“You get a vote, Taly,” he said. “If any of us says no, we won’t do it. We’ll keep with your original plan.”
Taly bit his lip. “No, we have a better chance with your plan. Let’s do it,” he said in a rush. As he said it, he straightened. The color came back into his cheeks. “I’m ready.”
Obi-Wan sent the distress signal and kept it on. Now events were out of their control. Obi-Wan tried not to watch the power drain. He tried not to think about what might happen. Siri came over to stand next to his chair. He stood and took his place beside her. They gripped each other’s hands.
Taly moved to stand close to the windscreen, as though he could see what was ahead.
“Obi-Wan, no matter what happens,” Siri murmured, “I want you to know - “
He looked into her eyes. “I already know.”
The ship gave a violent shudder. They did not know if it was the beginning of the breakdown, or if they were in the grip of the field.
“The interdiction field,” Siri said as soon as she was sure. “It’s sucking our power.”
The ship groaned and shuddered. Stars seemed to wheel and crash as they entered realspace. The ship bumped and slammed against what felt like a wall. But it didn’t explode.
The pirate ship was waiting.
Laser cannon boomed. Obi-Wan sprang forward to the controls. “I can’t maneuver. We have no firepower. “
“They’re going to board us,” Siri said. “The escape pod?”
“They’ll blast us right out of space,” Obi-Wan said. He stood. He drew his lightsaber. Siri drew hers.
“Stand behind us, Taly,” Obi-Wan said. “Just stay behind us. Don’t try to fight.”
They felt the shock of the landing craft hitting the loading bay. They heard the pounding of boots. Many, many boots. They heard the clack clack clack of droids. Obi-Wan glanced at Siri. He saw the same knowledge in her eyes. They didn’t have to see them. They were too many.
They raced forward. Surprise was their only ally. They burst through the doors, into the thick of it - row after row of heavily armed pirates. They were a mangy group, all species, all sizes. What they had in common was weaponry and greed. Their faces were painted in bright colors, their belts hung with trophies from their many captures. He had never seen such a collection of fierce, ugly beings.
The corridor filled with smoke as small rocket fire ripped holes in the walls and thudded into the floors. Metal peeled back like durasheets.
Obi-Wan supposed that this was their warning shot, because the pirates didn’t move.
A squat, powerful being walked forward. His thick black hair hung to his waist.
“What do we have here? Jedi? Ha! What luck! Do you know there’s a bounty out for you?”
But he wasn’t looking at Siri and Obi-Wan. He was looking at Taly.
Siri sprang forward. She was all energy, like a pulsating beam of light. The pirates fired, blasters and blaster rifles, rockets and darts. She flowed and struck and moved and rolled and leaped. Fire singed her tunic and did not slow her down. Obi-Wan felt sweat dampen his back as he struck again and again, knocking droids down, evading the pirate fire, and always, always, keeping himself between the attacking troops and Taly.
He was not tiring, not yet, but he could feel the hopelessness of the situation. Still, he had promised Taly not to surrender, and he would not.
And then, suddenly, over the thud of rockets and ping of blaster fire, he heard a scream.
“No! Take me!” Taly ran through the fire. Amazingly, he was not hit. Coughing from the smoke, he yelled, “Take me, you cowards!”
“Taly, no!” Siri yelled.
“I can’t let you die for me!” Taly called to them as a pirate swept him up and threw him back. The pirates roared as they tossed him like a toy, farther and farther back, to the end of the line. The last pirate holding Taly ran, while the others kept up a steady barrage at Siri and Obi-Wan.
Retreating, the pirates kept up the intense fire. Siri and Obi-Wan could not get to Taly. The pirates leaped onto the ship and took off into space with Taly, leaving Obi-Wan and Siri aboard a smoking, dying ship.
CHAPTER 16
“We need a landing site, and fast,” Siri said. Beads of sweat matted her hair. The expression in her eyes was ferocious as she gazed out at the galaxy, as if challenging it to dare to defy her. As if space itself was obliged to hold up the dying ship.
The power was draining so fast that soon it would hit all systems. Then they would be unable to choose a course or guide it to land. They could see smoke billowing out from the port side. The attacking ship had chosen their blast sites carefully, it was clear. The escape pod bay was a mass of molten metal. Another blast on the port side had taken out all the weapons, and the ship listed to the side, constantly in danger of spinning out of control.