Seswenna Aeternum
Seswenna Ascendant
Tarkin Memorial Conference Center, Eriadu City, Eriadu
Eriadu, and by extension the Seswenna Sector, has always been quite contested. Sitting at an intersection between several hyperspace lanes, it undoubtably holds an important financial position in the galaxy. As such, it should come as no surprise that many powers have vied for control of the Sector and its capital, turning it into a pawn in the galactic game for centuries.Tarkin Memorial Conference Center, Eriadu City, Eriadu
No longer.
With the Confederacy no longer exerting control over Eriadu, ultimate leadership of the planet fell to its former Viceroy, one Vandar Tarkin. For many years, Vandar has been quite outspoken about Eriadu's plight as a plaything of galactic overlords who couldn't care less about the world or its inhabitants, and while in office made efforts to uplift the world into a new age of prosperity. As such, in the wake of the Confederacy's collapse the Eriadu Authority was formed; like its predecessors the Authority was modeled in the image of a miniature Galactic Empire, and Vandar poised to make it a power in its own right.
A great many Imperial factions had dotted the southern parts of the galaxy for decades, leaving even more remnant factions when they fractured. And it was to these remnants that an invitation to an Imperial summit was sent, to meet with High Moff Vandar Tarkin in the mutual interest of strengthening each other. Many others, the Authority included, were not remnants or splinter states but modeled after the Empire, and such states' leaders were also invited. This was to be a meeting of Imperial minds, a summit to secure a brighter future for all.
Vandar adjusted the collar of his uniform and stepped out of the airspeeder that had brought him from the Eriadu Imperial Palace to the Tarkin Memorial Conference Center. As he waited for the invited Imperials to arrive, he pondered to himself who would deign to attend the summit, and whether those who did had honest intentions or would simply seek to increase their own power.
That was the thing about Empires. They had the tendency to attract both kinds of people. On the one hand, you had your Pellaeons, your Fels, people who join to do the right thing for the galaxy and its people, but on the other you had your Ysannes, your Miltin Takels, your Hissas, selfish schemers who use the Empire as a vessel to indulge their excesses, feed their vanity, and satiate their bloodlust.
While Vandar respected Wilhuff, he was all too knowledgeable of the reputation his ancestor had, of his actions and their outcomes. In pushing the Tarkin Doctrine, feeding into Palpatine's insidious ideals, Wilhuff was ultimately responsible for signing the Empire's death warrant. His upbringing taught Wilhuff the power of fear as a means of order, but Jova failed to teach him an important lesson about fear. Wilhuff believed that one must rule through fear to command obedience, but Vandar knew that fear was only part of a greater equation.
Years of studying history and politics at Phelar University granted him an introspection: fear can command loyalty, but love and respect can as well, and fear should only be chosen when love and respect cannot be obtained. Loyalty through respect is a truer, more enduring loyalty, and if one commands it through fear they must be cautious lest fear turn to hatred. Wilhuff had failed to learn this lesson, and it cost him not only his own life, but the lives of millions of Imperials and ultimately the life of the Empire itself.
Vandar was keen to not replicate that failure.
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