GEN
Presents:
An
Internal Affair.
By Fleet Admiral Kyle Kessler
This one was a lot of fun to write, and I think the plot holds together reasonably well. The same old faces are back again. Kerrigan's cover identity was blown wide open in "A Conflict of Loyalties" so he's back in uniform under his real name - Carlist Reugen. There are also one or two recurring minor characters who make a reappearance, notably my Chief of Staff - Colonel Cherenkov; and the formidable Chief Steward Winter.
I feel I owe an explanation to the people who've written in asking me to include their characters in my stories. I'm afraid that I take great care in naming my characters, and not everyone's EH name really fits in. Rear Admiral Flip-Flop, for example, just wouldn't look right.
Enjoy!
Dictatorships tended not to worry about details. Details were for committees
and Imperial Star Destroyers weren't run by committee. When the Commodore mentioned,
for example, that stocks of Torpedoes were running low in the middle of a patrol,
the Logistics officer simply obtained new supplies by whatever means necessary,
and sent the bill to Fleet Command later. If this meant stopping by a local
allied world and requisitioning whatever supplies were available, no one argued.
The Wing needed munitions, so munitions is what it received.
Fleet Command was used to dealing with impossible budget demands imposed upon
it by the vagaries of their wayward supply system. Or to be more accurate, Fleet
Financial Directorate was used to it. Fleet Command couldn't care less, since
they all descended from the very Commodores who caused the problems in the first
place. It was a complex system, and keeping track of it all required consummate
skill and patience; which is why Fleet Finance tended to produce forensic accountants
who were extremely patient, never lost a budget trail, and were very, very persistent.
So it was only a matter of time before the discrepancies in the accounts of
the Starfighter Training Platform Daedalus were discovered. Once that happened,
Internal Security got involved, and then it usually turned messy.
Major Carlist
Reugen smoothed his uniform tunic down and checked his boots for a shine before
leaving the Lambda Class Shuttle and stepping onto the deck of the ISD Relentless.
Intel people generally didn't care too much about smart military bearing. In
their opinion it got in the way of getting the job done, but he knew that Fleet
types liked to look smart, and creating a good first impression was useful.
Fleet didn't have a very high opinion of Intel in the first place, and Internal
Security was positively loathed, so anything that helped him get on Rear Admiral
Maldon's good side was worth a shot.
There was, of course, no one waiting to greet him. He sighed, realising that
it was of course, being entirely too optimistic of him to expect any kind of
official reception. A Captain standing waiting by a bank of fuel cells noticed
his arrival, however, and threaded his way through the bustle of droids and
crewmen to meet him at the boarding ramp. He snapped off a precise salute and
extended a hand to Reugen politely. "Major Reugen, your code key please,
sir."
Reugen reached into his tunic breast and passed the code cylinder to the Captain,
who inserted it into his datapad and checked for authentication, before smiling
and handing it back. "Welcome aboard the ISD Relentless, sir. I'm Captain
Warren; Intel Field Officer assigned to the Relentless. Is there anything you
need?"
"Thanks, Captain. I'll need an hour to talk to you about how we're going
to handle the Daedalus situation first. Then you'd better fix me up for a chat
with the Commodore sometime after that."
Warren grinned apologetically. "Sorry, sir. The Commodore wanted to see
you as soon as you arrived onboard. I'm to take you to his Stateroom immediately."
Reugen began to see how this was going to work. "Giving me the run-around
already? Some things never change do they?"
Rear Admiral
Jarak Maldon looked up from his desk as the two Intel Officers stepped into
his stateroom and regarded them both with a baleful, cyclopean stare from his
cyberoptic implant. He dropped the file he'd been studying into his in-tray
and indicated that they should sit. "Major Reugen, I trust you can tell
me a little more about what's going on with the Daedalus than the pitiful scraps
of information contained in this summary?"
Reugen cleared his throat. "Certainly sir." Opening his briefcase,
he extracted a personnel dossier and handed it to the Rear Admiral. Maldon took
it without comment and examined the photograph on the cover. It showed a handsome
woman in her mid thirties, dressed in the uniform of a TIE Corps Vice Admiral.
"Vice Admiral Akiko Kusanagi has been assigned as Director of Starfighter
Training Operations on the Space Platform Daedalus for the last year,"
Reugen began. "Up until now, she's always run a tight ship, but a routine
departmental audit turned up some irregularities in her budget and stock reports
that Fleet Finance were unable to explain. The Fraud Squad ran an in-depth audit
of her finances and discovered that for the last six months, she appears to
have fleecing the Daedalus of valuable equipment and resources." He indicated
the dossier Maldon was holding. "A full breakdown of embezzled goods and
equipment is provided at Annex A."
"What kind of goods and equipment?"
Reugen was about to point out that Annex A of the Report covered those details,
but wisely refrained. Trying to make Flag Officers look stupid was about as
wise as standing on top of hilltops in copper armour during thunderstorms, shouting,
"All Gods are assholes", and carried about the same life expectancy.
Suppressing a sigh, he elaborated. "Flight Training Simulators, surplus
TIE Training ships that were due to be returned to Fleet for disposal, substantial
sums of cash. Basically anything that could be disposed of with the help of
a little clever accounting."
Maldon flicked through the Annex, noting exactly what Reugen had just told him.
"Obviously not clever enough, however."
"Not nearly. I'm to arrest her for questioning. She has no financial background,
so at least one of her Finance Staff must be in on the deal. The Relentless
is scheduled to make a routine stop in the Phare system the day after tomorrow
to collect the latest class of recruits to graduate from Daedalus. Fleet don't
want her alerted to the fact that Internal Affairs is on their way to pick her
up, so I've been ordered to catch a ride with you. I'll need the use of a Squad
of Stormtroopers to actually make the arrest, and one shuttle and Flight Crew
to transport her to the Stiletto for questioning. Both the personnel and the
shuttle will, of course, be returned to you on completion of the operation."
Maldon nodded. "Very well, Major. Captain Warren can see that you get the
resources you need. Just try to stay out of the way for the duration of the
passage to the Phare system. Dismissed."
Reugen stood and saluted then walked smartly out of the stateroom. Once outside,
he exchanged a glance with Warren. "How do you stand it?"
Warren chuckled. "It's not so bad when you're actually assigned to a TIE
Corps Ship. Okay, no-one wants to go for long, cosy showers with me because
I'm still Intel, but I'm here to assess data on enemy forces, I'm not Internal
Affairs. I get along with people okay." He gave Reugen a wry look as they
stepped into the waiting turbolift. "You on the other hand. I'd advise
you to keep quiet about being IA if I thought it would make any difference,
but news travels fast on a Star Destroyer, so it would be a waste of time. Just
keep your head down and be thankful you're only onboard for a few days."
"Gee, thanks."
The modified
Space Platform Daedalus hung suspended in the void, navigation lights winking
on and off as the Imperial II Class Star Destroyer Relentless approached. Once
the headquarters of the Strike Fleet, the Daedalus was now home to the Starfighter
Flight Training Division of the Imperial Weapons and Tactics School.
On the bridge of the Relentless, Major Reugen was trying hard to shake off a
sense of foreboding that something was wrong. He glanced over at Rear Admiral
Maldon, who appeared to be lost in thought as the Officer of the Watch guided
the ship into a parking orbit. Maldon glanced over to Reugen, expression unreadable,
then raised a finger, beckoning Reugen over to join him.
"Something's wrong, Major."
Relieved that he wasn't being paranoid, Reugen nodded. "Yes sir, I get
that feeling too, but I can't say what it is."
Maldon indicated the viewscreen. "There should be a small flotilla of training
ships stationed here. Cruisers, dreadnoughts, corvettes, as well as scores of
TIE Trainers. Apart from the perimeter patrols, this place is deserted."
He flicked a switch on the armrest of his command chair and a fresh data readout
appeared. "According to reports from the Flight Office, no major training
exercises are scheduled. Wherever they've gone, they didn't go with permission
from Fleet Admiral Kessler."
Reugen absorbed the data carefully. Maldon was right, it was far too quiet.
There should have been classes of Cadets flying combat training exercises almost
constantly, and the absence of the Daedalus' fleet of support ships was worrying.
"Perhaps the Training Office could shed some light on the situation?"
Maldon shook his head. "Unlikely. The Training Office and Fleet work a
lot more closely together under the new administration. High Admiral Astatine
and Fleet Admiral Kessler don't do anything like this without telling each other.
It's possible of course, but by the time we get an answer from the Training
Office well have men onboard and we'll know for sure anyway." He
frowned. "I'll get the Yeoman to check with the Training Office anyway,
but I don't think we're going to hear anything surprising. No, someone tipped
off your friend the Vice Admiral and she's long gone."
"Not that long gone. I only received the arrest warrant two days ago."
"Then it's possible we may be able to track her. I'll start Captain Warren
analysing likely escape routes, but any information you have on her will help
him greatly in assessing her likely avenues of escape. First of all, however,
you get yourself onboard the Daedalus and make sure she's gone. We need to know
when, where, and with what. I'm sure you know your job, Major. Dismissed."
Reugen saluted and headed for the turbolift. He supposed he'd underestimated
Maldon, he didn't miss much, that was certain, and he knew enough about the
gravity of the situation to not allow traditional Fleet prejudices towards Intel
to cloud his judgement. All the same, heads were likely to roll for this, the
Ubiqtorate were going to be furious. Another thought struck him; Fleet Admiral
Kessler wasn't likely to be too pleased either. He wondered if the Admiral knew
just exactly which Intel officer had been assigned to handle the arrest? He
didn't think Kessler still bore him any grudges over the Argimiliar incident,
but if he did, this was exactly the kind of situation that could be used to
get Reugen into deep trouble.
Time to keep a low profile over this one, he decided.
The Transport
pilot turned in his seat and gave Reugen a thumbs up. Reugen acknowledged the
signal with a nod, then turned in his seat to address Sergeant Perrell. "I
want you to treat this like a hostile boarding operation, Sergeant. Leave them
in no doubt that we mean business, and make certain your men are careful. If
you have to shoot anyone, so be it, but I'd rather leave here with the same
number of troopers that I arrived with."
Perrell nodded and without another word, the eight troopers all adjusted weapons
settings. Reugen didn't need to ask if that meant weapons were no longer set
on "stun".
The rear ramp on the Assault Transport hissed open and several white-armoured
Stormtroopers jumped clear, rifles at the ready. This didn't do anything to
reassure Commander Weiss's already panicky frame of mind. Standing alone in
the deserted Number Three Landing Bay, he made sure his hands were in full view
at all times, and forced himself not to make any quick movements.
A Stormtrooper sergeant appeared to mutter something into his helmet transponder,
and after a second an Intel Major stepped down the Transport's boarding ramp
and made a signal to the sergeant. Without a word, the Stormtroopers spread
out to cover the exits from the Landing Bay. Weiss realised things were worse
than he'd feared.
The Intel Major stopped a few paces short of the nervous Commander and stared
at him for a second. "Take us to Ops, Commander. Now, please."
Weiss's mouth opened and closed a few times before he found his voice. "I..
Ahh
What's going on, sir? We weren't expecting the Relentless for another
week
"
"I gave you an order, Commander. Don't add disobedience to your list of
crimes. Operations Room. Now."
Weiss gulped once, read the promise of execution in the Major's cold, blue eyes
and didn't argue.
The doors
to the Ops Room burst open and Stormtroopers flooded in, overpowering and disarming
the two Navy troopers guarding the door. Techs jumped from their seats in alarm,
but soon went quiet as they watched the unwavering muzzles of the readied blaster
rifles.
Commander Weiss stepped inside, followed by Reugen. He nervously pointed to
the duty Controller's station. Reugen nodded once to Sergeant Perrell and without
another word, a Trooper stepped up to Reugen's side and was passed a small silver
code cylinder. The Trooper quickly went to work on the station computer as Reugen
cast his eye about the silent room. Keep them confused, keep them occupied and
above all, keep them scared. He let them all stew for a minute longer while
the Trooper completed the data dump. After a minute, the Trooper turned and
looked at Reugen, waiting. He nodded once and stepped over to the Communications
Station, glared at the Comm Tech who nervously got out of the way and opened
a channel to the ISD Relentless.
Rear Admiral Maldon's figure flickered into view, seated in his command chair
on the bridge of the Destroyer as the holocomm warmed up. He looked up, waiting.
Reugen cleared his throat. "Stand by for data transfer, sir."
Maldon's image nodded, then flickered out of existence. The Trooper at the Controller's
station pressed a final switch then unslung his rifle and resumed his sentry
post.
Reugen decided it was time to start applying a little controlled pressure. He
turned to Commander Weiss. "Who's the Officer in Charge here?"
Weiss raised his hand. "Captain Eisen put me in command until completion
of the training Exercise, sir."
Reugen arched one eyebrow. "Training Exercise? So that's what they're calling
it these days, is it?"
Weiss looked confused. "Calling what, sir?"
"There are any number of names for it, Commander. Mutiny, desertion, take
your pick. But they're all punishable by death. The question is - just how deeply
are you implicated?"
Weiss looked thoroughly scared now. Reugen allowed himself a small smile of
satisfaction; Weiss was ready to spill his guts of everything he knew. Time
to turn the screw a little tighter. "Sergeant, clear the room of all station
personnel apart from Commander Weiss and place them under guard in the corridor.
Leave yourself and two Troopers in here with us." Perrell's troops swiftly
moved to carry out the order.
Reugen's eyes drilled mercilessly into Weiss's terrified countenance. "Anytime
you're ready, Commander, start talking."
"So
she took off with the entire Training Flotilla? And the complete three senior
classes of every Training Company?" Maldon shook his head in disbelief
as he stared at the logs on his desk. "Fleet Admiral Kessler's going to
go crazy
absolutely crazy
"
Reugen cleared his throat. "We just missed her, she left less than three
hours ago. Station logs show that she announced a surprise Training Exercise
four hours before that. It took them that long to fuel and prep their ships,
and then they headed out. That would correspond more or less with the time that
the Relentless left Aurora. Logs show that the exercise is scheduled to take
place in the Lyarna System."
"I'm willing to bet that the Governor isn't aware of any such exercise"
Maldon snorted. "Given a three hour head start, they couldn't be that far
away." He drummed his fingers on his desktop for a second or two, deep
in thought, then turned to the Flight Ops station. "Major - start prepping
the squadrons immediately. I want everyone on full battle alert. Strip the Daedalus
of every able-bodied Cadet that's left behind too. Use them to reinforce our
Wing, and get them putting in simulator hours the second they get onboard."
The puzzled Flight Controller's face creased into a frown. "Cadets, sir?
You're sure that's wise? I think Wing IX can handle Kusanagi's task force even
if we are understrength."
"It's not Kusanagi's task force I'm concerned about, Major. She's not just
running aimlessly. This kind of treachery takes meticulous planning, she'll
have somewhere safe to run to, and I expect wherever that is will probably put
us in harm's way. See to it."
"Aye, sir."
"Captain Warren - your report?"
The Relentless's Field Intel Officer nodded. "Yes sir. Kusanagi's ships
are all second rate models, that's why they're used for training, and not frontline
duty. She's got one Dreadnought, one Escort Carrier, a Strike Cruiser and two
Frigates at her disposal, all of which are well past their sell-by date. She
also has the use of two Corvettes, which are in much better shape, but they
are after all, just Corvettes, so no real threat there. The two Corvettes are
her fastest ships, but she'll be restricted to moving at the speed of her slowest
ship, which will be the Dreadnought Nagisa."
"Not unless she's smart and she uses the Corvettes as scouts, Captain"
Maldon intervened. "Which is what I'd do if I were in her shoes."
Warren blushed. "I'll take that into account sir." He picked up a
stylus and pressed a stud, causing a holographic map of the Outer Rim to appear.
Emperor's Hammer Territories were highlighted in red. New Republic space in
green, neutral territory in blue.
"As you know, our border with the New Republic is guarded on the left flank
by our allies, the Imperial Orthodoxy." A sector pulsed white on the map
to indicate that area. "They tend to get nervous when uninvited guests
appear in their space, and just about the only courtesy they'd extend to Kusanagi
would be that they'd arrest her rather than blow her out existence due to the
fact that she's an Imp instead of a Reb. Sooner or later they'd hand her back
to us, so Orthodoxy space is out of the question.
"Our border with the New Republic along the Minos Cluster is heavily defended
by the Aggressor Strike Force. Apart from that, we have Interdictor Cruisers
and Frigate squadrons permanently stationed here, here, here and here
"
white flashes appeared on the display up and down the line where red met green
"
to control merchant traffic and provide early warning and interception
on any New Republic attack. So she can't run directly for Rebel space, because
our Interdictors and Frigate Escorts would get her.
"That leaves two possibilities. They can head up over the plane of the
ecliptic and attempt to transit through intergalactic deep space. The problem
with that is that none of her ships have the necessary high resolution nav sensors
to be able to get an accurate position fix when you're that far away from any
local stellar bodies. She could make it out there, but getting a good enough
navigation plot to get back would be almost impossible.
"The other alternative, is for her to attempt to transit through Independent
Space. We have Interdictors stationed along the major trade routes over that
border, but the Fleet's too widely spread to allow us to deploy much of a force
there. Our best defence along that axis is that the Independents would attack
any Rebel force that tried to pass through enroute to us, as they would attack
any of our forces that tried to reciprocate. It's always possible that a small
force could sneak through undetected, but not in enough strength to pose any
danger. Kusanagi might be able to get her ships through without being detected.
That's the bad news. The fact that she's escaping with ships the size of Dreadnoughts
and Escort Carriers works to our advantage, however. Much of that border is
covered by asteroid fields, black holes, pulsars and other navigational anomalies.
There is only one spot where she could conceivably sneak those ships through
the line, and that's here
" a spot on screen zoomed in to show an
asteroid field "
in the Dendrite Drift. Technically, it's an asteroid
field, but the rocks are so sparse that it's reasonably safe to travel through
it at sublight speeds. That means she'd have to drop out of hyperspace to cross
the drift, and she'd be vulnerable to attack while she did so."
Maldon's eyes lit up. "At her best speed, when could she get there?"
"Her Corvettes could be there now, but the Dreadnought couldn't make it
for at least another two hours."
"Do we have anything nearby?"
"Yes, sir. One Interdictor and two Frigates patrol that area constantly.
There's a nearby customs station that can have a Squadron of Gunboats scrambled
and in place to intercept half an hour from now."
"Excellent work, Captain. I'll signal Vice Admiral Ricaud to ask Fleet
for permission to divert the ships."
Reugen cleared his throat. "There is another thing, sir."
Maldon glared at him. "More bad news?"
"Going over the station's communications logs, I spotted a discrepancy
in the timings of some of the signals that had been sent and received."
"Is this going to be useful to us?"
"It might explain one or two things, and it gives us a slightly more hopeful
picture of how many active traitors Kusanagi has with her."
Maldon nodded. "Okay, go on."
"I checked the signal logs as a matter of routine for any transmissions
that Kusanagi may have sent once she realised we were onto her. Naturally, I
found nothing, but then something occurred to me. Commander Weiss remarked when
we arrived that they hadn't been expecting us for another week, yet we clearly
signalled Daedalus yesterday to expect our arrival. I checked the logs, and
sure enough, there was our signal, but it did say were going to arrive in a
week's time."
Maldon shrugged. "So they edited the logs, so what?"
Ruegen shook his head. "No, sir. That's the natural assumption to make,
but it's not just a simple matter of editing a log. There'd still be the matter
of dealing with whichever Comms Operator was on watch when the signal arrived.
In order for them to do that, they'd have to have the entire communications
staff on their side. There's simply no way they could know which Comms Operator
was going to be on watch when that kind of signal came in. Have you ever heard
of the acronym "KISS"?"
Maldon nodded. "Keep It Simple, Stupid. Yeah, I'm familiar with the term.
I wish more people were."
"Well the more people who are part of the subterfuge, the easier it is
for something to go wrong, so I didn't believe that the entire Comms Staff had
been suborned. Then I noticed other discrepancies. Not only had the signals'
text been edited, but its datestamp had been tampered with too. I checked our
logs; we transmitted that signal with a datestamp of 1721110100. The signal
that the Daedalus received had a stamp dated thirty minutes later. That data
is hardcoded into the message, it's inserted into the code by the transmitting
station and can't be changed without hacking in from the terminal that sent
it. It's next to impossible to hack into it from anywhere but the originating
communications terminal."
Maldon's eyes widened in disbelief. "Are you saying we have a traitor on
the Relentless?"
"No, sir. Keep it simple, remember? That would be too difficult to orchestrate,
and besides, I said I checked our logs. Our datestamp differs from the one that
Daedalus received, ours is legitimate."
"But you said it was nearly impossible for anyone to
" Maldon
growled. "Get the hell on with it, Major. I've got better things to do
than listen to you talk about how clever you are."
"I found a communications shunt installed on the Daedalus' communications
array."
"Major Ruegen, I'm a pilot, not a commtech. What are you talking about?"
Ruegen smiled. "It's a piece of equipment that intercepts signal traffic.
If you know the correct codes, you can install it into someone's communications
transponder and basically filter their mail. You can divert, delay, delete,
rewrite, whatever you want. The signal from us was diverted to the station Executive
Officer's cabin, where half an hour later, a duplicate signal was uploaded to
the communications shunt, then accepted as new incoming traffic by the station
transponder. That's the signal that's on the station log, and that's why it
was datestamped half an hour later. Incidentally, amongst their other duties,
Executive Officers are usually Unit Crypto Officers too, responsible for the
safe storage of all communications codes."
Maldon whistled softly. "Clever bastard."
"Not clever enough." Reugen tossed a buff folder onto Maldon's desk.
"Captain Josef Eisen's his name. His file's pretty unremarkable. Although
one thing is interesting, given that it was an account discrepancy that alerted
us to this whole mess in the first place. Eisen was Logistics Officer on the
VSD Crusader two years ago. He received a lot of praise in his annual report
for the quality of his accounting, apparently." Reugen rose from his seat,
snapping his briefcase shut. "Just something for you to chew over before
you make your report to Vice Admiral Ricaud."
The activity in the TIE Corps Commander's Outer Office barely paused as Vice
Admiral Val Ricaud entered. At the desk next to the door to the Inner Office,
Fleet Admiral Kessler's Secretary, Colonel Cherenkov, stood and greeted him
warmly.
"Good morning, sir. Admiral Kessler's expecting you, go straight in."
Ricaud nodded and stepped around a Petty Officer who was engrossed in sorting
files, knocked once and opened the door.
Fleet Admiral Kyle Kessler looked up from a report as the door to his office
opened and Ricaud stepped inside. The office was sparsely decorated. Kessler
had cleared out the accoutrements of his predecessor and refurbished it with
standard Fleet issue office furniture. There were one or two personal touches
which contrasted starkly with the overall décor. Along the wall were
pictures of a graduating class of cadets from Coruscant's old Imperial Naval
Academy, yellowing with age. Opposite the desk was a display case containing
a scale model of an Imperial Class Star Destroyer. The plaque on the rim of
the case proclaimed it to be the ISD Devastator, and listed her extensive Battle
Honours, before informing all who were interested that she'd been lost in action
at the Battle of Endor. Behind Kessler's desk, the old banner and seal of the
TIE Corps had been replaced with a life-sized oil painting of an impossibly
young Academy Cadet and striking young woman with brilliant green eyes and rich,
red hair. To one side of the painting was a picture of a stern Stormtrooper
Lieutenant Colonel and his smiling middle-aged wife, to the other was a picture
of the same woman with three young boys. Looking at Kessler, the family resemblance
was unmistakable, even down to the streaks of iron grey in the hair.
Kessler nodded in the direction of one of the seats opposite the desk and Ricaud
seated himself.
"Morning, Kess. You get Maldon's report?"
"Yes. And an earful from the Training Office too," he added sourly.
"Fleet Admiral Astatine's not the most friendly person at the best of times,
but now he's accusing me of losing his precious trainees. His trainees?"
Ricaud smiled. The issue of who retained functional control over the PLT Daedalus
was one that had traditionally caused a lot of friction between Fleet and the
Training Office. Since taking over the administration, Kessler and Astatine
had forged a pretty stable working relationship, but both men tended to revert
to type when the shit hit the fan
Kessler sighed wryly. "Astatine's a good man and probably the best Training
Officer this Fleet's ever seen, but sometimes his mouth hits the gallop before
his brain's fully in the saddle."
Ricaud resisted the sudden urge to chuckle.
"Anyway," Kessler growled. "Somebody managed lose a training
Flotilla and twelve Classes of senior cadets. Your people were the first on
the spot, what measures do you propose we implement?"
Ricaud leaned back, thinking carefully. "That Interdictor and its escorts
in the Dendrite Drift need to be moved to intercept, and the Gunboat Squadron
from Station DS-3 should be sent in. They'd better go in loaded for Rancor too.
Dreadnoughts are heavily armoured."
"Maldon wants to go chasing after them with Relentless as well. Personally
I'm not convinced." Kessler looked extremely dubious. "I've been through
that sector of space before. The Dendrite Drift is certainly navigable, but
taking a ship as bulky and unmanoeuvrable as a Dreadnought through there is
about as sensible as trimming your toenails with a lightsabre. You need to be
either small and fast, or have something with enough firepower to vapourise
anything you can't get out of the way of. I'd consider taking that route in
a YT-1300 or an ISD, but a Dreadnought, or an Escort Carrier? The Frigates might
be able to manage it, but the Dreadnought and Escort Carrier will get hammered."
He shook his head.
"No, I'm not convinced about this. We haven't had time to properly consider
exactly what she hopes to achieve. Why did she take the cadets with her? Why
not just jump into a shuttle and get out? She could have been long gone by now,
but she chose to take the cadets, therefore they're important to her for some
reason."
He shook his head ruefully. "She won't risk losing that Escort Carrier
in the Dendrite Drift, not if those cadets are so important." He grimaced.
"The question is, why?"
Ricaud cleared his throat. "Actually, I've been thinking about that, but
it seemed like a long shot at the time so I kept quiet."
Kessler gave him a sharp look. "Spill it, Val. Time is short, I need to
know what you think."
"Well," Ricaud flexed his fingers. "Here's the thing. Heading
straight for Rebel space is out of the question, the ASF would pick her up instantly.
Going out through the Dendrite Drift is, as you point out, apparently contrary
to her intentions. But if we accept that it's the Cadets that are driving her
ambitions, and it certainly appears so, surely we have to ask who would benefit
from having an Escort Carrier full of Imperial starfighter Cadets delivered
to their doorstep?"
Kessler shrugged. "My point exactly, it doesn't make any sense."
Ricaud raised a finger. "But it does make sense."
Kessler began to get that twitch in his cheek that usually meant he was losing
patience.
Ricaud leaned over the desk. "The point is, we're all perfectly aware that
the Orthodoxy has a warfleet that's at least three times the size of ours. Their
huge shipbuilding programme has been a source of concern to us for some time,
but we could at least take comfort in the fact that their manpower problems
were therefore exponentially worse than ours. But that information is at least
a year old now. You and I both know that they've completed their capital ship
construction programme. Now is it totally out of the question to imagine that
they've since begun to increase starfighter production in order to equip those
starships, and in doing so, are finding themselves drastically short of loyal,
trained, Imperial pilots?"
Kessler sucked in his breath in a low whistle. "Shit."
Ricaud nodded. "Indeed."
"You'd have thought Intel might have warned us about this! We've got jack
shit along that border. A couple of scout craft on irregular patrols, one or
two listening stations, but nothing you couldn't drive a Death Star through
without anybody noticing."
"So what are our options?"
Kessler rubbed the tips of his fingers against his temples, thinking furiously.
"Okay, Kusanagi's ships couldn't have made it to the border yet. I figure
we've got another twelve hours before she can get that far. We've got a Frigate
or two we could divert to get to the area, and the Relentless might just be
able to able to beat her to it, but her engines are going to suffer. The only
problem once she gets there, is that it's an awfully long stretch of space to
cover, and we can't mobilise your entire Battlegroup to patrol the border in
case we're wrong. The last thing we want is for Supreme Moff Babune to interpret
it as a pre-emptive attack."
"I can get Gunboat and Defender patrols mobilised almost instantly."
Ricaud offered.
"I know, but chasing Kusanagi's little mutiny isn't the only thing Fleet
has to deal with right now. I will not strip the Core Colonies of starfighter
defences to go chasing after this bitch. You can take no more than one Squadron
from each other ship in the Battlegroups and I'll send the Interdictor Harpax
II to rendezvous with the Relentless. It'll be a tight squeeze onboard, but
I'm sure Maldon will find space for his new pilots."
Ricaud stood and saluted. "Okay, sir. I'll get onto it right away."
Kessler raised a finger in warning. "Just remember, Val. There's no proof
that Supreme Moff Babune is behind this yet, and officially, he happens to be
our strongest ally. Start a war with the Imperial Orthodoxy over this and we'll
both be put up against the nearest wall and shot. But at the same time, we're
not going to take this sitting down. If you can't rescue those Cadets alive,
then you kill them, you wipe out Kusanagi's whole flotilla. Whoever's behind
this is not going to be allowed to get away with it." His gaze slipped
the model of the Devastator against the far wall, his expression softening.
"Of course, I'd prefer it we could all come out of this heroes and get
them back alive."
Ricaud smiled. "Understood, I'll see what we can do." Leaving, he
paused at the door. "By the way, Kess
why don't you let Chief Steward
Winter redecorate this place for you? You practically live in this office anyway,
you may as well make the place comfortable."
"And where would I work while he was tarting this place up?"
Ricaud shook his head in exasperation and left.
Kessler took a cigar from his desk humidor and jammed it between his teeth,
muttering curses under his breath. Pressing a key on his console, he asked his
Flag Lieutenant to connect him to Intel Headquarters on the PLT Stiletto, then
patted down his pockets for his battered old steel lighter as he waited for
the call to go through.
"You're connected sir."
"Thanks, Lieutenant."
"Ubiqtorate, state your name and business."
Kessler spat out his cigar and roared into the communicator. "Don't jerk
me around with your power games you jumped-up, lowlife son of a bitch! Get that
shit-for-brains Langer on the line and tell him that Fleet Admiral Kessler is
going to gouge out his eyes and piss in the sockets if he doesn't come up with
a bloody good explanation as to why we weren't informed about the Imperial Orthodoxy's
critical pilot shortage!"
If you couldn't throw your weight around when you were fourth in command of
the Emperor's Hammer, there wasn't much point in wearing the uniform.
Rear Admiral
Maldon shook his head in disbelief as Vice Admiral Ricaud's image disappeared
from the holo. "Those double-crossing sons of bitches.." he muttered
under his breath.
Major Reugen coughed politely. "There's zero proof so far that the Imperial
Orthodoxy is actually behind this, sir."
Maldon snorted derisively. "Bullshit. This smells right. She's run for
the IO, you're just embarrassed that Intel didn't see it coming earlier."
Reugen at least had the good grace to look embarrassed. "I'm not at liberty
to comment on that allegation, sir. My department is Internal Affairs."
"Yeah, whatever." He turned to Captain Warren. "Captain, I want
the Navigator to get me a chart of routes that are furthest from known friendly
patrols and listening stations, then I want a chart of the locations of the
nearest Imperial Orthodoxy stations that are capable of hiding a flotilla the
size of the one we're looking for. Match up those two charts and then I want
Spear, Dagger and Sword Squadrons patrolling those routes."
"Yes, sir!"
"Soon as you've done that, take the location of our rendezvous with the
Harpax II and get me the fastest route possible to that location. I want us
out of here in half an hour, and I don't much care if we tear our engines to
shreds getting there. Go to it."
Finally, Maldon turned to Reugen. "And as for you, Major; Fleet Admiral
Kessler asked me to send you his regards. He also says that Supreme Director
Langer of the Ubiqtorate is sending an Intel Strike Team to be placed under
your command once they arrive. We'll rendezvous with them when we meet the Harpax
II."
Reugen raised an eyebrow, but refrained from comment as Rear Admiral Maldon
left the briefing room. Kessler knows I'm here and he didn't send a hit squad?
Things are looking up.
Captain
Vigsted was woken from his sleep by the sound of the bridge alarm reverberating
throughout his quarters. He groaned, bubbles escaping from his mouth, broke
the surface of his sleeping tank, ordered the computer to activate the lights
and responded to the call from the bridge.
"Captain speaking" he croaked. "What news?"
A flickering green holo of the Officer of the Watch hovered in mid-air before
his face, the anxious officer's limpid blue eyes blinking excitedly. "Sensors
have picked up the Y-Wing Longprobes, sir. You asked me to wake you when the
news was confirmed."
Vigsted sighed. "How long has it been?"
"Two hours sir."
Only two hours? Oh well, better make the most of it, it could be a while before
I see the inside of my tank again.
"Very good, Lieutenant. Prepare the ship to move, but don't do anything
until the pilots have reported in person. I'll meet them on the bridge, and
above all - maintain radio silence."
"Aye, Captain."
Vigsted clambered clear of his sleeping tank and groped around for his uniform,
already the air was drying his skin out. He sometimes envied his primitive ancestors,
swimming free in the seas of Mon Calamar. But only sometimes. He'd have to speak
to the Chief Engineer about the humidity control in his quarters again.
Arriving on the bridge of the CRS Insurgence, he was saluted by two human pilots
in bright orange flightsuits. Like most Calamari, Vigsted was colour-blind.
Eyesight that evolved under the stormy oceans of the Mon Calamari homeworld
didn't have much use for any colours other than various shades of blue, but
he knew enough of the varIous shades that were available to him to know that
this was what humans referred to as "orange". He didn't much care
for the colour.
Sitting himself in the command chair, he acknowledged the salutes. "Your
report, gentlemen?"
"Sir, the Imperial Interdictor and both Frigates have pulled clear of the
area and entered hyperspace as expected. There is currently no commercial traffic
on the route, sir. The way appears to be clear."
"Excellent work, Commander. You had no problems transiting the Independent
Territories?"
"None sir. Y-Wings are common craft around here, no-one gave us a second
glance."
"Good. Go get some rest, you'll be needed again later."
The two pilots both saluted and left the bridge. The Executive Officer blinked
twice, the traditional Calamari expression of polite expectation. Vigsted stared
out of the viewscreen into the panoramic vista of the Dendrite Drift, carbonaceous
and nickel-iron asteroids swirled gently past in the distance. This is it. Eisen
had better be worth it.
He cleared his throat. "Take us in, Commander , slow and easy. Shields
up and gunners alert. Let's do it."
Captain
Warren knocked on the door of Reugen's cabin and stepped inside, a pensive expression
on his face. Reugen's desk was buried under masses of reports and statistics,
he looked grateful for the interruption.
Warren cleared his throat. "You got a minute?"
Reugen yawned and indicated the edge of the bunk. "Be my guest, make yourself
comfortable. What's up?"
Warren sat down on the edge of the bed and laid a red file cover on Reugen's
desk. Reugen raised an eyebrow. "What's this?"
Warren sighed. "Bad news. Possibly. Or possibly something that we can turn
to our advantage."
"How do you mean?"
"This is this week's Intelligence Summary, direct from the Ubiqtorate.
Amongst the usual reports, is one thing that suddenly started to bother me a
lot in the light of what's been happening recently. There's a sketchy report
here from an agent in the Independent Territories alerting us that a Rebel Cruiser
had gone missing while on a diplomatic mission."
Reugen's blank expression indicated that Warren needed to explain further.
"The CRS Insurgence was enroute to an Independence Day celebration in the
Kozar System. Nothing unusual about that, the Rebs are always trying to ingratiate
themselves with the Indies. As is standard, the ship had been demilitarised
before it was granted clearance to pass into Indie space, so basically, her
fighter squadrons were disembarked at the nearest Rebel station to the border
before she crossed the line. We know this happened, because we have an agent
on the station that inspected the ship before it was allowed to proceed further
into Indie space."
"Okay
"
"But the thing is, the Kozari claim that the Insurgence never showed up.
She's overdue at the celebrations by twelve hours."
Reugen shrugged. "Could be any reason for that, a CRS without fighter escort
might make a juicy target for a well organised gang of pirates, or she could
have a problem with her drive systems."
"Yeah, but we tend to get nervous about Reb capships going missing so close
to our borders, and the suspicious thing is, the Kozar System borders the Dendrite
Drift. Now I ask you, is that a co-incidence?"
Reugen was suddenly very interested. "And at just about the same time as
our pickets along the Dendrite Drift were called away, too. How incredibly convenient."
Warren sighed. "Working in Intel has taught me that there's absolutely
no such thing as a co-incidence."
"A philosophy I happen to agree with whole-heartedly, but think about this
for a second. What use is a Calamari Cruiser without it's fighter squadrons?
Without starfighter cover it's basically just a reasonably well-armed target."
"That's where I was hoping you could help. I think this information's relevant
but I'm out of ideas. I thought perhaps they were planning to transfer the training
ships to the Cruiser's empty hangar bays, but rejected that idea almost immediately.
I mean, they're only obsolete TIEs, of no possible use to the Rebels, and definitely
not something you'd contemplate losing an MC-80 over."
Reugen frowned in concentration, deep in thought. After a while, he sighed.
"Warren, I don't know about you, but I always think better with a drink
inside me. How about it?"
Kessler was getting a headache. He was a practical man, not a diplomat. Definitely
not a diplomat. In fact, it would probably be safe to say that he didn't know
anyone who hated him enough to ever accuse him of being a diplomat. He'd never
come across a problem that couldn't be solved by a Star Destroyer, a Wing of
starfighters and crippling turbolaser support fire. People accused him of lacking
imagination, this wasn't true. He had plenty of imagination. He had enough imagination
to get headaches thinking about the kind of problems that resulted from not
taking direct, decisive action in a military situation. What he lacked was patience.
As far as he was concerned, he wasn't paid to be diplomatic, he was paid to
crush the enemies of the Empire quickly, mercilessly and with as few friendly
losses as possible. Diplomacy was for diplomats.
The litany of complaints that were being delivered to him by the diplomat currently
seated across his desk were not doing anything to improve his temper. As has
already been mentioned, Fleet Admiral Kessler was not famous for his patient
nature.
His Excellency Pavresh Rampala, Ambassador of the Exalted Imperial Orthodoxy,
was finally winding down his speech, much of which concentrated on the gross
violations of the border treaty signed only three years ago by Grand Admiral
Stephan Ronin and his Most Exalted Majesty, Supreme Moff Lardo Babune. The speech
paid careful attention to the unacceptable build-up of military forces along
the joint border between Imperial Orthodoxy and Emperor's Hammer space, and
warned of the grave dangers implicit in such an aggressive and foolhardy venture;
before concluding with the warning that the brave and valiant forces of the
Orthodoxy Starfleet would not allow such a threat to the safety and security
of their borders to go unchallenged.
This was entirely the wrong sort of language to use under the current circumstances.
Kyle Kessler may very well have been a Fleet Admiral in the service of the Emperor's
Hammer Strike Fleet. It was true that he was a Knight Commander in the fraternal
society of the Grand Order of the Emperor. It was even rumoured that as well
as being an Officer, he was also a Gentleman; but the thing that most people
forgot about Fleet Admiral Kessler (at least until it was too late) was that
when you stripped away all the ranks and titles, all that remained was the second
son of a Stormtrooper who'd grown up in one military base on Coruscant after
another. Which basically meant that when you started using words like "unacceptable",
"gross", "foolhardy" and especially "aggressive";
all that he heard was that you were looking for a good smack in the teeth.
Lord Ambassador Manesh sat quietly by Rampala's side, waiting for Kessler's
response to the Orthodoxy Ambassador's demand to know what he, the TIE Corps
Commander and the man directly responsible for this outrage, intended to do
about it.
Kessler removed his cigar from his mouth and inspected the softly glowing tip
for a second. Then he pressed a button on his desk and cleared his throat as
two armed Navy Troopers entered the office.
"Your Excellency, I've given careful consideration to your complaints and
have reached the following conclusion: Arseholes to the lot of you."
He clicked his fingers and the two Troopers grabbed an arm each and escorted
Rampala from the room. Manesh sighed.
"Don't look at me like that, Manesh!" Kessler snapped. "It's
his own fault for confusing me with someone who gives a shit."
"The Grand Admiral is going to be upset, Kessler."
"Arseholes to him too. I'm not paid to be nice, I'm paid to hurt people.
If he wanted nice he should have put you in charge of the Fleet."
Manesh stood, brushing down his cloak. "Yes, well I suppose one should
really have seen this coming. I'd best go and attend to His Excellency and soothe
his temper before he finds a gun."
"For his sake I hope you do."
Manesh nodded once in respect and turned to leave, an amused glint in his eye
and the ghost of a smile on his face.
Bloody diplomats Kessler muttered under his breath. Clamping his cigar back
into his teeth, he activated the commlink to his Outer Office.
"Cherenkov, you'd better have a good excuse for this," he growled
into the speaker.
"Uhh, Colonel Cherenkov's not in the office right now, sir. This is Lieutenant
Dickinson, sir."
Kessler's brow furrowed in perplexity. Lieutenant Dickinson? The name sounded
vaguely familiar.
"You're the new Flag Lieutenant, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"And did Colonel Cherenkov not instruct you that the Orthodoxy Ambassador
was to be refused access to my Inner Office?"
"The Colonel did leave instructions to that effect sir, but I thought that
since he was accompanied by Lord Ambassador Manesh it would be okay. Sir."
Kessler's free hand groped across his desk to the large glass paperweight that
sat on top of his in-tray. It was about the size of a man's fist, and balanced
perfectly for throwing.
"Oh you thought did you? I see. Lieutenant Dickinson, please step into
my Office."
Reugen
straightened his uniform and together with Captain Warren, approached the ISD
Relentless' Commodore as he studied a tactical display. Maldon looked up at
Reugen and raised a hand, indicating he should wait.
Reugen observed the tactical display he was discussing with the Officer of the
Watch. Displayed were several navigational markers along the IO border, each
assigned a Flight of Starfighters on Reconnaissance duty. Highlighted in red
were several hotspots, areas judged where it was most likely the renegade task
force would try to slip through the line. Patrols were heavier here, but resources
were still stretched awfully thin.
Eventually, Maldon and Lieutenant finished their discussion and he nodded, indicating
Reugen should speak.
"I've completed my analysis as you requested, sir."
"Okay, Major. Spit it out."
Reugen took a deep breath. "Given the size of the area we have to patrol,
and given the forces at our disposal, there's a less than twelve per cent chance
that we're going to intercept Kusanagi. Even when the Frigates Calico and Tribal
arrive, we still won't have enough to increase that factor to more than fifteen
percent. That's the good news. The bad news is, that even if we do get lucky,
our forces are too thinly spread to do anything if we do find them. Whoever
is unlucky enough to discover her ships will be lucky to signal a warning before
her escorts destroy them. Then she'll be alerted and will simply microjump out
again. Unless they run smack into the Relentless or the Harpax II, we don't
have a hope"
Maldon frowned. "So what you're saying is that in all likelihood, we're
screwed?"
Reugen nodded apologetically.
"Not good enough" Maldon countered. "Find a solution."
There's something depressingly predictable about people in positions of power.
Something about rank seems to convey an unshakeable belief in these people,
that if you simply shout at people enough, even the most impossible demands
will be complied with. What's really depressing is that for some inexplicable
reason, it actually works from time to time.
Reugen hadn't survived as an undercover Intel agent living under a false identity
on the Fringe for eight years without learning a thing or two about how to survive
in hostile environments. And he hadn't made it Major in Intel by being unable
to anticipate the demands of his superiors either. This time, thanks to Warren's
alertness, and a few stiff drinks, he had the germ of an idea.
"In anticipation of your
demand, Captain Warren and I have formulated
a theory, sir." Swiftly, and with the minimum of fuss, he explained the
circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the CRS Insurgence.
Maldon frowned and rubbed his jaw. "This has got to be connected, but I
don't see how we can turn this to our advantage."
Reugen nodded to Warren, who cleared his throat and spoke. "Major Reugen
and I believe that the significant factor here is that due to the necessity
of having to transit Indie territory, the Insurgence is without her fighter
cover. If she is in EH space, and we all believe that to be the case, she'll
be staying as far away from contact with our forces as humanly possible. She'll
have no scouting capability, she won't know what's ahead of her until she gets
there. Without her fighters she's vulnerable to the first routine gunboat patrol
that stumbles across her. We don't believe they're eager to risk a ship like
one of their MC-80s so easily."
Reugen took up the thread. "We think they've somehow managed to organise
a method of re-supplying the Insurgence with starfighters, and more importantly,
we think we know how they did it."
He pulled out a shipping manifest and handed it to Maldon who looked at the
figures blankly.
"This is the manifest of a freighter convoy led by the FRT Blue. For ease
of reference we'll refer to it as the Blue Convoy from now on." He indicated
a list on the manifest. "Here you can see that Blue was carrying thirty
six X-Wing fighters and munitions from the Incom licensed manufacturing plant
on the Independent world of Eldoray II. You can see the purchase order here
"
he indicated a stamp at the bottom of the page. "The craft had been purchased
by the government of Barakka for use with the fighter squadrons of that world's
Royal Guard."
Maldon nodded. "Let me see if I can guess, they never made the delivery?"
"We don't know, we got this information from the weekly Intel Summary.
Intel routinely track the movements of military equipment throughout the Independent
Territories."
"So what makes this convoy so unusual?"
"For one thing, I worked as a field agent before I was transferred to Internal
Affairs. I spent ten years operating as a smuggler in the Indie worlds, and
I can tell you that there is no Incom manufacturing plant on Eldoray II."
Maldon stared at Reugen for a good long minute before finally replying with
barely suppressed impatience. "And why didn't Intel spot this sooner?"
"Sir, you have to understand that Intel has to sift through masses of raw
data like this every day. The people who work on analysing military equipment
transfers don't work in the same department as the people who keep tabs on military
industries. This Intel Summary is nothing more than a dump of raw data, the
analysis of that data will still be ongoing. We only spotted this because we
knew exactly what we were looking for. The analysts on the PLT Stiletto are
looking for connections in everything, not just this one small area."
Maldon conceded the point with bad grace. "Okay, Major, I take your point.
How does this help us?"
"I sent a priority signal to Headquarters demanding the current location
and destination of Convoy Blue. It was a pretty long shot, but I got something.
They're still travelling under the same registration, and they crossed the border
through the Dendrite Drift yesterday. The Interdictor Harpax II checked them
and cleared them for passage to Argimiliar. They're carrying industrial supplies
this time, which means they transferred their X-Wings to the Insurgence in Indie
space, probably at the same time as the Insurgence disappeared. The interesting
thing about their manifest this time, however, is that while their cargo could
be described as "industrial supplies" if you take a good long look
at exactly what kind of equipment they're shipping, you'll realise that it could
also be called "starfighter repair and resupply equipment."
Maldon's eyes gleamed. "They're going to rendezvous with the Insurgence."
Reugen nodded, a sly smile spreading across his face. "Almost certainly,
and the really good news is, they're in Emperor's Hammer space now. Our border
controls are a lot tighter than the Indies' and if they ever want to leave our
territory without being arrested, they're going to stick to the flight plan
they filed when they passed through customs. Which means that somewhere along
that route, they're going to meet the Insurgence. With a small amount of luck,
we'll run into Vice Admiral Kusanagi and her little friends too."
"If we take it for granted that Kusanagi is somehow connected with the
activities of the Insurgence" Maldon observed.
Reugen crossed his arms and eyed Maldon critically. "You really think this
is all a co-incidence, sir?"
Maldon pondered the possibilities for a few seconds. It didn't take him long
to reach a conclusion. "No, Major. No, I don't." He heaved a sigh
of frustration. "We're too far away from Argimiliar to make any difference
now. We'd better signal Battlegroup High Command with your findings. Make sure
Fleet gets a copy of this too, they'll most likely divert an ASF ship to check
them out, they're closest." He pursed his lips in distaste as he remembered
something. "Better alert them to the fact that we've most likely removed
the Harpax II from her picket duty on the Dendrite Drift unnecessarily too.
They'll need to get that gap in the line closed, and close it soon. No sense
in allowing them to escape the same way they got in."
Reugen smiled and handed a signal pad to the Rear Admiral. "At once sir.
I've already got my report written. If you could just sign it we'll get it transmitted
right away."
Maldon gave Reugen a sour look. "You think of everything, don't you?"
"I try to sir. That's what they pay me for."
Maldon paused in the act of the signing the signal as a thought struck him.
"Only one thing bothers me. Convoy Blue is carrying repair and resupply
equipment, which means that the Insurgence is expecting to have taken losses
somewhere before they meet up with the convoy, surely?"
"Ah.. yes." Reugen shifted uncomfortably. "That's the one thing
we haven't quite worked out yet."
"The thing is," Maldon continued, "if they come into contact
with our forces we're going to come down on them like a ton of duracrete. I
can understand them wanting to be ready for a fight if it comes to that, but
they're a lone Cruiser, deep behind enemy lines. If I were in their position,
I'd be jumping at every shadow, desperate to avoid detection. So who are they
expecting to have to fight, here, in our territory?"
"We're working on that one sir. Best guess is that they intend to fight
their way clear of our border forces when they make a run for home."
"Yes, I suppose that makes sense." Vaguely troubled, Maldon signed
the signal.
Vice Admiral Sarok was interrupted from his reverie by the appearance of Rear
Admiral Cyric at his shoulder. The ISD Intrepid Commodore cleared his throat
politely to capture the attention of the Aggressor Strike Force Commander, startling
Sarok slightly.
"What is it, Rear Admiral?"
"Incoming holo from Fleet Command sir." Cyric informed him.
Surprised, Sarok raised an eyebrow. "Strange, it's been quiet. Oh well,
let's see what Kessler needs from us." He walked the length of the bridge
to his seat and considered sitting before deciding better of the idea. This
was a message from the TIE Corps Commander after all. He stood respectfully
at ease and nodded to the Communications Yeoman.
Fleet Admiral Kessler's image appeared hovering in the air before him. He wasn't
seated at his desk at Fleet Headquarters, but appeared to be onboard a ship
of some description. Peering closely at the seal on the bulkhead behind him,
Sarok realised he was calling from his office suite on the SSSD Sovereign. As
a rule, Kessler only visited the Sovereign when the Fleet was mobilising or
when Grand Admiral Ronin had called for him. He sincerely hoped it wasn't the
former. On consideration, Ronin didn't normally call for Kessler unless he'd
offended someone, and that usually meant Kessler was going to be in a bad mood.
Perhaps it would be preferable if the Fleet were being mobilised after all?
"Sarok, glad I caught you. Give me a second to get Ricaud patched in
"
Looks like the Fleet was mobilising then. Vice Admiral Ricaud's image appeared
next to Kessler's; the two officers frozen in a flickering blue tableau, then
the encryption circuit synchronised and the holograms animated again.
"Right," Kessler began. "I'm not in the mood to mess around,
so pay attention. Ricaud already knows most of the details so I don't intend
to bore him with irrelevant data. Sarok, I'm dumping the necessary files to
you now, you can go over them later and fill yourself in on the details, but
here's the basics. Vice Admiral Akiko Kusanagi has taken off with the entire
Daedalus Training Flotilla, and over three hundred pilot cadets."
Sarok's jaw dropped open. "How the hell
"
Kessler raised a hand. "Not now, Sarok, we don't have time, it's all in
the report. We had a good lead that she was intending to run for Orthodoxy territory,
so that's the avenue we've been directing our search along. Val's Battlegroup
have been concentrating their efforts along the Orthodoxy border and its approaches,
however, I just received a Intelligence Report from the Relentless that indicates
a Rebel Cruiser took advantage of our diverting the pickets along the Dendrite
Drift, to slip across our border undetected."
Ricaud looked shocked, then vaguely guilty. "Don't blame yourself, Val.
Your conjecture about the Imperial Orthodoxy involvement was a good idea. Not
your fault that it seems we were intended to fall for it all along."
Sarok frowned. "Sir, are you saying that this Daedalus mutiny and the Rebel
Incursion are related incidents?"
Kessler nodded. "Absolutely. We have some very reliable intelligence that
proves this wasn't a simple case of a Rebel ship taking advantage of a sudden
opportunity to a exploit a gap in our defences. The infiltration was meticulously
planned, they couldn't have done it without knowing exactly when our picket
ships were going to withdraw. In order for them to have known and prepared for
that, they must have known that Kusanagi was going to defect before we did,
and they must have also been counting on our suspecting the Orthodoxy of being
involved."
Ricaud interjected. "So we're now ruling out Orthodoxy involvement?"
Kessler shook his head. "No, Val. Right now I'm not ruling anything out,
but our resources are stretched and Orthodoxy collusion looks increasingly unlikely.
We have zero hard evidence that they even know this situation is occurring,
let alone that they're involved. We do know, however, that the Rebellion is
somehow in this up their precious, tree-hugging, hippy necks." He paused
for breath. "We also know that the Orthodoxy are screaming blue murder
about what they perceive as our threatening military build-up along their border,
and we also know that Grand Admiral Ronin doesn't appreciate Fleet Admirals
who insult Orthodoxy Ambassadors and have them thrown out of their offices."
He flicked a glance at Ricaud who was covering his mouth with his hand and trying
hard not to laugh.
"Yeah well, that's another story, but the thing is we're going to have
to scale down our presence on the Orthodoxy border. Val - see to it that the
Relentless and her forces step down their activity. We've got a lot of Orthodox
warships massing on their side of the border in direct response to our movements,
and when I say a lot, I mean it. Having so many of our people conducting aggressive
patrols so close to their Fleet is an inherently dangerous situation. Wars have
happened over less."
Ricaud scowled. "If you insist, sir."
"You're damn right I insist. I'm not losing the Relentless over a petty
case of sabre-rattling that should never have happened in the first place. Besides
which, we now have a good solid lead on the Rebs."
He focussed on Sarok. "That's where you come in, Sarok. We have every indication
that the Rebel CRS Insurgence intends to make a rendezvous with a resupply convoy
which is currently enroute to the Argimiliar system. I understand the Intrepid
is only twelve light years from there?"
Sarok nodded, a grim smile clamping down on his lips. "That's correct sir.
We can be at Argimiliar within the hour."
"Excellent. I've transmitted the route that the convoy will be taking along
with all available intelligence on the situation. I want you to stalk that convoy,
shadow it all along its course. It's imperative that your presence not be detected.
Somewhere along that route they're going to meet up with the Insurgence. When
they do I want your Interdictors to pin them down and then you must capture
that Cruiser!"
Kessler's eyes flashed as he stabbed his finger down on his desk to emphasise
the point. "Don't fail me on this one Sarok. That Cruiser is planning to
meet Kusanagi's ships somewhere along the line, and they can tell us where she
plans to be. If we don't take them alive we're going to lose over three hundred
starfighter cadets. That's enough to fully crew the Battlegroups with all of
its squadrons at maximum capacity! We cannot screw up on this one! Vice Admiral
Holm is sending Praetorian Squadron to assist you. They should arrive within
the hour. Make good use of them, they're going to be your eyes and ears."
Sarok nodded again. "Understood, sir. We'll get them, I promise you."
Kessler smiled at last. "I don't doubt that you will. Kessler out."
Captain
Vigsted sat at the bridge of the Insurgence, waiting patiently. Stars bled past
in luminous streaks of brilliance, then slowed and surged back into tiny pinpricks
of stellar fire.
"Sensors!" he snapped, his hands clutching at the armrests of his
seat, betraying his anxiety.
"All twelve freighters in place and accounted for, sir. Long range scans
reveal the presence of no enemy forces."
With a sigh, he relaxed slightly. They were safe for the moment, but they weren't
out of deep water yet.
"Launch the Longprobes, patrol pattern Epsilon, passive sensors only. Then
I want Grey Squadron launched and flying patrol in case someone stumbles onto
us."
He turned to the short human in the uniform of an Imperial TIE Corps Captain
and grunted. "Well Eisen, it seems we might have pulled this off."
Captain Josef Eisen clasped his hands behind his back and sneered. "Hardly
a totally successful conclusion though, is it, Captain?"
Vigsted suppressed a snort of anger. "I'm not going to debate our orders
with you, Captain. We got you out in one piece, even if that Imperial bitch
managed to escape, which to be frank, I couldn't really care less about. My
first loyalty is to my ship and crew, not New Republic Intelligence's half-baked
ideas of what constitutes logical military planning!" He settled back into
his seat. "I'd like to meet whichever idiot decided that a single MC-80
could take on a force of that size and successfully neutralise them this deep
into enemy territory!"
"An enemy force using starfighters that were obsolete even at the Battle
of Endor, and which were being piloted by Academy Cadets!" Eisen reminded
him.
Vigsted gave up trying to contain his anger. "Might I remind you, Captain,
that we lost four pilots today and took a heavy battering trying to extract
you from the mess you got yourself into?"
Eisen ignored his comment. "You had no business trying to take on those
Frigates anyway. Your mission to was to neutralise the threat posed by those
cadets and destroy the Escort Carrier, not the entire Flotilla. This rendezvous
is pointless anyway. It places us in unnecessary danger. We should be on our
way back to the Drift by now. That Interdictor won't be gone forever."
Vigsted felt his gill slits flapping in open annoyance. With an effort he steadied
himself and tried to remain calm. "I really couldn't care less what your
opinion is, Captain. I'm not risking my crew trying to get out through the Drift
without their ships back at full operational effectiveness, so I'll thank you
to shut the hell up and allow me to do my job."
Mercifully, Eisen didn't comment.
"Captain Vigsted, sir" the bridge sensor op reported. "The Longprobes
are picking up anomalous sensor readings, Lieutenant Commander Ryan doesn't
know what to make of it."
Vigsted frowned. "Can you confirm their readings?"
"Negative sir, we read nothing out of the ordinary."
"Find out what he's talking about, get it patched through to the bridge."
"Yes, sir. I..."
A alarm disturbed the tense silence with a shrill warble, dragging the sensor
op's attention back to his console. His face went white in alarm.
Vigsted tried to control the mounting tension and dug his fingers into his armrest.
"What is it, Lieutenant?"
"Both Y-Wing Longprobes just went off our sensors. I'm picking up radiation
surges
it looks as if they've been destroyed, sir. I'm trying to increase
scan resolution to search for filtered ion streams, but it'll be a few seconds
before the interference from the explosions dies down enough to get any kind
of sensor reading on the new scans."
Filtered ion streams? Cloaked fighters? "Shields up! All hands to Battle
Stations!"
Eisen laid a hand on Vigsted's shoulder in warning. "If you switch to active
sensors we can be detected!"
Vigsted snatched his arm away in irritation. "It's too late for that you
fool, we're already under attack!" He began issuing instructions to manoeuvre
the ship to protect the Freighters while the hyperdrive was warmed up, praying
that they had enough time.
"Proximity alarm sir! I'm picking up ships exiting from hyperspace... sir,
it's a Star Destroyer!"
Vigsted blanched with fear as the massive, hulking form of an Imperial II Class
Star Destroyer emerged from hyperspace practically on top of them. Swarms of
TIE Defenders and Missileboats began to stream from her launch bays as the beleaguered
X-Wings of Grey Squadron began to assume defensive positions around their mothership.
A second arrow-like craft, smaller than the Destroyer, but with four dome-like
protrusions extending from her upper and lower hull appeared a second later.
"Sir, we're being hailed. They're demanding our surrender."
Vigsted's shoulders slumped in defeat as Eisen gesticulated wildly. "You
can't surrender, we have to get out of here!"
"Eisen, that's an Interdictor Cruiser you fool. We can't escape and I won't
see my men die in vain today. Lieutenant, open a channel to the Captain of that
Destroyer."
"This is Vice Admiral Sarok of the Aggressor Strike Force Star Destroyer
Intrepid. Stand down your fighters, lower your shields and prepare to be boarded.
Resistance will be met with your total destruction. You have thirty seconds
to comply. Sarok out."
Vigsted ignored Eisen increasingly panicked demands and turned to his Tactical
Officer. "Lower the shields and stand down Grey Squadron. We've lost this
one. Begin destroying all communications codes and wipe the data core of the
central computer." He gazed out of the bridge windows, shoulders slumped
in defeat as Assault Transports cleared the Intrepid's launch bays and closed
in rapidly.
Kessler
woke with a start. For a second he couldn't remember where he was, then realisation
flooded back to him as the low hum of sublight engines intruded on his consciousness.
He was aboard the Excelsior, his personal Shuttle, enroute back to Fleet Command
on Aurora Prime. Gazing out of the window, he caught a glimpse of Aurora City,
gleaming like a jewel in the nightside of the world fast approaching below.
With a yawn, he stretched his tired muscles and closed his eyes, determined
to catch another half hour's sleep before the Excelsior landed. Colonel Cherenkov
had other ideas, however.
A soft cough from behind signalled that sleep was a luxury Kessler wasn't going
to enjoy on this flight. Sighing, he craned his head around to see his grizzled
Secretary waiting patiently.
"Important message?"
Cherenkov nodded.
Cursing under his breath, Kessler stood and followed Cherenkov aft to the communications
suite. A Navy Chief Yeoman stood and offered him the seat. "Message from
Vice Admiral Sarok, sir."
Kessler grunted and sat at the message terminal, then nodded.
Sarok's image swam into focus and Kessler waited patiently.
"Sir, we've captured the Insurgence and Convoy Blue as planned. Praetorian
Squadron were invaluable in tracking them and enabling us to get into ambush
position so easily. No losses were sustained."
"Good work, Sarok. Any news of where and when they plan to rendezvous with
Kusanagi?"
Sarok's grin broadened. "They already have, sir. There appears to be more
going on here than we initially suspected."
Kessler frowned. He was tired, grouchy and confused; and he certainly wasn't
in the mood for guessing games. "Sarok, I was asleep two minutes ago. You're
going to have spell this out for me."
"Certainly, Admiral. It seems that Captain Eisen was a New Republic Intelligence
deep cover agent. Now that we've got our hands on him, he's proving to be exceptionally
talkative."
"Eisen? How did.. never mind, I'm sure you're about to explain."
Sarok continued. "It's a long story, but these are the salient points.
Eisen has revealed that a year ago, he became aware that Vice Admiral Kusanagi
wasn't the most honest Officer in the Fleet. It was fairly easy for him to corrupt
her with funds embezzled from the Training Budget, and this of course, left
her open to blackmail by New Republic Intelligence. He was very careful to make
sure any indications of malpractice in the financial records would point straight
to Kusanagi and not him, although of course, he was skimming funds out of her
share too.
"Now it starts to get complicated. Two months ago, she got too greedy for
her own good. Eisen is very good at manipulating computer records, but the money
they were making from the Training Budget wasn't enough for her. She confided
in him a plan that was going to make them rich beyond their wildest dreams,
but unfortunately for her, as a loyal New Republic agent, Eisen couldn't allow
her to succeed in her plan. So suddenly, errors started to appear in her financial
accounts. Fleet Finance spotted them, Intel was alerted, and a warrant was put
out for her arrest."
Kessler rubbed his eyes. "What was this scheme she dreamed up, Sarok?"
"Sir, I think you owe Vice Admiral Ricaud an apology. She brokered a deal
with the Imperial Orthodoxy to bring them our starfighter cadets."
Kessler blinked furiously. It all started to make sense. New Republic Intelligence
must have ordered Eisen to prevent Kusanagi from completing the deal. The Imperial
Orthodoxy was an aggressive organisation, far more so than the Emperor's Hammer.
With the increase in operational effectiveness that a fully manned starfighter
corps would bring, the threat to the borders of the New Republic would be considerable.
So Eisen had started leaving deliberate clues in Kusanagi's finance records,
waiting for Fleet Finance to spot the Audit trail and call in Intel to do his
dirty work for him. It was a simple, elegant plan. Kessler found himself admiring
the man.
"But it didn't quite work, did it?"
"No, sir. Eisen doesn't know how, but Kusanagi found out about the arrest.
She had no reason not to trust Eisen, however, so she told him she was accelerating
her plan and they were leaving almost immediately. Eisen was forced to activate
a contingency plan, very short notice, very high risk. He played along with
Kusanagi but brought in the Insurgence to attack Kusanagi's ships, wipe out
her Escort Carrier and retrieve him safely. Things didn't go according to plan
however, the Cadet Starfighters put up a spirited resistance and inflicted enough
damage on the Rebel Cruiser and starfighters to force them to retreat having
recovered Eisen's escape shuttle."
Kessler felt his heart swelling with pride.
"But sir, it gets better. New Republic Intelligence is even less happy
with the idea of the Orthodoxy getting their hands on those cadets than we are.
Eisen's offered us a deal."
"Spit it out, Sarok."
"We let him and the Insurgence go free and he tells us where to find the
rendezvous between Kusanagi and the Orthodoxy Fleet!"
Akiko Kusanagi
struggled to sit upright in the command seat of the Dreadnought Nagisa. Long
hours of stress and lack of sleep had combined to take their toll on her health.
She knew that her officers were suspicious, but they'd accepted her orders that
they should wait at this point near the border to be joined by friendly escorts
before returning to the Daedalus. She'd ordered a total communications blackout,
explaining that the sudden appearance of the Rebel Cruiser meant a probable
invasion by Rebel forces, and any communications could give away their position,
with fatal consequences.
Commander Drax in particular was openly sceptical, but had stopped short of
outright mutiny. She didn't believe she could continue the charade for much
longer however.
Damn Eisen! Traitorous scum! A lot of things began to make sense with the knowledge
that he'd been a New Republic Intelligence agent all along. The way those accounting
errors had sneaked into her records shortly after she'd revealed her plan to
him, the audit, the warrant for her arrest. The son of a bitch had planned it
all. He hadn't planned for the Orthodoxy agent in EH Intel who'd warned her
of the arrest, however. That much he hadn't foreseen.
But the reality of his betrayal had come as shock, nevertheless. She found herself
drumming her fingers on the armrest of her seat, several bridge officers had
noticed and were staring. She forced herself to appear calm. They think I'm
just an Academy fool who's struggling to come to terms with facing real combat
at last. As long as that's the worst thing they suspect, I might get away with
this after all
Rear Admiral
Maldon sat at the bridge of the Relentless, teeth clenched in impatience. They'd
been a mere six light years from Kusanagi's rendezvous point when the word had
arrived from Battlegroup Command. Ricaud had been barely able to contain his
excitement. Relentless was the only ship close enough to make the intercept
in the timeframe allowed. The Harpax II was in hyperspace enroute back to the
Dendrite Drift and couldn't be contacted, so the Relentless was without Interdictor
support. Ricaud had made it clear that a lot would depend on how many of Kusanagi's
officers were part of the mutiny, and how many were unwitting pawns. If the
Nagisa didn't surrender immediately, they were going to be lucky to destroy
them before they could escape again. Maldon didn't believe in luck.
Major Reugen's analysis of the situation was comforting at least. Kusanagi couldn't
have more than one or two of her key officers fully aware of the situation.
Ideally this would include her Signal Communications Officer, and Tactical Officer.
If she was working alone, she'd be suffering from extreme stress, especially
after the shock of Eisen's betrayal. Her crew would certainly be suspicious,
Maldon was counting on that. No, Maldon was depending on that.
The massive warship dropped out of hyperspace seamlessly and Maldon ordered
full reverse on the sublight engines. The Relentless screamed to a halt a bare
thousand metres short of the Nagisa, Wing IX's starfighters surging clear of
her launch bays en masse.
"Wing Ops, hold all squadrons in covering positions. Gunnery, lock your
targets but do not fire. Tactical, pin that Escort Carrier with tractor beams.
Communications, open a channel to the Nagisa" Maldon ordered.
Watching events unfold from the bridge doors, Reugen held his breath.
Maldon took a deep breath, paused, then began. "Dreadnought Nagisa, this
is Rear Admiral Jarak Maldon of the TIE Corps Battlegroups Star Destroyer Relentless.
We are here to escort you back to the Space Platform Daedalus. It is my duty
to inform you that Vice Admiral Kusanagi is to be placed under arrest for high
treason, by order of Fleet Admiral Kessler. Nagisa, you have one minute to comply
with these orders and respond. Relentless out." He signalled for the transmission
to be cut.
Seconds ticked by with agonising slowness. Reugen began to sweat, wondering
what was happening on the bridge of the Dreadnought.
Without any warning, events were taken out of their hands.
With a flicker of pseudomotion, two Star Destroyers dropped out of hyperspace
three thousand metres off the Relentless' starboard bow, adjacent to the flotilla.
Maldon stared at them impassively, demanding an identity check from the sensor
station.
"ID Check negative, sir. They're not ours."
"No response to standard hails, sir. They're ignoring us."
Reugen whispered in his ear. "Imperial Orthodoxy, they must be here for
the cadets. I'd say we had a stand-off, sir."
Both Destroyers turned to face the gathering of ships and began to launch starfighters,
two squadrons each of sleek TIE Avengers streaked clear of the launch bays and
formed up into Flights.
Maldon frowned. "Only two squadrons each? It's true about their pilot shortage
then, we outnumber by them two squadrons at least."
Reugen coughed politely. "Yes, but they're crewed by veteran pilots, sir.
I hardly need remind you that nearly a third of this Wing is made up of first
semester Cadets dragged from Daedalus who have never flown live before today."
"Yeah, " Maldon whispered back, nodding in the direction of the two
brooding ships. "But those bastards don't know that."
The two fleets faced each other across the void, the prize of Kusanagi's tiny
flotilla and the precious Escort Carrier between them. Relentless continued
to signal the interlopers, demanding their retreat. She remained ignored.
The first movement, when it came, came as a shock . Nagisa and her frigate escorts
began to manoeuvre, swinging about to assume covering fire support positions
on the Relentless' flanks in a broad delta with Nagisa at the apex. The Escort
Carrier began to disgorge streams of TIE Fighters and Bombers, which formed
up into textbook drill formations and assumed attack positions on the TIE Avenger
squadrons. Watching them marshal their antiquated ships into perfect formation,
ready to fight and die for the TIE Corps, Maldon felt a lump of solid pride
swell in his chest at the bravery and professionalism of the TIE Corps Cadets
that Kusanagi had tried to sell today. They deserved better than this.
The bridge speakers crackled into life with a burst of static.
"Relentless this is Commander Drax of the Nagisa. All ships report ready
to fire at your order, sir."
A thin trickle of sweat beaded at Maldon's brow as his face cracked into a relieved
grin. "Glad to have you with us, Commander. Hold your fire at present,
await further orders for now."
Without a single word to mark their passing, the massed ranks of TIE Avengers
peeled away and returned to their hangars, the two interloper Destroyers retreating
as silently as they came.
Wild cheers erupted on the bridge and Maldon sagged back into his seat in relief.
Reugen took off his cap and grinned unselfconsciously. "Well sir, if I
ever agree to play poker with you, get someone to sit on me until the urge passes.
You were dealt a hand full of crap and you bluffed your way right out of it.
Very impressive!"
Maldon shook his head, staring with pride at the flights of bombers and fighters
that were flying in a victory parade past the bridge. "A hand full of crap?
No, Major," he smiled fondly. "I had all the Aces."
Kessler
put down his cigar and sipped at his mug of java as he read the news of Kusanagi's
trial and execution. Grimacing in distaste, he spat out the hot liquid and set
the cup down. It tasted flat. Chief Steward Winter held the belief that he could
break Kessler of his bad habits. He'd started by removing all of the ashtrays
from his office, but Kessler kept a spare in his desk drawer for emergencies.
Point to Kessler.
Then Kessler had noticed small decorations appearing in his office. The fresh
flowers which appeared on the conference table every day, the antique bookcase
which had mysteriously arrived over a weekend, full of leather-bound volumes
on military history and tactics. The oil paintings of famous ships and Admirals
that had sprung up one by one. The fresh toiletries that replenished themselves
in the office bathroom suite. Point to Winter.
Now he'd graduated to "forgetting" to add sugar to his java. Kessler
sighed and opened his desk drawer. He added a few generous spoonfuls of real
sugar to his drink then returned the packet to his secret stash. He sipped the
java. Perfect. Point to Kessler
He reflected that things must be getting bad when a man had to sneak sugar into
his own damn office, but he secretly enjoyed the daily battle of wits with his
Chief Steward. It was a pleasant distraction from the daily grind of memos,
meetings and conferences.
Turning back to the news display leading with the headlines of Kusanagi's case,
he sighed. Another battle fought from the safety of his desk, another victory
for the forces of bureaucracy. Rear Admiral Maldon had been praised for his
part in the operation, of course. The Press were treating him as the hero of
the hour, and well they should. Ambassador Rampala had returned from the Orthodoxy
to Lord Ambassador Manesh with an unannounced trade treaty that was very favourable
towards the Emperor's Hammer. No-one said anything officially, of course, but
knowing glances were exchanged across the table as the Treaty was signed.
Finally, Vice Admiral Langer, Supreme Director of Intel Division, had received
a gift of a case of the finest Corellian Brandy and a heartfelt apology from
the Flight Office, with a recommendation that a certain Major Carlist Reugen
be promoted at the earliest convenience. A few days later, an envelope from
the Ubiqtorate had arrived with an Internal Affairs Personnel Memo which announced
the promotion of Colonel Carlist Reugen (details withheld for security reasons).
There was also a card, which simply read: "Forgiven. SD/VA Langer."
The door to the office opened and Chief Winter entered, bearing a tray of food.
Surprised, Kessler checked his watch. It was lunchtime after all.
"Good day, sir. Lunch is served" Winter greeted him, placing the tray
at the edge of his desk. "Did the Admiral enjoy his drink?"
"Yes, thank you, the Admiral certainly did," Kessler replied heartily.
"Excellent as usual, Winter." He watched out of the corner of his
eye for any trace of disappointment, but Winter had been playing this game for
far too long and was too wily a player to make as basic a slip as that. Kessler
eyed the food cautiously. "What's this?"
"If you'll excuse me, sir, I'll empty the ashtray for you and replace it
with a clean one."
"Yes, yes, but what's this?" Kessler indicated the food.
"A light salad of bridle berries and Auroran wisp flower, tossed in a creamed
cheese sauce, sir. Most nutritious."
"I don't care if it's been planted by Palpatine and picked by Piett, salad
isn't food. Salad's what food eats! Take it away and bring me something that
used to frolic carelessly in sun drenched meadows!"
Winter picked up the tray and replaced the cover with a smile. "If you
insist, sir."
Watching him leave, Kessler chuckled to himself, then reached for his ashtray.
It was gone of course, and he'd be lucky if he ever saw it again. He thought
the skirmish over the salad had been too easy. Now, of course, he could see
that it had only been a feinting attack, a diversion designed to drag his attention
away from the true prize - his ashtray!
Muttering curses under his breath, he opened up his desk drawer again and extracted
a crystal tumbler and a small bottle of Corellian Brandy. He poured himself
a generous dram and washed out his tonsils with it, savouring the fiery liquor
as it cauterised its way down his throat. Pouring himself another, he replaced
the bottle, locking the drawer again. The glass he set down on his desktop,
within easy reach in case he needed it in a hurry. Then he picked up a report
and began to read, waiting for Winter to return with lunch.
It was highly unlikely that Kessler would ever sit at the bridge of a Star Destroyer
again, and his chances of ever piloting a TIE again were infinitesimal. But
not all battles were fought in the cold hard vacuum of space.
Winter really hated it when he drank brandy in the office.
©
(copyright) Paul Lee Charlton. All Rights Reserved