Revanche-class Star Defender
Swiftsure, in orbit via Anzat
A pinprick of brilliant white light suddenly rippled out into a thunderstorm of crackling purple-blue; many more quickly blossomed after it. Tyris watched other magnetic pulse ordinances explode across the rest of the atmosphere, blanketing the world in brief but intense electromagnetic radiation designed to fry the internals of any of the Reaver nanites in the atmosphere. He withdrew his hand from the cold pane of ceraglass.
“It's fitting for our stormy world, I suppose,”muttered the anzat, sparing a glance at Rear-Admiral Costigan, who remained engrossed with whatever he was watching through one of the holo-screens.
The anzat commander strolled along the length of the bridge, still trailed by his escort of intrusive Observers. His emerald eyes lingered on the windswept peaks. Bursts of the radiation bombs continued to fall down lower, and lower into the atmosphere until they were detonating just above the highest buildings on the world. A pair of purple pulses flew out of one of the star defender's hangar bays: the magnetic pulse cannons began their supplementary bombardments of what had been Anzat's capital before its fall to the Reaver hordes. A familiar human voice called out from behind him. A brief scowl creased his face:
The ambassador.
“Commander Tyris?”
The anzat commander turned to see that the rest of the anzat delegation had arrived on the bridge, accompanied by the honor guard of shock troopers, now joined by a squad of battle droids which he didn't recognize. The droids seemed roughly humanoid in shape, albeit their hands had been replaced with what seemed to be weapons' barrels, and the head seemed far more cylindrical that any organic species he had ever encountered in his ninety years of experience living in the galaxy. The brightly emblazoned Unitas symbol on their torso made their allegiance plainly clear.
The Confederates and their droids...their technology...Tyris walked towards the delegation, quietly eying the ambassador. The man stared right back on him.
“Your absence triggered a security alert,” noted the man, “these droids were going to watch over you, but I see that the good Rear-Admiral has already assigned some watchers...”
“Forgive me, ambassador,” mused the alien, “I am use to having more freedom in where I go. But the good Rear-Admiral can vouch for my whereabouts during my absence.”
“Indeed, but it is a mute point. Rear-Admiral Costigan has been gracious enough to allow us to watch your world's reclamation from the bridge itself.”
“So I see.”
***
Watcher's Tower, Anzat
SWA1219 jumped out of the hovering CG-10 Centaur Transport onto the basalt and duracrete mixed stone landing pad of the Watcher's Tower. His blue photoceptors immediately looked up, calculating the distance to the top of the ancient structure. As he did so, dozens of his fellow C1s dropped right behind him. Several of the droids immediately moved to the front, activating their back-mounted shield generators to provide protection against any Reavers that could file out of the building to oppose them. As soon as the dropship ascended into the stormy clouds, the droids began to take blaster and slugthrower fire from the craggy windows which dotted the old watchtower. The droids instantly took cover behind their shield-wielding companions. The shields began to brightly fire under the impact of the Reavers' fire. Several of the Confederate droids turned their blasters to bear upon the windows, but to no effect; the droids simply weren't accurate enough to hit the more distant windows. SWA1219 raised his left arm up and fired, sending a pair of wrist rockets at one of the snipers' perches. The rockets exploded just after going through the window, making minute fireballs and spraying shrapnel throughout the room. Another droid, equipped with a close fire support module, began to pepper the windows with impact detonation grenades out of its mortars. Large chunks of stone began to fall, but the droid took some comfort knowing that with the damage dealt to structure, dozens of Reavers were going with it. SWA1219 reached into the pack of one his bretheren, pulling out more wrist rockets with his auxiliary hand, and loaded up the rotary magazine of his tiny rocket launcher.
As he did so, a pair of droids sporting anti-vehicle attachments sprinted to the side of the formation and dropped down to rest on all fours. A pair of missiles jumped out of their backs and surged into the graven durasteel gates of the building, blasting the doors back into the dark recesses of the old fortress. More blaster fire and slugs came pouring out of the entrance. The heavy anti-vheicle droids began to fire with their ion cannons, sending bright blue bolts into the darkness. SWA1219 heard several bodies drop to the ground under their fire. The close-support droid ran over towards the entrance and lit out a stream of flames past the ruined gates; a mighty inferno briefly scorched and purified the entrance of the Reaver plague. After seeing that several of the injured droids were repairing themselves, SWA1219 activated its own pack. After almost turning invisible, the droid sprinted into the breach. The husks of Reavers littered the floor and the antique furnishings now burned brightly in flames. Any other sort of organic would have long fled the place, yet one unusually large Reaver still stood at the entryway to the next room. While the droid could not tell its origin, it did recogize the threatening manner in which the Reaver brandished a large gun.
SWA1219's right arm pulsed, sputtering out a flurry of concussion bursts from his concussion rifle. The bursts smacked into the creature, eliciting a howl of pain and buffeting the Reaver backwards. His blue photoceptors noted that the Reaver was wearing some sort of antique armor breastplate once stored in the ancient place. Deciding that the value of the armor was not likely the value of the droid's existence to the Confederate commander, the droid switched firing modes on the concussion rifle. He fired. A pair of high-powered concussion blasts zipped through the central torso of the Reaver, piercing the armor to explode in the body itself. The nanite-reinforced body collapsed under the droid's attack. But even as it fell, the close support droid rushed in, almost smacking into SWA1219 and lit the body on fire with its flamethrower. The two droids began to sweep through the building, with SWA1219 sneaking up and attacking the prey while the other droid came up and incinerated the Reavers with careful gouts of searing fire.
***
Revanche-class Star Defender
Swiftsure, in orbit via Anzat
Commander Tyris hunced over Costigan's command chair as the Confederate began to discuss the tactics of a planetary assault. While the Confederation had little experience in actually conducting assaults, they had spent plenty of time studying the tactics, if only to defeat the tactics likely to employed against them. Brailey's hands swept over a holo-projection of the world and the orbiting rings of Confederate vessels.
“We're employing what's called an orbital siege orbit,” noted Costigan, “in more normal circumstances, this would stretch our lines thin and dilute our strength in a normal fleet engagement. But this obviously isn't. Instead it's really useful if you're setting up a blockade to catch smugglers or any other sort of blockade runner. In this case, we're not only using it as a simple quarantine measure, but also to ensure that we can blanket the surface below with orbital fire support if we need it. This is a relatively seamless transition in this case too because we had to neutralize any potential Reaver activity in the atmosphere here, so the nature of the threat combined with Lucerne's school of thought that's dominating Confederate doctrine right now essentially formed our tactics. Just as a sidenote, while you may think of feasible ideas in your career to deal with certain situations, make you'll be able to politically survive it, regardless of your idea's actual success or failure.”
“You are scared of this other Rear-Admiral?”
Brailey hesitated, “It is not so much fear as political power.”
“You fear it.”
“He is an influential enough man,” admitted Costigan, “but it's more than that. A lot of officers simply know how to conduct operations in his sort of matter. It's what they're good at, and this fleet, in case you haven't noticed, isn't solely comprised of people who've worked with me in the past.”
“So you took the cautious route,” stated Tyris, leaning back, “this is what I did before.”
“Well it's true there has to be a certain balance between political necessity and tactical practicality, I can't comment certainly on the situation. If that were the case, everyone would be great military commanders. It's achieving the right proportions of intellect, influence, material, and actual leadership that makes a grand commander. And to be sure, there are excellent commanders who may be missing one of those pillars, but it prevents them from being greater.”
“Hence your Confederation's willinginess to train us again.”
“And equip,” reminded Costigan, “unless you were maybe someone of Thrawn or Gevel's intellectual capability, I doubt a bunch of pointy wooden sticks would do much good against another army with blasters in most instances.”
“So you are setting me up with all but one pillar.”
“Influence.”
“Yes,” agreed the anzat, “why not this one?”
“Influence is earned, and it's not something that be genuinely given away,” mused Costigan, “I'll be blunt with you. Those four pillars, those are Lucerne's ideas, not mine. And he's highly suggested that I help you with this one, because as he's said, you're already in the hole, Commander.”
“Because of my defeat at the hands of Grand Admiral Desaria.”
“And because Anzat will be reliant on the rest of the Confederation until your world's back on its feet.”
“Including your advice, or so it would seem,” half-snickered Tyris.
“Which is why Lucerne wants to employ you at some operations at which you are more experts than us.”
“Oh? Do tell..”
“Not here,” muttered Costigan quietly, “but I will discuss it with you in my cabin once the bulk of the fighting on the world below is done.”