Star Wars - X-Wing - Starfighters of Adumar

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Star Wars - X-Wing - Starfighters of Adumar Page 7

by Aaron Allston


  "You mean, it's a very decorative way to get killed. You're awfully

  unconcerned."

  Tomer shrugged. "This is their planet, Wedge. Their way of life. It's for

  me to understand it... not to try to change it."

  Cheriss, backing away from an especially aggressive advance, caught

  Depird's blastsword blade centimeters below the tip with her dagger. She swung

  it out of line and brought her own blastsword point to bear in a single,

  beautifully fluid motion. Depird tried to check his forward motion but

  couldn'this body arched away from her blade but he ran upon it anyway. There

  was a sharp crack, a shriek of pain from him, and he was thrown to the floor

  on his back. He lay there writhing, a blackened patch on his tunic at the

  center of his chest, smoke rising from it.

  Cheriss, barely winded, set her dagger on the floor. She turned to smile

  at Wedge, then extended her hand toward him, palm up; a moment later, she

  turned it palm down.

  "You get to choose," Tomer whispered. "Palm up means she spares him. Palm

  down means she kills him. Palm up will suggest excessive sentimentality on

  your partnot something the Adumari hope to see in a fighter pilot."

  Wedge stared at him. "You think I should let him die?" he whispered.

  Tomer shrugged. "I'm not expressing an opinion. Just analyzing actions

  and consequences."

  Wedge put on his sternest face, his offended officer face, and stepped

  out into the open ring. He moved to stand over Depird, who writhed in obvious

  agony. The duelist was unable entirely to keep quiet; each of his breaths

  emerged as a moan.

  Wedge studied him critically for several seconds, then raised his gaze to

  Cheriss's. He spoke loudly enough for all to hear. "This boy needs to learn to

  handle pain, so that when he does die, he does not embarrass his family." He

  held out his hand, palm up.

  Cheriss shrugged and nodded, not apparently both - ered. Some applause

  broke out from the audience, and some murmuring; 6ut Wedge could see the

  perator nod agreeably, and suddenly all the courtiers around the ruler were

  applauding, and the applause spread from there to the rest of the crowd.

  Wedge returned to his place in the audience. As he approached, Tomer,

  too, applauded. "A good solution," Tomer said, his voice barely audible over

  the crowd. "Credible."

  "We're going to talk about this later," Wedge said. "And you're not going

  to enjoy it." He looked around for his pilots and spotted them, all three

  together, standing toward the back of the audience ring.

  The crowd broke up, its members drifting away, and Wedge saw the

  perator's personal retinue move toward a side exit. Two men dressed in the

  featureless brown livery worn by the door guards collected Depird, hauling him

  unceremoniously to his feet and helping him toward the main exit. Janson

  caught his eye and grinned uninformatively.

  "Did you like it?"

  Wedge turned. Cheriss, her weapons once again sheathed, stood before him.

  Her smile was, oddly, just a little uncertain.

  "He certainly did," Tomer said. "I thought it was a very impressive,

  skillful display," Wedge said truthfully. "With an interesting aesthetic

  component. Do I understand right that his objection to you was that you'd

  beaten his brother in a tournament?" She nodded. "In the finals of the last

  Cartann Ground Championship. Depird's brother, unlike Depird, was one of the

  few pilots who really knew how to handle a blastsword. Almost a pity that he

  died of his injuries."

  "Pity. Um, Cheriss, what purpose did the ground championship serve, other

  than to establish you as the new ground champion?"

  She smiled. "Well, none, I suppose." "Entertainment," Tomer said. "And

  continuation of a tradition dear to the hearts of the people of Cartann."

  "That, too," Cheriss said. Janson appeared beside Wedge. "News," he said.

  4

  They were on foot in the streets of the city of Cartann, but nearly

  anonymousthe people on the street accorded them not a second glance. Wedge

  supposed it was because they were in native dress; had they been in their New

  Republic flight suits or dress uniforms, he was certain they'd be mobbed.

  Cheriss moved on ahead of them, politely banished from the current

  conversation as she led them back to their building.

  "You don't speak for me," Wedge said. "Ever." The words originated in a

  cold spot deep in Wedge's gut, but Tomer seemed oblivious to Wedge's emotion.

  The diplomat merely shrugged. "I understand. But you have to understand that

  sometimes I can't let you say the first thing to pop out of your head. Until

  you know a lot more about the way things work in Cartann, you're likely to

  precipitate an interplanetary crisis with an ill-thought-out remark."

  "Tomer, I direct your attention to the word 'let.' You've misused it. You

  don't 'let' me, or 'not let' me, anything. Understand?"

  "I understand completely. You're the one who doesn't understand. You shot

  your mouth off tonight and precipitated a duel you immediately wanted to stop.

  Should I step aside, keep quiet, and let you do that again? Or something

  worse?"

  "No." Wedge fumed for a few moments. "We have to work out a way to do

  this. To work together. But I'm not going to blindly follow your lead."

  "It would be better for everyone if you did." Tomer caught sight of

  Wedge's expression. "Well, on another matter, what's this news Janson brings

  us?"

  "Pilot news," Wedge said. "Results of some Red Flight betting. And rather

  than compromise myself with the diplomatic corps by letting you know just how

  badly I lost, I'm going to ask you to go on ahead. We'll be along to our

  quarters after a while."

  Tomer frowned, obviously trying to figure out how to phrase a refusal,

  then shrugged. "Contact me by comlink if you need me." He increased his pace,

  said a word or two to Cheriss as he passed her , then disappeared into

  pedestrian traffic ahead.

  "It's Iella, all right," Janson said. "She wants to see you. I mean, it

  didn't seem to be an urgent thing. I think she was happier to see me, of

  course. She even asked about Hobbie."

  Hobbie brightened. "She did?"

  "Oh, yes. 'How's old Bugbite?' she asked."

  Hobbie's shoulders slumped. When first he'd met Iella, years ago, on a

  covert mission to Corellia, he'd been stung in the face by a local insect.

  Iella's partner Corran Horn, both of them then investigators with Corellian

  Security, had shot him down with that nickname. " She did not."

  Janson's grin deepened, but he returned his attention to Wedge. "And she

  did want to talk to you. Underneath the shortest of the flat displays around

  the plaza where we landed, at midnight tomorrow. You have to make sure that

  you're not being shadowed. You can't compromise her cover identity."

  "What is her cover identity?"

  "She's some sort of computer slicer. Hired a while back to develop

  programs to translate and interface between Cartann computers and New Republic

  and Imperial computers."

  "Define 'a while back,' " Wedge said.

  Janson shrugged. "I'm not sure. At least severa
l weeks, possibly several

  months."

  Wedge looked between his pilots. "There's something very odd going on

  here. I had the impression from General Cracken that a mapping ship

  accidentally discovered this planetwhich had been cut off from the rest of

  galactic civilization for thousands of yearsa short time ago. Immediately

  afterward, the New Republic was supposed to have dispatched a diplomatic

  delegation, which immediately discovered that they preferred dealing with

  pilots, which immediately resulted in our being sent here. Quick, quick,

  quick.

  "But now I find that the Adumari people have hyperdrives; they even have

  some hyperdrive-equipped fighters. They've brought in specialists to link up

  their computer systems with ours. They've contrived to bring in pilots from

  the Empire at the same time we're here, and even set things up so that the two

  opposing groups of pilots wouldn't know about one another until we bumped into

  one another tonight. What do you want to bet that we haven't been brought here

  chiefly because they love pilots? We've been brought here to duel with our

  opposite numbers."

  "It's worse than that," Hobbie said.

  The others looked at him. "You know," Janson said, "whenever the name of

  Derek 'Hobbie' Klivian comes up, the words 'It's worse than that' ring in my

  ears. Sometimes I hear them when I'm dreaming."

  Hobbie ignored him. "Wedge, while Janson was politely asking Iella about

  her love life" "I wasn't!"

  "I was talking to people about things. Asking questions instead of

  answering them. And I found out that Adumar doesn't even have a world

  government. The perator of Cartann doesn't represent the whole world."

  "That would certainly explain why they all seem to identify more with

  this nation than with their world," Wedge said. "What do they have?"

  "Well, remember that all the answers I got were from Cartann loyalists."

  Hobbie shrugged, apologetic. "But if you read past the text stream to the data

  stream, it looks as though Cartann is the biggest of a large number of

  nations, and it controls several other nations besides. Through tradition and

  military. It controls something like more than half the planet. So they could

  set up trade treaties, that sort of thing, for Cartann, but they couldn't

  negotiate to bring all of Adumar into the New Republic."

  "You're right," Wedge said. "It was worse than I thought."

  Janson grinned. "Oh, it's even worse than that."

  Wedge sighed. "Look, this is your last one. The next person after Wes who

  has bad news, we all just shoot him. Go ahead, Wes."

  "Cheriss is sweet on you."

  Wedge felt his shoulders sag. "Tell me you're kidding."

  "Sorry, chief. Do you see the way she looks at you? And she gave you the

  decision on her challenge duel, to kill or not to kill. They say that's a

  really big thing here. As subtle as flowers and sweets."

  "Wes, she's half my age."

  "True." Janson looked resigned. "I'll help you, Wedge. I'll go break the

  news to her, console her in her time of grief. I'll"

  Wedge held up a hand. "Never mind what I just said. Let's just shoot Wes.

  "

  "I'm for that," Hobbie said.

  "What's our strategy?" Tycho asked.

  Hobbie gave him a curious look. "I thought we'd just all draw and fire.

  But I could count down to zero, and then we could draw and fire."

  Tycho gave him a mock-scowl. "Quiet, you. Wedge, what's our strategy in

  dealing with all these serpentine politics?"

  "Play dumb for now. Let everyoneTomer, the rulers of Cartann, our own

  Intelligence networkthink we believe everything they've told us so far.

  Follow Tomer's plans for use of our time with just enough belligerence to

  remind them we're fighter pilots. And find out what we can on our own. I'll

  talk to Iella tomorrow. Hobbie, Tomer said that Intelligence certified our

  quarters as free from Cartann listening devicesbut nobody certified them free

  of New Republic Intelligence listening devices; I want you to screen our

  quarters and see if our own people are eavesdropping on us. Tycho, Wes, I want

  you to visit Allegiance tonight; I'll wager every credit I'm carrying that

  there's an Imperial capital ship orbiting Adumar opposite our ship, and I

  don't want Allegiance taken off-guard if there's trouble."

  Janson spoke up, sounding hurt "Can it be later tonight? I, uh, sort of

  made an appointment for this evening..."

  Wedge just looked at him.

  "I suppose not," Janson said. "Tycho, didn't anyone ever tell you that

  when you ask Wedge for strategy, he gives you work to do?"

  The next morning, Wedge led Red Flight in a dive toward the trees,

  keeping a careful eye on the unfamiliar range meter. The cockpit of the

  Tarrvin-on-Kallik Blade-32 was unfamiliar to him; it wouldn't do to get

  himself and his pilots killed because he wasn't completely at home with the

  controls.

  Or with the speed measurements, for that matter. Adumar didn't measure

  things by the old Imperial standards; instead of klicks per Coruscant hour,

  flight speed was measured in keps, or thousand paces (measured by the stride

  of some long-dead Cartann perator) per Adumar hour. The Adumari measurement

  was about eighty percent of the Imperial standard, so Wedge had to do constant

  conversions in his head.

  When the forest below began to turn into individual trees, streams, and

  riders on those banded-armor farumme reptiles, the control console began to

  chime insistently at Wedge. He knew that it was the collision alarm of the

  system's computer, but it seemed to be set on fairly conservative numbers and

  distances. Only after several more moments, in which the chime became more

  loud and insistent, did Wedge haul back on the control yoke, bringing his

  Blade-32 out of its dive.

  As he began to level off above the forest floor, he felt his maneuver

  pushing him back in the pilot's seat, felt a slight dizziness as blood began

  to rush from his head. A moment later, the pressure eased and the dizziness

  diminished. He shook his head. The Blade-32 had inertial compensators like the

  New Republic and Imperial fighters he was used to, but their computers weren't

  quite up to the task of calculating precise adjustments to keep the pilots

  from suffering all the ill effects of high-gravity maneuvers.

  Still, he was flying again, testing a new fighter, tearing up the sky

  with gravity and engineering limitations his only enemies.

  When he was chained to his desk and his general's duties for days, weeks

  at a time, he could pretend that flying was something he had largely set

  aside, something he returned to occasionally for enjoyment. But at times like

  this, it was impossible to deny his pure love of flying, his need of it. It

  was impossible to deny the ache it caused him when he was unable to find

  cockpit time. Flying was a part of him, had been since his childhood, and he

  felt a flash of anger at the bureaucrats and deskbound organizers who, since

  his promotion to the rank of general, had given him assignment after

  assignment that kept him far from a cockpit most of the time.

  Regular fighter missions
were a thing of his past, and he missed them

  terribly. But perhaps they were a thing of his future as well. Perhaps someday

  he could find himself a post, as General Salm and General Crespin had before

  him, that would allow him regular command of a fighter wing. That prospect

  gave him some hope for his military future.

  He checked his sensor board, or lightboardthe screen with the green

  wire-frame grid the Adumari called a "lightbounce system"and saw that Tycho,

  Janson, and Hobbie were still tucked in tight. Off in the distance, their

  escort of four Cartann fighters was still in formation.

  But Wedge's visual check showed that Janson was upside down. "Janson,

  orient yourself," he said. "You're belly to sky."

  "Negative, boss. I'm right side up. You three inverted coming out of that

  headache maneuver."

  Wedge glanced up, saw only sky and sun above him.

  Janson's voice came again, a taunt this time "Made you look." He righted

  his Blade-32.

  The lightboard beeped at him. It showed an incoming flight of a half-

  dozen Blades, four advanced, two in the rear. Wedge's communications system

  buzzed. "Hail General Antilles! The Lords of Dismay Flightknife issues a

  chall enge."

  Wedge sighed. He was already well familiar with some of the Adumari pilot

  terminology, such as the use of "flightknife" for "squadron." For the sixth

  time since Red Flight had commenced this familiarization run, he switched over

  to general frequency and said, "Antilles here. Denied."

  "Another time, then. Confusion to your enemies! Farewell!" The incoming

  fighters began a slow loop around to head back the way they'd come.

  "They love you, Wedge." That was Janson's voice. "This is the only planet

  where everyone who loves me also wants to kill me," Wedge said. "All right.

  Opinions, people? On the fighters, I mean."

  "A bit like flying wishbones," Janson said. "These Blades have the kind

  of mass and solidity I like in the Y-wings. But sluggish."

  "I like the weapons arrangement," Hobbie said. "Two lasers forward, two

  lasers back. Two missile ports like the X-wings... but we're carrying sixteen

  missiles, not six. More punch against capital ships. If we could swap proton

  torpedoes for the lower-powered explosives these are carrying, that'd be a lot

  of bang."

 

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