Dropping out of hyperspace to find an armada waiting with weapon systems powering up wasn’t as alarming as it should have been. In part that was because Ayli could feel the Force guiding her and knew that she wasn’t about to be reduced to space dust in the next few moments. More than that however was the fact that the make and model of the armada’s warship woke her slumbering rage.
“Got multiple targeting locks from, well it looks like everyone over there,” Nix said.
Evasive maneuvers were called for, but Ayli kept their shuttle flying straight and true towards the fleeing Enclave racing yacht.
“Comm alert coming in too,” Nix said. “Do you want to take it or shall I?”
“Go ahead.” Ayli was too focused on closing the distance with the much faster yacht and staying alert for the targeting locks turning into confirmed attacks to feel like dealing with the people she knew were on the ships in front of her.
“Zardewill Consortium shuttle, you have violated an Imperial control sphere. Power down your weapon systems and prepare to be boarded.” The speaker’s crisp core world accent left Ayli reaching for the Force to strangle him at range.
That wasn’t going to solve their problems though. Killing one Ex-Imperial Officer was good but killing an entire armada of them was always better.
“I’m going to need to see some Imperial Security codes. We’ve run across a lot of pirates claiming Imperial navy privileges.” Nix wasn’t speaking the lingo a professional navigator would have used but it didn’t matter. Pushing back against the authority they’d never deserved to have and was entirely illusionary was an effective tactic for inciting anger no matter what words were used.
“You will stand down now,” the faux-Imperial officer commanded. “Any attempt to flee the system will result in your immediate destruction.”
Ayli brought the hyperdrive up to full power for an instantaneous jump and held it there for a moment, giving the armada a chance to fully lock onto them and make the decision to blow them out of the sky before they got away.
In the instant that the lead ship fired, she threw the shuttle into hyperspace and brought it right back out.
Nix wasn’t going to be happy with that move. Rapid jumps into hyperspace were an astrogation nightmare and, worse, played havoc on the hyperdrive. Even with the inhumanely smooth skip the Force had let her pull off, the drive was going to need replacement parts soon, and would start behaving unpredictably after a few more jumps, which was never ideal.
“I’m sorry, where you threatening us instead of providing legitimate credentials?” Nix’s communique was not designed to deescalate the situation, which was probably further proof she wasn’t a Jedi, and it made Ayli love her all the more for it.
“Zardewill Shuttle, you will stand down this instant!”
“Random pirate armada, you are harboring a group of elite criminals,” Nix said. “They just docked with your flagship in a Incomm Starburst class racing yacht. If you’d care to send them back out so that we can return them to the justice they fled from, we…well I guess we won’t be leaving you alone even if you do that.” Nix looked over al Ayli who nodded in response.
She’d spent so many horrible years, all of her childhood really, fighting Imperial Forces. Leaving this remnant of the Imperial navy to regroup, rebuild, and become a new menace to the galaxy was simply not going to happen.
“Yeah, you should probably surrender now,” Nix said. “You won’t like what happens if you test us.”
The targeting systems on most of the armada had locked onto their shuttle again, but the lightspeed skip had given them enough distance that a fair portion of the armada’s weaponry was ineffective. The ones which could reach them were still a problem, but not one that Ayli was overly concerned with.
At least not until the Force went abruptly silent around her.
“Oh. That was a mistake.” Nix had closed her eyes. Nix was not referring to what she’d said. Nix was concentrating. And whispering to the Force.
Ayli was only somewhat aware of that however. Facing an armada of ships firing at her, if even from their maximum range still demanded more or less the entirety of her natural piloting talent, hard won experience, and battle honed attention.
“Ah. There we go,” Nix said, her tone perfectly calm. “Imperial pretenders, check your sensor. Your new guests are disembarking now in your main dock. There are eleven of them. Watch the one in the lead. See how he’s suffering from fairly severe burns? I did that to him. Because he displeased me. He has now displeased me for a second time.”
Nix tightened her hand into a fist and gave a small snarl.
“In case your curious where he just went, the flight path should be obvious from the third starboard camera in your docking bay, but I would recommend turning on your external sensors. He’ll be out of tractor beam range shortly and if you wait a moment you might even catch the moment when he pops like a blood balloon.”
People exposed to hard vacuum did not, in fact, pop like balloons of any sort, but a remarkable number of people were unaware of that fact and it made for a satisfying visual image in the case of Primus Dolon.
An easily circumvented outburst of revenge aside, Nix’s assault also had the benefit of casting the Enclave’s Elders into chaos, which shredded the field of silence they’d wrapped Ayli’s shuttle in.
“Jedi scum!” The wanna-be Imperial’s voice held as much disgust as fear but Ayli could tell that fear was easily winning the contest between the two. “You may have escaped the Emperor’s justice so far, but we will destroy you in his name!”
Nix looked over at Ayli is disbelief.
“I just threw someone out of a docking bay and slapped the hell out of a bunch of old people? In what galaxy is that something a Jedi would do?”
“I don’t think they’re up on the fine points of religious doctrine among the different Force traditions,” Ayli said, diving into the path of a turbo laser battery a fraction of a second before the plasma bolts could reach them.
Closing the distance with the armada was neither a safe, nor a smart play, but it did ensure that the Imperials…
Ayli had to stop that thought.
These weren’t Imperials.
Not anymore, if they ever really had been.
What was more likely was that they were the newest generation of pathetic losers to be recruited by the fading remains of an Imperial navy task group which the Alliance hadn’t been able to track down. There might be a few of the senior staff who’d once served as actual Imperial officers, but the rank and file were usually drawn from the sort of people who’d gleeful serve a fascist regime if only they could find one to join which would justify their hatred and small mindedness.
That the galaxy had no shortage of such people during the Emperor’s reign, and was still abundant with them was balanced in Ayli’s heart only by all the people she’d known who were so much better than that.
Giving up on the galaxy was easy, and she suspected that a lot of ‘Imperial soldiers’ in the armada’s ships had done just that. She couldn’t though. Not when there were so many people in it still worth fighting for.
As she piloted the shuttle into a deadly hail of fire therefor, she banished the idea that she was still fighting Imperials. The people in front of her weren’t the boogeymen of her childhood. They didn’t hold unconquerable power and control over everything in the galaxy.
Not that the Imperials ever had either, but as a child up against a machine which had seized control over ever facet of life she could see, it had been hard to imagine what path could possibly lead them to victory.
As an adult, starting down an enemy that was, in an immediate and personal sense, every bit as overwhelming as the Galactic Empire had been, she still couldn’t see a path to victory.
But she saw more than ever the need to fight for one.
“You seem to be having some problems with destroying us. It’s probably because Imperial maintenance standards sucked,” Nix said. “I mean, you know that the galaxy moved away from them like almost immediately after you all lost to the Alliance right? The last Imperial shipyard was even decommissioned two standards ago. And it wasn’t that people minded that it had been churning out stuff for the losing side. Business’s just want to make money and your stuff? It sucked. Gotta swap out all the Imperial trash that people loaded their ships up with because it was cheap, when you think they’d realize that the Empire never gave a flying bantha poodu about quality or safety. Just look at the Tie Fighter design, right? Worst safety record of any single man fighter in galactic history. Oh, you’ve got some! That’s nice.”
Ayli was not at all surprised to see a flight of Tie’s launch from one of the nearest ships. Capital ship weapons were great in a space battle but demonstrably terrible at dealing with small ships.
Tie-Fighters, on the other hand were excellent in dogfights. Potentially deathtraps for their pilots, as Nix had pointed out, since they lacked the shielding of a better built fighter like an X-Wing, but nimble and deadly nonetheless.
Which made it all the more amusing when they started plowing into one another in the tight formation they were flying in.
Ayli glanced over to see Nix deep in concentration again.
Most shuttles were not armed. Corporate shuttles in particular often flew to destinations where combat vessels were not allowed to land out of safety concerns.
Since they’d borrowed the ship from Sali though, armaments were not a concern. There might be a pirate out there who would fly around in an unarmed shuttle, but if so, Sali had probably already shot them down.
Which meant Ayli got to dogfight.
With a twenty to one advantage, it should have been a short and unpleasant experience.
With the Force directing her where to go and when to shoot though, the odds were not at all what they appeared to be.
Especially since the pilots who were most in position to cause they problem found control switches and triggers flipping or freezing up exactly when they didn’t want them too.
“Well that was fun,” Nix said as the last two Tie-Fighters plowed into each other leaving the galaxy none the worse for their loss. “Do you have anymore toys we can break?”
Angry static answered her question and from the flagship, Ayli could feel plumes of unbridled rage rising.
“Ah, you only had a few of those. That’s a shame. Probably hard to keep your gear in working order when it was so badly made in the first place,” Nix said. “So are you going to return our prisoners to us then?” Nix asked, the hint of amusement in her voice calculated to even further enrage everyone who could hear it aside from Ayli who found it delightful.
“You failed to kill me, you witch!” Primus Dolon said, cutting into the line.
“I didn’t fail at anything,” Nix said. “You’re alive because I want you alive. For now.”
“Lies. You will die and you will never see who killed you,” Dolon said.
“Pretty sure I will,” Nix said, and focused again.
On the open comm, Ayli heard a scream of pain and surprise, though oddly not Dolon’s.
“I’m guessing you were thinking to send Elder Korgruv as your first assassin?” Nix asked. “You might want to get him to a bacta tank, like right now. That broken plasma conduit he was standing near didn’t really make him any uglier but there’s probably time to save his eyes if he gets treatment right away.”
“Nix, I think you broke them,” Ayli said. “The armada’s powering up their hyperdrives to jump out of here.”
“Oh. That’s not going to be a problem,” Nix said as a second armada slammed out of hyperspace and a gravity well enveloped a fair portion of the solar system.
“Did someone order an interdictor?” Sali asked, joining the comms.