Arthur (
specifiercity) wrote in
undergrounds2016-01-09 03:19 pm
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JANUARY 5TH: HILLINGDON
JANUARY 8TH: THE BAR
JANUARY 11TH: THE PURGE
It's a new year, but it's the same old routine for Arthur. The holidays barely register as a thing for him anymore, and while everything gets a bit cozier and cheesier over the holidays, he's glad for the return to infrequent parties and fewer social expectations. He doesn't have that many friends and family to connect with over the holidays anyway, and it wasn't a good time for him to go home to Chicago for a visit.
So it's no surprise that he can be found in the halls of Hillingdon house in early January as if none of it had ever happened, looking for quick and easy bounties to pick up as he organizes a few supply orders. One day he can be found speaking in a hushed but urgent down into his phone at the end of a hallway.
"Two weeks ago you said you'd have the black ironwood. No, I'm not settling for desert, that's not the same thing. I'm almost out and now I'll have to go to someone else - yes, I'd rather pay a bit more than be dead, thanks. Jesus..."
The conversation continues like this for a minute or two longer until he hangs up with a curse, a look on his face like he misses the old days when one could literally slam the phone down to end a call.
JANUARY 8TH: THE BAR
So the man isn't really one for birthdays. He's never made it a big deal, and it barely even came up in the past few years while he was too busy traveling to realize it had come and gone. Today the plan was no different. He ran his errands this morning, had a business meeting over lunch, stopped in at Hillingdon to check in and see if there were any bounties worth picking up, and finished with a lovely dinner catching up with a couple associates. There were a couple glasses of wine ingested at this dinner, but nothing too over the top, and they don't even know it's his birthday when they part ways and he heads home alone.
On this walk, however, he thinks on it a little bit and feels that something is missing. He is turning 30 after all, and it would be a shame not to mark the occasion. There's a popular bar he's stopped into before on his way home, and tonight he spontaneously decides to have a few drinks. It's barely an hour later, after striking up a pleasant conversation with the bartender and introducing himself to the patrons next to him, that Arthur's grinning widely with flushed cheeks, animated and excited at every topic of conversation that comes his way.
He is, of course, uproariously drunk.
JANUARY 11TH: THE PURGE
Arthur's been watching Daybreak. He's been watching them move throughout Croydon, pushing out the dark magic like this is their divine mission. Arthur's not a huge fan of magic that hurts anyone, but he's also not a fan of Sylvia Redbright's apparent directive to bring peace to the London underground by controlling the whole system.
This, though, this has Norrell written all over it, so Arthur's been tracking one Daybreak witch all morning, watching him come and go and hoping that he'll lead him somewhere useful. It's an odd, perhaps creepy thing to do without any promise of a paycheque at the end, but Arthur's as covert as he can be and he's obnoxiously patient. Currently he's watching this witch speak with a defensive shop owner, from across the street in a small deli, passively hoping that it'll turn into a real fight since he's so unbelievably bored.

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He pauses for a moment, before he speaks up again, quieter this time. "So. You were involved. With the business with Islington." He had to have been, it's the only thing that would have made sense, considering his comment about needing the amount of wooden bullets he did.
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"I don't like it when vampires get ideas about expanding. I wasn't really involved, I just wanted to make it a little harder for them."
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To make it all about the vampires was a much simpler solution for everyone involved. "Not a fan?" he asks, idly.
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He sighs and leans against the wall, thinking back to some of the things he'd seen in the military, some of the intel he'd be privy to. He knew those were often extreme cases, but it was horrific nonetheless. "They need it like we need water to survive, except we don't have to kill or maim anyone to get water."
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Faolan included. Although he has his own private reasons for that. He tries not to let them cloud his judgment, but he won't lie, he's not fond of them himself as a whole.
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"There are systems you can put in place, so they get their blood and they don't have to hunt for it, but even then they have to be kept in check. They're stronger than us, and like you said some of them just like the thrill of it. They're also immortal, and that does things to your head," Arthur says, gesturing vaguely to indicate some grand loss of morality that vampires undergo. He doesn't know what it's like to be immortal, but by the way some of them talk...
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He searches for the right way to phrase it. "The grand majority of them believe they are above the rest of us. Although such an opinion seems to hold across all of the longer-lived supernaturals," he points out. Not that he has all that much experience with the fae, but he has enough to know how they like to toy with a person.
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"The difference is that fae don't need to take anything from humans just to keep living," he says. "And the Night Council's not trying to push vampires out. They're just letting them get stronger, expand territory; they don't even try to keep them under control other than to subject them to the same laws as everyone else. It's easy to keep the community a secret when you're just killing and hiding the evidence."
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"Their attentions have been decidedly elsewhere, to be sure," Faolan agrees. He taps his fingers on his coffee mug. "You think that there's reason to be concerned about the vampires, then," he says, in a manner to suggest that he's all ears, if there's more that Arthur cares to share with him.
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He pauses a moment to glance at Faolan, try to maybe gauge his feelings on the matter. He doesn't think he's saying anything particularly controversial, but he doesn't want to inadvertently wander into touchy territory either. His tone remains neutral as he continues. "Like I said, I don't hate them all or anything. I've worked with vampires and made deals with them, but I just think they have to know that they're subject to consequences just like the rest of us. Unfortunately, because they're immortal, there's only one kind of punishment that really scares them."
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He quirks something of a wry smile at the other man that doesn't quite meet his eyes. "It makes you selfish, when your own existence lasts for that long. When your hunger drives you the way that it does for them. It's why they're so dangerous. And why, yes, threatening their existence seems to really be the only way to get through to them. And that's only if you're an actual threat."
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He pauses, but not quite long enough for Faolan to interject. His tone remains casual, but there's definitely some weight in it somewhere - some recognition that this proposition is a big one. "Imagine every hunter in this clan working together to hold them accountable. We could become that threat."
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"We could," he agrees. "Provided we stood together. Provided we were to make intelligent decisions as a whole, and weren't to try operating as individuals who all happen to share a common goal. It's a definite possibility." He gives the other man a long, searching look, trying to assess whether it is something that Arthur is serious about himself.
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"I guess that's up to you now," he says, with a hint of a smirk.
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"I guess it is," he says, with the quirking of a smile.
He's got a lot of things to think about, it would seem. He raises his coffee to take a sip, before nodding to the door behind him. "Duty calls," he says. "No rest for the weary and all that. Though I wish you luck with your supplier." He raises an eyebrow. "Let me know if you need a referral elsewhere. I wouldn't know the difference in quality, but I've got a guy you might be able to turn to, if you need it."
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It's ominous, perhaps, but if Faolan's headed in the direction Arthur hopes, he wants to make it as easy as possible for him without showing too much of his own hand.
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"I'll be seeing you around then, Arthur," Faolan says in parting, before he turns and disappears into his office at last.