toward them, and opened fire. His shots caused the TIE fighter to spook and pull away from its prey, but Lara's laser fire was more accurate—her concentrated fire punched through the TIE fighter's top hatch. There was no explosion, but the thin atmosphere in the fighter vented and the starfighter went into straight-line flight, out and away from the engagement zone.

  "Nice shooting, Wraith Two. Thanks." The comm unit identified the speaker as Ran Kether.

  "Happy to oblige, Rogue Seven."

  Surely Face would now dive into the main body of the fight.

  But he didn't. He circled around the periphery of the bat­tle. Frowning, Lara followed. She knew her duty, even when she didn't understand it.

  On Lara's sensor screen, the cloud of TIE fighters suddenly be­came bigger, more diffuse, then resolved itself into seven wing-pairs and one trio of starfighters.

  "Group, this is Rogue Nine." She could almost recognize Corran Horn's vocal characteristics in the comm-distorted words. "Remember not to fire on the interceptors. They're Tyria was in the flow of the moment. Even when she wasn't looking at her sensor board, she had a grasp, a comprehension she'd never really enjoyed before, of where the fighters around her were in relation to her and to one another. She knew what they intended. A moment before they maneuvered, she knew which way they would turn.

  Three pairs of starfighters—Corran Horn and Ooryl Qyrgg in the lead, two Kidriff TIE fighters behind them, gaining to optimal distance for a shot, and behind them, Donos and Tyria, unable to gain on the lead Rogues.

  Ooryl fell a little behind and Horn swung ahead and slightly below him. The maneuver gave Horn a split second of advantage, since his pursuers couldn't see the first signs of his next action. Suddenly he was behind Ooryl, losing ground to the TIEs so quickly that they overshot him. One TIE fighter, its pilot obviously experienced, banked to port. The other hung there in place for a moment, and Horn took his shot, a quad-linked laser barrage. Tyria couldn't tell where it hit the TIE; the enemy starfighter blew so suddenly that she wasn't able to reg­ister the impact.

  Both Horn and Ooryl banked in the wake of the escap­ing TIE.

  "How'd they do that?" Tyria asked, surprised. She hadn't felt the trick maneuver coming, hadn't predicted it. "That was too fast for them to have said anything."

  "Experience," Donos said. "Less chatter, Wraith Four."

  "Sorry."

  "I'm hit!" The voice was young, a little panicky. "Losing shield power. Smoke in my cockpit. Lasers indicate malfunction."

  Lara checked her board. The transmission was from Rogue Eight, "Target" Nu, the Rodian. He was separated from his wingmate and had a pair of TIEs on his tail.

  "I'm coming." That was his wingmate, Kether. "I'm—I'm hung up here."

  "Rogue Eight, this is Wraith One." Face's voice. "Come to one-nine-four. I'll head in straight toward you and head-to-head your pursuit. You pair up with Wraith Two out here and stay clear of the engagement."

  "Thanks, Wraith One." The blip that was Rogue Eight vectored toward her and Face. Face headed straight toward it, leaving Lara hanging out in the void.

  She didn't object. She didn't ask for orders. She knew what was required of her.
>
  But she wondered, and her confusion gradually turned to cold worry in her stomach.

  Seven fighters of the combined TIE pursuit force, including the one Face vaped on his head-to-head run into the center of the engagement zone, were destroyed before the pursuing squad leader ordered an evacuation. Donos decided that the man had to have been assuming the TIE fighters';, greater speed and ma­neuverability would give him all the advantage he needed against a numerically superior mixed force. But against the Rogues and Wraiths, he was wrong.

  The surviving TIEs fled planetward, doubtless to form up with yet another flight group and come once again after the Rogues and Wraiths. But this time they wouldn't catch up.

  Donos responded to Wedge's order that the group form up on the Millennium Falsehood. But on his sensor board, Wraith One and Wraith Two maintained their distance, paralleling the main group's course a dozen kilometers out.

  Lara could still hear a little high-pitched alarm in Rogue Eight's voice, but that situation seemed to be under control. "I'm get­ting regular power fluxes but no serious drops. I've had to shut down one starboard engine but I can limp in on three."

  "Group, this is Leader. As soon as we have a little bit of moon horizon between us and the planet, the Drakes are going to sepa­rate and head on out to Rendezvous Point Beta. The rest of us will vector back into space the planetary sensors can scan, and will then make the jump to Rendezvous Point Alpha. Rogue Two, I want you to delay your jump thirty seconds to make sure all our damaged snubfighters make the transition to hyperspace."

  "Leader, Two. Understood."

  "Wraith One, Wraith Two, rejoin the group and prepare for jump."

  Face's voice was next. "Leader, this is Wraith One. We need to jump from here and follow you in."

 

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