Hull no. 721- a fanfic

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fractalsponge1
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Post by fractalsponge1 »

Now that is a very nice chapter. 1000 petatons is not very nice, but there's poetic justice for you :). What do you reckon is the converged sheaf that the squadron followed up with? The Mandator itself should probably put out, what, about a few hundred petatons per volley on its own, depending on how big it is (~5 recusants=venator, ~2.5 venator=ISD, so around 80-100ISD=mandator?).

And I would be honored if the Bellator/Warrior got in. Most of my back-of envelope calcs and ideas on capabilities are in the thread in A&P. PM me if you need anything else. But I thought all of Srindavathar was spoken for already - room for another battlecruiser/heavy cruiser?

Again, fun chapter. Love seeing more of the big battlewagons being rolled out, keep it up!
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Post by Eleventh Century Remnant »

If I go with the 1E25 W estimate for the Imperator, that works out to about 2.4 petatons- usual caveats- near 100% efficiency, all power can be channelled through weapons.

The Shockwave- class Admonisher is throwing about 6.7- or would be if all it's turrets were still there. The newer Allegiance class are probably at least as good, despite being smaller- a much less wasteful design.
Invincibles, they're an interesting case- the original Han Solo trilogy, via WEG's corporate sector sourcebook; not remotely wedge shaped, essentially cylindrical, which makes me wonder about their designed weapons load.
Is it possible that they were a failed spinal mount ship- originally intended to carry a single arm superlaser mounted on the long axis? They certainly don't do so by the time of the galactic civil war.

The Anon- SD III and VII are smaller and probably less potent; basically, a heavy destroyer is somewhere from about 1.5 to 3x the firepower of an Imperator, I reckon.
Light cruisers, the most common being the 3.1km Urbanus/City class, somewhere from eight to twelve petatons, 3.5 to 5x the firepower of an Imperator.

The One and Indivisible was effectively a medium cruiser throwing 18 petatons if fully intact, which she wasn't for very long, from a mosh of all sorts of weapons. The nearest Imperial equivalent, Anon starcruiser II, I've assumed they're named after flag officers and titled as such, Admiral class, I detailed out as nine clusters of five single ball turrets for 320 teraton weapons, backed by eight rows of four twin turrets for 70 teraton weapons, so that pretty much matches up. 5 to 9x the firepower of a line destroyer.

Between that and dreadnought it's blue sky, rule of thumb, but the markers at the other end of the scale are the executor at 118x the firepower of an Imperator, on turret count from the movie shooting model- throwing 283 petatons a salvo in a huge shower of relatively light weapon fire. Good for hitting fast, agile targets.
We know the Mandators rate out considerably below that, and I reckon they can do a standard 145 petatons/salvo, with on-mount capacitors stretching that to 189 for a brief burst at the start of the engagement.

The two heavy cruisers, two light cruisers, two heavy and eight line destroyers between them- giving the heavies twenty to twenty-five, the light cruisers ten, the heavy destroyers five and the line destroyers 2.4 each, that comes to 94 petatons.

Mind you, the planetary shield did take the initial kinetic impact without going down. Earthquakes everywhere, but nothing like as bad as it would have been on an unshielded world. Tichy and the escorts were shooting at the power fluctuations in the shield, and able to draw a bead on them because they were very large and obvious. Which after an impact like that, isn't really surprising.

Sindavathar isn't all here; there are second battle and battlecruiser squadrons. Plenty of room for additional firepower.
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

I hate to say this, but I really want to follow your story and posts well, but your formatting is just...impossible for me to read. Is there something computerwise going wrong? Improving it I think would increase readership and help a lot. Just a thought.
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Post by Kartr_Kana »

How did I miss this update? Great work as usual, can't wait to see how it ends ;D I figure the Goshawk fires an open spread at the incoming enemy fighters right before launching its own. Once the fighters launch they use their altitude advantage to bounce what's left of the enemy fighters. First wave TIE Interceptors and any other high acceleration specials they have. Second wave Bombers and Shuttles, third wave TIE/ln. Int's break through and use their accel to loop back and hit them from behind. Bombers push through and start hitting ground targets covered by the Ln's. Anyway that's what I figure ;P
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Post by Eleventh Century Remnant »

Sorry about the delay, this one was a bit on the tricky side to write. The actual violence was simplicity itself, it was the verbal portion of the catfight that took time.

IP, damn, you caught on. It's secretly an ego management technique to prevent me getting so many readers my head swells up... :D
Seriously, it's painfully obvious that typesetting is not my favourite thing, and I'm embarrasingly capable of not noticing that I've made a mistake. Where needs fixing?



36c

As the squadron manoeuvred to form a firing line and the ion cannon ships turned briefly away to form up, Lennart could almost feel the mood change- on Admonisher.

No, he could, it was just that he shouldn’t be able to- but their decision processes seemed to shift from trying to fight their way clear, and engage targets chosen for them by that, to doing as much damage to the Imperial ships as possible.

As Dynamic jumped in, she was met by a ripple of half broadsides before the viewscreens had cleared, started to evade in a clumsy lurch- it looked as if one of the main engines was in local control- not well enough.

The red bolt clusters converged quickly on target, ripped into the already battered destroyer’s bow and starboard side, tearing compartments open, knocking out one hyperdrive node , both starboard secondary engines, and ripping open a set of fuel cells-

and drawing a phased, timed return shot that blasted Admonisher’s portside forward group of turrets wide open, they exploded and kicked the heavy destroyer down and to it’s starboard, turning it broadside on to Dynamic.


Dordd declined to take advantage of the opportunity, instead turning and accelerating away as best he could, inflicting further damage on his ship as shot up compensator nodes failed and the already-damaged structure they were supposed to support was crushed.

Better than hanging around waiting for it to be done for them by turbolaser fire.

Dynamic was allowed to accelerate clear, and Admonisher, the bear- the shark- at bay, declined to pursue- not as if she actually could, but her fire could follow the light destroyer; chose not to, turned away from the burning Dynamic towards Fist.

Tevar made the same mistake, if it could be called that- by doctrine, she was right. By pragmatic consideration, she was taking a hazard that could not possibly be worth it. She curved back to bring Admonisher into her alpha arc, head on and bows down; opened fire.

Admonisher was slow to roll back on target, and limping from the loss of one more battery group; but her tired gun crews could still come up to the mark, they put a line of battery salvos along Fist’s line of flight.

The Imperial destroyer scored first, but on sequential fire; damage the areas where the shield had been peeled back, certainly, but not the still functioning, still shielded compartments, hits there would ablate and abrade, but they wouldn’t stop the big renegade firing on her, not fast enough.


One group from Admonisher’s third sequence of fire hit the bridge tower. Already pounded, it was largely empty, but there was still one main long range scan dome there. At tactical combat range the “big ear”’s secondary function was to analyse and deconstruct enemy EW, they couldn’t afford to lose it.

The dome disintegrated, then the salvo gutted Fist’s bridge module, flaring out forward and aft blasting away all the soft tissue and leaving only part of the hard outer walls and sparring of the module.

‘Emergency dive.’ Tevar snapped; put the bow down, change from the plan view exposing her turrets to a narrow stern-on tangent, on the theory that Admonisher would expect Fist to be ballistic now and make a prediction based on that.

She was right that time, the wreckage of the bridge module tore off as Fist accelerated into the turn, ducking under the full converged sheaf that Admonisher lobbed- the renegade’s fire caught the wreckage of the bridge tower and evaporated it, but missed the main hull.


Lennart weighed up the possibilities of doing the same. On one hand, evidence- but did that really matter now, wasn’t it time to just blow them up and let forensics do what they could?

It would make the fight a lot easier if Admonisher was decapitated, would save Imperial lives- and an effective end of the fight before the actual end would suit his political purposes too.

Admonisher couldn’t evade everyone at once, what would have been a difficult and unlikely shot earlier was now just about possible.

There was no good reason not to, and besides, Admonisher had realised that Fist was being conned from a position in her main hull, and was making a determined effort to finish her off. Tevar was likely to give them more chances than they deserved.


What she had left to prove, Lennart didn’t know; after catching and killing Reiver, not much, he would have said, but there were a whole complex of reasons in there.

Sector fleet seeking to redeem itself, sector aristocracy seeking to assert itself, and a woman.

Was there any real difference, Lennart wondered, between a misogynistic, xenophobic organisation and an organisation full of misogynistic xenophobes?

For the tactics of survival within the organisation, for change and reform, a lot- but from the viewpoint of the individual on the receiving end, not much.

That and personal pride, which might be the deadliest component of the lot. Fist should be running clear, and he should be trying to distract Admonisher.


Distract like a sledgehammer to the forehead. ‘Guns, group up converged sheaf, point target, bridge module. Roll to present the starboard side immediately after. On my mark-‘

He waited for the roll, was interrupted by a pit technician ‘Containment breach in the bridge tower, they’re out.’

Deal with that in a moment. ‘Shoot.’

The six remaining octuples and the three heavy axials crashed out together, at the same moment give or take five milliseconds that Admonisher also lobbed a full converged sheaf, from her remaining turrets, at Fist’s predicted turning arc.


They expected Fist to avoid pivoting in place, to continue to accelerate and attempt to turn to bear, prolonging the move into a wide sweeping bank, and they were right.

Admonisher was no longer firing ninety-six gun full salvos; she had been reduced to seventy-two, which made it slightly more survivable.

A full almost seven petaton salvo from a Shockwave was perfectly capable of pushing enough energy through the shields of a light destroyer to burn through from one end of the ship to the other;

but with two turret complexes blown apart, the big ship could only manage five, and Imperators were substantially better shielded and a lot tougher on the inside.

Which helped, a little. The full set of bolts crashed into the skid-turning Imperial destroyer over Fist’s portside turret line, shearing through and angling in towards the initial acceleration grid of the port main ion engine.


There was a scintillation of colour- the white flare of shield interaction and the green wash of bursting tracer wave, the fiery incendiarism of vapourising durasteel, a violet-white flare of a rupturing capacitor and the thin, electric blue wash of a rupturing engine spewing ionizates- a symphony of luminous horror.

Between the impact and the loss of an engine, Fist tumbled out of control; at least there was still something left- still mostly there, gaping, molten hole in the hull, the port aft vertex hanging on and who knew how, but not destroyed. Maimed, but not destroyed.

Admonisher’s command crew had less than a heartbeat to appreciate their efforts, because Black Prince managed to land her own full time on target salvo. The shields and the front of the bridge module under them seemed to melt and ripple as the thirty-twos hit, and the three huge axial cannon finished it by tearing the command tower apart.


‘Brenn, take over. You know what I want done.’ Lennart said, and turned and bolted for his day cabin before the navigator could put two and two together.

Crap, Brenn thought, but didn’t have time to do more than that, to wonder what Lennart was playing at.
Two decisions to be made- where were the fighters to go?

Clear the area around the deepest hole in Admonisher’s hull specifically. Two ships of the squadron severely damaged- who to send to render assistance?

‘Com-scan, record for transmission; “Ion division commence fire; all ships, once the target shields are fully depleted main guns stand down, LTL aim for enemy point defence. Fighter elements, same target category, clear the skin around their dorsal midships battery cluster.

Comarre Meridian, proceed to assist Fist, Guillemot proceed to assist Dynamic. All ships, as your shuttles and transports return, load them with boarding troops, send them out to join the attack stream, reporting to Air Commodore Olleyri.” Right, send all that lot and-‘


The door hissed open again and Lennart came out from his day cabin, looking worried- he had thrown some water over his face, and collected his lightsabre.

‘Ah. Skipper, you-‘ That explained a lot, and Brenn had been about to ask ‘are you sure about this?’ Looking at Lennart’s face, the answer was obviously no. On the other hand, what else was there to do?
‘-Need a hand?’ Brenn actually said.

‘I’m leaving the professional side of this to you to finish off, and your taking that load off my mind is help, believe me.’ Lennart said.

‘And thanks, but I have to do this, deal with Kor Alric in person, and somebody has to do that,’ he waved at the tactical map, ‘you’re the best candidate. Cover my back by making sure nothing goes wrong here, yes?’

Mixed feelings; on one hand- and the rRasfenoni had five- Brenn could think of many things to go wrong, one of them being the presence of said aliens.


He didn’t particularly want more command time, especially not unofficial command time as it was likely this would be. Taking the conn in the middle of a squadron scale operation, while the captain went off to do something exceptionally shady, was not Brenn’s idea of a worthwhile way to spend an afternoon.

Then again, what could he actually do? Refuse? That would let Adannan run wild- not an option. Who else could be left in charge? There were several of his own juniors and probably either Gunnery or com-Scan department heads who could be handed the job- but that would be just cowardice to leave it to them.

‘You can count on me.’ Brenn actually said.

‘I know.’ Lennart said, ‘and thank you again for that, too.’ He left the bridge, the blast door slamming shut and shimmering slightly as the tensors and internal ray shields locked it in place.


He had carefully not raised the possibility in Brenn’s mind that Adannan might be heading for the command bridge. Possible- more than probable- but he hoped to lure the dark jedi away.

There were two contradictory logics at work; the bridge was Lennart’s sanctum, his place of power- so in theory, it would make good emotional sense to face Adannan on his own command deck.

On the other hand, it was full of people and systems he didn’t want damaged in the crossfire. Also, and I really am thinking magically now, he chided himself, he didn’t want them to see him like this, deliberately reaching for the force.

That was possibly a suicidally bad decision, he might need to draw strength from them, but he was hoping the force was sufficiently nonlocal that he didn’t need to put them directly in the firing line to achieve that.

Now all I need to do, he thought, is think of some way to avoid putting me in the firing line… No chance. The politics didn’t work.


‘If Kor Alric turns up, don’t let him in, tell him I’ve gone down to Engineering.’ Lennart advised the stormtrooper detachment on watch. Even on Black Prince’s pie-plate dropships there wasn’t enough room for them all, there would be details left behind.

This was one of them, eight troopers and a squad leader, E-11s, two flamers, a squad automatic and a riot gun.

‘Sir, what is Kor Alric’s precise legal status?’ the squad leader asked, slowly and carefully.


‘Good question.’ Lennart replied. Tempting- useful- as it would be to be definite, it wasn’t what the evidence said.

‘I don’t know, exactly.’ He admitted. ‘I think he’s violated the terms of reference of his position, and needs to be arrested pending investigation at the very least.

I know I can convict him of treason, but I don’t expect it to reach a courtroom. I think things are going to get resolved in a more…visceral manner. What do you think?’ he put the sargeant on the spot.

‘Sir?’ That was a very this-is-an-officer-problem kind of ‘sir.’ Get your finger out of your arse and tell me what needs doing, Sir.

‘I mean it. In a way, you’re what this is all about. The imperatives, the bone-marrow deep loyalty. What do they say- where does service to the Empire lie?’ Lennart asked slowly, spelling it out as he went.

‘Captain, the dangerous cults act-‘ the stormtrooper sargeant temporised.

‘Which Kor Alric attempted to misuse to force me to cooperate with his scheme. I’ll have to answer to that sooner or later, but to an honest judge, not to him.’ Lennart said, dreading the idea.

‘After what you’ve heard, Sargeant- NL1084, is he still the legitimate authority? Do you feel still bound to obey an order that he gives you?’


There was a long pause, longer than Lennart could afford, and a hissing and crackling at the limit of audibility- intertrooper comms. ‘Sir,’ the sargeant said eventually, in flat, baffled tones, ‘the chain of command has declined to offer a position.’

‘You know, a man can look surprised even in a full face helmet. How far up the chain of command did you go?’

‘To the contact code for Kor Alric’s offices on Coruscant, sir.’ NL1084 answered.

Lennart took a couple of seconds to think that through. They, Adannan’s colleagues in that particular labyrinth of night, had hung him out to dry. If he could take Kor Alric down- if the dark jedi wasn’t strong enough to pull off his own scam, then the hell with him.

Behind that attitude lurked something genuinely twisted, but there was a later to spend worrying about that. Or hopefully there would be. ‘So do what I ask of you, then, and stand ready here.’ He ordered, and headed for the lift.

‘Gethrim?’ he called the chief engineer on his personal com. ‘Final moves. Any idea what their plan is?’

‘Fan out. Give each of the minions a letter of authority, try to get them to a live com terminal, an escape pod, somewhere where they can get in touch with the rest of sector and region- rest of the Empire for that matter- to get help to use against you.’

There was also a muttered grumble about just because he was running the com tap, people coming to him for info.


‘To serve his goals, maybe. Me, I think he intends to take out along the way. I hope he does; I hope I have managed to make him mad enough to fixate on me and leave most of the rest of the crew out of it. If he’s any good as a forcemonkey, he can sense me and pursue, I’ll lead him away.’ Lennart said.

‘There’s only one problem with that plan. You’re a dreck swordsman.’ Mirannon pointed out, bluntly. ‘There. I’ve fed their biometrics into the system with an exclusion order.

Locked them out, they can override locally, but they’ll need to repeat the command at every hatch they come to. Slows them down and tracks them for an intercept.’

‘Nicely done, but I was actually thinking of your other talents as a homicidal maniac.’ Lennart said.


“You do realise disembowelling people is just a hobby?” Mirannon started to say, then realised just how much like the crazed dark jedi that sounded.

He changed it to ‘You know, after this I may take up a less active pastime. Spanner arranging, maybe.’

‘I know. After. Where are they now?’ Lennart asked.

‘Mostly stumbling around the bridge tower. Two, no, three already made it into the main hull, his personal pilot, his PR flack and the slab of meat.’

‘Right. Not a problem. I know who I can get to deal with them- although I may need some backup to deal with Adannan personally.’ Lennart said, perfectly matter of fact.

‘I was wondering when you were going to work that out.’ Mirannon said.

‘I was just hoping you would realise it’s too damn’ dangerous to mention the possibility until it’s too late for Adannan to work it out for himself.’ Lennart said. ‘He has a huge blind spot where it comes to non force users- I hope; best not to give him ideas.’


‘Ah. Right.’ Mirannon said blankly. Should have bloody known the skipper was going to be ahead of the situation.

‘I’m going to need some of your fu- men. Voulnteers only of course, this is going to get messy, likely to be a lot of fallout.’

‘If you’re just planning to nuke him, I can easily manage that; give me a minute to run up a pellet and laser-trigger.’ The engineer joked. Actually, there was an idea he could use in there somewhere.

‘Not that it isn’t tempting, but a little bit of gamma’s an occupational hazard, especially for engineering; it’s the legal fallout I’m actually worried about.’ Lennart said.

‘So I should warn them they’re in for a fate worse than death?’ Mirannon bounced back.

‘Afraid so. If anyone’s mad enough to volunteer, send them to DC Dorsal-140.’


The first intercept was no real surprise. One of the blips had entered a main vertical turbolift shaft, and was heading at high speed to Main Machinery-1.

What other way was there to get around a ship even the size of a destroyer, quickly enough to matter? The crowded, deliberately awkward internal structure didn’t help- for structural strength and to resist blast and flash, the structure was full of corners, baffles and blast doors, offset corridors, subdivided spaces.

It was at least as bad as an urban area to get around, realistically ten minutes from end to end in uniform, more depending on what was being carried. Battles could be won and lost in that time- several already had today.

When there was no shooting going on, sometimes the easiest way to get from one extremity of the ship to another was actually to go EVA, but not now.


Turbolifts were on the face of it an absurdly dangerous and failure prone solution to the problem, but there was no real practical alternative.

Well, not short of issuing everybody their own individual jetpack and rearranging the internal companionways for personal flight. That could be made to work on paper, and Mirannon would liked to have seen it tried at least once, although preferably on someone else’s ship.

Login and over-ride, redirect the capsule to the maintenance yard adjacent to Main Machinery-1. Why walk further than necessary? The big engineer made the rest of his dispositions, then strolled off to meet a man in a lift.

Incriminating himself by doing so, but what the hell. He guessed, and rightly, who Adannan would send. The yard was closed off by a blast door, running hot- somebody was trying to melt their way through from the other side using a lightsabre.

That was possible on cheap separatist ships, not on Starfleet spec. Plug in, set a momentary softening in the tensors securing the door, then a two second delay to open.


As he had expected, the lightsabre sank in as the forcefield relaxed, then wedged stuck as the field came back to full strength and hardened the metal around it again. As the door slid open, the goon on the other side didn’t have the sense to switch his blade off and had it torn out of his hand.

It was who Mirannon had been expecting, the heavyweight, Banaar. Man of the bans, the boundaries; borderer and half- outsider, a natural for becoming twisted embittered and hostile.

He glared at Mirannon for a second, then popped two long vibroblades out of springloaded forearm sheaths, snapping into his hands and activating, and he decided to join the scream and leap school of combat.

Split second to make a decision; was he needed alive, for any purpose? For interrogation, information, evidence? On the face of it, no; although it would be as well to err on the side of caution, it being notoriously difficult to unkill people.


Mirannon stepped into the attack, left arm snapping out in an up and out block across Banaar’s right wrist to stop that blade and give time, at the same time drawing his plasma torch blade and firing it up- the thug might be fast, but he was a grudging, grumpy, negative personality.

So many qualities, so many dependent factors. Temperament, preparation, mental discipline. The big engineer wasn’t a hardened killer, but he was a better man. Hs blow landed first.

The plasma torch took the dark minion in a perfect stop-thrust just below the ribcage. Which would probably have been enough, but then Mirannon chose to exploit the properties of a containment- forcefield torch that was a tool more than it was a weapon, and fanned out the blade.


All the way. What had been a hundred and thirty centimetre long elliptical sectioned cone deformed into a flat-headed mushroom of power and light, twelve centimetre stalk, eighty centimetre diameter disk.

That sliced Banaar’s torso in half, destroying him structurally, no last dying moves. He looked astonished for a second, expression on a head on a half- severed neck bobbling above a filleted, cauterised body; then the corpse squelched to the ground, most of the clots bursting open.

As a hobby, against friends and colleagues, fence, prod, probe, be flashy and experimental, have fun. Against subhuman slime like Adannan’s hired brute, the instant killing stroke was better than he deserved.


‘Medical?’ Mirannon normalised and powered down the blade, called the med complex dispatch desk. ‘Cleanup crew to turbolift maintenance, bring the heavy gurney and a freezer bag in case we need to mine his head later.’

No answer. ‘Medical? Hello?’

‘Sorry, Chief, we have a situation here. The twi’lek-‘
By then, Mirannon was already off and running.


The one of Kor Alric’s minions who was absolutely sure this wasn’t going to work was Laurentia. She was painfully aware that there was no real hope of accomplishing the task she had been set, which was to go to the Legion, turn them back to the side of officialdom and reassert the Special Agent’s claim on their loyalties.

She didn’t think the job had a snowball’s chance in hell, and was wondering bitterly what would get her first, the legion, the crew or the ship’s own environmental systems, when suddenly there were people, stormtroopers, in the corridor ahead. It was going to be the worst case scenario after all.

She had been trying to pick a reasonably empty route, away from the working spaces of the ship and from where damage control would be busy. Try to get as far as possible on her forlorn hope- which it had been all along, hadn’t it?

Ever since Kor Alric had plucked her out of the depot unit where she had been perfectly content serving as a specialist-7 trainer in civil policing and civilian interaction.


He had essentially abducted her to serve as his personal assistant, public relations agent, and whatever other darker and sicker things occurred to him.

What he had mentioned as a possibility to Lennart, he had already done to her twice, keeping her head alive on life support while he took here apart and put her back together again, while she was conscious and watching. Strangely, the actual cutting wasn’t nearly as bad as the running commentary he had kept up.

And other, lesser indignities and degradations, and occasional opportunities for her to do the same. So it had gone, Kor Alric cultivating both sides of a love-hate relationship, steering her towards a state of dependency where there was nothing in the universe she hated and feared more than him, but could not exist without his attention and approval.

He had made a psychological wreck of her, and whatever independent intelligence she still had left agreed with Lennart; he had made them all less. Part of her duty in particular was to make more of herself, she had to try to repair the damage he did to her, stay strong and capable, ready, adaptable and willing to serve.

And how he had enjoyed playing on that. Still, the imperatives remained. If this was the hand she had been dealt there was nothing to do but play it out, suffer, endure and grab at every bittersweet moment; learn to endure, if not exactly enjoy, the pain.


Intellectually she knew she was one of many, but her kin were spread few and far between. Aleph-3, the absurd one with no personal name who had spent her life in the field, had fallen in love, or convinced herself that she had, with her commanding officer.

Who, to be fair, was a competent man who treated her as a professional and respected her skills, and wanted her to be her own person- against her own wishes on the subject?

Ah, there may be an opening there, Laurentia thought, and hated herself for still wanting to try.

It was Omega-17-Blue who were barring her way now, had intercepted her on the upper barracks deck four levels above the staging area for the dropships. Caught before she could get a chance to deliver the message.

Laurentia was relieved but not surprised when her sister took off her helmet and hooked it to her belt. Tactically it would have been netter for them to just shoot her, but there was a lot of unfinished business.


‘Are we really so dissimilar? We share the same fatal flaw.’ Laurentia said as an opening gambit. ‘Loyalty to our men.’

‘In your case, I would call that a death wish.’ Aleph-3 shot back. ‘You’re probably not aware, but you have a nervous twitch; every time I mention him, you jump as if someone stood on your tail.

Why do you follow him?’ It was an impossible question, one that momentarily took Laurentia aback as she tried to work out how her sister could ask that.

‘You shouldn’t need to ask that. It’s built in to all of us, unyielding loyalty, faithfulness to authority no matter what-‘

‘Except that it isn’t.’ Aleph- said flatly. ‘There is nothing, nothing in the hindbrain that condemns us to a life of service without meaning, without intelligent anticipation, without excellence. We do not have to be used the way you have been used- how could you let that happen to you?’

And in asking that, Laurentia realised, she also asks, how can I? The situation starting to get to you a little, dear sister? ‘So you are content to be a slave, just so long as you aren’t an obscure one? Have you ever been a harem pet, or do you just want to be?’


Laurentia was aware that she was attacking from a position of weakness. What would constitute a position of strength? Harsh reality against fluffy imagination, Pain against Dreams? Inherently extremely depressing- but if that was what was most likely to work, it was what she would have to do.

‘We came out of the same mould,’ the actually younger Aleph-3 admitted, ‘but I’m not your mirror. Why are you asking me these things that you should have asked yourself, and got answers to, long ago?’ Which was a question that could be pointed both ways.

They were clones; what was obvious to one as obvious to the other- and they were both accusing each other of being fundamentally flawed, of missing the obvious.

‘You’re afraid.’ Aleph-3 went on. ‘Afraid of being a clone, willing to do anything, descend to being a prostitute and a sadist’s torture doll, to grasp at an identity of your own.’


Water off a sugar cube’s back. It was so true, so painfully and directly true that it made little difference. So many of the rank and file- and the live born enlistees more than most- fit that description, eagerly embracing anonymity- but not their line.

Their batch was supposed to be identifiable, distinct- and yet identify with the many. It was as much a fact of Laurentia’s existence as breathing oxygen, so true that it actually had no tactical significance, being effectively unchangeable. So why had her sister chosen to say that?

‘You? Sniper-scout, seeing without being seen, undercover operative; how many identities, how many masks, how many ways to avoid having to say ‘I am me, I am here, it is now?’’ Laurentia counter-accused.

Aleph-3 opened her mouth to retort, then remembered Lennart had said much the same thing. Instead she snapped ‘if that means accepting what identity means for you, then damn’ right. I am a hunter, a shadow, I’ve tracked down dozens of enemies of the Empire- and you belong to one.

You’ve let yourself be used, tortured, three quarters destroyed- if that is what it means to be and to belong, then I want no part of it.’


‘And you think you would have been able to do any differently in my place- you think you would have been given a choice?’ Laurentia snarled at her sister.

‘You’re fooling yourself- followed a trail right off into dreamland. Reality hurts. You don’t have choices, you don’t have options, I was hurt and how are you try to use that against me.’

‘Hurt? You were played.’ Aleph-3 bit back. ‘You’re a doll owned by a monster, the only thing you have to be proud of is your suffering, and that is nothing worthy of celebration.’

Why am I saying this? Aleph-3 wondered. What is actually my objective here? Killing my sister would be trivially easy. The rest of the squad aside, he took her apart and put her back together too many times.

She’s not as strong or as fast as she ought to be, her skills have too much gloss polish and not enough cutting edge, although as mad as she has every right to be she shouldn’t hesitate to hurt me. Although what is this standing and talking, if not hesitation?

The thought crystallised; I want to save her. From Kor Alric, and from herself. Although she knows how to place her barbs, I don’t think I can save her from me as well if she keeps trying to goad me. Two out of three is the best I can manage.


‘You, you number. You’re nobody’s; that man you think is yours,’ Laurentia screamed at her sister, ‘he doesn’t want you, he can’t tell who you really are- doesn’t know how many of you he’s going to have to put up with.’

That went to the bone, Aleph-3 had to admit. Largely because she was terribly afraid that it was true. Did Jorian Lennart need her? As he was at the moment- no. Honestly, no.

As he grew into the Force- but a moment; was what she wanted to turn him into likely to treat her any more considerately than Kor Alric did Laurentia?

The dark jedi’s pet saw her sister’s flicker of doubt.

‘Join us. It really is that simple. Come with me, do your duty. Your connection doesn’t make sense and can’t bear fruit, only misery- and that’s not what you’re for.’


That was so absurd, even in her confused and blackened mood Aleph-3 noticed it. ‘I don’t believe this.’ She said. ‘That you, victim as you are, still have the nerve to talk about purpose-‘

‘Audacity was never something our line was short of, sister.’ Laurentia said. ‘Consider this, we were designed and raised by a bunch of isolate xenomorphs, who had the personal contact of two males from freakishly repressed cultures.

A mando so gynophobic that a clone son was the only way he was ever going to reproduce, and a dried out old fart of a jedi- and past that only the textbooks to go on. You think it’s remotely possible that they actually got human sexuality right? You really think we’re normal?’

Aleph-3 paused for a moment, remembering dealing with clone troopers whose sexuality had been so confused they had hit puberty in their late twenties, and how it had felt to be the only woman in the barrack block when they did.

That in itself had been a good incentive to throw herself into the role of sniper-scout, away from the main body of the regiment.

It had made a difference at the time, too; so many of the clones had been, effectively, eunuchs, and most jedi generals had all the empathy and concern for their men of a halfbrick, and tended to target- fixate.


A lot of the clonetroopers had got themselves killed because they, literally as well as metaphorically, did not have the balls to stand up to the oblivious dedication of their leaders and point out that there was often an easier and less wasteful way.

The lack of hormonal activity reinforced the sense that they were just meat, not living beings with a life cycle and an identity that might be worth preserving. How the live born recruits to the stormtrooper corps were coerced into the same mental state was an interesting and painful tale.


‘There are billions of different takes on what it means to be normal, and most of them contradictory. I’m sure I can pass for several.’ Aleph- 3 said, and regretted it immediately.

‘I’m sure you can, but only one of them matters; are you comfortable in your own skin? Are you doing what makes you happy?’ Laurentia asked, pointedly.

‘Considering how often you end up out of your skin, that’s not a metaphor I’d have used.’ Aleph-3 snapped back.

Damn her, she thought, she’s a version of me, she knows me too well and she’s already hit rock bottom, there’s nothing more I can do about that except maybe make her cry, and that takes us nowhere.

‘Squashing your libido out of shape and putting on a mask are not what I mean, and you know it. Who are you when you’re not pretending? Who’s the face behind the mask?’ Laurentia said.

‘Don’t be daft, I’m me.’ Aleph-3 said, weakly.


‘And who- what- is that? Is there anything that you would sell your soul for the chance to do, or refuse even if your life depended on it? Professionally, we’re ambisexual; man, woman, alien, machine, animal, no difference.

Where does the pretence and the facility, where does the ooze end and the hard edge of ‘no’ begin?

You don’t know, do you? You’re just as much a pet, a pawn and a victim as I am, you’ve never been given sufficient opportunity to prove it.’ Laurentia snarled. Perhaps this was going to be easier than she had thought.

‘Now that is something I can recognise in myself.’ Aleph-3 said. ‘Pride in being one of the boys, as well as one of the girls. That feels familiar- and I know who I am, even if I can’t explain it.’ Or daren’t, a little voice in the back of her head said. ‘At any rate, better uncertain than condemned.’


‘The one thing you have to be,’ Laurentia charged, waving away what she considered to be Aleph-3’s hollow protest, ‘loyal to the cause of the Empire. Faithful unto death, faithful beyond reason, wasn’t that the old joke?’

‘That was one we told against ourselves,’ Laurentia went on, ‘we knew ourselves that well, but we still stood to the colours and fought and died in the same old way. Nothing changed, the loyalty’s bred in the bone.

You don’t know your man as well as you think you do, and you’re not really bound to him. He’s a renegade, which in itself may be charming, but it’s wrong and you know it.

He’s not the power here, he’s a mid ranking line officer, Kor Alric stands far higher in the trust of the emperor we serve, and that is the imperative, that is what we have to obey.’


Aleph-3 could feel the rest of the team behind her thinking about it. Theoretically, Laurentia had a point.

‘He stands condemned as a traitor, caught plotting against the Empire. If you’re determined to stand by him, if his claws are in you that deeply, then my main imperative is to shoot you as an accessory to treason. Something you, personally, have only made easier.’Aleph-3 admitted.

‘Not by anyone who had the authority to do so.’ Laurentia stated. ‘Captain Lennart’s too junior- and already in violation of regs himself in failing to obey a senior official of the Empire.’


‘Are you entirely serious?’ The squad- and actually senior officer of the entire recon/hunter element, Aleph-1, asked Laurentia. ‘Your interpretation is that a senior officer’s authority automatically protects him against charges resulting from the misuse of that authority?

A junior officer has no right to question? Regulations, law, common sense, none of it important? I would have to ask my commanding officer’s permission to report him for treason, and would be unable to do so if he ordered me not to?’

Of course.’ Laurentia said, without a trace of irony. ‘The powerful- wield power. That is how it is. How could the Empire function if every Ploovo, Gort and Rikki could interfere at any moment?’

‘That’s completely crazy.’ Aleph-1 said, not entirely believing. ‘I’ve been a scout all my career, and most of that spent in disagreement- different eye view, different idea of what was going on and what needed to be done from my line of command.

If things worked the way you think they do I would have been dead years ago- if common sense and power went hand in hand, fine, but they don’t, not in the human race and no species we know of is that alien.

There has to be some measure of respect for the abilities and willingness to serve of the lower status, some measure of reciprocity here.’


‘Captain, I don’t believe you’re a dishonest or treacherous man by nature,’ Laurentia said, with a twisted grin, ‘so I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt that, if I were to play back to you in a couple of days’ time what you’ve just said, you’d be as horrified as I am by the proto- Rebellion propaganda you’ve just reeled off.’

‘We have no rights, only duties?’ Aleph-3 shook herself together, and said. ‘Dewback-shit. We have the right of expecting the other parts of the Imperial order to live up to their mandate and do their jobs.’

‘Oh, and, as far as having sufficient rank goes,’ she continued, ‘you are aware of what just got broadcast over the PA? Your man condemning himself, from his own mouth. I have his own word for it, and apparently he’s of sufficient rank that I have to take him seriously when he incriminates himself.’

‘Nonsense.’ Laurentia, for effect, giggled. ‘He can order you to believe that he’s loyal, and follow him. His word against- his word? You’ll obey the formal order- you have to. You will fall into line.’


‘And if I think the higher duty is to protect the Empire from him?’ Aleph-1 said, again.

‘You can’t. It is the law, it simply isn’t up to you to decide how good a servant of the Empire he is, it doesn’t work that way round.’ Laurentia said, and actually the rulebook was on her side. ‘Now are you going to join the ranks of the deviant and try to stop me, or follow while I go to talk to the legion commander?’

‘If it’s word against word, rank against rank- he’s not here.’ Aleph- 3 said. ‘You are. And I believe the Captain and myself both rank you, Specialist.’

Lauentia looked over the team. Twelve of the elite of the stormtrooper corps- and the rules were clear. Even if she killed one, she could order the rest to fall into line, and they would have to do so. Captain OB171, Warrant Officer OB173, who else? Who was of sufficient rank- just the squad leader and her sister?

Laurentia flexed her left hand- the telescoping finger-claws shot forward, fused into place, and she drew her master’s gift and activated it with the other hand. Vibro-claw and lightsabre.


She darted towards her sister, claw ready to parry high, lightsabre sweeping up from low, hopefully to disembowel;

Aleph-3 barely had time to draw her parrying stick, the superdense rod of exotic Phrik that could withstand, briefly, a lightsabre, and move it up, round and out, pushing the sabre down and away from the high guard position.

The claw came down and tried to slash her sister’s right arm, Aleph-3 managed to lean back into it and avoid it ripping her head off, but she had a split second before her sister managed to manoeuvre the sabre free- Aleph-3 headbutted Laurentia.

Burst her nose, made her stagger briefly, lost a hank of hair and was stunned by one of the vibroclaw fingers flickering along the side of her head, but Aleph-3 recovered fast, adrenalin taking over.

Twisted out of the way of the sabre which went high and wide, managed to recover, switched her parrying rod from hand to hand, didn’t have time to think about her other hand as Laurentia came back at her.


Aleph-3 tried to get past the sabre and grab Laurentia’s sword hand, the sabre flickered back to cut her arm off, Aleph-3 blocked it with the rod and started pushing it up and away, had to jump back herself as the claw came down and raked her over the chest- the armour took that swipe, a few scores, no real damage.

The iridescent red-blue plate the squad all wore was actually the never-officially-issued Royal Guard version of the later model Clonetrooper suit; it had been designed with some pretty impressive enemies in mind- could take most carbine and pistol fire.

How long would it take for a lightsabre to burn through? Longer than a second- well, there was a chance there.

Although not a good one. Might hold off a slash, briefly, not a thrust. Aleph-3 decided to feint what had worked last time- catching the lightsabre on her stick, holding it for a moment while bringing her heavy rifle up in the other hand.


Pushed out for the sabre and caught it; wondered whether or not to convert the feint into a real attack; found the grip, started swinging the gun up- as expected, her sister reacted to that, swaying back out of the high block and flashing the lightsabre round and down-

Aleph-3 tried to drop the muzzle out of the way, didn’t quite manage it, had the front end of her gun sliced off. Which was an acceptable loss, because it let her get a lunge in with the parry stick into the nerves in her sister’s other armpit.

Laurentia’s claw arm hung limp, the lightsabre recovered- almost of it’s own will, she felt, following what the weapon said to do- and slashed out flatly at Aleph-3’s stomach; Aleph-3 rolled backwards and found herself against the feet of the rest of the team, and Aleph-1 pushing the hilt of a vibrosabre into her hand as she stood up.

Laurentia had been about to follow up and slash at her sister as she stood, but hesitated. Partly from caution- Aleph-3 had an offensive weapon now. Partly- well, they were sisters. The same flesh and blood. It wasn’t going to be easy to land the killing stroke.

In theory, loyalty alone mattered. She had thought that. Now- well, the first thing to do, they thought circling round each other, disarm. Laurentia could accomplish that easily enough by striking at- through- the vibrosabre.

Aleph-3 kept sidestepping, trying to hold the sabre abck and keep the parrying stick forwards; almost succeeded in turning through one eighty, leaving Laurentia between herself and the rest of the team.


‘You do realise I want you dead as well?’ Aleph-1 said, as Laurentia passed closest to him. And raised his own carbine.

Laurentia was shocked, taken aback; her mental horizon had contracted to focus on her sister, she had almost forgotten about him- turned to swing the lightsabre at him.

Aleph-3 saw her opportunity, darted forwards, almost colliding with her sister, reaching past her to catch the lightsabre near the hilt with the stick and flick it upwards- and sabre coming up and under, almost straight up the line of her sister’s torso, impaling.

That worked, at least the first part. Laurentia looked down at the sabre pushed out of position, back at her sister almost draped over her, screamed in anger and tried to reverse the blade in her hand, cutting down on her sister’s head.


Aleph-3 started to bring the sabre up, had to raeach out and back to get it in position to start the move, hesitated. Was this right? It might be necessary- but what a life her sister Laurentia had had, torment and torture, and to come to an end like this, barren and brutal and lightless-

for a moment, it was more than she could do to deliver the killing slash. Her own flesh and blood deserved better, deserved a second chance.

The hate in her sister’s eyes burned through that, it was the duration of a blink, a surge of realisation, not long to change a life but more than long enough to end one. The lightsabre swept down-

And fortunately, Aleph-1 had the presence of mind to pull the trigger.

At a slight angle to avoid overpenetrating into his senior warrant officer, who was left there in shock for a few seconds as the chestless body of Spec-7 batch 6NL strain code 554 subunit 108, “Laurentia”, collapsed to the deck.


‘If you had managed to get that blow in,’ Aleph-1 said, ‘you’d be having nightmares about this for the next ten years. Couldn’t let you go through that.’

‘She was right.’ Aleph-3 said, lost and maudlin. ‘What am I not willing to do, where won’t I go…Jorian knew that, that’s why we were sent to meet her. I needed to do that- nightmares and all. I couldn’t. I flinched.’

‘Normal, human reaction.’ Aleph- 1 said. ‘which is a step up.’ He retried the lightsabre from the corpse’s dead fingers. ‘He also knew we would be here to back you up. Come on, we’ve still got a shuttle to catch.’

‘What do we tell the High Colonel?’ Aleph-3 managed to ask, the most sensible question she could come up with instead of what she felt like saying.

‘Simple. An agent of the traitor tried to give us illegitimate orders, and like the indefatigable, incorruptible servants of the Empire we are, we- did what had to be done. It is true,’ Aleph-1 pointed out, ‘from a certain point of view.’


-------
To be honest,the more I write them, the closer I come to thinking that Aleph-3 really is chasing a mirage trying to seduce Lennart, and she would actually be happier with OB171.
Last edited by Eleventh Century Remnant on 2009-11-18 04:38pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Kartr_Kana »

first post!! Now to finish reading 8)

Damn! Excellent chapter as always!! Mirranon was hilarious stabbing the guy then changing the blade to a fan :lol: Personally I would have gone with a football shape and gutted him :twisted:

Do they really snip your balls off when you join the stormtrooper corps?

I feel really bad for the Dynamic and her captain. Jumping out of hyperspace and into a salvo from the Allegiance, bad luck that.

Hey if your going to show the boarding action can I be a badass stormie officer? Capture the bridge or something :P just asking. If you don't have any openings left I'll understand :D Or maybe OB171
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Post by LadyTevar »

My poor FIST! That's going to take WEEKS to repair!
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Post by Kartr_Kana »

Months :D and probably a board of inquiry :twisted:
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Post by fractalsponge1 »

^Well, capturing the bridge of the Shockwave would be tricky, since it doesn't have one any more :P

I am hoping for a boarding action chapter though. Keep up the good work!
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Post by Vehrec »

Oh dear, oh dear. That won't just buff out of the paint, that's for sure. And I imagine that secor Fleet won't be happy about having to send Fist away for either major repairs or outright sending to the scrappers. Because I don't see anywhere that isn't a Kuat authroized sub-contracter having the parts on hand to replace that engine, let alone a quarter of the aft hull and the bridge tower.
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Post by Eleventh Century Remnant »

Now that the mainly naval parts of the Third Battle of Ord Corban are over, the score sheet can be drawn up.

Imperial forces- one line destroyer (Fist) severely damaged, one line destroyer (Black Prince) lightly damaged. One light destroyer
gone (Perseverance), one light destroyer critically damaged (Dynamic), one light destroyer moderately damaged (Voracious) one light destroyer light damage (Hialaya Karu). Four medium frigates destroyed, two severely damaged.

On the Alliance side, one medium cruiser-carrier destroyed, kill credit to be shared out among the squadron in proportion. One heavy destroyer about to be boarded and taken. Two line destroyers gone. One planet, with dents. Add that to the two light destroyers taken earlier, and it's definitely an Imperial victory, if not exactly bloodless.

Realistically- a court of inquiry is unlikely. The moff's just been arrested for corruption, there's going to be a thorough purge of the sector fleet, followed by a major buildup from the understrength force, appropriate for the head count, that it was to at least a standard, sixteen hundred ship and twenty-four Imperator, full group, and possibly beyond to clear up the remains of this mess.

Anybody who can prove that they were on the side of right through all this is not likely to get stepped on, and anyone with a credible combat record on top of that is going to rise far and fast in the expanding group. Of course if Captain Tevar wants to keep worrying, that's up to her.

There are going to be troop actions, Admonisher- never mind taking the bridge, the important target now is engineering control. Sieze that and gain control of the ship's habitation systems, make the ship safe, flush out the rebels and, eventually, do enough of a repair job to have her rejoin the Imperial fleet.

That and a planetary assault- in fact, two. Ord Corban itself, and there are only two rebel objectives that I can think of; take some of the Imperials with them, or if any of them happen to be ridiculously optimistic (far from impossible in the Alliance) draw them in and bog them down badly enough that some people might be able to escape in the chaos.

The other one is Plrlanilthre. (I'm going to ditch the apostrophe. As a literary device from the Golden Age, of indicating a syllable break in what was supposed to be an alien language with unfamiliar syntax, it makes sense, but it is getting to be a shade overused.)

A ground attack to take down the shield generators would be a textbook move, and in fact the rRasfenoni fighters are relatively little threat to Goshawk, the overwhelming majority of them being atmospheric types with nowhere near starfighter level power plants and weaponry. In sufficient numbers, they are a threat to the dropships- and I reckon fifty thousand counts as 'sufficient numbers'.

Break up the light fighters with ship's point defence (looking at my notes, seems to be seven hundred and eighty-eight twin LTL, plus fighter-weight quads) and charge through the middle of them with the fighters and landers. Not ideal, definitely messy, but the ship is less expendable than the ground and fighter components that deploy off her. Unless Tichy can manage something, which is distinctly possible.

KartrKana, I'm not going to slide you in 'behind the mask', as it were, of an existing character, but- I never did go into detail about the legion, did I? The 276th Atrisian (Provisional 721 Heavy Composite) are, as might be expected, fine tuned for performance. Four combat Regiments, three primarily walker- that is, each three walker and one repulsor batallion- and one primarily repulsor, three repulsor and one walker batallion.

All are afully mechanised, and between them the ten walker batallions boast 30 AT-AT and 10 AT-HE, 160 medium and 120 light walkers, in addition to the 102 heavy repulsortanks in the repulsor batallions, supporting light tanks, IFVs and skimmers. In addition to that, there are two independent batallions, artillery and boarding ops- the boarding ops lot deploy preferentially off the assault transports, and include two platoons of spacetroopers.
That's where you come in; spacetrooper platoon lead.

Partly, that business was a dig at Traviss, but more seriously, I don't think you can call clonetrooper willingness to disregard the value of their own lives normal human psychology. They are conditioned through upbringing and indoctrination into a state of unnatural willingness to serve, and I reckon an inevitable side-effect of that process, if not a necessary step, is a warped sex drive.

Physiologically, no change. Mentally, no sense of self, limited concept of friends and family, no expectations, no social confidence.
I also don't really believe that it is humanly possible to be incorruptible, although the depth of conditioning is such that the process is going to be glacially slow for most troopers. Long service and contacts with the civilian world do tend to shake some of the starch out, as do jobs in which the trooper has to use their own judgement.

I'm surprised that nobody was surprised by NL1084 sending all the way to Coruscant for a situation report, and getting that answer back; it was a very unusual response, and one Adannan certainly wasn't expecting- it did satisfy the legion's chain of command, but then, Dr Nygma is a very good voice actor :twisted: .
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Post by LadyTevar »

Dr Nygma did that? :lol: :lol: :lol: Oh priceless!

And I think Tevar is hoping for Lennart to survive and put in a good word for her.
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Post by fractalsponge1 »

Ah, that was Nygma? Hopefully you'll expound on that a bit later.

Wonder what the rRasefnoni mobile forces will look like actually - surely nothing bigger than a medium star cruiser? Still, probably numerous enough to keep parts of sindavathar gainfully employed.
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Post by Kartr_Kana »

ECR you ROCK!! Space trooper commander ;D Just watch as me and my men hit the ground running ;D volley firing proton torpedo's and suppressing fire with one man E-web teams ;P Thanks ECR now I have something to look forward to while I blow doors open and clear rooms this week ;D
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Post by Eleventh Century Remnant »

Sorry about the brevity of this one; in the morning, I will be heading off to spend nine days in a wicker longhouse by the sea. I just wanted to get something writen up and posted before then. If it feels a little disjointed, that's probably because right now, I feel a little disjointed, running around trying to get ready.

Ch 37 partial;

The rRasfenoni had a problem. Managing not to get squashed by the Imperial Starfleet. That was actually a real and distinct possibility for the ‘second city’ of their little polity, the one they had chosen to stage the actual fighting over, at least if Tichy misplaced his hyperspace exit and came out too close and heading straight for the planet.

Such an error was unlikely, but a deliberate attack- no, no responsible officer would squander a ship by smashing it into an immovable object like that. Mandators were simply too important to lose, and Tichy could be more subtle than that.

There were a couple of tricks that the big dreadnought could use to decelerate, but none of them were a good idea from the viewpoint of structural integrity.

Grabbing something with the towing rig and using that as an anchor could be done, but only with the chance of tearing the stern off the ship. Best not.

A second kinetic attack? Excessively predictable- once it was spotted coming, and the main reason it wasn’t usually done and Tichy had ridden it almost all the way in, the impact ship would be blasted to vapour. Which in itself would still hit, but a planetary shield could soak that a lot easier than it could a solid hit.


It would take Tichy six thousand seconds to decelerate to a reasonable speed; no way to slow down much faster than that, there were a few exotic possibilities- but nothing that would work for a ship the size and structural strength of a dreadnought.

In theory, something with the power to weight of a starfighter- or a very fast frigate- could juggle the transition to and from hyperspace, lose or gain momentum in the shunt; for anything with a structure rated at less than four thousand ‘g’, it was distinctly unwise- and to be honest, most fighters couldn’t do it either.

The computer systems to manage it were a step above even the standard full range nav computer, and too expensive for most forces to bother issuing.

Slingshotting around something with the towing rig could work, but faced the slight problem that just because it was effective momentum transfer, it wasn’t magic.

The stress would be placed on the towing tractors and field generators, and anything much more than rated acceleration, they couldn’t stand anyway. The object itself would probably be ripped to shreds, the impulse would be impossible, no physical object- ah.

And then, a plan was born. This could be fun.


Goshawk was dodging as well as she could, sidestepping and writhing; eventually, if only from power endurance, she would lose.

The shield surfaces emitting were much less efficient than a warship’s neutrino radiators, but very much larger- and the planet may be running on fusion power for the most part, but they had hundreds of square kilometres of reactor farm to work with.


Kor Alric felt two of his team die. Banaar- one of trillions like him. A thug who could be replaced anywhere in the galaxy.

Laurentia- well, she was more of a loss. More in terms of man- hours wasted, his moulding her and playing with her, now gone. Well, there was at least one ready made replacement.

The plan was coming apart around him, though. There was one chance, one last chance. He should have done this to begin with, but the personality profile had been all wrong.

He couldn’t cut through plates and spars protected by the ships’ shields and tensor field; that was intended to if not resist at least minimise damage from multi-teraton hits. Had to work his way through the corridors, strangely deserted.

No point avoiding it, he needed to find Lennart and the bridge was the most obvious place. Although- he had got into the lift, instantly been frustrated by it’s habit of pausing at each floor and asking for a confirmation code to proceed.

Obviously some kind of security lockout, so he had lightsabred his way through the floor, into the shaft- and found out that telekinetic hovering was harder than it looks. Getting back out of the shaft at bridge level was fun, too.


Hanging by one hand and trying to satisfy the biometrics- what kind of madman puts a retinal and DNA scanner on the wrong side of an elevator door?- had been complicated, and he was painfully aware of the amount of warning he would be giving to whoever was on the other side.

As the door crunked open, there was a squad there. Good. They could- their guns were pointed at him. His brain was still buzzing with potential solutions, he hadn’t decided precisely what yet, so the red mist hadn’t come down and he was still able to think of scanning them for intent.

Surprisingly, none. Two flamers and a missile launcher loaded with something anti-personnel, it shouldn’t have been hard for them to kill him, if they had received orders to do so. Which they hadn’t.

‘Follow me.’ He said, pushing himself up out of the shaft and turning towards the command bridge door.


The stormtroopers looked at each other. The sargeant swallowed, took the plunge. ‘Sorry, Sir, that’s beyond our remit.’

‘What? Adannan snarled, infuriated. ‘How dare you- your remit is to obey.’

‘Exactly, Sir. Captain Lennart said to tell you that he’s heading down to Engineering.’

Hm. So he had chosen the bowels of the ship rather than the brain for his arena, had he? No matter.
And what to do about these? Anything? They were only a symptom- a symptom of him.

A cunning psychological fighter as well, it seemed, to mislead and corrupt stormtroopers out of their unthinking obedience. If anything, Adannan thought, I need him. If I can only make him see.


The barrage from the ships of the squadron slackened; all were close enough to watch each other’s fire go in, and know when to stop shooting to allow the ion cannons free play.

Fewer of them than Lennart had really wanted or intended, and the majority of those relatively lightweight- the only really heavy weapons in the squadron were Fist’s aft turrets.

Of those, one was gone, the other- the maimed destroyer was evidently in no mood to accept help, instead demanding of Comarre Meridian- herself damaged- that instead of manoeuvring clear, they roll Fist round into firing position.

There was dedication, and there was dedication- not that Brenn was minded to try and stop her. Anything that helped put Admonisher down before someone managed to regain control and resume return fire was all right by him.


The shuttles were starting to come back, most of those left over Ord Corban microjumping in.
The first to land were a group from Voracious- cleared in ahead of the other because they were carrying retrieved ejectees, including apparently Group Captain Vehrec, who was suffering from severe radiation poisoning.

Bacta was supposed to be good for that, eat away damaged tissue and encourage regrowth, but at the moment that would probably mean dissolving all of him.

What they would have to do to get him decontaminated, Brenn didn’t really want to think about- sieve through him molecule by molecule looking for damage, probably, and hope there was enough left to regrow.

Anyway, the medical retrievals were the first to touch down; the first to leave again had an unfair advantage- the two spacetrooper platoons. They didn’t have to wait for the stubby, heavy assault shuttles to dock, they could just jet on out to meet them.

QAG-111 could have stopped them; in quick conference with Olleyri, decided not to. It was logical to lead in with them anyway.


The heavy assault shuttles had enough power endurance to touch and go, and no ordnance to reload, so not a problem. The only major headache was going to be traffic control around the target site- the spacetroopers might be better off going in through the ruins of the hangar bay rather than getting in the way of the fighters.

It was Aron’s Hunters and Franjia’s Starwings that got hauled back for precision strike work, both of them remembering- and cursing bitterly- about what she had said earlier about defence suppression work; ten percent tour survival rate.

They had already lost a couple- the two Hunter squadrons were now down to sixteen craft between them, the two starwing squadrons nineteen. Neither of them were technically senior, but everyone knew it was them who had the ball.


Shockwave class carried a relatively strange point defence fit- no LTL at all. Highly peculiar, meant that against attack boats and corvettes they had to resort to stepdown main gun fire, but relatively well adjusted for the threat of droid fighters, with a thick blanket of one hundred and sixteen half- megaton corellian quads.

This was going to be fun. Proximity missile detonations to try to take the turrets out with flash could work, actual strafing runs- well. Best to clear out one aspect, bombard it with warheads set to detonate just off the hull, land enough energy per square metre to melt a defence turret without burning into the hull.

Then, once there actually was an edge to work with, start unravelling the defences from there. Franjia’s PulsarWing no longer mounted the missile guidance electronics, which was sensible enough for an individual craft, considering the thing didn’t have a missile system, but not for a squadron leader who might have to designate missile targets for their unit.

Half of them were confused by what she was doing back in the cockpit at all; she had disappeared, been recaptured from a rebel ship, ended up in sickbay, released herself to light duties, went AWOL and technically stole her own fighter.

Half of the pilots didn’t understand why she was still allowed to fly, the other half just wished they could get away with it too.


That and she was really still trying to get the hang of the PulsarWing. It had it’s flaws. With the guns drawing full load, she didn’t need the instrumentation, she could feel the balance of the thing change through the seat of her pants as the reactor module ate fuel.

That, and the fact that it was a reactor module, power generator, engine setup, not an integrated pod; much closer to the thing’s shuttle ancestry than to the vast majority of fighters.

The target finding and tracking system was designed to be worked by a gunner, too- Cygnus had chosen to take little or nothing from the old H-60 and TL-118, the earlier big gun fighters, which meant that while they avoided a lot of the mistakes, they also bypassed any good ideas that were going.

At least Subpro had understood that a capital weapon mounted on a fighter needed a fighter gunsight, not a full on-mount fire control system.


She really needed a gunner and a flight engineer, there was simply too much cockpit work to be done to make this a feasible option for the majority of Imperial pilots.

Anyone with multi-engine time could cope, but it wasn’t a multi-engine transport, it was a fighter and had to be handled with the speed of a fighter. Too many complex problems needing solved too quickly.

The stability suffered under maximum rate of fire, she swore the cockpit module actually got shorter as the engines pushed against the recoil, the ESM system was completely new and giving her more data than she wanted or could analyse- then again, partly it was her fault for even trying.

Most pilots would have switched everything to automatic and hoped the computer knew what it was doing.

That and most pilots when they came in to land would have put it down, walked away and immediately requested reassignment to TIE Bombers. Understandable.


She wouldn’t. Although it was definitely a challenge, the striking power more than made up for it. The sheer power of the multimegaton light turbolasers meant that she had about a tenth of a second to draw an arc with the beam, and the fire control system was designed to do that, also limited autosteer on to target. Which she had to set the parameters for.

For the first and only time in her career she had lost count of her score. At first, use the advantage to it’s fullest, open up at range and pick off lazy rebels who thought they were too far away to need to manoeuvre, but that had quickly turned into a disadvantage given the missile volleys the rebels had enough sense to lob back at her.

Actually, the ESM system had come in pretty handy, and she now had positive proof that the PulsarWing was very well shielded. It had been a wild ride, and she was too busy dealing with the ship systems for it to sink in yet just how many of those little red dots she had put an end to.

The plan was for her to ride in slightly above and apart, use her turbolasers to pick off any of the defence mounts that looked to be too dangerous. Aron would be hotdogging it in at close quarters.


The barrage rolled in- few flashes of red point defence laser, combing the area, splashed a few of the warheads, no prematures; she rippled off three bursts of fire, missed one and killed two quads, then noticed a strange blip behind them.

Coding system- officially imperial transponder, esm gave it a high probability of fraudulence, also indicated the thing was being flown by a reduced crew. Unidentified, but probably armed yacht. Kor Alric’s personal transport.


Was there anything to do? The strike was going in- most of the fighters opening up with their own ion guns, backing up the light ion cannon fire from the rest of the squadron and Fist’s overdriven heavies.

Point defence was suffering already, several turrets had been taken out in the main ship to ship, the first loaded assault shuttles and transports- also with ion cannon- were moving out. There was nothing immediately requiring her attention. Except maybe that transport.

Check with flight control? She believed- knew- that Kor Alric was scum, a fundamentally evil man. She was in trouble anyway, largely his fault. He had preyed on her impulses, marginalized her, nearly broken her career- and possibly with the motive of turning her into another cyborg, a replacement for his personal pilot.

There was no real possibility of committing murder without being noticed; the PulsarWing and it’s gun flashes were just too much of a giveaway. On the other hand, the target was unescorted.

As well hung for a murder as a theft. She would not serve him- and forget the usual rhetoric about rather dying first; with the firepower at her fingertips, she had the opportunity to kill.

It was, on the face of it, insane, but that man had endangered her, endangered her ship and her comrades. Never mind the poor fools she had spent the day blowing up, there was the real threat.

Come to think of it, it was a unique, and she was flying a prototype; she could claim electronics malfunction, might even get away with it.


Targeting passive, quick look over the official target- flowers of detonating warhead, followed by a new cluster of blips that she mistook at first for debris, realised were the spacetroopers deploying in the wake of the barrage- and swing round to bear.

The sleek dart- shape was twisting and twitching, partly overworked engine management, but also partly deliberate evasion, and at least part of the flagship’s attention was going on focusing jammers on it. All the proof she needed.

The force was obviously with Myfara, because nothing else but a healthy supply of miracles could explain how she had been able to be in the right place, the flight bay, bring the Tetrarch up to readiness, get clearance and launch without being stopped. Her master had passed a codeword, the one that meant ‘send for help.’

It was probably faster to jump clear and jump back than to try to make high-sublight speed to the edge of the jamming zone. That still left her trying to pick her way through the fringes of the battlefield, looking for safe space to start plotting a jump.

There was an alert beep; incoming fighter showing no aspect change, on an attack course. Myfara activated the droid driven defence turrets, cursing- needing to hold steady for the calculation.


Tetrarch was a difficult target, if not exactly cloaked, then at least wearing a long overcoat. Easier to track it by the ion flares. Then it became a lot easier than Franjia would have liked, as the defence systems gave four active fire control beams to home in on.

The droid turrets were each a linked laser cannon and missile launcher, and they had no inhibitions at all about firing on other Imperial craft.

Franjia had half a second to weigh the situation- as long as it would take the droids to lock on to her PulsarWing. No sense waiting.

Line up and shoot, two dual-purpose light turbolasers spitting out two six- megaton bolts per second each. In theory, ten seconds to burn through an unmodified Corellian Corvette, two seconds to wreck an assault transport.

In practise, the personal transport of an agent of the privy council was going to be a much more resilient beast than that. Myfara had to make the choice- hope the turrets would be enough and continue to plot, or engage directly, take the intruder down and then run?

Three pairs of turbolaser bolts pounding the combat-yacht were a powerful hint. Myfara paused the calculation, started to turn as if to make it a stern chase, relying on speed- masking two of the turrets that spat out laser fire at the attack fighter, although all four spat out concussion missiles.

Easily enough to swat light fighters away, and useful if what had been attacking her had been a light fighter. Franjia managed to blind two with the attack jamming suite, snapshot and killed one, rolled away from the fourth which detonated, proximity not contact. Shield erosion, that was all.


At least, for the time being. Tetrarch reversed roll as soon as Franjia was engaged with the missiles, looping up and over to point on from high on the port wing of the heavy fighter.

Adannan paid relatively little attention to such things, allowed his pilot to use her own judgement when it came to what sort of firepower his personal transport required.

While that meant she got her own toys to play with, it also meant that he would hold her very painfully responsible for getting it wrong, so she had put a lot of thought into this.

A yacht is at a natural disadvantage in any fighter combat. Even if it can turn and burn with a first-line fighter, it is so much bigger and so much easier a target. Speed and agility are secondary defensive mechanisms at best, behind the ability to get them before they get you.

Quadrilateral again, the Tetrarch mounted four blister turrets around her nose, each housing a rapid-fire autoblaster and a long barrel area defence laser.

For all the disparity in mass and size, the PulsarWing actually had the edge in raw firepower. Not that anyone observing could have deduced that from the storm of tracer.


Franjia pushed the PulsarWing into a hard turn against her previous line of flight, breaking across the Tetrarch’s nose, not enough to throw off all the turrets but certainly enough to baffle the pilot.

The transport was fast, in and of itself, but it was not a dogfighter; Myfara managed to haul the thing’s nose round, following the fire pointers, when the heavy imperial fighter flashed past again going the other way, a sideways Z-turn that brought Franjia’s guns back on target- she landed another four hits before Myfara could swing the bow gun clusters round to bear.

Both craft on each other’s bow quarter; Myfara expected the treacherous Imperial- well, if that wasn’t a contradiction- to repeat the same move, take another step in the dance; eased the nose in that direction-

and naturally, Franjia did anything but, breaking and rolling outwards, level and reciprocal, pushing the engines hard to get a vector and pivoting on the thrust deflectors to strafe.


Tetrarch wasn’t the Falcon, at the far end of a vicious circle of adaptation; more speed to do illegally lucrative things, that made enemies needing weaponry to fight them off, that attracted official protection needing armour plate to survive, that slowed the ship down needing more powerful engines- Tetrarch was effective, but first- order.

Tetrarch’s shields flickered, fading on the edge of blowout; Myfara was slow to respond- for Adannan’s followers, imminent death was not the terror it might have been. Failing him was a dreadful prospect, though.

The combat yacht tried to flip end for end, point it’s main guns towards the heavy fighter, but Franjia read the move again, as Tetrarch rolled over she accelerated across it’s bow, wrongfooting it, and leaving Myfara wondering exactly who or what she was up against.

Soon to be quite a lot. Elements of Delta and Epsilon squadrons were wondering where their squadron leader had got to; spotlighted around, waved active sensors over what she was shooting at.


It looked to the dark jedi’s personal pilot that the entire squadron was about to move on her; that settled it, no more point in fighting. Shift shields aft and turn away, firewall it, get out.

There was one factor that she missed. Franjia put the heavy PulsarWing on it’s edge and sideslipped outwards. Away from the sensible direction, opening the range, but also opening the angle- aiming for Tetrarch’s thinly protected bow.

A narrow sliver of a shot window. Easy enough when you’re able to take more than one shot.

Myfara didn’t have time to comprehend what had hit her. Two six-megaton bolts hit and splashed over Tetrarch’s bow, shattering the nose, burning out the electronics, and turning the flight deck into a cinder pit.

Franjia wasn’t sure what she expected to happen next; ordered to stand down, at least. Blown to bits by point defence fire from Black Prince, maybe.

Actually, a simple order to rejoin the strike pattern from Olleyri. Calm, as if nothing had happened. She was on the verge of demanding his opinion and that he arrest her when she realised how daft that would be.

That, and as the front face of Black Prince’s bridge module lit up, it looked as if someone else was thinking fratricide.


On board the Dynamic, the best that could be said was that there were some people still alive. Some, not everyone. C turret’s internal baffles had failed- enough heat had been transferred into the gun house to incinerate everybody in there.

The secondary reactor’s crew were gone, most of the port engine bay had been opened to space and gunflash.

Main Battery Control was still ready, closed up with two turrets remaining, although there was nothing substantial left in the way of targets. Except maybe one.

Suluur had managed to catch up with the squadron com chatter, and listened to Adannan’s self- condemnation, coolly and distantly, face a calm mask. Aldrem worried about him, but right now-

‘He was in the Imperial suite, last I heard. And, I think…get me Captain Dordd.’


The command bridge of Dynamic was a mass of red and grey, status indicators and internal display showing a ship that had been pounded within an inch of it’s life.

‘Aldrem.’ Dordd acknowleged wearily, when com- scan put them through. Kriffing smenge, you look terrible, was the first thing that occurred to Aldrem. Dordd looked as if he had aged ten years in ten minutes, and that was pretty much how he felt as well.

Dordd wasn’t sure how much more he could take. He had taken a ship he had known was not ready for combat into a fast-moving running brawl against an enemy with four times the weight of fire, and although they had emerged on the winning side, he didn’t feel as if he had won. ‘What is it?’ he asked.

Aldrem thought about cutting straight to the chase, but decided Captain Dordd might be just a touch too eager. Possibly the best thing he could personally do would be to offer himself up as a target, let the captain vent his feelings on someone who could take it more easily than a member of his permanent crew.

Trying not to let it look like as bad an idea as he felt it was, he said ‘Well, Sir, most of the ship’s still here, by tonnage if not necessarily by function…’


Dordd refused to behave as he had been expected to. Wishing he had thought that a week earlier, before he had let loyalty con him into a state where he put his ship through this. Not that it was a good ship, not that he hadn’t expected this, but it hurt. Not that he could afford to show it, now they needed him more than ever.

‘Do you have nothing better to do than to try to draw some of my venom, Lieutenant?’

I should have known better, Aldrem realised. ‘Actually, yes, I do. Have you had a chance to keep up with the interflotilla chatter?’

Dordd snorted in disbelief.

‘Too busy, right. Can you roll the ship round,’ Aldrem said, ‘so I have a clear line of fire to Black Prince’s bridge module?’


‘I’m going to need you to explain that.’ Dordd said. He genuinely had been to busy to do more than watch the tactical map and try to direct damage control. He didn’t have much idea of what the rest of the squadron were up to.

‘There was the beginning of a transmission, cut off, placing Captain Lennart under arrest, or would have if it had got that far.’ Aldrem explained.

‘Then a command- level advisory about Kor Alric being indicted for treason, and some quotes from the man himself that, I’m no trial judge- although it would be an entertaining second career- I reckon that at the very least he convicted himself of lese- majeste. The politics are happening now.’

‘You want a firing position on the flagship.’ Dordd said.

‘I reckon that I can drill the shields with a five gun rapid burst and put a reduced power sixth shot right through the windows of the Imperial suite, burn it out without taking the bridge module with it.’ Aldrem stated.


Dordd thought about it. His feelings towards Captain Lennart at the moment were far from clear, but the special assistant to the privy council was unquestionably scum.

‘Helm, roll forty degrees starboard.’ Dordd ordered. That would bring them into arc. If his career wasn’t already ruined, this was going to be another condemnation. Actually, looking down at the battered and still half- molten forward hull of the maimed Dynamic, he wasn’t sure he still cared.

‘What, we’re doing it? Stations, stand by, main guns to central battery control, switch that active finder off and give me passive and boresight projections.’ Aldrem reacted, and ordered the command centre team.

Six dots. Line up, set the sequence, last gun in circuit step down all the way- to the equivalent of a few hundred tons of conventional explosive. Enough to blow out the compartment he was aiming for. Even in a moment like this, there was still time for finesse. I really, really hope I’m right, he thought to himself.

This had better be the right thing to do, otherwise I will be very annoyed with…hold on a minute, it was my idea. Actually, he thought as he squeezed the trigger, the right thing to do might have been to call ahead and tell somebody about this.


The five shot were spaced precisely, timed to perfection; hitting and loading the shields, not quite simultaneous- milliseconds apart, enough that the shielding carried away the energy safely, just close enough together that it choked on it’s own ability to do so.

Local overload- allowing the sixth shot to pass through unimpeded, and in the process further demonstrating that windows on the front of a bridge module were an essentially bad idea.

Adannan’s programmer and data miner were both still there, trying to figure a path around the lockouts Rythanor and Mirannon had placed on them.

Which in itself was evidence of treason, tampering with a highly classified and highly secure system. Not that it was any less inherently indictable than blasting through the windows and bursting a bolt on the throne.

The high backed seat reserved for the use of His Imperial Majesty exploded, vapour and shrapnel shredding both the dark minions. It was a fully successful shot, just a shame that their prime target was absent. They did, however, manage to kill his accountant.

----

Tichy's plan, incidentally, is to disrupt the planetary shield with their own shield projector mounted as part of the towing rig. Drawing the field across the planet's bubble is going to act as a drogue- some well cushioned deceleration, the connection's too elastic to rip the stern off, but the interaction should have some effect, either weaken the bubble enough to alow Goshawk to make a break for it- or to allow the approaching battlecruisers a chance to fire in.
Last edited by Eleventh Century Remnant on 2009-11-18 07:45pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Kartr_Kana
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Post by Kartr_Kana »

A little disjointed yes, but still good reading. Hurry up and get back from you vacation!! You can't leave me and my spacetroopers just floating through space like that!! :D
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Vehrec
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Post by Vehrec »

*uses a Steven Hawking voicebox built into the bio-bed to inform ECR that he can go frak himself.*

But nicely done nonetheless. I expect I'll be getting the Imperial Hero Treatment and all that, and I should count myself lucky to wind up living like Vader.
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Andras
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Post by Andras »

ECR-
That, and as the front face of Black Prince’s bow module lit up, it looked as if someone else was thinking fratricide.


did you meant Bridge module instead of bow module?
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Vianca
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Post by Vianca »

Thing seem to get meaner.

Hope you have a second arc planned, for when Kor Alric is gone the way of the Dodo. :mrgreen:
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Post by LadyTevar »

Vianca wrote:Thing seem to get meaner.

Hope you have a second arc planned, for when Kor Alric is gone the way of the Dodo. :mrgreen:
If he does, Tevar should volunteer the Fist as one of the Black Prince's support vessels.
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Post by Darth Raptor »

Looks like Adannan's only hope of survival, never mind success, is to turn Lennart. I do hope his end is appropriately excruciating and humiliating.

Poor old Vehrec; spent all that money on rejuvenation therapy just to wind up as a cyborg.
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Post by Vehrec »

LadyTevar wrote:
Vianca wrote:Thing seem to get meaner.

Hope you have a second arc planned, for when Kor Alric is gone the way of the Dodo. :mrgreen:
If he does, Tevar should volunteer the Fist as one of the Black Prince's support vessels.
I don't know, miss. How does an Urbanus Class Cruiser sound if you stay in the Sector? That Ioned flagship is gonna need some new crew/captain once the purges in Sector Fleet are over.
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Post by Eleventh Century Remnant »

Back, and this actually came out faster than I expected. This is not the end, but it is the biggest single part of the end.
Andras, you're right, that was a typo, I'll edit it. Vianca- it was always going to end in blood.
Vehrec, there'll be a bit about what happens in the next chapter, it is that bad and it isn't.
I didn't actually expect it to go this way- the bloodshed, yes, but not the words.


37b

Adannan narrowed down his focus in the Force, until he could percieve one man and one man only. It wasn’t as easy as it should have been; because of his peculiar, untrained subconscious way of doing things, Lennart left his force signature all over the ship.

He seemed to be making, not for Engineering, but for a space in the base of the superstructure. As Adannan let himself glide down the lift shaft, he felt the direction to his prey change, relative motion allowing him to zero in.

Stop, and out of the shaft, into deserted corridors; they were avoiding him, there should be people moving around, the emptiness meant he was being tracked somehow.

It didn’t really matter how- there were a dozen potential ways, but all of them boiled down to meaning that the crew was complicit with their captain in this. That would stand watching, especially if that was how Lennart intended to surprise him.

He found his prey not where he had expected, in the warren of storage chambers and workshop spaces that made up the damage control bunker, but in the vestibule in front of it.

Open space, with lights that flickered and died as the sith acolyte approached.


So, Lennart wanted to do this in the dark? It was more atmospheric, even symbolic. Adannan approved; fired up his lightsabre, a bar of scarlet glowing in the darkness. That metaphor suited what he was about to say very well, actually.

Lennart’s own lightsabre- which he had no business having, and gripped as he would a torch- lit up, a highly dubious flaring crimson. That was presumption- or willingness? No, simply what he had to hand.

Which was wrong. If he was minded to use the dark side as just another tool, if that was all he wanted to do with it…then he would fall as easily and as inevitably as rain.

Eventually. For the moment, Adannan paused and waited. It was what Lennart had been hoping for, to begin with a clash of words, but had been trying to prepare himself for a straightforward brawl.

The fact that it was what the dark jedi seemed to want too made Lennart think, and Adannan strained trying to overhear it.

‘You tell me.’ He began by saying.


‘Once I understand it myself.’ Lennart said. ‘You know that I’m playing for time,’ he lied trying to plant the idea in Adannan’s head, ‘you know that I know charging straight in would be an amateur’s mistake.

I could try to babble you far enough off balance to stand a fighting chance, but I reckon you’ll be expecting that…the question here is, what do you have to gain?’

‘How do you think you’re going to escape the consequences of killing me?’ Adannan probed.

‘You’re assuming you haven’t backed me far enough into a corner that I’m willing to lash out now and make up the rationale later- which is what you were trying to do anyway, wasn’t it?’ Lennart said.

‘I always thought the metaphor of extra strings to the bow is far too limiting. Strings on a piano might be closer to the reality.’ Adannan said.

‘You make plans like that, you love being in the centre of the maelstrom where you have to improvise- and get to look smarter than everyone else because they have even less of an idea what’s going on.’


‘Consciously, that would be criminally unprofessional.’ Lennart stopped himself before he could go into a long digression about responsibility and the interactions between layers of command. ‘As a professional, I try to do my duty and let my subconscious take care of itself.’

‘Interesting- are you saying that if you had hidden doubts, if you smelt something distinctly rotten about the state of Imperial policy, you would keep them to yourself and try not to worry your crew?’ Adannan suggested, tone obviously saying that it wasn’t so.

‘Considering the interest we take in current affairs around here, you sure you’ve got a leg to stand on with that argument?’ Lennart said, gesturing with the lightsabre in that direction.

‘Considering how little of the opinions expressed actually carry your stamp, yes. You have a habit of not committing yourself on paper. Blunt to the point of viciousness, but not on the record.’ Adannan replied.

‘Nonsense. On a ship as heavily populated as an Imperator we’re living out of each other’s armpits, and news spreads fast- changes in mood, changes in attitude register immediately. They know what I think, they know what I feel. And incidentally, the majority hate your guts. Too many random acts of violence.’ Lennart changed the subject quickly.


‘Funny that, I seem to be missing most of my associates.’ Adannan said, sensing a potentially useful line of attack.

‘Turnabout. Retribution. You could even call it hiding the evidence.’

‘With the losses- still well over a hundred thousand in the squadron, all of whom will be aware that you arranged for another unit to make a precision strike on the Imperial suite of your own ship.

Forty thousand of those are aware that you did your best to set me up, and, assuming you win, dealt with me yourself. That alone should guarantee you enough notoriety to bring the attention of the Inquisitorius tumbling down on you. You can’t afford to kill me, and you’ve given me every reason to kill you.’

‘Except I map back to your own plan one. Become a dark acolyte of the Force- over your dead body.’
Lennart smiled a slightly manic smile. ‘One dark sider killing another is perfectly expected, isn’t it? And we do have reasons.’


‘My associates and support team- I ought, strictly speaking, to revenge myself on you for them.’ Adannan said, the next step in a train of thought he meant to construct.

‘Posing a quandary?’ Lennart spotted it. ‘If you have that much human empathy left in you, if you cared about them enough to bring me to justice for their murders- then the situation would have played itself out differently and we wouldn’t have ended up here.

Oh, I know what you’re aiming at- that you are a better and more connected person than I took you for, which means your words are not hollow, and a working relationship between us would be possible.

Unfortunately, I’ve also given you every reason to take revenge on me- which you would actually have to try to do if I was going to believe you at this stage.’ Lennart pointed out- then realised a moment too late that that was exactly what he didn’t want to happen.


‘Revenge deferred? You never understood what I was really here for- and it is important enough to postpone dissecting you for the time being.’ Adannan said. ‘My team will just have to do without their honour guard for the moment until the cause is served.’

‘You know, I did wonder if there was a more complex reason for this than simply ‘grr, argh, power, gimme.’ Were you actually intending to explain this to me at any point, or just to blackmail, badger and bully me into submission with the dark side of the force?’

Lennart nearly said something about things could have worked out so very differently if the explanation had come at the beginning instead of the end, but- no. Not smart.


Adannan grinned wolfishly. Lennart’s weakness was his reason; he could be swayed, he wasn’t determined enough, or mad enough, to pick his line and stick to it whatever sense said to the contrary. In this level, in this realm of high politics, that was a weakness.

Although it was definitely harder than he had expected, playing the role he had assigned to himself. There were still contingency plans and possibilities swirling around Lennart’s head; how to manipulate them, make Lennart choose the option that suited himself?

The technicalities of getting away with it, even this late in the day after the broadcasting of some pretty damning evidence- well, an accusation of treason can be a very two-edged sword, Adannan thought.

Pose as an agent provocateur, claim to have been pretending to be a traitor and a renegade to prod Lennart into action, and turn round and praise him for his decisiveness and let him in on the secret?

No, Lennart wouldn’t believe it. His calling the emperor ‘a deranged, dangerous old fool liable to drag the rest of us down with him’ had been sincere, it was impossible to pretend now that he had been faking it.


Go all the way? Why not?

‘Captain- you were there for a fair wedge of galactic history; how do you feel about the way it was written up?’

‘I have a great deal of admiration for COMPNOR and their ability to rewrite history, if that’s what you mean.’ Lennart said, cautiously. He had an idea what Adannan was about to say, and was wondering whether or not he ought to let the crew hear it.

He was also hoping that Gethrim had had the sense to turn off the backscatter tap, this was something no-one in their right mind would want getting on the record.

‘You accept that the reality and the official version diverge?’ Adannan said, academically, then put the idea into plainer words- ‘You do realise you’ve been forcefed a pack of lies?’


‘My sincere admiration for COMPNOR. The rewriting of the past is standard procedure in circumstances like this, it is a basic part of any new government’s playbook, and anybody smart enough to work that out knows how short and messy the life of a dissident in such circumstances usually is.’ Lennart pointed out.

‘You cowering in terror from the forces of officialdom? A difficult mental picture to believe.’ Adannan grunted.

‘Reading between the lines is a good and survival enhancing thing, but so is knowing when to sing from the official hymn sheet. I don’t think you’ve got a clear picture in your mind of the alternative.’ Lennart said, switching back to the attack.

‘Lies and deception for a safe and secure society?’ Adannan sneered. That wasn’t what he had expected Lennart to say at all.


‘Without the Empire, the fall of the Republic should have resulted in at least a generation-long clusterkriff, multiple regional civil wars, the abandonment of interstellar trade and peace, and the death of quadrillions.

Yes, lies and deception for a safe and secure society- it’s not right in itself, but it’s a hell of a lot less wrong than the alternative.’ Lennart said forcefully, waving his lightsabre.

Leaving himself wide open for a physical strike, Adannan thought, but verbally- his defence was tight, but there was an opening.

‘What if that was about to cease to be the case?’ he asked.


‘I think I know where you’re going with this. Carry on.’ Lennart said, trying to undermine Adannan.

‘Was the abolition of the Senate the act of a man of sense? Was the use of the Death Star an essential building block in a safe and secure society? The last five years are not what you- what a lot of the old new order- think they were. Yes, a certain manipulation of public confidence is essential-‘

‘Between that and the sheer pleasure the Dark Side gives you in fooling so many.’ Lennart interrupted, and Adannan failed to spot the implicit leading question in time.

‘Exactly, and our rivals within the imperial hierarchy are the most lied to of all.’ Adannan stormed. ‘What does it matter, truth, lies, raving gibbering bullshit, anyone not strong enough to pierce through the lies doesn’t deserve the truth.

Anyone not strong enough to establish and maintain their own truth-‘ he stopped himself before he could go on to add the words ‘cannon fodder.’


‘Well, you’ve just managed to convince me that the force is a large part of the problem.’ Lennart said, much more calmly than he felt. ‘Was that where you were intending to go with this, or were you going to try to tell me how big a lie the Empire is?’

‘Not the Empire,’ Adannan said, inwardly berating himself for letting Lennart draw him out like that- and then asking, why not? Why not go into full flood? Because that would be an implicit admission that the naval officer had a point- that he had got to his point before the dark acolyte did.

‘Not the institution, the Emperor. You reasoned out yourself that, in a government riddled with dark force users, he would have to be either a puppet or the prince of darkness.’

‘Not something I particularly wanted to be right about.’ Lennart admitted. ‘And when I look at the damage the force has done to you, and multiply it by how much more powerful he would have to be…’


Adannan managed to let that part pass, with difficulty. ‘You still don’t get it, do you? He started out damaged, he was powerful in the Force long before he went into politics.

He is the head of the order of the dark side.’ and just in time, Adannan realised that going into too much detail about His Imperial majesty’s precise status as the master of the Sith would be very, very counterproductive.

If there was a chain of argument guaranteed to end with Black Prince wearing the rebel phoenix, it would be reminding Lennart of just how much time they had spent during the clone wars looking for the Sith lord who was supposed to be leading the Separatists.


The idea that Palpatine had been playing both sides was a revelation too far, for the time being. It was also, in any remotely evidential sense, unproven.

Some of the inner circle- not necessarily the same thing as the privy council- claimed to know that it was true, but there was a lot of wild boasting and exaggeration involved and nothing except the fact that it felt right to back the theory up, and you could say that about any half- baked conspiracy theory.

‘Palpatine blackmailed, connived, schemed, manipulated and twisted his way to the top, with the aid of the Dark Side.’ Adannan finished, weakly.

‘That sounds no different from normal politics- which I think is actually condemnation enough.’ Lennart said deadpan. ‘That and further proof that the Force makes you stupid. How else could the jedi have failed to notice that they were under the authority of an office held by their worst enemy?

Or are you going to reassure me with the notion that the dark side is inherently more devious, twisted and sneaky?’


‘Damn you, will you stop going off at tangents? The Jedi are dead and gone, which was less painful than they deserved. I’m trying to tell you that the man you owe allegiance to is not the man you thought he was- he’s the hollow shell of his former self, a black pit of rage, hunger and the Force- all the brilliant twisting wit he used to raise himself to power is gone, eaten away.’ Adannan shouted.

‘This contradicts my line of argument how, exactly?’ Lennart couldn’t resist saying. If Adannan was trying to argue him round, he must have realised we have a dozen different ways of killing him with the ship’s systems, and a dozen more chances if he makes it as far as open space. Good. Probably.

‘Let me just see if I have this right.’ Lennart said. ‘You and the lesser lords of darkness- or just you?- think the old man’s lost the plot. You’re fishing round for things to use against him, any scrap of knowledge about him and his past and methods, or about the Force.

Anything that might come in handy, and you have some very high clearances or good slicers to do it with, which is how you managed to latch on to the 118th Fleet incident. That with the ultimate aim of cutting him even further out of the loop than he already is-‘


‘The Imperial Household and the Privy Council do the day to day work of running the empire, but between diving deeper and deeper into the Force, he remains well aware of the details, and every major change in Imperial organisation or policy crosses his desk.’ Adannan interrupted.

‘The abolition of the Senate was the mark of a maddened old man,’ ignoring Lennart’s muttering about how he personally would have been a damn’ sight less moderate if he had to listen to the tedious old bastards drone on all day, ‘the stamp of the Dark Side was clear, and you don’t think Tarkin had enough mechanical intuition to come up with the Death Star on his own, do you?’

‘A detail.’ Lennart asked. ‘Tarkin’s flaws were those of viewpoint, not of intellect. He disliked the Force as much as any man, and hated telepathy in particular with the passion of someone who had a lot to hide. He should have noticed.’

‘Exactly, viewpoint.’ Adannan said. ‘He saw himself as a brilliant political manipulator, and he was egotist enough to see himself mirrored in others, and assume that the same was true of His Majesty. He failed to reach out far enough to realise there was so much more than that.’


‘ A “more” that you yourself reckon has become counterproductive.’ Lennart noted. ‘This plan of yours, digging into the incident, investigating the old methods of programming loyalty in the living- I suppose your ultimate goal would be to be able to enact Special Order 66, or something like it, on His Majesty himself?’

‘You’re asking me to confess to plotting regicide.’ Adannan quibbled, not entirely logically. Perhaps he had finally started listening to himself and realised just how far he had gone.

He had wanted to lead Lennart into this, a fragment of truth at a time. Instead, it was all coming out at once, the floodgates burst.

‘Why not?’ Lennart asked. ‘I’ve already got you for treason. No way back. Your only way out of this, now that the situation has got this far, is to convince me, my crew and the rest of the squadron.

Convince us that this plot against His Majesty is real, that it is necessary, and that it stands more than a whelk’s chance in a supernova. How can you expect to succeed against the living embodiment of darkness you’re making him out to be?’


Many of us may fail, and fall,’ Adannan said, ‘but the scheme will survive because it is so much in the tradition of the Dark Side. We can hide virtually in plain sight because His Majesty expects jockeying for position, conniving, scheming- he accepts plots and treachery as the inevitable consequence of hiring capable, ambitious men.

Our best protection,’ the dark acolyte smiled, ‘is his own assumption that having his minions try to kill him is nothing that out of the ordinary for the Dark Side of the Force.’

‘Which explains amongst other things,’ Lennart went off at a tangent again, ‘why there is no constitutional mechanism for succession. There couldn’t be- or, at least, what there is runs through the traditions of the dark side. What about the rest of us?

I mean, if you actually read his texts, he’s the only academic political theorist I ever met who had a sense of humour. Well, closer to desert-dry wit, actually. Who do you plan to get to replace him- or is it a simple case of who chibs, wins?’


‘What?’ Adannan asked- he could guess from the context, but that Lennart took such a swing into the surreal and slangy was not good. It meant that he wasn’t taking it seriously at all- or that he was internalising it and thinking deeply, while on the surface he played silly buggers trying to buy time.

‘Oh. Colloquialism used by some of my engineering crew. The act of using a weapon- in context, succession by right of assassination. By powerful men, and women, controlling major organs of the Imperial state and no qualms about using them to their own ends.

How is this much different from the worst case scenario?’ Lennart probed, tone carefully level.


‘It is the way of the dark side- the strong climb higher on the piled bodies of the weak. Metaphorically.’ Or, on occasions, not. ‘It is a good and a healthy system, the way things ought to be, except that Palpatine has escaped from the reach of the rest of us.’ Adannan searched for a metaphor that would help convince the quizzical naval officer.

‘The Empire replaced the zombie aristo-plutocratic pretence of democracy that paralysed the Republic,’ he failed to find one, ‘with a vibrant, living democracy of violence, in which every man can rise as far as his abilities can take him, and retain what he can keep hold of- and yes, the public mindspace is part of what’s to play for.’


‘It is an open field,’ Adannan continued, getting carried away with his theme. Lennart was far from certain that he was right, counting the Names and Numbers who had slid into the hierarchy, and noticed that even he didn’t go so far as to claim it was in any way a level field- ‘and that those of us who can call on the Dark Side of the Force have risen far and fast is not a coincidence.

You have that power, and you are close to a secret that can help tilt the balance. Join us. Join with us, and help remove the dark hand squeezing the Empire to madness and death.

There are so many minor matters on which we are in agreement- that order is a made thing, that it is never better to be less powerful, that…you could do the Empire- and yourself- a great service by removing the dead weight. At the top.’

Adannan ran to a halt, slightly out of breath, and wondering why he felt so on the defensive, why he had felt the need to explain himself at all. Lennart’s half- realised gestalt lent him a power he did not actually possess, of course, but-anyway, he was right, he could be a great asset.


Is he going to go for it, or am I going to have to cut him down and run for it? What does he think, what does he feel? Laurentia was right, damn him for having her killed- and now, Lennart might be thinking that for the best of reasons at the time, he has taken so much away from me, Adannan thought, he can’t possibly trust me.

I should have spent more time with him, got to know him more as a human being, but every encounter blew up into a clash of personalities. The weight of our official masks distorted the issue. Mine, anyway.


Lennart was actually guiltily aware that he had made up his mind early on, and was skimming through the things that had been said later on, trying to decide if any of them were worth altering his judgement and his plans over. On balance…no.

‘You know,’ he said, casually, trying not to give it away and draw an attack before he was ready, ‘there is one power I do have, that seems to be exceptionally rare among the servants of night, that might be of some use.’

There was a general shuffling and scuffling, and somehow the chamber seemed fuller all of a sudden.

The last move, Lennart thought. Checkmate.

‘Lads?’ Thirty engineering plasma torches flared into life and brightened to combat mode, half-lighting snarling faces and looming bodies. ‘Get him.’


Adannan had paid them no respect- groundlings, he had thought- he had scorned them, got some of their friends killed and injured, and at the last managed to incriminate himself quite spectacularly. They had every reason to get him.

All thirty moved in on the dark acolyte. Adannan tried to lash out for their minds and blast them back with confusion and terror, met the combined resistance of all thirty backed by their commander and patron. Couldn’t bite deep enough to do anything, tried to narrow his focus to a few, but then they were on him.

Thirty amateurs, in blade to blade, surrounding. Should be possible- no, not thirty amateurs. One amateur and thirty hobbyists, who may never have drawn blood except by accident but who knew the moves, knew the tactics. They refused to give him the asymmetry he needed, contracted in on him in a jagged ring of light.

Adannan lashed out in a defensive flurry, probing and hacking, and the ring moved to meet him, he had his sabre smashed away from his target by half a dozen blades, and the rest who could reach him stabbed and stabbed and stabbed.

By the time Lennart wound his way through the melee to take the dark acolyte’s head, the glory and the blame, Adannan’s body was in shreds and he had wounds enough to kill him fifty times over.


The dismembered remains scattered down to the deck, the torches flickered down from bright combat to safe, and they turned to face their commanding officer.

Lennart stepped back, swept his sabre up in salute, brought it down again. ‘So now you know why I needed your help, and just what sort of maniac we were dealing with. Couldn’t have done it without you.

Two things. Feel free to dismiss his words as the ravings of a man drowning in the Dark Side- but if you can’t, think how very many people there are, for how many reasons, who wouldn’t want to hear a word of that repeated.

If you think there was anything to it, then think it to yourself, very quietly.’ Lennart said, slowly and deliberately.


‘Second- Vilberksohn?’

‘Sir.’ Followed by a muttered ‘kriffit.’

‘I knew you’d be in here somewhere. Organise a droid detail to get this mess- messes, by now- cleared up. Attach a thermal demo charge to Kor Alric’s light sabre before you jettison it. Thank you all, and dismiss.’
The blades were de-activated, and the men, strangely sombre, filed away.

Lennart relaxed, switched off his own sabre. Felt the tense, hunched feeling between his shoulder blades ebb away. The ship felt cleaner, now, a stain removed. When he was sure there was no-one left in earshot, he looked down at the severed head on the pile of mangled remains and said

‘I think you may have a point. It’ll bear investigation, certainly, but quietly, and in my own time and own way- I’ll be damned, and I mean that literally, if I do it under your lead and as a part of your cabal.’

The force must be getting to me, he thought, I’m starting to talk to the dead. I’ll know it’s gone too far when I start expecting answers. Even if it is only "So why did you have to kill me then, you bastard?"

He turned away from the splash of body parts, then, and headed back to the bridge. There was a fair amount still to do.
Last edited by Eleventh Century Remnant on 2009-11-18 07:54pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Count Chocula
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Post by Count Chocula »

Hot Damn! Another juicy update on a very well-done story. I'm glad you're back from vacation! :D

It may be too early for this, but this fic gets Chicago-style votes from me to appear in the Cleaned-up Fanfics section.
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The only people who were safe were the legion; after one of their AT-ATs got painted dayglo pink with scarlet go faster stripes, they identified the perpetrators and exacted revenge. - Eleventh Century Remnant

Lord Monckton is my heeerrooo

"Yeah, well, fuck them. I never said I liked the Moros." - Shroom Man 777
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Darth Raptor
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Post by Darth Raptor »

In this case, good triumphed because evil was dumb.

Since this is the most recent, I gave this update priority. Revised 37-B sent.
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