Kings and Pawns: Volume II
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Feb 26 2004 4:41pm
The office was dark, as was the sky around it. Coruscant had been plagued by storm after storm during its latest routine maintenance of the weather modification grid, storms that brought rain and thunder flush against building surfaces never intended to encounter them. Luckily for the occupants underneath thousands of square kilometers of transparisteel and ferrocrete, the deluge would little affect their comfortable worlds. But one man enjoyed the unexpected rains, found it fitting for his mood and currently reigning personality.


There was little he could do but laugh, after all. Director Trachta in all his glory had near-refused to promote him without some display of ability - an action for which Assistant Director Maeris Salazar could be ill-angered: he had done far less to accomplish far more when his own subordinates were concerned. This, coupled with the sheer importance the position in question, made Trachta’s demand reasonable if not slightly easy.


So Salazar had gone above and beyond, orchestrating a brilliant plot that would turn the Empire on its head, route out potential saboteurs or assassins, as well as net several systems for the Glory of the Emperor in the process. Oh yes, he thought, swirling a decanter of brandy in cold, almost lifeless fingers, Trachta would be pleased.


If he were not, and Salazar was successful in his quest of impressing the brass, then nothing would stand in the way of the current Director of crossing paths with some accident…
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Feb 26 2004 4:42pm
“ Gentlemen, I received this. Would any of you care to tell me why?”


Colonel Marx, one being of eight attached to the staff of Admiral-Baron Telan Desaria representing Imperial Intelligence, shrugged his shoulders as he took a quick look at his peers. Every one donned the ominous black that signified trade and duty, every one capable of unspeakable acts a sophisticate of Desaria’s taste would not fathom. Marx, in particular, wore the Order of the Black Eagle on his chest with particular pride, every glance a wealth of fond memories from the subjugation of Serivus Prime. “ This material was deemed urgent by High Command and distributed to every senior flag officer in the field.”


Admiral Desaria was standing, pacing about the darkened room illuminated only by three lamps dangling from the hull above. His youthful face was cast in a most vile glow, an image not helped greatly by a fire burning in emerald corneas. “ When is it timestamped?”


Major Fieri Lor-asha, female cryptographer from Bestine IV, recalled the document from memory. “ Zero-seven thirty this morning. HoloNet relay times place its receipt aboard at zero-eight nineteen.”


“ The event itself? The one referred to throughout the dossier and its very reason for existence?”


Lor-asha again answered, blinking slowly and deliberately as if challenging an Admiral’s right to inquire. “ Thirteen-zero-niner.”


Until then, Admiral-Baron Desaria had maintained a level of patience as he accepted the typical insolence of his Intelligence staff. That time came to an end as he slammed both hands flat upon the table, doubtless cracking the igneous layers beneath. A pair of white aiguillettes that hung from his right shoulder shook to and fro as silence took hold of the room and its now-uneasy occupants.


“ Four days ago!!! You are my Intelligence officers! I rely on your to remain informed about those things that happen outside of my zone of command. This incident was not anywhere close but considerably important! My lack of knowledge made me look rather foolish before Admiral Zarris from High Command when I had no idea to what he was referring. You see, as an Admiral, I need information to form plans and operate effectively. Without it, you tie my hands and make me little more than a well-dressed, Empire-loyal, Snowkan. So, now that I have all of the facts, I am taking action. You’re dismissed.”


Lor-asha let her mouth fall slightly as a peer moved to speak, but the Admiral-Baron would have none of it. “ Oh no, you may crawl to Coruscant and explain to your Directors that the only reason for your return was your incompetence. I have already requested a new staff that will be arriving within the next twelve hours. Perhaps, if you ever have a next assignment, you will consider letting me decide what is and what is not important. Now get out of my sight!”
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Feb 27 2004 12:55pm
Tanaab


Battle of Tanaab indeed! huffed Captain Reat as he angrily closed a carbon-copy of the Capital Charter, Tanaab’s only newspaper. Why he read it, only the gods knew, for almost every sitting he found something that upset him or angered him. Such was not an altogether hard task for a man of his sensibilities. Today, a minor reference to a labor dispute’s route near a monument to Lando Calrissian for his role nearly one half-decade before threw Reat into a role. His father, proud and arrogant, had been one of a dozen freighter captains to enlist mercenary escorts before the so-called Battle. He, however had had the unfortunate experience to have that escort be the very predator he was trying to elude. Throughout Reat’s childhood, he heard little besides constant reminiscing and angry musing - he grew to hate the battle that liberated his father’s trouble simply because it took place so late in history.


“ Captain.”


A voice interrupted the man’s reverie and he looked forward. One of a dozen beings on the bridge of the torpedo boat Perseverance was looking towards their captain with anxious eyes. “ Sir, Number Four engine has registered faulty again. Chief Watts recommends shut-down of Port Propulsion Cluster.”


Reat slapped his hand on a grey-trouser covered leg and sighed. His ship, the only vessel defending Tanaab, was the most modern torpedo boat on the market fresh from Corellia Engineering’s yards and thusly required some of the most extensive maintenance money had bought. Tanaab’s government, however, could barely afford the ship let alone the nefariously expensive replacement parts: copies and black-market jury-rigged solutions could be found on every level and near every compartment. One of the draw backs was a rather predictable if occasional failure of some systems.


“ Slow to one-quarter standard speed and cut power to PPC. Chief Watts, I expect repairs finished in four hours.”


A technician whose name Reat mentally misplaced nodded in reply and relayed the Captains orders fifty meters aft to the ship’s chief engineer.


No sooner had the order been given than the ship shook, rocking to one side before another, pitching a few beings about without regard for their strapped restraints.


“ Watts!!! What the Sith was that? Did the Starboard Cluster give?”


The non-commissioned officer in charge of the ship’s internal communication lay sprawled next to his seat, two blue-smocked medics hovering around busily applying bandage and dressing. With a free hand, the female of the pair reached up and activated a commlink that was beeping in rapid succession.


“…Reapeat, Starboard Cluster Functioning at full capacity; Port cluster not yet deactivated. That vibration did not, repeat did not, originate from our drive chassis.”


Chief Watts may have been rotund and foul-mouthed to any man regardless of rank - however much weight rank carried in the Tanaabian Defense Force remained to be seen - but he was far removed from incompetence. Reat turned his full attention to the sensors officer.


“ Captain, we have three contacts on scopes. They came out of hyperspace right above us. Their reversion tremor caught us full-on.”


“ Type of contacts?” Reat asked, returning to his chair and pulling the safety harness tight.


“ None is broadcasting an IFF code. Two are Corellain light frigates that seem to be running escort for what looks to be some sort o super-cruiser. One thousand meters long, one and a half tall. She doesn’t match anything in my database.”


That’s because we should have bought a better one! “ Conn-“


The tactical operations officer turned and slammed both hands to his headset. “ The frigates are coming about, matching course and speed. We’re hot for a missile lock!”


“ Shields!” Reat screamed, straining against the harness he forget momentarily he had donned. Aside from command lessons, he could not help but think now this may be a Battle of Tanaab.
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 1 2004 6:01pm
On-station - Commenor
Imperial Reign-class Star Destroyer Autarch



“ Enter, Colonel.”


Admiral-Baron Telan Desaria looked up from a copy of Hartzell’s My Fifty Years at War to the newest member of his staff, Intelligence Colonel Maxmillian Lenin. “ What can I do for you at this hour?”


“ Is it late, sir?” the Colonel asked, his mouth waxing indignant under a well trimmed but graying goatee. The features on his face did not belie sarcasm but sincerity – Desaria noticed this and smiled a genuine smile. The gentleman from Balmorra had obviously been working too hard to take notice of his wrist chronometer.


“ It is indeed. Did you bring back the copy of War’s Peace I leant you, what, a decade ago?”


Lenin smiled, his bushy facial bouncing as he did, but quickly lost all jocularity from his features. “ No sir. This report was just filtered through my office and I thought you should see it.”


Desaria accepted the cryshac and placed his thumb overtop its protective seal. When his identity was confirmed, white text displayed itself against an aqua background. The Admiral’s eyes skimmed over word after word, and with every line of text he perused, those eyes grew just perceptibly farther and farther apart.


“ An unidentified ship and two Corellian-model escorts? Lord Lupercus will spawn a calf!”


“ I’ve been thinking about that third ship and I think I know what she is.”


“ Well, the information is doing no good inside you – share!”


Lenin brought himself to his full height as if reporting for parade. “ A Bulwark-class battlecruiser.”


“ A Bulwark-class Battlecruiser?” Desaria repeated, his head tilted in confusion. “ No one’s used them since we were cadets.”


“ Yes sir, but that’s not because they were ineffective. Their weapons were powerful but it simply burnt too much fuel. When hauling a fleet of tenders in tow became unfashionable, out they went. I am guessing they’ve got their hands on several of them and they now represent the bulk of Rebel capital resources.”


“ A Bulwark-class Battlecruiser, eh? It’s odd enough, and if we and really dealing with Reel hangers-on, then they’d do something like that.“ Desaria removed a commlink from its nearby perch. “ Captain Voltaire! Send orders to all of the command-escort squadron to be ready for maximum hyperspeed immediately; course: Tanaab. I’ll join you on the bridge shortly.”


Lenin saluted and departed the room. Desaria began compiling a quick report to High Command, all the while thanking himself for eliminating his previous Intelligence staff. &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 2 2004 10:42pm
“ You understand what it is you must do?”


Admiral-Baron Telan Desaria bowed low before the visage of his friend – or rather, a man once with enough time to have friends. Now as the Supreme Commander of the Imperial Military, he undoubtedly remembered few of the good times shared between the Kuati aristocrat and the Corellian schoolmaster’s son. Reichsmarschall Simon Kaine was once a good man but had been trapped by command. He was now a great general but had had the humanity almost wrung from him but the burden of duty.


Or so perceived the officer who knelt before the HoloNet-transmitted visage of the Army’s patriarch on his halted command ship.


“ I do, Your Lordship.”


“ Telan, why do you insist on using that title with me?” asked the blue-hued figure displayed at nearly three times its actual stance.


The words and the cordial, wholly un related nature behind them startled the Admiral. “ I am confused by your question. With the rank of Reichsmarschall comes the title Lord of the Empire. I have done little more than accord you the respect you deserve, sir.”


Kaine shook his head for he was saddened. Telan Desaria, since his rise from the tactical replacement pool, had proven a valued officer and friend to the recently-installed Reichsmarschall. Desaria had won decoration after decoration, rising more rapidly through the chains of command than many thought possible. His was a unique personality, possessing an unquestionable loyalty to the Empire and his own code of honour, but ruthless to the point of brutality against any who had turned their back on rightly appointed authority. Soldiers of the former Galactic Defense Initiative he could excuse as having grown up to serve loyally and indoctrinated to believe the righteousness of their own government. Rebels and traitors he could not abide and found no pitty for them or any remorse in ordering the most horrid of executions for their end. Kaine’s rise had given him a different perspective on the Admiral-Baron, a perspective that had, until the initial wariness had dissipated, cost him their friendship.


“ Command recognizes your vigilance in reporting this matter. Take your squadron through Tanaab and route out these Rebels. Orders for specific operations will be waiting for you there. In addition, if you require them, the resources of the entire Sector Fleet are at your disposal. Every formation in the Empire has been alerted and deployed for action. The Rebels must be stopped.”


Desaria stood and glared into the closely bonded particles of transmitted imagery with burning eyes that sent a chill down the Reichsmarschall’s spine. “ They shall be, for the last time and for all eternity.”
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 3 2004 5:29am
“ We’ve completed our reversion to realspace, Admiral.”


A pair of eyes set deep in a face masked as much by youth as it was etched in years of pain and combat blinked shut for a scant moment of introspection – the same look the Baron of Raenoria donned before every action. His was a position of immense responsibility and without exception he doubted his own right, his own merit, to take so many lives in hand and dispatch them at whim. The exploits that had placed the lauded Imeprial Cross at his throat vested the unqualified and undying faith of millions upon him, and every action’s eve made him wonder if he would let them down. He could not, and never had, even in defeat, for the memory of those fallen was never erased: the thought pervaded time again without hindrance.


“ Sensors, a picture if you please.”


“ Conn-sensors! We have five in-bound tracks! I read three – wait, four – in-bound frigates in escort formation. One Bulwark-class Battlecruiser is the centerpiece. They’re coming in at vector three-thirteen mark zero-three-five.”


“ Let’s give them an appropriate welcome, shall we? All ships: forward emplacements, independent fire by battery on the supporting ships. Captain Voltaire, turn us straight for the Bulwark and ready all torpedoes.”


“ You’re not going to ram them, are you sir?” asked Lieutenant-Commander Mavis, latest aide-de-camp to the Admiral-Baron, to which his charge simply smiled and retuned to the business of war.


The quintet of self-declared ‘Rebel’ ships came straight for the four Imperial Destroyers supporting the command ship of the Demassi Sector Fleet, Tanaab grey-black moon at their backs and its only sun juxtaposed nicely behind their prey. The predator was caught unaware, however, when the Destroyers proved their own combat value against the aging vessels and their expensive but smaller escorts. Wave after wave of concerted turbolaser fire lanced out from the warships’ angular prows to decimate their foes. One after another, the frigates crumpled before the weight of plasmized energy, hulls buckling and turning to molten slag in the cold vacuum of space. Whatever was contained therein could only await termination when every available centimeter of air was consumed by fire.


While the escorts met their demise, inevitable as it was against ships near ten times their size and strength, battleship met battleship: both Bulwark and Reign were the titans of the field, the only ships to even approach parity in their militaristic stance. The former rose high from its level ventral hull like a mountain of metal, flaring aft through many fins and projections along a thirteen-hundred meter length. The latter looked every bit the Star Destroyer descendant she was, gradually rising prow giving way to superstructure and command tower only two hundred meters from the aft engine arrays.


The distance closed between them, their captains staring at one another over open sights: they needed no range calculation or trajectory-bearing, the other’s target so massive as to make such destructive luxuries obsolescent. The numbers on range counters ticked down and down before the order came from the man whose hatred burned faster than the dying ‘Rebel’ escorts.


Admiral-Baron Telan Desaria watched his battleships make quick work of the enemy and gave something of a sadistic grunt as his first balled and slammed down on the arm of his command chair. A few of his teeth were visible as an evil smile creased only a small portion of his mouth.


The commander of the Autarch had served with his admiral in some capacity for the better part o five years, but now was the only time fear coursed through his veins. When his name was called, he met the Baron’s gaze with iron eyes but remained unsure just how long he could maintain such a confident façade.


“ Captain Voltaire?”


“ Admiral!” he replied, snapping to attention out of reflex.


“ Forward warhead batteries are to fire two volleys on my command.”


“ Aye sir.” Voltaire nodded, making sure to rapidly turn his master’s wish into reality. When all was done as the aristocratic officer wished, he was so notified.


“ Fire first volley.”


Desaria’s voice was calm and wholly professional as he issued the singular command for the launching of nearly fifty Mark III proton torpedo-warheads, explosive projectiles on line-of-sight paths that were much slower than their full-torpedo brethren but four-times more lethal. A flare crested over the bow as the weapons parted company with their launchers, bound for a quick end upon first meeting the hull or particle shield of their target.


“ Fire second!!!”


This order was unprofessional in its delivery, for the man who issued it had eyes aflame with anger and a voice trembling with rage. His skin above knuckles grasping the arms of his command chair was turning a dangerous white from the sheer unintentional pressure of their grip. Regardless, the order was given and the missiles sent on their way. Bright plumes of fire erupted where explosive met metal, debris flying in every direction. The second salvo of fifty-odd missiles tore the old structures from one another, fires hotter than hell expanding from within, shining through cracks being pulled in once shining armor-plate.


The Autarch lurched as only a battleship could, dorsal and to starboard to be rid of its prey’s demise and the unwelcome affects thereof: their position irrelevant, the ‘Rebel’ presence above Tanaab had been snuffed out by the vengeful fist of the Empire.
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 4 2004 3:49pm
“ Thank you, President Mourisom.”


Admiral-Baron Desaria switched off the holoprojector causing the half-size visage of Tanaab’s political leader to dissipate into ions that gloated about the office. The Admiral turned to the half-dozen officers who had sat-in on the conversation, and bade them sit around his desk now that the formalities were at their end.


“ General Maxim, you’re positively going to explode.”


Lieutenant General Rovert Maxim smiled and accepted a proffered cigarra from the Admiral’s Chief aide-de-camp before responding. Only when its pleasing – and highly expensive – aroma began filling the cabin did he deign to reply. “ Well, let me be the first to congratulate you on a masterful performance.”


“ Whatever do you mean, General?” asked Desaria, accepting a cigar himself and lighting it. A few puffs later, a small ember of flame smoldered just below the ashed end. “ Commander Mavis, would you please pour some drinks?”


The Lieutenant Commander nodded affirmative and replaced his silver-lined container of cigarrae into his double-breasted tunic. Maxim turned to the Sector Fleet’s commander. “ You just brought Tanaab into the Empire, a world of little strategic but immense political value. You sly narwhal.”


Desaria replied with a knowing smile complimented by falsely innocent eyes. Maxim laughed, the Sector Fleet commander began a slight chuckle, but the other four persons were in the dark as to the source of their joviality. Maxim took notice before the Baron and turned to the man nearest him: Marshal Hideki Togo, the Fleet’s senior fighter officer.


“ Did you not look over the agreement that President signed?” Maxim asked, jabbing a finger towards the holo-pad flanking Desaria’s desk. Receiving a negative nod, he proceeded. “ Well, our glorious commander has a way with words the President obviously didn’t catch onto. Firstly, he willingly signed a contract that placed Tanaab under the protection of the ‘Armed Services of his Sovereign Imperial Majesty, the Emperor, until such time as he should deem the situation fit to renounce the status of Imperial Planetary Protectorate in favor of independence.’”


Marshal Togo looked at Desaria whose cigarra sat fuming between clenched teeth, a bemused look about him. “ Sir, how does this profit the Empire more so than a standard defense pact???”


Desaria smiled and removed the cigarra from his mouth. “ Well, firstly, no Emperor has been installed yet. Which means…”


Maxim was chuckling like some giddy school girl and continued where his friend trailed off. “ Which means that until we do, install an Emperor that is, Tanaab is an Imperial world like it or not. And if they say they don’t like it, then we just send an occupation army armed with several hundred thousand copies of the agreement they signed.”


“ Brilliant, sir,” commented Vice Admiral Namako, commander of the Sector Fleet’s Reconnaissance detachments. She was the most attractive of the assembled flag officers for she was the only female.


“ I can’t take all the credit now,” admitted the Admiral-Baron. “ Lieutenant Commander Mavis thought up the idea, I just spun the fancied language.”


“ Well here-here!” said Commodore Trenton raising his glass in the direction of the Admiral’s aide-de-camp. The others joined in raising their glasses in salute, to which he blushed, applause begun at General Maxim’s chair did little to assuage his shyness.
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 5 2004 11:49pm
High Command of the Galactic Empire

Imperial City, Coruscant



“ The morning reports, My Lord.”


Lithiss Trachta gracefully accepted the attaché for as long as decorum required then forgot his presence when its memory was no longer mandated. Together with the small pile of pads, discs, and cryshac sheets, Trachta drowned out the world and retreated to a calm and undistressing place. There, he could mull on matters of Imperial Security without allowing the beeping of monitors or the clicking of keys irritate him – it was not only good for him but his aides as well since most senior officers throughout Imperial Intelligence had murderous tempers.


Seated atop the other documents was the early-morning dossier published by the General Staff, or, more to the point, which ever of its members was restless enough the night before to pen a report briefing the reader on all major events of night-time hours. Trachta got a slight amount of pleasure at seeing the signature of Vice-Marshal Reynoldes affixed. Many years ago when the two were…younger men…Reynoldes had tried out for Intelligence but was rejected where Trachta was accepted. There was no lingering animosity as the pair of Academy classmates had little to do with each other after the event; it simply gave the de-facto Director a chuckle.


“ Well well, Maerris, you’ve been busy!” Trachta scrolled down and opened an attached document prepared by the Ministry of Propaganda. Nearly every government of any importance – and many without – condemned the ‘Rebels’ for their use of some sort of black-hole generating superweapon in rebuilding the Alliance to Restore the Republic. Governments that had only recently taken up arms against the forces of the Empire were now insulting and chastising the elusive group.


This could have easily been spun as an internal problem and I am sorry to say I doubted its expansion into galactic proportions. However, Salazar has handled this marvelously! Now when we hunt down and destroy these Rebels, people of his own choosing, there will be no cries of genocide or hatred from beyond our borders. Magnificent!


Trachta adjusted the amount of light his photoreceptors took in via a small knob on the side of his faceplate. Mechanical implants had their usage, Trachta’s favorite being the ability to dim unwanted light at a moment’s notice.


One of the datacards that had so errantly spilled out when he removed their balancing item from on top was labeled as being from Intelligence’s own Internal Security Division, Section V. A moment’s recollection brought forth the knowledge of Section V’s mission: monitor and report all noteworthy activity currently common knowledge among the civilian population. Their reports were often stale and uninspired, to say nothing of extremely boring, but the de-factor Director wanted to keep abreast of all things. It seemed as if the weight of a day’s relaxation slowed his hand as he married the disc with his pad’s port.


Sticking out after a cursory review was a report typed on the recent increase of prison riots, escapes, and attempts throughout the Empire. All told, he number of convicts departed from facilities and penal colonies was staggering, disclosed numbers in the tens of thousands. While that was only a ten or so percent rise in the standard and by far a superior level compared to the rest of galactic civilization, the factual and unreported numbers were much higher.


Commodore Trachta gave another smile and accompanied this one with a hearty chuckle: he realized then where Salazar was getting the manpower to feed his vision of advancement. In reality, Salazar was proving to be quite industrious. The prisoners themselves, if killed, saved the Empire money while the freed up space for those who might take their place. Using prisoners on a sort of lethal parole gave them a determined edge to their combat ability that produced a reality unmatched by any game of chess. The entire line of personnel procurement, while it did cost the Imperial Civil Defense Corps several hundred dead and twenty times that wounded, was genius when Trachta thought of it.


Worse still as a smile crossed his lips, Trachta wondered if he would have to promote this rising star after all.
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 6 2004 5:57pm
Imperial Protectorate World of Tanaab, Demassi Sector

Imperial Reign-class Star Destroyer Autarch
In-orbit




Colonel Lenin looked at the data before him and wondered why it did not make sense. Was it that he had slept barely ten hours in half-as many days? Was his inability to relax a factor in the confusion clouding his brain? The questions came at him without pause, adding only greater and greater levels to the stress he was under. As senior Intelligence officer on the staff of a Sector Fleet Admiral, his reports would determine the course of action for many ships and many, many soldiers. He, his career, and whatever unwitting subjects of his eye, could ill-afford a mistake or misstep.


Vasily Varionovich Lenin took measure of the data. How his mind would work he could not be sure, but knew he needed an answer. The Admiral was counting on him, as were the millions of personnel assigned to the Demassi Sector Fleet. Lenin could not afford distractions. He cleared his mind of superiors, peers, and dependants. His commander relied on his ability to act as well as think professionally, and so he would.
Posts: 1621
  • Posted On: Mar 6 2004 10:51pm
Imperial Protectorate World of Tanaab, Demassi Sector

Imperial Reign-class Star Destroyer Autarch
In-orbit



Admiral Telan Desaria closed his eyes before he took full measure of his opponent. When he did, those eyes turned to slits so he could not only glare, but glower at the unfortunate soul whose heart had the audacity to override sense and challenge the commander of the Demassi Sector Fleet to a game of strategema.


Captain Voltaire looked back at his superior, glare interrupted by the multi-level chess-like series of boards. The game itself was one of wits, where Voltaire had an edge, and ruthless tactical efficiency, which Desaria had to a t.


“ You’re move, Admiral.”


Voltaire closed his eyes and let out a breath he had not known he was holding. An extended hand held a container of iced tea that the Autarch’ commander readily took, its cool refreshing taste soothing strained nerves. While on the surface he remained the forty-plus year captain of an Imperial battleship, below his typically unfailing wit was made flinch by the throng that had gathered in the officers’ mess to observe the contest.


The Admiral graciously accepted his turn, first in the game’s innumerably possible rounds, and reached assuredly for his second tier ravenhawk. The piece itself displayed its abilities with little effort of explanation: winged, large, fierce-looking and a mouth full of razor sharp teeth. It was the game’s battlecruiser – tough, fast, and hard hitting – and the only one of its kind. While Desaria’s colour of black had the game’s most powerful element, Captain Voltaire’s red was vast in number.


Deftly, Desaria moved the piece to the tertiary level and placed it next to red’s third of four kazaar beasts. At the same time, three black gnair-dragons were moved to the edge of the level where, much like their animate brethren, they waited to strike.


“ He’s going to attack already!” came a hushed realization from somewhere in the crowd. Captain Voltaire had every reason to be apprehensive since most players did not contemplate attacking until their third or fourth turns. In response, the remainder of the four kazaar beasts formed a vicious pact with the one kept at bay by the ravenhawk and attacked. Voltaire hit two keys at the base of the three-tiered structure and watched the randomizer run over computation after computation. One by one, the results of battle were displayed until stopped by a player: neither Desaria nor Voltaire touched the device. One, two, then three of the kazaar beasts were removed from play, but the fourth got the best of the ravenhawk. The fourth was, however, placed out of play as well for four moves to compensate for fatigue.


“ Finally!” Desaria exclaimed, pushing his dragons forward. “ Assault!” he declared, the trio placed atop a small pyramidal structure. Voltaire had no choice according to game rules to show his reserves, which were paltry, and enter them into the computer. The dragons won and thusly so did Desaria, his captain’s fortress captured on the first move.


Credits were heard exchanging hands as Voltaire sighed. He had been bested, but by one of the best, so it was a lesser burden to bear.


“ Another game, Captai-“


“ Bridge to Captain Voltaire; Admiral Desaria. Something is happening on long range sensors you should see,” interrupted the commsystem. The pair looked at each other wearily then headed for the nerve center of the Imperial Reign-class Star Destroyer.