nancy. (
stauncherhearted) wrote in
undergrounds2016-07-16 09:17 am
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waves that swallow quick and deep
oh no, it's another catch-all for Shea's characters!
Private starters in the comments, hit me on plurk, or just drop something in.
Private starters in the comments, hit me on plurk, or just drop something in.
late July, for Natasha
Or, well, stakes flying, as it were.
She didn't strike the killing blow. That was all on Alex. But she'd helped take out a guard, given Alex valuable information and items that she couldn't have successfully completed her mission without. She was an accomplice.
That wasn't what upset her, though. She'd killed thousands of people, some worse than Millicent, others far better. She'd make the same decision, if it came down to it, because it had been the right thing to do. But now, they were sitting here with Raymond Harris.
The fear in the city, that was her fault. She was seeing the city she loved and cared for for over a hundred years tear itself apart with fangs and claws. The people she swore to protect were afraid of "gang violence". And she had no one to talk to about it.
No one, save Natasha.
Which was why, with a bottle of fine whisky in hand, she knocked on Natasha's door one evening, hoping the other woman was in. "It's Evie, may I come in?" Vampires didn't need invitations from other vampires. But it was polite. And Evie was nothing if not polite.
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Her eyes go from Evie's face to the bottle and then back again before she steps aside, making room for the other woman to come it.
"Make yourself at home," she says. "I wasn't expecting company though. Everything okay?"
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"I was hoping we could talk." But she needed to know she could trust her, first. Standing in the entrance hall, she gave a small smile. "But if can wait." She'd draft an email to Jacob, perhaps, all the same. Leave out certain details, and not press send. Probably delete the whole damn thing, truthfully.
"Or I could make you coffee." She liked coffee when she first woke up, which, truthfully, was in the morning. With her daylight ring, it was easier to keep a human schedule. Though she did sleep in a bit later and stay up far later than your average human.
A modified schedule, then.
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She smiles then, reassuringly. It's clear that the other woman has a lot on her mind, and Natasha can't say what. In their line of work, it's rare to see someone get visibly flustered about something, and while Evie isn't doing so bad, she's still clearly uncomfortable.
"Coffee sounds good. I'll take my whiskey in it. You can have it straight. How's that sound?"
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She actually starts to work on coffee for Natasha- it gives her something to do and makes her feel better about interrupting the other girl's (relative) morning. Evie sets the whisky down on the counter.
Once the coffee is brewed she pours Natasha a big mug, and adds a healthy heaping of whisky before doing the same for herself. Then, she sits at the table. "Natasha?" she asks, looking at her dead in the eyes. "I need to know if I can trust you."
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Coffee is about the only thing Evie will find in Natasha's kitchen, but there is that. The apartment itself is spartan—furnished enough not to seem completely strange, but it doesn't look lived in in the way in the way most places would after a few months of occupancy. There are no pictures, no keepsakes, no trinkets. Nothing to personalize it. But oh, there is coffee.
She takes the cup when Evie offers it to her, nodding to the other side of the couch in an invitation to join her.
The question takes by surprise, though.
"That's up to you, isn't it? I can't really tell you to trust me. I can keep a secret, though, if that helps."
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She sits across from Natasha when bidden. she needs to look at the other woman when they speak. Look at her in the eyes and decide if she's lying.
but she's a spy. an uncapitalized assassin. what they do is keep secrets. She trusted her enough to extend an invitation to their brotherhood. What's another secret?
She doesn't need to threaten Natasha about what happens if she tells. They both know the price that comes with spilling secrets that aren't yours to spill. Natasha has seen what Evie can do.
"I was there the night Millicent was killed."
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If Evie was telling the truth. The other option was that she knew about Natasha's involvement, which couldn't be counted out
Giving a little cough as though clearing her throat, Natasha takes a deep drink of her coffee despite how hot it is and pours a little more alcohol into it. In a carefully neutral voice, she says, "I can see why you wouldn't want that getting out."
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"Precisely." She's taking another drink of whisky.
"My entire life, Natasha, I've been quite careful to always look at things from every angle. My brother couldn't be bothered to plan. He always acted rashly. I hated it- he nearly destroyed the entire English bank, and I had to clean up his messes. It was, and still remains, the subject of many, many fights between the two of us." This isn't about Jacob, however, but it's paramount Natasha understand where she's coming from.
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"Well, that explains how she did it," Natasha says then with a sigh. "I would have taken her more seriously if I knew she had someone on the inside."
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And she was regretting it every night.
Wait.
"She spoke with you?"
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She takes another drink of her coffee. She's not judging. In a way, she blames herself too. If she'd taken Alex more seriously, she might have stopped this all before it happened.
"Honestly, I though she'd get herself killed."
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They'd had no way of knowing that this would happen. None at all. But here they were, and here Evie was.
"I need to fix this, Natasha. Somehow, there has to be some sort of way." Back in the old days, they'd start at the bottom, assassinating those with titles who shared the same beliefs and instilling someone they could trust there. Nowadays, it was much harder to get away with murder. Not to mention, all those involved were vampires. That tended to make things more difficult, even for her.
"I won't be able to live with this, in a manner of speaking."
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On the other hand, if she was asking for more than that, Natasha wasn't sure she could give it. Her own position here is too precarious.
The situation is already turning over in her head, spinning it around, checking all of the angles. It's not for the first time. She's been considering it for some time.
She's already gotten involved enough.
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"I know better than to ask for more."
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"There are so many people dead, Natasha. Which is what I was trying to avoid."
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"I know I shouldn't beat myself up about this. Logically, I know that."
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Natasha saw a little of herself in the girl, though. A little of her from fifty years before.
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"I would have done it myself, eventually, if things had continued down this path with her- I was always taught that the lives of the people are far more important than the life of just one person." Second life, whatever.
"There's no way of knowing, truly."
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Though, ideally, they wouldn't even realize what was happening until it was too late.
She pours them each a bit more whiskey, and she's fairly certain Natasha's coffee is more booze at this point- idly, she recognizes how cute her friend looks in pajamas, still looking a little sleepy.
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Whether or not that's less imposing depends on you point of view.
"That would be ideal. Being able to support a movement or even a faction is safer than a leader." Leaders being demonstrably easy to dispose of when it becomes necessary. "Do you have anyone in mind?"
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"And without the support, you can't do anything, anyway." Which was part of their problem- half of the members of the Nest adored Raymond and his edicts.
"The only suitable candidate I can think of right now is, well, Jean-Claude."
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