The fleet - the combined forces of the Galactic Empire and the Tetan Rebellion - had jumped into the Cinnigar system early in the day.
They'd spent three days in orbit over Koros Major, making sure that the Tetan Parliment got a good, long look at who was now sharing space with the Rebellion.
Stormtroopers had been landed on Koros Major's surface, along with a dozen prefabricated garrisons and their full compliment of staff and vehicles. The Rebels had removed themselves from their hidden caves, and Imperial survey teams had moved in to take note of their locations. They had also planted explosives that could bring each of the underground complexes down, if the Rebels managed to make it back to them.
Delark Shee, also known as the hidden rebel leader Simon, had decided to oversee the battle from the bridge of the
Nirvana, and he watched now as the fleet bore swiftly down on the world below, which was growing larger by the second.
The Rebel fleet consisted of just under two dozen vessels, most of them smaller than a Dreadnaught. The majority were Marauder Corvettes and Corellian Gunships, small ships that were cheap and common enough for them to get a hold off. There was, however, one Victory Class Star Destroyer, an old, dilapidated thing that showed its age worse than any of the other craft. It was obvious that the Rebels had lucked out with the craft, which they said was captured from the Tetan Parliment.
Their fleet had been divided into two forces, each supported by one of the Empire's Imperator Star Destroyers. The right-hand column was led by the Victory Star Destroyer, aptly named
Free Tetan, the other by two aging Dreadnaught cruisers.
They had emerged from hyperspace far enough away from the planet to give the defensive forces time to array themselves, and they had done a good job of it. Three Imperator Star Destroyers and a scattered force of smaller craft waited in a loose wedge shape to confront the oncoming fleet. All of the ships were at least a decade old, but they appeared well mantained and, judging by their positioning, were well commanded.
"If you were the Tetan Commander, who would you target first? The Rebel ships that had been agitating you for the last five years, or the greater threat of the Empire?" Bhindi asked Godridge, staring out the large plexiglass viewports at the enemy fleet.
Godridge pondered the question for a moment, also looking at the waiting fleet.
"I would target the Rebels." He said slowly. "The Tetans must know that they cannot hope to win against the Empire, but if they can destroy the Rebel forces, then perhaps they can secure some victory amongst themselves before the end comes."
"Very good, Commander. Let us hope the Tetans think as you do." She turned away, raising her voice and beginning to issue orders. "Launch the fighters. Order the flanks to break off and proceed in a pincer movement. Reduce our speed to three/quarters thrust, and order the group to do likewise. I want all of us striking at the same time."
There was a series of acknoweldgements, and Delark Shee smiled. He was fianlly going to see the Tetans destoyed, after years of waiting and watching, it was going to happen.
"Time to firing range?" Bhindi asked calmly. The enemy Star Destroyers were growing larger, their multiple tiers, each lined with weapons, becoming discriminated from the rest.
"Thirty seconds, Admiral." Came the reply from sensors, and for that brief time everyone watched in silence. Then the first shots began lancing out from both sides, the Rebel craft returning the fire eagerly.
"Open fire." She ordered, and the deck began to rumble as the largest ship in the Ubiqtorate fleet began to fire with her own massive cannons.
True to Godridge's prediction, the enemy craft were concentrating their fire on the Rebel craft, a fact that quite worried Delark Shee, who began screaming at Bhindi to protect his ships.
"Do not worry, Delark." She assured him. "The battle is nearly won."
Indeed, the lead enemy Star Destroyer had begun to belch flames from her sides. Debris, metal and plastic mixed with the flash frozen bodies of crew members suddenly exposed to vacuum, was already pouring out of deep gashes in the vessel's superstructure."
Bhindi gave a small nod to Captain Joda, who said something into his comlink. The Imperial fleet, in perfect synchronization, stopped firing and hovered. The move was enough to surprise the Tetans, who also stopped shooting, leaving only the Rebel ships to continue their attacks.
And then, in a blistering array of fire, the Imperial craft poured their energy into the remaining Rebel ships. The ancient Victory Star Destroyer crumbled, entire sections exploding as point-blanc shots tore through her superstucture.
The smaller ships didn't stand a chance as the Empire turned her guns on them, and the few that survived the barrage in any sort of condition turned tail and attempted to run towards the planet, only to be finished off by the Tetan Defenders, whose wits had at last returned to them.
Delark Shee, who had been frozen when the Empire's ships turned against his own, now threw himself at Bhindi, his face contorted with rage. The Admiral stepped calmly away from his grasping fingers as two Stormtroopers picked him up and carried him from the bridge, screaming like a wounded animal.
Now, the two fleets hovered, neither side firing nor doing much of anything. A few small shuttles had set about picking up bodies from the crippled enemy Star Destroyer, but the sudden reversal of the Empire's ships had thrown the enemy off guard.
"Admiral, we're recieving a hail from the planet." Bhindi acknowledged with a nod and turned to Godridge.
"Status of the enemy fleet, Commander?" She asked.
"Approximately 40%. One Imperator Star Destroyer crippled, two others damaged. Their support ships and fighters are more or less gone."
"And the Rebels?" Godridge frowned.
"Completely wiped out."
"Admiral, we're recieving another hail. This one's from the
Tetan Legacy. Says he's the Fleet Admiral or some such."
"I'll take them here." She said. The com officer nodded, and two full-size holograms appeared. Both were men, one of them in a flowing, dark blue robe who was obviously a politician of some sort, the other wearing a fleet uniform and evidently the local commander.
"Gentlemen," Bhindi said, bowing slightly. "I am Admiral Bhindi Drayson, of the Galactic Empire." Both of the holograms were eying her careful, again surprised to see such a young woman commanding their enemy's fleet.
"I am Heshan Mork, Chancellor of the Tetan Confederacy." The senator said, returning the bow. "I am ... pleased... that you have decided to stop fighting us and give us this oppertunity to speak with you."
"I haven't decided anything, Chancellor. You will know when I have. You do, however, have some influence on my decision." She paused, looking to the other holo. "And who are you?"
If the man was surprised by the sudden change of direction in the conversation, he hid it well.
"I am Fleet Admiral Dezar Greemen. I wish to thank you for destroying those pesky Rebels. You have done us a great service, Miss Drayson."
"First, I am not 'Miss Drayson'. I am an Admiral of the Galactic Empire and Moff of the Ubiqtorate Expansion Regions. You may address me as such."
"My apoligies, Admiral."
"Secondly, I did not destroy Delark Shee to do you a favour. I have my own reasons for doing what I do."
"Delark Shee?" Heshan Mork said, not as proficient at hiding his surprise. "Of course. The Rebel... we never learned his name, you know."
"Perhaps you should have tried talking to him." Godridge said under his breath, so that neither of the men would catch it.
"Regarldess of your reasons, thank you, Moff Drayson. The Rebels had been tormenting us nearly six years."
"Don't thank me yet, Chancellor Mork. Wait until you understand my reasons for being here."
She paused, considering.
"But perhaps it would be better for this discussion to take place where we know we will not be overheard. Would it be acceptable for me to land and meet you in person? We will both bring guards, of course."
"Of course." Mork said, smiling like a true politician. "I'll prepare my audience chamber. We look forward to your visit."
The hologram flickered out.
"Perhaps we too can speak sometime, Admiral Drayson." Dezar Greeman said. "I would like to know the reasoning behind your style of attack. We knew you were there, of course, at Koros Major."
Bhindi smiled. "Did you ever know why, though, Admiral?"
"No. We had theories, but nothing more than that." He admitted.
"And did it worry you?"
"Of course. The presence of a large Imperial fleet so close to our home would worry anyone."
Bhindi grinned now. "There is your reasoning for our, uh, 'style of attack', Admiral." She said. "Good day." She made a slight motion with her hand, and the connection was cut.
"Prepare my shuttle, Commander. And two Stormtrooper barges. I want to leave within the hour."
"You're really going then?" Godridge asked, casting an aprehensive eye at the planet below.
"Of course. And you're coming with me." She smiled sweetly and stepped into the turbolift. "Oh, and make sure our guest is prepared for transit. I have no use for him, and I daresay the Admiral over there would like to debrief him."
* * * * *
The shuttle was met by a reception committe from the Tetan Parliment, headed by a man who introduced himself as Chancellor's Aide Torgan. He and his handful of bodyguards were clearly aprehensive about the four long lines of white-clad stormtroopers who had disembarked their two shuttles before Bhindi, but they seemed ever more aprehensive about those in the modified, pure black armour that accomponied her out of her personal shuttle.
They travelled through the city in a government landspeeder, which held only enough seats for the driver, a guard, Bhindi, and Torgan. Two speeders filled with Stormtroopers followed behind, the others waited with the ships.
The Parliment House, known only as the Iron Citadel for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, was a lavish building set in the middle of a single city block. A wall of stone, nearly two meters thick, surrounded the building, broken only by an ornemental wrot iron gate that opened for them as the speeders approached. The defences, if there were any, were clearly hidden.
They parked underground, and were led directly to the audience chamber, where Chancellor Mork was waiting. The table, a long wooden one with a gleaming mahgonany finish, was laden with dishes of food and pitchers of drink.
Bhindi politely declined anything, but Godridge gratefully accepted a glass of an orange liquid which he said was a tropical drink popular in the core. Bhindi took his word for it.
"Moff Drayson, it is a pleasure to finally meet you in person." The Chancellor said, and Bhindi had to surpress a chuckle. Considering that her fleet had just crippled more than a third of the planet's defensive fleet, that was hard to believe. But then, Mork was a politician, and they made their careers with lies.
"And you, Chancellor. You have done a fine job in keeping the Empress Teta system together. Apart from those Rebels, of course."
"Of course. Perhaps now with their ...removal... we will be able to restore a proper government to Koros Major."
Bhindi nodded slightly, but said nothing.
"You must tell me, though, Chancellor," She said earnestly, leaning forward on the table. "what happened to Kanbal Stian? He was the Chancellor here, was he not, but we have gotten no information on what happened to him."
Mork frowned and set his drink down on the table.
"That's the problem. There is no information. He simply... vanished one night, shortly after the rebellion began. No trace of him since. About four and a half years ago, the Senate decided it was time to move on, and elected a new Chancellor. That was me."
"Do you suspect kidnapping, then?" Bhindi asked, certain of the answer.
"Of course. There is no other possible reason for the disapearence of the Chancellor."
"You will be able to find out the answer, I'm sure." Bhindi said. "We have Delark Shee, the leader of the rebellion, in custody aboard my Star Destroyer now. He will be turned over to you, upon your membership into the Empire."
That was it. The bombshell that Mork and everyone else had been waiting for. It was not a surprise, merely a confirmation of what they already knew had to happen.
"Membership into the Empire." He repeated. "What would that mean?" And here, Bhindi smiled.
"It would mean you would swear loyalty to the Regent and His New Order." She said. "It would ensure your protection from outside and inside threats. You would pay taxes to the Empire, and would be under the Command of the Empire."
"And what about my Government? It would be dissolved, no?"
"Of course not. You would become a member state of the Ubiqtorate. You would be encouraged to create your own government, on three levels. Regional, Planetary, and Interplanetary. You would remain in place as Governor of the Tetan Confederacy, within the Empire, of course, and would report to me."
"What if I refuse?"
Here, Bhindi frowned.
"Then we would be forced to continue our invasion. You would be killed, along with a large number of your supporters and most of your military. We would gain control of your world, although it would be a damaged one, due to the battle. We would install a new Governor to rule over the Confederacy."
The Chancellor was silent for a long moment, until he finally said, "I don't have much choice, do I?"