Calamari System, 25 ABY
Mon Eron, Council Chamber
Following the Battle of Calamari, Dragon-Coalition War
The special session of the Mon Eron Council had been called in record time, the present threat great enough to move a whole nation to action. When the Rogue Empire attacked Dac, Mon Eron remained silent; the Mon Calamari Fleet's aggressive, expansionist policies had made them a fair target of like-minded nations. When Grand Admiral Thrawn struck at the world, again Mon Eron did not raise a hand to defend them; such was the path the Dac people had set themselves upon. The Chiss Empire, The New Order (on more than one occasion), none of Dac's historic enemies were ever Mon Eron's concern. The people of that world had chosen their path through the galaxy, had chosen their allies and therefore their enemies, and it was their responsibility to deal with the consequences.
Such was not the case with the Black Dragon Imperium. They claimed the entire region of the galaxy, decreed all within it to be subjects of their God's will. The Dragons were coming, and when they arrived, not one among the Council dared hope they would stop with Mon Calamari. The Coalition was leaving, the whole world was being emptied, and if something wasn't done soon, the people of Mon Eron would be the only ones left to greet the Dragons upon their return.
“Order, order,” the head of the Council called, quieting the chamber in an instant. The tension was palpable, the fear weighing on the room like humid air in the heat of summer. The seated representatives filling the bottom half of the Chamber turned their heads upward in unison, regarding the domed skylight at the top of the sphere. The view of the night sky seemed to ripple and warp, until a new image altogether took form, revealing the “window” to be a viewscreen. The world of Dac now hung overhead, its face obscured by the swarms of starships clustered around it.
“The decision set before us is clear,” the leader began, eyes sweeping across the collection of Mon Calamari and Quarren representatives. “To stay is to subject ourselves wholly to the dominion of the Black Dragon Empire. Resistance would be bloody, brief, and futile. If we wish our people to live, to be free, then we must leave. We must evacuate, as Dac is evacuating. If we move now, if we mobilize everything within our power and petition the Coalition with all haste, they may yet be willing to escort us beyond the borders of Black Dragon Space. Where we will go, what will become of us, none of us can know, but to stay is to accept a fate worse than death. To stay is to become slaves of the Dragon Imperium's machine lord, to be remade into unspeakable abominations. We will go. We will, finally, entrust our fates to foreign powers and alien governments.”
The votes were cast and tallied with no further ceremony. The outcome was unquestionable. After decades of isolation, neutrality, and the security they had brought, the people of Mon Eron were leaving home behind.
* * *
Teth System, 25 ABY
Teth, Refugee Zone 27
Following the Evacuation of Dac, Dragon-Coalition War
When she signed up for the Eastern Coalition Provincials, Private Rebecca Cormier had never dreamed she'd be spending her time backhanding fishy refugees.
“Move along, move along!” The rough voice of Sergeant Ishmael was an odd sort of welcome relief in this dreary place. “The water's clean in this bay, no Phage presence for a thousand miles, but we've got plenty more of your friends and families to look after, so move along, wash up, but don't take more than your fair share of time. We're on a schedule, people. On a schedule!”
Sarge was waving the line ahead, the rest of the squad spread out in the surrounding area to give some small sense of order to the chaos going on around them. Military drop ships were still landing within sight, disgorging hundreds of thousands more refugees, the differences between the Mon Calamarians and Mon Eronians evaporating as the basic biological need for ocean water against their drying skin pushed everyone forward.
In the distance, bobbing on the water like giant corks, were the converted tanker ships that had brought the Whaladons and Moappa. The water they'd siphoned from Mon Calamari before leaving was going bad, the cobbled-together environmental processors not nearly powerful enough for their needs. The only option available was to dump the aquatic creatures right into the ocean. Out beyond them, the faintest pinpricks floating atop the water, were the sensor buoys, monitoring the seas for any sign of Phage intrusion.
It was a nightmare, logistical and otherwise, and Rebecca and her squad were not equipped to deal with it, but these people were depending on them, so they'd man their stations, give their reassuring nods, and hope beyond hope that someone, somewhere up the chain of command, had some idea of what to do here.
A distinct sound rang out across the crowded shore, a sound that soldiers knew all too well, one for which they were trained to respond. One that didn't belong anywhere near a refugee center. Screams and shouts issued from a cluster of refugees off to Rebecca's right, others diving to the ground or covering their heads with their flippered hands as if their arms would protect them from another blaster bolt.
Rebecca scrambled over, hoisting her blaster into position, heart pounding with the fear and excitement of the moment. She pushed a Quarren aside, broke into an opening, caught sight of a Cooperative Defense Force trooper on the ground, a smoking scorch mark on the side of his armor. His blaster was . . . it was . . .
It was in the hands of a Mon Calamari child, no more than ten years old, waving it wildly at the rest of the Cooperative trooper's squad.
There was a good deal of shouting, most of it incoherent, but she definitely heard the word “stun” in there somewhere among the troopers' chatter.
“No!” she shouted at them, holding both arms out, blaster gripped by the barrel in one hand. Her appearance drew the child's attention, who turned the stolen blaster in her direction. “It's okay, it's okay,” she said, trying to sound calm and reassuring, but the adrenaline and tension of the moment making that all but impossible.
The child's attention (and weapon) swung back to the Cooperative troopers as they shifted forward, intending to take advantage of the distraction Rebecca had provided.
“Wait!” she pleaded with the unfamiliar troopers, glancing to her side as the hulking form of Rud, an Azguardian from her squad, appeared. “Hold this,” she said decisively, pushing her blaster into his hands. She unstrapped her helmet. “And this.”
“Sarge isn't going to like this,” Rud warned.
“Then Sarge can eat bildog poodo,” Rebecca proclaimed, stepping forward. Rud was right, though; Sarge would not like what she was about to do.
“It's the uniforms!” she shouted at the Cooperative troopers, unbuttoning the clasps of her own shirt. “He doesn't understand!” The kid had just seen his homeworld blasted to hell by soldiers, of course he was jumpy!
“What the hell are you doing, soldier!” came Sarge's gravelly, Calamari voice, right on cue.
Rebecca tied the sleeves of her uniform around her waist, her plain, sleeveless undershirt making her look instantly un-soldiery. “Sarge, if you think -”
The imposing figure of a Calamarian White Knight appeared suddenly from the crowd, putting a hand on Sargent Ishmae'ls shoulder. “Let her be,” he said decisively, turning his head to regard Rebecca and giving her a nod.
She advanced slowly, crouching down to be closer to the child's height, arms held out, palms open, in front of herself. “Hey, hey hey, look at me,” she said when she caught the child's attention. “Don't worry about them,” she added, waving for the Cooperative troopers to back off. “They're on your side, promise. You just spooked them, that's all.”
She risked a glance at where the fallen trooper had been, was glad to see he'd dragged himself out of sight. “We're here to help,” she reassured, stretching a hand out further. “The bad guys can't get you here, but I need you to give me the blaster, okay? I need you . . . I need you to trust me, okay?”
Her blood pressure was so high she could feel her pulse in her fingertips. The child was frightened, clearly, and confused. Dangerous, certainly, but this wasn't what they were about. She was not about to let a scared child get shot by a squad of foreigners who couldn't even keep their blasters out of a kid's hands!
“Please,” she pleaded, shuffling closer.
Tears were streaming down the child's face. He clearly hadn't meant to get himself in this situation.
“It's okay,” she said again. Maybe if she said it enough, she'd start believing. “It's okay. It's okay.” The blaster slid out of his hands under her gentle guidance, and she tossed it immediately to another soldier, Risha, who'd been moving in along the edge of the refugee onlookers. She took the child in her arms before the Cooperative troopers could move in, picking him up off the ground and running back toward her squad, who had assembled around Rud.
“Good job,” Risha said approvingly, patting Rebecca on the back.
“I learned from the best,” she said to the Chalactan woman, offering an appreciative smile. “But I wouldn't have had the chance if that White Knight . . .” she trailed off as she scanned the area but couldn't find the Mon Calamari Knight who'd stayed Sarge's wrath.
No matter, she had more pressing matters to attend to. Kneeling down, she set the young Mon Calamari back on the ground. “Now, what are we going to do with you?” she asked in the cheeriest voice she could muster, trying not to spook the child further. “Where are your parents at, hmm?”
He wouldn't meet her gaze. “They're dead.” It was the hollowest sound she'd ever heard.
Rebecca sank back on her feet, no words coming to her.
“There's got to be some kind of orphanage program or something, right?” Flim, the Duros of the bunch, asked, trying his best to be helpful.
“The Teth government has a trauma center set up on the far side of that hill,” Risha said, pointing to a mound of sand half a kilometer away. “They'll know what to do.”
Rebecca glanced to Sarge, who still wasn't looking happy about the whole situation. “Oh, alright, Private. Take the kid . . . but put your uniform back on, for heaven's sake!” Storming off back to his place monitoring the line, he added: “You kids are gonna get me demoted if you keep this up!”
* * *
Rebecca had been assured that the child would be taken care of, but she was dubious. The Cooperative trooper, it turned out, was fine. He'd gotten a bit of a light toasting that a healthy dab of bacta cream would take care of, and the day or two of recovery would give him plenty of time to think about what he'd done. Letting a child nab his gun, of all things!
“Did you hear the news?” Risha asked over the hum of repulsor engines. “Teth's going all-in on the Mon Cal refugees, devoting everything they've got to reintegrating them. Sounds like they're letting Mon Eron's people establish a government-in-exile. I hear they've even asked the Cooperative for more help.”
Rebecca huffed. “Yeah, a lot help they'll be.”
“Hey, be nice. One mistake doesn't decide the worth of a whole organization. From what I hear, those CDF folks are making quite the name for themselves overall. Reports of violence are down in their sectors of the refugee centers; they must be doing something right.”
“Yeah? Then why not send them here?” Rebecca asked as the ramp dropped on their troop transport, and the roars of angry protesting refugees spilled in.
“Because they got assigned to one of the other thousand hot spots around the planet!” Risha shouted in response, heading down the ramp after Sergeant Ishmael.
“Alright troops,” Ishmael started, “keep tight, watch each other's backs, and for all that's holy, don't let one of them snatch your weapon!”
Despite their best efforts, the Phage had gotten into the general population. It spread quickly once containment was lost, and unfortunately, Panacea's troubles fighting Phage wasn't a matter of software. A research lab on Kubindi had discovered a cure of sorts, but Panacea was physically incapable of replicating the particular biomolecular interaction that made the Kubindi cold a Phage-killer. It meant everyone would have to be given injections of the cold, wait a safe incubation period, and then receive a Panacea treatment to purge the virus from their bodies.
It also meant that the emergency clinic just ahead, which had just received a shipment of the injections, was the natural target of a fearful, sick population. If something wasn't done soon, the press of refugees would break through the barricades, make off with the injections, and a whole new series of cascading catastrophes would be on their way. Without tracking patients properly, Teth would lose track of who had and hadn't been treated for Phage exposure. The people who took the injections would die of the Kubindi cold, a virulent disease that was even more dangerous to many non-native species. The people who didn't would die of the Phage, not only forfeiting their own lives but serving as reservoirs for the techno-organic virus, allowing the chance for it to spread throughout the newly cured population again.
It was a lot of pressure for a Provincial volunteer with nothing to her name but a philosophy degree and a glorified grocer of a husband. Rebecca and her squad pushed their way through the crowd, sliding in between barricades to reinforce the line.
It wouldn't be enough.
The crowd surged, and Rebecca leaned into the barricade, trying to hold it against the press of desperate bodies. Rud grabbed one end, anchoring it firmly, and two other squad mates ran over to help Rebecca. Together, the four of them seemed to be holding the line, but the barricades to either side started sliding back. The Azguardian tried shifting his feet a little to catch the corner of his neighboring barricade, but his end started giving way. There were just too many of them!
And then, suddenly, it stopped.
Rebecca and company looked around, dumbstruck. What had happened? What had changed?
“My people,” an amplified voice began, one Rebecca recognized immediately. She spun around, searching behind them, searching the stacks of medical supplies and pitched tents.
“I know that you are weary. I know that you are afraid. This world is not our world. These people are not our kin.”
There he was! Standing atop a makeshift platform, commlink in hand, the White Knight who'd backed up Rebecca earlier was addressing the crowd.
“The night is dark and full of doubts. We don't know if the Dragons will pursue us further, if Mon Calamari was the end or only the beginning of our struggle. But this is what I do know: Teth, this world, it's people . . . this rock, the Rock of the East, it stands. It stands with us. It stands against our enemies. Now, we have crates of medicine here, and no, it's not enough, it's not, but more is on the way. And more will keep coming until it is enough, because that's where we are, that's where we've found ourselves. Not among friends, not among family, not among allies, but among a Coalition of our peers . . . A Coalition of the compassionate, who will not leave us to our fates.”
She didn't know who he was, but the people seemed to respect him. The war had gained the White Knights a lot of respect in the East, sure, but this seemed more than that. Glancing over to Sarge, she saw something in him that confirmed her suspicions.
“Sarge? Who is that guy?”
Mon Eron, Council Chamber
Following the Battle of Calamari, Dragon-Coalition War
The special session of the Mon Eron Council had been called in record time, the present threat great enough to move a whole nation to action. When the Rogue Empire attacked Dac, Mon Eron remained silent; the Mon Calamari Fleet's aggressive, expansionist policies had made them a fair target of like-minded nations. When Grand Admiral Thrawn struck at the world, again Mon Eron did not raise a hand to defend them; such was the path the Dac people had set themselves upon. The Chiss Empire, The New Order (on more than one occasion), none of Dac's historic enemies were ever Mon Eron's concern. The people of that world had chosen their path through the galaxy, had chosen their allies and therefore their enemies, and it was their responsibility to deal with the consequences.
Such was not the case with the Black Dragon Imperium. They claimed the entire region of the galaxy, decreed all within it to be subjects of their God's will. The Dragons were coming, and when they arrived, not one among the Council dared hope they would stop with Mon Calamari. The Coalition was leaving, the whole world was being emptied, and if something wasn't done soon, the people of Mon Eron would be the only ones left to greet the Dragons upon their return.
“Order, order,” the head of the Council called, quieting the chamber in an instant. The tension was palpable, the fear weighing on the room like humid air in the heat of summer. The seated representatives filling the bottom half of the Chamber turned their heads upward in unison, regarding the domed skylight at the top of the sphere. The view of the night sky seemed to ripple and warp, until a new image altogether took form, revealing the “window” to be a viewscreen. The world of Dac now hung overhead, its face obscured by the swarms of starships clustered around it.
“The decision set before us is clear,” the leader began, eyes sweeping across the collection of Mon Calamari and Quarren representatives. “To stay is to subject ourselves wholly to the dominion of the Black Dragon Empire. Resistance would be bloody, brief, and futile. If we wish our people to live, to be free, then we must leave. We must evacuate, as Dac is evacuating. If we move now, if we mobilize everything within our power and petition the Coalition with all haste, they may yet be willing to escort us beyond the borders of Black Dragon Space. Where we will go, what will become of us, none of us can know, but to stay is to accept a fate worse than death. To stay is to become slaves of the Dragon Imperium's machine lord, to be remade into unspeakable abominations. We will go. We will, finally, entrust our fates to foreign powers and alien governments.”
The votes were cast and tallied with no further ceremony. The outcome was unquestionable. After decades of isolation, neutrality, and the security they had brought, the people of Mon Eron were leaving home behind.
* * *
Teth System, 25 ABY
Teth, Refugee Zone 27
Following the Evacuation of Dac, Dragon-Coalition War
When she signed up for the Eastern Coalition Provincials, Private Rebecca Cormier had never dreamed she'd be spending her time backhanding fishy refugees.
“Move along, move along!” The rough voice of Sergeant Ishmael was an odd sort of welcome relief in this dreary place. “The water's clean in this bay, no Phage presence for a thousand miles, but we've got plenty more of your friends and families to look after, so move along, wash up, but don't take more than your fair share of time. We're on a schedule, people. On a schedule!”
Sarge was waving the line ahead, the rest of the squad spread out in the surrounding area to give some small sense of order to the chaos going on around them. Military drop ships were still landing within sight, disgorging hundreds of thousands more refugees, the differences between the Mon Calamarians and Mon Eronians evaporating as the basic biological need for ocean water against their drying skin pushed everyone forward.
In the distance, bobbing on the water like giant corks, were the converted tanker ships that had brought the Whaladons and Moappa. The water they'd siphoned from Mon Calamari before leaving was going bad, the cobbled-together environmental processors not nearly powerful enough for their needs. The only option available was to dump the aquatic creatures right into the ocean. Out beyond them, the faintest pinpricks floating atop the water, were the sensor buoys, monitoring the seas for any sign of Phage intrusion.
It was a nightmare, logistical and otherwise, and Rebecca and her squad were not equipped to deal with it, but these people were depending on them, so they'd man their stations, give their reassuring nods, and hope beyond hope that someone, somewhere up the chain of command, had some idea of what to do here.
A distinct sound rang out across the crowded shore, a sound that soldiers knew all too well, one for which they were trained to respond. One that didn't belong anywhere near a refugee center. Screams and shouts issued from a cluster of refugees off to Rebecca's right, others diving to the ground or covering their heads with their flippered hands as if their arms would protect them from another blaster bolt.
Rebecca scrambled over, hoisting her blaster into position, heart pounding with the fear and excitement of the moment. She pushed a Quarren aside, broke into an opening, caught sight of a Cooperative Defense Force trooper on the ground, a smoking scorch mark on the side of his armor. His blaster was . . . it was . . .
It was in the hands of a Mon Calamari child, no more than ten years old, waving it wildly at the rest of the Cooperative trooper's squad.
There was a good deal of shouting, most of it incoherent, but she definitely heard the word “stun” in there somewhere among the troopers' chatter.
“No!” she shouted at them, holding both arms out, blaster gripped by the barrel in one hand. Her appearance drew the child's attention, who turned the stolen blaster in her direction. “It's okay, it's okay,” she said, trying to sound calm and reassuring, but the adrenaline and tension of the moment making that all but impossible.
The child's attention (and weapon) swung back to the Cooperative troopers as they shifted forward, intending to take advantage of the distraction Rebecca had provided.
“Wait!” she pleaded with the unfamiliar troopers, glancing to her side as the hulking form of Rud, an Azguardian from her squad, appeared. “Hold this,” she said decisively, pushing her blaster into his hands. She unstrapped her helmet. “And this.”
“Sarge isn't going to like this,” Rud warned.
“Then Sarge can eat bildog poodo,” Rebecca proclaimed, stepping forward. Rud was right, though; Sarge would not like what she was about to do.
“It's the uniforms!” she shouted at the Cooperative troopers, unbuttoning the clasps of her own shirt. “He doesn't understand!” The kid had just seen his homeworld blasted to hell by soldiers, of course he was jumpy!
“What the hell are you doing, soldier!” came Sarge's gravelly, Calamari voice, right on cue.
Rebecca tied the sleeves of her uniform around her waist, her plain, sleeveless undershirt making her look instantly un-soldiery. “Sarge, if you think -”
The imposing figure of a Calamarian White Knight appeared suddenly from the crowd, putting a hand on Sargent Ishmae'ls shoulder. “Let her be,” he said decisively, turning his head to regard Rebecca and giving her a nod.
She advanced slowly, crouching down to be closer to the child's height, arms held out, palms open, in front of herself. “Hey, hey hey, look at me,” she said when she caught the child's attention. “Don't worry about them,” she added, waving for the Cooperative troopers to back off. “They're on your side, promise. You just spooked them, that's all.”
She risked a glance at where the fallen trooper had been, was glad to see he'd dragged himself out of sight. “We're here to help,” she reassured, stretching a hand out further. “The bad guys can't get you here, but I need you to give me the blaster, okay? I need you . . . I need you to trust me, okay?”
Her blood pressure was so high she could feel her pulse in her fingertips. The child was frightened, clearly, and confused. Dangerous, certainly, but this wasn't what they were about. She was not about to let a scared child get shot by a squad of foreigners who couldn't even keep their blasters out of a kid's hands!
“Please,” she pleaded, shuffling closer.
Tears were streaming down the child's face. He clearly hadn't meant to get himself in this situation.
“It's okay,” she said again. Maybe if she said it enough, she'd start believing. “It's okay. It's okay.” The blaster slid out of his hands under her gentle guidance, and she tossed it immediately to another soldier, Risha, who'd been moving in along the edge of the refugee onlookers. She took the child in her arms before the Cooperative troopers could move in, picking him up off the ground and running back toward her squad, who had assembled around Rud.
“Good job,” Risha said approvingly, patting Rebecca on the back.
“I learned from the best,” she said to the Chalactan woman, offering an appreciative smile. “But I wouldn't have had the chance if that White Knight . . .” she trailed off as she scanned the area but couldn't find the Mon Calamari Knight who'd stayed Sarge's wrath.
No matter, she had more pressing matters to attend to. Kneeling down, she set the young Mon Calamari back on the ground. “Now, what are we going to do with you?” she asked in the cheeriest voice she could muster, trying not to spook the child further. “Where are your parents at, hmm?”
He wouldn't meet her gaze. “They're dead.” It was the hollowest sound she'd ever heard.
Rebecca sank back on her feet, no words coming to her.
“There's got to be some kind of orphanage program or something, right?” Flim, the Duros of the bunch, asked, trying his best to be helpful.
“The Teth government has a trauma center set up on the far side of that hill,” Risha said, pointing to a mound of sand half a kilometer away. “They'll know what to do.”
Rebecca glanced to Sarge, who still wasn't looking happy about the whole situation. “Oh, alright, Private. Take the kid . . . but put your uniform back on, for heaven's sake!” Storming off back to his place monitoring the line, he added: “You kids are gonna get me demoted if you keep this up!”
* * *
Rebecca had been assured that the child would be taken care of, but she was dubious. The Cooperative trooper, it turned out, was fine. He'd gotten a bit of a light toasting that a healthy dab of bacta cream would take care of, and the day or two of recovery would give him plenty of time to think about what he'd done. Letting a child nab his gun, of all things!
“Did you hear the news?” Risha asked over the hum of repulsor engines. “Teth's going all-in on the Mon Cal refugees, devoting everything they've got to reintegrating them. Sounds like they're letting Mon Eron's people establish a government-in-exile. I hear they've even asked the Cooperative for more help.”
Rebecca huffed. “Yeah, a lot help they'll be.”
“Hey, be nice. One mistake doesn't decide the worth of a whole organization. From what I hear, those CDF folks are making quite the name for themselves overall. Reports of violence are down in their sectors of the refugee centers; they must be doing something right.”
“Yeah? Then why not send them here?” Rebecca asked as the ramp dropped on their troop transport, and the roars of angry protesting refugees spilled in.
“Because they got assigned to one of the other thousand hot spots around the planet!” Risha shouted in response, heading down the ramp after Sergeant Ishmael.
“Alright troops,” Ishmael started, “keep tight, watch each other's backs, and for all that's holy, don't let one of them snatch your weapon!”
Despite their best efforts, the Phage had gotten into the general population. It spread quickly once containment was lost, and unfortunately, Panacea's troubles fighting Phage wasn't a matter of software. A research lab on Kubindi had discovered a cure of sorts, but Panacea was physically incapable of replicating the particular biomolecular interaction that made the Kubindi cold a Phage-killer. It meant everyone would have to be given injections of the cold, wait a safe incubation period, and then receive a Panacea treatment to purge the virus from their bodies.
It also meant that the emergency clinic just ahead, which had just received a shipment of the injections, was the natural target of a fearful, sick population. If something wasn't done soon, the press of refugees would break through the barricades, make off with the injections, and a whole new series of cascading catastrophes would be on their way. Without tracking patients properly, Teth would lose track of who had and hadn't been treated for Phage exposure. The people who took the injections would die of the Kubindi cold, a virulent disease that was even more dangerous to many non-native species. The people who didn't would die of the Phage, not only forfeiting their own lives but serving as reservoirs for the techno-organic virus, allowing the chance for it to spread throughout the newly cured population again.
It was a lot of pressure for a Provincial volunteer with nothing to her name but a philosophy degree and a glorified grocer of a husband. Rebecca and her squad pushed their way through the crowd, sliding in between barricades to reinforce the line.
It wouldn't be enough.
The crowd surged, and Rebecca leaned into the barricade, trying to hold it against the press of desperate bodies. Rud grabbed one end, anchoring it firmly, and two other squad mates ran over to help Rebecca. Together, the four of them seemed to be holding the line, but the barricades to either side started sliding back. The Azguardian tried shifting his feet a little to catch the corner of his neighboring barricade, but his end started giving way. There were just too many of them!
And then, suddenly, it stopped.
Rebecca and company looked around, dumbstruck. What had happened? What had changed?
“My people,” an amplified voice began, one Rebecca recognized immediately. She spun around, searching behind them, searching the stacks of medical supplies and pitched tents.
“I know that you are weary. I know that you are afraid. This world is not our world. These people are not our kin.”
There he was! Standing atop a makeshift platform, commlink in hand, the White Knight who'd backed up Rebecca earlier was addressing the crowd.
“The night is dark and full of doubts. We don't know if the Dragons will pursue us further, if Mon Calamari was the end or only the beginning of our struggle. But this is what I do know: Teth, this world, it's people . . . this rock, the Rock of the East, it stands. It stands with us. It stands against our enemies. Now, we have crates of medicine here, and no, it's not enough, it's not, but more is on the way. And more will keep coming until it is enough, because that's where we are, that's where we've found ourselves. Not among friends, not among family, not among allies, but among a Coalition of our peers . . . A Coalition of the compassionate, who will not leave us to our fates.”
She didn't know who he was, but the people seemed to respect him. The war had gained the White Knights a lot of respect in the East, sure, but this seemed more than that. Glancing over to Sarge, she saw something in him that confirmed her suspicions.
“Sarge? Who is that guy?”