[Jedi Quest] - 07(2)
Focus on the mission. It will get you through.
He had been glad when Mace Windu had briefed them on this mission. He had wanted something difficult to lose himself in.
The planet of TyphaDor had pleaded for the Senate’s help. They were the last holdout in the Uziel system against the aggressive invasions of the largest planet in the system, Vanqor.
An army of resistance fighters from the other planets in the system had found refuge on TyphaDor and formed a coalition force to protect the last free planet. So far TyphaDor had managed to hold out against Vanqor’s colonization efforts. Yet they knew invasion was imminent.
One of the successful tools the TyphaDor forces had used was a surveillance outpost on a remote moon. The outpost had been able to track the secret movements of the Vanqor fleet. Recently TyphaDor had learned that Vanqor was targeting the surveillance outpost for attack. The outpost was in a remote area of the moon, hidden by heavy cloud cover. The land was packed with snow and ice for months, which also meant that it was almost impossible to get crews in and out.
Reliable information had come to the TyphaDors that the Vanqors were close to pinpointing the location. It was imperative the news get through to the crew to abandon the post. There hadn’t been word from the crew in several weeks, and the fear was that the comm units were down, or the worst had happened and the post had already been attacked. Anakin and Obi-Wan had been sent to discover what was going on and, if they were still there, to bring the crew back safely.
The ship eased out of hyperspace with barely a shudder. Instantly the surveillance equipment hummed to life.
“Nothing to worry about,” Anakin said, setting his next course.
“Yet,” Obi-Wan muttered.
Anakin plotted a course that would keep him well away from space lanes. They traveled in watchful silence. The TyphaDor moon, so obscure it hadn’t been named, loomed. It was known by its coordinates - TY44. Anakin saw it on the radar and then received a visual sighting. He could not see the moon itself, only the atmosphere around it. The clouds offered no glimpse of the satellite’s surface.
“There it is.”
“Radar sighting,” Obi-Wan said suddenly. “Looks like a large gunship.”
Without slowing his speed, Anakin reversed and dived. If they could get out of radar range, they might not get spotted. The Galan starfighter was small enough that it could be mistaken for space debris until the ship got closer.
“Hasn’t noticed us,” Obi-Wan said. “I think we dodged this one.”
Anakin maintained speed, flying slightly erratically to mimic space debris.
The gunship suddenly changed course.
“He’s got us,” Obi-Wan said crisply. “Six quad laser cannons, three on each side. Two concussion missile launch tubes. Four… no, six turbolaser cannons.”
“In other words, we’re a little outgunned,” Anakin said.
“I suggest evasion as our best course,” Obi-Wan agreed dryly.
Laser cannonfire exploded around them.
“Missile on the left!” Obi-Wan shouted.
“I see it!” Anakin streamed up, making a sharp turn to evade the tracking device. The missile hugged their path. At the last second, Anakin veered off, and the missile passed them by a few meters.
“Close,” Obi-Wan said. “They’re speeding up. We can’t outrun them, Anakin.”
“Just give me a chance.”
“Too risky. Just get us down. We’ll land on the Typha Dor moon.”
“But we’re far from the outpost,” Anakin said.
“We stand a better chance down there.” Another missile screamed past. The small ship was tossed by the reverberations of cannonfire. “They’ll send a landing ship, but we’ll have a head start.”
The explosion was close. Anakin gripped the controls and gritted his teeth. His choice would be to keep flying, but he had to obey his Master.
He felt the response of the ship as he changed course. It shuddered, as though it had sustained damage. He glanced at the indicator lights. Nothing blinked at him. There must be superficial damage on the wing. Not a problem for an experienced pilot.
Anakin dipped the ship and dived into the heavy cloud cover below.
CHAPTER TWO
Obi-Wan glanced down at the surface as they dipped lower. He squinted against the glare. The thick clouds didn’t diminish the effect. The ground was covered in snow and glaciers, and the light bounced and refracted, making it difficult to see. Anakin skimmed over the terrain, looking for a place to land.
“We’ll need to engage the sensors,” Anakin said. “No telling how deep that snow is.”
Obi-Wan had already turned to the starship sensor array. “I’m getting a solid reading. The ice is meters thick. It will hold the ship.” Obi-Wan read out the coordinates. “By the lip of that rock outcropping there. We’re far enough away that we won’t lead them to the outpost, but it will be a bit of a walk.”