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    Showdown At Centerpoint

    Page 2
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      not-be able to see the Fire's blink code signals if she signaled again. In

      theory, he could use the coneship's running lights to send blink code of his

      own, but he would not be able to see the lights himself, rendering it just

      that much harder to send accurate code. Han was hoping the question of

      signaling wouldn't come up. The poor visibility to the stern made for

      another good reason to have the Fire go in second. Better to have a ship you

      trusted at your back. At least a ship you more or less trusted. Han had

      managed to put to rest most-but not all-of his reservations regarding Mara.

      He could think of no reason, no motive, for her acting against Han and Leia

      and the Republic, and there was no hard evidence that she had done so. But

      she had never explained her actions to his satisfaction, either. She had

      been in the right piaces at the right times-and ihe wrong places at the

      wrong times-a bit too often in recent days. On the other hand, if she had

      wanted to do real damage, Mara was too much of a pro to let things be

      bungled. And the opposition had certainly done some bungling, thank the

      stars. Not everything had gone their way. Say whatever else you might about

      the woman, but Mara was competent. And that was a compelling argument. No,

      Han told himself as the Jade's Fire was lost completely to forward view.

      Leave ii be. They really had no choice but to trust Jade. He watched as the

      Fire came into somewhat fuzzy view on the stern viewscreen. It was time to

      forget everything else and remember that the main thing was to get this

      crate down onto the surface. "Now, Salculd, it is your task," he said. "Do

      well." "I will," Salculd said. "Don't worry about that." The ship chose that

      moment to lurch to one side, and Salculd grabbed frantically at the

      controls. "Sorry, sorry," Salculd said. "Stabilizer overcompensating. All

      right now." "I can't tell you what a comfort that is," Han said. For a

      moment he considered the idea of shoving Salculd out of the pilot's station

      and taking over, but he knew better than that. The controls were set up for

      a Selonian, and the coneship had so many idiosyncra- sies it made the

      Millennium Falcon look like a standard production ship. It might be an

      alarming thought, but unless things got really hairy, it was probably safest

      to trust Salculd. Saiculd edged the throttle up just a trifle more and the

      coneship moved just a bit faster in toward the planet. At least the coneship

      was not such a relic that it relied on ballistic reentry, using friction

      with the atmosphere to slow itself down. It could make a nice, civilized

      powered reentry. At least Han hoped so. Most spacecraft were designed to

      survive at least one ballistic reentry, but not this thing. The planet moved

      closer. In another few minutes Salculd would have to turn the ship over and

      point its engines forward to slow the craft. That was the part that worried

      Han. Once they were decelerating, they would be at their most vulnerable.

      The coneship's fragility was far from the only source of danger. Someone on

      Selonia had sent a whole fleet of Light Attack Fighters up to meet the

      Bakuran ships. The Bakurans had done a fair amount of damage to the LAFs,

      but Han had to assume that whoever commanded them would have the sense to

      hold some of them in reserve. And as Dracmus assured him that the Hunchuzuc

      had no such ships, it only made sense to assume that whoever it was who did

      have Light Attack Fighters might take a dim view of the coneship's arrival.

      Thingb could get sticky. Han had worked on the assumption that there would

      be trouble, and done his best to plan accordingly. The Jade's Fire could

      provide a certain amount of covering fire, if push came to shove, but the

      other ship would be an uncertain protection at best. The coneship was

      completely unarmed, and had no shields at all. It didn't even have enough

      reserve power to hook up any weaponry-a moot point in any event, as there

      was no practical way to dismount any of the Jade's weapons or attach them to

      the coneship. Han had looked into it. Short of standing in the airlock and

      taking potshots at any attackers with his hand-blaster, there was not much

      he could do. But Han was used to working with nothing. Even a ship as

      decrepit as this one could play a few tricks if need be. He had found a way

      to rig up a defense that might provide some measure of protection if things

      got hot. Of course, sometimes, when you worked with nothing, nothing was

      exactly what you got. And sometimes, if you got into a fight with people who

      had better hardware, those other people won. Not a happy line of thought

      when you were on board a flying practice target headed into a war zone. And

      his thoughts didn't get any happier a few minutes later when Leia sent that

      attack warning.

      CHA PTER TWO

      Landing Leia Organa Solo, Chief of State of the New Republic, sat at the

      navigator's station aboard the Jade's Fire, watching the coneship drift in

      toward the planet Selonia. She had been a fool to let Han stay aboard that

      bucket of bolts. But she knew perfectly well that there had been no chance

      at all to get him off that ship, once he had decided he owed something to

      the Selonians on board. But what, exactly, was he getting them into? Leia

      was forced to think not just like a wife but like a politician. She could

      not see any way of avoiding it, but there was no question that Han was being

      drawn in by these Selonians-and that Leia was being drawn in as well. It

      would be easy, all too easy, for the New Republic to find itself on one side

      or another of a light it had no business in. It would be even easier to get

      tempted into bargains with these Hunchuzucs, bargains that had a few too

      many hidden strings attached . . . "He'll be all right, Leia," Mara said.

      "We'll stay right with them, all the way down. The Fire can offer them more

      protection than you think." "Hmmm? What? Oh, yes," Leia said, pointlessly

      embarrassed. It was somewhat mortifying to be reassured by Mara Jade, of all

      people. Somehow to have Mara assume that Leia was worrying about her

      husband's safety when she was really thinking about the politics of the

      situation made it even worse. Was she so callous that calculation of

      political advantage even pushed aside worries about her husband? So

      calculating that even Mara Jade was capable of more concern for Han? But

      Leia told herself, rather firmly, that she had more sense than that. She had

      no choice but to think on more than one level. What good would it do Han if

      she got so tied up in sentimental worrying that she failed to foresee the

      dangers ahead? "Han will be all right," Leia said again, trying to convince

      herself as much as her companion. "If anyone can get that tub down to the

      surface, he can." "If anyone can," Mara agreed, none too reassuringly. Mara

      was at her usual post, at the pilot's station, guiding the Jade's Fire down

      toward the surface. She frowned and adjusted the thrust controls a bit,

      slowing them down again. "Trouble?" Leia asked. Mara shook her head without

      taking her eyes off the viewport. "Nothing we can't handle, but I don't like

      being behind the coneship. That Sefonian pilot needs a fly
    ing lesson or two.

      If she hits the brakes like that too many times, she's going to get our nose

      assembly right up her stern." "Can we back off a little?" "Not if we want

      them to stay in visual contact with us. That stern holocam has no resolution

      at all. We might be too far back for it to see us as it is- Burning stars,

      she doesn't know how to fly!" Mara pulled her joystick violently up and to

      the right. "She's doing the pitchover maneuver way too early-and without

      shutting off her engines. Nearly clipped her." Leia watched as the lumbering

      bulk of the coneship began its turnover, flipping end over end to direct its

      sublight engines toward the planet and slow its descent. It was painfully

      obvious that the pilot was not managing very well. The ship was lurching

      abruptly from one attitude to the next, pausing at intermediate stages of

      the maneuver instead of moving smoothly from a nose-to-planet attitude

      direct to stern-to-planet. It only made it worse-much worse-that the pilot

      was doing it under power. Leia was a pretty fair pilot, and she would have

      been very reluctant to try doing it that way. Mara was forced to fly two

      more evasive patterns just to keep the Fire from crashing into the other

      ship. Finally she backed the Fire off by five kilometers. "They're going to

      be nose-on to us anyway," Mara said. "They'll be able to see us reasonably

      well." "With a little luck," Leia said, a bit doubtfully. The Fire had

      first-rate detection systems, and could have tracked the coneship halfway

      across the Corellian system, but all the eoncship had was straight visual.

      Leia peered out the Fire's viewport and managed, with great difficulty, to

      spot the tiny dot that was the coneship. The bright bulk of the planet's

      dayside loomed up behind the ship, rendering it all but invisible. How easy

      would the Fire be to see. a little spot of red against the blackness of

      space? Mara wasn't even using the main viewscreen anymore, but watching her

      detector displays. She wasn't relying on visual detection. Oh, well. As long

      as at least one ship could see the other, things should be all right-

      "Trouble!" Mara announced. "Leia, weapons and shields to standby, fast!"

      Leia ran the power-up routines as quickly as she could. She ran quick checks

      on the ship's turbolasers and shields. "All weapon and shield systems

      functional and on-line," she announced. "What's happened?" "Power up the

      defense tracking systems and tell me," Mara said. "All the nav systems can

      tell me is that a bunch of blips just showed up out of nowhere." "Light

      Attack Fighters," Leia announced as the defense trackers came on. "A double

      flight of them, twelve in all, coming in from right over our stern. Must

      have dropped out of a high polar orbit." Mara shook her head as she stared

      down at the navigation display. "We can handle them, but it won't be easy.

      Not with the coneship to cover." "We're too far off to extend our shields

      toward the coneship." "And we're going to stay that way," Mara said sharply.

      "I'm not getting any closer to that pilot than I have to-especially in

      combat. She's already nearly rammed us twice. Get close enough to provide

      shield cover, and we'll all be dead. Covering fire is the best I'm going to

      be able to do. How soon until the LAFs get here?" "Firing range in thirty

      seconds." "Stand by for combat maneuvers." "No! Wait! We have to blink-code

      to Han, warn them!" "You've got twenty-five seconds," Mara said, steel in

      her voice. There was no point even trying to argue. Leia reached for the

      landing light controls and flipped them back to blink-code mode. She forced

      herself to take a full five seconds to compose her message, and then sent it

      three times, in rapid succession. "Done," Leia said. "Good," Mara said.

      "Hang on." Han was almost too busy trying to keep from being flung out of

      his chair to notice the flashing lights visible in the overhead viewport.

      "Smooth and gentle, Salculd! Not sudden!" he shouted as he tried to

      concentrate on the blink code-not easy to do when the ship he was on was

      flailing about like a cornered bantha. The trouble was that Han was only

      marginally better at reading code than he was at sending it. Even under

      perfect conditions, he might have had problems. He struggled to catch it

      all. At least Leia used the special word-end signal between words.

      Otherwise, he'd have never gotten anywhere. "B-A-N-D-I- something- something

      word ends," he muttered to himself. "Bandi? Bandits! Oh, great!" He tried to

      concentrate on the next word. Missed something -R-O-M word ends. Burning

      suns, Leia, do you have to send so fast? Missed something -E-H-l-N-D word

      ends J-A-D-E-S-F-I- Han missed the end of it as the coneship bobbled about

      again, but he had read enough to know the score. Bandits, enemy fighters,

      were headed this way, coming from behind the Jade's Fire. And either by bad

      luck or good timing they were heading in right as the coneship was at its

      most vulnerable. Han glanced over at the Selonians. You didn't have to be an

      expert at reading Selonian expressions to know that they were both scared

      silly, Salculd only slightly less so than Draemus. Han reminded himself she

      did not speak Basic. There was no point at all to telling Salculd about the

      bandits until she had the ship under control. Han was sure she hadn't even

      seen the blink-code message. Good. Let her work. Let her work. The coneship

      slowly lumbered around into braking position, its fat stern pointed almost

      precisely straight down at the planet, but canted just slightly into the

      ship's direction of travel, so the braking run could kill the craft's

      forward momentum as well. Han checked his instruments, doing his best to

      make sense out of the Selonian notation. By some miracle or other, Salculd

      seemed 10 have gotten them into the right position, and at the right

      attitude. "Good, good," he said as calmly as he could. Probably they had

      just a few seconds left before the bandits jumped them. But trying to rush

      Salculd would be worse than useless at this point. If she got any more

      scared, she might freeze completely. "Now then, Salculd, one other matter.

      Is time to, ah, lest our defense plan. You will bring the ship to spin,

      please, of three spins per minute." "Test?" Draemus sputtered. "But you said

      it was a one-time-only trick." Han had been hoping no one would bring that

      up. At least Dracmus had spoken in Basic. There was still a million-to-one

      chance Salculd hadn't caught on. "Quiet," he said in Basic before switching

      back to Selonian. "Make the spins, please, Honored Salculd. Make sure all is

      weli, in case needed." It was clear that Salculd did not believe him-but it

      would seem she was willing to pretend she did, at least for a little while.

      "Yes, yes," she said, "of course. Commencing axial spin." The ship began to

      rotate around its conical axis, so the stars pinwheeled across the sky. Han

      studied the overhead view, as best he was able. He could just about spot the

      Fire, and the bandits were almost certainly sma ller, and coming from

      behind. There was no way he could find them, especially with the ship

      spinning like a top. He gave it up. No point in worrying about things he

      could not change. "
    Disable internal damping," Han said calmly, casually. The

      inertial dampers prevented anything more than a few percent of a ship's

      acceleration and motion from being felt by those aboard. Without them, the

      occupants of a ship accelerating to light speed could be squashed to jelly.

      No one liked turning them off-but sometimes you had to do what you didn't

      like. "But if we cannot restart inertial damping-" "Worry about such later!"

      Han snapped. He knew better than Salculd what it might mean if they couldn't

      get the dampers back on. But they would have to live long enough for the

      problem to come up. "We need to use centrifugal effect if plan is to work,

      and inertial damping cancels it out. End damping!" Salculd inhaled nervously

      and reached out her hand to cut off the inertial damping system. All of a

      sudden, Han felt his weight double, then triple, as the dampers stopped

      compensating for the ship's deceleration. A moment later he felt the

      disorienting sensation of the ship spinning. "Confirm all inner airlocks

      sealed," Han ordered. "All inner airlock doors sealed. Pressure in locks,"

      Salculd said. '"Honored Solo, must we truly- "Quiet! We must. Be ready for

      next step! Maintain course, maintain thrust, unless I order otherwise!" Han

      struggled to concentrate on the spinning starfield overhead. If this was

      going to work, it would take exact timing. But how could he time anything if

      he couldn't see? Maybe he would get lucky and the Jade's Fire would signal

      the all clear. And maybe he would wake up and discover the whole nightmare

      trip to Corellia had just been a dream. If only wishing could make it true.

      He had done his best. Now all they could do was hang on and see how it came

      out. "Rear, ventral, and dorsal shields to full, forward shields to one

      quarter," Mara ordered. "Divert shields as needed for ship safety." Leia

      worked the shield settings. "Shields conligured as ordered." "Good," Mara

      said. "Maintain turbolasers at standby. We arc going to hold this course and

      speed. Act like they aren't there. They can't know how good or bad our

      detectors are. They've never seen this kind of ship before, but I know LAFs.

      They have the gear to detect turbos going on-line, but not shield

      activation. If we keep the guns off and stay on course, they might decide we

      can't see them." "What good does that do us?" Leia asked. "They might blow

     


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