(OOC note: this thread is concurrent with The Cooperative: Reapers of What They Have Sown)
The weather was so very nice this time of year. A cool breeze blew in from the ocean, just strong enough to fill the air with sounds of rustling leaves. Everything was in bloom; at times, it seemed, there were more colors than he could track at once, his mind cycling through sets of vibrant hues as his eyes swept across the landscape.
This was Varn, the world he loved.
“There you are!” The unexpected exclamation set a treeful of nearby birds to flight, their brilliant feathers and serene song only adding to the beauty of this moment.
A peculiar sloshing sound accompanied the approaching footsteps, and Josiah Deccol smiled. “Sit a moment, won't you?” he asked, not turning from the scene before him.
“Ahh, now that's where I'd like to be!” the newcomer exclaimed, his outstretched arm catching Josiah's attention as it pointed toward the ocean below and away. The hand withdrew, and its owner added, “Though I would not be out of sorts at all to sit here a while longer, with an old friend.”
“Three years,” Josiah muttered.
“What's that?”
He turned to his amphibian friend. “It's been three years, Vekkis.”
“Is that all? Seems so much longer, somehow.”
“Impending doom will do that to your memories,” Josiah said sullenly, turning back to the scene in front of him.
“Oh, it's not as bad as all of that.”
“Let's just enjoy the scenery in peace a little longer, shall we?” Josiah said, but in only a few seconds he found himself unable to do so. “What if the Reavers come? What if they take it all away? What if we lose this wonderous world?”
“Impossible,” Vekkis said quickly.
“Saying it doesn't make it true.”
“What if I say it twice?” he asked lightly.
“We have to save it, Vekkis. We have to save it all. And not just from the Reavers; from the Cree'Ar, from the Empire . . . from our own petty schemes.”
“We will,” he said, self-assured.
“How?” Josiah asked, looking his friend in the eye.
The fish-man smiled gruesomely. “We are the very heart of the Cooperative. It's time we start acting like it.
“Come, now. We have a short trip and a very long talk ahead of us.”
Quelii, in truth, was a world not altogether unlike Varn. Total landmass was slightly larger, it hoseted no indigenous populations, but it, like Varn had been a forgettable backwater until some galactic government took notice of it. The descendents of the original human colonists had taken to simple farming and textile production long ago, lving in relative peace and inconsequence for thousands of years.
And then the Galactic Empire was born. Quelii became sector capital of the newly formed Quelii Sector, and overnight all of the facilities and assets required to lord over dozens of worlds sprung into being on Quelii's surface.
When the Tarkin Doctirne was adopted and Imperial Oversectors flashed into being, by simple astrography the world became capital of the Quelii Oversector. And under the command of then-Grand Moff Zsinj, Quelii became the most militarily impregnable world in his domain, fully equipped to pursue the Imperial campaign against the Drackmarians through any possible scenario.
Even with the death of Palpatine, Quelii clung to its recently acquired importance, serving as the public face of Zsinj's military might even as he worked more covert and nefarious schemes.
With Zsinj's death Quelii's fortifications allowed it to resist conquest, one independent little speck in the midst of a Galactic Civil War.
But that was years ago, and without an Oversector's worth of resources to keep it maintained and supplied, the mighty defenses of Quelii have begun to fall into disrepair. The world is far from ddefenseless, however, it's orbital stations and dual-layer planetary defense shield more than sufficient to deter the Cavrilhu Pirates from ever venturing into Quelii Space. Consequently, the world and its Imperial-era rulers declined invitation into the original Quelii Sector Alliance. With the looming threat of the Reaver horde, however, Quelii has reconsidered its stance in local politics, dispatching a representative to the newly-convened Alliance, though it sems to have done so only for the opportunity to berate the Cooperative for its gross mishandling of the “Reaver Situation”.
If Quelii itself could be convinced to support the Cooperative wholeheartedly, then the usefulness of the Quelii Sector Alliance would soon be at an end. A new era would be at hand for the Quelii Sector.
In the spartan passenger compartment of a lone Theta-class shuttle, two figures sat and discussed the coming meeting. “No more begging,” Vekkis said sternly. “However this ends, no more grovelling for backwater know-nothings to cough up another kilo of support material.”
“'Backwater know-nothings'? Have you forgotten who we are, Vekkis?”
Vekkis gave an animalistic grin. “I am a sophisticated galactic citizen, sir; a chief official of the governing body of Varn, capital of a galactic power. I have ascended from the dregs into which I was born.”
“Stop that, you almost sound like you believe it.”
“But that's exactly what I mean. I've been there, the meaningless lord of a meaningless world, and I've seen to what heights cooperation and brotherhood can lift us. These people want so desperately to hold on to the speck of power that they have, that they're willing to wager the fate of worlds to keep it for themselves.”
“It's their choice,” Josiah said offhand.
“No,” Vekkis insisted, “it's their people's choice.”
As delicately as he could, Josiah said, “This world claims its heritage from the Galactic Empire and from Warlord Zsinj. You may find that its ruling elite doesn't agree with that assessment.”
“Then we should change their ruling elite to one that does,” Vekkis countered, his tone almost cruel.
“It's not our place to force our ideals upon others, Vekkis, no matter how assured we are of our rightness.”
“I will not stand by and allow the oppressed to go unfreed.”
His features pensive, Josiah finally nodded, saying, “Then if it comes to that, shout your belief with all the strength you have, and let the will of the Cooperative be its judge.”
The comm chimed and the copilot informed the pair that they were nearing hyperspace reversion.
The meeting had already been scheduled through official channels of the Quelii Sector Alliance, but the purpose of this tiny delegation had been left vague.
“How well do you think they'll take it?” Josiah asked as he checked his suit, making sure all of the folds fell as they should.
“Well, we did win over Halmad. That's got to count for something.”
“That's been a while, my good friend.”
“Yeah, but they didn't leave.”
“Not yet,” Josiah countered, his tone darkening. While it had not issued a formal secession, Halmad's closest trading partner and fellow member of the Cooperative, the Vahaba Colonies, had recently withdrawn all governmental representation and recalled all of its personal defense forces from Cooperative duty. It was being considered by most to be the Cooperative's first great loss, and in truth was a primary motivation for this endeavor.
The small holoprojector at the front of the room, installed for diplomatic exchanges, flashed to life, but the image it displayed was not the face of some local official. It was a simplistic two-dimensional representation of Quelii and the surrounding space, into which appeared a set of icons over the next several seconds. Each had a unique alphanumeric tag, and though neither man had the knowledge to determine specific identities from them, the trailing letters “UCPD” told them all they needed to know: United Cooperative of Peoples, Diplomatic.
The comm chimed again, and Vekkis nodded in his people's peculiar way, then realizing he couldn't be seen, said, “Put him through.” The upper portion of a human male in dress reminiscent of an Imperial Moff glowed blue-white where the map had been. “We have on sensors five transport vessels identifying themselves as diplomatic shuttles for the United Cooperative of Peoples. Explain yourselves.”
Josiah smiled disarmingly. “This is the truest vision of Cooperative come to life.”
The weather was so very nice this time of year. A cool breeze blew in from the ocean, just strong enough to fill the air with sounds of rustling leaves. Everything was in bloom; at times, it seemed, there were more colors than he could track at once, his mind cycling through sets of vibrant hues as his eyes swept across the landscape.
This was Varn, the world he loved.
“There you are!” The unexpected exclamation set a treeful of nearby birds to flight, their brilliant feathers and serene song only adding to the beauty of this moment.
A peculiar sloshing sound accompanied the approaching footsteps, and Josiah Deccol smiled. “Sit a moment, won't you?” he asked, not turning from the scene before him.
“Ahh, now that's where I'd like to be!” the newcomer exclaimed, his outstretched arm catching Josiah's attention as it pointed toward the ocean below and away. The hand withdrew, and its owner added, “Though I would not be out of sorts at all to sit here a while longer, with an old friend.”
“Three years,” Josiah muttered.
“What's that?”
He turned to his amphibian friend. “It's been three years, Vekkis.”
“Is that all? Seems so much longer, somehow.”
“Impending doom will do that to your memories,” Josiah said sullenly, turning back to the scene in front of him.
“Oh, it's not as bad as all of that.”
“Let's just enjoy the scenery in peace a little longer, shall we?” Josiah said, but in only a few seconds he found himself unable to do so. “What if the Reavers come? What if they take it all away? What if we lose this wonderous world?”
“Impossible,” Vekkis said quickly.
“Saying it doesn't make it true.”
“What if I say it twice?” he asked lightly.
“We have to save it, Vekkis. We have to save it all. And not just from the Reavers; from the Cree'Ar, from the Empire . . . from our own petty schemes.”
“We will,” he said, self-assured.
“How?” Josiah asked, looking his friend in the eye.
The fish-man smiled gruesomely. “We are the very heart of the Cooperative. It's time we start acting like it.
“Come, now. We have a short trip and a very long talk ahead of us.”
* * *
Quelii, in truth, was a world not altogether unlike Varn. Total landmass was slightly larger, it hoseted no indigenous populations, but it, like Varn had been a forgettable backwater until some galactic government took notice of it. The descendents of the original human colonists had taken to simple farming and textile production long ago, lving in relative peace and inconsequence for thousands of years.
And then the Galactic Empire was born. Quelii became sector capital of the newly formed Quelii Sector, and overnight all of the facilities and assets required to lord over dozens of worlds sprung into being on Quelii's surface.
When the Tarkin Doctirne was adopted and Imperial Oversectors flashed into being, by simple astrography the world became capital of the Quelii Oversector. And under the command of then-Grand Moff Zsinj, Quelii became the most militarily impregnable world in his domain, fully equipped to pursue the Imperial campaign against the Drackmarians through any possible scenario.
Even with the death of Palpatine, Quelii clung to its recently acquired importance, serving as the public face of Zsinj's military might even as he worked more covert and nefarious schemes.
With Zsinj's death Quelii's fortifications allowed it to resist conquest, one independent little speck in the midst of a Galactic Civil War.
But that was years ago, and without an Oversector's worth of resources to keep it maintained and supplied, the mighty defenses of Quelii have begun to fall into disrepair. The world is far from ddefenseless, however, it's orbital stations and dual-layer planetary defense shield more than sufficient to deter the Cavrilhu Pirates from ever venturing into Quelii Space. Consequently, the world and its Imperial-era rulers declined invitation into the original Quelii Sector Alliance. With the looming threat of the Reaver horde, however, Quelii has reconsidered its stance in local politics, dispatching a representative to the newly-convened Alliance, though it sems to have done so only for the opportunity to berate the Cooperative for its gross mishandling of the “Reaver Situation”.
If Quelii itself could be convinced to support the Cooperative wholeheartedly, then the usefulness of the Quelii Sector Alliance would soon be at an end. A new era would be at hand for the Quelii Sector.
In the spartan passenger compartment of a lone Theta-class shuttle, two figures sat and discussed the coming meeting. “No more begging,” Vekkis said sternly. “However this ends, no more grovelling for backwater know-nothings to cough up another kilo of support material.”
“'Backwater know-nothings'? Have you forgotten who we are, Vekkis?”
Vekkis gave an animalistic grin. “I am a sophisticated galactic citizen, sir; a chief official of the governing body of Varn, capital of a galactic power. I have ascended from the dregs into which I was born.”
“Stop that, you almost sound like you believe it.”
“But that's exactly what I mean. I've been there, the meaningless lord of a meaningless world, and I've seen to what heights cooperation and brotherhood can lift us. These people want so desperately to hold on to the speck of power that they have, that they're willing to wager the fate of worlds to keep it for themselves.”
“It's their choice,” Josiah said offhand.
“No,” Vekkis insisted, “it's their people's choice.”
As delicately as he could, Josiah said, “This world claims its heritage from the Galactic Empire and from Warlord Zsinj. You may find that its ruling elite doesn't agree with that assessment.”
“Then we should change their ruling elite to one that does,” Vekkis countered, his tone almost cruel.
“It's not our place to force our ideals upon others, Vekkis, no matter how assured we are of our rightness.”
“I will not stand by and allow the oppressed to go unfreed.”
His features pensive, Josiah finally nodded, saying, “Then if it comes to that, shout your belief with all the strength you have, and let the will of the Cooperative be its judge.”
The comm chimed and the copilot informed the pair that they were nearing hyperspace reversion.
The meeting had already been scheduled through official channels of the Quelii Sector Alliance, but the purpose of this tiny delegation had been left vague.
“How well do you think they'll take it?” Josiah asked as he checked his suit, making sure all of the folds fell as they should.
“Well, we did win over Halmad. That's got to count for something.”
“That's been a while, my good friend.”
“Yeah, but they didn't leave.”
“Not yet,” Josiah countered, his tone darkening. While it had not issued a formal secession, Halmad's closest trading partner and fellow member of the Cooperative, the Vahaba Colonies, had recently withdrawn all governmental representation and recalled all of its personal defense forces from Cooperative duty. It was being considered by most to be the Cooperative's first great loss, and in truth was a primary motivation for this endeavor.
The small holoprojector at the front of the room, installed for diplomatic exchanges, flashed to life, but the image it displayed was not the face of some local official. It was a simplistic two-dimensional representation of Quelii and the surrounding space, into which appeared a set of icons over the next several seconds. Each had a unique alphanumeric tag, and though neither man had the knowledge to determine specific identities from them, the trailing letters “UCPD” told them all they needed to know: United Cooperative of Peoples, Diplomatic.
The comm chimed again, and Vekkis nodded in his people's peculiar way, then realizing he couldn't be seen, said, “Put him through.” The upper portion of a human male in dress reminiscent of an Imperial Moff glowed blue-white where the map had been. “We have on sensors five transport vessels identifying themselves as diplomatic shuttles for the United Cooperative of Peoples. Explain yourselves.”
Josiah smiled disarmingly. “This is the truest vision of Cooperative come to life.”