It will never be like it once was.
That was all Gevel could think about. He stood on his balcony in his Imperial apartment, overlooking the political district. High ranking military officials were as much politicians as soldiers after all so Gevel’s apartment had been here, high up to reflect his seniority and rank
Oh, this wasn’t Emperor Gevel’s chambers; those were much more ornate, much higher, and much more secure. No, these were Theren Gevel’s quarters from when he was still an officer and not a puppet. The furniture had dust, the carpet smelled, but the keycard still worked the lock, and the door to the patio still released when he commanded it to.
So Gevel had made himself at home. His two troopers were in the building’s lobby, mostly deserted; many of these giant towers were empty now as huge chunks of the Imperial war machine had fled the capital, back to their own districts. So Gevel was alone, with his wine and his food.
He’d gotten some meal kit that the strange shopkeeper had ordered; the kind of thing you add a cup of water to, put on the heat, and it comes out a complete meal. This was Tamarind Beef with yucca and topato. It wasn’t bad; well seasoned beef, crispy vegetables, but as he swirled the wine is his goblet he found himself missing a salad.
No fresh veg this week; maybe next week.
It was nice to have these kind of first world problems again. Not enough crudite with your steak. It was almost civilised again.
But if things were better, why was it so quiet?
It used to be when you looked out the window, the night sky was never still. Lane after lane of vehicles coming and going moved about in all directions. Now, it was one lane, in one direction. And it moved slow. Some vehicles stopping to check in with the Empire. Others, the Dominion. Others both. After that, the shield blinked off, then back on again with a soft hum and a slight blue diffusion effect. Then it was quiet, and still again.
It would never be like it once was, Gevel confluded. He was tired of serving two masters. Until the Dominion were gone, or he was gone…
Gevel raised up the DL-44 he had carried with him since he was a young officer. He’d had to use it on a few occasions; mostly for bluster, but this blaster had blood on it. This would not be the first life it took…
His thoughts were interrupted by the comm chime. He hadn’t told anyone he was coming here, so he had no idea how anyone had found him.
But still, it would be rude not to answer. “Enter,” he said, and the door latch released and the door opened.
In walked Jaeder. He bowed when he finished walking. “Emperor,” he said. It was then that Jaeder did a once over of the situation and noticed the blaster in Gevel’s hands. “Should I leave you alone?”
Gevel frowned. “How did you even find me, anyway?”
“I have two of my officers stationed under your command,” Jaeder said. He gestured to the gun again. “Would you like me to come back another time?”
Gevel raised the blaster to level with Jaeder’s chest. “I could kill you right now,” Gevel mused.
“You could, but it would increase the amount of paperwork you need to do on a regular basis exponentially,” Jaeder countered, folding his hands behind his back,
Gevel sighed. “Never any good news with you, is there,” The Emperor bemoaned.
His Supreme Commander stiffened a little. “Actually sir, that may not be entirely accurate,” he said. “An order came across my desk today; six Cree’Ar capital ships are being pulled off of planetary defence, to be replaced as necessary by standing Imperial forces.”
Gevel frowned a bit and let the gun sink into his couch. “That’s going to leave us stretched a little thin, redistributing six capital ships,” Gevel said.
Jaeder did not seem concerned. “We finished, earlier tonight, shifting the planetary shield in that sector from damaged Imperial generators to the new gravity based technology the Dominion installed. Which means we don’t need as many ships now that we have the shield at full power. We can probably replace those six ships with two of our own. That, however, is not the overall point.”
Gevel wasn’t a stupid man. It took him a second though. “This isn’t the first transfer they have made…” he said, and then thought back. “Didn’t you have me rubberstamp a similar transfer order a few days ago?”
“Overall, this is a pattern of resource allocation that trends in one direction,” Jaeder said.
“Where are they taking their ships?” Gevel asked the obvious question.
“Our spy network has mentioned that they had planned an offensive against The Azguardians, and there is also this mysterious science project they recently announced,” Jaeder could only speculate. “Still, it can lead to our advantage.”
Gevel nodded. “Again, right now, there is very little loyalty to me or my command,” Gevel said. “And I don’t know how I change that given I can’t leave this planet.”
Jaeder nodded. “We do know someone who can,” the supreme commander pointed out.
Gevel stuck his fork in his food and thought for a second. “There might be another way to play this,” Gevel said and set his food aside. “Can you pass me that pad over there?”
Jaeder followed his eyes to a stack of them atop a filing cabinet. “Which one?”
“The top one,” Gevel said, and he leaned forward. “Kaine was never my friend, but he didn’t ever look at me as an enemy, nor I him. I think we both knew we’d rise of our own merits and sniping at each other was pointless. But he did tell me if I ever had any sniping to do, make sure I had a reliable shooter.”
Jaeder nodded. “Kaine gave you a number for an assassin.”
Gevel scoffed. “If I needed that, I think I could probably track down Ahnk Rashanagok if he hasn’t left the planet yet,” Gevel said. “No, Kaine was more subtle than that. He gave me a line, and if I had a problem, I could leave a message here, and the best problem solver in Imperial employ would find his way to get in contact.”
Jaeder nodded deeper, better understanding. “Sounds like an asset that would be very valuable, if we can put it in play.”
Gevel thumbed the pad and there was a positive acknowledgement; the message had been sent. “Now, we wait,” Gevel said.
“If you’ll excuse me, Emperor,” Jaeder said. Gevel nodded and Jaeder took his leave.
Gevel stood and walked out to the patio of his apartment. In the distance, he could see the section of reinforced shield; it didn’t glow quite the same. It wasn’t as blue as the rest of the planet’s shields.
Just another in a growing list of differences he would have to tolerate.
At least, he thought to himself, he might be able to fix one of his problems.
Assuming that Cisero was still alive.
There was a buzzing noise that snapped Ahnk awake.
“Si,” he said, addressing his ship. “I’m awake.”
“You better be,” Sihoyguwa said. “Seems like your free pass to the Coruscant undercity has been revoked. You’ve made both underworld and imperial intelligence.”
“Sounds like it’s time to relocate alright,” Ahnk said. “Bill fly you out of here?”
“Sure, don’t worry about me. You have a way out of here?”
“Not exactly, not yet,” Ahnk said. “But I’m working on a plan. Hey Si. I need a favour. Can you access SFS Records for shield array tests? Should be in my archives aboard ship.”
“Looking for something specific?”
“Look for adaptive implementation tests for Mon Calamari or Corellian vessels,” Ahnk said. He was going to need to convince the Coalition to take him somewhere (given his own ship would locked down until Bill could weasel out from under the Coruscant shield) and he figured it was most likely they’d use one of those craft, given what he knew of their technology (which, admittedly, wasn’t much).
But if they did want to take him, he’d need to make sure they were prepared to go where they needed to go.
“I’ll have the information ready to transfer,” his ship told him as he stopped in his tracks.
Something had sent his nerves into a state of alert. He could feel… anxiety, and tension. And it was close.
Ahnk tuned his senses a bit more. Ah, there it is.
Ahnk quickly stretched his shoulders, and went to grab his…
…ah, right. Left it with the ambassador. “I’ll need to make sure I get that back,” Ahnk said, as he decided he was going to go into battle anyway.
As he got closer, the situation became clearer. A semi circle of drunken bar patrons harassing a bartender. This wouldn’t be his first barfight on Coruscant, and it likely wouldn’t be his last.
As he approached, though, he felt a tap on the shoulder. “Don’t make any sudden movements.”
Ahnk didn’t look back, but did a quick check of his memory. That wasn’t a finger on his shoulder, it was the muzzle of a blaster. “I had planned on it, honestly; tend to want to move fast in a barfight.”
“Right, but that’s not even sporting; they’d need six more guys to make it any sort of challenge for you, even without your lightsaber,” the voice told him. “Sadly, we don’t have time for that.”
“I’d go faster if you jumped in on my side,” Ahnk threw out there. He didn’t need the help, but could use the time to figure out who this person was.
“Maybe, but I was led to believe this was a time sensitive affair, so we pick option C,” they told him and then fired the weapon.
Ahnk winced in pain as the blaster discharged more or less right beside his ear. Across the promenade, at the bar, one of the drunks grunted and fell forward, clutching at his arm. Suddenly, his buddies were concerned more about his injury and less about the bartender.
Ahnk, meanwhile, rubbed his ear. It was still sore. “So I guess this is the part where you stick the blaster in my back and I go with you,” Ahnk resigned.
“I can shoot you and drag you, but this way is probably faster,” they put the blaster low so that it easily disappeared unless you were very close. “Any of those funky Jedi moves…”
“A blaster bolt to the spine; I’ve done this before,” Ahnk said. “Should I put my hands behind my head?”
“Don’t be an idiot,” they told him. “Act natural.”
As they passed the bar, Ahnk nodded at the bartender. “Next time I’m on planet, drinks are on me,” he said, then he took one of the drunk’s mugs and downed it.
“What the hell was that?” the voice behind him asked.
“You said act natural,” Ahnk said, “and I was thirsty.”
“I also said not to be an idiot,” they said.
Well, this was going to be no fun at all…
Theren Gevel felt cold.
That was the first thing he noticed. The second was that there was a slight breeze. He was in his bedroom, in his old apartment; the living room patio door was open, but the bedroom…
…the bedroom door was open now too. He hadn’t remembered doing that.
“You’re not going crazy,” a voice spoke to him out of the darkness. Gevel blinked a few times, adjusting his eyes to the lack of light, when suddenly light poured into the room, from a pair of bright red eyes. “Up here,” the voice said, guiding him to his perch atop Gevel’s uniform dresser.
“Wait a minute… you’re…” Gevel began.
“In a fashion; let’s not get distracted,” the voice said, eyes blinking then opening again. “Do you remember, a gathering about what was henceforth named Kaine’s Plan B?”
“I do,” Gevel said. “That was… years ago. And how the hell would the Cree’Ar know about that?”
“They don’t,” the voice told him. “But there are forces within the Dominion who are aware of it, and are going to push to destroy it.”
“Why tell me? I can’t do anything from here,” Gevel said.
“I know you’ve been thinking of a way to get a message out to adjust the deployment of your forces,” the voice told him. “There is no more important deployment than this one.”
Gevel sighed. “I will do what I can,” Gevel said. “Do you mind if I go back to sleep?”
The shadowy figure in the darkness nodded. “Heavy the head that wears the crown,” he said, and then the red faded from the room and he was alone again.
“Don’t bother closing a door on your way out,” Gevel shouted at no one, and threw off his sheets in a rage. Guess he was awake now.
After a miserable shower and a very bad coffee, Gevel arrived at the top level of the Military Command Center.
Gevel noticed that it was unusually crowded in here. A small handful of alien riffraff had filled the room. Gevel noticed a Klatoonian, a Noghri, a T’doshok, and several Weequay were discussing something with the Cree’Ar he’d been told was known as Shran Badaar.
Gevel thought for a second of clearing the room, but saw it wouldn’t be necessary as the group noticed him and began to leave anyway. Some of them bowed to him, others didn’t look his way.
“Is it alien welfare wednesday? I didn’t realise Coruscant was supporting social assistance again,” Gevel said in a mocking tone. He drew a cigarra as he watched the aliens leave.
“We have enlisted the help of some factions of alien to assist us in our affairs in this galaxy,” Badaar told him.
Gevel nodded. “I know that you guys and the Weequay have had some sort of deal for a while now, and the Trandos are ruthless mercenaries, they have no love for the Coalition,” The Emperor stated, “but how did you get the Noghri on board?”
Badaar pointed to the everpresent star map. “The New Republic took advantage of a bad decision on the Empire’s part to manipulate the Noghri,” Badaar said. “But nature abhors a vacuum in power; with the Republic gone, the Noghri lacked the resources to rebuild their planet effectively. Some, like the Klatoonians and the Trandoshians, joined a league of intergalactic terrorists bent on getting, to use an expression native to your tongue, “getting something back”. A measure of revenge or retribution, hoping it would transform their fortunes.”
Gevel nodded. He could start to see the picture. “The galaxy had, for centuries, been a war between a Republic and its enemies. When the Republic fell, the Coalition rose, but if you weren’t in the Coalition…”
“Many species felt… caught in the middle,” Badaar said. “Shunned by an openly xenophobic Empire, but not within the borders of this Coalition, they suffered in silence. An opportunity we see fit to exploit.”
“I’ll bet,” Gevel said. “Just keep the Noghri away from me. I don’t trust them. In fact, keep them all away from me.”
“That won’t be an issue for much longer,” Badaar said. “That is the reason I have summoned you here today. I would like you and Supreme Commander Jaeder to begin the transition process of Coruscant to the hands of the Empire once again.”
That stunned Gevel into silence. “What… would that mean, in practicality?”
“The Cree’Ar will keep an embassy here; we will also continue to use this office and the resources of this building,” Badaar explained. “But we will withdraw our standing forces and transfer control of this world back to The Empire.”
“Hold on a minute,” Gevel said. “I’ve been informed that myself, almost all of my officers, and a large number of my infantry, have been fitted with devices. That regulate cardiovascular function, devices that need to be recharged by a Cree’Ar energy field.”
Badaar stood stoically. “What of it?”
“And you can just turn those devices off, if you want?” Gevel said. “How are we supposed to control this world, and others beyond it, with that hanging over our heads?”
Badaar turned to face him, but offered nothing. He walked away, leaving Gevel with a thousand thoughts, and an immediate urgency to have a long, protracted meeting with Cos Jaeder.
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