Star Wars - Wayfaring Strangers by The-world-is, literature
Literature
Star Wars - Wayfaring Strangers
Chapter 1: Section B1C Thirteen years ago, with the Clone Wars in its final stages, Chancellor Sheev Palpatine declared a New Galactic Order based upon the principles of safety, security, justice, and peace. To this day, he has failed to uphold his end of the bargain. With criminal activity on the rise and smuggling becoming a particularly lucrative choice of employment—now Emperor—Palpatine relies upon his Grand Imperial Army as his instrument of choice against those that oppose his rule. The Imperial Army Troopers are his primary bulwark of choice against these anarchists, his Stormtroopers the scalpel. As Imperial policy dictates, no human is useless in his army. Specialist Rice Dalle likes to snort at that statement, knowing full well how Emperor Palpatine’s reliance on fear, intimidation, and force can only go so far. He was sitting in the ruins of what was the main lobby of an apartment complex, enjoying the rain that poured into the rubble-filled streets. Rice reached into his
Star Wars - Wayfaring Strangers by The-world-is, literature
Literature
Star Wars - Wayfaring Strangers
Chapter 1: Section B1C Thirteen years ago, with the Clone Wars in its final stages, Chancellor Sheev Palpatine declared a New Galactic Order based upon the principles of safety, security, justice, and peace. To this day, he has failed to uphold his end of the bargain. With criminal activity on the rise and smuggling becoming a particularly lucrative choice of employment—now Emperor—Palpatine relies upon his Grand Imperial Army as his instrument of choice against those that oppose his rule. The Imperial Army Troopers are his primary bulwark of choice against these anarchists, his Stormtroopers the scalpel. As Imperial policy dictates, no human is useless in his army. Specialist Rice Dalle likes to snort at that statement, knowing full well how Emperor Palpatine’s reliance on fear, intimidation, and force can only go so far. He was sitting in the ruins of what was the main lobby of an apartment complex, enjoying the rain that poured into the rubble-filled streets. Rice reached into his