teumessian fox
Moon
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2020
- Location
- California, USA
Taungsdays were always slow — miserably so, in Echo’s opinion. That the denizens of Coruscant might have better things to do than drink and gamble their lives away at the Outlander Club had come as something of a surprise, though on a practical level it made sense; one had to earn credits to have credits to spend, and it was only the truly destitute (or obnoxiously well-off) who had the leeway to spend their early mornings throwing chits into slot machines with reckless abandon. The lack of orders coming to the bar hinted at some sense of propriety among the assembled gamblers: drinking before noon? How excessive. How unnecessary. How gauche.
But a quiet morning left her with precious little to occupy her time, and Echo found herself succumbing to boredom behind the bar, hands idly working the same rag over the same clean, polished glass in an effort to keep occupied. Cerd was a decent boss, all things considered, but the Bothan had little interest in paying his employees to do nothing, and Echo was all too aware that he would delight in figuring out some obscure, physically intensive chore for her to accomplish in her idleness. She was bored, sure — but when it came to menial labor, it was difficult to deny that she possessed some small, inborn sense of laziness, too.
It was strange to see the Club so quiet, regardless of the hour. In the evenings, the building came alight with a thrumming neon glow, with patrons packed from one wall to the next. Hearing the person next to you was an impossible task over the music, the sounds of the holo-screens, and the raised voices of one’s peers; half the time she found herself simply guessing at orders, too busy to read their lips or ask for clarity. Maybe it was luck, or some working of the Force that she was rarely wrong — as long as they tipped her and the Bothan didn’t find out and fire her, Echo wasn’t exactly liable to care.
Among the various employees — bookies, dancers, musicians, and bartenders alike — Echo had found some level of anonymity. Nothing was on the books, no chance of a trail; no one cared where she came from or where she hoped to go. Her past as a Jedi didn’t matter. Her real name, what brought her to Coruscant, why she was laying low, no one cared about any of it. There was nothing more comforting than being forgotten, especially considering the kind of trouble her (and her lightsaber) seemed to bring.
With a resigned sigh, Echo placed the glass on the counter. From beneath the bar she produced a bottle of amber liquid to fill it halfway, before topping it off with something that smelled impossibly sweet, turning the concoction a deep violet where the two spirits mixed. Swirling the glass, she brought it to her lips and took a sip, content to whittle away the last hour of her shift on her datapad.