“The pride of the Archives!” Ebenn Q3 Baobab exclaimed, leaning against the transparisteel barrier, setting off the archive alarm. For the minute or so it took Ebenn to shoo away the security guards and have the alarm reset, Miko wandered the nearby displays, taking note of the scope of artifacts present. It was truly an impressive sight, the rarest fragments of history from dozens of mysterious and distant species all gathered together in one room, surrounded by a towering Archive holding thousands (perhaps millions) of similar artifacts.
This is truly a place of knowledge.
“Quite a collection, eh?” Ebben probed, walking up beside Miko.
The Regent of Cestus nodded. “How many generations of research and exploration it must have taken find and catalog them all.”
“Indeed! The Baobab's have been in this business for hundreds of years.”
It was becoming apparent to Miko that Ebenn could talk about his family and their accomplishments for the rest of his life, if the Regent gave him the chance. “Time is of the essence, so let us talk plainly. Manda has become a powerhouse in the Outer Rim.”
“Oh, come now!” Ebenn said, feigning ignorance as he waved the comment aside.
“Your trade fleet is the most powerful independent commerce force in the galaxy, and the most influential in the whole of the Rim. Your Archives have grown to give Obroa-Skai a run for its money, and your Holonet has become the most viewed independent network in existence.”
“And the Cooperative needs us?” Ebenn asked pointedly.
“And the galaxy needs you,” Miko countered. “We want you to help us found a Rimward Free Trade Initiative.”
“Ahh, then this is about your trade route?” Ebenn probed.
“Yes,” Miko answered honestly.
“No time for word games, indeed. I think I might like you, Regent. If only you were looking for a job . . .” Ebenn probed further, trying to decipher this Regent Minn: “Why should I trust the Cooperative?”
“Because the Coalition offers open trade; the use of our routes even when it is to move goods to our potential enemies.”
“And if you change your mind?” Ebenn asked.
“The galaxy is a very large place. The idea that any one nation can maintain order at every given point throughout a region of space is preposterous. One of the key components of the Free Trade Agreement will be a joint security force, to disrupt piracy and counter threats to the trade network's integrity.”
Ebenn nodded in understanding. “Ahh, so that is how you will do it. If you ensure that we appear needed by you as much as you are needed by us, then the prospect of Imperial-style bullying will seem ridiculous.”
“It will seem ridiculous, because it will be ridiculous,” Miko corrected. “This galaxy seems to have forgotten about the concept of mutual benefit. One people need not lose in order for another to gain.”
“Or so is the claim.” There was a moment of silence, in which the two stared awkwardly at one another. “Very well, out with it.” And Ebenn turned to walk the long halls of the Archives, allowing Miko to catch up.
As the two walked, they discussed the successes of the Rimward Defense Initiative, it's role in the coming Free Trade Initiative, the worlds and species from the former which were likely to join the latter. They discussed the status of long-standing trade routes, and the Reaver disruption of the Coalition's Trans-Rim route in the North. How secondary and tertiary hyperlanes could be best tied together, and even a little on possible organizational and jurisdictional mechanisms to maintain efficiency and cut strain on both traders and security forces.
But it was obvious that the conversation was a purely academic one for Ebenn Baobab; that these talks should not be taken as any sort of admission to the plan's real-world validity, or his desire to engage in its enactment. But with a man like Ebenn Baobab, statistics and numbers were a good place to start. Hard data and reasonable predictions were the sort of thing that kept him rooted in reality, kept his focus away from chickens running through a field or all the shiny artifacts he and his ancestors had discovered.
“And the Baobab HoloNet could be tied directly into local systems, functioning as an independent Trade Initiative backbone upon which the whole thing could be organized.”
“But the Coalition is still necessarily at the center of this!” Ebenn shot back, wringing his hands. “That trade route of yours is good―it's great―but it still would tie us to you just as much as the League of Nations was tied to the Empire . . . perhaps even more so.”
“One day this will happen, Governor, and you will see starships bearing the flag of the Rimward Free Trade Initiative―not the Galactic Coalition―plying that route, defending its commuters, and on that day you will say: 'Ah, now I understand!' But until that day comes, I can offer you no comfort save my word, that this is no trick or ploy. I wish there was something more to give.”
“Then we must leave it at that, for the time being,” Ebenn said, sounding a little disappointed that the conversation had apparently come to an end.
“You misunderstand, Governor,” Miko said, piquing Baobab's interest once more. “There is still much to discuss. Such as the University of Manda.”
There was a brief look of puzzlement on Ebenn Baobab's face, and then his eyes brightened in understanding. “Oh, you are clever, Regent. Very clever. Baiting me with the prospect of learning and teaching! Have you no decency!” But his tone was playful, perhaps intrigued.
“The great universities of this galaxy are either crumbling or cut off by factional strife. The free flow of knowledge is no longer a universally accepted concept. Many of the brightest minds in the galaxy are already here, on Manda, working for you or your family members. Imagine, Governor: unfettered knowledge, a center of learning for the best and brightest―from whatever place of origin, whatever political alignment, whatever dreams or aspirations.”
“And you would help us achieve this?” Baobab asked.
“We would send to you our most gifted, our most promising! You would honor us by accepting them, and we would praise you by offering them; beyond that, there is nothing that we could do. You have already everything that you would require.”
Baobab's mind was working on this concept with an intensity Miko Minn had not yet seen. Here was a dream worth dreaming, Miko could see Baobab thinking.
Ebenn did an about face, rushing off without warning. “What is it?” Miko asked, chasing after him.
“Mungo, have to find Mungo!” Ebenn shouted, picking up his pace. “He'll put you in your place!” It sounded threatening, but Miko could sense the underlying childishness, that this was nothing more than just another of Ebenn Q3 Baobab's oddities.
“I take it I should follow along, then?” Miko smiled at his own response.
“Oh yes, yes indeed, Mr. Regent Minn of Ord Cestus. Yes indeed!”
If this old man wasn't actually going crazy before Miko's eyes, the Cooperative man might just have a chance at completing his mission.