Tejori Lotor
Only the bright future lays ahead...

Out there — it’s nothing. Nowhere, stretched wide and made infinite. The dry crust of desert. The whipping tails of dust. Past that: dunes. Mounds of sand, red as fire. They seem to run on forever underneath the cloudless sky.
Behind her: raggedy, ratty tents. Propped up by scraps of rusted pole and rebar, some of it kinked with an arthritic bent. The wind threatens to pick it all up and carry it away, but it never does. These tents have been here for so long they're a part of the world. Just like the people.
Tejori steps off her speeder —a limping one-seater she cobbled together. (He gave them more than he owed. Then he descends among the scavengers, the castoffs, the dregs of the galaxy's populace. All of them dust-cheeked. Scarred, too-branded by the roughness of this place. She doesn’t look down on them She is one of them.
A round-faced brute with a crown of wispy black hair and a fat body wreathed in rags steps in front of her, licking his chapped lips and chuckling. "What have we here—"
But she knows the play. She's no fool. Not anymore. She stares him down.
Realising she’s no easy mark, the rag-man grunts and wanders off in search of prey that doesn't sting or bite. Tejori, for her part, searches out the bar.
It's not much to look at. The bar has been welded together out of scrap, the whole thing warped and crooked and shaped into a rough half circle, all of it underneath the cap-top of a 323 Rakhmann concussion-miner. Dust and sand hiss against the canopy of thin metal.
She pulls up a rusted stool next to a socket-eyed skull-face: one of the Uthuthma, with swaddles of chain forming a scarf and obscuring its toothy maw. The alien chatters at him in its language: "Matheen wa-sha wa-sho tah." A statement or a question, Tejori doesn't know. All she does is smile and wink and give the stranger a thumbs-up. The Uthuthma keeps staring with those dead empty holes it reportedly calls eyes. A loud, gurgling throat-clear from behind the bar, and she turns to see the tender.
Big fella. Muscle gone to fat. Nose like a fallen tree. Whole right side of his face is peppered with scars, some of them lumpy with bits of scree and stone. One bit of gravel is bigger than the pad on Tejori’s thumb and sticks in the man's cheek the way a rock pokes up out of dry, dead ground. "Whaddya having?"
“What do you have?"
"Nothing but one thing: Knockback Nectar, they call it."
"If you only have one thing, then why ask me what I'm having?"
The bartender shrugs and snorts. "People like the illusion of choice. Gives them comfort in these strange times."
"Then I will have that, my good man."
"Good man," the bartender mutters, then pours from an old oil can into a smaller oil can and plonks it down in front of her. The so-called nectar is the colour of hydraulic fluid. And bits float in it. Spongy, bobbing bits.
"What is this?"
"Knockback Nectar, I told you already."
"No, I mean, what is it?"
"Ugh. Huh. You know, I don't ask. They just bring it to me. Something about scraping the lichen rocks from the dead buttes down in the south. I hear tell they pickle it in fuel barrels or some such."
"It'll get me drunk?"
"It'll get a space slug drunk."
She tips it back. It tastes like sour spit with a motor oil aftertaste. Doesn't take long before her gums start to feel numb and her teeth buzz.
All righty, then.
The Uthuthma babbles at him again: "Matheen bachee. Iss-ta ta-hwhiss."
“You’re right. It tastes like bantha urine,” she says. Her voice is stripped raw after one sip of the Knockback. The words wheeze out. She laughs: It's a mad, desolate, empty sound. Like this little enclave. Like this whole planet.
But she’d been given some credits and as everything she buys she barters for, she had to find somewhere to spend it. It was either this or death-sticks. And they’re addictive.
[member="Taneas Haring"]