Posted: 2008-06-15 06:33am
The command bridge was abuzz with activity, literally and figuratively. The wailing din of the myriad consoles, alarms and displays was drowned out only by the horde of people who believed they needed to be there. Despite its large size the bridge was downright crowded. To Grand Admiral Ozvald Teshik, this was not an environment conducive to command and control.
"Commander," Teshik's unnatural voice made Jerjerrod jump. The Grand Admiral's larynx was lost along with seventy-five percent of his body in the Hapan Cluster. "Just what is this... rabble doing here?"
"They were quite insistent, sir."
"So you just- whatever," he growled. There were more important matters to address than the Empire once again sacrificing operational security on the altar of politics. "Attention," he yelled. It was not the kind of yell that went unnoticed. "As of right now this is a restricted area. All non-essential personnel are to leave the premises immediately."
No one budged. A few chafed at the prospect of taking orders from a cyborg (at least one besides the new Lord Regent). The rest surely considered themselves essential in this crisis they knew nothing about.
Typical. "For our purposes, 'non-essential' shall be defined as 'anyone without a dully-assigned duty station on this command bridge'! All of you, get out of here, now! I'm taking command!"
The crowd finally filed off the bridge and allowed Teshik to get to work. "What's the situation?" he asked Jerjerrod, even as he called up a hologram to see for himself.
"Over a thousand ships just entered the Endor System and are bearing down on the Sanctuary Moon."
"I see," it was literally true. A veritable swarm of capital warships were surging toward the moon about which the Death Star and the allied fleet were keeping station. "From the opposite side," he observed. "That keeps them out of the superlaser's field of fire."
"It would appear our secret is out," the Moff confirmed glumly.
"That happened after the first shot fired in anger. I'm more worried about the timing. Lord Vader," he greeted the regent as he entered flanked by his Guards and followed by his son and daughter. "Your excellencies, I'll not mince words and waste your time. The situation is grim. Someone, presumably the Grand Vizier, has assembled a fleet of a thousand Star Destroyers and various support craft. They're closing from the opposite side of the moon and we can't orbit around without losing shield coverage. Admirals Ackbar and Piett have already moved to intercept, but I'm afraid the Death Star will be useless. We're outnumbered by about three to one and that's counting the Rebels and adjusting for the Executor's tonnage."
"Reinforcements?" asked Vader.
"The 89th Oversector Expeditionary is already inbound but they'll be about forty-five minutes. His Majesty sure knew how to pick remote systems. This will be over by then."
"How so?"
Teshik 'touched' an area of the hologram which magnified in response. A large, ovoid siege platform grew to dominate the display. "Torpedo Spheres. I believe they plan to tear down the shield and slag the moon from the far side. That would destroy the shield generator just as readily as a direct attack." He was confident he didn't need to spell out the rest.
He didn't. "Inform all commands; the Torpedo Spheres are their priority target. Move the Death Star to the highest possible orbit the shield will allow. That will narrow the corridor in which they can operate safely."
"As you command," he moved to relay the orders. As he finished his most urgent duties, "There is one other thing."
"Yes?"
"The timing of this attack is highly suspect. Somehow, Pestage knew the precise time when everybody who's anybody would be aboard the Death Star. It's too dangerous to evacuate and losing the station now would be a blow your lordship would not recover from, presuming you survive."
"You suspect a traitor?"
"One in particular: Nial Declann. He disappeared around the time of the late Emperor's death and no one on our side has seen or heard from him since. I'm no detective, but all of the evidence points toward him. Who else would know that the Death Star is operational and, more importantly, who could have mustered such a large fleet so quickly? Finally, he and I devised this very tactic as a contingency plan. Since all the Bureau spooks are locked up and all the mutineers are dead, it has to be him. It can't be coincidence.”
“And this is his fleet?”
“Actually, no. These are ships that by all rights shouldn't exist. That alone isn't unusual. The Navy habitually understates its strength both in manpower and material. But that's the thing, they're not Navy. They're not even military.”
“Then who?”
“COMPNOR,” Teshik replied darkly.
“Are you telling me those are privately-owned ships crewed by Party members?”
“'Yes' to the first part, 'not necessarily' to the second. They could be droids or mercenaries or clones. Also, we can't discount the possibility of embezzled Navy personnel, or 'all of the above' for that matter. I guess we'll know more once the fighting starts.”
***
"General Solo!" 3PO wailed. "General Solo! Oh, thank goodness we've found you!"
"Where's Leia?"
"She left for the bridge with Master Luke and Lord Vader!"
"Alright," he nodded to Chewie and Lando. "Back to the turbolifts!"
"But sir!" 3PO was aghast. "Access to that area is restricted!"
"One thing at a time, Goldenrod!" he yelled over his shoulder. "Hurry up or we're leaving you behind!"
"Wait, wait!"
"Are you sure about this?" asked Lando. Only loud enough to be heard over the alarm. "I heard they even booted Mothma off the bridge."
"I don't care," Han said firmly. "I am not sitting on my hands while we're under attack." If only I'd brought the Falcon. "I'm getting her off this station and I don't care what the Imperials say."
"Off the station!? This is the safest place in the whole system!"
"Then I'm taking her out of the system. This place is their prime target."
"And so are the people on board. You take her off the Death Star and you'll only be putting her in even more danger."
Han stopped to consider that for a moment, then shook his head and marched on. "No. I may not have the Falcon, but I haven't forgot how to fly."
"And they'll just let you take one of their ships?"
"Hey," Han gave his trademark grin. "She's a princess, remember?"
***
Day came early to the night side of the Sanctuary Moon. Countless millions of proton torpedoes initiated against the planetary deflector shield, which flashed just as brightly in an effort to shed the excess energy. Bright red and green bolts slashed through the warhead streams, blunting much (but not all) of what was only the opening volley. The joint Alliance-Imperial fleet had positioned itself between the moon and the sizable assault force. For now, the Torpedo Spheres were well-protected amidst the hundreds of Imperator II-class Star Destroyers that comprised their escort. The destroyers, for their part, were hammering the defenders, with a disproportional amount of fire battering the Executor and the Home One. The beleaguered battle wagons were focusing their fire on the nigh-solid streams of high-yield torpedoes that systematically identified weaknesses in the shield's strength or geometry and sought them out to grievous effect.
For now, what would one day be known officially as the Second Battle of Endor (but informally as the Real Battle of Endor) was a standoff. When fleet engagements devolved into stalemates, with turbolasers splashing harmlessly against equally powerful shields, that was when starfighters truly shined. The onslaught of capital ship-grade death forced shields to be projected at greater distances from the hulls they protected and at increasingly shallow angles. This opened them up to precision attacks by strike bombers, which in turn had to be escorted and intercepted by dedicated snub fighters. Tiny, single-pilot craft that wielded an infinitesimal fraction of the power capital ships commanded but could nevertheless shape the battle dramatically. They had the acceleration, maneuverability and precision to break the tie. Amidst the continent-shattering war of colossal titans these minuscule insects swarmed in a deadly, frenzied dance that was every bit as important.
And so the struggle for space supremacy raged on. B-Wings and TIE Bombers ran the blockade, their pilots keenly aware of the stakes as they sought their targets with single-minded determination. The bombers and their escort of assorted fighters weaved through both the enemy fire and defensive shields. Not all made it, some falling to enemy fighters or lucky ship-based gunners while others misjudged the openings and slammed fatally into the invisible walls of atomic and electromagnetic force. The bombers that made it through loosed volley after precision-guided volley of proton torpedoes into the most vulnerable sections of hull. Guns died, sensors went blind, shields failed and one by one Torpedo Spheres found themselves terminally crippled and easy prey for the capital ships of Death Squadron and the Alliance fleet. Without shields, the turbolasers blasted through with pitiful ease. Some broke up, others disappeared in a blinding flash of conflagration as reactors lost containment and went critical.
The battle was hard fought however and as the long, intense minutes rolled by, fewer and fewer bombers made it through. The enemy pilots and gunnery crews proved better than Teshik had expected. In fact, they were proving themselves superior to the allied forces present. Worse yet, the entire enemy fleet moved with a level precision and coordination that defied belief. Fortunately, the Grand Admiral knew exactly what was going on.
"I knew it," he folded his arms and gave a grim nod, signaling that he took no pleasure in his vindication. "It's him."
"Battle meditation," agreed Vader. Then, for the benefit of Luke and Leia he explained. "Grand Admiral Declann is a Force-adept, trained by the Emperor himself. His specialty is a technique that allows him to telepathically control and coordinate his forces."
"With that," Teshik grunted, "He could have just brought in random people off the street. Or, more likely, they're New Order fanatics and Imperial cultists. It doesn't matter. With Declann here, they're all of one mind. His mind. It's too bad we don't know which ship he's on. I suppose that explains why he didn't bring anything larger than a destroyer. It's much easier to hide his flag."
"Also, anything larger would be too attractive a target for the superlaser," Vader pointed out. "They will have to attack the station eventually. Have my fighter prepped for immediate takeoff. I will be able to find him if I can get close enough."
"I want to come too," said Luke.
"Remain here for now," the command was just firm enough to identify it as such. "You may be needed to defend the station if the shield is lost. Remain with your sister. You are her shield. I will locate the enemy command ship myself."
***
"Access to the bridge is prohibited by order of Grand Admiral Teshik," recited a weary Naval Security trooper. At this rate, he would be repeating the line in his sleep. "Alliance command is located on Level-"
"I've got to get in there," interrupted Han. "The princess is in danger."
"The Royal and Imperial Guard is responsible for the Imperial Family's security. You have nothing to worry about, sir."
"We're under attack! Spears aren't much good against a Star Destroyer!"
"I'm aware of this..." the trooper paused, he wasn't overly familiar with Alliance ranks. "General, which is all the more reason for her to remain here."
"That's what I tried to tell him," Lando offered the trooper a sympathetic shrug.
"You stay out of this," Han scolded. "Look, will you at least deliver a message to the princess? Tell her Ha-aah!"
Darth Vader stormed out of the doors and down the corridor at a brisk pace. Were he to walk any faster, he would have been running. Chewie and Lando gave him a berth wide enough to park a speeder in. Han glanced back and forth between Vader and the trooper. He knew which one he'd rather talk to, but he also knew which one would get him results.
"Hey," he called after Vader, who ignored him. "Hey," he called again. "Lord Vader!"
Vader stopped and whirled to face him. "What is it, Solo?"
He got straight to the point. "Leia needs to be taken someplace safe."
Vader resumed his march. "She is most safe here."
"Until the shield goes. You give me a ship and I'll get her out of the system."
To Han's great surprise, Vader actually stopped and looked at him for a solid moment. While he wanted to, while he physically needed to he did not wither under that terrible, unblinking gaze, instead hiding behind his best Sabacc face. What followed was even more surprising.
"Very well," Vader relented. "I will trust you to do this." Then, to the troopers at the entrance, "Let them in." Turning back to Solo, "Now, will there be anything else?"
"No," Han said quietly.
"Good," with a billow of his cape, he turned and stomped off toward the turbolifts. "We have little time."
Lando whistled, impressed. "That took a lot of guts, Han."
"Yeah. Feels like they're about to come out."
"Need to hit the 'fresher?"
"No," he returned his attention to the semi-stunned trooper, a smug grin plastered across his face. "No, I'm good. Well, you heard the Lord Regent. Let us in."
The guard nodded to his partner and escorted the visitors inside. "With the Lord Regent's permission," he announced. "Visitors for her excellency the princess."
"Han!" Leia was standing over a console when the group arrived. "What are you doing here?"
"I've come to get you out of here. The Endor System isn't safe."
"You don't know the half of it," snorted Teshik.
Han ignored him. "Come on, Leia. We can get ourselves a ship and blow this place before they blow it up."
"I'm not going anywhere. My place is here."
"Yeah well, your old man happens to agree with me on this one. That's why I'm here. And I'm not leaving without you."
"Then stay," she matched his sardonic smile. "You're welcome to observe the battle with me. But I'm not leaving. Your chivalry is adorable Han, it really is. But I will not abandon these people in their fight for the very future of the galaxy. And for what? Just to save my own skin? If we lose here, the Empire is finished, whether I survive or not."
***
The first stage of the assault was going well, all things considered. The Torpedo Spheres had taken heavy losses initially, but now with clear space superiority very few of the enemy bombers were getting through. The only option left to the treacherous defenders was to blast through the blockade with capital weapons. While hundreds of Star Destroyers had been lost in the maelstrom of turbolaser fire, hundreds more moved in to take their place. For the rebel fleet of the regicidal Vader, it was a losing battle. The Executor and that ugly Calamari monstrosity had been forced to flee to the far side of the moon to lick their wounds. The hodgepodge collection of warships that remained continued their desperate screening of incoming torpedoes, but despite their best efforts the shield was finally beginning to fail. Yes, the assault was going better than planned. He had underestimated the cowardice of Piett and that disgusting catfish and now faced nothing but ships the size of his own.
Were it possible, a self-satisfied grin would have crossed the face of Nial Declann, Grand Admiral of the Imperial Navy; one of the four who had not gone over to the traitor junta with the rest of the royalists and technocrats that infested the military. He saw through Vader's lies, for he had the Force. He had been there when the Emperor died. He had felt his master's brief yet powerful outrage over the fatal treachery. That was not especially odious itself, however. Murder was how succession took place in the Order of the Sith: Should the Apprentice become strong or clever enough to kill his Master, he was worthy to become the Master. Declann knew it would happen eventually. In fact, he looked forward to the day. Vader possessed limitless potential, enough to surpass Sidious himself and fulfill the prophecy of the Sith'ari, the sovereign Overlord of all Sith, a virtual dark side deity. Sidious fancied himself just such a demigod, but Declann knew the truth. Vader was the Chosen One, destined to bring about the next stage of the Empire. With no enemies from which to hide, the Rule of Two would be obsolete and Declann would finally have what he deserved: A place among the ranks of Sith Lords, perhaps at the right hand of the Master himself.
But Vader was no Sith, not anymore. He was weak, having succumbed to the weakness inside him; the weakness of love. His feelings toward his estranged offspring led him to abandon the dark side and all it meant to be a Dark Lord. Treason was an integral part of the Order, yet this betrayal was unforgivable; for not only had he betrayed his master, but the Order itself. Vader had no living apprentice, and while many of his and his master's acolytes remained, none were truly Sith. Only he possessed the ancient knowledge passed down from before the days of Lord Bane, and so long as he remained a slave to his weakness, the Sith were extinct. Such treachery would not, could not go unpunished; and if, in the course of this battle he rediscovered his passion, all the better. Either way, victory was at hand, but Admiral Declann was far too focused to celebrate. In his meditation chamber deep within the Star Destroyer Aldehon, every corner of his mind was dedicated to conducting his martial orchestra, a symphony of destruction that would bring this absurd revolt to an end.
The defenders were outnumbered, outgunned and surrounded. With his steadily rising three to one advantage, bomber support was hardly essential; merely gravy on the biscuits. But when his bombers began dying at an alarming rate, more of his faculties were dedicated to their plight. One didn't become a Grand Admiral by ignoring unexpected developments. His fighters were good, for he was an expert pilot and through the Force, so were they. The Rebel pilots and Naval Aviators of Death Squadron weren't exactly bad, they were among the best doing their best, but it wasn't good enough. None of them had the Force. But this one, the leader of the Avenger squadron that was slaughtering his bombers... he did have the Force!
Found you, a coherent thought rang out amid the clamor of Declann's mind. Then, a smile did at last appear; a broad, toothy, predatory grin.
***
Leia observed the hologram quietly. Between giving orders, Admiral Teshik informed her of major developments, each less auspicious than the last. Even without his discouraging insights, she could see for herself the grim reality of their situation: They were losing the battle.
"Planetary deflector shields are failing sir," the crewman in contact with the moonside facilities reported. "Estimate total collapse of all sectors in ten, nine-"
"Tell them to go to area defense," the Grand Admiral ordered.
"Aye, sir."
"That should buy us some more time," he grumbled. Until now, the shields that protected the moon protected all of it. The defense was global and nothing got in or out without permission. Now only the sectors under assault were active. While that took tremendous strain off the generator and breathed new life into the capacitors, the moon's defensive grid was now, quite literally, full of holes.
"But won't they get through?" Leia voiced the universal concern.
"Undoubtedly. You can see their bomber wings are already breaking off and heading for the atmosphere. But it's either this or lose the shields completely. I'm more worried about the turbolasers than the torpedoes now. They're too fast to block."
The hologram illustrated his concern. The occasional green bolt slipped through the shield and hammered the surface, spawning a country-sized shockwave and fireball that leveled all in its path.
"At least it's the far side," she tried not to think about all the living creatures being crushed, suffocated and incinerated. The dust ejected into the upper atmosphere would eventually blot out the sun. The Ewoks of Bright Tree Village would endure a winter that would last for years, not months.
"Mm, for now anyway. The moon's crust can only take so much, though. More of this and we'll have major tectonic disruptions. Groundquakes and volcanic eruptions at first, but if it absorbs enough energy the whole surface will turn to molten slag. Every bit as effective as hitting the generator directly."
"Sir," came another communications tech. "Admiral Piett reports the Executor's shield capacitors are recharged and structural damage is contained. She's ready to rejoin the battle on your order."
"Finally, good news. Patch him through directly."
"Piett here," came the admiral's voice over the comm.
"Is Ackbar's cruiser ready to go too?"
"Aye, sir."
"And is he clear on the maneuver?"
"That's what he claims."
"Very good. Execute Sigma-Omega-Four."
On Piett's order, the sublight engines of the Executor roared to life, propelling the nineteen kilometer dreadnought forward and around the moon at maximum thrust. Taking the cue provided, the Home One did the same in the opposite direction, and while her display was less impressive, it was only slightly so. With speed that defied their incredible volume, the two warships circled the moon faster than Leia would have thought possible. Once on the far side they ceased their burn and rode their orbit across the enemy formation, throwing the vast majority of their reactors' output to the turbolasers which tore through the enemy armada like a hail of red and green lightsabers. Dozens of Star Destroyers broke up or went nova. By the time their fleet mates returned fire in force the ships were already sling-shotting around the moon for another devastating pass. The second run didn't catch them off guard, but neither was there much guarding they could do. The 'small' destroyers simply couldn't repel firepower of that magnitude. After a token resistance their shields buckled and collapsed, exposing the hulls which yielded so readily they may as well have been made of silica.
Return fire met with lackluster results. While the battleships were putting minimal power into recharging their shields, they sustained little damage before disappearing behind the moon again. Unfortunately, so fleeting was their presence that only a half dozen or so ships were sunk on each pass, while hundreds more remained. The awe-inspiring attack did little but focus Declann's attention away from his bombardment of the Endor Moon. Like the switch to area defense, this was merely another stalling tactic on the part of Grand Admiral Teshik. They were still losing, and everyone on both sides knew it. She hadn't felt this helpless since she chose, for similar reasons, to remain on Yavin IV as the first Death Star approached. She had been in greater danger countless times before, but the shameful reliance on others to fight and die in her stead made it particularly unpleasant; only marginally less so than fleeing the system with Han, a proposition her rational mind repeated again and again.
“Leia,” Han said to her in a hushed, pleading voice. “There's still time. Let me take you out of here. Let me take you someplace safe.”
But another voice was speaking to her, one only she could hear. It had been bugging her for some time now. Easy to ignore at first, just vague feelings that could have easily been her own anxious imagination. But as their situation grew worse, the feelings resolved into thoughts which coalesced into words; clear, coherent, consistent, foreign.
"Trust your feelings!" The voice was eerily familiar, like something from beyond the grave.
"Ben?" she said aloud.
Luke was at her side in an instant. "What is it?" he asked.
"I just... I thought I heard Ben's voice..."
"Use the Force, Leia."
"But how!?" she cried to no one, eliciting a worried glance from everyone around. "There's nothing I can do! I'm helpless! I'm useless!"
"Let go, Leia!"
She did. With no better alternative, she lost herself in the moment and surrendered her conscious mind to instincts wiser than they could have possibly been. Suddenly it was all so clear, so simple. There was no more anxiety, no more doubt; only the correct course of action occupied her mind. All that remained was for her to make the necessary decision, the choice she had to make: Risk everything, or lose it all.
"Are you alright, your excellency?" Teshik's vocabulator managed to convey his concern.
"Admiral, I want you to take the Death Star out of orbit and open fire on the enemy fleet."
"My lady, we can't do that. Not without losing the shield."
"I know, which is why we'll have to rely on air cover," she turned to Luke. "Can I count on you for that?"
"Absolutely," he smiled. Finally, she was beginning to understand. "I'll suit up right away."
"Commander," Teshik's unnatural voice made Jerjerrod jump. The Grand Admiral's larynx was lost along with seventy-five percent of his body in the Hapan Cluster. "Just what is this... rabble doing here?"
"They were quite insistent, sir."
"So you just- whatever," he growled. There were more important matters to address than the Empire once again sacrificing operational security on the altar of politics. "Attention," he yelled. It was not the kind of yell that went unnoticed. "As of right now this is a restricted area. All non-essential personnel are to leave the premises immediately."
No one budged. A few chafed at the prospect of taking orders from a cyborg (at least one besides the new Lord Regent). The rest surely considered themselves essential in this crisis they knew nothing about.
Typical. "For our purposes, 'non-essential' shall be defined as 'anyone without a dully-assigned duty station on this command bridge'! All of you, get out of here, now! I'm taking command!"
The crowd finally filed off the bridge and allowed Teshik to get to work. "What's the situation?" he asked Jerjerrod, even as he called up a hologram to see for himself.
"Over a thousand ships just entered the Endor System and are bearing down on the Sanctuary Moon."
"I see," it was literally true. A veritable swarm of capital warships were surging toward the moon about which the Death Star and the allied fleet were keeping station. "From the opposite side," he observed. "That keeps them out of the superlaser's field of fire."
"It would appear our secret is out," the Moff confirmed glumly.
"That happened after the first shot fired in anger. I'm more worried about the timing. Lord Vader," he greeted the regent as he entered flanked by his Guards and followed by his son and daughter. "Your excellencies, I'll not mince words and waste your time. The situation is grim. Someone, presumably the Grand Vizier, has assembled a fleet of a thousand Star Destroyers and various support craft. They're closing from the opposite side of the moon and we can't orbit around without losing shield coverage. Admirals Ackbar and Piett have already moved to intercept, but I'm afraid the Death Star will be useless. We're outnumbered by about three to one and that's counting the Rebels and adjusting for the Executor's tonnage."
"Reinforcements?" asked Vader.
"The 89th Oversector Expeditionary is already inbound but they'll be about forty-five minutes. His Majesty sure knew how to pick remote systems. This will be over by then."
"How so?"
Teshik 'touched' an area of the hologram which magnified in response. A large, ovoid siege platform grew to dominate the display. "Torpedo Spheres. I believe they plan to tear down the shield and slag the moon from the far side. That would destroy the shield generator just as readily as a direct attack." He was confident he didn't need to spell out the rest.
He didn't. "Inform all commands; the Torpedo Spheres are their priority target. Move the Death Star to the highest possible orbit the shield will allow. That will narrow the corridor in which they can operate safely."
"As you command," he moved to relay the orders. As he finished his most urgent duties, "There is one other thing."
"Yes?"
"The timing of this attack is highly suspect. Somehow, Pestage knew the precise time when everybody who's anybody would be aboard the Death Star. It's too dangerous to evacuate and losing the station now would be a blow your lordship would not recover from, presuming you survive."
"You suspect a traitor?"
"One in particular: Nial Declann. He disappeared around the time of the late Emperor's death and no one on our side has seen or heard from him since. I'm no detective, but all of the evidence points toward him. Who else would know that the Death Star is operational and, more importantly, who could have mustered such a large fleet so quickly? Finally, he and I devised this very tactic as a contingency plan. Since all the Bureau spooks are locked up and all the mutineers are dead, it has to be him. It can't be coincidence.”
“And this is his fleet?”
“Actually, no. These are ships that by all rights shouldn't exist. That alone isn't unusual. The Navy habitually understates its strength both in manpower and material. But that's the thing, they're not Navy. They're not even military.”
“Then who?”
“COMPNOR,” Teshik replied darkly.
“Are you telling me those are privately-owned ships crewed by Party members?”
“'Yes' to the first part, 'not necessarily' to the second. They could be droids or mercenaries or clones. Also, we can't discount the possibility of embezzled Navy personnel, or 'all of the above' for that matter. I guess we'll know more once the fighting starts.”
***
"General Solo!" 3PO wailed. "General Solo! Oh, thank goodness we've found you!"
"Where's Leia?"
"She left for the bridge with Master Luke and Lord Vader!"
"Alright," he nodded to Chewie and Lando. "Back to the turbolifts!"
"But sir!" 3PO was aghast. "Access to that area is restricted!"
"One thing at a time, Goldenrod!" he yelled over his shoulder. "Hurry up or we're leaving you behind!"
"Wait, wait!"
"Are you sure about this?" asked Lando. Only loud enough to be heard over the alarm. "I heard they even booted Mothma off the bridge."
"I don't care," Han said firmly. "I am not sitting on my hands while we're under attack." If only I'd brought the Falcon. "I'm getting her off this station and I don't care what the Imperials say."
"Off the station!? This is the safest place in the whole system!"
"Then I'm taking her out of the system. This place is their prime target."
"And so are the people on board. You take her off the Death Star and you'll only be putting her in even more danger."
Han stopped to consider that for a moment, then shook his head and marched on. "No. I may not have the Falcon, but I haven't forgot how to fly."
"And they'll just let you take one of their ships?"
"Hey," Han gave his trademark grin. "She's a princess, remember?"
***
Day came early to the night side of the Sanctuary Moon. Countless millions of proton torpedoes initiated against the planetary deflector shield, which flashed just as brightly in an effort to shed the excess energy. Bright red and green bolts slashed through the warhead streams, blunting much (but not all) of what was only the opening volley. The joint Alliance-Imperial fleet had positioned itself between the moon and the sizable assault force. For now, the Torpedo Spheres were well-protected amidst the hundreds of Imperator II-class Star Destroyers that comprised their escort. The destroyers, for their part, were hammering the defenders, with a disproportional amount of fire battering the Executor and the Home One. The beleaguered battle wagons were focusing their fire on the nigh-solid streams of high-yield torpedoes that systematically identified weaknesses in the shield's strength or geometry and sought them out to grievous effect.
For now, what would one day be known officially as the Second Battle of Endor (but informally as the Real Battle of Endor) was a standoff. When fleet engagements devolved into stalemates, with turbolasers splashing harmlessly against equally powerful shields, that was when starfighters truly shined. The onslaught of capital ship-grade death forced shields to be projected at greater distances from the hulls they protected and at increasingly shallow angles. This opened them up to precision attacks by strike bombers, which in turn had to be escorted and intercepted by dedicated snub fighters. Tiny, single-pilot craft that wielded an infinitesimal fraction of the power capital ships commanded but could nevertheless shape the battle dramatically. They had the acceleration, maneuverability and precision to break the tie. Amidst the continent-shattering war of colossal titans these minuscule insects swarmed in a deadly, frenzied dance that was every bit as important.
And so the struggle for space supremacy raged on. B-Wings and TIE Bombers ran the blockade, their pilots keenly aware of the stakes as they sought their targets with single-minded determination. The bombers and their escort of assorted fighters weaved through both the enemy fire and defensive shields. Not all made it, some falling to enemy fighters or lucky ship-based gunners while others misjudged the openings and slammed fatally into the invisible walls of atomic and electromagnetic force. The bombers that made it through loosed volley after precision-guided volley of proton torpedoes into the most vulnerable sections of hull. Guns died, sensors went blind, shields failed and one by one Torpedo Spheres found themselves terminally crippled and easy prey for the capital ships of Death Squadron and the Alliance fleet. Without shields, the turbolasers blasted through with pitiful ease. Some broke up, others disappeared in a blinding flash of conflagration as reactors lost containment and went critical.
The battle was hard fought however and as the long, intense minutes rolled by, fewer and fewer bombers made it through. The enemy pilots and gunnery crews proved better than Teshik had expected. In fact, they were proving themselves superior to the allied forces present. Worse yet, the entire enemy fleet moved with a level precision and coordination that defied belief. Fortunately, the Grand Admiral knew exactly what was going on.
"I knew it," he folded his arms and gave a grim nod, signaling that he took no pleasure in his vindication. "It's him."
"Battle meditation," agreed Vader. Then, for the benefit of Luke and Leia he explained. "Grand Admiral Declann is a Force-adept, trained by the Emperor himself. His specialty is a technique that allows him to telepathically control and coordinate his forces."
"With that," Teshik grunted, "He could have just brought in random people off the street. Or, more likely, they're New Order fanatics and Imperial cultists. It doesn't matter. With Declann here, they're all of one mind. His mind. It's too bad we don't know which ship he's on. I suppose that explains why he didn't bring anything larger than a destroyer. It's much easier to hide his flag."
"Also, anything larger would be too attractive a target for the superlaser," Vader pointed out. "They will have to attack the station eventually. Have my fighter prepped for immediate takeoff. I will be able to find him if I can get close enough."
"I want to come too," said Luke.
"Remain here for now," the command was just firm enough to identify it as such. "You may be needed to defend the station if the shield is lost. Remain with your sister. You are her shield. I will locate the enemy command ship myself."
***
"Access to the bridge is prohibited by order of Grand Admiral Teshik," recited a weary Naval Security trooper. At this rate, he would be repeating the line in his sleep. "Alliance command is located on Level-"
"I've got to get in there," interrupted Han. "The princess is in danger."
"The Royal and Imperial Guard is responsible for the Imperial Family's security. You have nothing to worry about, sir."
"We're under attack! Spears aren't much good against a Star Destroyer!"
"I'm aware of this..." the trooper paused, he wasn't overly familiar with Alliance ranks. "General, which is all the more reason for her to remain here."
"That's what I tried to tell him," Lando offered the trooper a sympathetic shrug.
"You stay out of this," Han scolded. "Look, will you at least deliver a message to the princess? Tell her Ha-aah!"
Darth Vader stormed out of the doors and down the corridor at a brisk pace. Were he to walk any faster, he would have been running. Chewie and Lando gave him a berth wide enough to park a speeder in. Han glanced back and forth between Vader and the trooper. He knew which one he'd rather talk to, but he also knew which one would get him results.
"Hey," he called after Vader, who ignored him. "Hey," he called again. "Lord Vader!"
Vader stopped and whirled to face him. "What is it, Solo?"
He got straight to the point. "Leia needs to be taken someplace safe."
Vader resumed his march. "She is most safe here."
"Until the shield goes. You give me a ship and I'll get her out of the system."
To Han's great surprise, Vader actually stopped and looked at him for a solid moment. While he wanted to, while he physically needed to he did not wither under that terrible, unblinking gaze, instead hiding behind his best Sabacc face. What followed was even more surprising.
"Very well," Vader relented. "I will trust you to do this." Then, to the troopers at the entrance, "Let them in." Turning back to Solo, "Now, will there be anything else?"
"No," Han said quietly.
"Good," with a billow of his cape, he turned and stomped off toward the turbolifts. "We have little time."
Lando whistled, impressed. "That took a lot of guts, Han."
"Yeah. Feels like they're about to come out."
"Need to hit the 'fresher?"
"No," he returned his attention to the semi-stunned trooper, a smug grin plastered across his face. "No, I'm good. Well, you heard the Lord Regent. Let us in."
The guard nodded to his partner and escorted the visitors inside. "With the Lord Regent's permission," he announced. "Visitors for her excellency the princess."
"Han!" Leia was standing over a console when the group arrived. "What are you doing here?"
"I've come to get you out of here. The Endor System isn't safe."
"You don't know the half of it," snorted Teshik.
Han ignored him. "Come on, Leia. We can get ourselves a ship and blow this place before they blow it up."
"I'm not going anywhere. My place is here."
"Yeah well, your old man happens to agree with me on this one. That's why I'm here. And I'm not leaving without you."
"Then stay," she matched his sardonic smile. "You're welcome to observe the battle with me. But I'm not leaving. Your chivalry is adorable Han, it really is. But I will not abandon these people in their fight for the very future of the galaxy. And for what? Just to save my own skin? If we lose here, the Empire is finished, whether I survive or not."
***
The first stage of the assault was going well, all things considered. The Torpedo Spheres had taken heavy losses initially, but now with clear space superiority very few of the enemy bombers were getting through. The only option left to the treacherous defenders was to blast through the blockade with capital weapons. While hundreds of Star Destroyers had been lost in the maelstrom of turbolaser fire, hundreds more moved in to take their place. For the rebel fleet of the regicidal Vader, it was a losing battle. The Executor and that ugly Calamari monstrosity had been forced to flee to the far side of the moon to lick their wounds. The hodgepodge collection of warships that remained continued their desperate screening of incoming torpedoes, but despite their best efforts the shield was finally beginning to fail. Yes, the assault was going better than planned. He had underestimated the cowardice of Piett and that disgusting catfish and now faced nothing but ships the size of his own.
Were it possible, a self-satisfied grin would have crossed the face of Nial Declann, Grand Admiral of the Imperial Navy; one of the four who had not gone over to the traitor junta with the rest of the royalists and technocrats that infested the military. He saw through Vader's lies, for he had the Force. He had been there when the Emperor died. He had felt his master's brief yet powerful outrage over the fatal treachery. That was not especially odious itself, however. Murder was how succession took place in the Order of the Sith: Should the Apprentice become strong or clever enough to kill his Master, he was worthy to become the Master. Declann knew it would happen eventually. In fact, he looked forward to the day. Vader possessed limitless potential, enough to surpass Sidious himself and fulfill the prophecy of the Sith'ari, the sovereign Overlord of all Sith, a virtual dark side deity. Sidious fancied himself just such a demigod, but Declann knew the truth. Vader was the Chosen One, destined to bring about the next stage of the Empire. With no enemies from which to hide, the Rule of Two would be obsolete and Declann would finally have what he deserved: A place among the ranks of Sith Lords, perhaps at the right hand of the Master himself.
But Vader was no Sith, not anymore. He was weak, having succumbed to the weakness inside him; the weakness of love. His feelings toward his estranged offspring led him to abandon the dark side and all it meant to be a Dark Lord. Treason was an integral part of the Order, yet this betrayal was unforgivable; for not only had he betrayed his master, but the Order itself. Vader had no living apprentice, and while many of his and his master's acolytes remained, none were truly Sith. Only he possessed the ancient knowledge passed down from before the days of Lord Bane, and so long as he remained a slave to his weakness, the Sith were extinct. Such treachery would not, could not go unpunished; and if, in the course of this battle he rediscovered his passion, all the better. Either way, victory was at hand, but Admiral Declann was far too focused to celebrate. In his meditation chamber deep within the Star Destroyer Aldehon, every corner of his mind was dedicated to conducting his martial orchestra, a symphony of destruction that would bring this absurd revolt to an end.
The defenders were outnumbered, outgunned and surrounded. With his steadily rising three to one advantage, bomber support was hardly essential; merely gravy on the biscuits. But when his bombers began dying at an alarming rate, more of his faculties were dedicated to their plight. One didn't become a Grand Admiral by ignoring unexpected developments. His fighters were good, for he was an expert pilot and through the Force, so were they. The Rebel pilots and Naval Aviators of Death Squadron weren't exactly bad, they were among the best doing their best, but it wasn't good enough. None of them had the Force. But this one, the leader of the Avenger squadron that was slaughtering his bombers... he did have the Force!
Found you, a coherent thought rang out amid the clamor of Declann's mind. Then, a smile did at last appear; a broad, toothy, predatory grin.
***
Leia observed the hologram quietly. Between giving orders, Admiral Teshik informed her of major developments, each less auspicious than the last. Even without his discouraging insights, she could see for herself the grim reality of their situation: They were losing the battle.
"Planetary deflector shields are failing sir," the crewman in contact with the moonside facilities reported. "Estimate total collapse of all sectors in ten, nine-"
"Tell them to go to area defense," the Grand Admiral ordered.
"Aye, sir."
"That should buy us some more time," he grumbled. Until now, the shields that protected the moon protected all of it. The defense was global and nothing got in or out without permission. Now only the sectors under assault were active. While that took tremendous strain off the generator and breathed new life into the capacitors, the moon's defensive grid was now, quite literally, full of holes.
"But won't they get through?" Leia voiced the universal concern.
"Undoubtedly. You can see their bomber wings are already breaking off and heading for the atmosphere. But it's either this or lose the shields completely. I'm more worried about the turbolasers than the torpedoes now. They're too fast to block."
The hologram illustrated his concern. The occasional green bolt slipped through the shield and hammered the surface, spawning a country-sized shockwave and fireball that leveled all in its path.
"At least it's the far side," she tried not to think about all the living creatures being crushed, suffocated and incinerated. The dust ejected into the upper atmosphere would eventually blot out the sun. The Ewoks of Bright Tree Village would endure a winter that would last for years, not months.
"Mm, for now anyway. The moon's crust can only take so much, though. More of this and we'll have major tectonic disruptions. Groundquakes and volcanic eruptions at first, but if it absorbs enough energy the whole surface will turn to molten slag. Every bit as effective as hitting the generator directly."
"Sir," came another communications tech. "Admiral Piett reports the Executor's shield capacitors are recharged and structural damage is contained. She's ready to rejoin the battle on your order."
"Finally, good news. Patch him through directly."
"Piett here," came the admiral's voice over the comm.
"Is Ackbar's cruiser ready to go too?"
"Aye, sir."
"And is he clear on the maneuver?"
"That's what he claims."
"Very good. Execute Sigma-Omega-Four."
On Piett's order, the sublight engines of the Executor roared to life, propelling the nineteen kilometer dreadnought forward and around the moon at maximum thrust. Taking the cue provided, the Home One did the same in the opposite direction, and while her display was less impressive, it was only slightly so. With speed that defied their incredible volume, the two warships circled the moon faster than Leia would have thought possible. Once on the far side they ceased their burn and rode their orbit across the enemy formation, throwing the vast majority of their reactors' output to the turbolasers which tore through the enemy armada like a hail of red and green lightsabers. Dozens of Star Destroyers broke up or went nova. By the time their fleet mates returned fire in force the ships were already sling-shotting around the moon for another devastating pass. The second run didn't catch them off guard, but neither was there much guarding they could do. The 'small' destroyers simply couldn't repel firepower of that magnitude. After a token resistance their shields buckled and collapsed, exposing the hulls which yielded so readily they may as well have been made of silica.
Return fire met with lackluster results. While the battleships were putting minimal power into recharging their shields, they sustained little damage before disappearing behind the moon again. Unfortunately, so fleeting was their presence that only a half dozen or so ships were sunk on each pass, while hundreds more remained. The awe-inspiring attack did little but focus Declann's attention away from his bombardment of the Endor Moon. Like the switch to area defense, this was merely another stalling tactic on the part of Grand Admiral Teshik. They were still losing, and everyone on both sides knew it. She hadn't felt this helpless since she chose, for similar reasons, to remain on Yavin IV as the first Death Star approached. She had been in greater danger countless times before, but the shameful reliance on others to fight and die in her stead made it particularly unpleasant; only marginally less so than fleeing the system with Han, a proposition her rational mind repeated again and again.
“Leia,” Han said to her in a hushed, pleading voice. “There's still time. Let me take you out of here. Let me take you someplace safe.”
But another voice was speaking to her, one only she could hear. It had been bugging her for some time now. Easy to ignore at first, just vague feelings that could have easily been her own anxious imagination. But as their situation grew worse, the feelings resolved into thoughts which coalesced into words; clear, coherent, consistent, foreign.
"Trust your feelings!" The voice was eerily familiar, like something from beyond the grave.
"Ben?" she said aloud.
Luke was at her side in an instant. "What is it?" he asked.
"I just... I thought I heard Ben's voice..."
"Use the Force, Leia."
"But how!?" she cried to no one, eliciting a worried glance from everyone around. "There's nothing I can do! I'm helpless! I'm useless!"
"Let go, Leia!"
She did. With no better alternative, she lost herself in the moment and surrendered her conscious mind to instincts wiser than they could have possibly been. Suddenly it was all so clear, so simple. There was no more anxiety, no more doubt; only the correct course of action occupied her mind. All that remained was for her to make the necessary decision, the choice she had to make: Risk everything, or lose it all.
"Are you alright, your excellency?" Teshik's vocabulator managed to convey his concern.
"Admiral, I want you to take the Death Star out of orbit and open fire on the enemy fleet."
"My lady, we can't do that. Not without losing the shield."
"I know, which is why we'll have to rely on air cover," she turned to Luke. "Can I count on you for that?"
"Absolutely," he smiled. Finally, she was beginning to understand. "I'll suit up right away."