Cryax Bane
Red-eyed Snake

"Can you remember who you were before the world told you who you should be?"
Location: Happyland, Coruscant Undercity
Hillocks of cadavers clothed in body bags lay motionless on dusty, broken hover gurneys. The smell of half a dozen different kind of antiseptics and freon hung in the air. The room was bathed in a dim flickering light that no one knew whose job it was to change. The Happyland Morgue was the point of no return for the mongrels and thugs of the Coruscant undercity streets. The men and women wheeled into this place were the sector's vermin. People whose lives were desecrated worse than their bodies ever would be.
The Happyland Morgue was also the new workplace of Cryax Bane, the ex-President of the Red Ravens Crime Syndicate, and it was a far cry from the luxury vessels in which he flew and posh high rises where he once played. The morticians who preceded him had been extorted into taking a leave of absence from their stations, and physically escorted out by Bane’s Verpine henchmen, paid for by the Coruscant Rotary Club. Just like that, the CRC morticians stoically took their place. Bane liked his new Verpine muscle. Aside from the crackling of their chitinous exoskeletons, they were nearly soundless, communicating with one another over radio waves. A few of them didn’t even speak Basic. These days silence was a bigger luxury to him than glittering neon dragons.
Stepping over an odd stain that caught the heel of his boot with a squeak, the Chiss pushed an empty container over to one of the bodies, a bound and barely-breathing Rodian woman with the middle of her torso opened in a rift. He plunged his hands into the chasm and scooped up the still-warm organs which sank through his fingers with a squelch. Hunched, he turned and plopped them into the cryogenic container. Cryax wiped the rich, dark wetness onto his apron and then clicked away on a nearby computer, tracking the inventory. A CRC mortician would soon come to sew her back up and dump her somewhere on the Coruscant undercity streets.
It was simple, rewarding work. The kind of work meant for someone with a less-analytic mind than that of the Chiss bent over his computer. But there were no major decisions to be made. No egos to placate. No need to nod your head frenetically like a marionette on a string, making agreements you didn’t want to make for the good of the organization. Bane appreciated the freedom of a wandering mind.
In a few moments Cryax’s mind wandered to the tourniquet snapped around his arm as he administered another stim shot. Then he returned to pushing his container across the room towards another body. His brow furrowed as he realized the man had died on the table, and was no longer ripe for harvesting. Perhaps he could still salvage a cooling organ or two.
[member="Darth Vornskr"]