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bigapplesauce2015-04-26 07:59 pm
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We Care for Your Safety
Protecting the city from the rifties -- and the rifties from the city -- is a full time job. That's never been more true than it is today, when there are metaphorical (and sometimes physical) fires to put out all over Manhattan. It's been a rough time at ROMAC in general; most of the organization's people are unfamiliar with the specifics of the recent animal attack, but even those who don't know that a number of prisoners guests of ROMAC have gone missing in the last few days (or that the computer system is still compromised) know that something has thrown the organization into disarray.
Unfortunately for ROMAC and fortunately for certain other people, ROMAC's resources are spread thin by whatever's put the Rift in a tizzy. As large as the organization is, though, there's surely nothing to worry about from the handful of malcontents at large in the city.
Surely.
[OOC: And here's the thread for taking down ROMAC! There will be a couple of player characters on ROMAC's side (check to see whether their threads are open to all before tagging in, as they may have limited availability due to prior plans), and anyone in need of 'enemies' to tag against can request an NPC from the mods. Have at!]
Unfortunately for ROMAC and fortunately for certain other people, ROMAC's resources are spread thin by whatever's put the Rift in a tizzy. As large as the organization is, though, there's surely nothing to worry about from the handful of malcontents at large in the city.
Surely.
[OOC: And here's the thread for taking down ROMAC! There will be a couple of player characters on ROMAC's side (check to see whether their threads are open to all before tagging in, as they may have limited availability due to prior plans), and anyone in need of 'enemies' to tag against can request an NPC from the mods. Have at!]
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And then he's saying her name as if he's an old friend, and she lets out a strangled squawk of protest. Iman steps between the two of them, stopping the man with a hand to his chest, and Greta shifts awkwardly, feeling unmoored. "I, er..." is as far as she gets before trailing off, at a loss. Why on earth is this man concerning himself with her?
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Neither Asadi nor her charge recognize him, however, and with the recent disposal of Mr. Fring and his incompetent security detail, Rush has little patience for the colocalization of himself and pointless obstacles. He narrows his eyes at the intruder, raises the borrowed sidearm into clear visibility, and forces a round into its chamber with a pointed click.
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"I'm the Balladeer...?" he answers slowly, his eyes on Greta. Why isn't she telling them? She's acting like she doesn't - oh. "Wait, do I look different to you, too?" Seriously, he checked again in a real mirror when he got back to his apartment. He doesn't think he looks any different than normal, so he'd just decided the problem was with Sunshine. And of course once he realized what had happened to Greta, the whole matter slipped his mind a bit. This was much more important.
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Aside from his face, she has to admit he's doing a rather good impression of the man. He holds himself the same way, and the mild exasperation he displays in response to having a gun drawn on him is rather telling. And she has noticed a few subtle changes in his appearance before, now that she thinks about it - things she'd attributed to misrememberings or a failure to pay proper attention on her part. Things like his eyes seeming to be blue one day and hazel the next, or his hair being not quite the same shade of brown from week to week. Nothing so extreme as this, of course, but... well.
He doesn't look entirely unlike the Balladeer, either.
"Don't shoot him," she says quickly, skirting around Iman and laying a quelling hand on her arm. "I--you do look different, but I think... I think it's him." She frowns up at him, only a little less bewildered. "But what are you doing down here?"
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He'd been concerned the fire alarm would frighten her. Had anyone thought to explain what those were? Even if they had, the building was in chaos; it would be better to leave together. But at his knock, the door swung open. Everything inside looked as if she'd just stepped out for a second - half-prepared baking on the counter, her phone left behind again. No sign of any struggle, and it could just have easily have been her evacuating like they were supposed to. But after what little she'd told him of possible trouble, and what Daine had let slip of cages...
Well, it didn't take him much effort to get more information.
"The guards up top knew you were somewhere down here. Just not exactly where." He gives a slightly sheepish shrug. "So I've been asking around." And yes, he absolutely does mean to say he's been listening in on people's lives, in the most pointed manner he's done since coming here. Johnny didn't count; that was too weird and he's trying hard to forget it happened. None of the guards here were exactly good people, but after he'd finished with them, a surprising number were willing to just go home and rethink their lives.
As for the ones who weren't, he might technically be a blackmailer now.
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"Yes, well," he snaps at the other man, brushing roughly past. "ROMAC, if you may have noticed, is extremely unhappy with us at the moment, and it would benefit us all collectively and tremendously if we got out as quickly as fucking possible. Immediately, if you don't mind."
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But he didn't, and despite her growing mortification over what a mess this is, she's grateful that he was willing and able to come this far. It probably shows for the brief moment between his explanation sinking in and Iman tugging her onward, and then she throws him an apologetic look over her shoulder.
Well, this is all completely mad. She might as well attempt introductions as they hustle along. "That's, er, that's Rush," she tells the Balladeer, as if his name alone will excuse his behavior. "And this is Iman."
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"Oh, Iman! Good to meet you." She's the one who was looking so fiercely for Greta before; he might have expected she'd be here too. He spares her a smile before dropping into a more businesslike tone. "There's no more reinforcements coming. They're spread too thin dealing with all this Rift activity going on. No guards up that stairwell - most of them went lower down when the cells started giving out."
He nods in the direction he just came from. If any of those abandoned posts have been taken back up, he'll know it; he's got a great ear for aggressive people with guns in their hands and violence on their minds. But he doubts that will happen. Everyone he's spoken to was scared, both by the unprecedented level of Rift activity and by the release of whoever they'd been keeping locked up down below, and the Balladeer's never gotten the impression that ROMAC employees are easily shaken. They've got a lot more to deal with right now than the four of them.
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Although, his eagerness to come rescue Greta without any kind of apparent wherewithal does put him more or less in her good books, and it sort of reminds her-
It clicks. "Wait," she says, not stopping their movement even as she looks back over her shoulder. "Are you Beth?"
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And now that he's finally met her under the right name, of course, there's something else getting in the way. "Nice meeting you in person. I apparently don't usually look like this, but I'm sure I'll get right eventually." He'll have to remember to identify himself next time he sees her - assuming, of course, that this whole thing wears off in a few days.
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'Beth,' honestly.
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"We're almost there," she huffs under her breath, drawing them up another stairwell. "Up and out." Where is Greta going to go? She hasn't considered this. No exit plan again, not her strong suit apparently. "Do you - I mean, you'll need a place to stay," she says, darting a look back at her. "Not safe here, obviously. You could come to mine, if you like."
It's only the adrenaline, the heat of the moment, that allows her to offer the option so nonchalantly.
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"Fascinating as I'm sure all this is," he interrupts testily with little regard as to what, exactly, it is that he is interrupting, "getting out is rather fucking salient at the moment, so do you mind terribly having this discussion once we are outside?"
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"I introduced myself a lot of ways that day," the Balladeer adds over his shoulder, taking the stairs two at a time on his way up. He shouldn't stay in this building anymore either, not after what he just went and did. That's alright; he can find another place for a few nights. Maybe not with any of his non-Riftie friends, though, until the face thing goes back to normal.
That invitation does make him wonder if Iman ever told Greta what she told everyone else that day. But that's not really his business, is it?
"I can grab you a few things from your apartment if you want." he offers, because he's not the one they imprisoned in the first place. ROMAC won't be happy, sure, but they won't know exactly what he did until they track down the guards he chased away, and it won't take him that long to pick up the essentials. He's not going to risk leaving his guitar behind forever! The instruments he's gotten since the Rift can be replaced, but he's always had that one.
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But this has been her home since she first arrived, and it's hard to imagine turning her back on it forever. There are things in her apartment she doesn't want to lose, despite their relative unimportance. As if reading her mind, the Balladeer makes his offer in turn, and she shoots him a grateful look. "Could you? There's my phone, and, er--a scarf, in the top drawer of my clothes cupboard. It's... from home," she adds, to excuse or explain its importance. It's not as if it's scarf weather.
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"If you're sure," she says to the Balladeer. "Contact me when you've got her things and I'll let you know where to meet me." She expects he'll understand that she doesn't want Greta going anywhere, nor does she want to broadcast her decently well-obfuscated whereabouts to even a trusted ally.
"Come on, we're almost out." She pulls Greta through another door into the last stairwell up to the lobby. "Best thing to do might be to scatter as soon as we're out," she says. "Don't know what it's like out there, even if their resources are stretched - Rush gets back to where he's staying, I'll take Greta, and you somewhere to lie low for a while." It's sort of intoned like a question, like she wants everyone's input on this, but she's also pretty much giving orders right now. As far as she can see it this is the best plan. She doesn't like the idea of parting ways with Rush but she won't leave Greta either, and Greta needs her more right now.
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He is certain the archangel will not forcibly evict him.
He is reasonably certain the archangel will not forcibly evict him.
That would not be tremendously ideal, given the circumstances.
Rush halts once they are outside the building and briefly considers his appropriated sidearm, but does not discard it. He will not be traveling back to Hell's Kitchen while utterly defenseless. That would be absurd.
"Yes, well." He shoots each of them a short nod, his stare lingering on Asadi a shade longer than necessary to communicate something he is not altogether willing to define. "I imagine they'll have - rather significant trouble regrouping."
That is, perhaps, not the standard statement to communicate assurance and farewell, but he's confident Asadi will understand.
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Ah, well. This will blow over - these things always do. They'll meet up again later.
He brushes past Rush and bounds up the last few steps, stopping just short of the door and listening for a moment. It isn't the best he can do; there's too many people up there to really pick through, and he does better when he can see. But the general theme is alarm, panic. He's not catching any focus or aggression like he'd expect from a group of dangerous men hunting someone. "Yeah, sounds good," he repeats, quietly and to himself, then turns to nod at Greta and Iman. "Alright. I'll catch you later. Good luck."
And then he pushes the door open and strides calmly out. The best way to get anywhere, he figures, is to just act like you're supposed to be there. Nothing weird about him coming out of this stairwell!
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"Thank you," is all she can feebly offer him, and it's not enough. But he doesn't seem concerned as he pushes his way out of the stairwell. All she can do is hope he'll be all right.
To Rush, she adds a quiet, "Take care." He helped her, but more to the point, he helped Iman. Things could have turned out differently without his assistance.
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"Come on," she murmurs, and she turns, whisking Greta away down the sidewalk and to the nearest subway entrance.