Destiny's Way

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Destiny's Way Page 20

by Walter Jon Williams


  They were in deep space. No suns, no planets, no moons, no asteroids, no comets.

  “Twin Squadron,” she ordered, “alter course sixty degrees to left, in succession. Once you hit my mark, accelerate to ninety-five percent maximum thrust. This is Twin One, turning now.”

  The controls responded smoothly in her hands as she swung the ship on its new trajectory and punched the engine controls. Behind her each X-wing followed in turn, the line of ships, almost fifty kilometers long, turning toward the fight. Tesar and Lowbacca were a distant, reinforcing presence in the Force.

  Ijix Harona and his A-wings stayed behind, but Harona’s ships had enough acceleration, Jaina knew, to catch her any time he wanted.

  “This is Twin Suns Squadron and Scimitar Squadron,” Jaina told Far Thunder and Whip Hand. “Where do you want us?”

  Whip Hand replied first. “We’re holding our own,” Jaina was told. “Your priority is to help Far Thunder.”

  “Copy that, Whip Hand.” Whip Hand was a Lancer-class frigate, developed by the Empire to guard convoys against attacks by Rebel starfighters. It was a ship dedicated to battling swarms of small craft, and was ideal for holding off groups of coralskippers. If Far Thunder hadn’t suffered so much damage and evacuated so many of its crew, the two of them together could have done more than hold their own, but as it was, Whip Hand was severely handicapped by having to guard its crippled consort.

  Jaina studied the displays and realized to her relief that the enemy were not moving with the eerie synchrony that meant a yammosk guided their attacks. That was good, because she didn’t have any of her yammosk-jamming devices with her—there had been no point in taking one on what was supposed to be a training flight.

  The relationships of the two big ships, she saw, were interesting. They were flying abreast, with Whip Hand making big rolls around the cruiser to wherever the threat seemed greatest. At the moment, Whip Hand was rolling toward Jaina and her approaching squadron, almost eclipsing her view of the damaged cruiser.

  “Whip Hand,” Jaina transmitted, “can you roll another fifteen degrees and then hold your position relative to Far Thunder? I might be able to do you some good.”

  There was a moment’s hesitation. “Very good, Twin One.” Whip Hand ponderously rolled into place, completely eclipsing Far Thunder.

  “Heads up, people,” Jaina told her squadron. “We’re going to strip off some of the furball around Whip Hand before we get tangled up in Far Thunder’s trouble. Pair leaders, pick your own targets. Wingmates, stick to your leaders—remember, you’re just there to keep their tails clear. Once you’re clear of the skips around Whip Hand, look for me and hang on to my tail if you can, because things are going to get hairy fast. If you have any questions, talk now.”

  No questions. She’d made her instructions very clear for the rookies—just follow the guy in front. The veterans, on the other hand, probably understood what she was up to.

  Whip Hand was getting very close. The enemy coralskippers had been fully committed to their attack runs and were only now beginning to react to Jaina’s presence. Too late. Jaina picked one coralskipper that was only now finishing a run on Whip Hand’s aft engine assembly. The skip was arcing in preparation for turning and making another run, and its dovin basal shield was probably deployed aft in order to keep the frigate’s defensive fire from climbing up its tail.

  Perfect. Jaina was closing so fast, the target probably didn’t even know she was within ten kilometers.

  It was a deflection shot, but Jaina’s reflexes synched perfectly with the controls of her X-wing, and she turned the nose just slightly into the enemy’s turn and quadded the laser cannon. The coralskipper shattered into fragments as the X-wing whipped past. Then the big frigate, surrounded by streams of coherent light from its turbolasers, flashed beneath the belly of Jaina’s fighter.

  “Rolling to right, Twin Two.” Jaina wanted to roll in order to clear her tail of any enemy who might be bouncing her, but she didn’t want to lose her rookie wingmate as she shook the enemy free.

  “I copy, Twin One.”

  On her displays Jaina could see her wingmate matching her maneuver. Twin Two was a female Duro named Vale, who had thus far shown herself a reasonably capable pilot for someone just out of flight school.

  Jaina looked ahead and saw Far Thunder in bad shape. Parts of the big cruiser were shattered, other areas were blackened as if by flame. But at least two-thirds of her turbolasers were still pumping out fire at the forty or so coralskippers that hovered around her, and defensive missiles were still being launched. Space around the cruiser was filled with brilliant fire.

  Again Jaina chose a target, the hindmost of a flight of four coralskippers that had just made a run on Far Thunder’s bridge. She lifted the X-wing’s nose, matched trajectories, and blew the skip apart with the second shot. Then she pulled the stick hard, her fire climbing to the second coralskipper, and watched flame erupt from its stony hull as her laser bolts stitched its surface.

  The remaining two skips dodged left and right, and Jaina was unable to follow. In seconds she had left Far Thunder far behind and began to pull on the stick in order to loop around and make a second pass. Suddenly laser bolts were slashing past her cockpit. Something crashed on her aftermost shields.

  “Skip on your tail, Major!” Vale’s shriek dinned in her ears, and Jaina’s heart jolted against her ribs.

  “Breaking left!” Jaina said, and yanked the controls. The laser bolts slid off to the right, and she caught a glimpse of a coralskipper as it flashed past, bright projectiles still flaming from its plasma cannons. She doubled back onto the coralskipper and launched a missile at it, but its dovin basal sucked the missile into oblivion and the coralskipper shot away, accelerating fast.

  “Thanks, Twin Two,” Jaina said. Her heart was still hammering, and she could only hope that Vale’s frantic laser barrage had frightened the enemy pilot as much as it had terrified her.

  She spent the next few frantic seconds sorting out her command, getting Twin Suns Squadron organized after its fighting pass and in a position to make another run at the enemy. Seven coralskippers had been killed, with no casualties among the X-wings, but the Yuuzhan Vong were ready for them now, two battle group–sized formations having separated themselves from the main body, ready to bounce the X-wings when they next approached.

  “Lowie, you follow me,” Jaina said. “Tesar, your job is to fly cover and keep those guys off our tails.”

  “I copy,” Tesar said.

  “The A-wings should help you,” Jaina said. We hope.

  She aimed her flight for the furball surrounding Far Thunder and punched the throttles. An attacker’s chief advantage was speed: once she had to slow down in order to maneuver against the enemy, she’d be easy meat for those two battle groups hovering out of the action, waiting for just such an opportunity.

  So, if she could help it, she wouldn’t slow down. The A-wings weren’t the only starfighters that could make a slashing attack.

  The problem was those two battle groups hovering on either side of Far Thunder, just waiting for her to do exactly what she was doing.

  “Rolling to left,” she announced. That would put Far Thunder between her squadron and one of the enemy battle groups, which would mean that the enemy would have to run the cruiser’s gauntlet of fire before it could reach her. Maybe it wouldn’t try. She could only hope.

  “Leaders, choose your targets,” Jaina said. “Wingmates stick close.” She already had a coralskipper picked out, one just beginning its pass on Far Thunder. She followed it into its run, lined it up, fired lasers … only to see the bright bolts of light curl and shift blue and vanish beneath the event horizon of the dovin basal. She fired again, to the same result.

  And then one of Far Thunder’s turbolasers punched right through the craft like a knife thrust through a bar of soap, turning it to bright rainbow fragments that spattered on Jaina’s shields. The skip’s dovin basal hadn’t been able to guard ag
ainst Jaina and the cruiser both.

  She breathed thanks to whatever droid brain had fired the lucky shot, then rolled away from Far Thunder and punched the throttle to escape the danger zone.

  “Twin Leader, you’re being bounced!” Tesar’s voice. “Watch your six!”

  “Rolling left,” Jaina said again. That would put her in the overlapping fields of fire from both Far Thunder and Whip Hand, which she hoped might intimidate the Vong. Her cockpit brightened to streams of turbolaser fire, the blue and red and green light strobing on her control switches and dials.

  Then plasma cannon projectiles flamed past her extended right foils, and she jerked her X-wing left again, then rolled back onto the tail of the skip as it raced past. She could see the dovin basal singularity deployed aft, but she lined up the target anyway. Why not? Shooting at it might keep it honest.

  “Skip on my six!” Vale’s frantic voice jolted Jaina’s heart again. “I’m breaking right!” Behind Vale’s words she could hear the slam of plasma cannon projectiles on the X-wing’s shields.

  Jaina abandoned her quarry and broke left, then right, an S curve that she hoped would let her line up on the coralskipper that was hunting Vale. It flashed across her sights and she fired, but the deflection shot missed. Cursing, Jaina hauled the X-wing after the enemy.

  “I’ve lost shields!” The enemy’s dovin basal had jumped forward and eaten Vale’s shields. At least that meant the singularity wasn’t deployed aft.

  “Twin Two, break left!” Vale overreacted to Jaina’s command, hauling the stick around so hard that her maneuvering thrusters killed her own speed and made her craft a perfect target, but the skip swam across Jaina’s nose and she launched a missile. The enemy craft shattered like an egg, and for a moment Jaina mistook the buffeting on her shields for debris until a bright scarlet plasma cannon projectile slammed her canopy like a giant hammer ringing a bell. She rolled her ship to right but the cannon rounds followed, slamming her again and again.

  “Vale, your six is clear!” she shouted. “But I’ve got a skip on my tail! I’m breaking to right!”

  Her astromech droid R2-B3 gave a squeal of chittering anger as a dovin basal overloaded one of her rear shields. She spun the ship in a wild corkscrew spiral as plasma rounds blazed past her cockpit.

  Jaina licked sweat from her upper lip. “Vale, get me out of this!” First Far Thunder, then Whip Hand whirled through her vision.

  “I can’t find you, Major!” her wingmate wailed. One of the enemy rounds darted through the broken shield and took off a chunk of Jaina’s upper left foil. She led the enemy pilot on a mad dance through the void, but the skip hung on, its plasma cannons hammering.

  “Breaking left!” Jaina called, and hoped someone was in a position to hear and act on the knowledge. Turbolaser fire from Whip Hand traced surreal patterns across her vision. She could feel sweat beneath her arms and across her forehead, and felt her shoulders tense as if awaiting the shot that would blow her away.

  “Twin One, roll right!” Tesar’s voice. Jaina heard the command through the Force before she heard Tesar’s words, and she yanked the X-wing around. Laserfire streamed past her canopy, and then actinic light flared off her cockpit instruments as the pursuing coralskipper was blown to fragments.

  “Thanks, Twin Nine.” Jaina blinked sweat from her eyes. Tesar’s third flight had done exactly what Jaina had intended them to do: hang out of the fight until one of the hovering enemy squadrons bounced Jaina, and then bounce the attackers.

  It wasn’t over, though, by a long shot. Jaina’s squadron was still tangled up with a swarm of coralskippers, and they were all moving very fast. By now they had overshot the cruiser and frigate, and were engaged in a fighter-to-fighter duel outside the zone of the capital ships’ protective fire. They were all on their own, and the numbers were fairly even.

  A burning X-wing crossed Jaina’s path, and she felt a steel fist clamp on her insides and twist. The two skips that had flamed the X-wing flashed past too quickly for her to get a shot at them.

  “Twin Two, get on my tail!” The lost aft shield was preying on Jaina’s mind, and she very much wanted Vale behind her helping to cover the gap.

  “I still can’t find you, Twin Leader!” Vale’s bewildered cry nearly shattered Jaina’s eardrums.

  “Never mind,” Jaina said. “Just stay alive. I’ll find you.” Jaina pushed her Force-sense outward, tried to locate Vale in all the confusion.

  “Twin Ten and I will stick with you, Jaina,” Tesar said.

  “Thanks again.” And then she had to dodge a Yuuzhan Vong missile that was trying to find the hole in her shields. She yelled at her astromech droid to get the shield up again and took a snap shot—and missed—at a coralskipper that flashed past. She found Vale in her heads-up display and chased her down just in time to shoot a coralskipper off her wingmate’s tail. “Right behind you, Twin Two,” Jaina said as the burning coralskipper flamed off into the darkness.

  “Oh thank you!” Vale’s exclamation was heartfelt.

  “Twin Nine,” Jaina told Tesar. “Vale and I both have damaged shields aft. Can you stick with us?”

  “Affirmative.”

  There followed several minutes of burning, tearing, confused combat that alternated with bewildered moments in which Jaina couldn’t seem to find anyone to shoot at. She took shots at several coralskippers and launched a pair of missiles but had no idea whether she’d succeeded in hitting anything. And then she heard Lowie’s roaring cry.

  More coralskippers were arriving—at least ten of them!

  This was the second enemy battle group that had been hovering out of the combat, waiting to jump Jaina when she made her attack. Thanks to her maneuvering, they’d been forced to fight their way past the capital ships in order to reach Jaina and had lost a pair of skips in doing so, but now they had arrived. Now the odds against Twin Suns Squadron turned fatal.

  Jaina’s next few moments were frantic with evasive action as she danced and weaved and fled across the face of the void. In the course of her frantic maneuvers she lost track of Vale, Tesar, and Twin Ten; she lost a sense of everything except her own terror. Through the Force she could only sense desperation and terror, and she closed down her extended Force-sense, not wanting the other pilots’ emotions to distract her. She saw an X-wing explode in a shower of orange light, and she fired at skips that crossed her path without knowing whether she hit them or not. The intership comm filled with shouts, warning, and screams of frustration, fear, and anger. Jaina was nearly blind with the sweat that poured into her eyes. Finally she’d had enough. This was a fight that it was impossible to win.

  “Twin Suns Squadron!” she shouted. “Prepare for hyperflight—return to origin! On my mark!”

  “Return to origin” called for a hyperspace leap to the jump point previous to this one, meaning the place in empty space where Jaina had first heard Far Thunder’s distress call. There was no problem jumping from here—they were in deep space, where every point was a jump point.

  “Negative, Twin Leader!” came a voice. “Negative! Do not jump!”

  Only now Jaina remembered Ijix Harona and his flight of A-wings.

  “Where are you?” she demanded. She pulled her X-wing hard to the right to evade the bright fire of a plasma cannon. Another cannon jolted her front shields as a coralskipper tried a deflection shot.

  Colonel Harona’s voice was maddeningly calm. “We’re right here.”

  And suddenly the dark night of space lit with the fires of burning coralskippers.

  Seven enemy craft were destroyed in two seconds as Harona’s twelve A-wings punched through Jaina’s fight. Jaina’s squadron had become so entangled with the enemy that both she and the coralskippers had slowed in order to maneuver, leaving the Yuuzhan Vong easy, sluggish targets for the A-wings’ blazing storm of fire.

  Jaina gave a shriek of relief and joy. “Cancel that hyperspace jump!” she called. “We’re back in business!”

  There was mo
re desperate fighting for Jaina while Harona and his A-wings turned for another pass, but this time the odds were more even. She splashed one enemy, and scared another off the tail of one of her rookie pilots. Then Harona and the A-wings came slashing through again. The Yuuzhan Vong this time were more prepared and the A-wings nailed only four, but that tilted the odds more decisively in Jaina’s favor, and now it was the enemy desperately evading across space while the X-wings pursued.

  Before the A-wings could make a third pass, the Yuuzhan Vong broke contact and ran, heading for the tender analogues that had carried them here. Not just those engaged with Jaina, but all the rest as well, all those harassing Far Thunder.

  “Good work, Twin Suns,” Harona congratulated. “A fine day.”

  A fine day for you, Jaina thought. Her jumpsuit was soaked with sweat, and the air in her cockpit fairly smoked with the tang of adrenaline.

  “Form your squadron astern of Far Thunder,” Harona ordered.

  Jaina’s squadron had lost three craft and two pilots, both rookies. Jaina had barely had time to learn the names of the two pilots before the war tore away their lives. Her own wingmate Vale had survived. The rookie pilot who had succeeded in ejecting from his damaged craft was picked up by one of Far Thunder’s shuttles that carried its evacuating crew to Whip Hand.

  Once the crippled cruiser was evacuated, Whip Hand maneuvered to within point-blank range of Far Thunder and opened fire. The unresisting cruiser blew to bits in a furious explosion, leaving nothing behind for the Yuuzhan Vong. Jaina pictured the unlucky Captain Hannser on the bridge of Whip Hand as he watched the destruction of the ship for which he had fought so hard.

  Jaina knew just how he felt.

  The Yuuzhan Vong had lost a couple of dozen coralskippers in exchange for the destruction of a Republic-class cruiser. Even though they’d fled the battle, the Yuuzhan Vong had every reason to call it a victory.

 

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