SONJA
A good magician knows how to work an audience. A big part of showmanship is carrying along the audience, getting them to think or believe something they might not otherwise. If necessary, to do something they know is foolish.
Sonja knew there was no point in the charade anymore, the Kansas City Shuffle wasn't going to work once Sarin blew the lid off. With some relief, she stopped doing the voice trick- it was a massive strain under the magic dampening field anyways. So, she had managed to get herself alone in a room with about a dozen of the most powerful and dangerous criminals in the entire country. Good work, girl. She had been thinking of headlines and talk show interviews, her own action figure line. Now, inevitably, hospitals and funeral homes were coming to mind.
"That's your plan, huh?" she snorted derisively as Sarin dissolved in front of her. Sonja knew Sarin wanted her to show fear. Even though her heart was pounding and she felt sick to her stomach, she still managed to keep her voice steady. She wasn't going to grant her that. "You really are a chickenshit, you know that, Sarin?" Sonja said as she took a few steps back away from the looming cloud of gas. "You didn't need my help to become a national joke, because you already are one. Look at you. Yellow's the right color for you. You're so scared of me that the only way you dare to attack me is with a bunch of other guys backing you up. Not only that, but you wait until your buddies cancel out my magic and then turn yourself into gas. What a bunch of bullshit," she scoffed. She took another nimble step backwards, gently set down the baseball bat. "What's this going to prove, huh, Sarin? That the only time you can win is when you've completely stacked the odds in your favor? No one's going to look back and say 'Wow, what a victory.' No, what they're gonna say about you is 'Wow, what a pathetic coward.' Because that's what you are, Sarin. If you had any guts at all, you'd go solid and fight me one-on-one." Sonja ridiculously waggled her small fists. She wasn't at all a great fighter with just her own two hands. But a small chance was better than no chance, right?
SIXGUN
"Alright, here's the skinny," Sixgun whispered, hoping whoever was on the other end was listening. "Marconi asked me to bring up more muscle from the South. This gives us a chance to insert someone else, and I can't say I'm averse to having a partner. Start shopping for someone on your end."
"Also, there's this," he said as he pulled out the vial labelled "Apex", then took a good hard look at it for the benefit of his handler. "Some kind of snake oil. I'ma gonna hang on to it for now, but let me know what you want done with it. Also, I want a background on La Sombra and the Witchfinder. Something tells me those guys are going be tougher nuts to crack than the Irishman, or maybe even the Chicago boys. Music is the one to watch for, he might make a leadership bid." Sixgun stashed the vial beneath his mattress. He'd find a better place later. Then he got up and carefully listened at the door. Hearing nothing, he opened it, stepped quietly into the hallway. Time to have a look around, see what he could learn.
A good magician knows how to work an audience. A big part of showmanship is carrying along the audience, getting them to think or believe something they might not otherwise. If necessary, to do something they know is foolish.
Sonja knew there was no point in the charade anymore, the Kansas City Shuffle wasn't going to work once Sarin blew the lid off. With some relief, she stopped doing the voice trick- it was a massive strain under the magic dampening field anyways. So, she had managed to get herself alone in a room with about a dozen of the most powerful and dangerous criminals in the entire country. Good work, girl. She had been thinking of headlines and talk show interviews, her own action figure line. Now, inevitably, hospitals and funeral homes were coming to mind.
"That's your plan, huh?" she snorted derisively as Sarin dissolved in front of her. Sonja knew Sarin wanted her to show fear. Even though her heart was pounding and she felt sick to her stomach, she still managed to keep her voice steady. She wasn't going to grant her that. "You really are a chickenshit, you know that, Sarin?" Sonja said as she took a few steps back away from the looming cloud of gas. "You didn't need my help to become a national joke, because you already are one. Look at you. Yellow's the right color for you. You're so scared of me that the only way you dare to attack me is with a bunch of other guys backing you up. Not only that, but you wait until your buddies cancel out my magic and then turn yourself into gas. What a bunch of bullshit," she scoffed. She took another nimble step backwards, gently set down the baseball bat. "What's this going to prove, huh, Sarin? That the only time you can win is when you've completely stacked the odds in your favor? No one's going to look back and say 'Wow, what a victory.' No, what they're gonna say about you is 'Wow, what a pathetic coward.' Because that's what you are, Sarin. If you had any guts at all, you'd go solid and fight me one-on-one." Sonja ridiculously waggled her small fists. She wasn't at all a great fighter with just her own two hands. But a small chance was better than no chance, right?
SIXGUN
"Alright, here's the skinny," Sixgun whispered, hoping whoever was on the other end was listening. "Marconi asked me to bring up more muscle from the South. This gives us a chance to insert someone else, and I can't say I'm averse to having a partner. Start shopping for someone on your end."
"Also, there's this," he said as he pulled out the vial labelled "Apex", then took a good hard look at it for the benefit of his handler. "Some kind of snake oil. I'ma gonna hang on to it for now, but let me know what you want done with it. Also, I want a background on La Sombra and the Witchfinder. Something tells me those guys are going be tougher nuts to crack than the Irishman, or maybe even the Chicago boys. Music is the one to watch for, he might make a leadership bid." Sixgun stashed the vial beneath his mattress. He'd find a better place later. Then he got up and carefully listened at the door. Hearing nothing, he opened it, stepped quietly into the hallway. Time to have a look around, see what he could learn.