Star Wars - X-Wing 07 - Solo Command

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Star Wars - X-Wing 07 - Solo Command Page 4

by Aaron Allston


  Wedge Antilles stood his X-wing on its tail and blasted toward the sky.

  He'd sent Polearm Squadron, the A-wing unit commanded by Captain Todra Mayn, on ahead. There was little tactical sense in keeping the faster craft back with the X-wings and B-wings. Now Wedge led Rogue Squadron and Wraith Squadron in es­corting Nova Squadron, the B-wing unit.

  Sensor data arriving from Mon Remonda showed Solo's group closing slowly on a unit of six capital ships. The Mon Cal cruiser was already swarming with enemy starfighters, and defenders from Mon Karren and Tedevium.

  Wedge added up the numbers on that. Those two ships could field five squadrons of starfighters between them. The enemy force ahead could field nearly twenty-two squadrons. And then there were enemies coming up from behind—as Wedge's squadrons cleared the atmosphere, his sensors picked up two additional groups of capital ships chasing Solo's force.

  This was not going to be good.

  Wedge wondered if Baron Fel was among the starfighter pilots assaulting Mon Remonda. Soontir Fel was one of the greatest pilots ever to emerge from the Imperial Academy, one of the greatest to have flown with Rogue Squadron—and a man who shared a secret with Wedge Antilles.

  They were brothers-in-law. Only they and a very few oth­ers knew that famous Imperial actress Wynssa Starflare was also Wedge's sister Syal Antilles. Since the disappearance of Fel and Syal several years ago, Wedge had had no news whatso­ever of his sister. Now Fel was back, but flying for the wrong side, and there was still no word of Syal. It was a secret Wedge kept very close. One of his own pilots, Face Loran, had even starred in a holodrama with Wynssa Starflare, but Wedge had never confided the secret to him, even to obtain Face's reminis­cences about his sister.

  And now, once again, Wedge was rushing into battle with a force that might include Fel, leading to the grim possibility that he might have to shoot down his own brother-in-law . . . and perhaps lose any clue Fel might offer to Syal's fate.

  Sensors showed that the Iron Fist force had, since the last communication from Mon Remonda, turned about and was now retreating before Han Solo's force. Wedge nodded. If Zsinj maintained a course toward the planet, his force and Solo's would blast past one another in a matter of split sec­onds, exchanging one low-accuracy barrage, and then Zsinj would have to turn his force around to pursue. By retreating before Solo on the shortest course to an area of space where the New Republic fleet could engage their hyperdrives, he pro­longed the engagement.

  Wedge's squadrons caught up to Mon Remonda, but cir­cled around several kilometers from the Mon Cal cruiser. At this distance, the swarming dogfight between starfighters near the cruiser looked like twinkling stars. A grim simile—Wedge reminded himself that some of those twinkles were explosions that had once been friends and allies.

  "S-foils to attack position," he ordered, and suited action to words by toggling the appropriate switch above his line of sight. His S-foils split and locked into the familiar profile that gave the X-wing its name. "B-wings, you may arm your weapons."

  His sensors showed Zsinj's force spread out before the ap­proaching Mon Remonda. Straightforward tactics; it meant Mon Remonda couldn't expect to make a minor course change to elude a tight group of ships even temporarily. Any minor course change would still send Mon Remonda into the um­brella of enemy ships; any major course change would allow the pursuit ships to catch up.

  But this tactic was about to work in Wedge's favor.

  They dove in toward Iron Fist's stern. Sensors showed no starfighter response from the Super Star Destroyer—either the remaining squadrons were being slow to scramble, or all squadrons were engaged with Mon Remonda.

  Then flashes of light emerged from the destroyer's stern, congregating on Wedge's force, and the ball-like detonations of concussion missiles began to fill the space around them. Wedge was rocked by a near miss. "Begin evasive maneuvers," he said. "X-wings, ready torpedoes. Remember, port engines only."

  Pair by pair, his X-wings began a dance, juking and jinking to throw off the aim of the Imperial gunners they so rapidly ap-

  proached. The B-wings hung back, allowing the X-wings to draw the initial fire.

  Wedge's range meter scrolled down below two kilometers, the maximum effective range for his targeting computer. Enemy turbolaser fire increased in intensity—and proximity.

  At fifteen hundred meters, he said, "Launch one, launch two." He fired, sending paired proton torpedoes toward one of Iron Fist's stern engines. More blue streaks than he could count emerged from his X-wings, instantly crossing the dis­tance to the destroyer, which was suddenly and brilliantly illu­minated by their detonations against the port side of the stern.

  He looped to port. "Novas, your turn."

  "Acknowledged, and thanks, Rogue Leader." That was the voice of Nova One. "Novas, launch one and begin ion fire."

  Blue streaks leaped from the B-wings. Then the ungainly-looking craft continued their dive toward Iron Fist's engines, their ion cannons sustaining fire against the destroyer's stern.

  Wedge wished them success. They were designed to hurt capital ships; their pilots knew what they were doing. But if Iron Fist called back its starfighters and the Novas didn't no­tice in time, the entire squad could be lost.

  Now it was time to meet the weak link of this force: Zsinj's light cruisers.

  Mon Remonda rattled under blast after blast from the attack­ing starfighters. Solo ignored the vibrations. Shield integrity was good, the hull was holding up—they still had a chance.

  His communications officer said, "Nova One reports dam­age to Iron Fist's engines."

  "How extensive?" Solo asked.

  "Unknown."

  Golorno spoke up, his voice now more nearly normal. "A lot of the starfighters on us are in retreat. They just broke off to head for Iron Fist."

  "How many?"

  "About half."

  "Ah, good. Now they outnumber ours only two to one."

  Solo absently hammered the arm of his captain's chair. If only he were out there, in the Millennium Falcon, making a direct assault on the enemy ... here, all he could do was issue orders and hope they were so good that not many of his people died.

  They were never so good that none of his people died. Never.

  "Message for General Solo," the comm officer announced. "From Warlord Zsinj!"

  "Ignore it," Solo said. "I'll bet you a hundred Corellian credits he hates that. No, wait." He stood. "Chewie, get in here."

  The Wookiee squeezed in through the bridge door, look­ing quizzical.

  "Here, take my chair." Han helped his friend into the seat, which was far too small for him. "All right, put that message through."

  The comm unit on the command chair lit up. Even from his angle off to the side, Solo could make out Zsinj's florid fea­tures, bald head, and exaggerated handlebar mustache. "General Solo," Zsinj said, "I'm calling to offer you an honorable—what is this?"

  Chewbacca reached down and tilted the screen up so its built-in holocam would broadcast his face instead of just his chest. He grumbled something at the screen.

  "It's, ah, Chewbacca, isn't it? Please put your owner on."

  Chewbacca offered him an extended speech, nearly sub­sonic, bone-rattling. Solo smiled. It was an eloquent discourse on the ingredients that made up Zsinj, and not one of the ingre­dients was the sort that should be mentioned in polite com­pany or during any meal.

  "Wookiee is not among my many languages, you extruded fur thing. Where is Solo?"

  Chewbacca returned to his discourse and Solo moved to stand beside Captain Onoma, taking in the officer's sensor readings, his mind once again fully engaged by the battle.

  "This is Leader. Break by squadrons."

  "Wraith One acknowledges," Face said. "Good luck, Rogues." He began a long curve relative up and to starboard, taking him and the Wraiths toward one of the two Carrack-class cruisers in Zsinj's group.

  The Carracks were 350 meters long, looking like stubby metal bars with swells at bow
and stern. Face knew them to be formidable opponents for capital ships; their batteries of ion cannons made it possible for them to disable much larger ves­sels. But the comparatively light number of turbolasers they carried gave the starfighters a chance at them.

  The Wraiths approached their target from the stern. At Face's command, they split into two units, Wraiths One through Six going to starboard, Seven through Eleven going to port. Stern turbolasers opened up on them even before they were within range.

  "Fire at will," Face said, "but make 'em count."

  Runt and Donos were the first of his half squad to fire, the blue streaks of proton torpedoes drawing an instantaneous line from the X-wings to the flanks of the cruiser. Face watched their explosions balloon against the cruiser's side. He ignored the pure tone of his own target lock, twitched his pilot's yoke over so his targeting brackets fell within the center of one of the torpedo detonation clouds, and fired his own remaining torpedoes. Then he looped away from the cruiser's side, Lara tucked in behind him and to port. "Report," he said.

  "One, this is Seven." It was Dia's voice, barely recogniz­able through the usual comm distortion. "We have port-side penetration."

  "Ten is hit! Ten is hit!"

  Face felt his gut go cold, and a quick check of his sensor screen showed that Janson, Wraith Ten, was no longer present. "Calm down, Eleven. Detail damage to Wraith Ten."

  "He's not destroyed, One. An ion cannon hit him. He's got no power, he's ballistic."

  Face sagged in relief. "Ballistic toward or away from the cruiser?"

  "Away, One."

  "Keep clear of him, Eleven. You're active, you'll draw fire toward him. Squad, continue report."

  "One, Five." That was Kell; the sensor board showed him lurking closer to the cruiser than the rest of the squad. Face supposed that Kell, maneuvering in a captured TIE interceptor, considered himself harder to hit than the X-wings . . . and he was right. Too, the TIEs had no proton torpedoes, so Kell had probably chosen the role of close observer in order to con­tribute to this battle. "Starboard impacts damaged the hull but did not, repeat, did not penetrate."

  "All Wraith X-wings," Face said, "form up for a run on the starboard. TIEs, strafe the port side to keep their shields di­vided. Keep them honest." He toggled his comm unit to the fleet frequency. "Mon Remonda, Wraith One. Please dispatch a shuttle with a tractor for pickup of disabled snubfighter."

  Face brought his X-wing around slowly, allowing the other pilots with functional X-wings to form up on him. Kell, Shalla, and Elassar, in their interceptors, were already begin­ning their strafing run against the port side. "Once more into the gauntlet, Wraiths," he said, and nudged his yoke forward.

  They dove toward the cruiser in loose formation, X-wings spread far enough apart that their evasive juking didn't bring them in danger of collision. Streams of turbolasers and concus­sion missiles sought them, and Face heard a cry of surprise or pain from someone on his squadron channel.

  Their proton torpedoes spent, at a half kilometer they opened fire with quad-linked lasers and continued firing and diving until the cruiser's flank was almost all of the sky. Face hauled up on his yoke, felt the high-performance turn drag him deeper into his chair despite the best efforts of the acceleration compensator to protect him from the consequences of his ma­neuver. He saw the cruiser's hull flash beneath him, saw columns of laser fire on either side—then he was clear and headed out to space again.

  He spared a look at his sensor board. Ten Wraiths were still on the board. He breathed a sigh of relief—no additional losses. "Wraith One to squadron. Report damage. Ours and theirs."

  "One, Five. Starboard side also breached. I think we've got­ten both power generators and I think some of the reserve cells. Parts of the ship are going dark. They're not maneuvering."

  "Thanks, Five. Now get your rear end away from that hulk before some gunner with a little power left decides to make fireworks out of you."

  "Acknowledged, One."

  "One, this is Four." Tyria's voice, level and calm. "I took a turbolaser hit, I think at maximum range. I have some wing damage."

  Face checked her position on the sensor board, then ma­neuvered to sideslip past her. She was correct; her port S-foils both showed laser scoring on their trailing edges. "Any system failures, Four?"

  "Not so far, chief."

  "Keep me updated." He toggled over to fleet frequency. "Wraith One to Rogue Leader. Target secure."

  Wedge's voice came back instantly. "Good work, Wraiths. Rogue target destroyed. Iron Fist showing difficulty maneuver­ing. Stand by."

  "Acknowledged." He switched back to squadron frequency. "Wraiths, form up on me. We'll stay near Ten for the time being."

  On the bridge of Iron Fist, the Warlord Zsinj stood on the com­mand walkway above the crew pit. He did not stare out the for­ward viewports, which showed only starfield along his enemy's exit vector, but down into the screens of his bridge crew.

  He was not a tall man, nor was he physically impressive. He was as round as any merchant gourmand, and his exagger­ated bandit-style mustachios suggested that his self-image was quite different from the image he projected. The white grand admiral's uniform he wore suggested a rank he'd never earned in service to the Empire, and those who knew that fact could not help but attribute to him the sins of pride and self-deception.

  Only he knew how many of these attributes were affecta­tions. False clues to persuade his enemies—and superiors, and subordinates—to come to incorrect conclusions about him. To underestimate him. Sometimes to overestimate him—that could, on occasion, be as useful.

  Beside him stood the man in charge of his ground troops and starfighter support, General Melvar. Zsinj was lucky to have found a kindred spirit in Melvar, a man who painted on the face of a dedicated sadist when confronting the outer world and then removed it, revealing features extraordinary only in their blandness, in the warlord's company. Melvar could blend with any crowd on any world with his natural features, and probably had many more alternative identities tucked away than the score or so Zsinj knew about.

  "Mon Remonda and the rest of his fleet are still coming on at full speed," Melvar said. "But even with the two Carrack cruisers out and our maneuverability impaired, we should be able to give her a sustained broadside. If we concentrate on her power and engines, we'll trap her here. She'll never get far enough away from Levian Two to make hyperspace."

  Zsinj nodded absently. "Time until Mon Remonda is un­der our guns?"

  A crewman shouted up, "Ships appearing ahead, a drop out of hyperspace. Three vessels, sir—a Mon Calamari cruiser, an Imperial-class Star Destroyer, and a Quasar Fire-class bulk cruiser."

  Zsinj sighed, vexed. He looked forward through the view­ports, but couldn't make out the new enemies. "I didn't realize Solo had more of his fleet within range. Not that it matters. En­hance the view."

  A hologram appeared before a portion of the main view­port. On it were the three vessels his crewman had described. All three were turning to Zsinj's port, exposing their sides, ready to fire on the oncoming Super Star Destroyer.

  "They're angling toward the escape vector Mon Remonda will take," Zsinj said. "Toward our weak flank, where the Carrack-class cruisers have been knocked out. They're going to line up so that we'll walk into the worst of their damage if we adjust to continue our prosecution of Mon Remonda. But we're not going to play their game."

  Melvar smiled. "I somehow doubted we were."

  Zsinj called down to his communications officer, "Send Red Gauntlet, Serpent's Smile and Reprisal on ahead. Punch a hole in the defensive screen they're throwing up, Bring the starfighters back to Iron Fist to act as our own screen." He turned to his weapons specialist. "Ready all guns. Tell them to fire on Mon Remonda as they bear."

  "Yes, sir."

  Zsinj straightened, smiling. "Solo really should have taken my call. He might even have survived for a while."

  Face saw the shuttle towing Janson's X-wing disappear into on
e of Mon Remonda's bays. The Wraiths's three TIE intercep­tor pilots followed him in. He knew from comm traffic that the group's A-wings were already aboard.

  Then the leading edge of Mon Remonda came within gun­nery range of Iron Fist. Turbolaser flashes by the hundreds lit space between the two capital ships. Far ahead, similar flashes illuminated the void between Solo's Group 2 and Zsinj's ad­vance force.

  Like a younger sea mammal sidling up beneath its mother, Mon Karren moved up below Mon Remonda, moving into the sea of turbolaser fire with her sister ship, her back to the larger vessel's belly.

  Zsinj felt his shoulders sag as he witnessed Mon Karren's ma­neuver. "We've lost Mon Remonda," he said.

  Melvar offered one of his rare frowns. "They've just barely moved into our range."

  "Correct. But they're collaborating to absorb our battery as­saults, dividing the damage between them. And since I was foolish enough to bring back our starfighters to protect our engines—"

  "They can concentrate their shields against us. We have nothing to batter their topsides with to keep them honest."

  "Correct." Zsinj shook his head. "This isn't going to go down in the history annals as a loss for me, Melvar, but it is a loss. One little mistake and Solo slips through my fingers."

  "Still, you haven't lost anything but the ammunition and power you've expended."

  "True." He leaned down to face his weapons officer. "Con­tinue with the barrage until they make the jump to hyperspace. Not your fault, Major. Mine."

  "Thank you, sir."

  Still pensive, Zsinj turned away and headed out of the bridge. The rest of this battle was going to be mop-up; his sub­ordinates could handle that. He needed to rest and prepare for the next engagement.

  Solo's fleet dropped out of hyperspace mere light-years from the Levian system and stayed in realspace just long enough to pick up the hyperspace-equipped starfighters and coordinate their next jump. Then they fled back into the comparative safety of faster-than-light speeds.

  3

  Tired but all present and accounted for—a rarity in full-scale space-navy engagements—the pilots of Wedge's command gradu­ally collected in the pilot's lounge of Mon Remonda.

 

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