Wraith Squadron (44 page)

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Authors: Aaron Allston

Tags: #Star Wars, #X Wing, #Wraith Squadron series, #6.5-13 ABY

BOOK: Wraith Squadron
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Wedge hovered near his TIE fighter’s landing port as if preparing to dock.

The instant the bow vista lit up with the emissions of proton torpedoes and laser cannons, he announced, “Grays, form up!” He goosed the engines and moved out in an arc that would carry them well around the
Provocateur
on a course toward the corvette
Constrictor
. As soon as his range meter read two klicks he began firing lasers.

Night Caller’
s turret guns had already struck home, he saw. The corvette’s engines were awash in energy, their insulating sheaths glowing from absorbed energy; a brilliant ribbon of fire from the portmost topside engine was clear sign of a sheared fuel conduit.
Night Caller
continued fire against the other corvette’s stern. Wedge also directed his fire toward the engines, trusting Falynn to do the same, and said, “Gray Three, Gray Four, take the communications systems. You know where.”

Indeed they did. Different Corellian corvettes had set up their communications chambers at different points, but all had the majority of their comm and sensor hardware at the same position: starboard, in the central portion of the ship, deck two. Atril and Janson swept far to starboard, then angled back in and began firing continuously against the corvette’s far side.

Constrictor
finally began returning fire. The stern gun
and top turret opened up on
Night Caller;
the side guns sprayed fire against Wedge and the other TIE pilots.

Face was in the stairwell up to deck two when
Night Caller
was jarred by a powerful blow; it knocked him from his feet and he rolled across the bone-bruising steps down to the deck three landing. He made it painfully to his feet and hobbled up to deck two a moment later.

Lights in the corridor leading to the bridge flickered and smoke drifted through the corridor. Face limped forward. The blast door to the bridge was bowed in toward him. Paint had peeled and burned from its surface, yielding the smoke Face saw, and the metal of the door was glowing red from heat. The door made a hissing noise like a reptile preparing to strike.

He gulped and hit his comlink. “Captain Hrakness? Any bridge crew? Come in.”

There was no answer.

Kell tore past the
Provocateur
. His jittery laser fire had missed the first screen of TIE fighters, but his second set of torpedoes had detonated on the frigate’s shields. He grimaced; this was going to be a pounding match.

“Five, Seven.”

“I hear you, Seven.”

“We’ve lost the bridge.”

“What?”

“She took a direct hit from the frigate’s stern battery, Five. The bridge is
gone.

Kell swore and began to swing around for his next pass. Runt was now on his tail. “Was anyone still in the hold?”

“Face’s fighter. He wasn’t in it. I think
Night Caller
is drifting.” Indeed, the corvette seemed to be locked in the starboard turn that was supposed to bring its bow away from its enemies. In a minute, the maneuver would bring the bow toward the other two ships again.

Kell activated his comm unit and personal comlink simultaneously.

Night Caller
, this is Wraith Five. Does anybody read me?”

Wedge and Falynn roared past the
Constrictor’
s bow, reversed, and fired almost before they looked.

The enemy corvette’s bow hold was opening and her bow shields were down to allow her TIE fighters to emerge. The Wraiths’ linked laser fire went straight down the throat of the enemy ship. As they dove, losing relative altitude rather than follow their shots in, they saw energy spill right back out of the hold at them, evidence that something had lit off in the hold—probably the ion engines of one of the TIE fighters preparing to launch.

The corvette’s belly turret swung after them, firing as they passed, but then the guns froze in position, their last blast being half the intensity of a standard barrage.

Wedge checked his sensors. This close, the corvette’s shields would have lit up the sensor board, but the only thing doing that was the increasing brightness from the corvette’s engines. He swung around to bring the corvette into his firing brackets and switched his comm unit to broad-spectrum Imperial frequencies. “
Constrictor
, this is the New Republic. You are helpless under our guns. I’ll give you ten seconds to surrender. If you don’t, I’m going to blow a hole through your bridge and fly through it for fun.”

It was only a moment before a strangled voice replied: “
Constrictor
to Rebel forces. We surrender. Please bring up rescue craft. Our engines are on fire. And please don’t fire on our escape pods.” Two of the escape craft ejected from the corvette’s center section and began a slow drift toward Talasea.

“Acknowledged,
Constrictor.

Janson’s voice cut in. “Wedge,
Night Caller’
s in trouble.”

At a dead run, Face worked his way down to deck four and to the combined security hold and auxiliary bridge situated
just forward of the engines. The door opened to his voice but the chamber beyond was dark, unoccupied.

He slid into the command chair and hit his comlink. “Grinder! You still among the living?”

“I’m here.”

“I’m in the backup bridge. What do I do to bring it up?”

“Why does everyone think that
I
—”

“Grinder.”

“Type in command
wormturns
, W-O-R-M-T-U-R-N-S, then ID yourself by voice and issue the vocal password ‘Agamar Rules the Galaxy.’ ”

Face did as he was told and a moment later the auxiliary bridge sprang to life. He redirected all officers’ stations to his command console and immediately stopped the ship’s portward spin.

On the main sensor monitor,
Constrictor
was reading green—safe, pacified.
Provocateur
was still red. The board showed a variety of blue dots already in the fight and more onrushing from Talasea and her moons.

First things first. He activated the bow hold door and closed it, then brought bow shields up to full power. “Cubber.”

“Here.”

“Get a crew up to the deck two bridge door. The bridge is gone and the door is losing integrity. Weld it down or something before it blows out completely and takes half the crew with it.”

“We’re on it.”

As fast as he could process the information, Face flipped between the screens for each of the bridge positions he now commanded.
I used to think bridge officer was such an easy post
.

Provocateur
was outbound at full speed, again gathering up the last of her TIE fighters, taking advantage of
Night Caller’
s momentary lack of responsiveness and the Wraiths’ inability to do her harm.

“Wraiths, form up,” Kell said. “We’re not getting
through their shields alone. I want a torpedo barrage. I’ll transmit targeting data; have your torps follow it in. Everyone fire on my mark, except Seven and Nine—you fire exactly one second later.”

He counted off their acknowledgments until he was sure all were accounted for. Tyria and Piggy had finally emerged from the topside hold, and that gave them a total of seven X-wings, fourteen torpedoes, to fire in this barrage.

He finished his arc and swung into position at the head of the X-wing formation. Runt settled in beside him. “
Night Caller
, come in.”


Night Caller
here.”

“Face?”

“Never mind. What do you want?”

“Sensor data on
Provocateur
. Where are her shields weakest?”

“Uh, wait a second. Uh—”

“Face, hurry.” The frigate’s guns were beginning to converge on the X-wing formation. A graze from one of
Provocateur’
s stern laser cannons missed Kell’s X-wing but came close enough to blow through its bow shields, dropping them to zero power. Kell swore and redirected power from aft shields and acceleration to bring them back on-line and shore them up.

“If I’m reading this right, topside, just astern of the short-range communications array.”

Kell gained altitude relative to the frigate, saw the Wraiths following him smoothly through the maneuver, and dove toward the frigate’s topside. His targeting brackets went red as soon as they passed over the frigate, but he carefully positioned them over the antenna rig. “Wraiths, three, two, one—
mark.

He watched the reddish trails of ten proton torpedoes leap away from the X-wings and slam into the frigate’s topside. The next four torpedoes were away before the detonation and debris cloud began to clear; he saw their trails enter the expanding ball and disappear within. The ball continued to swell as the X-wings pulled up and arced away.

“Five, this is Eight. Sensors show shield failure and four
hull hits. I—wait a second, something’s wrong, I’m reading two
Provocateurs
—” Dead silence for a moment. Then: “Five, Eight. The frigate has separated amidships. She’s in two pieces. Her threat index is zero. Do you read?”

“We read you, Eight, and thanks.” Kell tried to wipe away the sweat stinging his eyes, but his hand encountered the eye shield of his helmet. He banged the shield up and mopped at his eyes.

His hands wouldn’t stop shaking.

27

“Foolish of us,” General Crespin said, “to bring along Rogue Squadron, all those A-wings,
Home One
, and a pair of frigates when all it takes is Wraith Squadron and a battered corvette to deal with the enemy.”

They were in the inflatable dome that served the temporary Talasea camp as an officers’ mess, unwinding over beer and brandy that tasted something like ship’s fuel. The general’s words were sarcastic, but his tone was more regretful than anything.

Wedge said, “If
Implacable
had come through, we’d have been dead without those extra forces. As it is, we had the element of surprise—a couple of different ways—going for us. Even so, we lost a good, experienced bridge crew.”

Crespin nodded. “I didn’t mean to be facetious. I was just itching to give Trigit back some of what he gave us on Folor.”

“You may yet.” Wedge took another pull from his petrochemical-flavored brandy. “We hit their communications systems hard and fast. They never got off a reply to Trigit. As soon as we’re able,
Night Caller
is going back out … and we’ll tell Zsinj a story of survival against terrible odds. I’m
going to do whatever it takes for us to sidle up next to Zsinj or Trigit and stick a vibroblade in his kidneys.”

The general smiled. “If you have any opportunity to set up a real engagement—”

“Yours and Rogue Squadron will be the first units I call on, sir.”

The general took a look around as though to make sure no one was listening. He leaned close. “By the way, Antilles, about your pilot, Face Loran …”

“Yes?”

“You’re about to receive some news pertaining to him. Now, I’ve had my problems with him, but I’ve also been keeping track of his progress. So, when you receive that news, keep in mind that I had nothing to do with it—one way or the other.”

“Very well.” Wedge gave the general a quizzical look, but the older man merely rose and departed.

Wedge took a look around. The table where Lieutenants Wes Janson and Hobbie Klivan had been swapping stories was empty. Wedge would track down the Rogues again later to catch up on their news. For now, it was time to check up on
Night Caller’
s progress. He headed out into Talasea’s fogmuted sunlight.

The New Republic encampment was a creeper-overgrown field surrounded by trees. The field was now dotted with inflatable domes and various forms of fighter craft and fighting vessels. All were dimmed by the near-permanent haze that shrouded the planet.

In the middle of the field were the two corvettes,
Night Caller
and
Constrictor
, both ships showing considerable damage.

Night Caller’
s bridge had been cored, leaving behind a blackened hole with peeling edges. Work crews were hard at work welding armor plates and a single transparisteel sheet across the gap. Wedge had insisted that the repairs look sloppy, unsophisticated; they were supposed to be all his crew had been able to throw together in a few hours.

Constrictor’
s bow hold doors were gone. In fact, the hold
itself was gone, its hemispherical outer hull torn away by explosions from within; the bow now looked eerily like a skull whose lower jaw had been lost. The ship also had scoring damage along its sides.

Provocateur
had been unrecoverable. Internal explosions and venting atmosphere had claimed the lives of any crewman surviving the torpedo attack. The frigate was a drifting tomb well before New Republic rescue forces could reach her.

“Commander Antilles.”

Wedge turned toward the source of that familiar, gravelly voice. “Admiral.” He saluted.

Admiral Ackbar, accompanied by a major, approached. He returned the salute. “My crews tell me you are almost ready for space. Are you sure you want to go back after Trigit so soon?”

“The more time he has to think, the greater the chance he’ll see through our disguise.”

“I’ll leave that decision to your initiative, then.” The Mon Calamari lowered his voice. “I did want to thank you for your kind words regarding my niece.”

“You’re very welcome, sir. I wish—” The extent to which Wedge wished stopped him short.
I wish we could have saved her. I wish I could have found words to help your family hurt less. I wish a bad-smelling pocket of womp rats shaped like men hadn’t been there to endanger her. I wish every legacy of the Empire were wiped clean from the galaxy
. He gave the admiral a regretful look. “I wish.”

“I understand.” Ackbar looked around, at the people moving between vehicles and vessels, at the areas where inflatable domes were already being brought down. “I, myself, wish I could find the pilot who went to such efforts to save her life. I would like to offer him my thanks.”

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