Priscilla Sato
May 18th, 2005, 02:07:29 PM
Making a living on Coruscant was sometimes a prickly business. Lack of available real estate was an obvious concern, but besides this it was difficult to find a market not already cornered by the nearly limitless workforce already in place, and the NR beauracracy perennially kept some of the planet's more...enterprising individuals down, in the gutters and out of sight.
However, it is the consistent practice of those who are kept down to persist in secret until they have clawed their way to the top. If they are very lucky, they can climb unnoticed until the proper authorities for handling them have suddenly become their subordinates.
Untold numbers had risen in this way. Who could remember, in the wash of glittering pomp, that the stunningly beautiful Senator was once infamous for assets which had nothing to do with her political mind? Who now chose to recall the subtle whispers of money changing hands when the chairman of Coruscant's most prominent pharmaceutical distributor sought the exclusive patronage of Coruscant's most wealthy doctors?
These minor misgivings were, of course, of no consequence, now. Who was going to argue with a Senator or a massive drug corporation? It was better simply to blink and smile these doubts away now, and grudgingly try harder in future to crack down on current lowlifes with delusions of grandeur.
All of which made Pris Sato's life that much more difficult a challenge.
But then, Pris had no "delusions of grandeur." Rather, she had plans for it, well-laid and well-executed ones several years in the brewing. No one but she knew of these plans, not even the very few business partners she kept in confidence for the purposes of furthering her lucrative trade.
By careful design, however, no one would ever have known of her profitable sidelines unless she divulged the information herself. Which she did only to the most deserving of potential customers.
Unfortunately, this did not apply to the great smelly boar of a humanoid currently sitting in front of her; nor did it apply to the vast majority of the bodies who shuffled in and out of the dingy tattoo parlor every day to look for the Dragon-hand of the Yakuza District, Pris Sato. Whatever they came here for, whether to boost their bragging credential or to fill their spiritual void with self-expression or simply to satisfy a masochistic appetite for pain, was not Pris's concern, unless she could see that taking an interest in the individual would equal a more substantial business deal later.
The leather-clad monstrosity oozing over the edges of her parlor chair at the moment was of no such value to Pris, so she didn't mind jabbing a little too hard with the needle currently inscribing "F--- Off" in Rodian into the bulging fat of his arm. Inebriated as he was, he barely seemed to notice.
"'Ey, now," he slurred, his bleary eyes rolling lazily toward her needle-hand. "A little more tender on me arm. Ah'm sens'tive. Or do Ah need t'prove it t'ya a li'l bit, doll?" One greasy, pudgy hand groped in the direction of Pris's left breast.
She nimbly swayed backward, lifting the ink needle in warning. "Your price just went up by fifteen creds, for the pleasure of getting even that close," she hissed in a voice remarkably gruff and ashy for such a young face and body. "Try it again and I'll be demonstrating the tenderness of my needle in your brain." Standing smoothly, she swiped at the last pool of ink with a stained rag and set the needle machine on the tray next to her.
"Get up, you're done," she commanded, leaning over to smack a self-stick gauze patch to the seeping spot. "Eighty credits."
She handed the man a datapad so that he could transfer the funds from his account to hers. As he raised his bulk from the chair, however, his weathered, baggy face grew grimly confused.
"Eighty? Th' agreement was f'r..." He paused a moment, trying to remember. "...was f'r sixty-five."
"And you charged fifteen more to your tab, Grumm, thirty seconds ago. You owe me eighty credits."
The grim confusion in Grumm's cloudy eyes was gradually sharpening into anger. He threw the datapad down on the front counter and growled, "Ah don' owe you a thing." Whereupon he started shuffling toward the door.
Pris felt her anger rise, flushing her cheeks. Her instinct was to go for the blaster under the counter and force the money out of him, but she knew Bernerd Grumm was a Flamethrower, and she couldn't afford to have the entire gang down on her head for pointing a gun at one of their buddies.
"Grumm, you stop right there, or you can go back to Meth and tell him he can stop sending his people over here. You really wanna go tell your boss you ticked me off over just one tattoo?"
It was a gamble--Grumm was not exceptionally bright in any case, and drunk he was even stupider, so if he so much as grunted in reply it'd be a miracle, and he was more likely to turn around and cuff her head right off her shoulders. Still, Meth was most frightening to his own people, and even Grumm had to know that the Flamethrowers were getting more from Sato's parlor than just good tattoos. She hoped his boss's terrifying ire would be enough deterrent to weasle the eighty creds out of his cheap leather pants.
The massive humanoid turned his head a little and fixed his beady eye on the young woman behind him. Then he turned fully and stumped a step closer, lowering.
"You wouldn't say a thing to him, if y'knew what I could come over here and do t'you." His fat fingers clenched ominously.
Pris was just trying to judge the space remaining between her and that blaster when the door to the parlor swung open and a tall, thin man with black hair and blacker eyes stepped in. The red light of the parlor's holosign outside--Dragon's Fang--shone in his hair and threw his high cheekbones and taut arm muscles into relief.
Instantly he saw the burly Flamethrower towering over the compact female, and next moment his switchblade was open in his hand.
"Problem, Pris?" he murmured, a wan smile on his face.
"Dunno," she replied, trying not to let her relief be obvious. "Ask Grumm, here."
The man canted his head, his eyes narrowing. The tip of the switchblade rubbed slowly up and down the outer seam of his jeans in a sharpening motion. "Whatcha say, Grumm. Is there a problem, here?"
The Flamethrower's reaction was as immediate as it was uncharacteristic. Seeming to deflate, Grumm hastily backed away from both Sato and the newcomer, his eyes filled with fear.
"N-nah, man, I...I was just..."
"Eighty credits, Grumm, and you can walk." Pris's voice was level, now.
The big man grunted, bobbing his head. "Sure, sure thing, girly, here." He seized the datapad, punched the obligatory keys, then dropped the thing like a burning coal and scuffed as quickly as he could move out the door, giving the thin young man a wide berth.
As soon as the door had clattered shut behind him, Pris relaxed. She glanced pointedly at the two other girls in the parlor, who had been staring in wide-eyed anxiety as the scene unfolded. Now they hurriedly looked away and went back to whatever it was they were doing.
The young man's switchblade had disappeared, and his cool smile broadened a fraction.
"'Lo, Pris," he said, drawing close to her. His long fingers trailed down the exposed skin of her left side. "What was that about?"
The girl shook her head and moved behind the counter. "Them frelling Flamethrowers are always causing trouble around here. They love to try to skip out on their bill, if they can manage it." She raised her eyes and tossed him a smile. "What brings you here this time of day, Sho?"
The young man was lighting a cigarette. Taking a drag, he tossed his black bangs out of his face and leaned against the wall. The muscles of his shoulders and arms made the vibrant, swirling tattoos covering the skin seem to move.
"Yuto says he needs the new shipment now. Can't wait for Friday. Says our supplies are too low."
The momentary lightening of Pris's face disappeared, and her mouth flattened into a businesslike line. Her brows drew down.
"You need to tell Yuto to go easy on those dyes. I don't just find 'em laying around in the street. Some of them can take months to get here. Which ones are you short?"
"Blue and black, mostly. He says green and red can wait til next time."
This talk of tattoo dye was, of course, for the other shopgirls' benefit.
You need to tell Yuto to stop handing out drugs like candy. These are impossible to get smuggled in. You're lucky I even have them on hand. Which are you low on?
Glitterstim and deathsticks, mostly...
Pris's eyes were emotionless, but the muscles around her mouth tightened in displeasure. "Lot of new customers?" she drawled sarcastically.
Shoichiro's eyes narrowed. Smoke curled out his nose, making him resemble nothing so much as a dragon waiting to eat its unwitting prey.
"If Yuto'd wanted you to know that, he'd have come himself. I'm here to pick up the shipment. You want me to take a message back?"
It was a threat, not a request. Keep your mouth shut and just fork over the goods. Yuto isn't the only one who doesn't need your smart mouth.
Pris did not like being threatened, but in this case she'd have to put up with it. Her authority was nowhere near enough to question Yuto or his mafia men. She nodded curtly and, producing a key from her pocket, turned and unlocked the back-room door.
The dim light guttered on automatically as she entered. When Shoichiro had followed her in, she shut the door and navigated through the stacks of boxes until she reached a group of crates at the back of the room.
"Here, these are the ones," she muttered, crossing her arms.
Sho glanced at her, then crouched down, his black tanktop stretching. The kabuki mask tattooed across his back peered up at Pris from just above the collar. She remembered the trouble it had been to get the eyes the correct hue, to get them to look as lifelike as she could. The tattoo was still a masterpiece, even a year later.
The man had pried open the crate marked MIDNIGHT BLUE and plucked a small jar of ink from inside. Unscrewing the cap, he eyed the dropper affixed to the inside of the lid. Carefully he grabbed the dropper and screwed it off. A small crumple of plastic peeked out from inside. Nodding, he put the dropper back into its spot, replaced the cap on the jar, and plinked the jar back into the crate.
"All there?" Pris snapped acidly. How dare he check up on her...
Almost before she realized he'd moved, Shoichiro was on his feet and had her backed against the wall, almost pinned there by his hips.
"I do what is necessary, Hebi," he breathed. Pris swallowed but kept her face level. Her eyes were focused on a design of red and yellow dye curling over his collarbone. "It's best if you didn't take too much interest in how I do it."
He leaned forward a handful of inches and brushed his lips over hers. Pris exhaled shakily, but before she could properly respond, she heard the clatter of the front door opening, and stiffened.
"I've got customers," she said, finally looking Sho in the eye. His cold black eyes closed and he shrugged indifferently, backing away from Pris. She slid past the man, leaving him to his shipment of "dye," and opened the door again, slipping her no-nonsense demeanor firmly back into place before she set foot into the main parlor.
However, it is the consistent practice of those who are kept down to persist in secret until they have clawed their way to the top. If they are very lucky, they can climb unnoticed until the proper authorities for handling them have suddenly become their subordinates.
Untold numbers had risen in this way. Who could remember, in the wash of glittering pomp, that the stunningly beautiful Senator was once infamous for assets which had nothing to do with her political mind? Who now chose to recall the subtle whispers of money changing hands when the chairman of Coruscant's most prominent pharmaceutical distributor sought the exclusive patronage of Coruscant's most wealthy doctors?
These minor misgivings were, of course, of no consequence, now. Who was going to argue with a Senator or a massive drug corporation? It was better simply to blink and smile these doubts away now, and grudgingly try harder in future to crack down on current lowlifes with delusions of grandeur.
All of which made Pris Sato's life that much more difficult a challenge.
But then, Pris had no "delusions of grandeur." Rather, she had plans for it, well-laid and well-executed ones several years in the brewing. No one but she knew of these plans, not even the very few business partners she kept in confidence for the purposes of furthering her lucrative trade.
By careful design, however, no one would ever have known of her profitable sidelines unless she divulged the information herself. Which she did only to the most deserving of potential customers.
Unfortunately, this did not apply to the great smelly boar of a humanoid currently sitting in front of her; nor did it apply to the vast majority of the bodies who shuffled in and out of the dingy tattoo parlor every day to look for the Dragon-hand of the Yakuza District, Pris Sato. Whatever they came here for, whether to boost their bragging credential or to fill their spiritual void with self-expression or simply to satisfy a masochistic appetite for pain, was not Pris's concern, unless she could see that taking an interest in the individual would equal a more substantial business deal later.
The leather-clad monstrosity oozing over the edges of her parlor chair at the moment was of no such value to Pris, so she didn't mind jabbing a little too hard with the needle currently inscribing "F--- Off" in Rodian into the bulging fat of his arm. Inebriated as he was, he barely seemed to notice.
"'Ey, now," he slurred, his bleary eyes rolling lazily toward her needle-hand. "A little more tender on me arm. Ah'm sens'tive. Or do Ah need t'prove it t'ya a li'l bit, doll?" One greasy, pudgy hand groped in the direction of Pris's left breast.
She nimbly swayed backward, lifting the ink needle in warning. "Your price just went up by fifteen creds, for the pleasure of getting even that close," she hissed in a voice remarkably gruff and ashy for such a young face and body. "Try it again and I'll be demonstrating the tenderness of my needle in your brain." Standing smoothly, she swiped at the last pool of ink with a stained rag and set the needle machine on the tray next to her.
"Get up, you're done," she commanded, leaning over to smack a self-stick gauze patch to the seeping spot. "Eighty credits."
She handed the man a datapad so that he could transfer the funds from his account to hers. As he raised his bulk from the chair, however, his weathered, baggy face grew grimly confused.
"Eighty? Th' agreement was f'r..." He paused a moment, trying to remember. "...was f'r sixty-five."
"And you charged fifteen more to your tab, Grumm, thirty seconds ago. You owe me eighty credits."
The grim confusion in Grumm's cloudy eyes was gradually sharpening into anger. He threw the datapad down on the front counter and growled, "Ah don' owe you a thing." Whereupon he started shuffling toward the door.
Pris felt her anger rise, flushing her cheeks. Her instinct was to go for the blaster under the counter and force the money out of him, but she knew Bernerd Grumm was a Flamethrower, and she couldn't afford to have the entire gang down on her head for pointing a gun at one of their buddies.
"Grumm, you stop right there, or you can go back to Meth and tell him he can stop sending his people over here. You really wanna go tell your boss you ticked me off over just one tattoo?"
It was a gamble--Grumm was not exceptionally bright in any case, and drunk he was even stupider, so if he so much as grunted in reply it'd be a miracle, and he was more likely to turn around and cuff her head right off her shoulders. Still, Meth was most frightening to his own people, and even Grumm had to know that the Flamethrowers were getting more from Sato's parlor than just good tattoos. She hoped his boss's terrifying ire would be enough deterrent to weasle the eighty creds out of his cheap leather pants.
The massive humanoid turned his head a little and fixed his beady eye on the young woman behind him. Then he turned fully and stumped a step closer, lowering.
"You wouldn't say a thing to him, if y'knew what I could come over here and do t'you." His fat fingers clenched ominously.
Pris was just trying to judge the space remaining between her and that blaster when the door to the parlor swung open and a tall, thin man with black hair and blacker eyes stepped in. The red light of the parlor's holosign outside--Dragon's Fang--shone in his hair and threw his high cheekbones and taut arm muscles into relief.
Instantly he saw the burly Flamethrower towering over the compact female, and next moment his switchblade was open in his hand.
"Problem, Pris?" he murmured, a wan smile on his face.
"Dunno," she replied, trying not to let her relief be obvious. "Ask Grumm, here."
The man canted his head, his eyes narrowing. The tip of the switchblade rubbed slowly up and down the outer seam of his jeans in a sharpening motion. "Whatcha say, Grumm. Is there a problem, here?"
The Flamethrower's reaction was as immediate as it was uncharacteristic. Seeming to deflate, Grumm hastily backed away from both Sato and the newcomer, his eyes filled with fear.
"N-nah, man, I...I was just..."
"Eighty credits, Grumm, and you can walk." Pris's voice was level, now.
The big man grunted, bobbing his head. "Sure, sure thing, girly, here." He seized the datapad, punched the obligatory keys, then dropped the thing like a burning coal and scuffed as quickly as he could move out the door, giving the thin young man a wide berth.
As soon as the door had clattered shut behind him, Pris relaxed. She glanced pointedly at the two other girls in the parlor, who had been staring in wide-eyed anxiety as the scene unfolded. Now they hurriedly looked away and went back to whatever it was they were doing.
The young man's switchblade had disappeared, and his cool smile broadened a fraction.
"'Lo, Pris," he said, drawing close to her. His long fingers trailed down the exposed skin of her left side. "What was that about?"
The girl shook her head and moved behind the counter. "Them frelling Flamethrowers are always causing trouble around here. They love to try to skip out on their bill, if they can manage it." She raised her eyes and tossed him a smile. "What brings you here this time of day, Sho?"
The young man was lighting a cigarette. Taking a drag, he tossed his black bangs out of his face and leaned against the wall. The muscles of his shoulders and arms made the vibrant, swirling tattoos covering the skin seem to move.
"Yuto says he needs the new shipment now. Can't wait for Friday. Says our supplies are too low."
The momentary lightening of Pris's face disappeared, and her mouth flattened into a businesslike line. Her brows drew down.
"You need to tell Yuto to go easy on those dyes. I don't just find 'em laying around in the street. Some of them can take months to get here. Which ones are you short?"
"Blue and black, mostly. He says green and red can wait til next time."
This talk of tattoo dye was, of course, for the other shopgirls' benefit.
You need to tell Yuto to stop handing out drugs like candy. These are impossible to get smuggled in. You're lucky I even have them on hand. Which are you low on?
Glitterstim and deathsticks, mostly...
Pris's eyes were emotionless, but the muscles around her mouth tightened in displeasure. "Lot of new customers?" she drawled sarcastically.
Shoichiro's eyes narrowed. Smoke curled out his nose, making him resemble nothing so much as a dragon waiting to eat its unwitting prey.
"If Yuto'd wanted you to know that, he'd have come himself. I'm here to pick up the shipment. You want me to take a message back?"
It was a threat, not a request. Keep your mouth shut and just fork over the goods. Yuto isn't the only one who doesn't need your smart mouth.
Pris did not like being threatened, but in this case she'd have to put up with it. Her authority was nowhere near enough to question Yuto or his mafia men. She nodded curtly and, producing a key from her pocket, turned and unlocked the back-room door.
The dim light guttered on automatically as she entered. When Shoichiro had followed her in, she shut the door and navigated through the stacks of boxes until she reached a group of crates at the back of the room.
"Here, these are the ones," she muttered, crossing her arms.
Sho glanced at her, then crouched down, his black tanktop stretching. The kabuki mask tattooed across his back peered up at Pris from just above the collar. She remembered the trouble it had been to get the eyes the correct hue, to get them to look as lifelike as she could. The tattoo was still a masterpiece, even a year later.
The man had pried open the crate marked MIDNIGHT BLUE and plucked a small jar of ink from inside. Unscrewing the cap, he eyed the dropper affixed to the inside of the lid. Carefully he grabbed the dropper and screwed it off. A small crumple of plastic peeked out from inside. Nodding, he put the dropper back into its spot, replaced the cap on the jar, and plinked the jar back into the crate.
"All there?" Pris snapped acidly. How dare he check up on her...
Almost before she realized he'd moved, Shoichiro was on his feet and had her backed against the wall, almost pinned there by his hips.
"I do what is necessary, Hebi," he breathed. Pris swallowed but kept her face level. Her eyes were focused on a design of red and yellow dye curling over his collarbone. "It's best if you didn't take too much interest in how I do it."
He leaned forward a handful of inches and brushed his lips over hers. Pris exhaled shakily, but before she could properly respond, she heard the clatter of the front door opening, and stiffened.
"I've got customers," she said, finally looking Sho in the eye. His cold black eyes closed and he shrugged indifferently, backing away from Pris. She slid past the man, leaving him to his shipment of "dye," and opened the door again, slipping her no-nonsense demeanor firmly back into place before she set foot into the main parlor.