Lancelot du Lac (
knightscode) wrote in
undergrounds2015-10-22 04:44 pm
Entry tags:
[ OPEN ]
Westminster -- CLOSED TO FAOLAN
Lancelot is getting somewhat used to Night Council work, little by little. He's getting used to travelling to Westminster, checking in, reading reports and generally investigating things that are not quite mundane.
He's also getting used to Faolan. Faolan is a strange sort of person, varying on days between a surly sort of grumpiness and casual friendliness. Lancelot can't quite work out what to make of the man, and he suspects Faolan can't quite work out what to make of him in turn. So much as he insists that he is not used to things or feels he doesn't belong, Lancelot... well, Lancelot isn't exactly in a much better position. He's still learning, but he's learning quickly. He's already been promoted, after all, much to his own surprise. No, Faolan... Faolan is withdrawn, and perhaps the reality of it is that he's a hunter. Hunters are not, exactly, people who work in groups. Perhaps he just needs a little coaxing?
So it is that Lancelot arrives early, waiting outside for Faolan with two cups of coffee from a place up the road and two pastries. Something to help him wake up and perhaps bribe him into conversation.
b) Police & Guardian work -- OPEN
Adjusting to life as both a Community Support Officer and a Night Council Guardian has been easy enough in one aspect: both roles are investigative, and both roles are about upholding the law and protecting people.
So it is that on some days he can be found out and about Richmond and the surrounding areas, neatly dressed in his police uniform and fielding questions from tourists and generally lost people. It's especially busy at the moment with the rugby world cup, and they have a lot of drunks to carefully handle and crowd control to do, but Lancelot doesn't mind it. He's polite and easy going, but he's more than able to handle himself when necessary.
Of course, on the days he isn't there -- or even late at night after work -- Lancelot has his other job to think of. Dressed down into tidy, smart clothing in place of his uniform he heads out back and forth from Westminster investigating Night Council business. From the smallest lead to the biggest problem he does his best to keep on top of things. Moving on troublemakers, carefully dissuading people being too open with their magic or looking into bigger crimes. Lancelot has a good sense for danger, and he's both quick on his feet and strong. Much to the annoyance of people he's looking to apprehend.
c) Crime Scene -- OPEN
Lancelot has made it before the police, for which he's glad. It gives him time to find out what he needs and get away again, cover up as much evidence of non-human action as he can.
Which may prove difficult.
As he crouches down and studies the body the pallor of it finally sinks in. About as pale as you can get, and aside from the damage produced by the fight something else nags at him until he carefully reaches out and pushes aside her hair.
She's been bitten.
The question then is if she's already been turned, or if she's just been drained. Lancelot belatedly realises he's not sure if there's any way you can tell at this point. Vampires are dead, so he can't check for a heartbeat. Is there another test for vampirism?
He supposes he'll have to add it to his list of things to read up on.
d) Off Duty Coffee Shop-- OPEN
When Lancelot isn't running between jobs he still has another responsibility, of course. Lily. His white Samoyed is slowly getting more and more confident around people, and so he does his best to make sure he always has time to take her out and about to meet new people. The parks around London, the high streets in various places and along the river -- she's a very well travelled dog in that respect.
He's sitting outside despite the cloudy weather, eyeing the sky warily as he sips his coffee and Lily laps some water from a bowl. She looks up sharply as someone walks near and flicks her ears, trying to decide if she needs to alert Lancelot before he looks up and around himself.
"Don't worry, she won't bite. She's probably more afraid of you."
Lancelot is getting somewhat used to Night Council work, little by little. He's getting used to travelling to Westminster, checking in, reading reports and generally investigating things that are not quite mundane.
He's also getting used to Faolan. Faolan is a strange sort of person, varying on days between a surly sort of grumpiness and casual friendliness. Lancelot can't quite work out what to make of the man, and he suspects Faolan can't quite work out what to make of him in turn. So much as he insists that he is not used to things or feels he doesn't belong, Lancelot... well, Lancelot isn't exactly in a much better position. He's still learning, but he's learning quickly. He's already been promoted, after all, much to his own surprise. No, Faolan... Faolan is withdrawn, and perhaps the reality of it is that he's a hunter. Hunters are not, exactly, people who work in groups. Perhaps he just needs a little coaxing?
So it is that Lancelot arrives early, waiting outside for Faolan with two cups of coffee from a place up the road and two pastries. Something to help him wake up and perhaps bribe him into conversation.
b) Police & Guardian work -- OPEN
Adjusting to life as both a Community Support Officer and a Night Council Guardian has been easy enough in one aspect: both roles are investigative, and both roles are about upholding the law and protecting people.
So it is that on some days he can be found out and about Richmond and the surrounding areas, neatly dressed in his police uniform and fielding questions from tourists and generally lost people. It's especially busy at the moment with the rugby world cup, and they have a lot of drunks to carefully handle and crowd control to do, but Lancelot doesn't mind it. He's polite and easy going, but he's more than able to handle himself when necessary.
Of course, on the days he isn't there -- or even late at night after work -- Lancelot has his other job to think of. Dressed down into tidy, smart clothing in place of his uniform he heads out back and forth from Westminster investigating Night Council business. From the smallest lead to the biggest problem he does his best to keep on top of things. Moving on troublemakers, carefully dissuading people being too open with their magic or looking into bigger crimes. Lancelot has a good sense for danger, and he's both quick on his feet and strong. Much to the annoyance of people he's looking to apprehend.
c) Crime Scene -- OPEN
Lancelot has made it before the police, for which he's glad. It gives him time to find out what he needs and get away again, cover up as much evidence of non-human action as he can.
Which may prove difficult.
As he crouches down and studies the body the pallor of it finally sinks in. About as pale as you can get, and aside from the damage produced by the fight something else nags at him until he carefully reaches out and pushes aside her hair.
She's been bitten.
The question then is if she's already been turned, or if she's just been drained. Lancelot belatedly realises he's not sure if there's any way you can tell at this point. Vampires are dead, so he can't check for a heartbeat. Is there another test for vampirism?
He supposes he'll have to add it to his list of things to read up on.
d) Off Duty Coffee Shop-- OPEN
When Lancelot isn't running between jobs he still has another responsibility, of course. Lily. His white Samoyed is slowly getting more and more confident around people, and so he does his best to make sure he always has time to take her out and about to meet new people. The parks around London, the high streets in various places and along the river -- she's a very well travelled dog in that respect.
He's sitting outside despite the cloudy weather, eyeing the sky warily as he sips his coffee and Lily laps some water from a bowl. She looks up sharply as someone walks near and flicks her ears, trying to decide if she needs to alert Lancelot before he looks up and around himself.
"Don't worry, she won't bite. She's probably more afraid of you."

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Of course, the fact that he is well aware that he has been signed on as something of a spy, with the intention of creating him into something of a spy, may have something to do with it as well.
He supposes that it isn't all that bad. And he does have a friend in it, for that matter, even if Lancelot does perplex him even at the best of times. He hasn't given up on him yet, and that is always something to be grateful for. He hasn't exactly made it easy for the other man, after all. Especially not since his newest assignment has started up.
Trudging into the office in Westminster, Faolan has already had one cup of coffee but it's hardly helped his mood nor his energy levels, given how late he'd had to be out the night before. So upon the sight of the other man and his two cups of coffee, as well as his two pastries besides, it takes him a moment to register that he's likely waiting for someone, and another moment besides to register that that someone may in fact be him. But how to determine that delicately...
"Coffee?" he asks, hopefully. Ah, well. He could have done worse.
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It could have been a good night, he supposes, a date or out drinking with a friend, but... Well, he hasn't really known Faolan to ever talk about doing such things. It could simply be that he's very private, but Faolan honestly doesn't appear to do much other than work. Lancelot quietly suspects he needs the money, but isn't about to ask such a thing outright. He might be sensitive about it. Easier to simply help where he can.
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"What's the occasion?" Not that he supposes the other man needs one, to buy him coffee and breakfast, but he wouldn't have known that he'd had a late night before now, would he? Lucky guess, perhaps? Coincidence? Although no, the other man doesn't believe in such things.
And as for Faolan himself. Well, it's a combination of several of the above listed, really. He is rather private, although mostly he simply doesn't know how to open up and share. And what is there to share about his life anyway? Aside from some rather dark secrets in his past, there's not a lot to him. He does work a lot, yes, because he does need the money. And he can't be a private investigator and a Night Council Guardian at once. He's had to give up the one job for the slightly better paid, definitely more steady one. But he's not living comfortably by any means. It just means he can afford food and rent. Basic necessities. For now, at least. The winter's coming, though, that'll be expensive, though if he's being honest he's trying not to think that far ahead.
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He pushes his way into the office area, paces around to where Faolan's desk is and hovers beside it as he sips his own coffee -- setting down the other pastry for him.
"Actually, I did want to talk to you about something. I missed you yesterday. Sylvia briefed you, I think?"
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D!
"It's all right," he assures the dog's owner, "she probably just smells..." Me. "...my dog."
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He's not met anyone else with a Samoyed yet, they don't seem particularly popular in London so far as he can tell. Most people have smaller dogs, or dogs with less intense grooming needs -- labradors, retrievers. Dogs that aren't so white as Lily is and liable to get dirty and track water all over.
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"Yes. I'm not quite sure what kind...he is. Some sort of mix, maybe, with German shepherd. He's all white too, actually. Blue eyes."
Which was quite the counterpoint to Simon's brown hair and brown eyes. He wasn't sure how that worked.
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He runs a hand over Lily's tail and she turns to nose him questioningly.
"They're normally a mix of colours, but they can be pure white too. Lily here is a Samoyed, and therefore also from Siberia -- aren't you?"
Her tail swishes faster at the sound of her name, at the tone of Lancelot's voice, and he smiles indulgently down at her.
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D
"And hullo to you, too, Lance," she says as she drops to a knee to pet the dog, rubbing her cheeks the way she knows they like. "Good news, before you ask- curse's lifted."
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"Lifted?" Lancelot echoes, and his face brightens further than it already had at the sight of her. "Oh, thank goodness! I admit, I was worried you might never find away -- and I'm not sure my skills are quite right for the area. I would not know where to even begin looking."
He winces apologetically, waves her to a chair opposite.
"Please -- do you want a coffee? If you have time, that is."
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"Precisely," she said. "Or, well, wore off, I suppose?" Didn't matter. It was over. It had been gone in time for dealing with Barnet. And all that had come with it, unfortunately.
Lance's words catch her off-guard. "Wait- you're serious? You were worried?" She turns towards him, eyebrows arched in pleasant surprise. "I've got time- I can pay." Nancy's already reaching for her purse with one hand.
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He gently reins Lily back as Nancy reaches for her purse, ruffling at her fluffy white mane of fur and offering a questioning smile. He's tempted to insist, but... Well, perhaps it would be overbearing to try and pay for her coffee when he's already bought her a drink and food before. Lancelot can never quite tell.
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C
Not that she cared about that; what she cared about were the two marks on the victim's neck. She'd seen those before. Her hand went up to the scar on her neck as she looked at the body.
"She's dead." Captain Obvious. "Vampire." Also captain obvious.
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The problem here is that Annie could be anyone. Annie could be mundane, she could be turned herself, vampire or werewolf. She could be anything. She's an unknown and Lancelot doesn't know if he can trust her.
For one thing, she's blurting about vampires to someone standing beside a dead body. That's already borderline breaking The Statute of Secrecy if she's really aware of such a thing.
"Do you think?" he answers, and lets the hair drop back over the woman's neck. His eyes rove around the area cautiously before he pushes to his feet again and dusts down his dark jeans absently. "Not the dead bit, that's fairly obvious. The rest is a little far fetched though, don't you think?"
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So she nods, and this time, she's the one to reach for the hair (crime scene, Cresta) to gesture. "No- no it's not. I know it's real. See? Look." She gestures. He'd laugh at her, call her crazy, everyone did. Claim she was delusional, but this wasn't one of her delusions.
"I know vampire victims."
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"Are you with Islington?"
A simple enough question he can pass off as something else if she doesn't know what he means, but if she does he has more reason to listen to her.
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D
She doesn't approach the dog further, but it doesn't take her long to drop to a knee and hold her hand out toward the dog. Not forcing her to smell it, no, but offering. She wondered how much of a sense of the supernatural animals had, really. Was there a difference, to them, between a human, a shapeshifter, and a werewolf? If scent lasted too long, she probably had all three for the poor animal's nose.
But it wasn't something she was too worried about.
"I love dogs."
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"I have no doubt she appreciates the compliment," he says, and reaches to ruffle her ears as she cautiously stretches out. Skip smells different, but she isn't quite sure why! What is it she can smell? It isn't like anything she has smelled before!
"She's a Samoyed," he adds, "rescue dog, forgive her if she's a little uncertain. She's still gaining her confidence back around people."
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"How long have you had her?"
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B? 83
She's out at a park, watching children on swings as she walks by. Imagining what that would have been like for her, she only snaps out of her trance when a girl tries to jump out of the swing and falls farther than she'd thought she'd fall. Elizabeth is already moving around the fence before the girl hits the pavement, scraping her knees, palms, and chin. Predictably, she starts to cry.
"Hey, hey it's okay," she helps the girl sit up and looks around for a parent or a babysitter-- someone. Plenty of people look concerned, some talking on their cell phones, but no one is moving standing up. Do they think this girl is Elizabeth's daughter?
The girl is still crying, Elizabeth can't ignore it. She starts singing to her, the tune awkward and a little unsteady because she's replaced the lyrics with her healing spell. Gradually, the scrapes heal and the girl stops crying, clearly confused as to why the pain had stopped.
"See? You're okay," Elizabeth smiles. But now she has an angry, temporarily-distracted father bearing down on her from behind.
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Well, one thing he can help with in the short term. He's in uniform, the bright yellow reflective gear and darker colours announcing him as Police Community Support Officer. He carefully times himself to intercept the man's path, drops to smile at the girl.
"Hello!" he says, before the man can begin his aggressive questioning. "Had a bit of a bump, have we?"
He blinks, caught off guard at the interception, and snaps at the child.
"Emily, come on get up!"
She sniffles uncertainly, wobbling to her feet and reaching for his hand -- wide eyes blinking owlishly around at the sudden gathering of people.
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"Glad she's alright," Elizabeth barely manages to say before she's standing up, straightening her skirt out and moving away as quickly as possible. She didn't want to be involved with a police officer, she was trying to lay low and be a model British citizen. The last thing she needed was to be deported.
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B - let me know if this doesn't work? Figure he can interrupt (and save her, haha)
"I don't need to go to hospital," she reiterated. The claw marks on her left forearm, which was bleeding a bit, and more so the shallow cut on her scalp that was gushing blood lead the guy to believe otherwise. Clearly oblivious to what caused it, he was insisting she seek medical attention because the 'dog' might have had rabies or some other condition. Ringer pulled back from his attempts to touch and guide her, shaking her head. "I'm fine."
It's fine!
The first time he'd met Faolan the man had been limping away from something, wild-eyed and asking if something was following him. Lancelot had been in the position the man trying to help Ringer was now, concerned, asking if she'd cleaned the wound, thinking about ringing up animal control to report a dog with possible rabies. All of that.
He also understands her hesitance, too, because she doesn't want to report a fictional dog and probably isn't in the mood to invent another explanation to make the guy go away. That much he can maybe help with. He hesitates a moment before approaching, brow furrowed with concern. Hopefully she plays along.
"There you are!" he says, "I've been looking all over. You really came all the way from the East End with this?"
East End Pack, come on, take the hint.
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"Hey," she replied easily, mustering a feigned enthusiasm though her tone remained generally consistent and level. "It's easier to see the best paramedic in the city than it is to suffer the NHS."
The stranger paused, clearly trying to understand this new turn of events. Ringer pointedly turned back toward him. "Thanks for caring. My friend's here now. I'll be alright." He looked at her for another agonizing few seconds, then to the stranger, and back again. Finally, he conceded and offered her well wishes before turning and stalking off into the night. Apparently he had been trying to hit on her.
Once he was completely gone, Ringer turned to face the stranger again. Not understanding what his angle was and not entirely believing he could selflessly have chosen to help her, she offered a vaguely awkward, "Thank you."
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