<font color=green>
Industrial Centre
A corporation's main concern is profits. The galaxy revolves are money, and he who has the most money always wins. It's just that simple. That easy logic explained, in three seconds, the entire purpose of Operation Custom and, in the end, everything else that LFX Industries did. They mantained a starfleet for the reason that their profits must be protected. They controlled worlds because the idea that 'more is better' rang especcially true with the members of the company. And they destroyed their enemies because enemies were bad for business.
In the end, everything that LFX Industrial did was done to further their own profits. And, occasioanlly, maybe help someone in need. But then, only if they had nothing to lose. A corporation can push and push, but only get so far as far as the galaxy is concerned. And stopping along the way to help poor babies will only push them backwards.
Some would consider LFX Industrial esspeccially cruel, uncommpasionate, even evil. To Seti Ashar, all those remarks were true. True and appalling to the current CEO of the largest private company in the galaxy. But with hundreds of thousand of employees and uncountable needs to satsify, he could hardly change LFX now. They were set in their ways of profit over all.
That was not to say he could not try. The company had, in the last sixteen weeks, spent in excess of ten million credits to get homeless people off the streets of Eriadu's many cities and into shelters, at least, homes, at best. But that was not enough. It would never be enough.
The man in question stood now, watching the ceaseless air traffic as it passed by the monolithic office building.
Always there was motion. People moving, in light of the evils inflicted on the galaxy. Someone suffered no matter what one did, but maybe, just maybe, that same act would help a dozen others. It was, he mused, quite impossible to help
everyone. What aided someone may well hurt someone else.
But that was, naturally, the name of the game. You don't get something for nothing, and hopefully the pros would outweigh the cons. It was all a game of Chance, really. A game of Chance, where cheating was overlooked, if not expected, and even...
encouraged. All away from the prying eyes of the public. Naturally.
Seti was interupted from his thoughts by the buzzing of the intercom and, with a sigh, hit the key that activated it. Voice only, no fancy holograms or image-display units for him. It was all about profits, this game, and wasting money on prime hologram communication to talk to his secretary, only sixty feet away, was seen as utterly and completely pointless by the LFX Industrial CEO.
"Yes?" He asked shortly. He was not in the mood for interuptions.
"Sir, Mr. Gohgen from the
goTech Corporation is here. You have a meeting scheduled with him right now." Sti sighed. This was not a time that he wished to waste meeting with some low-level corporate slug. Who the hell was Mr. Gohgen, anyway? And who in this bloody galaxy had heard of
goTech corporartion? If he hadn't known better, Seti Ashar would have sworn that this was one big joke. One big, sick joke. He sat back and let out a long, deep, sigh.
"I'll take him now, Nina. Send him up."
Mr. Gohgen from the
goTech corporation turned out to be a small man, older than Seti, with a hat and cheap buckle-up knee boots. He wore a wrinkled grey suit that he must have thought looked quite professional, since he had the gall to wear it into Seti Ashar's personal office. This was, after all, only one of the most powerful businessmen in the galaxy.
All overnight, it seems, too. He \mused to himself. He pushed that train of thought aside. Now was time to dwell over his new-found power.
"What can I do for you, Mr. Gohgen?" He asked civily, waving away the server droid and smiling politely at his guest." The other man sat down carefully in the large leather chairs provided, and a smile crept onto his face.
"I am most interested in talking to you, Mr. Ashar. Your corporation is most wonderous. And it grew up almost as if overnight, did it not? Truly remarkable, Mr. Ashar. It really is."
Seti faked a smile and nodded along, listening carefully to the man's rambling compliments. It soon became tiresome, and he interupted the man, "Thank you, Mr. Gohgen. But I'm sure you did not come all this way simply to compliment me on my work."
The small man shook his head nervously.
"No, I didn't." His smile vanished, replaced with a bitter frown. "I came to discuss this."
From inside the hat he drew out a small, high-powered blaster and pointed it at Seti. "You have much to atone for, Mr. Ashar."
Seti almost burst out laughing, so much was the rediculousness of it. He gave the man a smile, a real one this time, and nodded.
"Indeed I do. Go on then, shoot me." His bluntness, and the smile on his face, threw the man off for a second.
"What?" He asked, waving the gun as if he thought the LFX CEO couldn't see it.
"I said," Seti replied easily, "shoot me. You were sent to kill me, were you not? Go on. Do it. Pull the trigger. I dare you."
The other man was trembling now, shaking from whatever it was that made him so nervous. His finger twitched once as he tried to gather the strength the pull the trigger.
Seti winked at the man. From the corner came a single high-powered laser blast. The back of Mr. Gohgen's head was reduced to nothing, a charred mess. Immediatly ventilators activated in the room to clear the clouds of smoke and remove the acrid smell of boiling flesh. In the corner, T-X31 placed the BlasTech Heavy Blaster Pistil back in the comparment he kept for it and made the droid equivilent of a sigh.
Seti keyed the intercom again.
"Nina, send someone up to clean up the mess. Oh, and please find the person
who let someone managed to smuggle a blaster into my office. Then fire them."
The CEO neatly stepped around the still-twitching body and entered the turbolift. He was to accustomed to death for this to bother him to much, but it had never happened before in his own office. The entire incident had shook him, but nothing made him more curious and angry than
why?
He would have his answers soon enough, he suspected. And then someone would have to pay for trying to kill him.