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Star Wars - X-Wing 02 - Wedge's Gamble, Page 2

Michael A. Stackpole


  "Not good, not good at all."

  The major advantage an X-wing had over a TIE starfighter was shields. The two fighters matched each other in speed and the TIE actually had the edge in ma­neuverability. Shields allowed the X-wings to survive more hits during a fight, and in dogfighting, the goal was surviving to the end and beyond. Corran felt he could

  outfly the TIE pilot, but engaging in combat while naked was not something that made him feel at all confident.

  He punched the throttle to full and pushed the fighter through a series of twists and loops that carried it away from the TIE, but no closer to the Y-wings. Time seemed to be passing very slowly to Corran, with each second on the counter seeming to take a minute to click off. The TIE pilot seemed content to circle around, trying to close with Corran, then he broke off and streaked in toward the Y-wings, coming up from beneath them.

  "Heads up, Five. Invert, you have incoming."

  The Y-wings executed the flip in good order as Corran allocated power that would have normally gone to shields over to propulsion. That provided him a bit more speed, which let him close the gap with the eyeball.

  "Nine, I have missile lock."

  "Shoot, Six, shoot."

  The Y-wing let a proton torpedo go at point-blank range, but it shot past the eyeball and would have hit the X-wing had Corran not rolled fast. "Break outside, Champions!"

  The Y-wing pilots complied with Corran's order, but did so slowly. The TIE spun in on Champion Five, pour­ing verdant laser bolts into its shields. The Y-wing pilot continued his roll and dive, and the TIE corrected to fol­low him, allowing himself to fly a level arc as he pursued his quarry.

  You're mine, now. Corran eased back on his stick, millimeter by millimeter centering the Imperial fighter on his targeting crosshairs.

  Whistler shrilled a warning.

  Behind me? Who? He glanced at his sensors and saw the other TIE closing in on him and he wanted to break away. Can't, Five is history if I do.

  Corran hit his trigger, tracking ruby energy darts along the TIE's flight path. Even as he saw the lasers hit the eyeball's wings and cockpit, he braced for the other TIE's lasers burning through his ship. He saw his target

  explode and knew, as green laser bolts scythed down to­ward his ship, he was a dead man.

  He prepared himself for nothingness.

  He was not wholly disappointed.

  Nothing happened.

  Corran rolled left and climbed. "Find him, Whistler."

  The droid gave back a negative report.

  "What about Vengeance?"

  Whistler reported it had gone to lightspeed.

  At least we're clear there. Corran felt a shiver run down his spine. His left hand rose up and, through the fabric of his flight suit, touched a gold medallion he wore. It appears all my luck has not run out.

  "Five, Six, what happened to the other eyeball?"

  "I got him, Nine."

  "With what, Six?"

  "The missile I launched."

  It took Corran a second to make sense of the reply, then he remembered the missile that had almost hit him as he had come in on the TIE starfighter. "Six, you were aiming at the second TIE?"

  "Yes, sir, Lieutenant. Did I do something wrong?"

  Corran wanted to yell at him about choosing targets that have a higher threat factor—by virtue of being closer and, therefore, more likely to hit their target—but he stopped before he gave in to temptation. "Not wrong, Six, but it could have been more right."

  "Yes, sir," came a sheepish reply that remained full of nervous energy. "Next time, sir."

  "Yeah, at least we can all be thankful there will be a next time."

  Whistler tootled triumphantly as the X-wing's shields came back up.

  Corran smiled. "Yes, I do appreciate your shaving seven seconds off the estimate, Whistler." He keyed his comm unit. "Five, Six, mark the coordinates of your sleeping dupe, then we head in. We'll have reports to fill out but the fact that we can fill them out means this has been a very good day."

  2

  Wedge Antilles shook hands with both of the pilots stand­ing in his office. "Sorry to keep you waiting but we ap­parently have had another probe of the system by Imperial forces. The Imps didn't make much of a fight of it, but we almost scrambled the rest of the squadron." He walked around to his side of the transparisteel-topped desk, then waved the two of them to chairs. "Welcome to Rogue Squadron."

  Both pilots smiled and thanked him.

  Wedge looked first at the Sullustan female. "Captain Nunb, I hope you do not think the fact that you were not selected to join Rogue Squadron six months ago reflects in any way a lack of respect for your skills as a pilot."

  Aril Nunb shook her head, the slender plait of brown hair lashing one shoulder and another. "I harbored no such thought, Commander."

  "But you were aware that I chose Captain Tycho Celchu to be my Executive Officer, not you?"

  A red-purple light flashed in her big garnet eyes. "Ru­mors to that effect were easily heard, but more easily ig­nored, sir."

  Wedge smiled. Frank and practical, this I like. "Those rumors were true, Captain. My reasons were ..."

  "Excuse me, sir, but you have no need to explain yourself to me."

  "I think you will find, both of you, that Rogue Squadron is full of very good pilots. Our discipline is a bit more lax than in other units, and I tend to explain or­ders when I can because we rely on each other very heav­ily. No one shirks duty here, no matter how dangerous. I think it is important that every member of the squadron knows where he or she stands."

  The mouse-eared Sullustan nodded her head. "Yes, sir."

  "I'd heard stories about you and your brother, espe­cially concerning your exploits on behalf of the Alliance in stealing supplies from SoroSuub Corporation and turn­ing them over to us. I saw firsthand how well your brother flies when he piloted the Millennium Falcon into the second Death Star and enabled Lando and me to blow the reactor and control structures. I saw then, and later in reviewing your performance tests, that the both of you have a native ability in a fighter that wasn't learned and can't be taught. Since the rebuilding of Rogue Squadron involved training pilots to higher and higher levels of ef­ficiency, I didn't think you were well suited to a role with us in such a training period."

  "I understand, sir."

  What she left unsaid told Wedge that she understood a lot more about the situation in the galaxy than she cared to mention. Rogue Squadron had lost four pilots, a full third of its strength, in the last six months. Under normal circumstances new pilots would be brought in and trained up to the squadron's level of efficiency, but such training required time. Events in the galaxy did not give the New Republic's forces much in the way of time, so the replacement pilots were being drawn from the best available candidates who expressed an interest in joining the unit.

  Wedge turned to the redheaded man seated next to

  the Sullustan. "I was surprised, Captain Cracken, to see your name appear on a list of candidates willing to re­place pilots in Rogue Squadron. You've got your own flight group out on the Rim and you're used to flying an A-wing, not an X-wing. Won't you find us a bit slow for your tastes?"

  "I hope not, sir." Pash Cracken frowned slightly.

  Wedge thought for a moment that the question had irritated the young pilot, but the reply had come in a voice that maintained its emotional neutrality. Cracken was the son of General Airen Cracken, one of the Alli­ance's legendary leaders and the New Republic's answer to Ysanne Isard. Airen Cracken had fabricated an identity for his son that allowed Pash to enter the Imperial Naval Academy. On his first assignment after graduation, Pash led his entire TIE wing in defecting to the Alliance. They became known as "Cracken's Flight Group" and their killing of a Victory-class Star Destroyer had made them and their leader legendary as well.

  "If you don't mind my asking, why do you want to leave your people behind and join us?"

  Cracken's frown deepened and he shift
ed uneasily in his chair. "It's a kind of hard to explain, sir."

  "But your reasons must be strong because you'll have to take a reduction in rank to Lieutenant to join us."

  "I know that, sir."

  Wedge opened his hands. "You may share as little as you want with the others in the squadron, Mr. Cracken, but I really do need to know why you want to be a Rogue."

  Aril Nunb leaned forward in her chair. "Perhaps if I were to leave, sir?"

  Pash shook his head. "No, that's not necessary." Breath hissed in through clenched teeth. "This is going to sound odd."

  "Perhaps, but we won't know until you get it out."

  "Yes, sir." Pash sighed. "Pretty early on, because of time I spent fooling around with old Z-95 Headhunter simulators, my father realized I had a bit of a talent for

  flying. He encouraged my interest in flying and made all sorts of opportunities available for me to use simulators and then real starfighters. I soloed before I hit puberty and simulator battles had me beating some fairly good pi­lots. I knew I was good, but I didn't know how good be­cause I thought people praised my skill to get in good with my father.

  "When I went to the Academy I got a handle on how good I was. I was better than most of my instructors when I started, and by the time I graduated none of them could touch me. We were flying TIE starfighters and my squadrons weren't losing a single pilot. I graduated right up at near the top of the class, and the guys who finished ahead of me were the guys in my squadron that I'd forced to leave the simulators and work on their academic studies."

  Cracken's hands curled into fists as strain entered his voice. "When we defected, when we killed the Exsangui­nator, all my people followed my lead and most of us sur­vived. Attrition has worn the unit down, that's why we're now part of Commander Varth's wing, but the people that have been with me all the way along think I lead some sort of a charmed life. They think I won't fail them, that I can't be beaten. Those who have died along the way are accused of having done the wrong thing at the wrong time, and in some cases they're right, but I have sent people to their deaths.

  "The new kids coming into the squadron are incul­cated into this myth of my invincibility. My pilots are get­ting careless, and that's going to get people killed. I know that happens, but because of the legend they've built me up into, I can't get my people to listen to me or do the things I need them to do. If I stay there and some Imp outguesses me, everyone will follow me down in flames."

  Wedge sat back and nodded slowly. Rogue Squad­ron's unit roster had a lot of names on it, and save for a Jedi Knight, a couple of pilots assigned to training squad­rons, and a few pilots who had left for other pursuits, anyone who wasn't active duty was dead. Biggs Dark-

  lighter, Jek Porkins, Dak Ralter, and Bror Jace were all among the most talented and famous pilots the Empire had killed, but Wedge could attach faces to all the names on the roster, and knew the details of how each of them had died. That they had perished under his command did overwhelm him at times, so he found it very easy to un­derstand Pash Cracken's dilemma.

  "I would say, Lieutenant, that a change is due for you. Your unit will have to reassess how it operates in your absence, and that will certainly be a good turn of events." Wedge tried to read Cracken's expression, but he could not. "It strikes me, however, that there are plenty of other fighter units in the Alliance that would welcome a pilot of your skill—and most of them are A-wing units."

  "Yes, sir, true, but they're not Rogue Squadron."

  "Why is it that important that you join Rogue Squad­ron?"

  Cracken's shoulders slackened slightly—not so much that Wedge would have said he slumped in his chair, but Cracken had clearly decided he would withhold nothing from his answer. "Any other unit would put me in com­mand and that would solve nothing. You see, because of my previous situation, I no longer have a perspective on how well I fly. I'm beginning to question myself and my performance, and that means I'm a hairsbreadth from doubting myself. If I've lost something, I need to know I'm not flying as well as I can, but if I lose my confidence, I lose everything.

  "Here, in Rogue Squadron, I'll be measuring myself against the best our side has to offer."

  Wedge pressed his hands together, fingertip to finger­tip. "What does your father think of this change?"

  Cracken's face slackened for a moment, then fire flared in his green eyes. "My father had nothing to do with this decision."

  "But you have spoken to him about it?"

  "Yes."

  "And he approved?"

  Cracken's head came up. "He has nothing but the ut­most of respect for you, Commander Antilles."

  "That's good to know." Wedge frowned, drawing brown brows together to hood brown eyes. The conquest of the Pyria system had required two operations because Alliance Intelligence had failed to uncover some informa­tion about the Imperial installations on Borleias. The idea of Imperial operatives or traitors having set the Rebels up for their first defeat could not be ignored and any inves­tigation of such allegations would fall to General Cracken and his people.

  While Wedge had absolutely no reservations about any of his people, his trust was not shared by others in the Alliance. General Salm, the leader of Defender Wing, had long been suspicious of Captain Tycho Celchu. While Salm had admitted to Wedge that he knew Tycho had not leaked information concerning the first Pyria assault to the Empire, he believed Tycho was an Imperial agent who would betray the Alliance at the worst possible moment.

  The conquest of the Pyria system had opened the way for the Rebel Alliance to strike at Coruscant, the Imperial homeworld. Taking Coruscant would confer upon the New Republic a legitimacy it had not yet earned in the eyes of much of the Empire's citizenry. Those who were aware of the state of the Empire could find little to differ­entiate the Rebels from the Imperial warlords who were carving their own little realm out of the Empire. Though they might not believe assurances from Coruscant that the threat presented by the Alliance or people like War­lord Zsinj was minor, they did not yet see the Empire as a cadaver waiting for scavengers to carve it up.

  Coruscant was the key to establishing the New Re­public as the new ruling force in the galaxy. Taking it was a bold step—a serious gamble that required thousands of factors to fall into place to win. Since Admiral Ackbar had ordered Wedge to attend the Provisional Council's deliberations on the project, he knew Rogue Squadron would be heavily involved in the campaign. Airen Cracken had to be aware of that eventuality, too.

  In his place I'd consider planting an agent in Rogue Squadron to watch for any suspicious activity. But would I use my own son? Wedge looked at the younger Cracken for a moment and read disappointment on his face, not outrage or wounded pride. I'd be angry and indignant, fighting the implication of being a spy with an appeal to honor. Fash is not. Is he innocent, or just very much his father's son?

  The Corellian leader of Rogue Squadron sat forward and rested his forearms on the desktop. "Trust is the key to this unit, but that doesn't mean you have to tell your fellow pilots your deepest, darkest secrets. The people here are the best and I'm sure you'll both fit in. Again, welcome to the unit."

  "Thank you, sir."

  Wedge handed each of them a small strip of plastic. "The facilities here are a bit more comfortable than we've been used to—Evir Derricote ran this operation until we took it away from the Empire. He was devoted to a cer­tain level of creature comfort. Captain Nunb, you'll have your own quarters. Lieutenant Cracken, you will share a room with Nawara Ven, a Twi'lek pilot. I think you'll like him."

  Pash took the strips and handed one to Aril.

  Wedge glanced at his datapad, then frowned sharply. "I've only got an hour until I have to fly out to rendez­vous with Home One. I will be taking our Lambda-class shuttle since I'll be bringing General Salm with me. Lieu­tenant Cracken, you may use my X-wing for the time being—we should have one of the others up and repaired inside a week for you. Captain Nunb, I'll introduce you to Captain Celchu. Because
of his status, you'll actually be in command of the unit in my absence. Tycho will help you with anything you need."

  He stood up. "Is there anything else we need to dis­cuss?"

  The Sullustan shook her head. "No, sir."

  Wedge looked at Pash. "Anything?"

  "No, sir."

  "And if I see your father at the meetings?" Pash smiled. "Just tell him he was right about the grilling he said you'd give me, and let him know I passed."

  "It will be my pleasure, Lieutenant." Wedge kept a smile on his face as he led them to the door. "I think you both will find the trials of being a Rogue a bit more dif­ficult than any interrogation I'll give you, but I have no doubt, being as how you are Rogues, you'll survive and then some."

  3

  Corran welcomed his visitors to the small suite of rooms that he and his wingmate, the Gand named Ooryl Qrygg, had been given on Borleias. Since the Rebel assault had severely damaged most of the surface buildings in the Im­perial installation, the New Republic occupation force housed itself in the underground warrens that formed the foundation for the base. Aside from the occasional blaster scars and a couple of blown-out walls, the facility was in fairly good repair.

  Corran's suite had two bedrooms that had been built on to either narrow end of a rectangular room. The walls had been painted an Imperial grey. That color, combined with the deep blue of the carpet, made the room fairly dark. Corran had countered the color scheme by bringing in as many lights as he could find and rigging a small holoprojector to flash up images of other worlds and cover a huge chunk of the longest wall.

  He'd begged, borrowed, and bartered for the furnish­ings installed in the room. Most of the functional surfaces were the tops of spare parts crates. He'd managed to keep one of the couches that had originally been in the room and swapped the one with the blaster-burn hole for two

  Y-wing ejector seats. A small refrigeration unit doubled as the holoprojector stand and, though filling the room with an occasional rattle or wheeze, managed to keep bever­ages cold and food from spoiling.