LostSoul
Adventurer
Here's a story I'm in the process of writing that is background to the Heroes of Kalarba campaign. It deals with how Brooke & Troy met. There's some sex and profanity so if you're easily offended you might want to look somewhere else.
I've got more of this done but I'm just waiting to see what I think of it in a few days.
---
Troy Chance looked at his reflection and adjusted his necktie. He wasn't having any luck with it tonight. He twisted and pulled but the shape never took proper form. Or was it that he was just not satisfied with the thing? He had never liked these fancy events, these "how's-your-wife-still-on-her-deathbed-that's-nice-have-a-good-night" functions. Nothing real said, at least not to him. He would much rather have jumped out like Arthur did, drinking and whoring somewhere down in the dim rows of lights on the capital city streets where his memories always became fuzzy the next morning but left him feeling pleasant and ready to face the day.
Maybe there would be a game here tonight. That he could almost count on. The Count of Lower Aquessa, Troy knew, was an addict to the card and die. Troy knew of this urge to lose money but could not understand it. It was something that he accepted but knew that he would never experience. Troy felt immune to it, like that invulnerable feeling that you have when you're young. He was an odds-man, playing the numbers and the faces. And he had ways to make sure the numbers stayed in his favour without the faces knowing.
Troy ripped at the cumbersome Kalarban necktie and threw it into the sink.


it, he thought, and undid his top button. 


those socialites and thier standards. I look better this way and if I'm going out later that damn tie is not coming with me. He adjusted his collar in the fashion of the famous pilots, the war-heroes of whom he had grown up hearing stories, of thier courage and bravery in the old war and the uneasy peace that followed. He looked into the mirror and his mind drifted away to the grainy old picture he still kept with him, the picture of the pilot with his piercing eyes and look of steadfast courage, the courage that comes with knowing your fate and accepting it. He looked down for a moment and saw the necktie lying there in the cold stainless steel sink, a dark wet stain on its solid blue surface. He folded it up and placed it in his breast pocket.
The reception hall was brightly lit and open. Members of the elite and aloof class wandered about making small chatter with each other. They waved at Troy and smiled as he walked by, greeting him with pleasantries as he moved towards the bar.
"Nice night, isn't it," said one man he thought he may have recognized. The drink must have taken the old man away.
Troy smiled politely. If he had been honest, he would have answered: I wouldn't know, I'm in here. This wasn't the place for honesty. He knew that the old man was thinking something suitably unpleasant and would not have engaged Troy if he had the choice. But when they chose this life for themselves they gave the honesty up. A fair trade for comfort and beauty. It's possible to live without any of it.
He leaned up against the polished white sensen-marble of the bar and breathed in its aroma. That empty smell that came from the marble's absorption of unwanted spills and smokes. Arthur had called it "the favoured bar of teetotallers and the chaste." Troy hated it; he was none of these things. But then what was he? A drinker, a whorer, a man of vice with a knack for numbers. Nothing more.
Troy smiled at this.
"What will it be, sir?" the bartender asked.
"Corellian whiskey. Neat."
The bartender poured the drink and slid it across the bar to Troy. Troy opened his wallet and removed some cash.
"This is for the drink. And this is so you don't have to ask me again what I'm drinking. Just have it ready for me when I come up to the bar."
The bartender gathered the money. "Not a problem, sir."
Troy nodded and walked off.
The first part of the night went by slowly. Dinner was better, because he was already drunk by then and ready to eat. He ignored the chatter around him and immursed himself in the meal. It was good and the eating warmed him up. When it was done he felt tired. He would have liked to have closed his eyes right there and dozed while his host was toasting the table. Somebody always brought him out of it, rattling on about thier son in the new inter-system governmental peacekeeping body or daughter marrying some general of a inner-rim world or the new mine they discovered in the galactic fringe. Troy kept his polite face on and answered with the "really?"s and the "how fascinating"s that he grew up with. He kept his mind busy by running through numbers, permutations and combinations of hands, rolls, scores, and their pay-off values. Finally the dinner was over and the patrons left to smoke, gamble, drink, and talk business and politics both low and high.
Troy found himself lounged in a supple targan-back hide chair. The cool touch of the leather and the night breeze drifting in through the nearby window brought his awareness back to the party. He sat alone in the corner of the study chamber smoking a long guntha stick, watching the breeze catch and play with the smoke expelled from his lungs.
A group of white- and grey-haired men entered, laughing and boasting loudly, either about this or that event that allowed them to use thier considerable political and economic power, or how this or that business was on the point of breaking out so big that a seat on the Galactic Senate was within thier grasp. Troy wondered why the powerful lusted after such impotent appointments, why they gave these things value above all else.
"-and that was the end of her!" one particularly boisterous old man laughed. Troy labelled him Red Face when seeing him.
"Hello, boy," he continued, adressing Troy in that demeaning way old and powerful men treated the young, "I hope you don't mind us breaking your solitude!"
Troy nodded and grinned. "My mind needed the rest from the dizzying conversation out there."
"Ha! To be young and ignorant again! How I long for my youth and days of irresponsibility and carelessness. There are things to learn from every conversation."
"I guess."
"Ho! This one is as stubborn as I was! Hah! As I said, to be young again. Ah, well."
Troy nodded to the old man. He continued his conversation with the others following him. Troy knew of this man, a rich and power-hungry one from a nearby world. He was swift and had a sharp mind. Troy watched and listened to Red Face's boasts, his bragging, and his flock of comerades. Most were trying to gain some information, some kind of boon from him which they could use either to break thier enemies or gain great wealth. But Red Face told those kinds of stories that, in the telling, allow you to learn much about your audience while you hide behind the storyteller's veil. Red Face had a way with words just as Troy had a way with numbers. In that way, Red Face reminded Troy of himself.
Naturally, Troy hated Red Face.
Troy finished his drink and got to his feet. The initial drunkeness that came with the first few glasses had passed, and now he could think clearly again. He felt calm and rational and ready for anything that might come his way. He hoped to find a game with some of the richer and drunker aristocrats, but even the kid's game of stones and circles would have sated his appetite.
There was a drink waiting on the bar for him. Troy left a 10-note where the drink was sitting. The sensen marble was already dry, having absorbed the condensed liquid, and the money skipped errantly under the influence of some nearby breeze. Troy turned and left with the bill dancing in the wind.
There always was a game of some kind running at these functions and tonight was no exception. A herd of the usuals, looking serious or trying to, giving off and, in turn, missing tells that Troy could see so far away. It was always so easy... the calculated winning and losing, never humiliating deep pockets and scaring off those who might upset the balance. Troy knew the dance well.
"Any seats open?" Troy recognized them all but knew none.
"Sure." A narrow faced man with a habit of rubbing his chin pointed at an errant chair. Troy thought he looked like a rodent although the likeness was not there. The face called to mind the creature's cowardly habits.
"Thanks."
Troy sat down and took the cards delt to him. Three hours later, he left a rich man.
He bought a bottle of the whiskey from the bar and, after leaving a large tip, moved out to the patio to drink by himself. It was a nice evening, cool winds blowing down from the mountains, the kind of winds that make you feel like you can reach out and touch the stars if only you could fly high enough. Against the chill of the late summer breeze, the whiskey burned its way down Troy's throat.
How long will this last? he wondered. The cash in my pocket now is enough to let me live a normal - boring - life for a while. Or, if I felt like it, to let it earn for itself. As it is, this should be gone before the week ends. I'm a poor man with expensive tastes and friends. Arthur never went through this, I'm sure. Being a crown prince must have some benefits.
Troy felt a tug at his guntha stick and let it go. He turned to see it find its way into the mouth of a woman.
"Are you going to be sharing that at all?" she asked.
"I've only the one glass." She was wearing a white dress, tight and off the shoulders. He looked at their delicate curves and the creamy-white of her skin. Her lips were a pale shade of red, popular among the system celebreties at the moment. They effortlessly pulled against the guntha stick and opened again to expel the smoke.
"That's okay. I'm sure you don't mind drinking from the bottle." She said this and then finally turned to face Troy. Her face was noble, aristocratic and full of grace, the natural grace one must be born with and can't be learned no matter who your parents may have been or how much money they might have. Her eyes sparkled from the light of the guntha stick and thier dark green pools hinted of something hidden beneath the surface, something strong and passionate lurking within which would calm all the desires of your heart if only you could somehow experience it.
She flipped a loose strand of her short, dark hair. "I'm Brooke," she said.
"Troy," he said while filling the glass. He handed it to her and thier hands touched for an electric second. She looked him in the eye and he could feel himself drinking her up through her look, that look that he never forgot that seemed to go on and on and on and each moment it stirred his heart. Finally Brooke cleared her throat and looked at the glass which she sipped lightly.
"Not bad," she said, handing the guntha stick back to Troy and turning to look over the range below. Troy nodded and took a drag. It tasted of sweet spice and cinnimon. He swallowed discreetly and turned slowly towards the lights of Kalarba City and the mountain range beyond. His eyes lost themselves in Brooke's curves on the way. Her dress sparkled here and there and danced lightly in the breeze, clinging tighter to her body. Troy felt the hair on his neck stand up straight and he took another drag of the guntha stick.
Troy stared out at the lights below and above, the breeze in his hair, Brooke's scent in his nostrils. He felt the inches between them as though they were the width of the world. He felt her eyes looking outwards as was he and he felt as though the two of them were sharing the same sight. Brooke ran her fingers through her hair, closed her eyes and raised her neck to the night.
"I guess I had better get back inside. Thanks for the drink."
"And the smoke."
"That too," she said and grabbed the smoke again and pulled one last drag from it. Then she stepped into the light of the reception hall, moving gracefully from the patio as a dancer would. Troy watched her over his shoulder as she greeted a stranger as an old friend.
She has the same look, Troy thought, but she's the original. Leelu was an imperfect copy of her, a well made imitation but lacking in those few essential qualities. She's one hell of a fox. Troy turned to look at the city and mountains again. Leelu, he thought, how long had it been? Years, at least. He still felt the bittersweet taste of her lips and the firm-but-soft curve of her hips. That had not ended well. The loving but the leaving and then nothing. He had thought he would feel for her for always but soon enough the flame was gone and forgotten, tucked in his memory as something nice and maybe more but nothing more important than any of those grainy night encounters that had filled his time since then.
Troy flicked the half-spent guntha stick over the railing and into the palace garden below.
It was a few hours and many drinks before Troy saw Brooke again. She was at one of the game tables, sitting a step away. When she laughed her dress rode up her thigh even higher than it already was. Troy looked at the long smoothness of her legs and the inviting way she had them crossed towards him. He leaned up against a nearby doorway and watched her play the game.
She looked over at him when the hand was done. "I remember you," she said over the laughter of the table. Each head turned to look to where her words led them. On seeing Troy the laughter stopped dead and left only the slowly drifting smoke in its wake. Brooke smiled wide.
"Won't you join us?" The watching faces furrowed thier brows and fixed thier hatred. "At least for a drink."
"To even us out," Troy said, looking Brooke in the eye.
"I hardly think-" began one of the other men, only to stop short cut off from a look by Brooke. "Well, sit down, boy, and share a drink. Although you look as though you hardly need one." The other men chuckled at this. Troy stepped towards the table and pulled a chair from nearby, placing it next to Brooke, all the while never taking his eyes from hers.
"Thanks," Troy said in that tone of voice that adults use when children tell them things they consider pointless. The chuckles left the smokey air. "What's the game?"
"Sabacc," Brooke answered.
"King's rules?"
"Nothing else. Honour goes to you."
"Thanks." They had not broken eye contact even with Troy shuffling the old-style deck. Finally Brooke looked away when Troy began dealing.
"You sound like you know the card games well," Loud Mouth said. "Certainly you've been to the Casino Royale on Soccarro six?"
"I've had the pleasure," Troy answered. He was now dealing the cards that he had grown up with.
"Really? I was there once before the spring and the hordes of tourists descended on it. Back in those days you could get in close with Dean Regal. He is, of course, the owner of that place. I spent some long and expensive nights there, back when it was a really high-class place and they knew who to let in. And who to keep out."
"Really." Troy anted up. "Have you been to Casino Royale, Miss Brooke?"
"A Lady like me in such a place? Never!" she smiled. Troy knew she was lying. "You'll have to take me there sometime."
"Of course."
By the end of the night the game was over and Troy had earned the emity of each of the men at the table. One by one they left in frustration. When it was Loud Mouth's turn to bow out of the game and only Brooke and Troy were left, Troy looked at his winnings and counted them up. A pittance compared to what he had began the game with. Troy looked at Brooke in surprise.
"The Lady did not find you tonight," she said with a smile. Troy knew the smile, knew that he had flashed it before, using it to calm the shocked faces. He knew it well enough to know that something else was hidden in it.
Troy leaned back and folded his arms behind his head. "Looks like she's found you all right."
"Yes, well, it was a lucky night. Even without your cheating for me." Troy should have seen that coming but did not.
"Yeah..."
"I'm off to spend some of this. It's been some time since I've been to Kalarba... and it was nice meeting you, Troy Chance."
"Likewise, Lady Ashby," Troy said.
Brooke stood from her seat and left Troy at the table with his money and the stale smoke in the air.
Troy looked out the window of the sleek air-cab that sped down from the palace hall to the city below. He liked the way the city looked from above and through drunken eyes. Calming and yet full of excitement and potential. Behind every one of those lights was a golden star, a beautiful woman, a treasure beyond imagining. If only he could bring them to him.
***sun was comkug soon It was early in the morning when Troy found Arthur. Surrounded by "friends", hangers-on that looked for fun, favours, and the sense of self-worth that royalty brought. Arthur didn't have any of it, having given too much of himself away. He was well into his cups but just scratching the surface of the treasury and his limits.
"Troy!" Arthur called out. He had a wild look in his eyes.
"Looks like you're having a good time." Troy nodded to old aquaintances and checked out the new ones. Royalty did have its advantages. He sat down across from Arthur and next to a long-legged woman with her hair up.
"Have a drink," Arthur said, waving his hand over the table full of smoke and liquor. Troy shook his head and nodded at a man dressed in silky black. The man passed a small pouch to Troy.
"I'm going to dance," Long Legs said. Most of the others joined her.
Troy sighed and took the pouch.
"So, what's her name?" Arthur asked.
"Who?"
"The broad that's got you shaken up. What's her name?"
"How do you know it's a woman?"
"Last time you did any it was Leelu."
"This one's different," Troy said, passing the pouch back.
"Eh?"
"Lost some cash to her. In a game."
"No


! She must be something."
"I guess."
Troy felt a rush through his body and most of the night was carried away with it. But not all; he still saw Brooke on that balcony, star-crossed sky framing her face, her sublime features blending with the night, just as clear now as the moment he saw her. Troy smiled and took a drink.
"That's more like it. Come on, let's get this night started."
The sex with Long Legs was long and the pleasure came quick. Troy fell asleep soon after.
The throbbing in his head came before Troy opened his eyes and woke from the pleasing blackness all around him. He saw the feet of Long Legs resting before him, heard her gentle breathing from the head of the bed, smelt her aroma drifting on the breeze from the open window with the long, white, thin curtains. The mid-afternoon breeze was nice and raised the hairs on Troy's arm.
Troy rose and Long Legs stirred. She opened her eyes and smiled weakly at Troy before falling back to sleep. Troy watched the rise and fall of her chest, her small breasts bared in the sunshine. Her hair was balled in a mess around her head, her blue lipstick faded. Troy went to the washroom, the room spinning slightly around him.
He looked at himself in the mirror, felt the stubble on his face and traced his old scar with his finger. He took a small pink pill and washed it down with a glass of water. The throbbing stopped and the room quieted down. He lathered his face and trimmed the stubble, keeping it clean but still raw.
Troy put on a pair of comfortable lounging pants and sat in a deep chair next to the window. He took a nearby fruit and looked out onto the neighbour's garden, green vines growing controlled and kept perfectly symmetrical. Troy bit into the fruit and its juices splashed out against his face. He wiped them off with the back of his hand. He lay back deeper into the chair.
He reached over for his comlink and pressed a button. Then he sat there, finishing his fruit, looking out into the sky. The wild Vornskyrs flew high overhead, above the feeding pens. Troy remembered when he first rode one, back when he was a child, and he and Arthur were being schooled in the art of politics. He instinctivly feared the great, feral beast, but the royal ridemaster had explained that the Vornskyrs had all been raised in captivity at birth and conditioned through pain and pleasure. Hurting humans was as unnatural to them as roosting on the low, fertile valleys.
With the fruit done he lit a guntha stick. He remembered old tales from Maia about the knights of Kalarba, flying on their vicious Vornskyrs trained in war, striking at the other houses' mercenaries with thier laser swords. About the great alliance between House Hosk and House Indobok. About the great peace that followed for over a thousand generations. And his thoughts turned to the Clone Wars and the pilots that served in the grand army. He finished the guntha stick and tossed it out the window into the well-kept garden below.
A knock at the door woke Long Legs. Troy answered it and brought in a silver platter filled with warm foods.
"Something smells good," Long Legs said.
"I ordered some food from downstairs."
"I don't know if I can eat anything right now. Let's have a look."
Troy came to the bed and lay next to Long Legs. "Coffee," he offered, taking a mug for himself. Long Legs sat up, folded her legs up against her chest, and took the drink. Troy lighted a guntha stick and handed it to her. She sipped the coffee and took a drag.
Troy dug into his meal. The warm, greasy food coated his stomach. He felt it restore something that he had lost last night, or maybe before, but something that he hadn't felt slip away. He looked at Long Legs sipping her coffee and wondered. He felt an emptyness there, a tree in a forest and nothing more. She wasn't her. When the meal was done Troy got up and finished dressing.
Long Legs looked at him and followed his lead.
"I'm going downstairs to get the news," he said, "You want to come?" It wasn't a question.
"Sure," Long Legs said, fixing her makeup in the bathroom.
They walked downstairs to the warm light and the cool breeze. Troy smarted at the sudden exposure and the noise from the street. He stepped to the curb and hailed a cab.
"Thanks for the night," Troy said as they hugged and exchanged a kiss. "I'm sure we'll see each other again."
"Sure," she said and stepped into the cab, pulling her legs in behind her. Troy walked away and entered the cafe.
It was cool in the cafe but the air was warm with the smell of food, coffee and smoke. The owner nodded at Troy from behind the counter where he was drying out a glass.
"How was the meal, Troy?" he asked.
"Not bad, Atcus," Troy said, sitting on a stool. Atcus poured him a cup of coffee and offered a smoke. Troy took them both. "Left me a little on the empty side."
"Isn't that always the way? But you still need to eat, even if they can't all be a gourmet feast."
"That's true."
"One of these days, that will change. When you're ready for it. What you tell me about the nights and losing yourself in them tells me that you aren't yet."
"I wonder if it will ever change. Or go away without something better in its place."
"That's always a risk. What you're looking for can't be found in card, smoke and drink."
"But between a pair of thighs?" Troy offered.
"Maybe. But not always." Troy looked at Atcus, watched him lean back, supporting his bad hip. He had white hair, thinning but cut short and a patchy beard. He wondered what he was doing here in the cafe, working idly day after day after day and what it brought to him. Was this what I am destined for? A lonely life passing time with the random people who pass through?
"There's something in you that you need to get out. A heavyness on you. And you feel like you need to cut it out, burn it in the fire and come out clean. But that way could also break you."
"Another lecture, Atcus? You know I'm no man for religion."
"We all have our own beliefs, our own faiths. Whether you admit it or not."
Troy looked at the newsbrief on the counter, the local magazine covering street events and nights out. He knew where he was going to spend the night and the morning after, and looking at the show's ad excited him.
"Right now I think I'm a worshippper of vice. Praying at the ministry of sound."
"To find desire on a siren's cry, and god between a pair of thighs," Atcus quoted.
The lights flashed back and forth, spraying images across the club walls. Troy stood back and took a drag, scanning the crowd. He felt the pulse of the music and the warm rush of chemicals flow through his body. He moved his leg in rythym with the bass and tapped out the beats with his fingers.
Arthur put his arm around Troy. "Look at it all! Bangin'." Troy ground his teeth and smiled.
"Hypnotic opera, here on Kalarba," he said. "I haven't seen it this good since we were at the Casino Royale."
"That was a


ing trip," Arthur said, his eyes empty on the crowd.
Troy nodded silently and continued with the beat. His mind went back to the nights at Casino Royale, when he was still young and everything was new. Dark and hidden nights with treasures everywhere you looked. A feeling of complete and utter belonging, of chaotic peace and fulfilled longing. He remembered the women's eyes and the wholeness he found there. A tightness gripped his chest.
Let it go, Troy thought, and he floated on the beat.
A half naked dancer high on a platform swayed rythmically. Fire in her hands and eyes. The laser lights cast a shadow on the wall behind her, larger than life, a shadow dancer all its own. Troy watched the shadow dancer and followed along with it. He moved his tongue to the hightening music, crouching his face in a look of ecstasy.
Arthur was gone, dragged onto the dance floor by a joyless woman in a state of bliss. Troy smiled and took a drag, felt his lungs expanding and the smoke filling them. He held it for a moment then let it go, watching the smoke catch the lights and move on its own.
He was someone else for an eternity, but when it passed he was nothing once again.
I've got more of this done but I'm just waiting to see what I think of it in a few days.
---
Troy Chance looked at his reflection and adjusted his necktie. He wasn't having any luck with it tonight. He twisted and pulled but the shape never took proper form. Or was it that he was just not satisfied with the thing? He had never liked these fancy events, these "how's-your-wife-still-on-her-deathbed-that's-nice-have-a-good-night" functions. Nothing real said, at least not to him. He would much rather have jumped out like Arthur did, drinking and whoring somewhere down in the dim rows of lights on the capital city streets where his memories always became fuzzy the next morning but left him feeling pleasant and ready to face the day.
Maybe there would be a game here tonight. That he could almost count on. The Count of Lower Aquessa, Troy knew, was an addict to the card and die. Troy knew of this urge to lose money but could not understand it. It was something that he accepted but knew that he would never experience. Troy felt immune to it, like that invulnerable feeling that you have when you're young. He was an odds-man, playing the numbers and the faces. And he had ways to make sure the numbers stayed in his favour without the faces knowing.
Troy ripped at the cumbersome Kalarban necktie and threw it into the sink.








The reception hall was brightly lit and open. Members of the elite and aloof class wandered about making small chatter with each other. They waved at Troy and smiled as he walked by, greeting him with pleasantries as he moved towards the bar.
"Nice night, isn't it," said one man he thought he may have recognized. The drink must have taken the old man away.
Troy smiled politely. If he had been honest, he would have answered: I wouldn't know, I'm in here. This wasn't the place for honesty. He knew that the old man was thinking something suitably unpleasant and would not have engaged Troy if he had the choice. But when they chose this life for themselves they gave the honesty up. A fair trade for comfort and beauty. It's possible to live without any of it.
He leaned up against the polished white sensen-marble of the bar and breathed in its aroma. That empty smell that came from the marble's absorption of unwanted spills and smokes. Arthur had called it "the favoured bar of teetotallers and the chaste." Troy hated it; he was none of these things. But then what was he? A drinker, a whorer, a man of vice with a knack for numbers. Nothing more.
Troy smiled at this.
"What will it be, sir?" the bartender asked.
"Corellian whiskey. Neat."
The bartender poured the drink and slid it across the bar to Troy. Troy opened his wallet and removed some cash.
"This is for the drink. And this is so you don't have to ask me again what I'm drinking. Just have it ready for me when I come up to the bar."
The bartender gathered the money. "Not a problem, sir."
Troy nodded and walked off.
The first part of the night went by slowly. Dinner was better, because he was already drunk by then and ready to eat. He ignored the chatter around him and immursed himself in the meal. It was good and the eating warmed him up. When it was done he felt tired. He would have liked to have closed his eyes right there and dozed while his host was toasting the table. Somebody always brought him out of it, rattling on about thier son in the new inter-system governmental peacekeeping body or daughter marrying some general of a inner-rim world or the new mine they discovered in the galactic fringe. Troy kept his polite face on and answered with the "really?"s and the "how fascinating"s that he grew up with. He kept his mind busy by running through numbers, permutations and combinations of hands, rolls, scores, and their pay-off values. Finally the dinner was over and the patrons left to smoke, gamble, drink, and talk business and politics both low and high.
Troy found himself lounged in a supple targan-back hide chair. The cool touch of the leather and the night breeze drifting in through the nearby window brought his awareness back to the party. He sat alone in the corner of the study chamber smoking a long guntha stick, watching the breeze catch and play with the smoke expelled from his lungs.
A group of white- and grey-haired men entered, laughing and boasting loudly, either about this or that event that allowed them to use thier considerable political and economic power, or how this or that business was on the point of breaking out so big that a seat on the Galactic Senate was within thier grasp. Troy wondered why the powerful lusted after such impotent appointments, why they gave these things value above all else.
"-and that was the end of her!" one particularly boisterous old man laughed. Troy labelled him Red Face when seeing him.
"Hello, boy," he continued, adressing Troy in that demeaning way old and powerful men treated the young, "I hope you don't mind us breaking your solitude!"
Troy nodded and grinned. "My mind needed the rest from the dizzying conversation out there."
"Ha! To be young and ignorant again! How I long for my youth and days of irresponsibility and carelessness. There are things to learn from every conversation."
"I guess."
"Ho! This one is as stubborn as I was! Hah! As I said, to be young again. Ah, well."
Troy nodded to the old man. He continued his conversation with the others following him. Troy knew of this man, a rich and power-hungry one from a nearby world. He was swift and had a sharp mind. Troy watched and listened to Red Face's boasts, his bragging, and his flock of comerades. Most were trying to gain some information, some kind of boon from him which they could use either to break thier enemies or gain great wealth. But Red Face told those kinds of stories that, in the telling, allow you to learn much about your audience while you hide behind the storyteller's veil. Red Face had a way with words just as Troy had a way with numbers. In that way, Red Face reminded Troy of himself.
Naturally, Troy hated Red Face.
Troy finished his drink and got to his feet. The initial drunkeness that came with the first few glasses had passed, and now he could think clearly again. He felt calm and rational and ready for anything that might come his way. He hoped to find a game with some of the richer and drunker aristocrats, but even the kid's game of stones and circles would have sated his appetite.
There was a drink waiting on the bar for him. Troy left a 10-note where the drink was sitting. The sensen marble was already dry, having absorbed the condensed liquid, and the money skipped errantly under the influence of some nearby breeze. Troy turned and left with the bill dancing in the wind.
There always was a game of some kind running at these functions and tonight was no exception. A herd of the usuals, looking serious or trying to, giving off and, in turn, missing tells that Troy could see so far away. It was always so easy... the calculated winning and losing, never humiliating deep pockets and scaring off those who might upset the balance. Troy knew the dance well.
"Any seats open?" Troy recognized them all but knew none.
"Sure." A narrow faced man with a habit of rubbing his chin pointed at an errant chair. Troy thought he looked like a rodent although the likeness was not there. The face called to mind the creature's cowardly habits.
"Thanks."
Troy sat down and took the cards delt to him. Three hours later, he left a rich man.
He bought a bottle of the whiskey from the bar and, after leaving a large tip, moved out to the patio to drink by himself. It was a nice evening, cool winds blowing down from the mountains, the kind of winds that make you feel like you can reach out and touch the stars if only you could fly high enough. Against the chill of the late summer breeze, the whiskey burned its way down Troy's throat.
How long will this last? he wondered. The cash in my pocket now is enough to let me live a normal - boring - life for a while. Or, if I felt like it, to let it earn for itself. As it is, this should be gone before the week ends. I'm a poor man with expensive tastes and friends. Arthur never went through this, I'm sure. Being a crown prince must have some benefits.
Troy felt a tug at his guntha stick and let it go. He turned to see it find its way into the mouth of a woman.
"Are you going to be sharing that at all?" she asked.
"I've only the one glass." She was wearing a white dress, tight and off the shoulders. He looked at their delicate curves and the creamy-white of her skin. Her lips were a pale shade of red, popular among the system celebreties at the moment. They effortlessly pulled against the guntha stick and opened again to expel the smoke.
"That's okay. I'm sure you don't mind drinking from the bottle." She said this and then finally turned to face Troy. Her face was noble, aristocratic and full of grace, the natural grace one must be born with and can't be learned no matter who your parents may have been or how much money they might have. Her eyes sparkled from the light of the guntha stick and thier dark green pools hinted of something hidden beneath the surface, something strong and passionate lurking within which would calm all the desires of your heart if only you could somehow experience it.
She flipped a loose strand of her short, dark hair. "I'm Brooke," she said.
"Troy," he said while filling the glass. He handed it to her and thier hands touched for an electric second. She looked him in the eye and he could feel himself drinking her up through her look, that look that he never forgot that seemed to go on and on and on and each moment it stirred his heart. Finally Brooke cleared her throat and looked at the glass which she sipped lightly.
"Not bad," she said, handing the guntha stick back to Troy and turning to look over the range below. Troy nodded and took a drag. It tasted of sweet spice and cinnimon. He swallowed discreetly and turned slowly towards the lights of Kalarba City and the mountain range beyond. His eyes lost themselves in Brooke's curves on the way. Her dress sparkled here and there and danced lightly in the breeze, clinging tighter to her body. Troy felt the hair on his neck stand up straight and he took another drag of the guntha stick.
Troy stared out at the lights below and above, the breeze in his hair, Brooke's scent in his nostrils. He felt the inches between them as though they were the width of the world. He felt her eyes looking outwards as was he and he felt as though the two of them were sharing the same sight. Brooke ran her fingers through her hair, closed her eyes and raised her neck to the night.
"I guess I had better get back inside. Thanks for the drink."
"And the smoke."
"That too," she said and grabbed the smoke again and pulled one last drag from it. Then she stepped into the light of the reception hall, moving gracefully from the patio as a dancer would. Troy watched her over his shoulder as she greeted a stranger as an old friend.
She has the same look, Troy thought, but she's the original. Leelu was an imperfect copy of her, a well made imitation but lacking in those few essential qualities. She's one hell of a fox. Troy turned to look at the city and mountains again. Leelu, he thought, how long had it been? Years, at least. He still felt the bittersweet taste of her lips and the firm-but-soft curve of her hips. That had not ended well. The loving but the leaving and then nothing. He had thought he would feel for her for always but soon enough the flame was gone and forgotten, tucked in his memory as something nice and maybe more but nothing more important than any of those grainy night encounters that had filled his time since then.
Troy flicked the half-spent guntha stick over the railing and into the palace garden below.
It was a few hours and many drinks before Troy saw Brooke again. She was at one of the game tables, sitting a step away. When she laughed her dress rode up her thigh even higher than it already was. Troy looked at the long smoothness of her legs and the inviting way she had them crossed towards him. He leaned up against a nearby doorway and watched her play the game.
She looked over at him when the hand was done. "I remember you," she said over the laughter of the table. Each head turned to look to where her words led them. On seeing Troy the laughter stopped dead and left only the slowly drifting smoke in its wake. Brooke smiled wide.
"Won't you join us?" The watching faces furrowed thier brows and fixed thier hatred. "At least for a drink."
"To even us out," Troy said, looking Brooke in the eye.
"I hardly think-" began one of the other men, only to stop short cut off from a look by Brooke. "Well, sit down, boy, and share a drink. Although you look as though you hardly need one." The other men chuckled at this. Troy stepped towards the table and pulled a chair from nearby, placing it next to Brooke, all the while never taking his eyes from hers.
"Thanks," Troy said in that tone of voice that adults use when children tell them things they consider pointless. The chuckles left the smokey air. "What's the game?"
"Sabacc," Brooke answered.
"King's rules?"
"Nothing else. Honour goes to you."
"Thanks." They had not broken eye contact even with Troy shuffling the old-style deck. Finally Brooke looked away when Troy began dealing.
"You sound like you know the card games well," Loud Mouth said. "Certainly you've been to the Casino Royale on Soccarro six?"
"I've had the pleasure," Troy answered. He was now dealing the cards that he had grown up with.
"Really? I was there once before the spring and the hordes of tourists descended on it. Back in those days you could get in close with Dean Regal. He is, of course, the owner of that place. I spent some long and expensive nights there, back when it was a really high-class place and they knew who to let in. And who to keep out."
"Really." Troy anted up. "Have you been to Casino Royale, Miss Brooke?"
"A Lady like me in such a place? Never!" she smiled. Troy knew she was lying. "You'll have to take me there sometime."
"Of course."
By the end of the night the game was over and Troy had earned the emity of each of the men at the table. One by one they left in frustration. When it was Loud Mouth's turn to bow out of the game and only Brooke and Troy were left, Troy looked at his winnings and counted them up. A pittance compared to what he had began the game with. Troy looked at Brooke in surprise.
"The Lady did not find you tonight," she said with a smile. Troy knew the smile, knew that he had flashed it before, using it to calm the shocked faces. He knew it well enough to know that something else was hidden in it.
Troy leaned back and folded his arms behind his head. "Looks like she's found you all right."
"Yes, well, it was a lucky night. Even without your cheating for me." Troy should have seen that coming but did not.
"Yeah..."
"I'm off to spend some of this. It's been some time since I've been to Kalarba... and it was nice meeting you, Troy Chance."
"Likewise, Lady Ashby," Troy said.
Brooke stood from her seat and left Troy at the table with his money and the stale smoke in the air.
Troy looked out the window of the sleek air-cab that sped down from the palace hall to the city below. He liked the way the city looked from above and through drunken eyes. Calming and yet full of excitement and potential. Behind every one of those lights was a golden star, a beautiful woman, a treasure beyond imagining. If only he could bring them to him.
***sun was comkug soon It was early in the morning when Troy found Arthur. Surrounded by "friends", hangers-on that looked for fun, favours, and the sense of self-worth that royalty brought. Arthur didn't have any of it, having given too much of himself away. He was well into his cups but just scratching the surface of the treasury and his limits.
"Troy!" Arthur called out. He had a wild look in his eyes.
"Looks like you're having a good time." Troy nodded to old aquaintances and checked out the new ones. Royalty did have its advantages. He sat down across from Arthur and next to a long-legged woman with her hair up.
"Have a drink," Arthur said, waving his hand over the table full of smoke and liquor. Troy shook his head and nodded at a man dressed in silky black. The man passed a small pouch to Troy.
"I'm going to dance," Long Legs said. Most of the others joined her.
Troy sighed and took the pouch.
"So, what's her name?" Arthur asked.
"Who?"
"The broad that's got you shaken up. What's her name?"
"How do you know it's a woman?"
"Last time you did any it was Leelu."
"This one's different," Troy said, passing the pouch back.
"Eh?"
"Lost some cash to her. In a game."
"No




"I guess."
Troy felt a rush through his body and most of the night was carried away with it. But not all; he still saw Brooke on that balcony, star-crossed sky framing her face, her sublime features blending with the night, just as clear now as the moment he saw her. Troy smiled and took a drink.
"That's more like it. Come on, let's get this night started."
The sex with Long Legs was long and the pleasure came quick. Troy fell asleep soon after.
The throbbing in his head came before Troy opened his eyes and woke from the pleasing blackness all around him. He saw the feet of Long Legs resting before him, heard her gentle breathing from the head of the bed, smelt her aroma drifting on the breeze from the open window with the long, white, thin curtains. The mid-afternoon breeze was nice and raised the hairs on Troy's arm.
Troy rose and Long Legs stirred. She opened her eyes and smiled weakly at Troy before falling back to sleep. Troy watched the rise and fall of her chest, her small breasts bared in the sunshine. Her hair was balled in a mess around her head, her blue lipstick faded. Troy went to the washroom, the room spinning slightly around him.
He looked at himself in the mirror, felt the stubble on his face and traced his old scar with his finger. He took a small pink pill and washed it down with a glass of water. The throbbing stopped and the room quieted down. He lathered his face and trimmed the stubble, keeping it clean but still raw.
Troy put on a pair of comfortable lounging pants and sat in a deep chair next to the window. He took a nearby fruit and looked out onto the neighbour's garden, green vines growing controlled and kept perfectly symmetrical. Troy bit into the fruit and its juices splashed out against his face. He wiped them off with the back of his hand. He lay back deeper into the chair.
He reached over for his comlink and pressed a button. Then he sat there, finishing his fruit, looking out into the sky. The wild Vornskyrs flew high overhead, above the feeding pens. Troy remembered when he first rode one, back when he was a child, and he and Arthur were being schooled in the art of politics. He instinctivly feared the great, feral beast, but the royal ridemaster had explained that the Vornskyrs had all been raised in captivity at birth and conditioned through pain and pleasure. Hurting humans was as unnatural to them as roosting on the low, fertile valleys.
With the fruit done he lit a guntha stick. He remembered old tales from Maia about the knights of Kalarba, flying on their vicious Vornskyrs trained in war, striking at the other houses' mercenaries with thier laser swords. About the great alliance between House Hosk and House Indobok. About the great peace that followed for over a thousand generations. And his thoughts turned to the Clone Wars and the pilots that served in the grand army. He finished the guntha stick and tossed it out the window into the well-kept garden below.
A knock at the door woke Long Legs. Troy answered it and brought in a silver platter filled with warm foods.
"Something smells good," Long Legs said.
"I ordered some food from downstairs."
"I don't know if I can eat anything right now. Let's have a look."
Troy came to the bed and lay next to Long Legs. "Coffee," he offered, taking a mug for himself. Long Legs sat up, folded her legs up against her chest, and took the drink. Troy lighted a guntha stick and handed it to her. She sipped the coffee and took a drag.
Troy dug into his meal. The warm, greasy food coated his stomach. He felt it restore something that he had lost last night, or maybe before, but something that he hadn't felt slip away. He looked at Long Legs sipping her coffee and wondered. He felt an emptyness there, a tree in a forest and nothing more. She wasn't her. When the meal was done Troy got up and finished dressing.
Long Legs looked at him and followed his lead.
"I'm going downstairs to get the news," he said, "You want to come?" It wasn't a question.
"Sure," Long Legs said, fixing her makeup in the bathroom.
They walked downstairs to the warm light and the cool breeze. Troy smarted at the sudden exposure and the noise from the street. He stepped to the curb and hailed a cab.
"Thanks for the night," Troy said as they hugged and exchanged a kiss. "I'm sure we'll see each other again."
"Sure," she said and stepped into the cab, pulling her legs in behind her. Troy walked away and entered the cafe.
It was cool in the cafe but the air was warm with the smell of food, coffee and smoke. The owner nodded at Troy from behind the counter where he was drying out a glass.
"How was the meal, Troy?" he asked.
"Not bad, Atcus," Troy said, sitting on a stool. Atcus poured him a cup of coffee and offered a smoke. Troy took them both. "Left me a little on the empty side."
"Isn't that always the way? But you still need to eat, even if they can't all be a gourmet feast."
"That's true."
"One of these days, that will change. When you're ready for it. What you tell me about the nights and losing yourself in them tells me that you aren't yet."
"I wonder if it will ever change. Or go away without something better in its place."
"That's always a risk. What you're looking for can't be found in card, smoke and drink."
"But between a pair of thighs?" Troy offered.
"Maybe. But not always." Troy looked at Atcus, watched him lean back, supporting his bad hip. He had white hair, thinning but cut short and a patchy beard. He wondered what he was doing here in the cafe, working idly day after day after day and what it brought to him. Was this what I am destined for? A lonely life passing time with the random people who pass through?
"There's something in you that you need to get out. A heavyness on you. And you feel like you need to cut it out, burn it in the fire and come out clean. But that way could also break you."
"Another lecture, Atcus? You know I'm no man for religion."
"We all have our own beliefs, our own faiths. Whether you admit it or not."
Troy looked at the newsbrief on the counter, the local magazine covering street events and nights out. He knew where he was going to spend the night and the morning after, and looking at the show's ad excited him.
"Right now I think I'm a worshippper of vice. Praying at the ministry of sound."
"To find desire on a siren's cry, and god between a pair of thighs," Atcus quoted.
The lights flashed back and forth, spraying images across the club walls. Troy stood back and took a drag, scanning the crowd. He felt the pulse of the music and the warm rush of chemicals flow through his body. He moved his leg in rythym with the bass and tapped out the beats with his fingers.
Arthur put his arm around Troy. "Look at it all! Bangin'." Troy ground his teeth and smiled.
"Hypnotic opera, here on Kalarba," he said. "I haven't seen it this good since we were at the Casino Royale."
"That was a




Troy nodded silently and continued with the beat. His mind went back to the nights at Casino Royale, when he was still young and everything was new. Dark and hidden nights with treasures everywhere you looked. A feeling of complete and utter belonging, of chaotic peace and fulfilled longing. He remembered the women's eyes and the wholeness he found there. A tightness gripped his chest.
Let it go, Troy thought, and he floated on the beat.
A half naked dancer high on a platform swayed rythmically. Fire in her hands and eyes. The laser lights cast a shadow on the wall behind her, larger than life, a shadow dancer all its own. Troy watched the shadow dancer and followed along with it. He moved his tongue to the hightening music, crouching his face in a look of ecstasy.
Arthur was gone, dragged onto the dance floor by a joyless woman in a state of bliss. Troy smiled and took a drag, felt his lungs expanding and the smoke filling them. He held it for a moment then let it go, watching the smoke catch the lights and move on its own.
He was someone else for an eternity, but when it passed he was nothing once again.