Miras Tinup
New Member
After a few years, everything began to blur together. He traveled from planet to planet, city to city, always listening for the faintest stirring of that tainted chord, the lone echo that would alert him to his prey. A dozen custom checks, market places, and cantinas turned into a hundred turned into a thousand, and before long the ex-Jedi had lost himself in his work. Everything but the hunt ceased to matter, until it was a rare occasion he was alert or sober enough to even know what planet he was on.
This was one of those rare occasions. The planet was Manda, and he'd run out of spice after being there less than a week. The withdrawals were the worst he'd ever had- fevers, nausea, crippling pain- and he'd spent the next three days laid up in a scummy hotel with the door barred, listening to the screaming tenants through the paper thin walls. At night the screaming of security sirens was near constant, punctuated by the occasional whine of a blaster bolt.
None of it concerned him. It wasn't his job to save people from themselves. The deserved the evil they manufactured. No, his interests were in a darkness far older than man.
When he finally crawled out of the hotel room he was pale, red eyed, and in a foul mood, but he was also sober- for the first time in the better part of six months. Shaking hands fumbling through his cloak for a cigarette, Miras approached the Toydarian scowling at him from behind the front desk.
"How much?" he asked in a voice that creaked through strained vocal cords.
[member="Alkor Centaris"]
This was one of those rare occasions. The planet was Manda, and he'd run out of spice after being there less than a week. The withdrawals were the worst he'd ever had- fevers, nausea, crippling pain- and he'd spent the next three days laid up in a scummy hotel with the door barred, listening to the screaming tenants through the paper thin walls. At night the screaming of security sirens was near constant, punctuated by the occasional whine of a blaster bolt.
None of it concerned him. It wasn't his job to save people from themselves. The deserved the evil they manufactured. No, his interests were in a darkness far older than man.
When he finally crawled out of the hotel room he was pale, red eyed, and in a foul mood, but he was also sober- for the first time in the better part of six months. Shaking hands fumbling through his cloak for a cigarette, Miras approached the Toydarian scowling at him from behind the front desk.
"How much?" he asked in a voice that creaked through strained vocal cords.
[member="Alkor Centaris"]