From Mercenary
Campaigns of the 32nd Century, Galatea Free Press
After their ambush and defeat of a pirate
attack on the Batman docks, Magyari’s Irregulars chose to capitalise on their
momentum and strike a blow against the Ashburton pirates. While the main goal
was it simply eliminate one pirate band, the hope was that they would send a
message to their opponents that they were not safe, they were not beyond the mercenaries
reach and that there was nowhere that they could hide. By taking out one band
in their supposedly secret hideout, the Irregulars were hoping to demoralise
others.
Of course, the problem was going to be
finding one of those secure hideouts. Interrogation of the captives from the
Batman attack had revealed that the pirates had a base on Phillip Island, but
the exact location was unclear. The pirates were known to be well-informed, to
the point that it was known that they had people watching the Irregulars’
dropships. As such, they would likely be tipped off about any potential move
against them, and could clear out before an attack was mounted.
Instead, they took a more risky but
potentially lucrative approach, code-named Operation LONELY ISLAND. Blending in
to the local population, members of the Irregulars planted information
suggesting a particularly valuable cargo would be leaving the Batman ports,
travelling by a route that would take it near Phillip Island. The cargo was, in
fact, a lance of the Irregulars’ BattleMechs with VTOL and Battle Armour
support that would be armed and ready to go as soon as an opportunity presented
itself. Their reasoning was that after their losses at the Batman docks, the particular
pirate band would be eager for some measure of revenge.
To aid in the deception, Major Magyari
moved the bulk of the unit to St. Kilda for exercises with the ADF. In order to
hide the shortfall in numbers, she added an extra lance to her unit, made up of
‘Mechs salvaged from Shasta and repainted in their colours. The pirates’
informants passed on their departure, effectively greenlighting a move against
this cargo.
And so the MV Sunshine, a bulk cargo freighter, set out from Batman along its
route. As expected, it was subsequently shadowed by a Mauna Kea class gunboat, which followed the vessel until it reached
Phillip Island. Drawing alongside, the gunboat effectively held the ship at
gunpoint while a Karnov VTOL dropped an infantry team off to size command of
the ship. The pirates steered the Sunshine towards Phillip island, parking it at their makeshift dock to unload its
cargo.
What they instead got was a quartet of
BattleMechs storming out of the vessel’s cargo bay doors and laying into their
defences. The Pirates rallied their own forces, which consisted of the Mauna Kea, several light tanks
hovercraft and VTOLs, conventional infantry, a Quasit MilitaMech and the same modified Yeoman that they had previously fielded. While they did hold the
advantage of numbers, the mercenaries simply possessed greater firepower and
capabilities. Furthermore, their initial ambush allowed them to claim the high
ground overlooking the pirate docks, giving them a tactical advantage.
In shot order, the pirate forces were
devastated. Of the units they had bought to the field, only a handful of
infantry had managed to surrender. The rest had been destroyed or disabled trying
to flee to a fallback base. Among them was the Yeoman, which apparently sank after being shot in the back by a
Lamprey. With the beachead secured, the Irregulars force called for the rest of
the unit so that they could secure the rest of Phillip Island.
The captive pirates and their equipment did
yield a wealth of information. They revealed that they did have an off-world
supplier, who had been providing them with weapons, equipment and other
supplies via dropship. (Ashburton’s six moons created a wealth of pirate jump
points, making it rather hard to detect an incoming ship) The Yeoman wasn’t their own design either,
having come form their off-world suppliers. Later research conformed that it
was a Jihad-era prototype, last known to be in possession of the RSMC. This
seemed to conform the identity of their supplier, who would have a vested
interest in keeping Ashburton destabilised.
Overall, the Irregulars had scored a major
victory in their campaign. However, its greatest challenges were yet to come.
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