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    Edge of Victory 2 Rebirth

    Page 27
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      guns to the mix.

      "I see it, but I don't believe it," Jacen said. A constellation of the

      expanding and deflating suns burned around the Sunulok, now, so brightly

      they almost couldn't see it, and Han laughed aloud, though the coralskippers

      were still pounding the Falcon. The dovin basals' grip on the Falcon

      suddenly relaxed, and the laser beams were lancing through the hydrogen

      cloud to burn clots off the Yuuzhan Vong ship itself. Targeting the cluster

      of dovin basals, Han launched his last spread of concussion missiles and

      then threw the Falcon back into drive.

      He punched up Karrde's comm channel. "Hey," he said, "the interdictor

      is out of commission, but I can't say for how long. If I were you I'd go to

      lightspeed."

      "That's the most beautiful thing I've heard in a long time," Karrde

      replied. "I'm gone."

      "Keep those skips back until we hit hyperspace," Han told Leia and

      Jacen.

      "Can do," Jacen called back up.

      Behind them, Han was gratified to see plasma boiling

      from the Sunulok. A few minutes later, they'd left the Interdictor-and

      the rest of their enemies-light-years behind.

      Jaina saw Ten shredded against an asteroid, and pressed her lips

      tight.in anger. She hadn't known the Twi'lek in the pilot's seat, but he'd

      been part of her flight, and he'd saved her life at least twice in this

      fight.

      What's worse, Alinn Varth, Three-flight leader, had been dropping in to

      take out the coralskipper on Ten's tail, and ended up flying straight

      through the burning debris as it skipped off the intervening rock. Jaina

      watched in horror as her leader's X-wing vanished, haloed in inferno.

      But Varth came out the other side, banking, three skips on her tail.

      Jaina dropped down like a bird of prey, spraying the lead skip, then

      launching one of her remaining three proton torps. The resulting explosion

      cracked two of the fighters and sent the third spinning aimlessly.

      "Thanks, Twelve," Varth gasped.

      "You okay, Nine?"

      "Negative. I've lost guns and short-range sensors."

      Gavin heard. "Fall back, Nine."

      "Colonel-"

      "Fall back. That's an order."

      "Yes, sir," Varth said. "As ordered, sir."

      "It's just us," Lensi said, for once not sounding brash.

      "It'll be just me, if you don't watch it," Jaina replied. "You've got

      two coming down."

      "Got 'em. Thanks, Sticks."

      The weapon was huge now that they were closing on it. Maybe it's not

      fully alive yet, she hoped.

      Kre'fey had been as good as his word; the Ralroost and her companions

      had cut through the defense perimeter around the weapon that had so

      successfully kept Kyp's squadron at bay, leaving the faintly glowing hulks

      of two Yuuzhan Vong capital ship analogs to mark the way in. Now they were

      setting up for the run on the gravitic weapon, and roles had reversed. This

      wasn't the fabled Death Star; if the Yuuzhan Vong ship had a weak point, it

      was unknown to

      the motley forces attacking it. In Kyp's holo, the huge iris in the

      center of the thing had seemed to project the gravity field, so that was

      number one priority, and when taking out something you didn't understand,

      honking gobs of firepower was always the safest bet. The Ralroost had the

      guns-it was up to the starfighters to see she had a chance to use them.

      There were two more large ships in the system; One had moved between

      Kre'fey's flotilla and the weapon; the other was hanging back, presumably to

      control the ample swarms of coralskippers that were still massing against

      them.

      "Seven," she heard Gavin say, "break off and take lead with Eleven and

      Twelve."

      "Mind if I cut in?" a new voice asked.

      "Wedge?" Gavin said. "You're sure you want to do this, what with your

      arthritis and all? How'd you slip your nurse?"

      "Told her I was going to take a steam bath," the aging general quipped.

      "What've you got for me?"

      "Good to have you, General. Gives us two full flights. Take Seven,

      Eleven, and Twelve. Guys, you are now designated Two-flight."

      "I copy, One Leader," Jaina said. She could hardly believe it. She was

      flying with Wedge Antilles!

      "Good enough," Wedge said. "Tighten up, Two-flight. Looks like we have

      some business up ahead."

      The next wave of skips hit them and hit them hard, fighting with a sort

      of desperation that Jaina hadn't yet seen in the Yuuzhan Vong. They came in

      clusters, three flying as shields for a fourth. Jaina needled them at long

      range with her lasers, determined not to waste another proton torpedo if she

      didn't have to.

      "I don't like this," Wedge said. "They aren't maneuvering. They're just

      coming head-on."

      "Makes them easy pickings," Lensi said. From the corner of her eye,

      Jaina saw one of his targets flare out.

      "Too easy, Twelve," Wedge said.

      One of jaina's targets tumbled out of formation, its cockpit a fused

      mass of coral.

      "Two-flight, break!" Wedge suddenly shouted. Even as he did so, the

      cover skips broke, and their undamaged charges accelerated through the gap.

      They weren't firing weapons, and they weren't throwing out voids.

      Jaina jerked her stick up, and the skip rose to meet her.

      "I'm going to hit!" Seven screamed, before his channel went dead.

      The voids slowed the skips down. When they weren't using them, they

      were incredibly maneuverable. Jaina's climb was as tight as she could get

      it, but the skip was matching her, still coming on, still at the bottom of

      her field of vision, clearly determined to ram her. Meanwhile, the remaining

      two skips that had flown shield for it were trying to pick up her tail. She

      had nowhere to go, and if she brought her weapons in line to fire, she'd

      meet her enemy head-on, as Seven had just presumably done.

      Suddenly a quad burst of lasers from above her imaginary horizon cut

      the skip in half. Jaina didn't have time to see who her rescuer was. She

      jammed the stick down and starboard, skimming by the wreckage of the

      coralskipper and shaking the two behind her.

      Except the two behind her were already gone.

      "You're clean, Jaina," Kyp's voice informed her. "General Antilles,

      permission to fly what's left of my Dozen with you."

      "Granted, Durron. I'll take what I can get, now."

      The Ralroost and its escorts had taken a lot of hits in the first wave

      of suicides, but once the tactic was understood, the remaining starfighters

      fanned out and picked off the determined skips far in advance. The Yuuzhan

      Vong that made it through their runs intact ended up behind them, where

      collision was much less effective. They still had their weapons, of course,

      and it made Jaina more than a little nervous to have so many live enemies at

      her back, but target prime was just ahead, and she had a job to do.

      The Ralroost opened up on the galaxy-shaped ship. Red streamers of

      plasma lanced out from the curved tips of the Yuuzhan Vong weapon, but the

      destroyer's shields handled the fire easily.

      "I don't get it," Jaina said. "Why use conventional weapons? Why aren't


      they using the gravity weapon?"

      "It's our lucky day," Kyp said. "It must be off-line."

      Multiple proton concussions blossomed at the axis of the Yuuzhan Vong

      weapon, rendering it a dull-red glowing mass.

      "Jaina, behind you!"

      Kyp's warning came too late. Twin bursts of plasma sheared through her

      shields and into her ion engines. A quick babble from her astromech told her

      that if she didn't shut down in fifteen seconds, the whole mess was going

      supercritical. She'd lost a stabilizer, too, and the ship was spinning

      crazily.

      And she still had a tail. Kyp got one of them, but the other just kept

      coming.

      This is it.

      The Yuuzhan Vong superweapon filled most of her gyrating vision, now.

      Grimly, she did her best to aim for it, then shut down. Maybe she could skip

      off it with repulsors. If not, at least she would put another ding in the

      thing.

      But then something in the huge craft made a very big bang, and all she

      saw was inferno.

      "Corran's been gone a long time," Tahiri whispered.

      "Not so long," Anakin replied. "Only about five minutes."

      "Seems longer." He felt her shiver, probably from the biting cold. In

      fact, the only part of Anakin that wasn't freezing was the strip along his

      side where he was pressed against the younger Jedi.

      "There has to be something we can do," she said. "If we can yank

      Massassi trees out of the ground with the Force, surely we can-"

      "What? Pull a bunch of oxygen molecules up here from Yag'Dhul, seal up

      the station, and repressurize it?"

      "Hey, at least I'm trying to think of something."

      "So am I," Anakin said, his voice rising a little. "If you have an

      idea, let's hear it."

      "You know very well I don't have an idea," Tahiri snapped back. "You'd

      feel it if I did."

      "Tahiri-"

      "Oh, just shut up."

      Anakin suddenly understood. Tahiri was frightened, as frightened as he

      had ever known her to be.

      "I'm scared, too, Tahiri."

      "No, you're not. You're never scared. Even when you are, you aren't by

      normal standards."

      "I was scared when I thought I'd lost you on Yavin Four."

      She was silent, and Anakin lost his read on her, but he suddenly felt

      her shoulders quivering and knew she was crying.

      Reluctantly, he reached his arm around her.

      "I'm sorry," she sobbed. "I got you into this. Corran's right-I keep

      thinking I can be like you, and I'm not. You always win, and I always screw

      up. If it weren't for me, you'd be back on the Errant Venture right now."

      "But I'd rather be here with you," he said.

      He couldn't see her face turn toward him or see the widening emeralds

      of her eyes, but he knew they were there.

      "Don't say things like that," she murmured. "I know you think I'm still

      a little kid. I-"

      She stopped, very suddenly, when he found her face with his fingers.

      Her cheek was smooth and cold. He found a stray lock of hair across her

      eyebrow and traced lightly over the raised scars on her forehead.

      Anakin rarely did things he didn't know he was going to do. But it had

      never occurred to him that he was going to kiss Tahiri until his lips were

      already touching hers. They were cold, and she pulled back.

      "Oh," she said.

      "Oh?"

      "That was a surprise."

      "Sorry."

      "No-c'mere." She took his face in both hands and pressed her lips

      against his. It wasn't a big kiss, but it was sweet and warm, and it jolted

      through him like ten g forces.

      "Your timing is perfect," she breathed. "Wait until we're doomed to

      give me my first kiss."

      "Mine, too," he said, his face warming despite the cold. "Umm..."

      "How was it?" Tahiri said, answering his unverbalized question. "Kind

      of weird." She kissed him again. "Nice."

      She took his hand and put her cheek against his. "If we survive, we'll

      have to figure this out, you know," she said.

      "Yeah."

      "I mean, I'm not the kind of girl who'll kiss just anyone on a

      first-time-to-be-stuck-in-a-locker-on-an-airless-space-station."

      "Might be simpler if we don't make it," Anakin remarked.

      "Yeah. Are you sorry?"

      "No. No, not even a little.1'

      "Good."

      "So let's survive," Anakin said, "so we get a chance to figure this

      out, okay? Do you think you can manage a hibernation trance? Our air will

      last a lot longer that way."

      "I'm not sure. I've never done it."

      "I'll help. Just clear your mind-

      "Maybe you don't know very much about girls. You just kissed me, and

      now you want me to clear my mind? It's like there's a tribe of Ewoks dancing

      in there."

      He squeezed her hand. "C'mon. Try."

      Something clanked outside.

      "Did you hear that?" Tahiri whispered.

      "Yeah. But how? There shouldn't be any air to carry the sound." He

      reached for his lightsaber.

      Something started working at the locker door. It swung open, and Corran

      was crouched there, an expression of extreme concern on his face. He still

      had a vac suit on, but without the helmet.

      "You're okay," he breathed.

      "We're okay," Anakin acknowledged. "Where did the air come from?" He

      started crawling out of the cramped space.

      "I remembered there was a modular backup system. I was afraid the Givin

      had taken it out, but they haven't. I sealed up the room and pumped air in.

      It probably won't last long, so get into those, quick." He gestured toward a

      pair of smaller vac suits.

      As they were scrambling into them, Corran shot Anakin a peculiar look.

      "What?" Anakin said. "Should I have left you two unchaperoned?" Vaping

      Moffs! Does it show? Anakin wondered. Just once, he wished most of the

      people he knew weren't Jedi.

      "You fools," Nom Anor hissed at the three warriors. "First you let them

      slip from your claws, now you cannot find them again? You are a disgrace to

      the Yuuzhan Vong."

      He stood next to where the ship the warriors had come on was connected

      to the infidel space station by an oqa membrane, speaking through the

      gnullith-villip hybrid in his throat. He disliked having to command through

      the thing, for it distorted his voice somewhat, lessening its effectiveness.

      The new leader of the warriors, Qau Lah, threw a withering glare his

      way, "The infidels opened their station to space. We were forced to obtain

      ooglith cloakers, as you know, since you wear one yourself. We will find

      them." He lifted his chin and bared his teeth. "Besides, it is the Yuuzhan

      Vong who does not accept challenge from a worthy opponent who disgraces his

      people."

      Nom Anor narrowed his eyes, then chopped his hand in a gesture of

      command. "Go. Find them."

      As they turned, he lifted the infidel blaster he had secreted in his

      sash. It made him feel vaguely sick to handle it, but he had learned to do

      all sorts of distasteful things lately.

      He shot Qau Lah in the back of the head from a meter away, then the

      warrior next to him. The third managed to raise his amphistaff before the

     
    blaster burned a hole through his face.

      That was three. Cursing to himself, Nom Anor started off to find the

      rest of the warriors who had seen him with the Jedi, to make certain none of

      them would carry report of what they had seen back to Qurang Lah.

      FORTY-TWO

      "What happened back there, exactly?" Leia asked. "Hand me that," Han

      said, gesturing toward his tools. The Falcon had made five quick jumps with

      no sign of pursuit. Now they were headed for the Maw, but Han wasn't waiting

      for the facilities there to begin his repairs. The second he thought they

      were safe, he'd begun tending to his baby.

      Leia handed him the demagnetizer. "Not that," Han said. "That." He

      pointed just as vaguely. "The thingie." " Which thingie?" "The

      hydrospanner."

      She handed it to him, rolling her eyes. "I'm not gonna sprout fur, you

      know," she said. "I'm not going that far."

      "I don't know," Han replied dubiously. "I knew this woman once, real

      pretty. Hit fifty and grew a mustache." "Han. The Sunulok?"

      "Ask your son. He's the one with the education." Jacen turned from his

      own work on the power core. "I'm pretty sure I get it," he said. His mother

      looked up at him. "Do tell." "The cargo tanker was full of liquid hydrogen,

      right?" "That far I got."

      "Dad dumped it all over the Sunulok, and we fired into it. That didn't

      do anything, except the Sunulok produced voids to swallow our shots. They

      started swallowing hydrogen as well."

      "And choked on it? What?"

      "The voids are like quantum black holes. You reach

      the event horizon-which in this case is more or less microscopic-and

      gravity becomes nearly infinite. Which means acceleration does, too. When a

      concussion missile hits one, for instance, the matter in it is instantly

      compressed into neutrons and then, blip, singularity. Just like a black

      hole. And like black holes, if you dump in too much matter at once, it has

      to queue up to get in. It starts compressing outside the event horizon, so

      on the way in it undergoes fusion."

      "And the black holes swallow most of the energy," Leia said.

      "Exactly. The light we saw was only a fraction of the energy being

      produced, the part that escaped. Most of it went into the singularity. We

      know from experience that disappearing energy taxes the dovin basals, right?

      In a few seconds the Sunulok's voids swallowed dozens of hydrogen fusion

      explosions. It shut them down."

     


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