Difference between revisions of "Dechan Fraser"

(removed - uhm, Fraser was never the Bounty Hunter. Michi was)
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Fraser quickly became a rising star with the Dragoons. As a [[Sergeant]] on [[Quentin]] in June [[3023]], he assisted [[Minobu Tetsuhara]], the [[Draconis Combine]] liason officer, in rescuing [[Colonel]] [[Jaime Wolf]] when Wolf’s ''[[Archer]]'' over-heated in combat.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 55-61</ref> By November [[3024]], he had made [[Lieutenant]] and was give a Lance command.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 90</ref> He saw particularly heavy fighting on [[Barlow's End]] in [[3026]], when circumstances placed him in command of more than a company’s worth of Dragoons during combat against the [[Eridani Light Horse]].<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 158-162</ref> By April [[3027]], he was promoted to [[Captain]], with a Company command in Alpha Regiment’s Baker Battalion, and fought against the [[7th Crucis Lancers]] on [[Misery]] and [[Udibi]].
 
Fraser quickly became a rising star with the Dragoons. As a [[Sergeant]] on [[Quentin]] in June [[3023]], he assisted [[Minobu Tetsuhara]], the [[Draconis Combine]] liason officer, in rescuing [[Colonel]] [[Jaime Wolf]] when Wolf’s ''[[Archer]]'' over-heated in combat.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 55-61</ref> By November [[3024]], he had made [[Lieutenant]] and was give a Lance command.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 90</ref> He saw particularly heavy fighting on [[Barlow's End]] in [[3026]], when circumstances placed him in command of more than a company’s worth of Dragoons during combat against the [[Eridani Light Horse]].<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 158-162</ref> By April [[3027]], he was promoted to [[Captain]], with a Company command in Alpha Regiment’s Baker Battalion, and fought against the [[7th Crucis Lancers]] on [[Misery]] and [[Udibi]].
  
The Dragoons relations with their employers took a downward turn once Warlord [[Grieg Samsanov]] was determined to put them under his personal control, and when his efforts inevitably failed, he became determined to destroy them. He was aided in this by [[Jerry Akuma]], an old rival of Tetsuhara’s. Tetsuhara was re-assigned to build a Kurita unit based on the Dragoons’ tactical doctrine, the [[Ryuken]]. By the close of [[3027]], matters quickly came to a head. Outright fighting broke out on [[An Ting]] between the Dragoons and a regiment of the Ryuken under Akuma’s command, after attacks on the Dragoons civilian dependents. It fell to Fraser's company to disrupt the Ryuken order of battle in the initial stages of the conflict and evacuate the Dragoon staff from their exposed HQ in the city. Later, Fraser personally killed Ryuken field commander Chou during an ambush<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 275</ref> and yet later killed Jerry Akuma himself.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 281</ref>
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The Dragoons relations with their employers took a downward turn once Warlord [[Grieg Samsonov]] was determined to put them under his personal control, and when his efforts inevitably failed, he became determined to destroy them. He was aided in this by [[Jerry Akuma]], an old rival of Tetsuhara’s. Tetsuhara was re-assigned to build a Kurita unit based on the Dragoons’ tactical doctrine, the [[Ryuken]]. By the close of [[3027]], matters quickly came to a head. Outright fighting broke out on [[An Ting]] between the Dragoons and a regiment of the Ryuken under Akuma’s command, after attacks on the Dragoons civilian dependents. It fell to Fraser's company to disrupt the Ryuken order of battle in the initial stages of the conflict and evacuate the Dragoon staff from their exposed HQ in the city. Later, Fraser personally killed Ryuken field commander Chou during an ambush<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 275</ref> and yet later killed Jerry Akuma himself.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' p. 281</ref>
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== The Battle of Misery and the Bounty Hunter ==
 
== The Battle of Misery and the Bounty Hunter ==
 
To cover the Dragoons’ withdrawal from the Combine, Wolf would send a challenge to the Combine to meet in battle on the world of [[Misery]]. Opposing them would be the four remaining regiments of Ryuken, the [[17th Galedon Regulars]], the [[21st Galedon Regulars]] and the [[8th Sword of Light]]. Minobu Tetsuhara was put in overall command of the Kurita units. On April 23, 3028, during a reconnaissance mission before the main battle, Fraser and his lance successfully ambushed a Ryuken lance, and discovered they had captured Dragoon traitor [[Fadre Singh]]. Singh had betrayed the Dragoons to Samsanov in return for a rank of ''[[Tai-Sa]]'' in the Ryuken. Fraser personally dragged Singh before Colonel Wolf, and after Singh revealed he had informed Samsanov of the Dragoons’ [[Hegira]] plan, he was immediately executed by [[Natasha Kerensky]].<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 299-303</ref> Like every other Dragoon unit, Fraser’s company took heavy losses during the battle. However, it was ultimately Fraser and his remaining warriors that defeated Tetsuhara himself.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 318-320</ref>
 
To cover the Dragoons’ withdrawal from the Combine, Wolf would send a challenge to the Combine to meet in battle on the world of [[Misery]]. Opposing them would be the four remaining regiments of Ryuken, the [[17th Galedon Regulars]], the [[21st Galedon Regulars]] and the [[8th Sword of Light]]. Minobu Tetsuhara was put in overall command of the Kurita units. On April 23, 3028, during a reconnaissance mission before the main battle, Fraser and his lance successfully ambushed a Ryuken lance, and discovered they had captured Dragoon traitor [[Fadre Singh]]. Singh had betrayed the Dragoons to Samsanov in return for a rank of ''[[Tai-Sa]]'' in the Ryuken. Fraser personally dragged Singh before Colonel Wolf, and after Singh revealed he had informed Samsanov of the Dragoons’ [[Hegira]] plan, he was immediately executed by [[Natasha Kerensky]].<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 299-303</ref> Like every other Dragoon unit, Fraser’s company took heavy losses during the battle. However, it was ultimately Fraser and his remaining warriors that defeated Tetsuhara himself.<ref>''Wolves on the Border'' pp. 318-320</ref>

Revision as of 22:18, 2 June 2010

Dechan Fraser (30?? – 30??) was an officer with Wolf's Dragoons, and later became the trainer and commander of the rebuilt Ryuken regiments with the Draconis Combine.

Career with Wolf’s Dragoons

Little is known about Dechan Fraser’s life before joining Wolf’s Dragoons. He was recruited in Lyran Commonwealth space[1], one of the relatively few Inner Sphere warriors to have been adopted into the Dragoons, and was at a relatively young age at the time. After a customary training period, Fraser was made a full Dragoon approximately around early 3023.[2] He was assigned to Alpha Regiment, widely considered the elite of the elite.

Fraser quickly became a rising star with the Dragoons. As a Sergeant on Quentin in June 3023, he assisted Minobu Tetsuhara, the Draconis Combine liason officer, in rescuing Colonel Jaime Wolf when Wolf’s Archer over-heated in combat.[3] By November 3024, he had made Lieutenant and was give a Lance command.[4] He saw particularly heavy fighting on Barlow's End in 3026, when circumstances placed him in command of more than a company’s worth of Dragoons during combat against the Eridani Light Horse.[5] By April 3027, he was promoted to Captain, with a Company command in Alpha Regiment’s Baker Battalion, and fought against the 7th Crucis Lancers on Misery and Udibi.

The Dragoons relations with their employers took a downward turn once Warlord Grieg Samsonov was determined to put them under his personal control, and when his efforts inevitably failed, he became determined to destroy them. He was aided in this by Jerry Akuma, an old rival of Tetsuhara’s. Tetsuhara was re-assigned to build a Kurita unit based on the Dragoons’ tactical doctrine, the Ryuken. By the close of 3027, matters quickly came to a head. Outright fighting broke out on An Ting between the Dragoons and a regiment of the Ryuken under Akuma’s command, after attacks on the Dragoons civilian dependents. It fell to Fraser's company to disrupt the Ryuken order of battle in the initial stages of the conflict and evacuate the Dragoon staff from their exposed HQ in the city. Later, Fraser personally killed Ryuken field commander Chou during an ambush[6] and yet later killed Jerry Akuma himself.[7]

The Battle of Misery and the Bounty Hunter

To cover the Dragoons’ withdrawal from the Combine, Wolf would send a challenge to the Combine to meet in battle on the world of Misery. Opposing them would be the four remaining regiments of Ryuken, the 17th Galedon Regulars, the 21st Galedon Regulars and the 8th Sword of Light. Minobu Tetsuhara was put in overall command of the Kurita units. On April 23, 3028, during a reconnaissance mission before the main battle, Fraser and his lance successfully ambushed a Ryuken lance, and discovered they had captured Dragoon traitor Fadre Singh. Singh had betrayed the Dragoons to Samsanov in return for a rank of Tai-Sa in the Ryuken. Fraser personally dragged Singh before Colonel Wolf, and after Singh revealed he had informed Samsanov of the Dragoons’ Hegira plan, he was immediately executed by Natasha Kerensky.[8] Like every other Dragoon unit, Fraser’s company took heavy losses during the battle. However, it was ultimately Fraser and his remaining warriors that defeated Tetsuhara himself.[9]

Along the way, he became enamored of a fellow Dragoon officer, Jenette Rand, although it is unclear when exactly they began a relationship. At the conclusion of the battle, Fraser and Rand were ordered on a special mission to accompany Michi Noketsuna, the former aide and pupil of Tetsuhara, on his quest for revenge against those who had wronged the Dragoons during their service to the Combine. As a result of this mission, Dechan missed the Dragoons’ further battles with House Kurita during the Fourth Succession War.

The exact details of the trio’s adventures are sketchy at best. They spent time in the Periphery, and at some point Noketsuna assumed the identity of the infamous Bounty Hunter, apparently legitimately inheriting the Marauder, the power suit and the legacy. Fraser and Rand accompanied him in this new identity as part of the Bounty Hunter’s lance, along with a man named Vic Travers, who was known to have extensive yakuza contacts. Under uncertain circumstances, the trio re-entered the Combine and Fraser assisted Noketsuna in killing Samsanov, after Samsanov refused to commit seppuku. The exact timing of these events is unknown.

The revenge turned out to be unfulfilling. In January of 3030, Fraser accompanied Noketsuna as he presented Samsanov’s head to Tetsuhara’s widow, Tomiko, who had joined a Buddhist nunnery on Awano. Tomiko refused the offer, however, and told them to give it to Tetsuhara’s father, Minoru Tetsuhara.[10] However, the senior Tetsuhara also refused to accept the head, feeling that House Kurita had had the right to act as they did, and that Minobu Tetsuhara had failed his duties.[11]

In October of 3030, Fraser again accompanied Noketsuna in an ambush on Benjamin of Internal Security Force agent Panati, who had aided Jerry Akuma in his efforts. To the surprise of Fraser and Noketsuna, Panati was accompanied by Theodore Kurita and Ninyu Kerai, with all three being incapacitated in the ambush. When Theodore Kurita protested the execution of Panati, Noketsuna revealed his identity and his vendetta. Theodore agreed to allow him to kill Panati, but persuaded him to forestall his vendetta any further, as the Combine was in a dangerous situation facing the newly formed Federated Commonwealth, and could not survive the loss of Coordinator Takashi at that time, in Theodore’s opinion. Noketsuna agreed to this, and agreed to serve Theodore in his attempt to save the Dragon. He turned the Bounty Hunter identity over to Vic Travers. Out of loyalty to their companion, Fraser and Rand accompanied him.

Rebuilding the Ryuken

Fraser and Rand soon proved their value to Theodore Kurita by training the new Ryuken and Genyosha.[12] The long-term goal was to allow Theodore’s new military doctrine to take hold throughout the Draconis Combine Mustered Soldiery. During this time, they were even considered part of his shitenno.

In December of 3038, Fraser and Rand met Warlord Kester Chi of the Galedon Military District. Chi was pleased that Fraser and Rand were being assigned to his District for the coming war, and Fraser quickly realized that Chi was nothing like his predecessor, Grieg Samsanov.[13]

War of 3039

Fraser personally commanded the Ryuken-roku during the War of 3039. In July, they counter-attacked the AFFS invaders on An Ting against the elite 1st Davion Guards. Fraser and his troops accredited themselves well, fighting with fierce determination and using tactics that the enemy commander, Field Marshall Ardan Sortek, was unprepared for. When Warlord Chi arrived with reinforcements, Sortek was eventually forced to retreat his unit. As An Ting was strategically critical, the Davion thrust in the Galedon district soon faltered.[14]

Fraser continued to command the Ryuken after the war, eventually marrying Jenette Rand. For a time, they continued to send reports to Wolfnet, but they received no response to their communications. [15]

Clan Invasion

By the time of the Clan Invasion, Fraser had become convinced that he and Rand had been forgotten by the Dragoons (whom they still technically served as sleeper agents), and in fact began to deeply resent Jaime Wolf in particular. He became particularly resentful when Wolf chose another to deliver the invitation to Theodore Kurita to the summit on Outreach, where the Dragoons would reveal their origins to the leaders of the Inner Sphere.

During the second stage of the Invasion, Fraser and the Ryuken raided the occupied territory from Wolcott.[16] In the aftermath of the Battle of Tukayyid, Fraser, Rand and the Ryuken were eventually transferred to Luthien. In 3053, he was summoned to a private meeting with Takashi Kurita, Theodore’s father and Coordinator of the Draconis Combine. He questioned Fraser’s loyalties, both to the Dragoons and to Noketsuna, who had not been seen since shortly after the War of ’39.

Dragoon Civil War

Upon Takashi Kurita’s death, Jaime Wolf arrived at Fraser’s home on Luthien to invite Fraser and Rand back to the Dragoons. Fraser confronted Wolf regarding his abandonment, dismissing Wolf’s claims that he had resisted contacting Fraser and Rand to avoid endangering them. Nevertheless, Rand – who had been born to the Dragoons – convinced her husband to go with her to Outreach with Wolf.

Upon their arrival on Outreach, the party was informed that Jaime Wolf’s son, Mackenzie Wolf, had been killed. During the Remembrance memorial, Fraser was disturbed that another warrior was given credit for defeating Minobu Tetsuhara on Misery.[17] Later, when Wolf was removed from command by the machinations of Alpin Wolf and Elson Novacat, Michi Noketsuna warned Fraser that the new Dragoon leadership was planning to assassinate the senior Wolf. Despite his continued sense of betrayal, Fraser warned Dragoon officers still loyal to Jaime Wolf, and even took part in evacuating him, though he turned down Wolf’s offer to join them in the Outback. This set the stage for the Dragoon Civil War. After an argument with her husband, Jenette Rand went off to join Wolf.

Elson Novacat soon approached Fraser with an offer to lead a newly recruited mercenary battalion against Wolf’s rebel forces. Those who fought well would be fully inducted into the Dragoons, and Elson believed Fraser was just the man to train and assess such a unit. He accepted the offer, forming Kappa Battalion using the unit Carter’s Chavaliers as a foundation.[18] In one of the pinnacle battles of the conflict, Fraser and Kappa Battalion turned on Elson’s loyalists, immediately after Maeve Wolf killed Alpin in single combat, saving Maeve’s life and sending Gamma Regiment into a retreat. This helped to end the war and return of Jaime Wolf to command. Fraser was reunited with Jenette Rand, though he remained cool to the senior Wolf.

It is hinted that Fraser continued to command an "Independent" Dragoon battalion after the civil war and reorganization of the Dragoons, but this remains unconfirmed.[19]

Battlemechs

During his early career with the Dragoons, Fraser piloted a Shadow Hawk to great success, performing many heroic acts.[20]
While commanding the Ryuken during the War of '39, he used a Hatamoto-Chi of the -Ku variant.[21]
While leading Kappa Battalion during the Dragoon Civil War, he fought from the cockpit of a Black Knight.[22]

Notes

  • There is some discrepancy in whether Fraser commanded the entire Ryuken brigade in the years immediately following the Clan Invasion. The novel Wolf Pack indicates that he did, whereas Objective Raids indicates he was only commander of the Ryuken-ni regiment. Both sources indicate he was ranked a Tai-sa at the time, which was the standard rank for a regimental commander in the DCMS. It is further notable that he was not listed as a regimental commander as of 3050.[23]
  • Much of the Wolves on the Border novel, which chronicles the Dragoons' departure from the Draconis Combine among other events, is told from Fraser's perspective. He was an ideal choice for narrator given his "adoptee" status with the Dragoons left him ignorant of their secrets and origins at the time.

References

  1. Wolves on the Border p. 248 – Fraser and Scott were recruited in Steiner space
  2. Wolves on the Border p. 255 – Fraser claims to have been a Dragoon for five years
  3. Wolves on the Border pp. 55-61
  4. Wolves on the Border p. 90
  5. Wolves on the Border pp. 158-162
  6. Wolves on the Border p. 275
  7. Wolves on the Border p. 281
  8. Wolves on the Border pp. 299-303
  9. Wolves on the Border pp. 318-320
  10. Heir to the Dragon pp. 214-216
  11. Wolf Pack
  12. Heir to the Dragon pp. 247-251
  13. Heir to the Dragon p. 306
  14. Historical: War of 3039 pp. 102-104
  15. Wolf Pack p. 57
  16. Wolf Pack p. 64
  17. Wolf Pack p. 257
  18. Wolf Pack pp. 326-330
  19. Mercenary's Handbook 3055 p. 39
  20. Wolves on the Border
  21. Heir to the Dragon p. 344
  22. Wolf Pack p. 387
  23. 20 Year Update pp. 40-43

Bibliography