"Time to reversion," queried Ruskov of the junior duty officer seated to his right, "Ensign?" As always, the Bothan Captain had adopted the attitude that was common of him in battle situations. Standing crisp in the small depression of the bridge command area, he kept his hands clasped neatly behind his back even as the vessel bucked slightly below him.
"Twenty-three point one-five and counting, Sir," replied the twenty-something human, his eyes never straying from the console before him. It was customary aboard-ship to keep all lights dimmed, save for those illuminations indicative of the ships systems.
Nodding slightly, Ruskov, a slight ripple running down his hackles, grasped his hands around the bar of his command station, bracing his feet for the reversion to real-space. "All stealth systems stand ready, active in," he glanced at a small chronometer on his right, "Twenty-three point five, no less." Another glance to his right and he barked somewhat more harshly then intended, "Beta Six reversion...Go!"
With a dull thud the vessel dropped abruptly from the quasi-reality of hyperspace into that more commonly known, real space. Shuddering brutally, the crew found themselves jostled gruffly as the sunlight engines came online, pumping hard at full reverse to slow their forward momentum drastically and within the shortest space possible. Even the Captain stumbled some as his ship leapt suddenly fore, before yawing with all her might aft. Inside her belly the inertial compensators were pushed to their limits, straining to keep the crew held firmly in place.
Even before coming to a full stop, Ruskov watched on as a number of small indicator bars leapt suddenly, casting a harsh red glare across his profile. Power systems were pushed, as they had been designed to be, compensators wildly working to keep their systems in functioning order, before suddenly leveling off.
A sudden calm seemed to wash over the bridge, a millisecond of trepidation that held all voices in stay.
It was Ruskov who first broke the silence, "Status, Chief?" Casting the words upon a Duro of indiscernible age standing just aft and starboard of his Captain.
The fellow seemed to pause for an instant before nodding once and answering Ruskov's query. "Full Stop. All stealth and cloak systems running at One-Ten. Our arrival remained within the gravity-shadow of Sathor I," he replied, speaking of Sathora's largest satellite moon, "Beta Six reversion was successful, Comrade."
Despite himself, Ruskov allowed a toothy grin to cross his features. "Excellent work, everyone."
"Helm," started Ruskov, his grin long gone, "bring us about to mark oh-oh-five, one half." Gesturing towards Sathora, its massive profile dominating the bridges' forward screen, the Captain added, "Move us into position over the target. Our counterpart will be arriving shortly and I want their arrival to cover ours."
With a sad little chuckle, he strode out from behind his brass, the ship yawing towards the planet and made his way over to the advanced tactical situation post located further aft of his command pit, "Chief, you have the forward bridge."
The reply of his senior officer was lost by the sudden oppressiveness of the TSP. This was a place designed of a single purpose, and it housed the most hostile components of his ships arsenal, including, but not limited to, her cloak and stealth systems.
"Captain in the TSP," barked an indistinct figure off to the far rear of the center, his race and profile lost in the all consuming darkness in which the officer and his comrades toiled.
"Stand easy Lieutenant," replied the Captain, able to recognize the officer by voice if not location, alone. "Tell me about those firing solutions, and I want positive information on our
baby down below."
*
Aboard the Imperator Star-Destroyer - "Avantyne"
Near Sathora Arrival Zone
12.546.0666
The Bridge of an Imperator Star-Destroyer is not often spoken of as the most romantic or intimate of settings, and it will certainly never be said of the bridge aboard the Star-Destroyer Avantyne. It can be said, and quite easily, that the Avantyne has perhaps the ugliest bridge of any ship of the Imperial line. While functional in all aspects, save for the aesthetic, the Imperators bridge had been heavily redesigned to meet the demanding needs of the CTCT. Sectionals had been required, and that alone demanded considerably more space. Space which was taken from the surrounding areas.
As a result, the bridge of the Avantyne had taken on a distinctly beaurocratic appearance. Senior naval staff operated from a raised balcony twined with another from which the CTCT senior body would function, which then loomed out over a massive central command pit that ended up resembling something out of an old holo-vid about pre-hyperspace orbital rockets. It was the kind of place you would expect to hear, "Uhh, Command; we have a problem here."
"Real Space Reversion in T-Minus Sixty Seconds," bellowed a massive monotone computer voice, alerting all hands throughout the almost two kilometer bulk of the Avantyne to brace for hyperspace exit. As one, all hands, fins and, tentacles grasped their positions or clipped into their safety harnesses. Countless droids, whirring this way and that, made their way to their posts. Everyone except for the Captain and his counterpart, Major Fystyng.
"I hope your transmission jockos are ready, Major," quipped the captain proudly as his ship hurtled itself heroically towards their destination. Only now did he wrap fingers about the handrail that ran the length of the forward bridge balcony.
"As I hope your crew are prepared and briefed, Captain," replied the Bith, continuing their quiet rivalry. "We need to get into position as quickly as possible, and commandeer all communications channels. Command is dispatching an interdictor to our aide to control space traffic, but regardless; we are to initiate a Level Three lockdown of Sathora upon arrival. For now, no one gets in, and no one gets out."
"Nor will communications," added the elder human, adjusting the brass of his collar, "my pilots are ready to drop as soon as we do. You will have your lockdown Major, you can trust me on that."
Nodding approvingly, the Fystyng casually adopted a more amicable tone, "As I am sure I can trust you on a great many things." Watching as his comment earned a grin from the Captain, Fystyng went on, "We already have confirmation of all codes. The satellite network is ours on arrival, which will help complete our comprehension of the situation but for now, Captain, you know everything I do."
"Thank you, Major, " said the Captain dismissivly, "But why Lurik Enterprises... they handle low budget commercial stuff, don't they?"
"Reversion in T-Minus 10, 9, 8," counted down the monotone of the computer voice.
Turning towards the Captain while bracing for reversion, the Bith grinned an imperceptible grin at his counter part and replied, "That is what we are about to find out."
*
With a nod, Ruskov removed the headphone from his ear, leaning further over the central TSP desk and the young human woman seated there. "Begin tracking the Avantyne, I want to know if they deviate from the projection by even a kilometer."
In the past few moments Ruskovs' normally collected demeanor had gone from calm to unnerved. Something about what he was about to do, about what he was about to order of his crew. Fighting the thought, Comrade Ruskov forced it down; this was his job, and the job of his crew. It was not his place to question leaders who had never failed their people before.
He checked the chronometers set into the desk before him, checking them against the projections, and nodded positively. "Okay folks, we're on"
A whirr of activity started up around the Bothan, so much that he had to press back his ears to shut out some of the noise. Various machines and systems beeped, blipped or, pinged their readings in the din, their operators then relaying the readings to another, more senior officer who then brought it to a more competent computer and crew, who then analyzed the data and presented it before the Captain and the TSP command.
"Target horizon coming up in fifteen points," chimed a voice in the darkness, spurring the Captain to heft his direct-line mic to his Chief XO on the bridge and order the helm to move into axial obit, bow down, and prepare for synchronized orbit. He could imagine his ship in the blackness of space, shifting her position, orbiting high above the planetary horizon below.
A quick check of the chronometers found that thought snuffed.
"Target in view," reported another, "Full stop in five point five seconds."
Forgoing the nod, the Captain again hefted the mic, passing further orders along to his Executive Officer, "Full stop on my mark, prepare for synchronized orbit over Target Alpha." Pausing for a two count, he then snapped, "Mark!" and imagined he could feel the ship coming slowly into position.
Required to do little more then turn his head, Ruskov nodded at a squat figure seated before yet another monitor. "You are clear to Acquire," he added.
The squat figure confirmed with a nod, his fingers dancing over a myriad of controls before glancing up at his Captain with a proud beaming smile, "Acquired Sir."
A subtle wave of his fingers found the image acquired only moments earlier displayed proudly on one of the projection maps. There, in all its high-resolution glory, was the rooftop of the Lurik Industries building. Off to the edge, Ruskov spotted a single body, laying prone atop the roof, with a blaster at his side. It did not take a rocket scientist, though he was well qualified to be, to tell that the man had eaten his own fate. "Good work. Synchronize with the satellite network please. Projections leave you with thirty-three points until the Avantyne is within range."
The squat figure nodded once before returning to his consoles.
"The Avantyne?" Queried Ruskov of no one in particular.
A voice off to his right replied in a calm female voice, "She is charging her comm-towers and dropping birds. I read two wings, E-wing Comrade. She's broadcasting..."
"Put it up," barked the Bothan.
A static filled computer voice resonated through the TSP, going through the usual warnings of a Planetary Lockdown. It was exactly the sign they were waiting for.
"All systems independent," snapped the Captain in a harsh voice with only moments to spare. Holding his pause for but a second, all seemed well. "Status?"
"All systems read positive," answered the woman who had been seated below the Bothan only moments earlier, now standing and checking another series of readouts. "The Avantyne has commandeered all military channels, and rerouted all outbound transmissions back. Inbound is recieving a Lock Down status alert and being differed back to Anthos Command. Her birds have fanned and grounded two hoppers that we outbound, the only traffic in the past Ten." The woman paused.
"All communications to Lurik Enterprises have been routed to the Avantyne, probably incase anyone tries to call out, but it looks like any open lines were cut in the grab." Another pause before, "The locals have the building secured, have for some time. Confirm evacuation of block-wide radius."
"Good work folks," said the Captain approvingly. "Keep me apprised," he added, returning to the bridge.
Once on the bridge, the mission shifted gears. Displayed on the main screen was almost the same image he had been viewing in the TSP, though now it was enhanced with various filters, tactical information, and a readout of local activity. He was watching in live action, despite clouds and atmosphere, what was transpiring such a vast distance below the nose of his ships' orbit.
Clearing his throat, he turned towards his weapons officer as the call of; Captain on the bridge, suffused behind him. "Weapons, status?"
"We have the solutions Sir, the bird is ready to drop."
Nodding, and without any ceremony of sparring of time, he ordered, "Fire."
*
Who are you, falling silent through the blackness of space towards your target? Who are you, unerring in your flight, so motivated to destroy that you will do so without thought? Who are you?
You are resolution.
You are a specially designed TRU warhead, built to do what no one would ever admit you have done. You have been built to evade notice and to function in secrecy, your exterior painted with technology that makes you invisible to the eye. Only two meters long, your slender body glides easily through the atmosphere, shaking its exterior protection in the heat of re-entry. Once through you find yourself in the sky of some unknown planet, streaming towards the ground at unimaginable vectors. You fall for a time before your internal brain tells you it is time.
With your nose pointed at the ground, a sudden burst of thrust shoves from your aft and launches you forward with crazy speed. Deep inside your body, an advanced computer tracks your target, constantly adjusting your pitch and sway to match the pre-approved vector.
In a flash you rip through the clouds, a slight vapor gathering on your body and then, down below, you see your target. It glows a crazy red in your computer eye, and you know what you will do. You are not merciless; you are simply a machine designed to do but one thing.
Your internal brain calculates, and abruptly the thrust in your aft cuts out, your motivators switching guidance from thrust-vectored to the specially designed flaps and wings spaced across your body.
You are passive in your work, giving no clues that you are there. Tactical information comes from above, somehow routed into your computer brain so that it may make the best calculations for impact. You do the work that no sentient mind could.
Suddenly you find yourself off the mark, straying dangerously wide. Inside you rationalize it as high altitude turbulence, and easily adjust for it with a puff of thrust from your rocket. Back on track, you configure for impact.
It takes only seconds for you to get within visible range of your target and only seconds more before you find yourself racing past it's upper most height and zipping violently down next to a wall of reflective glass. Your computer brain calculates that you have fallen, at the right speed and angle for exactly 3.33 milliseconds, the perfect zone for impact, and in response, fires one last thrust of your rocket.
Your vector changes dramatically, sending you smashing through the wall of glass at midlevel of the Lurik Industries main Headquarters.
Exactly 2.356 millions of a second later, you detonate.
Fifteen seconds after detonation, nothing remains of the Lurik Industries building, save for a twenty meter deep canyon carved out by the blast and a ring of debris that litters the opposing buildings.
No longer do speeders whizz about through the air, those that were within range of detection now lay somewhere below in the piles of rubble.
*
Two, Major Fystyng and the Captain of the Avantyne, as one, scream.
"What the fark was that?!"
But neither receives any answer. For what seems like an eternity, every sentient on the bridge finds themselves locked in stunned silence, watching on as what was once the Lurik Tower is abruptly reduced to so much debris and dust. Displayed on the massive, two-story screen mounted at the far head of the bridge, the explosion plays out in unreal reality, linked up live from a nearby hovering camera.
It seems to start from below; a sudden plume of smoke, flame and, debris shooting from the lower levels of the Lurik Building, pelting the neighboring structures with all. The explosion only grows from there, quickly shooting upwards and outwards to consume the whole of the structure. But it does not stop there. Like some voracious beast it yawns outwards, swallowing up the evacuated buildings which ringed the larger Lurik Tower, smattering that which has not been destroyed by debris with concussive force and explosive flame. A great mushroom cloud expands upwards and outwards, and seconds later, everything is lost in ensuing dust cloud.
The numerous high altitude speeders that seconds earlier dominated the air are now no where to be seen. Those close enough to get a hint of the blast finding themselves scattered like the wind while those with a true visual had found a much more grim fate.
Moments earlier the area surrounding the Lurik Tower had been rich with information, but now lay a devastated and radiation saturated wasteland.
"Get me visual," commanded Fystyng, outraged beyond reason. "Sithspawn, Captain, what in the void...?"
"I don't know, Major," whispered the Captain, handling the shock in his own, more subtle manner. "But I do know we need to get people down there, and fast. Suggest we move to Full Lock Down, and acquire all audio, visual and, other signals that may still be leaking."
WIth nothing but a nod, the Bith turned and started away from the bridge balcony, "I trust you can handle that, Captain. I must contact Command."