Chapter 6
I grit my teeth and pushed the thrusters beyond their recommended safe limit, a handful of turbolaser bolts screamed past the viewport as I tapped the emergency chemical thrusters and shoved us out of the next wave of incoming fire.
"Sir, port thrusters are down to fifteen percent fuel capacity," Frank reported. "Engineers are shifting refuelling rigs to compensate."
"Belay that," I went belly up and tried to stay out of most of their cones of fire. Most of the Munificent's firepower was focused 'down' so, by being up I was safe from the waves of light batteries. But that came at a cost.
"Enemy fire's dropping off, Mattix warned me. "They're going to use the Ion cannons or the heavy batteries next."
"Stay in this arc," Teskit's voice somehow remained calm even through the storms of fire we were avoiding. "Mattix, how many point defenses are around the bridge?"
"Scanning," the gunnery chief replied, chewing his lip worriedly as the enemy's larger weapons charged up. "Twelve point defense laser cannons cover the Vorsal section, Captain."
"Hammer the shields there with everything we've got and then launch the concussion missiles," Teskit ordered. "We probably won't make it through, but we can blind them temporarily and give ourselves some breathing room."
The ship shuddered underneath us as a handful of the topside light batteries tracked us. Evasive actions only went so far when you were as outgunned as we were.
"Captain, dorsal deflectors are failing," Ronard reported. "I"m shifting power, but that'll only give us ten percent at best."
"Mattix," Teskit prompted, trying to grab the stunned man's attention.
"Captain, those Ion cannons will hit if I don't go evasive," I used what was left of the chemical thrusters to force us out of a wave of light turbolaser fire."
"Corellian Nine Hells," Teskit swore, a scowl on his face as he ripped the Gunnery Chief out of his seat and took over the controls. "Firing missiles and turbolaser batteries," He stated.
But it was seconds too late, and the blue arcs of the Ion Cannons struck our ship, forcing me to wrestle with what little physical control I had left as the lights and panels went dark.
Then I lost what little control I had, and we were dead in space, watching as the Munificent passed underneath us, headed for the Starfury, a handful of final turbolaser shots striking us in passing while we were disabled.
Sighing, I rested my head against my console for a second before standing up and turning to the Lieutenant.
"Sir," I caught his attention. What're your orders?" The dim red glow of the emergency lighting cast an eerie pall over everything.
"Ronard, take the other engineers and see what you can do to restore power," Teskit ordered. "Ensign Hull, see what control you still possess over our trajectory with emergency power."
The Lieutenant stood up and moved away from Gunnery Chief Mattix's console.
"Gunnery Chief Mattix, regain control of yourself and take your position."
I didn't even look at the gunnery officer, instead taking the opportunity to see what functionality I still had.
Technically, I still had access to the chemical thrusters, what was left of them, anyway, and could nudge us in one direction or another. But I didn't see how that would be helpful when I didn't have the sensors to tell me where to go and what was around us.
"Sir, I can still receive communications, but sending is disabled," Franz reported. "It's probable that our relay was damaged by the Ion cannon."
"Give me your headset," Teskit instructed, reaching for the device and listening in on the battle we were now locked out of.
I finished the few checks I could, and then made my way over to the copilots. Frank and Victor were both silent as the grave, but they had a bit more access to information than my console did at the moment. So, after a few words, I was able to see the bits of the battlefield we could still glimpse.
It wasn't pretty. The Starfury was in better shape than we were, but that was only because it had better shields and more firepower. Somehow the Jedi had eked out a win against the droid starfighters, but they'd lost two of the three that were backing her up in the process.
Then, a few minutes later, the lights flickered on, the white glow blinding me as I rushed to my console and sat down.
"Captain, I've restored power, but we're not going to be much use in a fight," Ronard's voice echoed through the intercom system. "Dorsal deflectors are shattered, and we've lost control of the starboard side electronics. Computer systems will be glitchy until we get everything back on."
"Ensign Hull, what is the status of the Starfury?" Teskit asked as I boosted the sensors to full power.
"Drifting, sir," I replied. "Looks like the enemy took out the bridge."
Teskit frowned, and then touched the intercom button.
"What's the status of our hyperdrive systems?" He asked.
"Fried," Ronard replied. "Backup's damaged too."
I continued looking through the sensors, and while listening to their conversation, I plotted a course that would take us to the drifting cruiser. From what I could tell, she was mostly intact aside from the bridge being gone, which meant the secondary command center might be intact.
Then I noticed something.
There was fire coming from the Munificent, targeting two fighters that danced around it before they vanished into the underside and out of view. Then, a few seconds later, secondary explosions rippled through the ship, the frigate exploding in a beautifully dangerous display.
"Sir, the Munificent is down," I found and tracked the twin starfighters, noting that there wasn't any left aside from the lone Aethersprite, and it was drifting as well.
"Get us over there," Teskit stalked over to the holotable and tried to reboot it, failing before coming and standing over my shoulder to take a look at what I could see.
"I've got control," I sighed. "But two of our engines are fried. It'll take some time."
Teskit looked around the bridge, his gaze finally locking onto the lone officer who'd locked up in combat. "Gunnery Chief, if you cannot execute orders in a timely manner in combat, I will find someone who can. Fear is natural, but we are more than our base instincts. We were very lucky today," the Lieutenant sighed. "That will not always be the case. Move past your fear, Mattix, or I will remove you from my bridge and find you a different position. Am I clear?"
"Yes, sir," Mattix stammered. "It won't happen again."
"No, it won't," Teskit replied, his voice low and cold. "Because if it happens again, we will likely be dead."
Condev Teskit was at a loss for once. His current ship would not be leaving this system, the damage to the hyperdrives had seen to that. He had limited access to most of his ship with the hull breaches, and if not for sheer luck, their keel would've broken in half.
Thankfully, their full sensor suite worked, and the parts they'd stripped from the Pathfinder all those months ago had allowed them to repair their communications suite. Though, not enough to reliably establish a hypercom transmission. It was short range only.
With all of this information, Teskit concluded that he had only one option remaining.
"Ensign Hull," the officer in question glanced up from his console. "After we've picked up the surviving pilots, work out a docking solution with the Starfury."
"Aye sir," The Ensign replied, despite his near breach of regulations regarding his beard, he'd performed as well as any helmsman could be expected in their situation, if not better. His use of the chemical thrusters to avoid incoming fire was inspired, if a bit wasteful of resource. Frank and Victor had performed beyond standards as well, quickly grasping and folding into the command structure with little to no issue.
Teskit shoved those thoughts deep down, he'd handle the crew after they'd finished dealing with the aftermath of combat.
"Lieutenant 'Seven-Two," Teskit spoke over the intercom. (They still didn't have a name for the Clone Officer. Nothing seemed to fit yet.). "Prepare secondary crew to receive starfighter pilots in the cargo bay,."
"Aye sir," The Lieutenant and XO replied. "How many are we expecting?"
Teskit looked at Frank who held up a hand showing two.
"Two," Teskit replied. "We're rescuing two survivors."
There was silence for a moment as the Clone put together what that meant.
"Understood sir, we'll be ready, CT-1972, out."
Teskit watched as the Firebird limped alongside the Jedi's starfighter and the Clones used jetpacks and tethers to rescue the Commander. Then, after bringing her aboard, Ensign Hull diverted to the lone transponder from an ejected Clone Pilot. Only for there to be naught but a helmet remaining.
"Sir," Hull's voice echoed through the quiet bridge. "That was the only other transponder that was active."
"Set course for the Starfury," Teskit ordered, not taking his eyes away from the empty helmet and air supply pack. "Let's hope that there's better news there. Seven-Two, how's the Commander?"
"She's with the medical droid, sir," The clone reported. "B8 said she'll be unconscious for at least two days."
"Understood, be on standby for a docking tube deployment. We may be transferring ships."
The Lieutenant let the channel close and waited patiently for Ensign Hull to get them close to the Starfury. Matching up with the wedge-shaped vessel was difficult. The larger ships speed and mass threw the initial calculations off, but eventually, they were able to get a docking tube connected and the atmosphere equalized between the ships.
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"Seven-Two will be boarding the Starfury and checking the secondary control rooms, the engine room, and other critical areas," Teskit looked at the assembled crew. "If repairs can be made, we'll transfer all usable equipment to her and limp back to friendly space. The Admiralty will want to know that this hyperlane is temporarily secure, but that there's no guarantee that it'll remain that way without granting us more firepower."
"I'll report back as soon as we've finished our inspection," the Clone Lieutenant and engineers gathered in the docking tube.
Saluting, Teskit saw them off before returning to the bridge.
Up close, it was obvious that the Starfury had sustained more than bridge damage, scars and scorch marks dotted her hull, and when he examined her more intensely, he could see where emitters for the deflector shields were damaged or fried.
With her bridge simply gone, the Starfury would require a full overhaul in order to return her to combat-ready status, and the less said about the Firebird, the better. His ship was at her limit. Should the Starfury prove to still be void-worthy, the Firebird would have to be scuttled and the crew would have to familiarize themselves with the systems onboard the larger cruiser.
However, that depended entirely on how the Starfury's internals looked.
Two days later…
I threw my bag over my shoulder and headed for the docking tube. The Firebird had been home for the last few months, but now it was time to leave her behind. My quarters aboard the Starfury might be more cramped. But with her main bridge crew dead, and the XO having relinquished command to Lieutenant Teskit… Well, it was better to not dwell on the people you'd be taking the place of and the bunks they'd been sleeping in that now belonged to others.
Shaking my head free of the pensive thoughts, I scratched my close-cropped beard and boarded the Starfury. The larger corridors of the ship had clear signs and descriptions of where to go, and I quickly found my new quarters.
"So, looks like they threw us in the same room," Mattix tried to smile at me only for me to ignore him and enter the room, forcing my jaw to unclench as I tossed the small duffle onto the bunk I was claiming before stalking out of the room and heading for the secondary control room.
I'd probably be okay with speaking to him after a couple of days processing and sorting through my emotions. But after the last few days… I just wanted to get back to friendly space and take a shower with water, eat some food that wasn't freeze-dried rations, and have some rest in a bed that wasn't shipboard.
Over the last two days we'd dispensed with some of the navy traditions in favor of expediency. So, I simply entered the command center and took a seat at my console.
"Found out who you're bunked with, huh?" Franz's voice echoed through the mostly empty room.
"Yeah," I replied, remapping the console to issue commands to the engineers and other positions with simple taps instead of long codes and commands.
"I keep having nightmares about what might have happened if the Lieutenant hadn't taken over," the brunette added to what she'd just said. "I crunched the numbers, if he'd been a second later, we'd have gotten more than the smattering of ion fire and turbolasers."
"No use dwelling on it," I grunted. "Mattix fucked up. It's as simple as that. He'll either learn from it, or he'll go somewhere else. Either way, it won't be a problem for long."
"The cargo's been loaded onto the Starfury," Teskit's voice shocked me for a moment, sending a shudder down my spine as I parced his words. "Ensign Hull, take us on a small hyperspace jump to the system we were in before this one. The Firebird is on a timer for scuttling."
Flying a larger ship was odd, I noted as I entered the course and waited. Even beyond not having a viewport and relying on the sensors, there were a number of other factors to consider.
Instead of directly telling the engines what you wanted, it had to be relayed through the ship. Sure, I had a direct line if I needed to make an emergency maneuver. But this was a lot more supervising and directing the path we were going to take.
Basically, I did the math and had people executing my commands instead of me having to control every little detail. It was like having the two copilots on steroids. I delegated a lot more work, but the responsibility for maneuvering and control now fell to me.
So, I quickly calculated the jump and informed the Lieutenant that I had it locked in.
"Execute the jump and then we'll inspect the hyperdrive. If it's still intact, we'll make a longer jump and then make our way back to friendly space from there," Teskit turned to head out. "Hull, you have the con. I'll be in engineering if you need to reach me."