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Edge of Victory 2 Rebirth

Page 26

by Greg Keyes


  Anakin caught a thread of wistfulness in that, something like he got

  from his father now and then. Almost. . . almost as if Corran wished he were

  younger again.

  Which was ridiculous. The older you got, the more people took you

  seriously. Anakin was very much sick of being treated like a kid, especially

  by people who knew less than him.

  Mara . . . Mara had treated him more like an adult. And Mara was dying,

  and there was nothing he could do. He almost wished the turbolift would open

  to a bunch of Yuuzhan Vong, so he'd at least have someone to ...

  That's not a wish, he realized. That's the lambent.

  "Guys," he said quietly, "you'd better activate your lightsabers."

  At least Corran didn't ask questions, this time. He just did it.

  The door whisked open, and there they were. Six Yuu-zhan Vong with

  amphistaffs.

  "Me first," Corran said, leaping out, lightsaber blazing. Tahiti was a

  blur, and Anakin right behind her when he realized he only counted five

  Yuuzhan Vong warriors outside.

  But the lambent said six.

  He spun-almost in time. The Givin struck him across the bridge of the

  nose with a tightly balled fist, propelling him from the turbolift into the

  enemy-filled room beyond. His body struck Corran in the back of the knees.

  Surprised, the ex-CorSec Jedi still managed a shoulder roll, though Anakin

  caught a bright glimpse of pain from him as an am-phistaff struck a glancing

  blow. Head ringing, Anakin brought his radiant weapon up in a high parry he

  knew he had to make, felt the sharp thwack of a staff across it. Still aware

  of the danger at his back, he then threw himself to the side. He rolled up

  to see Tahiri doing a high, Force-aided flip to land in a protective stance

  beside Corran. Anakin rose and threw the most powerful telekinetic blast he

  could at the group of Yuuzhan Vong.

  If they had been any other species, it would have pasted them to the

  wall. Instead, two fell and the other three staggered as if in a high wind.

  Tahiri, unable to affect them at all, found another solution; a stack of

  cylinders in the corner suddenly flew into the already off-balance warriors,

  sending the rest of them down. Only the Givin, who had stepped back from the

  action, kept his feet, and he was laughing, a harsh, very un-Givinlike

  laugh.

  From side corridors, eight more Yuuzhan Vong filed into the far side of

  the room from where the Jedi now stood against a bulkhead, lightsabers

  bristling out like quills.

  The Givin reached up, touched the side of his nose, and something oozed

  off, revealing the Yuuzhan Vong beneath.

  "A good effort, for infidels," he said, taking an amphistaff proffered

  by one of the newcomers. He looked squarely at

  Anakin. "Not the Solo the warmaster wishes most, though after Yavin

  Four your worth has risen immeasurably."

  "I don't know you," Anakin said.

  "No. But your mother and I have met. I am Nom Anor, and you may

  consider yourself my captive."

  "We'd rather not jump to that conclusion, if you don't mind," Corran

  said.

  "The odds are against you."

  "You must not know much about Corellians," Corran said,

  "Don't be tiresome. You three have earned respect. If you were not

  infidels, I might even call you warriors."

  "I can't say the same for you," Corran said. "What about it, Nom Anor?

  Me and you, man to man."

  "Duel you as you dueled Shedao Shai? And if I win, the rest of you

  would surrender?"

  "No. But you could prove you aren't afraid to face me."

  "Sadly, my duty to my people forces me to decline your offer," Nom Anor

  said.

  Tahiri suddenly began shouting in Yuuzhan Vong. The warriors looked at

  her, first puzzled, then angry. One turned and spat something at Nom Anor.

  "What did you say?" Anakin asked.

  "The warriors with him don't speak Basic, and they don't have

  tizowyrms. They didn't realize that Nom Anor was turning down a challenge. I

  told them you were the slayer of Shedao Shai."

  "Good going, Tahiri. Now what?" Corran asked.

  "The head warrior of this bunch-Shok Choka-wants to take up the

  challenge."

  "Tell him I accept," Corran said.

  "No," Anakin said, "Tell him / accept. Tell him I slew many warriors on

  Yavin Four. Tell him I fought with Vua Rapuung. Tell him I demand my right

  to combat, or I will carry their names as cowards to the gods."

  Nom Anor was shouting himself hoarse in Yuuzhan Vong, but the warriors

  seemed to have almost forgotten he existed. It would have been funny if the

  situation hadn't been so deadly.

  As Tahiri translated, Anakin stepped out, lightsaber blazing. The other

  warriors fell back, forming a ring. Shok Choka stepped into it.

  FORTY

  When Jaina's engines came back on-line and she realized she wasn't

  going to die-at least not right away-she was, naturally, grateful. When, an

  instant later, Two and Ten dusted the skips off her tail, she was ecstatic.

  She proved this by frying the two skips hanging tight on Nine.

  But the best part was watching Wampa blow. It came apart in eight

  symmetrical plates billowing outward on a ball of fire. The wave of charged

  particles blew over her at lightspeed, nearly-but not quite-generating

  enough static to drown out Gavin's fierce cry of exultation.

  After that, the Rogues cleaned up the remaining skips- without their

  war coordinator, apparently on Wampa, they weren't that much trouble. What

  was left of Rogue Squadron re-formed.

  They'd lost Three and Four, and Eight was hobbling along on one damaged

  engine.

  "Dozen, how's it going down there?" Gavin asked.

  Kyp's voice came through a steady throb of gravitic distortion.

  ". . . lost five starfighters. Can , . . hurry, or you'll miss the

  party."

  "Hang in there, Dozen, we're on our way."

  And then, another beautiful sight. The Ralroost, reverting to realspace

  in all her glory, followed by two corvettes and a heavy cruiser.

  "Kre'fey here," the admiral's voice boomed. "Congratulation, Rogues.

  Excellent work. If you don't mind, we'll clear a path to target prime now."

  "Admiral," Gavin replied. "We don't mind at all."

  Trailing the Ralroost, Jaina turned her nose sunward and dived.

  "We're going to hit!" C-3PO squealed.

  "That's the general idea, Professor," Han said. The Falcon bumped into

  the side of the freighter module-two quick shots from the forward laser had

  cut it adrift. Now he engaged the Millennium Falcon's main engines and

  cranked them to full. The cargo pod lurched into motion, aimed straight at

  the Yuuzhan Vong Interdictor. The Falcon rattled like a metal bearing in a

  vorth cage, but Han held her nose steady.

  "What in blazes is going on up there?" Leia shouted over her the

  intercom.

  "Just keep a lookout for skips. We'll be seeing them pretty quickly."

  He was right-it didn't take the Sunulok long to figure out he was up to

  something. Coralskippers came howling in, blazing away at both the cargo pod

  and the Falcon. The trembling of the Falcon took on a diff
erent tone, now,

  as plasma bursts ate her shields. But the deciding factor for Han was the

  sudden bloom along the outbound rim of the freighter module. He turned the

  Falcon's, nose up and flew.

  "I hope you know what you're doing," Leia said.

  "Relax, sweetheart," Han said, though he felt anything but relaxed. His

  hands had a death grip on the controls as he tried to coax more speed from

  his great bird.

  Then something stopped them, hard. The interdictor had finally gotten

  its lock. Han blanched and tried the repulsor-lifts, glad he hadn't told

  C-3PO what he was doing so the droid could quote him the odds.

  He was stuck. He could only watch now.

  The tanker module was still hurtling toward the Sunu-lok too fast for

  the huge vessel to dodge without a hyper-space jump, but it was coming apart

  under the steady fire of the smaller ships. Han watched as its liquid

  contents continued, undeterred, spreading in a bizarre funnel-profile wave

  toward the Yuuzhan Vong ship.

  "I don't understand, sir," said C-3PO, in a hopeless and

  subdued voice. "What could liquid hydrogen possibly do against-"

  "Watch and learn, Threepio," Han said. Then, under his breath, "At

  least I hope." He fired three of his six remaining concussion missiles.

  "Leia, Jacen. Target the Interdictor, full power. Give her everything you've

  got."

  "But the hydrogen won't burn without oxygen," C-3PO said.

  "Sure won't," Han replied.

  The lasers lanced out just ahead of the missiles. At about the same

  moment, the Falcon's shields went down and the skips started taking her

  apart.

  And then everything broke loose.

  Shok Choka was big, even for a Yuuzhan Vong warrior. Each ear had three

  large chevrons cut from it, and a mounded scar ran from his chin, sliced

  through his lips, and continued along the ridge of his skull. He held his

  am-phistaff behind his back, the hand grasping it a little lower than his

  waist. He locked his amber gaze on Anakin's ice-blue eyes. His knees were

  bent, and though he was perfectly still, he somehow projected corybantic

  motion.

  Anakin cut his lightsaber off and held it loosely at his side. He began

  to circle the warrior slowly in a relaxed, almost contemptuous manner. Calm

  flowed through him. Shok Choka followed him with his predator gaze.

  Anakin stopped, smiled faintly, then stepped into the warrior's range.

  The Yuuzhan Vong moved almost faster than vision could process, the

  rigid amphistaff chopping down. Anakin's saber burred on, and he raised it

  in a wide, high block. Choka, anticipating that, arrested the slash and

  instead lunged in to spear Anakin in the throat, Anakin retreated, dropped

  his parry, again low and wide, as if he were defending for two people

  instead of one. That placed Choka's weapon so far out of line he couldn't

  make the third parry, but instead had to flip back toward Anakin and Tahiti.

  His still-live blade, slashing wildly, scored a meter-long cut through the

  bulkhead that only just missed Corran.

  Stamping and howling, Shok Choka came on. Anakin blocked a powerful

  blow that carried his blade into the bulkhead for a second time in a long,

  elliptical slash. He ducked a vicious jab that spanged into the wall and

  rolled forward, past Shok Choka's stamping feet and back out into the center

  of the room. Even as he stood, the warrior was renewing his attack.

  Now, suddenly, Anakin tightened his defense, so that rather than

  pushing the Yuuzhan Vong's blows as far away from him as he could, they were

  missing him by centimeters. Still smiling, he fell into the counterrhythm of

  the dance, the amphistaff whipping and whirling, spearing and slashing.

  The warrior suddenly dropped and swept Anakin's feet from under him,

  something the young Jedi hadn't seen coming at all. He thudded to the floor

  awkwardly and threw his blade up to catch the inevitable downward blow, but

  the staff whipped around and cut his shoulder, the deadly poisonous head

  slapping against the floor centimeters from his arm. Anakin caught the

  amphistaff with his left hand and with his right, lifting from a prostrate

  position, drove his weapon through the knee joint of Shok Choka's armor. The

  warrior grunted and aimed a powerful punch with his left fist toward

  Anakin's head, but Anakin wasn't there. Releasing the amphistaff, ignoring

  the cut in his hand grabbing it had caused, he bounded up and was suddenly

  standing above the warrior, who had overcom-mitted to the punch. In the

  split second while Shok Choka decided whether to tumble forward or attempt

  to regain his balance, Anakin cut his head off.

  Before the body could hit the floor, Anakin bounded toward his friends.

  Corran had already seen the plan, and with a single swipe of his own blade

  finished cutting the bulge-sided triangle Anakin had begun in the bulkhead

  with his "wild" parries. The other Yuuzhan Vong, stunned by the death of

  their war captain, hesitated an instant too long. One got a parting shot at

  Anakin, the last of the three to duck through the small opening. Several

  somethings cracked against the metal bulkhead-thud bugs, probably.

  Then he was through, turning a corner in the corridor behind Tahiri,

  and they were all running as fast as they could manage. They passed through

  a pneumatic bulkhead. Ana-kin slashed the controls as it sighed closed. He

  caught a glimpse of a Yuuzhan Vong face turning the corner, and a second

  later heard a thud on the other side of the door, then several more.

  Glancing back over his shoulder as he continued to run, he didn't see it

  open.

  "You did that on purpose!" Corran accused. "I thought at first you were

  just fighting sloppy."

  "We need to find berth thirteen!" Anakin gasped.

  "On it," Corran shouted back. "This way."

  "How far do we have to go? Because-" Tahiri began to ask.

  "Just keep running," Anakin urged.

  "-because my ears are popping," she finished.

  Anakin realized that his were, too, and that he was a lot more winded

  than he ought to be.

  "Sithspawn," Corran said. "The Givin have opened the station to space.

  We'll never make it to berth thirteen." He stopped, looked around. "Wait a

  minute," he said. "Follow me."

  He led them down a side corridor, where he paused.

  "They've changed the designations," he muttered, "but I think this is

  it." He keyed a door open.

  "We might make it to the ship," Anakin shouted, following him into the

  room beyond. It was wall-to-wall storage lockers.

  Corran sounded as if he were across a space twice as large when he

  replied. "No way. We're not even to the docking ring." As he spoke, he began

  cutting though the locks on the lockers with his lightsaber.

  "Check the unlocked ones, you two," Corran ordered. "We're looking for

  vac suits. This is the sector Illiet told us to go to."

  Anakin did, feeling the air grow thinner and colder as he did so. Most

  were empty. "But what if Illiet was in with Nom Anor?"

  "I doubt it. If he was, why such an unwieldy trap? Nom

  Anor must have contacted the other Yuuzhan Vong to meet him
, to get him

  off the station. Hah!" He yanked a large vac suit from one of the lockers.

  "Look at this thing," he said. "It must be twenty years old."

  The next locker turned up an airpack, but no suit. Neither did the next

  few, and Tahiri was starting to giggle with hypoxia. Anakin felt symptoms

  himself.

  "Okay, that's it," Corran said. "You two. Get in there." He pointed to

  one of the large lockers.

  "Why?" Anakin asked.

  "Just do as I say. This one time, please, without questions, just do

  what I tell you to."

  It seemed funny that Corran was shouting at him again. Part of Anakin

  knew that was a bad sign.

  He grabbed Tahiti's hand and pulled her into the locker. Corran shoved

  the airpack in behind them.

  "Minimum feed to keep you alive. Remember the locker is probably

  leaky." He swayed on his feet, seeming to nearly collapse. "I'll be back.

  There's another set of lockers down the hall."

  He slammed the locker door, and they were in total darkness. Anakin

  felt around for the feed valve, and soon a small hiss escaped the airpack.

  He turned it up until his dizziness subsided.

  "What if he doesn't have enough strength to get the suit on?" Tahiri

  said. "What if it's leaky?"

  "Don't think about it," Anakin said. "We can only wait

  now.

  "The walls are getting cold," she said.

  They'll get a lot colder before it's over, Anakin thought. Unless the

  Yuuzhan Vong light the station up and blow it to atoms. Either way it won't

  be long before we don't care anymore. Maybe Corran was right. Maybe his luck

  had finally run out.

  "Don't worry, Tahiri," Anakin said, contrary to what he was thinking.

  "Corran's been out of more scrapes than the two of us put together. He'll be

  back."

  FORTY-FIVE

  The space around the Sunulok birthed stars. That's what it looked like,

  anyway, and in astrophysical fact that was more or less what was happening.

  The cloud of boiling liquid hydrogen had enveloped most of the

  Interdictor, and wherever a laser beam or concussion missile pierced that

  gauzy haze an unbearably bright pinprick of light erupted, then quickly

  blossomed larger before suddenly going out.

  "Keep firing, you two," Han told his wife and son, adding the forward

 

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