And then, to his surprise, the Springhawk made a sharp turn away from the hull and headed again for deep space.
Beyond the expanding cloud of destruction, he could see the other Chiss ships doing the same. “What’s wrong?” he asked, hiseyes flicking across the sky for some new danger that might have caused Mitth’raw’nuruodo to break off his attack.
“Nothing is wrong,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said, sounding puzzled. “Why?”
“But you have ceased the attack,” Kav said, clearly as bewildered as Doriana. “Yet they lie helpless before you.”
“Which is precisely why I’ve stopped,”
Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. “Jedi Master C’baoth; leaders of Outbound Flight. Your vessel has been disarmed, its ability to defend itself destroyed. I offer you this one final chance to surrender and return to the Republic.”
“What?” Kav yelped, his eyes widening. “But you were to destroy them.”
“If and when you should command again, Vicelord Kav, such decisions will be yours,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said coolly. “But not now. Outbound Flight, I await your decision.”
Through the echoing haze of dying minds still screaming at her, through the smoke and debris and distant moans of the injured, Lorana realized she was dying.
Probably from suffocation, she decided as she noticed that her lungs were straining but that little or no air was reaching them. She tried to move, but her legs seemed pinned somehow to the deck. She tried to stretch out to the Force, but with the death agonies of the Vagaari now joined by the much closer deaths of her own shipmates she couldn’t seem to bring her thoughts into focus.
Something cold and metallic closed around her wrist.
She opened her eyes to find a maintenance droid tugging at her arm. “What are you doing?” she croaked. It was a matter of mild surprise to discover that she had enough air even to speak. Experimentally, she tried to take a deep breath.
And felt a welcome coolness as air flowed into herlungs.
She blinked away some of the fog hazing her eyes and peered through the swirling debris. There was a long jagged slash through the ceiling above her, undoubtedly the source of the weapons blister’s sudden decompression. Stretched across the gash were a dozen sheets of twisted metal that appeared to have been blown or pulled away from the walls. Half a dozen small metalwork droids were climbing across them, filling the room with clouds of sparks as they hastily welded the sheets into place over the gash.
Lying on the deck halfway across the room, his arms stretching toward the ceiling as he used the Force to hold the still unwelded sheets in place, was Ma’Ning.
Lorana couldn’t see very much of his body with the wreckage of the control room scattered across her line of sight.
But she could see enough to turn her stomach. He must have caught the full brunt of one of the laser blasts, taking both the agony of the shot itself as well as the impact of the shards of shattered metal it had created. “Master Ma’Ning,” she gasped, trying to get up. But her legs still refused to work.
“No, don’t,” Ma’Ning said. His voice was strained but still carried the full authority of a Jedi Master. “It’s too late for me.”
“For—” Lorana broke off, a sudden edge of horror cutting through her. With the attack and her own near suffocation, she’d completely lost her connection to the Jedi meld that had so successfully blocked the Vagaari attack.
Now, as she tried to stretch out to it again, she found that it had all but vanished.
“No,” she whispered to herself But there was no mistake. When their attackers had targeted the weapons blisters, they had knowingly or unknowingly targeted the Jedi as well.
And with only one or two dazed and stunned exceptions, they were dead.
All of them.
“I should have… tried stop… him sooner,” Ma’Ning murmured, his voice weakening as he rapidly lost strength. “But he was… Jedi Master… Jedi Master…”
With an effort, Lorana pushed back the paralyzing horror. “Don’t talk,” she said, trying again to move. “Let me help you.”
“No,” Ma’Ning said. “Too late… for me. But not… for others.” One of his outstretched hands twitched toward her, and a bent section of girder pinning her legs to the deck lifted a few millimeters and clattered away. “You can… help them.”
“But I can’t just leave you,” Lorana protested. Again she tried to get up, and this time she succeeded.
“I am far… beyond your help,” Ma’Ning said, a deep sadness in his voice. “Go. Help those… who can still… be helped.”
“But—”
“No!” Ma’Ning bit out, his face convulsing with a sudden spasm. “You’re… Jedi. Taken… oath… serve others. Go…
go.
Lorana swallowed. “Yes, Master. I—” She trailed off, searching for the right words. But there weren’t any.
Perhaps Ma’Ning couldn’t find any, either.
“Good-bye… Jedi Jinzler,” he simply said, a ghostly smile touching his lips. “Good-bye, Master Ma’Ning.”
Ma’Ning’s smile vanished, and he lifted his eyes again to the repair droids and their work. Turning away, Lorana picked her way through the wreckage toward the door.
She knew she would never see him again.
The door, when she reached it, was jammed shut.
Stretching out as best she could to the Force, she managed towork it open far enough to slip through. The corridor outside was nearly as bad as the blister itself, with buckled walls and chunks of ceiling littering the deck. But here at least the attackers hadn’t managed to cut completely through the hull and open it to space.
The blast doors ten meters down the corridor in either direction had closed when the blister had decompressed, sealing away this section from the rest of the ship. But with the breach now scaled and the emergency oxygen supplies repressurizing the area, the forward blast door opened for Lorana without protest.
In the distance she could hear shouting and screams, and could sense the fear and panic behind them. But for the moment, those people weren’t her immediate concern. The Dreadnaughts were well equipped with escape pods, where the survivors could take refuge while the droids repaired the hull.
But there was one group of people who wouldn’t have that chance: the fifty-seven so-called conspirators C’baoth had ordered locked away in the storage core.
The people she had locked away in the storage core.
Her legs were starting to throb now where the girder had landed on her. Stretching out to the Force to suppress the pain, she headed in a limping run toward the nearest pylon turbolift.
“We made a bargain!” Kav snarled. “You were to destroy Outbound Flight for us!”
“I never made any such bargain,” Mitth’raw’nuruodo said. “I agreed only to do what I deemed necessary to eliminate the threat posed by the expedition.”
“That was not what we wanted,” Kav insisted.
“You were in no position to make demands,”
Mitth’raw’nuruodo reminded him. “Nor are you now.”
There was a sudden hiss from the comm. “So,” an almost unrecognizable voice ground out. “You think you have won, alien?” The display came alive… and a cold shiver ran up Doriaria’s back.
It was Jorus C’baoth, pale and disheveled, his clothing torn and blood-spattered, one side of his face badly burned. But his eyes blazed with the same arrogant fire that Doriana had seen that day long ago in Supreme Chancellor Palpatine’s office.
He groped for Mitth’raw’nuruodo’s sleeve. “Kav is right—you have to destroy them,” he hissed urgently. “If you don’t, we’re dead.”
Mitth’raw’nuruodo’s eyes flicked to him, then back to the comm. “I have indeed won,” he told C’baoth. “I have only to give a single order—” His hand shifted slightly on his control board, his fingertips coming to rest on a covered switch edged in red. “—and you and all your people will die. Is your pride worth so much to you?”
“A Jedi does not yield to pride,” C’baoth spat. “Nor does he yield to empty threats. He follows only the dictates of his own destiny.”