A whole ass fucking night in a holding cell at the city police station. A whole ass fucking night! After being detained by the police and being read his rights, Li had been dragged downtown, almost literally. He...admittedly hadn't gone down very easily, and, as a result, he had more than a few bruises, as...well as a small taser burn, but those were all but gone by the time he was finally met with the presence of his boss. Not Hal. Thank god. The last thing he needed at that moment was Hal Roberts' judgemental attitude and mockery. No. It was Hal's bossā Mr. Malcolm himself. The man was the only person Lilian could think to call the night before. He didn't exactly have any friends, and his family were all back in Montreal or somewhere in the French countryside. Not exactly helpful here. Beyond that, he wasn't close with any of his neighbors, only really knew their faces, and he highly doubted his landlady would give a shit about him being in jail. Hell, she might have even used it as a reason to evict him! There was no telling with that woman, and she and Li weren't exactly on the best of terms.
As a police officer unlocked the cell, Li caught the gaze of his boss, like that of a disappointed father. He knew that look all too well, but it didn't faze him. Not anymore. He just dashed out of the cell as soon as it was open, ducking past the police officer, and around behind the man who had paid his bail. He watched as Mr. Malcolm exchanged pleasantries with the officer, thank her. Thanking her. What the hell was he thanking her for?
With a huff, Lilian crossed his arms over his chest and glared at the woman, "Where do I file a complaint about the guys who brought me in?" he asked coldly.
Both the woman and Mr. Malcolm looked at Lilian. While the lady officer seemed unfazed by the question, Lilian's boss was staring at him in some mixture of shock and appallment. The man turned to the woman and gave a tight smile.
"I'm sorry," he told her, "He's...very impassioned."
The woman shrugged and moved to step around them and head back toward the front of the building, "Not the worst I've dealt with," she hummed, "Though the guys who brought him in would probably beg to differ. Heard he gave one of them a bruised rib."
"Of course he did," Mr. Malcolm sighed, following after the officer as she went.
Lilian trailed along behind both of them, moving his hands to his pockets as he glared at the backs of their heads, "In my defense, the asshole nearly yanked my arm out of the socket," he muttered.
"After you attacked one of the other officers," the woman replied pointedly.
"He attacked me first!" Li burst, "I didn't do anything wrong!"
The officer stopped as they made it to the lobby and turned to look at Lilian, looking down at him with a cold and serious frown, "You resisted arrest after crossing a police line and then assaulted three police officers. You're lucky to be getting off with merely a fine and a night in jail."
Lilian opened his mouth to argue but stopped as Mr. Malcolm looked at him with the same hard, cold gaze and instead bit his tongue as he looked away from the two. Mr. Malcolm thanked the officer again and she directed them to where they could pick up Li's belongings. After what felt like hours of paperwork, they were finally walking out of the building, Mr. Malcolm pulling out his keys while Lilian checked over his video camera to make sure it was intact.
"You can't keep doing things like this, Lilian," Mr. Malcolm spoke firmly, "The company's insurance can't cover this kind of damage."
"So now I'm damage?" Lilian muttered, rewinding the recording to when the officer had popped out of the forest and grabbed him and playing it frame by frame as he pinpointed when the altercation had truly begun.
"That's not what I'm saying," the man huffed and walked over to his car parked by a meter, "All I'm saying is that we can't handle the chaos you inflict."
Lilian laughed, still not looking up from the replay as he responded, "If that were true, you would have fired me years ago. What I do is valuable to you. You specifically, not you the company. You like that I'm willing to throw my life on the line to get a story because it gets the story. And you don't care about the consequences of my actions because you know I'm not stupid enough to try and sue a major commercial company with high-stakes lawyers that would eat my public defender for breakfast before the jury could even be assembled. Possibly even literally depending on the alignment of your lawyers. Gods know eating people is not a new concept among villains. Just look at the Crimson Artist. Even working for the DNCC that guy was getting off on eating people. I wouldn't be surprised if your lawyers were secretly literal blood-sucking arachnids."
Lilian stopped by the car and looked at it. It was nice. Though granted, Lilian knew jack shit about cars. But hey, it was clean. He looked at Mr. Malcolm next to see the man rubbing his temple.
"You...are such a blister of a person," he muttered, then sighed, "The point is, Lilian, the trouble you've gotten yourself into has only escalated in the past months, and it's starting to draw negative attention. HR is on my ass, and the board is getting fed up with social media calling us out as a dangerous work environment because of people witnessing your antics. You need to cool it back."
"So you don't want good stories," Lilian said flatly.
Mr. Malcolm turned to him, exasperated, "This isn't about the stories, Lilian! This is about you running around nearly getting yourself killed in the name of a company that is already in the bad graces of OSHA for being subjected to violent attacks from villains who get offended by an online article. All I'm asking is that you think for just a moment and try to go about your work in a way that doesn't blow up on social media painting us as a corrupt and evil company sending their reporters off to their deaths!"
Lilian watched him blow up, then, when he was down, he turned his attention back to his camera and returned to futzing with the recording as he answered, "With all due respect, sir, I couldn't give a single crap what people on social media think. So what if a few people see me getting tossed around by villains and collateral damage while I work? As long as I'm not pressing charges, no one is truly at fault, and if it comes to a legal issue, I can just tell investigators the truth. I choose to do what I do and there's nothing you can do to stop me because even if you fire me, I'll continue doing what I do and publish my stories freelance. But in the end, we both know you're not going toā"
"I'm placing you on probational leave until further notice."
The words were cold. Hard. Almost cutting. Causing Li to look up immediately.
"What the fuck?" he spat, "What do you mean you're placing me on leave?!"
Mr. Malcolm sighed and started to walk around his car, "Until you can get your shit together, we can't afford to have you on staff. You're writing is amazing, Lilian, but it isn't worth the sanctity of the company. I'm sorry."
Li stared after the man, then ran around the car to catch up with him, "This is fucking bullshit! You can't just kick me out of work for being prone to danger. Danger, in its essence, is the nature of a reporter's job! Even weathermen are in danger when they report in the field. What makes this any different than that shit?!"
"I won't be talked out of this, Lilian. Occupational hazard is one thing. We have insurance for that. Throwing your life on the line to get a close-up shot of an explosion is completely outside of anything any company has covered. Again, I'm sorry, but this is just the way it has to be. When you're ready to perform in a reasonable manner, maybe I'll change my mind, but until then, you're out. Have a good day, Lilian."
With that, the man got into his car, started the engine, and waited for Lilian to move away before pulling away from the curb and weaving into traffic. Lilian stumbled back to the sidewalk and leaned against a concrete wall lining a planter outside the police station.
Well fuck...