The armies and individuals that made up the Palestar Crusade were a fractious lot, who would in normal circumstances likely destroy one another rather than work together. Yet from their division came strength. So long as the Crusader forces were bound together through Dacian, their varying powers and specialties endowed the Crusade with many terrifying abilities.
It was from this vast strategic potential that the Crusade’s grand strategist, Mr. Ridley, needed to draw the elements of an unstoppable invasion force. Tasked by his master to bring chaos to the galaxy, yet given free reign in his means and methods, the young tactical prodigy’s mind had taken quickly to the challenge.
The Crusade’s subjugation of the Unknown Regions had been brutal and overt, but facing no real or concerted resistance, this tactic had been easy to employ. Now that they were the small fish in a very large lake, a new strategic pardigm would be needed.
The problem was that the Empire and the galaxy’s other great powers were heavily established and well-armed. Though they might react slowly to a determined invasion, recent history had shown that all of them could eventually bring to bear fleets and armies that the Crusade couldn’t hope to best openly. Yet the Crusade was not a subtle instrument either, and it certainly didn’t play politics. No one aspect of the Crusade’s forces seemed right to shake up the galactic scene.
It was in studying the fall of the Coalition that an epiphany came. The latest case of a great power fragmenting on the galactic stage, the Coalition had been destroyed not by being bested in combat, but by attrition from many fronts.
The solution, he came to realize, was in employing the Crusade with restraint and care. Instead of one overall invasion, a series of smaller campaigns might succeed to unbalance the galaxy through attrition. The more Ridley thought about it, the more he came to see his mission not as planning a galactic war, but in orchestrating galactic anarchy. Even the greatest conductor needed the right instruments, however, and two such well-played tools leapt to mind immediately for the first campaign...
Dacian may have commanded the galaxy to burn, but it would be Mr. Ridley who lit the match.
It was good to be king, although for Maxson, being Supreme Commander of Nyx was just as good.
From his majestic command center atop Fort Maxson, the commander could look out at monuments to the glory of Nyx that filled the Governing district. This view was only enhanced, in his opinion, by the heavy armed military contingents that tightly controlled and guarded entry to the high-security zone.
For indeed, despite the glory and honour of Nyx, there were many who tried to undermine it - traitors, rebels, and sympathizers to the old and weak regime. Even now they plotted in the dark, instigating violent uprisings in cities all across the planet. Every day on Nyx was a struggle between pro- and anti-Maxson cells, with revolts seizing cities only to be overturned by the highly mobile and disciplined 101st regiment.
As Maxson’s eyes rested on the well-worn executioner’s square, he felt tremendous satisfaction. It was conflict like this that kept Nyx strong, kept it from sliding into the weakness and ineffectiveness it was allowed to suffer under democracy’s thrall.
A lieutenant working quietly at one of the command center’s many terminals quickly hopped to his feet and walked over to the Supreme Commander, head bowed. Maxson noticed the soldier’s approach and recognized him as the one in charge of Crusade communications. The Supreme Commander stirred - though Nyx was proud and independent, even Maxson daren’t forget who was responsible for his rise.
“What news, soldier?” asked Maxson, waving away the customary salute. “Does Dacian send word?”
“No, sir,” replied the lieutenant, keeping his eyes fixed forwards. “Mr. Ridley, sir. He wishes to speak to you immediately about an upcoming campaign?”
“Does he now?” Maxson sniffed, turning back to his panoramic view of the district. “I hadn’t realized a fresh campaign was already being planned... prepare my shuttle, I’ll be leaving within a half hour.”
“Yes sir, Supreme Commander.” The soldier saluted once more and scurried out of sight. Maxson’s attention was already drawn to the executioner’s square, where media cameras and dignitaries were gathering.
A man was lead from a small, squat bunker nearby to a brick wall built for this express purpose. From behind a painted line nearby stood a squad of fully-armoured soldiers, standing at rapt attention.
The man was scruffy, worn, and exhausted, but he managed to grasp the situation he was in. Some sort of deeply held instinct drove him to hunch a bit, as if shielding his face slightly with his shoulder was really going to help. The Nyxans weren’t much for formality or last words, so his attendant guard had only just cleared the line before the waiting soldiers blasted the prisoner to pieces. The brick wall behind was burned black, with the outline of the deceased just barely visible.
Maxson smiled. He liked executions to mean a little something.
“One less drag on Nyx’s glorious destiny,” he murmured to no one in particular.
New Mandalore was awash with excitement.
This wasn’t altogether unusual, consider the warrior-state lived a precarious day-by-day existence. At any moment open combat and brawls could be taking place in the ever-shifting streets. The main settlement looked something like the most advanced form of a shanty-town, and every day buildings had been moved, rebuilt, dismantled, or simply flown away again.
The rock that anchored New Mandaore, however, was the unmoving stone and steel of the coliseum. Built in the heart of the city, the coliseum attracted warriors from across the galaxy who spoke in hushed voices of the fighter’s paradise that lay within. The galaxy neglected and disdained its’ warrior peoples in the current age of order and government, but here was a place where martial skill ruled.
On the day in question, this was more true than usual. Kale, the Mandalore of the Mandalorian clans and thus ruler of New Mandalore, was holding war games in the coliseum. Bringing fresh slaves and plunder with him, many of the finest fighters of the settlement had turned out to compete for prizes.
As for Kale himself, he took the opportunity to satiate his bloodlust.
The crowd roared and cheered as another slave was hurled screaming into the lava-pit at the heart of the coliseum floor. Fully two-dozen grubby humanoids, dressed in rags and armed with knives, uneasily circled Kale. The black-armoured Mandalore ignored them, instead enjoying a momentary respite as he watched the dying man sink slowly into the burning hot magma.
If one was not familiar with Kale or his Mandalorian crusaders, they might have wondered what honour he could have possibly claimed from battle with such obviously inferior wretches. On New Mandalore, honour had become a curse-word - both sorrowfully mourned and scornfully mocked, it had died right there on the coliseum dirt. Now the crowd cheered only to bloodshed in its’ purest form, and the more the better.
Kale was happy to oblige, once more lifting his battered vibroaxe from where it had stuck in the ground. The slave-gladiators all around inched back at the sight of it, wincing at the thought of those who had come before. There was no pretense of challenge or possibility of freedom here, only the question of how long it would take Kale to get them.
A hoarse roar preempted the slaughter beginning anew. Men, women, aliens - some distressingly young or incapable - scattered to the coliseum walls as Kale came lunging after them for his next victim. Running down a desperate-looking man clearly born for a cubicle and not combat, Kale kicked him heavily in the back and brought him to the ground. The scream was cut short by the swing of his axe, and another cheer went out as blood spurted into the air.
A disturbance was growing near the edge of the coliseum’s rim. Curious, Kale stopped in his massacre long enough to see what was distracting from his performance.
A man dressed in black leapt from the edge of the audience seating, landing on the blackened dirt below. Immediately, the crowd’s roaring and cheering dimmed - to leap into the ring while Kale was there was a death sentence. The warrior-king brooked no defiance.
Kale hesitated though, as the black-clad man straightened his stance. A red star was emblazoned on his chest, and though the man seemed hardened and experienced, there was also a haunted expression to his gaunt features. A Void Knight in training, an agent of the Crusade - and even Kale was not so foolhardy as to strike against his master.
“Mr. Ridley has need of you,” the man declared with a nod. There was a slight tic in his voice, the barest hint of personality straining to come forth that suggested this man was not yet fully broken to Dacian’s will. Still a trainee? mused Kale, as he stowed his axe. Must be serious business.
Still, Kale felt insulted by the manner of the young man’s entry. “You demean me in front of my people by entering the battle circle, wretch,” Kale growled, marching up to the Void Knight so that he could look directly down at him.
“Better in front of your men than your master,” the intruder replied, which elicited the barest of smiles behind Kale’s helmet. The spunk would be ground from this one soon enough. “Besides, Mr. Ridley has news sure to excite you - a campaign promising more bloodshed than the coliseum could possibly contain.”
Intrigued, Kale gestured for the Knight to lead the way. Behind him, the helpless slaves peered hopefully at the retreating metal giant. As he reached the gates he paused.
Without looking back, Kale raised a gauntleted fist. Taking his signal that he was finished, eager warriors leapt down into the arena from all sides, eager to take up their previous sparring - and tear through the terrified survivors.
The screams of the dying accompanied Kale and the Void Knight all the way out.
Maxson and Kale sat uneasily in the meeting room. Being that this meeting room was in the depths of Dacian’s black fortress, this wasn’t too surprising. More than that, though, the two men were uncomfortable with each other.
Kale and his Mandalorians had been the ones responsible for breaking the old regime on Nyx, a slaughter that Maxson had taken advantage of to become the Supreme Commander - but at a price, in the form of service to Dacian. Maxson, in turn, had aided Dacian in breaking Kale and his Mandalorians to the will of the Crusade. One was a hands-on warrior who lived for nothing but slaughter. The other was obsessed with advancing the glory of his nation and expanding its’ power.
Whatever brought these two men together would have to be important. A direct summons to Palestar’s lair was that sort of important.
Thankfully they didn’t have to spend long in awkward silence before the door opened and Mr. Ridley entered. Taking a seat between the two of them, Mr. Ridley laid a folder on the table and steepled his fingers. “Thank you for responding so promptly gentlemen.”
Maxson offered a nod and Kale gave a slight grunt. Mr. Ridley might have been Dacian’s minion, but he wasn’t the man himself.
“You’re both busy men, which is why I’m going to get straight to the point - we’re going to invade the Empire.”
This got a slightly stronger reaction, both commanders suddenly taking keen interest in their host. With a thin little smile, Mr Ridley continued. “The Empire is the single most powerful thing in the galaxy - no contradictions, Maxson. If the objective of the Palestar Crusade is to throw the galaxy into chaos, then it’s their stabilizing influence we’re really trying to eliminate. Any other target we undertake, if destroyed, will only further the Empire’s goals and allow them to fill the vaccum. No one is prepared for a galaxy without the Empire, however.”
“There’s a reason for that,” Kale snorted, as he leaned back in his chair. “Destroying the Empire is like blotting out the stars, or making the galaxy spin off in all directions. It can’t be done.”
“We needn’t destroy the Empire entirely to reap the benefits of their fall,” replied Mr. Ridley, as he opened the folder in front of him. “Striking them at just the right place, in just the right way, can send out shockwaves that will destroy their reputation and influence - worth far more to the Empire than mere ships or soldiers. But the question is, just where could such a critical weak point be found? People have been trying to destroy the Empire for generations and failed to find the slightest chink in their armour.”
“Small thermal exhaust port...” Kale muttered, glancing away. “Let me guess, you’ve found this magic weak point?”
“What does it matter to you?” said Mr. Ridley, pulling out a picture of the galaxy from the folder. “What I can offer you, however, is a chance for war, plunder, slaves, bloodshed, and glory. The likes of which the galaxy has not known in years - it’s waiting for us in the Onyxian sector.”
“Onyxian sector?” asked Maxson, brow furrowing. “I’m not familiar with it.” Being a native of the Unknown Regions, Maxson’s knowledge of the outer galaxy was a little weak.
“It’s a large swath of space recently annexed by the Empire,” Mr. Ridley explained, sweeping a finger along a part of the map. “Billions of new subjects hostile to their new overlords, a blunt military presence prepared to put down uprisings, and tight PR-control to keep any incidents of Imperial brutality out of the holonet. It’s the one place the Empire is not yet entrenched, and thus vulnerable. It’s our perfect attack point. It’s your target.”
“Fine with me,” growled Kale. The huge Mandalorian slammed a fist on the table and laughed. “So long as there’s plenty of people to kill, what do I care for strategy?”
“And what of Nyx?” snapped Maxson. “An opportunity to defeat the greatest military power in the galaxy? Our prestige would skyrocket! This campaign must be mine.”
“Which is why you’re both going,” replied Mr. Ridley. “Kale, your murderous brute force will need the strategic tempering of Maxson to overcome the Imperial defenders. Marshall your respective armies in preparation of the invasion. Your first target will be to set up a forwards position on an abandoned world near the inner edge of Onyxian space. From there, I’ll leave strategy to your respectively brutal talents.”
Kale stood up from the table grinning ear to ear. “The first smart thing you’ve said all day, tiny. Don’t worry, I’ll squash this little Imperial bastion for you.”
“Never mind the brute,” Maxson sniffed, getting to his feet. “Nyx will deliver control of Onyx to the Palestar Crusade, and all will know of our victory.”
“I can see you two are the right men for the job,” said James, satisfied. “That will be all. Glory to the Crusade.”
It was from this vast strategic potential that the Crusade’s grand strategist, Mr. Ridley, needed to draw the elements of an unstoppable invasion force. Tasked by his master to bring chaos to the galaxy, yet given free reign in his means and methods, the young tactical prodigy’s mind had taken quickly to the challenge.
The Crusade’s subjugation of the Unknown Regions had been brutal and overt, but facing no real or concerted resistance, this tactic had been easy to employ. Now that they were the small fish in a very large lake, a new strategic pardigm would be needed.
The problem was that the Empire and the galaxy’s other great powers were heavily established and well-armed. Though they might react slowly to a determined invasion, recent history had shown that all of them could eventually bring to bear fleets and armies that the Crusade couldn’t hope to best openly. Yet the Crusade was not a subtle instrument either, and it certainly didn’t play politics. No one aspect of the Crusade’s forces seemed right to shake up the galactic scene.
It was in studying the fall of the Coalition that an epiphany came. The latest case of a great power fragmenting on the galactic stage, the Coalition had been destroyed not by being bested in combat, but by attrition from many fronts.
The solution, he came to realize, was in employing the Crusade with restraint and care. Instead of one overall invasion, a series of smaller campaigns might succeed to unbalance the galaxy through attrition. The more Ridley thought about it, the more he came to see his mission not as planning a galactic war, but in orchestrating galactic anarchy. Even the greatest conductor needed the right instruments, however, and two such well-played tools leapt to mind immediately for the first campaign...
Dacian may have commanded the galaxy to burn, but it would be Mr. Ridley who lit the match.
***
It was good to be king, although for Maxson, being Supreme Commander of Nyx was just as good.
From his majestic command center atop Fort Maxson, the commander could look out at monuments to the glory of Nyx that filled the Governing district. This view was only enhanced, in his opinion, by the heavy armed military contingents that tightly controlled and guarded entry to the high-security zone.
For indeed, despite the glory and honour of Nyx, there were many who tried to undermine it - traitors, rebels, and sympathizers to the old and weak regime. Even now they plotted in the dark, instigating violent uprisings in cities all across the planet. Every day on Nyx was a struggle between pro- and anti-Maxson cells, with revolts seizing cities only to be overturned by the highly mobile and disciplined 101st regiment.
As Maxson’s eyes rested on the well-worn executioner’s square, he felt tremendous satisfaction. It was conflict like this that kept Nyx strong, kept it from sliding into the weakness and ineffectiveness it was allowed to suffer under democracy’s thrall.
A lieutenant working quietly at one of the command center’s many terminals quickly hopped to his feet and walked over to the Supreme Commander, head bowed. Maxson noticed the soldier’s approach and recognized him as the one in charge of Crusade communications. The Supreme Commander stirred - though Nyx was proud and independent, even Maxson daren’t forget who was responsible for his rise.
“What news, soldier?” asked Maxson, waving away the customary salute. “Does Dacian send word?”
“No, sir,” replied the lieutenant, keeping his eyes fixed forwards. “Mr. Ridley, sir. He wishes to speak to you immediately about an upcoming campaign?”
“Does he now?” Maxson sniffed, turning back to his panoramic view of the district. “I hadn’t realized a fresh campaign was already being planned... prepare my shuttle, I’ll be leaving within a half hour.”
“Yes sir, Supreme Commander.” The soldier saluted once more and scurried out of sight. Maxson’s attention was already drawn to the executioner’s square, where media cameras and dignitaries were gathering.
A man was lead from a small, squat bunker nearby to a brick wall built for this express purpose. From behind a painted line nearby stood a squad of fully-armoured soldiers, standing at rapt attention.
The man was scruffy, worn, and exhausted, but he managed to grasp the situation he was in. Some sort of deeply held instinct drove him to hunch a bit, as if shielding his face slightly with his shoulder was really going to help. The Nyxans weren’t much for formality or last words, so his attendant guard had only just cleared the line before the waiting soldiers blasted the prisoner to pieces. The brick wall behind was burned black, with the outline of the deceased just barely visible.
Maxson smiled. He liked executions to mean a little something.
“One less drag on Nyx’s glorious destiny,” he murmured to no one in particular.
***
New Mandalore was awash with excitement.
This wasn’t altogether unusual, consider the warrior-state lived a precarious day-by-day existence. At any moment open combat and brawls could be taking place in the ever-shifting streets. The main settlement looked something like the most advanced form of a shanty-town, and every day buildings had been moved, rebuilt, dismantled, or simply flown away again.
The rock that anchored New Mandaore, however, was the unmoving stone and steel of the coliseum. Built in the heart of the city, the coliseum attracted warriors from across the galaxy who spoke in hushed voices of the fighter’s paradise that lay within. The galaxy neglected and disdained its’ warrior peoples in the current age of order and government, but here was a place where martial skill ruled.
On the day in question, this was more true than usual. Kale, the Mandalore of the Mandalorian clans and thus ruler of New Mandalore, was holding war games in the coliseum. Bringing fresh slaves and plunder with him, many of the finest fighters of the settlement had turned out to compete for prizes.
As for Kale himself, he took the opportunity to satiate his bloodlust.
The crowd roared and cheered as another slave was hurled screaming into the lava-pit at the heart of the coliseum floor. Fully two-dozen grubby humanoids, dressed in rags and armed with knives, uneasily circled Kale. The black-armoured Mandalore ignored them, instead enjoying a momentary respite as he watched the dying man sink slowly into the burning hot magma.
If one was not familiar with Kale or his Mandalorian crusaders, they might have wondered what honour he could have possibly claimed from battle with such obviously inferior wretches. On New Mandalore, honour had become a curse-word - both sorrowfully mourned and scornfully mocked, it had died right there on the coliseum dirt. Now the crowd cheered only to bloodshed in its’ purest form, and the more the better.
Kale was happy to oblige, once more lifting his battered vibroaxe from where it had stuck in the ground. The slave-gladiators all around inched back at the sight of it, wincing at the thought of those who had come before. There was no pretense of challenge or possibility of freedom here, only the question of how long it would take Kale to get them.
A hoarse roar preempted the slaughter beginning anew. Men, women, aliens - some distressingly young or incapable - scattered to the coliseum walls as Kale came lunging after them for his next victim. Running down a desperate-looking man clearly born for a cubicle and not combat, Kale kicked him heavily in the back and brought him to the ground. The scream was cut short by the swing of his axe, and another cheer went out as blood spurted into the air.
A disturbance was growing near the edge of the coliseum’s rim. Curious, Kale stopped in his massacre long enough to see what was distracting from his performance.
A man dressed in black leapt from the edge of the audience seating, landing on the blackened dirt below. Immediately, the crowd’s roaring and cheering dimmed - to leap into the ring while Kale was there was a death sentence. The warrior-king brooked no defiance.
Kale hesitated though, as the black-clad man straightened his stance. A red star was emblazoned on his chest, and though the man seemed hardened and experienced, there was also a haunted expression to his gaunt features. A Void Knight in training, an agent of the Crusade - and even Kale was not so foolhardy as to strike against his master.
“Mr. Ridley has need of you,” the man declared with a nod. There was a slight tic in his voice, the barest hint of personality straining to come forth that suggested this man was not yet fully broken to Dacian’s will. Still a trainee? mused Kale, as he stowed his axe. Must be serious business.
Still, Kale felt insulted by the manner of the young man’s entry. “You demean me in front of my people by entering the battle circle, wretch,” Kale growled, marching up to the Void Knight so that he could look directly down at him.
“Better in front of your men than your master,” the intruder replied, which elicited the barest of smiles behind Kale’s helmet. The spunk would be ground from this one soon enough. “Besides, Mr. Ridley has news sure to excite you - a campaign promising more bloodshed than the coliseum could possibly contain.”
Intrigued, Kale gestured for the Knight to lead the way. Behind him, the helpless slaves peered hopefully at the retreating metal giant. As he reached the gates he paused.
Without looking back, Kale raised a gauntleted fist. Taking his signal that he was finished, eager warriors leapt down into the arena from all sides, eager to take up their previous sparring - and tear through the terrified survivors.
The screams of the dying accompanied Kale and the Void Knight all the way out.
***
Maxson and Kale sat uneasily in the meeting room. Being that this meeting room was in the depths of Dacian’s black fortress, this wasn’t too surprising. More than that, though, the two men were uncomfortable with each other.
Kale and his Mandalorians had been the ones responsible for breaking the old regime on Nyx, a slaughter that Maxson had taken advantage of to become the Supreme Commander - but at a price, in the form of service to Dacian. Maxson, in turn, had aided Dacian in breaking Kale and his Mandalorians to the will of the Crusade. One was a hands-on warrior who lived for nothing but slaughter. The other was obsessed with advancing the glory of his nation and expanding its’ power.
Whatever brought these two men together would have to be important. A direct summons to Palestar’s lair was that sort of important.
Thankfully they didn’t have to spend long in awkward silence before the door opened and Mr. Ridley entered. Taking a seat between the two of them, Mr. Ridley laid a folder on the table and steepled his fingers. “Thank you for responding so promptly gentlemen.”
Maxson offered a nod and Kale gave a slight grunt. Mr. Ridley might have been Dacian’s minion, but he wasn’t the man himself.
“You’re both busy men, which is why I’m going to get straight to the point - we’re going to invade the Empire.”
This got a slightly stronger reaction, both commanders suddenly taking keen interest in their host. With a thin little smile, Mr Ridley continued. “The Empire is the single most powerful thing in the galaxy - no contradictions, Maxson. If the objective of the Palestar Crusade is to throw the galaxy into chaos, then it’s their stabilizing influence we’re really trying to eliminate. Any other target we undertake, if destroyed, will only further the Empire’s goals and allow them to fill the vaccum. No one is prepared for a galaxy without the Empire, however.”
“There’s a reason for that,” Kale snorted, as he leaned back in his chair. “Destroying the Empire is like blotting out the stars, or making the galaxy spin off in all directions. It can’t be done.”
“We needn’t destroy the Empire entirely to reap the benefits of their fall,” replied Mr. Ridley, as he opened the folder in front of him. “Striking them at just the right place, in just the right way, can send out shockwaves that will destroy their reputation and influence - worth far more to the Empire than mere ships or soldiers. But the question is, just where could such a critical weak point be found? People have been trying to destroy the Empire for generations and failed to find the slightest chink in their armour.”
“Small thermal exhaust port...” Kale muttered, glancing away. “Let me guess, you’ve found this magic weak point?”
“What does it matter to you?” said Mr. Ridley, pulling out a picture of the galaxy from the folder. “What I can offer you, however, is a chance for war, plunder, slaves, bloodshed, and glory. The likes of which the galaxy has not known in years - it’s waiting for us in the Onyxian sector.”
“Onyxian sector?” asked Maxson, brow furrowing. “I’m not familiar with it.” Being a native of the Unknown Regions, Maxson’s knowledge of the outer galaxy was a little weak.
“It’s a large swath of space recently annexed by the Empire,” Mr. Ridley explained, sweeping a finger along a part of the map. “Billions of new subjects hostile to their new overlords, a blunt military presence prepared to put down uprisings, and tight PR-control to keep any incidents of Imperial brutality out of the holonet. It’s the one place the Empire is not yet entrenched, and thus vulnerable. It’s our perfect attack point. It’s your target.”
“Fine with me,” growled Kale. The huge Mandalorian slammed a fist on the table and laughed. “So long as there’s plenty of people to kill, what do I care for strategy?”
“And what of Nyx?” snapped Maxson. “An opportunity to defeat the greatest military power in the galaxy? Our prestige would skyrocket! This campaign must be mine.”
“Which is why you’re both going,” replied Mr. Ridley. “Kale, your murderous brute force will need the strategic tempering of Maxson to overcome the Imperial defenders. Marshall your respective armies in preparation of the invasion. Your first target will be to set up a forwards position on an abandoned world near the inner edge of Onyxian space. From there, I’ll leave strategy to your respectively brutal talents.”
Kale stood up from the table grinning ear to ear. “The first smart thing you’ve said all day, tiny. Don’t worry, I’ll squash this little Imperial bastion for you.”
“Never mind the brute,” Maxson sniffed, getting to his feet. “Nyx will deliver control of Onyx to the Palestar Crusade, and all will know of our victory.”
“I can see you two are the right men for the job,” said James, satisfied. “That will be all. Glory to the Crusade.”