Lark
Saint of the Damned
Being a bartender was such a beautiful profession. Though his role was to craft a cocktail that was intoxicating enough to warrant the purchase of another, Lark felt as though he was a central figure in the lives of every patron that strolled through the preppy little club on Naboo. Men ten years out of college pretending they were twenty-three moaned about how they wanted to marry rich, young businessmen enacting laws that would work to their own favor complained that socialists were taxing their wealth away from them. And next to those greedy patricians were sorority girls convinced the fraternity brother who invited them was the one. And perhaps he was, so long as he never divulged what happened that night when he fulfilled his pledge to that absurd brotherhood. Who was Lark to judge? He had seen so many people he'd never give a second thought find everlasting happiness with one another.
The bartender was the eternal spectator. They saw every bribe and heard every whisper. A perfect career for Lark, what a shame it took so long for him to discover it's charm.
It was one of many pastimes he had taken in the past few years. Ever since the Sith Empire had collapsed, he had been travelling from planet to planet, odd job to odd job. He had pretended to be a biologist on Hoth, and after that he had studied at Dantooine. At some point he had grown bold and worked in construction on Coruscant, even though the Jedi likely hunted him as passionately as the Sith did. And yet, here he was. Crafting an Old Fashioned for some drunk fraternity brother whose girlfriend was turning twenty-two.
And oh, how much fun it was. The birthday girl was such a sweet thing, and a friend of the other bartender working Keffler's Tavern. Lark and Kyn, the other barkeep, would be heroes for an evening.
He still found the shift towards a more civilian lifestyle strange. Sometimes, as he lay on his bed in his one-room apartment just a ten minute walk from Keffler's, he wondered whether or not he actually fought for the Sith for so many years. All the blood he had spilled, the wars he had fought in, that all seemed so long ago, and so very far away. The duels, the training, the missions, strange excursions towards otherworldly dimensions, conflict against beings that shouldn't exist. Somehow, all of that had led him right to where he was now. Behind the bar near Theed University, getting prospective lawyers drunk while doing some civic studies of his own.
Suited Lark just fine. He had a small circle of friends, most of whom he met through Kyn. The bubbly woman was in all honesty a poor bartender, but she made up for it with a genuine positivity that somehow never managed to grate on him. He had made up some story about his past, almost on a whim. Here, his name was Forrest. He had been born on Naboo, but spent most of his life traveling with his merchant uncle before the man passed of sudden illness and was forced to return home. That, at least, let him handwave away any peculiar knowledge he had regarding the galaxy. I was there with my Uncle, he'd say, in response to someone regarding upon his intricate understanding of that Kadavo's lava mines. And his friends would accept that, delighted to be in the company of someone so well-travelled.
His life was so routine, he even began to border on indifference regarding galactic news. Wish the Alliance made their way over here, one professor would say, to which Lark would simply respond with; That so?
Looks like the Sith are making a comeback. Wonder what they'll call themselves this time, another would posit. Something unnecessarily dramatic, Lark would passively suggest, before letting the conversation move to another topic.
A temporary break in the crowd let Lark get a quick glimpse of Kyn, who looked back at him and mimicked the motion of someone talking with her hand. The patron she was serving had nearly drank a whole keg of their draft beer, and was at that obnoxious intoxicated stage where he thought everyone wanted to hear about whatever it was he had to say. "That's embarrassing," Lark said as the man excused himself to use the bathroom. Hopefully he wouldn't have to be cleaning anything up at the end of his shift. "You need me to take some of the conversation?"
"Nah, I got it. He's an ass, but he's happy so long as I nod my head every now and then. Was slurring on about his buddy's dog-sitting business, of all things." Kyn's positivity was matched only by her patience. "About time for a shot though."
"You read my mind." Keffler didn't mind if they had a few drinks throughout the night, so long as they didn't indulge to the point to where they couldn't tell the difference between white wine and champagne. "Whaddya want?"
"Vermouth, my good sir. And it's your turn for the toast."
Who the hell does a shot of vermouth? Kyn really was that wonderful sort of enigma that one couldn't help but be fascinated by. Lark complied, and poured himself a shot of whiskey. "To pet-sitters everywhere," Lark said, mocking his coworker's dreadful conversation. They had long ago ran of of subjects to toast to, and had decided to take turns coming up with a new cheers every night.
The drink went down smooth, and the two spent another minute chatting and laughing before it was time to check for any refills. Yes, Lark thought, as he let his muscle memory take over wiping down the counter. This is nice. Not sure I deserve the simple life, but here I am. It won't last forever, but I'll enjoy it while I'm able.
For Lark was always ready to leave for a new life whenever he decided it was time, leaving everything he had built behind him. Fifty years from now Kyn would be rocking in her chair, perhaps enjoying a drink that strange old coworker once taught her to make. One that she couldn't make quite as proper as... whatever his name had been. What had happened to him, she would think. And then she would go on with her day, only thinking of whatever his name was every now and again.
Right underneath the bed in Lark's apartment, where he spent his free time ignoring the news, lay a weathered suitcase. And in that suitcase were the only possessions he'd carry with him from life to life. An old novel he was fond of from Typha-Dor. A flower that matched his eye color. A color that matched corrupted gold, not the colored green contacts he wore to hide his past. And an enchanted Sith dagger the color of frost, his most eternal companion. One that he just couldn't bring himself to get rid of.
The suitcase was never unpacked, and was always ready to be taken wherever Lark went next.
Darth Strosius
The bartender was the eternal spectator. They saw every bribe and heard every whisper. A perfect career for Lark, what a shame it took so long for him to discover it's charm.
It was one of many pastimes he had taken in the past few years. Ever since the Sith Empire had collapsed, he had been travelling from planet to planet, odd job to odd job. He had pretended to be a biologist on Hoth, and after that he had studied at Dantooine. At some point he had grown bold and worked in construction on Coruscant, even though the Jedi likely hunted him as passionately as the Sith did. And yet, here he was. Crafting an Old Fashioned for some drunk fraternity brother whose girlfriend was turning twenty-two.
And oh, how much fun it was. The birthday girl was such a sweet thing, and a friend of the other bartender working Keffler's Tavern. Lark and Kyn, the other barkeep, would be heroes for an evening.
He still found the shift towards a more civilian lifestyle strange. Sometimes, as he lay on his bed in his one-room apartment just a ten minute walk from Keffler's, he wondered whether or not he actually fought for the Sith for so many years. All the blood he had spilled, the wars he had fought in, that all seemed so long ago, and so very far away. The duels, the training, the missions, strange excursions towards otherworldly dimensions, conflict against beings that shouldn't exist. Somehow, all of that had led him right to where he was now. Behind the bar near Theed University, getting prospective lawyers drunk while doing some civic studies of his own.
Suited Lark just fine. He had a small circle of friends, most of whom he met through Kyn. The bubbly woman was in all honesty a poor bartender, but she made up for it with a genuine positivity that somehow never managed to grate on him. He had made up some story about his past, almost on a whim. Here, his name was Forrest. He had been born on Naboo, but spent most of his life traveling with his merchant uncle before the man passed of sudden illness and was forced to return home. That, at least, let him handwave away any peculiar knowledge he had regarding the galaxy. I was there with my Uncle, he'd say, in response to someone regarding upon his intricate understanding of that Kadavo's lava mines. And his friends would accept that, delighted to be in the company of someone so well-travelled.
His life was so routine, he even began to border on indifference regarding galactic news. Wish the Alliance made their way over here, one professor would say, to which Lark would simply respond with; That so?
Looks like the Sith are making a comeback. Wonder what they'll call themselves this time, another would posit. Something unnecessarily dramatic, Lark would passively suggest, before letting the conversation move to another topic.
A temporary break in the crowd let Lark get a quick glimpse of Kyn, who looked back at him and mimicked the motion of someone talking with her hand. The patron she was serving had nearly drank a whole keg of their draft beer, and was at that obnoxious intoxicated stage where he thought everyone wanted to hear about whatever it was he had to say. "That's embarrassing," Lark said as the man excused himself to use the bathroom. Hopefully he wouldn't have to be cleaning anything up at the end of his shift. "You need me to take some of the conversation?"
"Nah, I got it. He's an ass, but he's happy so long as I nod my head every now and then. Was slurring on about his buddy's dog-sitting business, of all things." Kyn's positivity was matched only by her patience. "About time for a shot though."
"You read my mind." Keffler didn't mind if they had a few drinks throughout the night, so long as they didn't indulge to the point to where they couldn't tell the difference between white wine and champagne. "Whaddya want?"
"Vermouth, my good sir. And it's your turn for the toast."
Who the hell does a shot of vermouth? Kyn really was that wonderful sort of enigma that one couldn't help but be fascinated by. Lark complied, and poured himself a shot of whiskey. "To pet-sitters everywhere," Lark said, mocking his coworker's dreadful conversation. They had long ago ran of of subjects to toast to, and had decided to take turns coming up with a new cheers every night.
The drink went down smooth, and the two spent another minute chatting and laughing before it was time to check for any refills. Yes, Lark thought, as he let his muscle memory take over wiping down the counter. This is nice. Not sure I deserve the simple life, but here I am. It won't last forever, but I'll enjoy it while I'm able.
For Lark was always ready to leave for a new life whenever he decided it was time, leaving everything he had built behind him. Fifty years from now Kyn would be rocking in her chair, perhaps enjoying a drink that strange old coworker once taught her to make. One that she couldn't make quite as proper as... whatever his name had been. What had happened to him, she would think. And then she would go on with her day, only thinking of whatever his name was every now and again.
Right underneath the bed in Lark's apartment, where he spent his free time ignoring the news, lay a weathered suitcase. And in that suitcase were the only possessions he'd carry with him from life to life. An old novel he was fond of from Typha-Dor. A flower that matched his eye color. A color that matched corrupted gold, not the colored green contacts he wore to hide his past. And an enchanted Sith dagger the color of frost, his most eternal companion. One that he just couldn't bring himself to get rid of.
The suitcase was never unpacked, and was always ready to be taken wherever Lark went next.
