“Not me,” adamantly stated one of the soldiers, “last time I was near Tobias, he was glaring at me.”
The others glanced around at each other. A habit easily encouraged as much by the roundness of the ship’s Communication Center as by the demeanor of their captain. Finally, a younger looking crewmember, with a single blue square on his uniform, stepped forward: Ensign Jelter. He gazed across the room’s occupants.
“I’ll go tell him. But next time, it’s not going to be me.”
Several murmured approvals or heartfelt appreciations. The crew went back about their normal business as Jelter exited the room into the gleeming corridors of the Providence. They all dread Tobias so much. He’s stringent and demanding, that’s true. But he’s a good man that cares about his crew. His lip slightly wrinkled. At least I think he is. Crashdown might not agree with me on that…
Clad in his naval blacks, Ensign Jelter of the Confederation Merchant Marine paced through the hallways of his ship, the Providence. The difference between the Merchant Marine and the regular navy was obvious; the Navy defended, the Merchant Marine traded and transported. But visual and actual difference between the personnel was non-existent. The military operated them both. Similiarly dressed sailors and crewmen walked around the man, leaving the galleon’s bridge. Jelter stepped up to the bridge doors and inserted his rank cylinder into the appropriate socket. Brief sensor scans confirmed the physical identity of the man with the information stored in the code cylinder and the ship’s databanks. The doors quickly whisked open, revealing the sparsely populated deck. A tall figure, leaning against the ship’s command chair, staring idly into space. There he is. Jelter purposely strode up to the convoy’s tall, imposing commander: Captain Ingham Tobias.
Not only was Tobias tall, but he was lean and gaunt, prompting many to comment that he resembled a younger Tarkin. His serious and authoritative manner further enhanced the comparison. But Jelter knew better. He has been through so much. It’s little wonder why he acts the way he does. Less than a decade ago, Ingham owned Tobias Lines, a modest, but successful, shipping company which ferried freight and passengers all across the Meridian Sector. The company’s several bulk freighters was the man’s pride, and his downfall. With the fall of the New Republic, a wave of lawlessness swept over the sector. The ever-present criminal elements grew to such strength that they became the authorities of many planets; including Budpock. When the said planet fell to the piratical forces, his property was confiscated and divided up among the looters. The company and fleet owned by Ingham’s father and built up for decades under the man was taken away from him in less than an hour. Tobias was a ruined man. Bereft of his wealth and pride, the man exchanged his sizeable house for an apartment in Demmit Station. Bitter and depressed, he eeked out an existence in the capitol by running odd jobs; a serious blow to a man so proud of his previous achievements. With the fall of Budpock to Confederate and Commonwealth forces, order and fairness had been restored. The corrupt, piratical bureaucracy was replaced with a democratic government, and lives began to become closer to normal, like the days before the criminal rule. Rather than start his business anew, with the possibility that it could be completely disbanded like before, Tobias decided to help ensure that such an event couldn’t happen again; at least to Budpock and himself. A week after the change of government, the Budpock native presented his credentials and experience to the Confederate Government, which promptly placed him in his current command of the Styria Convoy.
“Sir?”
Tobias spun around on his heel and stared at the ensign. “Yes ensign?”
“The Endeavor has finished its starfighter transfer. Its internal bays are now filled with the Drone Fighters, just like the Blackwall and Adventure.”
“Very well,” clipped the commanding officer, turning to his communciation’s officer, “We are leaving port now. All ships to the nav point for the first jump.”
“Aye sir.”
Ingham glared at the Ensign. “Well, don’t just stand there. Get to your station.”
Jelter blushed and about faced back to the hold of the ship. Ingham shook his head as the rest of the bridge crew quickly moved to take their stations. The Budpock native quietly sat down in the command chair, steadily tapping his foot. A voice rang out from the recessed crew pit.
“All ships ready and accounted for.”
“Very good,” nodded Ingham, “Make the jump.”
The dozen Confederate galleons, formed in a lozenge formation, began to accelerate from the mining planet and flashed into hyperspace.
***
Captain’s Quarters, Styria-class Galleon Providence, en route to Meridian
The door swung open into the darkness. A shaft of light slowly pushed the darkness away as Ingham expressionlessly marched in. Like clockwork, he precisely pivoted on his heel and pushed the blast door against the doorframe. It hit with a dull thud and locked. Tobias stared up at the ceiling, letting out a deep exhale. Completely in the dark, he loosened his tunic’s buttons starting from the collar. And he let out a weary, toothy smile. Ingham tapped a button on the side of the walls, letting glow panels illuminate the room in a pale light.
The rectangular room and accompanying furniture was a dark gray; the same utilitarian stock furniture was used by lower-ranking officers across the Confederation. As the master of the vessel, he had access to more deluxe and artistic furnishings, but it was intentionally sparse. The few mementos of his former life lay neatly arranged on his desk. A testament to his now-dead accomplishments. He rarely looked at any of them, save for a single holo of a woman: the one he was staring out now. Through good times and bad. Yet you never got to see me quite like this. For Better or worse.
Tobias sighed and retrieved a flask from under his bed. He turned the cap open and took a whiff of the smell. That amazing smell of a Twister. Raising the vessel to his mouth, the man gulped down the mixed drink, whose ingredients included brandy and a few fruit extracts. He wiped his lips. That one’s a decent mix. Ingham glanced at the holo of his wife. Not quite as good as she could make it. My Lara. He ripped his eyes from her smiling visage. Tobias’ pale face tightened as the first tear formed under his eyelid. The flask clattered down to the floor. And so I am alone yet again.