The newly appointed prefect, Cato Portius had been appointed as a local friend of Ribaldequin's ancestors and a nobleman of some standing in the community that had opposed the appointment of a new King, as such he was keen to set to work on the new constuction. He had been tasked with the supervision of the new construction project, as such he had moved swiftly to find a fit and free work source to do the donkeywork for the project., these would come in the form of the "savages" and "monks" of Ravens Gate.
Thus with little ceremony the mildly obese man had arrived at Ravens Gate less than 24 hours after Ribaldequin's pronouncement. He was aboard the Sentinel-class landing craft "Frost Falcon" which touched down on a patch of ground outside of the fortress by a hundred meters or so.
Swiftly disembarked were a pair of lines of 10 Stormtroopers which formed up on either side of the ramp as the officer in his austentatious new uniform (over an armourweave vest) disembarked followed by a few cronies who had been appointed to in addition to his hulking bodyguard "Krog", dressed soley in a simple tunic and wheilding a Concussion Rifle, he was an imposing sight which Cato thought would help to intimidate the locals.
They advanced up towards the gate of the castle, being followed by the stormtroopers..
Added (05 Mar 2011, 3:44 PM)
---------------------------------------------
The warriors of Ravens Gate marched out unarmed, they spent the next few days walking under Stormtrooper escort to the closest mag-lev station. From there they were loaded on a comfortable train and transported to the new sorting facility for the Labour Corps. It was a seamless operation and the former warriors were well adapted to physical labour, and blended in seamlessly with the labour corps in the construction of the foundations for the arcology.
Many of the more intelligent warriors laid aside their ways, learning to read and in due time take the progression exams, allowing them to shed their feudal past and become part of the progressive society Deralia was becoming. This was especially popular amongst the young who had resented the divinely sanctioned poverty that the monks had kept them in and now sought for a brighter and better life.