Lazy Iblis
Smoke filled the dingy cantina air. The faint barroom lights were muddied and diluted to a point that it was troublesome to make out the face of the reprobate one seat over.
But that was how Seluseus Krönch liked it, Dante knew. The Barabel spent every off-hour wasting away in these types of joints, filling his guts with rivers of the cheapest drink credits could buy and spending any left-overs getting his mind blown by the latest strain of spice to hit the market. It was pitiable.
Dante watched the Barabel from a booth across the cantina's deserted dance floor. He was idly rolling a glass of rotgut in between his hands. The first of the evening. Condensation from the cooled alcohol dampened his palms.
The large frame of the former Shockboxer turned Dante's Manager was unmistakable, even through the spice haze permeating the cantina. The Barabel downed another cup down his hatch and slammed the empty mug onto the counter. He shook his head violently from side to side, making the fat covering his chin and neck undulate.
"Another!" The Barabel yelled.
He was putting on an air of confidence for the two men seated next to him. Whether these were new investors, or established business partners, or simply gambling buddies he was attempting to swindle, Dante didn't know.
Dante's finger traced the fresh scar on his lower arm. A reminder of his most recent fight against the King of Kaas City's arena.
Seluseus didn't pay him to know things. He paid him to put up a show and lose fights.
Just do as I say kid, and you'll make it big. It's what all the pros do, trust me. The Barabel had told Dante before his first professional fight.
He'd lost that fight, of course. He'd been too naive to know better. It was on purpose, against some second-rate, washed out degenerate spacer in some obscure third-rate cantina's local shockboxer's league. Seluseus had played up Dante's skills before the fight, even made up a fake record of victories, to work the bets in Dante's favour. Then he'd bet four-to-one odds against his own Shockboxer under a false name, and when the bell rang and Dante was counted down and out, the fat Barabel had walked out twenty-hundred cred sticks richer.
From the other side of the cantina dance floor Seluseus let out a half-laugh half-gargle through those fattened gills of his.
Dante drummed his fingers against the glass, sending small ripples across the gold-ambrosia surface of liquid.
That fat Barabel had to die.
Tonight.
Dash Farstar
But that was how Seluseus Krönch liked it, Dante knew. The Barabel spent every off-hour wasting away in these types of joints, filling his guts with rivers of the cheapest drink credits could buy and spending any left-overs getting his mind blown by the latest strain of spice to hit the market. It was pitiable.
Dante watched the Barabel from a booth across the cantina's deserted dance floor. He was idly rolling a glass of rotgut in between his hands. The first of the evening. Condensation from the cooled alcohol dampened his palms.
The large frame of the former Shockboxer turned Dante's Manager was unmistakable, even through the spice haze permeating the cantina. The Barabel downed another cup down his hatch and slammed the empty mug onto the counter. He shook his head violently from side to side, making the fat covering his chin and neck undulate.
"Another!" The Barabel yelled.
He was putting on an air of confidence for the two men seated next to him. Whether these were new investors, or established business partners, or simply gambling buddies he was attempting to swindle, Dante didn't know.
Dante's finger traced the fresh scar on his lower arm. A reminder of his most recent fight against the King of Kaas City's arena.
Seluseus didn't pay him to know things. He paid him to put up a show and lose fights.
Just do as I say kid, and you'll make it big. It's what all the pros do, trust me. The Barabel had told Dante before his first professional fight.
He'd lost that fight, of course. He'd been too naive to know better. It was on purpose, against some second-rate, washed out degenerate spacer in some obscure third-rate cantina's local shockboxer's league. Seluseus had played up Dante's skills before the fight, even made up a fake record of victories, to work the bets in Dante's favour. Then he'd bet four-to-one odds against his own Shockboxer under a false name, and when the bell rang and Dante was counted down and out, the fat Barabel had walked out twenty-hundred cred sticks richer.
From the other side of the cantina dance floor Seluseus let out a half-laugh half-gargle through those fattened gills of his.
Dante drummed his fingers against the glass, sending small ripples across the gold-ambrosia surface of liquid.
That fat Barabel had to die.
Tonight.
Dash Farstar