Chapter 27
<em>Centares, Centares System</em>
<em>Maldrood Sector</em>
I handed the tablet back to hare, feeling a sense of perverse satisfaction. But that was the reality of this gctic order, that not even the idealism of the Separatist Alliance could cure. Politics will remain corruptible–if not always with money–no matter in the Bronze Age or Space Age. Nobody can fix it. Least I could do was exploit the disease for reasons better than others, if not totally unselfishly.
But as the days ticked on with no signs of the person who was supposed to rescue us, I was feeling less and less optimistic about our chances. The confirmation lost by <em>five </em>votes. Even with the Commonality, that was too close to replicate. Dooku will be prepared for next time, and that means I''ve stalled as much as I could. All that''s left is to put up a good fight.
<em>And that we shall, </em>I thought as I crossed the deck to the visual disy, mming down the st shields and activating the holoHUD. An interdiction minefield had beenid 50,000,000 klicks out, and several dozen support ships were arranging themselves behind the Coalition Armada, already pre-loading the first caches of munitions onto their tenders.
Seven-hundred warships in total–greater than the First and Second Fleetsbined–most of them now stateless and eager to return home. Then there were another eight-hundred warships that should be enroute from Commonality space. It was thergest single gathering of Separatist warships since the start of the war.
There would be no fancy manoeuvres this time. Not with this many ships. Not with this manymanders. Separatist fleet doctrine relied on overwhelming numerical superiority, justified with exemry formations. The first the Republic will attempt to do is break up the Armada and defeat us in detail. To prevent that, everyone will have to y by the book and avoid ying hero.
"Interdiction arrays are reporting three-hundred drive trail signatures," Stelle paused, as if checking if that was all.
I keyed in the frequency, "I am dering sector-wide Red Alert; all personnel to battlestations. There are three-hundred–"
"Six-hundred–" Stelle leaned forward, "No, <em>one-thousand </em>drive cones!"
I watched in quiet dread as the icons began flooding onto <em>Repulse''s </em>holoHUD,pletely nketing the interdiction array and sweeping through it with brute force. For a moment, I was thrown back to Ringo Vinda, watching ARENA''s red tide trample over everything on the board. This felt obnoxiously simr, instilling the same emotions you would get knowing a tsunami was approaching yet too close for you to escape.
"...Urgent transmission to Columex; request all avable reinforcements immediately. Send it."
<em>"Repulse?" </em>a voice asked.
"I apologise," I stifled a choke, "There are <em>one-thousand </em>signatures approaching. Avoid allmunication but tightbeam and optical. Here theye."
??
Calli Trilm didn''t have time to think about anything but what''s at hand. And what''s at hand was a disaster. The Coalition Armada was supposed to outnumber the Cerulean Lance, but instead they found themselves outnumbered by three-hundred warships. Which means either every Republic Sector Fleet was a thousand strong and the war was about to end in a month, or this wasn''t <em>just </em>the Cerulean Spear.
Either way, someone in Naval Intelligence was about to get bent over a barrel.
<em>Of course they''d know we''d outnumber them, </em>her brain berated, <em>so of course they''d bring even more!</em>
"Tell me something, Tex," she demanded harshly.
"They''reing at us head on, sir," her tactical droid said, "No formation. The only finesse is their approach vector. They intend on rolling right over us. We''ve stopped their momentum with our mines, but they''re elerating again."
An icon left of hers blinked on the expansive battle plot; Task Force Repulse–Rain Bonteri''s formation in the Armada–signalled steady eleration to 1,000G in line ahead. A hundred and twenty marks surged out of orbit, ships queuing into a <em>textbook </em>Battle Order One. Three straight columns, with the heaviest ships in the leftmost main battle line, lighter cruisers and frigates in the middle, and auxiliaries–including carriers–on the right.
Battle Squadron Talcene and Battle Squadron Bryx–two stateless formations from their eponymous sectors–raced after Task Force Repule, bringing the full number up to two-hundred and fifty ships.
"Mark bearing," shemanded.
"Mark bearing," Tex repeated.
She nodded in satisfaction, "Signal Task Force Clysm into Battle Order One. el up to one-thousand gravs. Time to intercept?"
"Fifty minutes. Intercept velocity thirty-thousand KPS," the droid vocalised his internalputations, "Permission to speak freely?"
"Granted."
"There is only a twenty-seven point three-nine-nine percent probability of our victory," TX-103 said, "It would be more strategically sound to fall back to Columex, where our strength can be bolstered."
"That''s not the point, droid," Calli scolded mildly, "Centares is a signatory. There are thirty-seven Centarian warships in Battle Squadron Maldrood. If you want to talk statistics; over sixty percent of our fleet isposed of ships and spacers who have lost their homeworlds. The fact that they are still fighting with us is because they believe we will fight for <em>them</em>."
"The psyche is a troublesome factor," Tex replied tly.
"No," she disagreed, "It is quite manageable, for most races. And when it is on your side, it is as if the gods are fighting with you. Come, droid. Let''s give the Loyalists a thrashing they will remember."
Task Force Clysm, with Battle Squadron Salvara and Battle Squadron Perkell, were situated on the right most nk of the Armada. Around one-hundred eighty warships in total. <em>Star of Serenno''s </em>sublight drives roared, kicking her in the rear and sending her sprawling forward, with the rest of the division neatly falling in behind.
To avenge their lost worlds. For the distant hope they will be liberated. To defend those who have not fallen. In the name of the Confederacy itself. For whatever the reason they held in their hearts, seven-hundred shining stars appeared in the night sky of Centares. Whether they would glow for an era, or burn so brightly for only a brief moment. Such was the solidarity of the Separatist Alliance.
??
Commander Vinoc ordered Task Force Sol forward in a standard line ahead, nked by Battle Squadron Maldrood and Battle Squadron Jospro. Thergest but slowest of the three divisions–courtesy of the heavy Sy Myrthian carrier-battleships–two-hundred and seventy warships clung onto the Armada''s left nk.
<em>"The Sy Myrthians are getting left behind, Commander," </em>Captain Harsol tightbeamed, <em>"Their carriers cap out at three-hundred gravs."</em>
"Forget the screens!" Vinoc snapped, "We shave half an hour off our transit without them. We''rest in the battle order, so as long as the LACs catch up before then, we''ll be fine."
<em>"LACs?"</em>
"Light attack craft."
<em>"Slides off the tongue well, I''ll give it that," </em>Harsol mumbled– <em>"Understood. I''ll ry the order. What about the Columexi?"</em>
The Commonality wanted to rendezvous every one of their avable ships in Columex before sending them to Centares in full force. They simply didn''t expect the Republic to charge in so fast or so hard. With 1500 parsecs between them, the difference between the swiftest cruiser and heaviest dreadnought was a couple hours to a whole day. If the Commonality was intent on sending their Joint Defense Fleet together, then they might as well not.
"Let''s hope they''re hauling ass, if nothing else."
Harsol afforded a chuckle, <em>"Looks like they''reing straight down our throats, sir. They''re wanting for a brawl, after all."</em>
The captain of <em>Sa Nor </em>cut thems with that.
"They won''t," TJ-912, his recently assigned tactical droid, pointed to the tactical disy, "Their drive trails suggest some standard of coordination between ships. They are attempting to mislead us by purposefully mixing in lighter ships, but if you ignore the shorter trails, you''ll note that the more prominent cones are maintaining a coherent line abreast."
Vinoc saw it. The Cerulean Spear Fleet had arrayed themselves in two lines abreast obscured within a mess of light cruisers, frigates, and corvettes. Their violent eleration was only a ruse to pull a fake from right under them. He checked the repeater; 30,000,000 klicks to intercept and closing. He couldn''t see them yet, but he could see the blossoming drive signatures of Battle Squadron Jospro''s LACs behind them.
Over two-hundred thousand were already in space and racing ahead of their motherships, with six-hundred thousand more swarming out of the hangars with the cadence and symmetry only the metronome precision of droid brains could perform. As he watched their formation weave itself into a star-speckled nket fit for an eldritch god, Vinoc felt that the Republic had no idea what''s waiting for them.
<em>Come right on then, bastards, </em>he thought viciously, <em>see what we''ve got for you.</em>
??
"Velocity twenty-three thousand KPS, fourteen minutes to intercept range," Stelle reported.
The Republic fleet was stilling straight on. <em>I can literally see your line of battle, assholes–how much closer do you want to push this game of chicken? </em>Ironically enough, the Republic held an overwhelming advantage in a full frontal rush. Not because they outnumbered us, but because they were using Star Destroyers as their ships-of-the-line. Aside from a couple handful of obsolete Invincible-ss dreadnoughts in the back–which <em>we </em>had too–the main bulk of their battle line were Venators. The ten or so ISDs–Tectors, apparently–were on our right nk, rematching against Task Force Clysm.
Back to Star Destroyers. Venators may have piss poor ventral firing envelopes–yes, even with their new hangar gun, which couldn''t depress vertically downwards or even fire rearward due to its jury-rigged cement–they do have <em>absolutely overwhelming </em>forward firepower. Their tapered hull meant the vast majority of the guns on their artillery deck could fire forwards, to say nothing of their dorsal barbettes. Of course, that meant their rear firing envelope was pretty much non-existent, but they don''t tend to show that anyway.
Munificents and Recusants were built simrly, in that regard.
On the other hand, the bulk of the Coalition Armada''s line of battle were Providences; their 360 degree transverse coverage sacrificed the potency of each individual firing arc, as the sum total had to be halved towards each nk of the ship. And of course, its tubr shape meant there was only a minimal forward envelope.
I eyed the readout; range to intercept 23,000,000 klicks, and plummeting eye-wateringly fast. At constant eleration of 1000G, we were already <em>tearing </em>through space at 24,000KPS. And it was <em>nothing, </em>not when most Separatist capital ships came with inertial dampeners powerful enough topensate for up to 2500G. But a 1000G was hard enough to control–we don''t want to be sting straight through the enemy, right?
Unless you were that onedy with purple hair. She''s kind of special. <em>What was her name again?</em>
"Task Force Clysm is signalling hard to starboard," Stelle ryed.
"Project <em>Queen of Beauty''s </em>bridge and signal Task Force Repulse," I stood up, feeling far too jittery to sit without bouncing my leg to disintegration, "Standard starboard turn. Keep it tight as we manoeuvre in session. Arm portunchers one to fifty."
<em>Repulse''s </em>bridge shimmered, a curtain of light falling over the viewports and recing it with the illusory image of <em>Queen of Beauty''s </emmand deck. In a rare moment of queasiness, I could feel <em>Repulse </em>heeling over hard to starboard in a much sharper angle than <em>Queen of Beauty. </em>The disconnect between what my body experienced and what my eyes saw pretty hammered me to the point of artificially-induced intoxication.
I fell ass-first into the captain''s chair, shit-faced beyond belief and rubbing my eyes shut as I retreated onto years of naval experience to gauge the progress of the turn. Manoeuvring in session was rather self-exnatory. When the van of a line of battle executes a manoeuvre, that same manoeuvre will be sessively performed by every ship as they arrive at the wake of the vane. In simple terms, every following ship will only turn when they arrive in the exact spot the van was when <em>they </em>turned.
In this case, we were all following the… the what? Unwilling to open my eyes, I wracked my brain for the order of battle I prepared a few days ago. <em>Repulse </em>was in the second column–so as we turn to starboard, we will be hidden behind the main battle line. And that means the van was… <em>Astarte?</em>
Whatever the case, manoeuvring in session from a line ahead was preferable to a simultaneous manoeuvre from a line abreast, simply due to the sheer number of ships participating. <em>Especially </em>when there were Providences, Invincibles, Dreadnaughts, Kolivexes, Munificents, Recusants, Auxilias, and a dozen other sses which all have different rates of turns.
Like I said; by the book.
At the speed we were racing along, however, it sure as hell didn''t feel like it. I cracked my eyes open the moment <em>Repulse </em>stopped turning, though a cursory scan told me <em>Queen of Beauty </em>still was.
"They''reunching fighters!" the sensor droid cried in rm.
The scanner disys were a sight to behold. Wave after wave of drive cones were spawning out of the Venators, radiating out in a blinding white fog thatpletely smothered the main signatures. Standard Venator capacity was 420 LACs. I yed around with the repeater''s interface for a couple seconds, and got myself a cursory figure of 400 Venators.
That was 168,000 LACs. Considering that Venators were not the only carrier-capable ships, I rounded it up to 200,000 across the whole line. That meant Task Force Repulse had a share of 60,000…
"Get our Vultures in the air!" I shouted, "Are our tubes loaded!?"
"Yes, sir!" Stelle answered, "Deploying Vultures– the enemy fleet is bearing down on us!"
Star Destroyers had a near-100% forward firepower efficiency, simply by design. But turbsers fired tibanna gas wrapped in a maic field. Gas that wanted to expand into the void, and a maic field that decayed exponentially with every klick travelled. Strangely enough, that meantser bolts theoretically had more range in-atmosphere than in-vacuum.
What didn''t decay, however, was steel. Explosives wrapped in steel.
"Ourst ship-of-the-line haspleted its turn," Stelle reported.
"Very good," I leaned forward, "Open fire."
??
As the first torpedo signatures glittered the battle plot, Calli Trilm drew in a deep breath. Task Force Repulse unleashed the first, massive salvo of the battle, plumes of fire and smoke rapturing out of the broadsides of their battleships.
"Open fire," she ordered.
<em>Star of Serenno </em>shivered as a zing wave of energyshed from her hull in a brilliant cascade of warheads streaking through the void. As the three Task Forces manoeuvred, their vans and rears met to form a single massive line of battle along 800 klicks. 200 destroyers and 30 dreadnoughts, with fifty and a hundredunchers per broadside respectively. Eachuncher concealed three tubes.
Forty-thousand proton torpedoes screamed towards the Cerulean Spear Fleet.
The Republic had more numbers, better guns, better firing envelopes, better fire control, and simply better ships. Their main armament–eight dual-barrelled DBY-827 heavy turbser batteries–could punch out a capital ship''s shields with a single salvo, and tear into the hull with the next.
But one thing they didn''t have was the range. Jedi cruisers relied on their fighterplements to dish out missiles and torpedoes, as they didn''t have any of their own.
<em>We must dictate the cadence of battle, </em>Calli Trilm mused in practised calm, <em>that is our only hope of victory.</em>
She snatched the backrest of her chair as centrifugal force threatened to toss her off her feet; all 230 ships rotated on their long axis in tandem, flipping ''upside down'' and unleashing a second rippling wave of torpedoes. By the time the battle line had flipped back upright, the portsideunchers were already reloaded, and another salvo roared out into the abyss.
With impulse drives capable of upwards of 10,000G, it took the first salvo ten whole minutes to transit the 20,000,000 klicks between the battle lines. <em>Three salvoes in ten minutes, </em>Calli checked her chrono. eptable.
The Republic battle line dashed in to close the distance as quickly as possible, eating the full brunt of the first two salvoes with their forward shields. The actual hit ratio was poor; maybe one in a hundred, or even less. The vast distances meant their targetingputers had to rely on enemy drive cones, which were blurred enough–not to mention the torpedoes were ballistic by the time they reached. Lastly, the Republic had prepared several screens of point-defence frigates.
On the other hand, the Coalition Armada was notcking in munitions. Each Providence carried enough warheads for eighteen whole salvoes, and munition tenders were already crossing the distance between the auxiliary column and the battle column with even more. Distant explosions lit up the void, nearly iprehensible from the backdrop of stars.
"Time to intercept?" she asked.
"Their el-squared is dropping," Tex noted, "I calcte… thirty-four point five minutes."
"Eleven salvoes," Calli grinned with all teeth, "Keep firing."
Another volley of torpedoes erupted out of the hull, charging down the gleaming wakes of the previous broadside.
Her eyes scanned the battle plot, at the swarm of drive cones pushing ahead of the Cerulean Spear''s main line of battle. Calli patiently waited for each scan, updating their position on the disy and calcting the eleration. Six scanster, and Calli was rtively certain those were enemy starfighters. 2000G; twenty-three minute transit.
The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the vition.
"Where are our fighters?" she demanded.
"Our carriers are having trouble keeping up with the columns," Tex answered.
She swore beneath her breath, "Move our screens forward, ten degrees below our horizontal ne."
"There seems to be something wrong with our bloody carriers today," Calli grumbled.
??
Vinoc stared at the tactical disy, weaving the Force into his mind as he enhanced his own cognitive abilities. This was his first timemanding such a massive fleet, albeit in arger formation, and he could not say that he was not slightly nervous. Nervous at the lives in his hand; tens of thousands of men and women fighting under hismand. Nervous at the sheer amount of firepower he controlled.
<em>This must be what Master Tann meant by true power. </em>What was a Jedi Knight under the onught of six-hundred thousand missiles? Against the collective will of three million spacers brimming with a kindred resentment for the Republic?
<em>Crying Sun </em>punched out another full cannonade–a hundred and fifty torpedoes rampaging out into the abyss. She was not the only one. At the vanguard of the line of battle was Task Force Clysm, with its subordinating formations Battle Squadrons Salvara and Perkell. Once boasting quarter a thousand vessels, their number has been reduced to a mere one-eighty. They had lost the most, and the least to lose.
And they fought with savagery. For every four salvoes the rest of the fleetunched, they managed five. Against the spearhead of the Cerulean Spear–the Tectors–they pushed their ageing warships to their absolute limits in order to keep up, with little regard for their own safety.
The disparity between the front and rear was evident. While Task Force Sol was thergest of three, it was also the most sluggish. Both Battle Squadron Maldrood and Battle Squadron Jospro–<em>especially </em>Jospro–have beenrgely untouched by the war, and their spacers appeared keen to remain that way. Even as the boiling mass of Vulture droids swarmed from the Sy Myrthian carriers, the carriers themselves remained a good distance behind the auxiliary column.
He had briefly lost the skill in his brief stint under the thralldom of the Dark Side, but toeing the line in the Force reminded him how to keep his cool under duress. As much as he wanted to rage against the Sy Myrthians for theirck of zeal, he knew it would amount to screaming at the stars. Vinoc tried to recall the names and faces of his Jedi instructors… but came up short. Perhaps it wasn''t to be, not when his world was now consumed with beeping repeaters, shing sensor lights, and the howling of sublight drives and rocketing warheads.
Thankfully, it was just as well, for the blessed stars shone bright on him. Task Force Sol''s rather anaemic efforts had prompted the Cerulean Spear to redeploy their most powerful assets to the vanguard. To the point, in fact, that Vinoc started harbouring doubts on the Sy Myrthian''s intentions–because it seemed they had stationed their carriers so far back that the enemy hadn''t even realised their existence.
The star destroyer ahead of <em>Crying Sun </em>blinked out a code with their rear lights.
"Task Force Clysm is requesting fighter support," TJ-912 automatically tranted, "Shall we respond?"
Vinoc nced at the progress of their LACs, "Aye. They''re here."
Not a secondter, hundreds of thousands of screeching fighters sted straight through the columns, rampaging through the narrow intervals between ships to meet the enemy. The numerous tactical disys scrambled and hissed, formation images glitching as targetingputers and sensors all across the battle line found themselves half-blinded by the interference from just shy of a <em>million </em>Vultures, Hyenas, and Scarabs tearing a seam through space.
Not even a tactical droid had the mental faculty to coordinate so many pins on a screen, much less any organic brain. But droid fighters were only good at one thing, and it was the one thing the Sy Myrthians had ordered them to do: <em>swarm.</em>
And swarm they did, like an all-devouring hive mind. Just asst Jedi cruiserspleted their line of battle and released their firstser broadside, the droid LACs descended on them like a gue of stone mites. Bright bursts of point-defence and explosive tibanna-bolts carved open gulfs in the infinitely ck wavefront of destruction. But the gulfs closed, filled in by the endless numbers. Laser clusters zed in desperatest-ditch efforts to thin the horde, but it was no use.
The swarm crashed into the enemy''s rearguard at 50,000KPS, shredding two-dozen Venators and twice the number of escorts into scrap metal within a period of seconds, and then moved on to the next section.
"What a terrible way to die," Vinoc mumbled, screams echoing in his head. Visions of bulkheads crumpling like flimsi; of the shocking onrush of dark cold, and silent demise.
"Enemy LACs are redeploying," TJ-912 stated unfeelingly.
They were. The Vultures had been concealed by the Armada''s main line of battle until now, but despite being caught by surprise, the Republic fighter wings were deflecting their vectors in surprisingly good order.
It might be too little, toote.
With the opposing column having their hands full swatting droids from the sky, there was perishingly little to impede Task Force Sol fromying into them with renewed viciousness. The enemy fleet was no longer 20,000,000 klicks in the unknown. <em>We have them dead to rights, and they aren''t fighting back.</em>
<em>Crying Sun </em>roared like a living beast, unleashing fusides after furious fusides in ferocious rhythm.
??
Sweet Mary, the sight was utterly <em>biblical.</em>
The Vulture swarm was a legend ripped right out of the tales of Lovecraft, undting and writhing like a single eldritch abomination created solely to blight God himself. Have you seen a school of piranhas befall a fallen deer and leave nothing but bone behind? It was the same thing. The droidspletely trampled over any resistance with hardly a hup, savagely chewing up and spitting out the enemy battle line with only one intent on their artificial brains.
Sure, hundreds were being downed every second, but that was expected for swarm tactics.
Regardless, it was a terrible way to die. I hoped their ships disintegrated around them fast enough for them to die painlessly. If not… I forced myself to ignore the horrific ramifications.
The 200,000 Republic starfighters were being redirected to the rearguard, to meet the droid LACs in what must be the singlergest fighter battle in the war. A new storm of pins speckled the battle plot as the enemy carriersunched a <em>second </em>wave of LACs from what seemed like the depths of hell, bringing the total number up to upwards of half a million.
I swallowed my surprise. <em>How </em>exactly they managed to double their carrier capacity was beyond me. For a tense moment, I watched the screens to gauge what the LACs were tasked to do–and to my immense relief, they were banking around to head rearward.
With the imminent threat of bombing runs now passed, the Armada''s battle column was free to renew their ceaseless battery with eagerness. This round, however, the Cerulean Spear had already closed the distance and manoeuvred into a parallel line ahead. Amidst the embroiled stars, some six-hundred warships exchanged thunderous broadside, unleashing tempests of iron and fire at each other.
Republic turbsers punched gaping holes in Separatist deflectors. Separatist warheads screamed back in response, acrid smoke licking the heavens. Shot and shell roared through the vast emptiness between battle lines; a horrid, violent microcosm of a gxy at war. Very soon, shields on both sides had been battered away, and durasteel hulls shattered and splintered, cracking and buckling under assault.
And amidst the maelstrom, smaller vessels minnows through the ranks. Munifexes and Arquitens met and danced just beneath the waves of hellfire, just as stupidly brave crews of Lupus-ss frigates bum-rushed arcs of point defence tounch opportunistic waves of missiles at the nks of the enemy column. They''re deaths were almost a foregone conclusion, but if they took out a whole Venator with them… it was then a small price for victory.
The enemy column lit up the void with a facsimile of a horizon, beads of light exploding out and rocketing towards us. <em>Queen of Beauty </em>ate a shot at amidships, gouging out a deep scar in her hull and carving up twenty-one of herunchers. Even if I wasn''t physically present, <em>Repulse''s </em>sound systems did a disturbingly good job of replicating the deep groans of crunching steel as the ship struggled to hold herself together.
I gave the order, and <em>Queen of Beauty </em>joined the increasing ranks of battleships being folded out of battle, with a Recusant-ss battlecruiser taking her ce. The tactical disy spelled it out cleanly; the situation was untenable. Even with our preemptive strikes, and Task Force Sol <em>utterly </em>ravaging the Republic''s rear, the enemy still had better shields and better turbsers, not to mention four ships for every three of ours. A Providence could take on a Venator one-to-one with a respectable chance of victory, but under the fire of <em>two?</em>
There will probably be studies and debates on this battle centuries in the future, but right here and right now, my conclusion is that we were getting <em>fucking mauled. </em>Something had to be done, or the stars will be witness to our deaths.
<em>Queen of Beauty </em>passed in front of Repulse on her way to Centares, giving me a particrly good view of how the ship was literally bent into a V-shape by the attack she endured, like a fish with a broken spine.
Not all of them were as lucky as her. Among the column were wrecks; gutted hulls still drifting with the rest of the fleet but streaming with atmosphere, debris, and life pods while frantic rescue teamsunched themselves into a grim race against time, fighting with untold courage to save their trapped and wounded crewmates.
It was mountingly dangerous work. It was hard to distinguish between a fighting and wrecked ship in space. After all, even wrecks continued at velocity with the rest of the fleet. Drive cones were used most of the time, but ships-of-the-line disengaged their sublight drives once they reached the required velocity, relying on secondary drives and attitude thrusters afterwards. At that distance, the only surefire way to confirm an enemy warship was no longer fighting was if it was in pieces.
And that''s exactly what happened. Republic fire control fixed targeting solutions on wrecks and inadvertently unleashed broadsides on unwitting rescue Droch-ss cutters. Sometimes, some adjacent warships recognised the trajectory of iing fire and warned the rescue parties in advance, but most of the time most warships were too busy with their own problems.
<em>''If enemy shells weren''t heading for us, it wasn''t our problem'' </em>was the reigning attitude. I couldn''t me them.
Who I <em>could </em>me, however…
"Where the hell are our allies?" I fumed, internally doubting the validity of ''allies.''
"Columex has not responded," Stelle said.
A shockwave boomed from our portside, a ship-of-the-line detonating from a torpedo run by a particrly bold Carrack-ss light cruiser with too little sense–which itself was obliterated from existence by the shrapnel. <em>Repulse </em>shook violently, with Stelle himself careening into a wall. If it wasn''t for our shields, we would be swiss cheese.
"Contact them again," I demanded, far too high on adrenaline to deal with my near-death experience, "This time, I want a bloody answer!"
"That would be breaking–"
"Just fucking do it, Stelle."
Stelle punched in a receiver address. It took five minutes for a response.
I was ranting even before there was a coherent picture of the other end, "Where are our reinforcements!? Did you fail to receive our previous transmission!?"
"I am afraid none areing, Commodore."
The person I was speaking to was a human male. I already had my predispositions, but I did not expect Diedrich Greyshade to feel so <em>simr </em>to Simon Greyshade, despite their different appearances. Diedrich had that devious character floating about him, like his rtive, though his voice was harsher, harder, and made the uniform he wore convincing enough.
Extra points for the honesty, too.
"Want to exin?"
Diedrich Greyshade rubbed his forehead, "I extend my apologies. I attempted to bring our fastest ships, but couldn''t gather enough support."
<em>"Support?"</em>
"The Joint Defense Fleet is a democracy, sir. We''re technically a civilian cooperative," he tried to exin, "Believe me, sir, Columex is next in the Republic''s sights. We know that. But the other sectors aren''t willing to risk it. There are merchantmen fleeing here from Centares, and the picture they paint isn''t pretty enough. We don''t want to die for a lost cause."
<em>Sounds like a fat load of shit. Why''d you keep quiet then?</em>
"Antemeridian is <em>literally </em>a hundred parsecs north of here–"
"We don''t want to die for a <em>lost </em>cause, sir," Diedrich reiterated more forcefully, "The Commonality did not weather gctic politics by being stupid. Antemeridian and Budpock have evacuated their armed forces to Columex as well. I advise you to preserve as much of your forces and withdraw here. We can make a <em>real </em>stand–"
"Well, can we expect <em>anybody </em>else toe!?" I interrupted harshly.
Diedrich paused, making a show of thinking.
"...No."
I cut the connection, even more frustrated than before. Partly because I now knew no help wasing, and partly because Greyshade was <em>right. </em>Bncing military strategy and political strategy will never get easier.
I had to give an order to retreat sooner orter. We created a n to retreat in good order, though we spun it as a ''measure ofst resort'' to the Centareans.
<em>Now? </em>Maybe. But would the Salvarans, the Bryxi, the Wobanians ept that? The Centareans most certainly won''t, and we can''t have spacers threatening mutiny at such an hour.
Should I wait for us to suffer more losses? But that would defeat the point.
I certainly didn''t expect the Republic to solve my conundrum for me. <em>In the worst way possible.</em>
"Sir!" a droid shouted up at me, "Our scanners are indicating a massive object extracting from hyperspace!"
It was as if the volume of the universe had been toned down–followed by a blinding sh of light, like the fabric of space-time had been ripped apart right in front of the column to reveal the infinite heavens. And then the tear sewed itself back shut, and a behemoth drive signature mmed its way onto the battle plot, dwarfing everything around it.
That was the only warning I got before Battle Squadron Salvara just… <em>disappeared. </em>Wiped off the map. The entire vanguard of our fleet simply gone<em>. </em>All three-hundred thousand souls in thirty, forty Dreadnaughts, dead in the blink of an eye. Thest defiant lights of Salvara–the spacers who''ve been with us since the start–snuffed out almost in an afterthought.
The image was brutally clear.
<em>Super Star Destroyer.</em>
At <em>least </em>eight klicks stern to bow, and the whole length of it like a vengeful titan. It definitely wasn''t the <em>Executor, </em>as it didn''t have a city-like superstructure. Instead of the sleek, dagger-like deadliness that defined the <em>Executor, </em>it was bulkier, more <em>mighty. </em>An indomitable juggernaut that would not stop for nothing, casting a shade of foreboding inevitability.
"essing registry… Mandator-ss star dreadnought," there was a hint of panic in Stelle''s voice, "Registered callsign; <em>Legacy of the Founders.</em>"
That literally meant nothing to me. But if the Republic was willing to name that ship something so <em>grandiose, </em>then they must be damn well sure she could live up to it.
<em>Legacy of the Founders </em>unleashed another relentless barrage of turbsers, and Separatist warships erupted into mes under it, paying the ultimate price for their loyalty. Task Force Clysm swung around in good time, bearing broadsides and responding with a rippling st of torpedoes, missiles, andsers. The Mandator''s shields flickered as they absorbed the cannonade, then replied with another punishment of overwhelming firepower.
"Sir!" Stelle snapped me out of my daze, "Should we retreat!?"
"–Right," I swallowed thickly, "Order of retreat."
"Order of retreat," the droid nodded, rying themand.
Green cascaded down the repeaters as the whole fleet acknowledged and epted my assessment of our situation. <em>Repulse </em>suddenly kicked her sublight drives into gear, vectoring her main thrust downwards as hard she could to lift her tail in the opposite direction.
Standard order of retreat, as it were. This was one of the rare cases our line of battle was still preserved enough to pull it off. Usually, each section of the line would just make an independent jump to the nearest friendly system, before regrouping at the rendezvous point. That wasn''t possible here, because we had to withdraw to Columex in one piece. In some deep space battles, the order of retreat was as simple as swinging one-eighty and jumping.
Doing that here would result in half the fleet disappearing into the''s mass shadow, or straight up ramming into Centares before they couldpletely insert into hyperspace.
The solution? Jump from <em>under </em>the system ne.
Within seconds, each ship in the Armada had spun ny on their transverse axis to nosedive perpendicr to the Republic fleet, before spinning another ny on their long axis to have their dorsals face Columex. The ships already in the process of retreating such as <em>Queen of Beauty </em>jumped first, provided their hyperdrives were still functional.
Among the abandoned hulks still drifting along the original column were crippled ships-of-the-line, pulsing out ''white g'' signals to signify their surrender. The reason we chose to dive ''down'' instead of ''up'' was to both exploit human psychology and as well as Star Destroyer design. It worked, because the volume of fire we received immediately plummeted.
"Clear!" the astronav droid called.
"Execute insertion."
<em>Repulse </em>burned again, this time vectoring her thrust upwards to swing herself ny-degrees again, along her short axis to parallel herself with the hypene egress on the opposite side of the.
shes of light sprung from the readouts and ship after ship ignited their hyperdrives and sted themselves into hyperspace. Starlines appeared beyond <em>Repulse''s </em>viewport, and the star system of Centares was no more.