
_______________________________........ | ____________________________________________________________________________. Fiber This was an ugly night. It pained her to be doing this, to be hunting Kata, but Zhen’s entire life was built around making hard choices. It was her code, no one and nothing was above the common welfare of all humanity, not herself, not Kata, not anyone whose death might get them even one iota closer to mankind’s optimal goal, however far in the future it lay. He always bore stress differently than her. She had a few major backstops aside from her devotion to the mission, such as a life that kept her too busy for much introspection, frequent usage of the LSF’s psychiatric counseling, and a general belief that free will played no role in choices and detachment that came from that. Kata’s methods were more eclectic, and he tended to veer between calm and rapid outbursts much moreso than her.
When she had thought about herself and Katakuri, how it would end, there was only one way she had thought it would go. They would both have been stars on the memorial wall in the LSF HQ, unlabeled, unadorned, just more casualties on a wall behind many security checkpoints and the strictest clearance procedures; the site of the only memorial to benders allowed anywhere in the city. She had stared at the wall many times, counting the few she could name, the blank stars situated amongst the nonbenders who had served honorably, the names known only to those who had served with them, and perpetually fading into obscurity as time wore on and retirements and age took their toll. Now there would be no place for Kata on it, not even if he surrendered now; the only obituary he would have is a line listing him as terminated in the after action report.
He had seemed so normal at the Gala, he had played his role perfectly. Even his antagonism towards her husband was forgivable, a way to liven up the evening. A part of herself she tried to suppress found herself wishing his outburst had come a little earlier, that his first outburst had been to give Xiaozhou a premature cremation, but that was an instinct she suppressed. As she had told herself many times, as repulsive as he was, Xiaozhou still was a net positive towards humanity’s ultimate goals. This moment called for a different side of her than the gala, instead of the saintly philanthropist, always promoting her own mission, she was a silent enforcer. No details given, no questions answered, just someone following orders far too classified to let any one from the public know. She couldn’t help but be self-critical about the job she was doing while she was next to 141, no matter what she did, some humanity would slip through; the same could not be said for 141. Exit Ahead of the both of them were three representatives from SynEn. An, who had been introduced as the expert on the science of synergy as well as the one most familiar with the expansive service tunnels sprawling beneath the city. There was the engineer she brought in to assist and finally there was Jack who was acting as her security. He kept pace with An, and although he’d remained mostly silent, there was a strong sense of alertness about him. Despite keeping his eyes forward he was very obviously keeping close track of everyone in the tunnel. He couldn’t help it. There was no way for him to ignore the beast swallowing every inch of space in the narrow corridor behind them or the mysterious expressionless figure next to it. One was impossibly too large. Impossibly too grotesque. The other was a blank canvas. A void and he didn’t like it.
He got the distinct feeling that neither himself nor An were meant to be here or even see them under normal circumstances and that the sooner he got their guests where they needed to be, the sooner he and An could get out. These people were dangerous. Even for someone like him, but he kept calm and remained focused on the task at hand: Get them to the Underground and get back to Vyska. canaryrose Although Jack could disguise his discomfort, An was having a harder time doing so. That thing, behind her… nevermind the other one, with her disguised face and strange suit. It wasn’t human- but if it wasn’t human, what was it? It was no robot, as she had first thought. It filled the already stuffy, damp hallway with the mixed scents of sweat and antiseptics. If she got too close, focused too hard, she could hear its rickety breathing, the in and out of its warped chest and stretched torso. She just… had to try not to focus so hard. That was it.
She tried her hardest not to look at it, instead looking ahead of her, into the tunnels beyond. That was it. That was her job, this wasn’t related to what had happened, not at all. But it was, wasn’t it? These people were hunting something. And An doubted it was the rats. She was an expert, that’s why Vyska had sent her. An expert. They weren’t here for her. So why was she so scared? Despite the storm in her mind, An managed to keep a straight face as long as she kept her eyes off the “agents”. Her lips were pursed, unmoving, her steps purposeful and quick. She just hoped they couldn’t hear the rattling of her heart in its cage. Exit After what felt like an eternity wandering through the coiling service tunnels of SynEn, the group finally arrived at a locked wrought iron gate. Pins and plates were bolted across the frame and further secured with chains wrapped around and through the bars to create a tangled web of metal. It was obvious from marks on the chains and on the gate itself that attempts to breach the barrier from the other side had been made but then quickly abandoned when it was realized the corridor beyond was still in use. Cameras protruded from the ceiling blinked with life unfettered and all of them were turned to face the ominous ingress. All of them watching and waiting for someone to come through. To test the security of SynEn. A security that was undone in little more than a handful of minutes with a bolt cutter and power drill.
The engineer worked quickly and before long, defeated chains were removed and bolts and loose bits of debris pushed to the side. Once the gate was pulled open, the path forward was made clear. In the dark beyond, painted walls turned to cold bleak cement. The uninteresting gray was interrupted every now and again by some small amount of graffiti. A memoir of the brave few who dared to venture so far. The ground was mostly barren or stained wet. There was no electrical humming in the now stale air. No noise. Nothing but an eerie stillness. A quiet that beckoned the agents forward. canaryrose As the engineer undid the chains, An felt a sense of relief, thinking of being freed from their companions. She turned to them, then, curt, her eyes focusing on the one who looked vaguely normal. “This is the abandoned segment of the Underground,” An said, gesturing into the abyss. “We don’t operate down here, but it’s the most straightforward way to get to the Core without running into anyone. Follow this…” she tugged on the white cable, “and you’ll get to the Core. The wires will guide you, but I understand you’ve been given a map. Try and follow the wires, but, well… we don’t have infrastructure past this point, so we won’t be able to render any assistance once you’re down there. We don’t even have operational communications. So try not to get lost.” She stepped aside, then, behind Jack, giving the two a wide berth. Fiber Zhen could feel the tension in the air, and to an extent she understood it. It had taken her a long time to get used to Object-141, and she had not been kept in the dark as much as the people from SynEn. It was not her mission to reassure them, not right now. She said
“Thank you for your concern. It is people like you who help us keep the city safe.” As she walked forward, Zhen flicked a button on her wrist, one that activated some noise suppression circuits in her helmet, creating enough dampening and background noise that she could whisper into the microphone without anyone outside hearing. Opening the channel to mission control while they still had a signal, she said
“Beginning our approach to the underground. Is there anything in the files about our guests from SynEn? I trust they can keep word of this operation quiet.” Exit The engineer waited only long enough for the larger of the two individuals to squeeze through. Once they were clear of the frame, he shut the gate behind them. For him at least, the iron bars standing between himself and the monster on the other side gave him some semblance of security even if there was no longer a way to lock the entrance.
”Are we done here?” He whispered a little too loudly and a little too quickly. Jack gave him a nod as he watched the larger figure recede further into the darkness, its immense size blocking the entirety of the corridor and obscuring his view of the smaller figure in front of it. But even as the edges of the two individuals began to melt into the lightless hall ahead and the distance between himself and their immediate danger continued to grow, what remained long after was the noise. An ominous echo crawled back to them from the shadows again and again. A sound like that of a breath made of grinding stones. A nightmarish herald for any in their path.
”That is the third individual to show up like this.” Jack said, removing his hand from the grip of the gun tucked under his rib. ”Whoever they are, whoever they work for, these people are dangerous…” canaryrose An tried to disguise it, but that echoey voice made her flinch all the same. Keep the city safe. It was almost funny, how ironic it was… but not, at the same time. What were they helping these people do? An watched as they retreated down the corridor, only relaxing when she could finally no longer hear them. She then turned to Jack and the engineer, trying her best to look as though that hadn’t rattled her at all.
Min- the engineer who had accompanied them- was one of her best employees, but An disliked his presence here all the same. She was relieved when Jack dismissed him and he practically ran down the corridor. She just hoped he wouldn’t gossip about this to anyone else. “I think I’ll give him a bonus on his next paycheck,” she muttered, more to herself than to Jack. “Might encourage some discretion.” Still, the employees who worked in the tunnels… well, they had a mantra, one An found amusing: what happens in the tunnels stays in the tunnels. She just hoped it would apply here.
“Jack,” she said. “I… thank you for coming. I know you did not have to.” He could’ve sent anyone, really, he was Vyska’s personal bodyguard, but An suspected he had come more for her than for the security of the company. It raised some interesting questions about if she was under any sort of surveillance, but it was still kind. “You said the third,” she whispered, beginning to walk. “What were the first two? What do you mean… do you think this is connected to…” She didn’t want to say too much- even with them far away, the specter of that presence lingered, making her nervous to even think of her now-usual treasonous musings. Exit ”It’s all connected.” Jack glanced over his shoulder at the gate to the Underground once more, checking to make sure the shadows hadn’t moved. They hadn’t, and with every step in the opposite direction he took, he could feel the weight pressing against his chest lighten a little more. ”These people were nothing more than rumors not even a week ago, but now here they are, walking casually among us as if they were always right here.” Jack shook his head, taking his place a step and half behind An. He was quickly losing his grip on the plot. There were too many pieces being added to the board: Vyska became a Bender and then lost contact with her father soon after. An discovered a facility beneath the palace. The King announces his intention to change Bending laws and then more of these... agents show up. ”When I said there were three, I meant they made three. One of their own visited us on the day of the explosion with the same credentials as them but by comparison he was… normal. But they all want the same thing…” |