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    Yag’Dhul Orbit, Yag’Dhul System

    Harrin Sector

    At the bridge of battlecruiser Chimeratica, Confederate Rear Admiral Rain Bonteri observed the approaching enemy. His hand flashed over the screen, and a pair of spinning scales strung out around the holographic display of Yag’Dhul like an armillary sphere, miniscule increments denoting the absolute bearings with regard to the galactic plane. The holographic planet spun, just as the star system spun, but these absolute bearings would always be aligned with the arbitrary constants set by the Standard Galactic Grid.

    The New Territories will always be nested in the absolute north, just as the Unknown Regions lay in the west and Trailing Sectors in the south. That will not change, even as the galaxy itself traversed the cosmos, spiralling at a steady 250 klicks a second. One of the joys of a galactic civilisation. Standardisation. Standard bearings, standard time, standard distance, standard alphabet.

    People really took standardisation for granted, even as standardisation acted as the steady hand that guided this civilisation to peace and prosperity for ten-thousand years. Even as standardisation acted as the calculating impetus behind every battle and every war, the platform from which mass destruction and slaughter would be planned upon.

    Three fleets approached Yag’Dhul. Rain Bonteri eyed the absolute bearings, shifting the holograph towards a top-down view.

    From the north-east, bearing 033 degrees and 100,000 klicks out, just beyond Yag’Dhul’s third moon, was Octavian Grant’s 20th Sector Armada, numbering two-hundred and fifty ships. As the 20th Sector Armada was ostensibly a rear-line combat element, most of their fighting force consisted of smaller vessels around a core battlecruiser squadron. Numbers and tonnage combined, it was a peer force to the 28th Mobile Fleet.

    From the north-west, bearing 341 degrees and 90,000 klicks out, was Empatojayos Brand’s Taskforce Swift Justice, recently liberated after Fondor’s surrender and withdrawal from the Confederacy, numbering a little over one-hundred warships. Many sleek Fondorian vessels had joined this command, including new Tector-class battleships, but in total this force was still disadvantaged against the 28th Mobile Fleet. On its own, at least.

    From the south-east, bearing 150 degrees and 150,000 klicks out, isolated from their comrades approaching from the north, was Anakin Skywalker’s Open Circle Fleet, numbering three-hundred ships. Bringing over a hundred Venator-class battlecruisers to bear, the Open Circle was by far the most dangerous enemy fleet element present, one the 28th Mobile might not hope to triumph over in even combat.

    “Just under seven-hundred ships,” Senator Daggibus Scoritoles gravely informed the gathered officers of the 28th Mobile Fleet, “On behalf of the Body Calculus, I extend my sincerest gratitude for your efforts towards the liberation of our star system. However, in light of the Republic’s enormous advantage, I must advise you to retreat. Rest assured, even against this force, Yag’Dhul will not be taken by the Republic, this is as the Body Calculus determined.”

    The Givin of Yag’Dhul were the most revered mathematicians of the galaxy, and the Body Calculus was formed of the most revered mathematicians of the Givin. Some species gave more weight to their words than others, but the Givin were one of the few who always backed their words with hard numbers. If Daggibus Scoritoles had even forgone the Givin societal custom of greeting mathematics to implore a hasty withdrawal, then the chances of victory must be bleak indeed.

    “Have the esteemed Body Calculus determined the possibility of victory to be ‘zero’?” the Rear Admiral leaned back, almost relaxed.

    “No possibility is ‘zero,’ Admiral,” the Givin looked at him through an exoskeleton of bone, fixed into a perpetual scream, “But the enemy has as many as three times the number of ships that you do, and intend to envelop you from three directions. However, you can still withdraw, and regroup with your allies for a counterattack. The Body Calculus has deliberated a strategy for your fleet to execute.”

    “I must express my dissatisfaction, Senator,” the Rear Admiral gestured coldly, “Why do you not say ‘us,’ and use ‘you’ in its place? Is the Mathematocracy not a constituent state of this Confederacy? Yag’Dhul’s shipyards are well-regarded, and the reputation of their Wavecrest-class frigates precedes themselves. Will you not fight with us?”

    “I am afraid that the Body Calculus is hesitant of committing its warships,” Senator Scoritoles bowed stiffly, “As a defeat would render it unable to defend its orbital and atmospheric space.”

    “Then how must we convince the Body Calculus of our certain victory?” the Rear Admiral asked, “Must I descend to Dodecapolis, and make a presentation of my strategy with prepared graphs and charts?”

    “I have already presented your strategy to the Body Calculus,” the Givin Senator replied, “They concluded it is… implausible. Defeating a numerically superior enemy in detail has merit, but that is the obvious conclusion the enemy will come to as well. A ‘defeat in detail’ will only work if the enemy has the advantage in terms of total numbers, while you have the advantage over any single one of their divisions. That is not the case here. The Twentieth Sector Armada is a near-peer force, and the Open Circle Fleet have you at every disadvantage.”

    “And how has the Body Calculus arrived at that conclusion?”

    “With the evaluation of a dataset of battles accumulated over the long millennia of galactic warfare. The Body Calculus has all the data on hand, should you have the capacity to analyse it.”

    To analyse every battle ever fought since the foundation of the Mathematocracy in the span of hours just to prove a point, the Rear Admiral mused, is such an unnecessary effort that speaks to exactly how the Givin operate.

    “Then this battle will be a statistical anomaly,” the Rear Admiral promised, “You speak of our defeat in the upcoming battle, Senator, but the battle has already begun.”

    “You speak of–”

    “Indeed I do,” the Rear Admiral gestured again, this time at a display, and five pairs of eyes turned to see it, “As you can see, we have already begun whittling away at the enemy force. Fifty battlecruisers of the Open Circle Fleet are leaving. The Open Circle Fleet no longer possesses the advantage, and is now a near-peer force.”

    “At the cost of seventy of your own ships.”

    “Seventy frigates. It is a fair trade. And one we would immediately recoup if your Wavecrests are committed to our cause.”

    “Even so,” Daggibus Scoritoles’ hologram shimmered, “It is unlikely for any fleet to defeat three peer enemy fleets in quick succession. The dataset proves as such; there is no historical precedent for such an event ever occurring.”

    “It appears Body Calculus fails to understand that the historical precedent will begin with this battle,” Commodore Horgo Shive said leisurely, “The Twenty-Eighth Mobile is not any fleet, not by design. Take it from a Muun, Senator, who does not move their credits easily. A risky investment promises high returns, and this fleet is an asset on which I have bet everything. That is the case for the entire Confederacy. This entire war is a volatile venture, and yet it is one that three of the most intelligent species of the galaxy have put their faith in; the Muun, the Siniteen, and finally, the Givin. Of which, only one has yet to put their credits where their mouth is.”

    The silence of the Givin representative stretched on, watching the officers through pitch black, soulless eyes. He would not be moved by confidence or appeal to emotion; the Givin knew but one argument, and it was backed by numbers.

    “Tell this to the Body Calculus,” the Rear Admiral finally told the Givin, “They must stop falling for the fallacy that a ‘defeat in detail’ is anything but eloquent vernacular created by military strategists to make a simple premise more sophisticated than it really is.”

    Daggibus Scoritoles then questioned, “How so?”

    I will defeat the enemy. No matter how many times I must,” the Rear Admiral stood up, spreading his arms, “Once. Twice. Thrice. Four times. Do you know why I must defeat three enemy fleets? It is because I have already destroyed the fourth.

    On the display, right on top of the 28th Mobile Fleet, bearing 000 degrees and zero klicks out, was the GAR’s siege fleet, meant to take Yag’Dhul by force, once numbering four-hundred warships strong. Once. If Anakin Skywalker’s plan was for the siege fleet to buy time for the encircling forces by engaging the 28th Mobile Fleet, then he has already failed. Not a single ship of the siege fleet remained in active combat, completely destroyed over the course of three hours under the combined manoeuvres of the 28th Mobile.

    Rear Admiral Rain Bonteri stepped forward until he was right in front of the skeletal features of the Givin Senator, “If the Body Calculus wants historical precedence, then tell them they stand on history. I have destroyed a near-peer force, one in an defensive posture no less, and I will do it again three more times.”

    Senator Scoritoles took a half-step back to create distance, “Once is chance.”

    Challenge gleamed in the Rear Admiral’s eyes, each like a kaleidoscopic crystal, “And twice is?”

    If the Rear Admiral saw something within the Givin’s sunken black eyeholes, he did not show it. Something passed between the two men, and if the Givin had the biological capacity to smile, perhaps Daggibus Scoritoles would have.

    “Twice will be intent.

    On the opposite side, a shared unease rippled through the three commanders of the Republic effort to destroy the Battle Hydra. The three fleets had approached Yag’Dhul swiftly, yet their pace was tempered with the necessity to remain synchronised in their approach, to eliminate any gaps in the encirclement from which the enemy could escape through.

    This was critical, as Yag’Dhul possessed a quaternary satellite system with three close-orbiting, oversized moons that acted as much on the planet and each other as the planet acted on them, creating erratic and powerful gravitational forces that would complicate any engagement. Such a phenomena would usually act as a hard limit for the maturation of any spacefaring civilisation, but the Givin had especially evolved with extraordinary mathematical and astronomical abilities to break out of their lunar cage.

    The original plan was for the siege fleet to pin down the Separatists until the main force arrived, but considering the sudden radio silence, the three Republic commanders could only conclude their allies had already been destroyed. That left an issue, as they now had no way of knowing the exact location of the Separatist fleet. The quaternary system was filled with asteroids ripped from the moons by extreme tidal forces, and clouds of thick atmosphere hanging between them that refracted many sensor systems.

    They had to approach this way, with their fleets in such a position to overlook any possible escape vector through the moons and asteroid fields. There was no fear about the Separatists’ attempt to escape via going above or below the system plane, as the lack of astronomical phenomena enabled all three fleets to discover and intercept them quickly. As such, should the Separatists attempt to escape, it was determined they would do so by giving them the slip by exploiting natural blindspots created by the quaternary system.

    “That is,” Jedi Commander Tallisibeth Enwandung-Esterhazy narrowed her eyes, observing the quaternary system between the gathered holograms, “If the Battle Hydra even intends to escape at all.”

    “Withdrawal is the only natural conclusion for him,” Governor-General Octavian Grant argued, not unsoundly, should their opponent be any other, “We’re closing in on the enemy from three directions, and even without the siege fleet, we still command thrice their numbers. All the conditions point towards a decisive victory.”

    “Not all conditions,” Jedi General Empatojayos Brand inserted into the conversation, “You don’t bother fighting a Dxunian raptor on its home turf; you wait for it to come to yours. We are doing the former. One moment you think you’re the biggest monster around, the next you’re ten-thousand feet up in the jaws of a raptor. The second we cross the orbit of the third moon, we best stop thinking we’re the hunters.”

    “Besides, it already isn’t a decisive victory,” Commander Tallisibeth shook her head, “The siege fleet might not be so powerful, but they still had four-hundred warships. Not to mention all of the boots we had on the ground, now at the mercy of the Givin.”

    If General Octavian Grant was resentful of being disagreed with twice, he did not show it. Born into the nobility of the neighbouring Tapani Sector, Grant was a blue-blooded aristocrat, young and contemptuous for those he felt were lesser beings compared to humans like himself and his fellow Tapani nobles. For him to work with Jedi was distasteful in of itself, but a barely-civilised Onderonian and an impoverished orphan from Vorzyd-V? Fortunately for Republic cooperation, the origins of individual Jedi are not so easily discovered by outsiders.

    The only way matters could be made worse was if Tallisibeth or Brand was a politician on top of it. Octavian Grant was one of the Governor-Generals who found himself gravely injured by the Supreme Chancellor’s consolidation of military authority, which itself acted as a catalyst for Grant’s newfound hatred for politicians like Palpatine. If he had to work with the spineless bureaucrats that populated the likes of Admiral Honor Salima’s Home Fleet, he might just mutiny… if it weren’t for the alternative being the alien-dominated Confederacy. Well aware of this fact, the GAR’s Strategic Command had by-and-large allowed General Grant to operate independently in the 20th Sector Army, dominated by the Tapani Oversector itself, to appease him.

    Thankfully, on this occasion General Octavian Grant had tempered himself for battle, and considered his allies fellow military commanders first and foremost–though he still harboured internal doubts about the efficacy of Jedi officers.

    “I will retire myself from this debate,” General Grant raised a gloved hand, “I will not pretend to know our opponent anymore than a countryman of theirs, or someone who met them in person. If the Battle Hydra truly intends to fight, however, then I can only think of one way they can.”

    “They intend to defeat us one at the time,” Tallisibeth agreed, “While we are still isolated from each other.”

    As the three allied fleets entered the quaternary system, their sightlines and communication corridors would soon be interrupted by the three moons and many other astrographical phenomena. Since the allied fleets had to coordinate with each other, they decided to base all of their bearings and distances relative to the planet of Yag’Dhul itself, so they would all be looking at the same thing. With this in mind, the farthest moon from Yag’Dhul was just portside of the 20th Armada, bearing just 050 degrees, relative to the planet. The second moon was on the port bow of Taskforce Swift Justice, bearing just west of absolute north. Finally, the closest and smallest moon of Yag’Dhul was slightly southwest, bearing 195 degrees.

    “So the question is; who will he attack first?” General Grant crossed his arms, “If we can predict this, we can manoeuvre our fleets decisively and crush the menace once and for all.”

    “He will attack the Open Circle Fleet first!” General Empatojayos Brand declared with such force his hologram quivered, “A predator will always attack the most isolated prey first. Taskforce Swift Justice and the Twentieth Armada are only twenty-two degrees distant, while the Open Circle Fleet is a whole two-hundred degrees distant from us.”

    “That is sensible,” Tallisibeth held her chin, analysing the battlespace carefully, “If the Separatists attack the Open Circle, the Battle Hydra would put as much distance between himself and the two of you as possible. However, the Open Circle is the most powerful fleet between the three of us. We are no siege fleet; is the Battle Hydra so confident he can destroy us before you two can reinforce?”

    Octavian Grant’s eyes sharpened, considering the young Jedi Commander in a new light, “What do you suggest then, Commander Esterhazy?”

    “Observe,” Tallisibeth spun the tactical holo, pointing at the large, empty space on the west side of the quaternary system, “Should the Separatists defeat us in detail, manoeuvrability is key. I think… no, the Battle Hydra will attack the weakest of us first; Taskforce Swift Justice, the only numerically smaller force between us. He will attempt to execute a surprise attack through this debris field here, and after defeating the fleet, he will break out into the west, manoeuvring around and thus able to target the Open Circle or Twentieth Armada at his discretion.”

    General Brand’s eyes widened, then squinted, eyebrows drawing together in irritation. The Onderonian Jedi had not thought of that indeed, but it made terrifying sense. His fleet was separated from their closest ally–the 20th Armada–by the second moon of Yag’Dhul. The Battle Hydra could lash out during the interim where the moon interrupts the communication corridor between the two fleets, and completely overwhelm Taskforce Swift Justice before using said moon to disappear once again.

    Anakin Skywalker’s Padawan lives up to her master’s reputation, that is what the Jedi Knight decided then.

    What Tallisibeth didn’t mention was that she could see where the Battle Hydra was. Rees Alrix’s funerary flame burned brightly, the void in the Force acting like a firebreak that made it a simple exercise to deduce out where the ‘anomaly’ was. The Battle Hydra was west of Yag’Dhul, hiding behind the first moon, bearing 292 degrees relative to the planet, and he was closest to his prime target; Taskforce Swift Justice, with a thick cloud of orbital debris and asteroids bearing 305 to 343 situated between the two forces. It was with her supernatural radar that Tallisibeth formulated her strategy.

    “I see…” General Octavian Grant nodded, perhaps not so disgruntled with dealing with Jedi now. At least they weren’t advocating for a full frontal assault like so many others do, “And how will we counter this movement in the scenario that the Battle Hydra does as you predict?”

    “Upon meeting the Separatists, Taskforce Swift Justice should withdraw,” Commander Esterhazy immediately answered, “As the enemy pursues, the Twentieth Armada and Open Circle will close the distance and strike from behind. From here, the enemy has two choices; complete their destruction of Taskforce Swift Justice, which will allow us to bleed them out–or turn around and try to break for the safety of the Yag’Dhul satellite system. If they turn around, it will be the Open Circle and Twentieth Armada’s turn to withdraw, allowing Taskforce Swift Justice to strike them from behind. With this, there will be no escape for the Battle Hydra.”

    “Clever,” Octavian Grant praised, though it didn’t sound any more positive than a factual statement, “And not to mention this strategy will work should the Battle Hydra target any single one of our fleets, not just General Brand’s. However, there is one major flaw in this strategy.”

    Commander Esterhazy swallowed the Governor-General’s words, bringing up her datapad to review her strategy again for what she had ostensibly missed.

    “It is communication, Commander,” the General, however, did not give her the luxury of figuring it out, “Your strategy is our best chance of a decisive victory, I concur, and the probability of success in very high–however, close attention to force concentration, flexibility, and promptitude in advance and withdrawal is required. To coordinate as such between three separate fleets, requires communication.”

    “Are you saying we are unable to collaborate with each other, General?” Empatojayos Brand raised an eyebrow.

    “We will be, if the enemy attacks the Twentieth Armada first,” Octavian Grant brought down his hand like a hammer, “Considering the locations of our fleets, the only reason this meeting is possible is because the Twentieth Armada is acting as a ‘bridge’ between Taskforce Swift Justice and the Open Circle Fleet. If the Battle Hydra attacks us, and jams this corridor, communication between our allied fleets will break down.”

    “…I acknowledge your point, General,” Tallisibeth began, proceeding in spite of the nervousness gripping her, that naturally came when speaking with such a high-ranking superior, “But I cannot accept that the Twentieth Armada will be the Hydra’s initial target. In fact, attacking the Twentieth Armada is the worst decision out of all three allied fleets.”

    “I agree with Tallisibeth,” General Brand supported her against the Governor-General, for the second time, “The Twentieth Armada is a peer force to the Perlemian Coalition’s Armada. If the Hydra decides to attack you, they will be putting themselves between the Open Circle and Taskforce Swift Justice, opening themselves to attack from every direction. If they were to make a move, this will not be it.”

    “It is two-to-one, General,” Commander Esterhazy summoned up her courage to look General Grant in the eye, “We will proceed with my strategy. General Brand will prepare for battle, while our two fleets will begin moving to his defence.”

    “I refuse,” Octavian Grant’s face tightened, visibly incensed to being stifled time and time again, “As your ranking officer, I command you to rendezvous with my Twentieth Armada–”

    Tallisibeth and Empatojayos Brand made eye-contact. The situation was deteriorating due to one man’s stubbornness, made even worse when said main was a Governor-General, the top leader of the Grand Army of the Republic. Governor-Generals commanded thousands of ships and billions of soldiers, and answered only to the Supreme Chancellor himself; there was understating the vast influence and power each of them had at their disposal. If Octavian Grant made a command, it was unlikely Commander Esterhazy and General Brand could refuse without dire consequences.


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    Master Skywalker would know what to do, for a moment, that was what Tallisibeth thought.

    And then Admiral Yularen, who had been content being in the background until then, stepped forward into the holographic sensor, appearing beside the young girl.

    “With all due respect, sir,” the Admiral addressed the Governor-General, “Jedi officers are under the jurisdiction of Jedi Command, not the GAR Strategic Command or Republic Navy. You may be the ranking officer, but acting with the authority of Jedi General Anakin Skywalker, the Commander has no obligation to follow your commands.”

    General Grant’s jaw clenched, “Then we find ourselves at an impasse. However, I will not risk my fleet for a strategy I know is critically flawed. I will repeat myself one more time; once the enemy fleet engages and jams the Twentieth Armada, all communication between our fleets will disappear. The only way to counter this is for both of your fleets to begin making their way over to me immediately.

    “The General has a point, Commander,” Yularen, who had already retreated out of the hologram, told Tallisibeth softly, “In a collaborative battle like this, communication is everything, and the Twentieth Armada is the linchpin holding us together. The Battle Hydra must surely realise this.”

    Tallisibeth’s chest clenched tightly, painfully. This is so much harder than Master Skywalker makes it look. How do I know what decision is correct? My own? My ally’s? What does the Force say? She closed her eyes… the Force only told her where the Battle Hydra was, nothing more. And considering where the Battle Hydra was, their closest and most natural target was as she posited; Taskforce Swift Justice.

    Noticing but uncaring of the Jedi Commander’s internal turmoil, Octavian Grant abruptly cut his own connection, essentially forcing the last word to belong to him. Despite that, Empatojayos Brand and Tallisibeth could still connect to the same holoconference, which meant the 20th Armada was still facilitating communications. Maybe that was General Grant’s way of highlighting the importance of his fleet.

    “Well, aren’t we off to a great start,” General Brand mumbled, looking at Tallisibeth apologetically, “Sorry about that, Padawan, but Octavian Grant is one of the more… prideful Governor-Generals. What will we do now?”

    Tallisibeth laughed nervously, “I was going to ask you, Master. I’m only a Padawan…”

    “You’re Anakin Skywalker’s Padawan,” Brand corrected, “And you’re commanding the Open Circle Fleet. I think you underestimate just how far your reach goes.”

    Tallisibeth wanted to sit. Her legs felt tired. But there was nowhere to. Does Master Skywalker have to deal with this everyday? I can’t imagine. This is exhausting.

    “…There’s a moon coming up between you and General Grant,” she pointed again, “If the Battle Hydra decides to attack one of you, it will be when the moon blocks your communication. Send a surveillance craft to sit on the moon, so it can run to either you or him should either of you get attacked.”

    “Sensible,” the Jedi Knight agreed, “I will do as you say.”

    The connection closed.

    “Was that the correct decision, Commander?” if Admiral Yularen approved or disapproved, he made no outward sign of it. The question seemed more like a test, in Tallisibeth’s eyes.

    “I don’t know,” she slumped, purposefully failing the test, “I hope.”

    Governor-General Octavian Grant, Commanding Officer of the 20th Sector Army regarded the urgent report with the cool disinterest of an immovable aristocrat; “Separatist warships closing rapidly!”

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