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Javier de Costa, CPT of La Lagrima de Cocodrilo - Printable Version +- Discovery Gaming Community (https://discoverygc.com/forums) +-- Forum: Role-Playing (https://discoverygc.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +--- Forum: Stories and Biographies (https://discoverygc.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=56) +--- Thread: Javier de Costa, CPT of La Lagrima de Cocodrilo (/showthread.php?tid=60653) |
Javier de Costa, CPT of La Lagrima de Cocodrilo - Scribbley - 05-30-2011 Javier de Costa grew up poor, in a rural agricultural area on the endless orange-yellow plains that sweep across Malta. His mother and father still farm there to this day, along with his sister. In his two and a half decades of life, the Maltese networks brought to him vids and images of the Outcasts' growing military stature, glimpses of the "House" systems, seemingly teeming with humanity, the dishonorable malice of the Corsair nation, and of course the many dangers that fill the black between the stars. Like many of the young men of Malta, Javier yearned to explore. Many of his friends from his younger school days had gone on to join the military in some capacity. A few even as sabre pirates, and one lucky one served on a cruiser. Javier's father wished for him to carry on the family legacy of tending the fields, and growing crops. Beans, barley, various vegetables, a small vineyard, and --yes-- acres of cardamine grass. It was his uncle, Don Emilio "Dos Equis" Fernando who found buyers or consumers of his father's crops. Most of the goods were bought for domestic use somewhere on Malta. Except for the cardamine. His uncle Don Fernando wasn't one of THOSE Dons. He had no governmental clout to speak of. He was rather a regionally important businessman in Javier's corner of Malta; one of perhaps hundreds of successful men who had earned the title of "don" from their less successful colleagues and benefactors. Don Fernando's nickname, Dos Equis, came from his younger days when he had made not one, but two successful voyages from Malta directly to the Liberty planet Manhattan, in a stolen "Stork" train. Nowadays such a run would be impossible, given the current militarized state of Liberty, and the Houses in general. The Nomads War had changed things. But still, Javier's uncle was known by many as the man who helped elevate the cardamine market in Liberty and cemented a steady market on the capital planet of the House itself. No longer was it just a substance for criminals and the underworld. It was probably this fame and notoriety he had seen his uncle enjoy that gave him pause when his uncle one day approached him, asking for a "favor." "Javier, my boy. Do you want to be a farmer like your father, my dear brother?" Javier had not even noticed his uncle stroll up from the hacienda to the bean field, where Javier was plowing the earth in the same manner his ancestors had for thousands of years back on Earth. "My father wishes for me to continue the tradition, Don," he replied after only a momentary freeze. The Don Fernando gave his trademark closed- mouth wry smile, then said, "Do you know that your grandfather was an architect? I know you love your father, but this is not the family tradition," as he motioned to the fields around them. "Our family has but ONE tradition: chase your dreams. This-" the Don again gestured around at the rolling wheat and cardamine, "this is your father's dream. And he caught it. I am very proud of him. My dream? My dream was for adventure. I caught that dream long ago as well you know." Javier stopped plowing with his hoe, and turned to his uncle. The Don gave another smile and continued. "My boy, what is YOUR dream?" Javier looked down at his dirty boots. "I'm not sure Don. Travel? Or maybe just money and women," he replied with a laugh. The Don laughed with him. "I thought so. I see some of myself in you. And I think I have just the job for you, to get you started." Javier's grin slowly melted. The Don's jobs were always dangerous. His father had forbidden him from working for his uncle. Many brave young men from Malta seeking fortune would sign on for work from his uncle or men just like him, and never return home to the yellow-orange seas of grass of their home world. "Don, my uncle, you know my father has forbidden me from working with you." The Don's wry smile, as always, persisted. "Ci, ci. My boy, who tends those acres of cardamine on the hills above your father's house?" Javier was perplexed at the perceived change of subject. "Well, I do. My father has me work all the fields above the house, and he below down to the stream." The Don nodded his head in grunted. Then he asked, "and who buys that cardamine?" Javier fidgeted, then replied, "I do not know, Don. You always take care of it." "Ah." said the Don. "I take care of it. Yes. Javier, my boy, you already work for me. You work for me, because you work for your father. And your father, he works-- for ME. Do not make me embarrass your father by talking to him about you working for me. Let him see his son as a man choosing his own path, not a boy hiding behind his leg. Come work for me." The Don's wry smile had fallen, and been replaced with a piercing hazel-eyed stern stare. The sort that makes one have the urge to swallow even when their mouth is empty. *Gulp*. Javier looked away from that granite gaze and across the rolling terrain in the wide valley below him. He then replied, "I see, Don. It is true that I long to see more than these furrows and plants. I will come work for you." A white toothy smile ripped across the Don's face. "Excellent, my boy. Are you still flight- certified?" The Don had purchased flying lessons for Javier since his 18th birthday. "Ci, Don. I am." Javier replied with a smile. Javier enjoyed flying a great deal, and was excited by the not-so-subtle hint as to what sort of work he would be doing for his uncle. "Excellent," Don Fernando replied. "Meet me at my installation at the space port tomorrow at 8:00 am. Don't be late." The Don turned and strolled with his cane, which he didn't need, picking his way through the waist-high wheat of early Spring. Javier turned, to finish his bean- planting. He was in no hurry to go down and explain things to his father. Javier de Costa, CPT of La Lagrima de Cocodrilo - Scribbley - 05-31-2011 "What the hell is this?", Javier asked staring at the ridiculously loaded out BWT before him on the port tarmac. "This," replied El Mosquito, a very short middle-aged slave of Don Fernando, "is the ship the Don has assigned for you. She is called, La Lagrima de Cocodrilo. Of course, the stupid House-centric neural net will tag her as 'Cocdrilo's Lagrima' to other vessels." El Mosquito was so short, he was probably technically a dwarf. He had been a favored slave of the Don's since he was first acquired as a young child. He had developed into quite the handy engineer. "Ci, ci, little man. That's wonderful. Crocodile's Tear. They'll think me either a liar or a blubbering coward from the first glance at their sensor ID.", grumbled Javier. He had arrived 30 minutes early to his uncle's facility at the space port that morning, and El Mosquito had spilled the proposal early. He and this pint-sized servant were to be transporting cardamine. Directly to New York. In a proposterously overloaded Border World Transport. "Senor de Costa, if they're picking us up on their sensor ID, we have already failed. Perhaps your embarrassment and displeasure at the ship's name will further motivate you to utilize stealth in your smuggling." Javier turned around to see a woman in her early forties. She was astonishingly muscular... almost like a man. And her voice was quite husky for a lady... But no one would dare to ever comment on it within earshot of her. "I am Francesca, I am to be your first mate." The thought of any sort of "mate" status with this woman gave Javier a twinge of almost fear. "Uh... alright. Francesca. What skills do you bring to table?" The woman closed the distance between her and the two men with a slow, almost strutting gait. "Call me Frank," she said. Javier figured he could remember that. Now that she was standing in front of him, he could see that she had... shaved. Well, at least she was trying. Francesca casually leaned against the side of the BWT's hull. "Well, I am trained and experienced in managing the climate controls of the cargo space, keeping the cardamine 'fresh.' Although I've never gone as far as we're planning to go. Hell, no one goes that far anymore." For good reason, given the increasingly militarized nature of Sirius. So here was his crew. A half-sized man, and a man-sized woman. But the ship. It had not transport turrets, but rather those designed for a slave liner. "Who designed this loadout, Mosquito? The guns... They're too big. She may get 3 shots off before exhausting her power core. And the size of them... They look absurd." El Mosquito looked down at his feet and removed his cap. "I did Senor... I thought perhaps the size of the weapons may throw a potential attacker off for a moment... Confuse them." Javier snorted. "Mosquito, they'll just assume the pilot of this is overcompensating for a small d--" he stopped mid-sentence, realizing the implication, and the strength of the blow to the diminutive and already low midget slave. No need to be cruel. This was his crewman now, after all. "It's fine, my little Mosquito. It adds... Character." The little man, who just a moment ago appeared to be on the verge collapsing into a blackhole of embarrassment, visibly straightened and smiled. Javier turned towards Francesca. "uh, Frank... Let's go ahead and begin loading. I'll start working on a course, and get final instructions from my uncle. Let's shoot to be out of atmo before 10:00, and have lunch in the Sigmas. "Aye," Francesca gruffly replied in her deep voice, as she immediately turned to a pair of slaves and a robotic assistant next to a anti-grav pallet filled with containers, and began huskily barking out instructions. El Mosquito bordered the BWT, to make final preparations. "I was plowing bean fields yesterday," Javier thought to himself. The thought began as a sort of regret, but after the thought was finished, he smiled. Glancing up at the disappearing stars as dawn crept into the sky, he briskly walked towards the cartography room. Javier de Costa, CPT of La Lagrima de Cocodrilo - Scribbley - 05-31-2011 Javier looked out the window at the floating rocks gaseous shapes of the field surrounding Buffalo Base. His first delivery to the New York system had been uneventful, if long. With size of the loads of carda he would be bringing, the timing of the individual runs would be of little consequence-- as long as they kept coming. 3598 units of fresh cardamine. And by fresh, it was meant that it was standing under the Omicron Alpha sun on Malta herself just a mere few days before. His route had been made exceptionally long by the caution he took. He gave known patrol routes, enemy bases, and even free ports a large berth. His little Mosquito proved to be quite adept at keeping the old engines of the BWT functioning within parameters at all times. And his burly female first mate had kept the cargo as crisp and aromatic as the day they had left. He allowed himself this moment of satisfaction, looking out the large window in one of the common spaces on the Rogue station, while his crew tended to the refueling of the ship and reloading of it's cargo bay. He was going to bring back a full load of assorted consumer goods from Liberty. They were sure to be valuable as a novelty at least, back on Malta. His daydream was interrupted by the news feed that had been buzzing in the background at the bar. "--increasing Lane Hacker and pirate activity in California. Liberty government sources have announced an increase in patrols around Los Angeles and trade lanes leading to the Sand Diego Border Station, to stem the unlawful activity and violence." Javier swore. His route had taken him right across that trade lane, to the Cortez jump hole. He was going to have to make a slight detour. No matter. He was sure all roads would lead home if he could just get out of House space. --- La Lagrima de Cocodrilo had uneventfully made it to the Colorado system, skirted off most of the patrol paths around the trade lanes, passed under the South Pole of California Minor, buzzed through the Shackleton Ice Field, and made a ballsy run through the Magellan jump gate, between patrols and when traffic was low. There was a small exchange of fire between the smuggler ship and a Bowex escort, but the ship backed off after it's shields were popped in a single volley from the comically over-sized guns on the Crocodile's Tear. El Mosquito was smiling from ear to ear for finally getting a chance to use the turrets. Javier was just glad they actually worked at all, given the relatively small power core they were drawing from. Javier was not familiar with the Magellan system, other than knowing of a lane hacker base in the ice field opposite the California jump gate. He supposed he had no other plan at this point, but to stop and ask for directions. Again setting a wide berth from the trade lanes (on the other side of the system's sun, in fact), he set a course for the intersection of the lane hacker patrol ion trails, and cruised across the empty void between the two ice fields of Magellan. |