“What’s going on?” an unfamiliar voice said at Leia’s shoulder.
She turned. A young man—a kid, really—was standing there, scratching at a mop of tangled hair and frowning up at the tactical. For a moment she didn’t recognize him; then her memory clicked. Ghent, the slicer Karrde had lent them to help crack the bank break-in code that the Imperials had framed Admiral Ackbar with. She’d forgotten he was still here. “It’s an Imperial attack,” she said.
“Oh,” he said. “Can they do that?”
“We’re at war,” she reminded him patiently. “In war you can do just about anything the other side can’t stop you from doing. How did you get in here, anyway?”
“Oh, I cut myself an entry code a while back,” he said, waving a vague hand, his eyes still on the tactical. “Haven’t had much to do lately. Can’t you stop them?”
“We’re certainly going to try,” Leia said grimly, looking around the room. Across by the command console she spotted General Rieekan. “Stay out of the way and don’t touch anything.”
She’d gotten two steps toward Rieekan when her brain suddenly caught up with her. Ghent, who’d cut himself a top-level access code because he didn’t have anything better to do…
She spun around, took two steps back, and grabbed Ghent’s arm. “On second thought, come with me,” she said, steering him through the chaos to a door marked crypt opening off the side of the war room. She keyed in her security code, and the door slid open.
It was a good-sized room, crowded to the gills with computers, decrypt techs, and interface droids. “Who’s in charge here?” Leia called as a couple of heads swung her direction.
“I am,” a middle-aged man wearing a colonel’s insignia said, taking a step back from one of the consoles into about the only bit of empty space in the room.
“I’m Councilor Organa Solo,” Leia identified herself. “This is Ghent, an expert slicer. Can you use him?”
“I don’t know,” the colonel said, throwing the kid a speculative look. “Ever tackled an Imperial battle encrypt code, Ghent?”
“Nope,” Ghent said. “Never seen one. I’ve sliced a couple of their regular military encrypts, though.”
“Which ones?”
Ghent’s eyes went a little foggy. “Well, there was one called a Lepido program. Oh, and there was something called the
ILKO
encrypt back when I was twelve. That was a tough one—took me almost two months to slice.”
Someone whistled softly. “Is that good?” Leia asked.
The colonel snorted. “I’d say so, yes.
ILKO
was one of the master encrypt codes the Empire used for data transfer between Coruscant and the original Death Star construction facility at Horuz. It took
us
nearly a month to crack it.” He beckoned. “Come on over, son—we’ve got a console for you right here. If you liked
ILKO
, you’re going to love battle encrypts.”
Ghent’s face lit up, and he was picking his way between the other consoles as Leia slipped back into the war room.
To find that the battle was under way.
Six Imperial Star Destroyers had come in from hyperspace through the center gap of the Interdictor group, splitting into two groups of three and heading for the two massive midorbit Golan
III
battle stations. Their
TIE
fighters were swarming ahead of them, heading toward the defenders now beginning to emerge from the low-orbit space-dock facility and from Coruscant’s surface. On the master visual display, occasional flashes of turbolaser fire flickered as both sides began to fire ranging shots.
General Rieekan was standing a few steps back from the main command console when Leia reached him. “Princess,” he nodded gravely in greeting.
“General,” she nodded back breathlessly, throwing a quick look across the console displays. Coruscant’s energy shield was up, the ground-based defenses were coming rapidly to full combat status, and a second wave of X-wings and B-wings were beginning to scramble from the space dock.
And standing in front of the raised command chair, barking out orders to everyone in sight, was Admiral Drayson.
“
Drayson?
” she demanded.
“Ackbar’s on an inspection tour of the Ketaris region,” Rieekan said grimly. “That leaves Drayson in charge.”
Leia looked up at the master tactical, a sinking feeling settling firmly in her stomach. Drayson was competent enough… but against Grand Admiral Thrawn, competent wasn’t good enough. “Has the sector fleet been alerted?”
“I think we got the word out to them before the shield went up,” Rieekan said. “Unfortunately, one of the first things the Imperials hit was the out-orbit relay station, so there’s no way of knowing whether or not they heard. Not without opening the shield.”
The sinking feeling sunk a little lower. “Then this isn’t just a feint to draw the sector fleet here,” Leia said. “Otherwise, they’d have left the relay station alone so we could keep calling for help.”
“I agree,” Rieekan said. “Whatever Thrawn has in mind, we seem to be it.”
Leia nodded wordlessly, gazing up at the visual display. The Star Destroyers had entered the battle stations’ outer kill zones now, and the black of space was beginning to sparkle with more serious turbolaser fire. Outside the main fire field, Dreadnaughts and other support ships were forming a perimeter to protect the Star Destroyers from the defenders rising toward them.
On the master tactical, a flicker of pale white light shot upward: an ion cannon blast from the surface, streaking toward the Star Destroyers. “Waste of power,” Rieekan muttered contemptuously. “They’re way out of range.”
And even if they weren’t, Leia knew, the electronics-disrupting charge would have had as much chance of hitting the battle station as any of the Star Destroyers it had been aimed at. Ion cannon weren’t exactly known for tight-beam accuracy. “We’ve got to get someone else in command here,” she said, looking around the war room. If she could find Mon Mothma and persuade her to put Rieekan in charge—
Abruptly, her eyes stopped their sweep. There, standing against the back wall, gazing up at the master tactical, was Sena Leikvold Midanyl. Chief adviser to General Garm Bel Iblis… who was considerably more than merely competent. “I’ll be back,” she told Rieekan, and headed off into the crowd.
“Councilor Organa Solo,” Sena said as Leia reached her, a tautness straining her face and sense. “I was told to stay back here out of the way. Can you tell me what’s happening?”
“What’s happening is that we need Garm,” Leia said, glancing around. “Where is he?”
“Observation gallery,” Sena said, nodding upward toward the semicircular balcony running around the back half of the war room.
Leia looked up. Beings of all sorts were beginning to pour into the gallery—government civilians, most of them, who were authorized this deep into the command floor but weren’t cleared for access to the war room proper. Sitting alone to one side, gazing intently at the master displays, was Bel Iblis. “Get him down here,” Leia told Sena. “We need him.”
Sena seemed to sigh. “He won’t come down,” she said. “Not unless and until Mon Mothma asks him to. His own words.”
Leia felt her stomach tighten. Bel Iblis had more than his share of stiff-necked pride, but this was no time for personal squabbles. “He can’t do that. We need his help.”
Sena shook her head minutely. “I’ve tried. He won’t listen to me.”
Leia took a deep breath. “Maybe he’ll listen to me.”
“I hope so.” Sena gestured toward the display, where one of Bel Iblis’s Dreadnaughts had appeared from the space dock to join the rising wave of starfighters, Corellian Gunships, and Escort Frigates blazing toward the invaders. “That’s the
Harrier
,” she identified it. “My sons Peter and Dayvid are aboard it.”
Leia touched her shoulder. “Don’t worry—I’ll get him down here.”
The center section of the gallery was becoming almost crowded by the time she reached it. But the area around Bel Iblis was still reasonably empty. “Hello, Leia,” he said as she came up to him. “I thought you’d be down below.”
“I should be—and so should you,” Leia said. “We need you down—”
“You have your comlink with you?” he cut her off sharply.
She frowned at him. “Yes.”
“Get it out. Now. Call Drayson and warn him about those two Interdictors.”
Leia looked at the master tactical. The two Interdictor Cruisers that had come in late to the party were doing some fine-tune maneuvering, their hazy gravity-wave cones sweeping across one of the battle stations. “Thrawn pulled this stunt on us at Qat Chrystac,” Bel Iblis went on. “He uses an Interdictor Cruiser to define a hyperspace edge, then brings a ship in along an intersecting vector to drop out at a precisely chosen point. Drayson needs to pull some ships up on those flanks to be ready for whatever Thrawn’s bringing in.”
Leia was already digging in her robe pocket. “But we don’t have anything here that can take on another Star Destroyer.”
“It’s not a matter of taking it on,” Bel Iblis told her. “Whatever’s on its way will come in blind, with deflectors down and no targeting references. If our ships are in place, we’ll get one solid free shot at them. That could make a lot of difference.”
“I understand,” Leia said, thumbing on her comlink and keying for the central switching operator. “This is Councilor Leia Organa Solo. I have an urgent message for Admiral Drayson.”
“Admiral Drayson is occupied and cannot be disturbed,” the electronic voice said.
“This is a direct Council override,” Leia ordered. “Put me through to Drayson.”
“Voice analysis confirmed,” the operator said. “Council override is superseded by military emergency procedure. You may leave Admiral Drayson a message.”
Leia ground her teeth, throwing a quick glance at the tactical. “Then put me through to Drayson’s chief aide.”
“Lieutenant DuPre is occupied and cannot—”
“Cancel,” Leia cut it off. “Get me General Rieekan.”
“General Rieekan is occupied—”
“Too late,” Bel Iblis said quietly.
Leia looked up. Two
Victory
-class Star Destroyers had suddenly appeared out of hyperspace, dropping in at point-blank range to their target battle stations exactly as Bel Iblis had predicted. They delivered massive broadsides, then angled away before the station or its defending Gunships could respond with more than token return fire. On the tactical, the hazy blue shell indicating the station’s deflector shield flickered wildly before settling down again.
“Drayson’s no match for him,” Bel Iblis sighed. “He just isn’t.”
Leia took a deep breath. “You have to come down, Garm.”
He shook his head. “I can’t. Not until Mon Mothma asks me to.”
“You’re behaving like a child,” Leia snapped, abandoning any attempt to be diplomatic about this. “You can’t let people die out there just because of personal pique.”
He looked at her; and as she glared back she was struck by the pain in his eyes. “You don’t understand, Leia,” he said. “This has nothing to do with me. It has to do with Mon Mothma. After all these years, I finally understand why she does things the way she does. I’ve always assumed she was gathering more and more power to herself simply because she was in love with power. But I was wrong.”
“So why
does
she do it?” Leia demanded, not really interested in talking about Mon Mothma.
“Because with everything she does there are lives hanging in the balance,” he said quietly. “And she’s terrified of trusting anyone else with those lives.”
Leia stared at him… but even as she opened her mouth to deny it, all the pieces of her life these past few years fell suddenly into place. All the diplomatic missions Mon Mothma had insisted she go on, no matter what the personal cost in lost Jedi training and strained family life. All the trust she’d invested in Ackbar and a few others; all the responsibility that had been shifted onto fewer and fewer shoulders.
Onto the shoulders of those few she could trust to do the job right.
“That’s why I can’t simply go down and take command,” Bel Iblis said into the silence. “Until she’s able to accept me—really accept me—as someone she can trust, she won’t ever be able to give me any genuine authority in the New Republic. She’ll always need to be hovering around in the background somewhere, watching over my shoulder to make sure I don’t make any mistakes. She hasn’t got the time for that, I haven’t got the patience, and the friction would be devastating for everyone caught in the middle.”
He nodded toward the war room. “When she’s ready to trust me, I’ll be ready to serve. Until then, it’s better for everyone involved if I stay out of it.”
“Except for those dying out there,” Leia reminded him tightly. “Let me call her, Garm. Maybe I can persuade her to offer you command.”
Bel Iblis shook his head. “If you have to persuade her, Leia, it doesn’t count. She has to decide this for herself.”
“Perhaps she has,” Mon Mothma’s voice came from behind them.
Leia turned in surprise. With all her attention concentrated on Bel Iblis, she hadn’t even noticed the older woman’s approach. “Mon Mothma,” she said, feeling the guilty awkwardness of having being caught talking about someone behind her back. “I—”
“It’s all right, Leia,” Mon Mothma said. “General Bel Iblis…”
Bel Iblis had risen to his feet to face her. “Yes?”
Mon Mothma seemed to brace herself. “We’ve had more than our share of differences over the years, General. But that was a long time ago. We were a good team once. There’s no reason why we can’t be one again.”
She hesitated again; and with a sudden flash of insight, Leia saw how incredibly difficult this was for her. How humiliating it was to face a man who’d once turned his back on her and to admit aloud that she needed his help. If Bel Iblis was unwilling to bend until she’d said the words he wanted to hear…
And then, to Leia’s surprise, Bel Iblis straightened to a military attention. “Mon Mothma,” he said formally, “given the current emergency, I hereby request your permission to take command of Coruscant’s defense.”
The lines around Mon Mothma’s eyes smoothed noticeably, a quiet relief coloring over her sense. “I would be very grateful if you would do so, Garm.”