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Maximus Whitesun
Jan 21st, 2014, 11:39:25 AM
They were still there, both of them: the obnoxious twin suns of Tatooine that lashed the barren surface into a desolate wasteland. He found himself checking periodically, peering through the ragged drapes that hung over the sandblasted glass of his windows to watch them rise, hoping against hope that he had somehow materialised on some - any - other world while he had slept.

Once again, a miracle failed to liberate him, and a sigh heaved out from his lungs into the dry air, the almost absent humidity exploiting the brief access to his mouth to tear out what moisture it could. The air didn't have to resort to such tactics of course: every molecule of water steamed away from the surface of the skin, swirling into the atmosphere only to circulate in the hot winds until it was liberated once again by one of the moisture farms, to be consumed and then stolen all over again by and from the people foolish enough to live here.

Why a world such as this remained inhabited, Maximus Whiterun found himself at a loss to say. In antiquity, mining corporations had plundered the planet's surface for every resource they could conceivably find and extract, but a few thousand years on the ore veins had run dry, and the only thing that Tatooine seemed capable of yielding in any abundance was sand, the never-ending supply of salvage that the Jawas seemed to condense from thin air, and a soul-destroying sense of misery that nowhere else in the galaxy seemed able to replicate.

Maximus had escaped, that was the bitter truth of it. He'd lived the dream of so many young men on Tatooine, and had sailed across the stars to the Imperial Academy; embarked upon a career that was supposed to change his life. An officer with the Sandtroopers, a specialised branch of the Stormtrooper Corps was not as removed from home as he had hoped; but it was an escape, into a world where his life had purpose, and that purpose earned him respect.

It had all fallen apart though, more than a decade ago now. With the Desert Sands aboard the Devastator, he had been dragged unwillingly back to Tatooine in pursuit of an errant Senator and a set of stolen plans. Smuggled into two droids, the plans had been launched into the Dune Sea, and the Desert Sands - alongside the local garrison and Vader's own 501st - had been given the oh so simple task of retrieving them.

Find two nondescript droids somewhere on the vast surface of Tatooine. Whitesun had warned them of the nigh impossible task they faced, but listening to logic was not a skill many in the Imperial hierarchy possessed. Their failure had seen the unforgiving Vader cast the entire Desert Sands company aside, leaving them marooned alongside the local garrison for being incapable of miracles. It had caused two dangerous Jedi fugitives to slip through the Empire's hands, made the Battle of Yavin possible and set into motion the slow downfall of the Empire; and amid the casualties and collateral that their desperate efforts towards impossibility had caused was the tragic death of dear, sweet Cousin Beru.

The muscles in Whitesun's jaw bunched. They should have just glassed Tatooine from orbit and had done with it.

The ten years since had been insufferable. Substandard conditions, meagre provisions, no purpose, and no hope of relief or replacement. Many of the Sandtroopers had resigned or retired, spending every credit they had just to be anywhere but here. Some simply abandoned their posts, hiding under the slugtails of the Hutts and their ilk until they too had abandoned this rock. Others resorted to more expedient, less expensive, and fatally drastic ways of escaping damnation. An urban myth amongst the rank and file spoke of men striding out into the wastes and hurling themselves into the Pit of Carkoon as a way out; they had no idea just how close to the truth such fables were.

Where there was a will though, there was a way towards opportunity: and Maximus Whitesun had seized his. News on Tatooine was scarce, but even on this backwater word of The Treaty arrived. The threat of mutual destruction had driven the Galactic Empire out of almost half the galaxy; worlds like Tatooine and it's garrison were abandoned without a second thought. Prefects, senior administrators, and ranking officers managed to have themselves retrieved, but for most of the Imperials here involuntary redundancy had been the order of the day. There was outrage. Despair. A lack of leadership.

Opportunity.

Tugging the loose duster over his repurposed Sandtrooper armour, Commander Whiterun stopped just long enough to regard himself in the cracked mirror bolted to his walls. The combination of cloth and composite reminded him of holostills from his younger days, of Jedi Generals who mixed the armour of Clone Troopers with the robes of their Order to ready themselves for the War. Martial was the word; he summoned a small smile at the irony, before stepping out into the street.

A hot, gentle breeze meandered down the main street of Wayfar, kicking up a haze of dust that assaulted the eyes of those who hadn't learned to blink against it. Antagonised by the airflow, the hand painted sign above Whitesun's door, Marshal, creaked on it's hinges as it swung. A hand idly brushed over the hip of his duster, the glancing pressure making contact with the holstered blaster worn underneath. A flick of the wrist cast off any errant sand as Whitesun settled the fedora onto his head, the brim offering a much appreciated barrier between his eyes and the assault of the sun.

This was Wayfar, he mused, a nigh-forgotten mining town on a nigh-forgotten backwater. This was the depressed, the desperate, the devoid of anywhere else to go.

This was his town.

Yoss
Jan 24th, 2014, 05:24:30 PM
Beneath the creaky plate metal sign that read "APOTHECARY" in Aurrebesh, a door opened onto the main thoroughfare. The occupant within peered out cautiously, daubing a bead of sweat that dared collect on his forehead before the inevitable dry air could claim it. His yellow eyes squinted cantankerously as he dared to look up and see the position of the murderous twin suns. Mid-afternoon. With a groan, Doc Yoss committed to his errand, drawing a makeshift hood over his head as some laughable relief from the heat of the direct sun. To others, Tatooine was an inhospitable wasteland. To a Pantoran, the parched and baked desert world was mythical Hell made manifest.

Light-footing it down the street, the Doc spied Marshal Whitesun making his rounds, and picked up his pace.

"Marshal! Marshal!"

The purse holding what little mercy this decrepit mining camp possessed was only passed around a few hands, and Doc wasted little time making himself plain.

"We were supposed to get situated by the caravan from the Gundolt vaporator farm this morning."

Maximus Whitesun
Jan 25th, 2014, 07:18:43 AM
The heel of Whitesun's boots dug silently into the sand as he came to a halt. On some worlds, in some deserts, such actions would greet you with a satisfying, grating crunch; but not here on Tatooine, not on the outskirts of the Dune Sea. Hundreds of thousands of years of relentless wind and shifting dunes had ground what had once been mountains into a fine and silent powder. A blessing for the Tusken Raiders and their attempts at stealth raids against towns and villages, but to everyone else it was a curse, an unstoppable plague that infected and infiltrated every orifice of every object to have the misfortune of enduring more than a second of this planet's atmosphere.

He unleashed a sigh, reluctantly turning his attention onto the being that loitered around him. It was vaguely human in shape, but far from it in pigment; not a species he knew the name of, and not one he particularly cared to. Nor, for that matter, was he particularly interested in it's name.

"The fact that I was not there," he countered, the tiredness of his tone of voice doing nothing to erode the careful annunciation of his words, "Suggests that I don't hold this supposed task in particularly high esteem. I suggest dropping the pretence that this, whatever it is, might be as important as you seem to think it is -"

A pause drew out the middle of his sentiment, the scathing look of an adult disapproving of a petulant child sweeping across his features. A subconscious hand settled atop his blaster; an instinctive reminder that this non-human should mind himself better when speaking around his betters.

"- and explain yourself properly, like a civilized being."

Yoss
Jan 25th, 2014, 11:41:29 AM
Most sentients might wither under that kind of insinuation. Doc Yoss was either too angry or tired to let it dissuade him.

"Water, Marshal. It runs out, we run out. We're already a week behind our top off, and I'm starting to get the first few dehydration cases."

Yoss shifted uneasily, withering from the sun above rather the man in front of him.

"If it's a flux or a fever or any such malady, I have means to make that right, but once folks ain't got enough water in 'em to sweat it out, there's just one cure for that. We need that water, Marshal."

Torik Beirhannon
Feb 16th, 2014, 12:42:01 PM
From high above, a figure stood watching over the main drag of the small settlement from the comfort of his upper balcony. Propped up on the railing, he cast narrow eyes from side to side with a degree of laziness in the way they moved from building to building, person to person. He pursed his lips, bringing up a white-flecked red tin mug to sip from its' contents. Nothing so brutish as caf; no, he preferred to begin his daily rituals with water accompanied by a small slice of an Ithorian sunburst lemon dropped in. Simple and elegant in a place that wasn't so simple, and certainly not elegant. He swallowed, and his eyes moved onward again, only now they came to rest on two figures that were known well enough, and without thought the watcher shifted his footing, placing weight on another leg.

Torik Beirhannon had been on Tatooine for long enough to know how things operated, and he'd been in this town for almost that same amount of time. He'd gone to ground here, and had never felt the need to rise back up. He still had Ell-E, the little droid still chirpy as ever, and his ship remained berthed, but it'd not been touched in a very long, and he had no desires to do so.

Let The Akurian Queen rot away into a million little bolts and rusted parts. He'd never get rid of her, but he also never wanted to lay eyes on her again - he paid his monthly rental fees for the storage and left it at that.

But she was a relic of another life, and Torik had forged himself a new existence that he found strange contentment in.

And now, looking down at Yoss and the Marshall, he frowned a bit. By the doctor's mannerisms, it was a rather easy notion to get despite not quite being in earshot to the two men's voices. It certainly didn't bother Beirhannon, and he raised his voice so that the two would hear him.

"The good Doctor is rightly concerned, Marshall," his tone was level, yet playfully serious at the same time, and he took another drink, swallowing before sending a half-smirk and raised eyebrows downward.

"If we have no water," the mug gently tapped against the weathered railing, "... then you have no town."

Maximus Whitesun
Sep 13th, 2015, 05:46:45 PM
Whitesun's eyes followed a slow and incredulous arc as they turned upwards towards the spacer who'd decided - for reasons that Whitesun could only surmise stemmed from cognitive deficit, neurological damage, or anotherwise impossible to escape criminal past - to undertake his retirement here among the sands and shanty shacks of Wayfar. Genial as Mister Beirhannon was - he'd made a point to remember that name - his words came with that same slick coating of smugness that spacefarers always had, the same grease that saw them evading obligation, responsibility, due process, and good practice with equal measure and equal disinterest.

"I am well aware of how things function on my planet," he replied, with a note of challenge barely restrained behind the forced formality of his voice. It was all well and good for Beirhannon to sit there offering benign observations from his warru nut gallery like some quintessential superfluous bureaucrat, but just like his equivalent the galaxy over, it was all passive observation with no substance, and provided absolutely nothing of benefit in the resolution of this situation.

Neither, frustratingly, did the non-human's apparent idiocy. An explanation he had given, true, but none of it was valuable, none of it relevant. He had explained the consequences in detail, but the situation, the problem, the clues towards resolution were as cryptic as they had been when this conversation began. Whitesun let his eyes settle back on his unfortunately-complexioned companion. "Just as I am aware of the dangers on dehydration on the world upon which I was born."

He drew in a long breath threw his nose, ballooning his lungs before heaving it out as a heavy sigh. "I asked you to explain yourself properly, not to simply state the obvious like I am some sort of idiot child without mentioning even the barest of relevant facts. I am not some mystic who can conjure a flood of water from within my sleeves: I am the Marshal of this town; I am your defender, not your nursemaid."

His jaw clenched as irritation crept into his words. "You expected me at a caravan this morning. Good for you. Why? What purpose would you have your protector serve? Am I to buy water from these Gundolt moisture farmers? Protect their caravan from raiders? Raid it myself? Repair their broken equipment? Take a blaster carbine to the town's population, so there are fewer parched tongues to concern ourselves with?"

A grunt of resigned laughter escaped, an almost imperceptible shake moving Whitesun's head as he peered over frustration's head into the nothingness beyond. When his eyes came to rest upon the blue man once more, his tone had turned quiet and cold, edged with the sharpness of a verbal knife. "Speak words that are useful, or speak none at all."