Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Kaycey
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Kaycey

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Kaelyn Bellamy


Kaelyn stared at the furnace across from her position on the wool sofa. It was grey, only a slightly lighter tone than her baggy men’s department sweats. Her and her loose pants had become one in the past few weeks as the temperature plunged throughout the city. She had been housed here in the Bronx for almost a year now. Kaelyn knew she ought not to try her luck moving around non-stop, it seemed to draw more attention than staying put. However, changed was much missed in her life. The small apartment in which she resided, rented for only $995 a month. She was unaware of how many square feet it was, the landlord, if that’s what you could call him, probably didn’t know either. Her method of payment was cash in an envelope, if that spoke to the professionalism of him and his business at all. It was a one bedroom, one bath, and half kitchen, she called it. To herself. Her living room, bedroom, and kitchen were all sort of synthesized like a single entity. It was barely furnished, only a few pieces were present. Across from her wool sofa, in front of the furnace, stood a bulky ‘vintage’ TV as she loved to call it, and a small, rectangular coffee table.

The place was immaculate. How could it not be with so few belongings? Should a place be so under designed, the cleanliness was less noticed and the sanity of the owner was called into question, though. The kitchen held within its drawers a few forks and spoons, exactly two butter knives, a paring knife which she used for anything that wasn’t butter, a skillet, a sauce pan… Maybe four plates, all from different sets. How she’d lived like this for a year already, no one could speculate. A good three quarters of her belongings had been left behind in haste. Often, she joked pessimistically that she'd forgotten to bring Katherine along, too.

Kaelyn had been sleeping on the couch as of late. Her mattress had become lumpy and lopsided from overuse and quite likely, her restlessness. When she wasn’t teaching, she was home, in bed. Her groceries were even delivered to her. She’d made some sort of teetering black market deal with the owner of the supermarket a few blocks over. She had her delivery boy bring her bi-monthly groceries, memorizing her list and address, off the books, and in return he was paid in cash. She was scheduled for a delivery that afternoon, and thought she might leave before he arrived so she wouldn’t be home to answer the door. Perhaps the teenager wouldn’t find her existence so pathetic if he thought she might be out. That had been her brilliant idea this morning, but as the Sunday dragged on into the early afternoon, her eyes remained glued to one of 6 channels, her hands salty from her family sized, value-brand snack mix.

Over the past school year and through her first summer in hiding she’d gained at least ten pounds, settling on her thighs and rear, which didn’t look befitting on her lank figure. Her students, and her only peers, loved her regardless – kindergartners. They loved anyone who dressed in bright colors and smiled a lot. The twenty-three year old had been blonde for some time, and only during the past year had she began keeping it dark, opting also for Halloween-grade colored contacts. Kaelyn hardly recognized herself, which was essentially the point. Her face had aged five years faster than she had wanted it to, though she amplified this process by letting herself go, looking for any means to change some aspect of her physical appearance.

“It’s okay, Kat, it’s part of your super hero disguise,” she told herself.

Her eyes had dried out, body and pants ad becoming one with the couch and so she sat up, rolling closed the chip bag and replacing them on the bottom shelf in her tiny pantry. She washed her hands to avoid tracking all day chip grease onto every surface of her home. After ruffling through the small dresser beside her bed, she replaced her baggy clothing with a thick coral pea coat and black tights. The last thing she wanted to do was move any limb of her body in any direction other than the couch, but beating the delivery boy was a necessity. Just this once, maybe to prove she was capable of change after striving for nothing but the status quo. Her existence revolved around staying the same. Even her habitual laziness was growing weary of it.

Two weeks from now, when he came again, she would surely answer the door with the same hesitant, jumpy dance her eyes did. But varying just this once wouldn't hurt anything or anyone, but it might soothe the insanity ready to rear its head.

There were blue sticky notes in her bedside table drawer – she wrote him a little note that she wouldn’t be home, that she would pay in-store today, just to leave the groceries on her steps. Suede boots found her feet and she moved towards her front door, unlocking the two dead bolts and the main lock, pulling it open with intention.

But it wasn’t the delivery boy standing at her door this time.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by The Fauxtrot
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Benedict Mercier


It might have been at a food truck, or off 5th street, or outside of Stingers; Ben could never be sure where he first saw his White Rabbit. After a few weeks retracing steps and coming up with nothing, he was starting to doubt himself. Maybe it really hadn’t happened, maybe it was all a strange manifestation of the brain. Just like the story. He tried to recall detail after detail, but what he could remember most was the feeling that accompanied their run in.

She had run into him hard, and reflexively, he wrapped his arms around her waist prevent a fall. Her head didn't reach beyond his shoulders, but he didn't need to see her expression in order to know. Even through their coats, Ben could feel her body trembling. She had murmured something into his coat and pulled away. He remembered her breath puffing out little clouds into the cold air, her face obscured behind a long curtain of dark hair. He'd meant to apologize, but before he could get a word out, she was already moving past him. Her gate was an awkward quick shuffle, she'd clutched her bag and she ducked her head as if she didn't want to be seen. He couldn't help think it strange, even surreal. Her aura oozed trouble and secrecy. That was the reason he had taken to calling her White Rabbit; if only he'd been a better Alice. He'd always had an eerie ability to tell when someone needed help- maybe he should have followed her. Maybe...

“Hey, hombre.” Mousy eyeballed him over from behind the counter, “Oye, listen, are you gonna’ pay or what? What’s the problem? This ain’t some library or whatever.”

Ben put down the magazine he had been pretending to read and glanced at his watch. “Is Angel around, Mr. Torres?”

“What have you got against my son?”

“I just need to ask him a few questions.”

Mousy glared at him, “Too bad. He's not here.” The automatic doors slid open; three young men, dressed to the neck in thick black coats, entered the Super Mouse Supermarket. Mousy broke eye contact to stare at them as they walked in, swearing under his breath, “Now what? Got to be kidding me with this shit…” He made his way from behind the counter, all 270 pounds, and lumbered over to straighten a tower of soup cans. His neck craned in the group’s direction as he rotated soup labels back and forth.

Ben also eyed the group of men, "Then, if you don't mind. I'll just wait for him here."

Mousy's neck snapped in his direction, "No. You know what? I do mind, Ben. You come in here- calling me by my last name, not even saying hello- acting like me and my family are trash? What is this, really?"

"You know that's not true."

"I don't know. All I know is that you used to be family, hombre."

A knot formed in the pit of his stomach. Guilt. While Mousy Torres had always been notoriously dramatic, Ben could understand where he was coming from. He knew he hadn't been himself after the accident. And how could he? Manny had been like a brother. The fact that Manny had been Mousy's own son, only made matters worse for him. Ben knew himself well enough to realize that was acting like a dick; he was refusing to move on, when everyone else already had. That made him a self-absorbed dick.

Ben could vividly recall standing on Torres family doorstep on some odd hour, holding Manny's folded uniform. He had finished breaking the news to them, and at the time, he had been fully prepared to take one to the jaw for it. But to his surprise, Mrs. Torres invited him in. It wasn't his fault, they told him at the funeral. They would all get through this together, one day at a time. As Manny's body was lowered into the ground, Mrs. Torres hugged him fiercely. Between sobs, she told him that she was glad that at least he had survived. He remembered feeling sick, sick to the very core; the idea that he should be the one being comforted by family who had just lost their oldest son. It was beyond pathetic.

"Angel's not here right now, so you can leave."

"H-h-hey pops! There's only f-f-five left in the b-back!" Angel emerged from the back room behind the counter lugging a stack of brown boxes; he nearly dropped them when he saw Ben. His brown eyes, framed by false, neon blue eyeglasses, swiveled between Ben and his father. His voice was small contained a slight stutter that didn't fit with the over all appearance of his quirky, Williamsburg-hipster attire. "H-hey Ben. W-wha-what's going on?" he hefted the boxes on to the counter and ran a hand through a mop of shaggy, black hair. Sensing the tension, he added, "Nice. Is that a-a-a new patrol c-c-car?"

"I was just looking for you." Both men looked away from each other, Ben gestured to the door, "Let's talk."

"Oh, boy. Are w-we gonna d-d-do a r-ride along?"

No sooner after they rolled out of the Supermarket parking lot, did Angel's posture change. He shoulders rolled from an inward hunch, to something more arched and proper. He reached into his pocket and took out a toothpick which he began to chew, "Benedict, I take it you have a reason for kidnapping me? If you will be so kind as to take me a few blocks south from here, I have a delivery to make while we're at it."

"Don't see what it could be," Ben made the first turn onto Baker's Street. He wasn't the least bit surprised at the sudden change in Angel's behavior, he had fallen into some bad habits after his brother's death and took advantage of the victim card with his parents. Ben felt like it was his responsibility to keep an eye on him. He didn't have the heart to tell Mr.Torres that his son was about a half step from juvie. He took it upon himself to pick the teen up in his patrol car from time to time and drive him along the bad bits of town. He wasn't sure what it would accomplish, maybe he was hoping to scare the troublemaking out of him.

Angel smirked and pulled out a stack of Super Mouse Supermarket coupons, "This, see? I'm making an executive decision today, Benedict. There's this place a few blocks down, where I deliver under the counter groceries to a hardcore meth addict."

"What?" Ben raised an eyebrow, "You're just as dramatic as your father. Where is it?"

"Look, see for yourself. There it is, pull up right there and give her this. Tell her we won't deliver anymore because this is a shitty neighborhood."

He pulled the patrol car on the side of the curb and left the engine running, "Alright, out you go. Hurry up so you can watch me fill out paperwork at the station."

"Dude. I'm serious, I kinda don't even want to go up there. She's really weird." For the first time, Ben felt like Angel might be telling the truth.

He unbuckled his seatbelt and opened the door, turning back to face the teen, "If you touch anything, I won't hesitate to tell your parents about you smoking behind the dumpsters. But just in case I need back up, you know how to work the siren, right?" Ben waited for Angel to respond, but when he saw that the teen didn't bother to smile or take his eyes off the door, he turned and made his way up the walkway. Before he knocked he shot a look over his shoulder, his expression read: You'd better pray that this isn't a joke

As he was about to knock, the door slid open. He stood there, Super Mouse Supermarket coupons raised in one hand, eyes widening as he instantly realized who had answered the door. "So the White Rabbit is real, go figure..."

No sooner had the words left his mouth did the stack of coupons fly out of his hand. He quickly looked over to see what had caused this, but the woman had already pulled him through the door. The door slammed closed and Ben could see the stack of coupons nailed to the wood of it. Only it wasn't a nail, he realized...

It was a tranquilizer dart.

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Kaelyn Bellamy


Saying she pulled the door open was a mistake – she pushed it open. The only pulling being done was more in the form of dragging him in. A tall freckled man stood before her, holding the distinct green supermarket coupons she got with every delivery. He was in a police officer’s uniform, force issued boots and everything. Knock offs had different shaped aglets. She took this in within seconds, scanning him up and down. His squad car sat outside, she could tell it was running by the exhaust puffing around the rear. A quick getaway?

Her right hand hid in her pocket, finding a leftover dart from what she’d managed to squeeze out of a vet. Kaelyn gripped it, positioning it in her hand before aiming it. She had no idea that they were heavy and less aerodynamic than what would have been desired. It managed to pick up the coupons in his hand, scraping his finger, landing in the mesh of her screen door. His face, though, was how she knew she was in trouble. Shocked, but not as if he expected her to act normally. He seemed to foresee her acting delinquently, but in a much different way. The ease in which she gripped his collar came to a shock to her, taking him off balance and getting him a foot or two into the home as the door slammed behind them. She saw him reach for his gun on his hip, and her hands released him, just to reach for a second dart, hidden right under the other in her pocket.

Into the side of his neck it plunged.

His gun had made it half the trip of being aimed at her, but it dropped within seconds to the floor. It wasn’t the first one to have been aimed at her. She knelt down, only moving towards him as his eyes rolled into his skull. Her arms caught him to keep his head from bouncing off the fake wood floors that covered up a faulty foundation of concrete. He was still, but these were meant for smaller animals and he wouldn’t be unconscious for more than one or two hours. Kaelyn laid him down gently, grabbing him by his hands and dragging him to her bed. Laying him on the pillow top seemed much too ceremonious to her – like she planned to take his virginity or to castrate him because he broke her heart. She didn’t recognize him from the time she’d run into him on the street. That had been months ago, before she stopped going out. What had he called her at the door? A rabbit?

Her messy hair found its way into a bun on the top of her head. Kaelyn felt the urge to rip it out if it didn’t stay in its place.

Surely Sector 12 would have trained someone much better than this. And they wouldn’t have sent one lone agent in. There was no reason for an officer to deliver her coupons? Had the boy carrying her groceries been hurt? He had come to let her know? She wasn’t on paper, he would never have known how to find her. Did that stupid Mexican kid call the cops on her? She always paid, why dismiss the good business? If he was working for some higher power, she would already be dead, or worse. There was a logical explanation for him coming to her door. His car had been left running because he knew he wouldn’t be long, he was just bringing a crazy lady her coupons…

But was there an explanation for what she’d done? She couldn’t go to jail – if they ran her fingerprints Holiday and Jameson would be in the next cab to the station.

Her shaky hands rummaged about his holster, finding and unhooking the handcuffs. She fastened him to her bed post at the foot of her bed. Kaelyn even patted him down for other weapons. Not that she would have known if she felt anything abnormal. It was all just padding.

In his breast pocket was his badge. There was an adorable ID pictured followed by his position and the NYC shield emblem. It made her sick. Surely he had a mother a few blocks away who cooked him soup and toast and asked if he’d met any nice girls recently.

“Benedict Mercier,” she mumbled to herself with a sigh. “Who are you?” She set the badge on her bed, still in her outerwear, pacing between the couch and the bed.

Worst case scenario, they knew where she was. But she couldn’t just leave right now? She didn’t have nearly enough money saved up for a change like that. And she didn’t know if it was safe to use her bank accounts. She could drain them… But what if he was just a regular person? It would be worse, after all this time, if she messed everything up herself, rather than them finding her. The satisfaction Holiday would find in that… she could see it. There was no way he wouldn’t turn her in.

That was only a possibility, though, if she let him go.

How would she fix this?

“Problem solve, Katherine, c’mon.” She whined, hitting herself on her head like a child throwing a tantrum.

Maybe she could tell him. Convince him she didn’t mean to assault an officer. Get him to just leave and keep his mouth shut and never come back!

“Right,” she huffed, watching him stir quietly on the floor.
Hidden 9 yrs ago 9 yrs ago Post by The Fauxtrot
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Benedict Mercier


To say that she really hadn't gotten the drop on him would be a lie. It was out of habit that he reached for his gun in the first place, a habit that he found himself hesitating over for a fraction of a second. Somewhere in his brain, he asked himself, "Do I really intend to shoot her?" He hesitated, "No." It cost him. The needle sank into his neck like butter.
Somewhere far away, he was able to make out the screech of his tires. Angel. That kid was going to be in so much trouble. Ben promised himself he'd see to it that Angel was sacred straight. He'd have him stay in a cell overnight. He'd make him mop up urinals... He'd... He'd...
He was slipping.

Oh. She got him good.
Real good.
Reallll goooood.
Reallllll GoOoOoo-

Blackness...


On the surface of the moon, air is fresh and crisp. Breathable. Gravity on it’s surface gives a body the sensation of moving against a slow river current. Everything floats, and everything is washed silver; every rock, every crag, every particle, glow in ethereal silence.

Ben trudged forward, dust his boots kick up along the way hang suspended in ghostly clouds about his ankles. He was still in uniform with the front of his shirt torn open. Though, just who or what had caused it to tear, would forever remain a mystery. Clear buttons from his shirt hovered a few meters in front of him, glittering in the lunar light. If he could reach them, maybe he could fix it.

Maybe he could fix everything.

“They say that if anger is a gun aimed at someone, guilt is a gun that is aimed at yourself.”

“Manny?”

“Hey man. So, what do you say? You gonna hurry up and kill yourself?” Manny's voice came from someplace low. Looking down, he saw that his gun was still in its holster. “If you feel so bad, why not just get it over with?” Manny's voice offered reasonably, "You owe me one don't you, Red?"

Ben looked around and saw nothing. He reached for the gun at his hip, unholstered it, its silver barrel emitting the same unnatural glow. It was heavy, heavier than he had ever remembered it being. Brows knit together, pensive, “I don't think... I..." he turned over the weapon in his hand. Trying again, he whispered, “...I don't know...” His words didn't seem to matter as he found his arm reaching upwards to press the weapon against the left side of his temple. "Its all my fault." Images of Manny's headless corpse glowed across the moon's endless silver terrain. He lowered the gun, bewildered. He saw more images materialize in the ground before him. Manny's mouth twisted with pain as his head rolled down the sidewalk and into a sewer drain. He saw himself, Ben, straining with all of his might to reach it. He strained, and strained, and then ripped off his Kevlar vest and tore off his shirt. Free of the bulky clothing, he tried again, strained, and strained, he tried to reach Manny until he felt ribs finally crack under pressure. The glowing images showed him screaming in sheer frustration, it showed him beating the pavement until they too snapped under pressure. Ben watched himself heave large industrial metal trash cans into the empty street as if they were little more than pebbles. He watched himself roar into the empty street like a madman.

The head of Manny Torres was still out there, eyes probably still open. Rotting away at the Big Apple from the inside.

"I've seen enough." A cold numbness had fallen over him. Resolute, he raised the barrel to his head, "Enough. I get it now." From behind him, two pale white arms snaked around his waist, nose and lips pressed at the back of his head. Warm breath caused the hair to rise at the back of his neck. Someone was kissing his birthmark.

"Benedict, my child. Why have you forsaken me?" A voice familiar, yet not intimately so, whispered in gentle hushed tones. It was the kind of voice that belonged to anyone and no one; wise yet filled youth and vigor; it was the kind of voice that signaled The Hunt; one that could inspire intellect, and one that could drive men to madness. "You have been stricken with a curse. A curse every child born under Cancer must bare deep within their hearts."

"You're a little late. I've been a reformed man for years now." A shiver slid down the base of his spine after which, he found that he could no longer move. Ben squeezed the trigger but his finger wouldn't even budge. He tried again, he squeezed, and squeezed, and squeezed it, tried with all of his power to pull it.

"Cancer's madness has taken your emotions hostage, yet you are not without hope. Your pain is crippling your abilities now, when you need them the most."

"I've been living fine without religion."

"And now on the eve of your new life? Meeting that woman wasn't an accident- you still haven't told her the truth. If you wanted to, you could have put more effort into finding her sooner, couldn't you? For months you've been avoiding having to reach into the depths of yourself. The illness you harbor is preventing you from facing the truth. The truth of what happened that day is that you saw her coming, Ben. You spotted her in a crowd from far away and you made sure to walk into her. You did it because you were knew she'd be in trouble if you didn't. She didn't know that you saved her from something that day. Do you even recall what that danger was?"

"Truth is relative. That day I only acted on a hunch, and honestly, I really don't know why I acted that way, maybe I was wrong."

"Seek me out. Seek me, and I will let you reclaim yourself. I will give you back what is every Cancer's birthright."

"I won't."

"You will eventually, Ben. Drink from the well, son of Cancer. Drink deeply and know thyself."



As he regained hold of his mental faculties, there came a voice from above him, clipped and worried, "Right".

"Water," his voice was a rough whisper, "Please. I'm very thirsty." At this, he could hear the sounds of her boots shuffling back and forth with indecision. He groaned, "It's just water, sweetheart. What harm can I do with a little of that?" He kept his eyes tightly shut, attempting to ward off any light in the room. He grinned in what he thought might be her direction. He'd been told by women that he was, 'mischievously handsome', red hair and lips that were usually prone to smirking.

The sound of her solitary snort came from the opposite direction of what he had assumed. Ben could practically feel her eyes rolling as she shuffled her way to the sink. Great, he thought to himself, Well shit, whatever it takes. He tried to sit up once he heard the water running, but found it strangely difficult to manage. The chinking of metal on metal and sharp pain cutting into his wrist immediately clued him into the situation. He grimaced, "Why? Why do I always have to be the one in cuffs...just once I'd like it if..." he opened his eyes one at a time. Shaking his head, he waited until his vision slowly came into focus.

Too soon, the woman made her way back to him, she held a plastic cup and stood there looking at him. Some unnamed expression bubbled beneath her cool exterior, though it could have been his own imagination. When she finally did speak, Ben wished that she hadn't, "It took me a while to realize who you were, Benedict Mercier." She reached for something out of his field of vision, and then held up what he knew instantly to be an old catalog from a department store, "you used to be an underwear model, right?"

He nearly choked. "That catalog is at least three years old. Why in the world-"

"It came with the place," she countered defensively. "Boxes of all sort of stuff left behind under the sink."

There was a long silence in which Ben experimentally flexed against his restraints, "Hmmmn..."

"Benedict Mercier. A police officer, right? It doesn't make sense of how someone like you who modeled..." she trailed off, flipping a few pages, "-it seems that there was even an article written-"

"I was young, I needed some money-" beyond mortified, he decided to try and steer the conversation in a different direction, "Unhook me, I won't make any arrests. I just need to make a few calls so we don't get SWAT surrounding the place."
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Kaelyn Bellamy


Maybe she could fool him. She would make up a sob story about being scared in such a rough neighborhood. Cops loved that shit. They loved being the hero, to be conflicted between obeying the law and protecting the lone damsel…

Why was he so willing to let her off the hook? Was he with Sector 12? He didn’t want the cops to get their hands on her because it might make things messy for Holiday. If Kaelyn handed him the phone, he might clue them in on her location. Wouldn’t they have a tracker on his vehicle? It would be in Hyde’s character to dot all the t’s. Holiday was more about making the orders and leaving it as someone else’s burden. Maybe they didn’t know anything was wrong yet, that he was with her.

She knelt beside him. His face was familiar because of that fossil of a magazine, but had he been in the lab, too? Did she see him there? Maybe between the periods of starvation her memory had fogged over the memory of him. She’d barely looked through the dusty catalogue, why would she recall it so easily? Why else would he offer to let her go? An innocent man knocked on the door only to be assaulted. She couldn’t get out of that one.

Kaelyn gripped the Velcro holding his cuff together, pulling it up as far as it would go over his forearm, when it yielded nothing she repeated it on the other side. Nothing.

“Hold still,” she muttered, undoing the front of his uniform and pushing up his undershirt.
A dark brown ovular circle wrapping around the back of his right hip, tainting freckled peach skin. It would have been just out of view of the lens in those nudes. “Cancer,” she sighed. Was that a good enough explanation for his kindness? His warmth of heart? His forgiveness?

“Are you working for-“ she started to question him, coming back to her feet. Kaelyn felt heavy the weight of the curse of symbolism had been gifted to her at birth, along with every other Taurus short-coming. She saw everything with the intent of finding ulterior motives – everything meant something and everyone had agendas. Her mother promised her that she would grow into her sense of self. What her mother meant was that she was dramatic. Which was hardly listed on her negative traits written on her birth certificate. Her parents were sure that she had just been mixed with the aspects of Gemini, though her birthday was far from Twin Season. Kaelyn had never spoken a word of the nine months of captivity to anyone. Her family had no idea – surely they thought she joined a hippie backpacking group to spite her parents for calling her ‘practical’ and ‘realistic’. Which meant boring. She wasn’t appreciated like Aries, her sister, or Aquarius, who held most high-paying and innovative positions. Taurus were meant for simplicity.

But Kaelyn felt that she had broken the mold, and part of her was so proud that she’d been chosen to be tortured for days, weeks, months. She had something that made her feel so complex, like she had something more than marriage, motherhood, and a desk job to offer the universe. She couldn’t be labeled as boring and self-attentive by anyone who truly knew her. Stability was no longer the most important thing to her – or so she pretended – but staying alive was. It had awakened an excitement in her that no water sign could freeze, no fire sign could blister, no air sign could gust,

and no earth sign could bury.

Symbolism was for those who hadn’t experienced the symbols in their glorious immortality.

“Who are you working for? Did 12 send you?”
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The Ophiuchus Project


Commissioner Eli Staff stared out of his office window, sweating. Even in the winter, the impregnable walls of Rikers Island prison complex insulated heat to an unbearable level. A thin smile stretched across his face. Almost unbearable, he reminded himself as he turned once again to face the two men. "Do you want to know why I love my job, gentlemen?" Both men said nothing as he began to pace slowly along the perimeter of his office, his left boot scraping unevenly behind him along the concrete floor. Tall metal bookshelves lined the white walls, a portable cooling unit sputtered and wheezed in the corner. He plucked a book from one of the shelves, tossing it a short distance. The leather bound tome landed on ground at the feet of both men with heavy thud; Commissioner Eli Staff wiped at his forehead, "I love my job because it never ceases to surprise and inspire me." He laughed, "Fifty employees, twenty inmates, monitored checkpoints, surveillance placed at the doors of each entrance, and the entire underground level. That's everything you need, isn't it?" The Commissioner gestured to the book at their feet, "A record of all the construction ever done on Rikers Island complex. I think your team will find that when working below ground, modern blueprints won't account for the false walls or old piping."

"So that we have an understanding, each of the employees and inmates will be hand-selected by our team. I'll need access to their files."

The Commissioner laughed again, but more explosively. "Is that so?" He looked between the two men trying to decide whether or not to believe them. It was his first time noticing how different both men seemed from each other in both stature and demeanor. One considerably older and seemingly indifferent, he kept his hands in the pockets of his navy blue suit; dark eyes scanning the countless titles around the office. The one who had spoken looked to be in his thirties, tall and broad chested. He didn't seem like a doctor, although he had been introduced as Sector 12's Head of R&D. "Dr. Casper, was it? I read your dossier in it's entirety and it never mentioned anything about you getting to choose which of my people you'll be taking for this project."

"A small oversight." Massive Dr. Casper replied candidly while reaching into the breast pocket of his blazer. He pulled out a cellular phone and punched in a number and without hesitation, extended his arm. The old man shook his head and picked up the book. The tail ends of several tattoos peeked from his cuffs as he began flipping through pages.

A nerve at the left-side of his temple began to throb, Commissioner Staff snatched the phone, "Is this a joke?" he snarled, holding the phone up. "Mayor Dyer?" the Commissioner looked up at both men, his chin slack with momentary shock as the Mayor of New York City answered on the first ring. Surprise melted into disquiet. "Joe? That you?" recovered, he spoke rapidly into the phone, loosening his neck tie, "You know about this? Well- no- no, don't tell me what's beyond our control. This is my jail. The best faculty? How are we going to make up for that? Do you want a riot? I helped you get elected Joe, don't forget that-" he was shouting into the phone now. Worse too, that Mayor Joe Dyer's voice seemed distracted, almost bored. He kept repeating that there was nothing to be done, but that the Commissioner had nothing to worry about and should go along with whatever Sector 12 wanted.

Red mist clung to the corners of his vision, he opened and closed his mouth several times. Using his good leg to send the wastebasket near his desk flying, he began to curse until spittle formed at the corner of his lips. "Thirty years, I've been here in this hell hole for thirty years..." he stabbed END CALL. "Let... Let me ask you two something..." he struggled to catch his breath, "what does it taste like, eh? Tell me, because I really need to know." He looked up at both of the men, revealing a set of grey teeth, "I bet you two had to blow just about every good ol' boy in Congress to make this happen." He lurched forward and latched on to the front of older man's suit, grasping him tightly by the lapels.

The older man stood unfazed, peering over the Commissioner's shoulder to glance at the clock, "Dr. Casper, you've got this handled right? I'll get the driver to pull around."

"Very well, Dr. Holiday. Call Dr. Jameson and tell her The Ophiuchus Project has been green lit. Renovations and interviews begin tomorrow. At this rate we can expect to resume our search in the spring."

"The hell it has! Any of you cocksuckers think you can survive the heat? Do you? It'll roast you alive. Flies. Flies everywhere-" The Commissioner's voice cracked. Pain radiated from the left side of his body as the enormous vice-like grip of Dr. Casper's hand clamped down on his shoulder.

"I see you can't be reasoned with." Dr. Casper flexed his fingers and waited patiently for the screaming to stop. "Relax. It's only a hairline fracture," he released his grip and watched as the man began to dry heave into the concrete. "Let's keep in touch Commissioner."

Hidden 9 yrs ago 9 yrs ago Post by The Fauxtrot
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The Fauxtrot

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Benedict Mercier


"I've got to make some calls."

"No."

"Look, lady-"

"Lady?" she scoffed, "A moment ago, it was sweetheart"

"You have a gun in my face."

They stood on opposite ends of the room, she was staring him down. He was working hard at hiding his irritation. The two of them had been going back and forth with one another about things that didn't make any sense to him. Sector 12? Is that from a movie? What the hell was that supposed to be? After his recovery, Ben soon realized that she had robbed him of his gun. She asked him questions but his puzzled expressions and half-formed answers only had served to agitate her. They raised their voices, and the more questions she threw at him, the more he grew defensive about his answers. At one point, he made the mistake of asking if she was under the influence of any illegal substances. She responded with a gun to his face.

"I'm giving you fair warning-" she suddenly gripped her torso. For a moment she seemed confused.

A low growling from his own stomach indicated something he was very familiar with from long nights on the job. "You're hungry," he offered without humor. "I'll fix it."

"Don't move."

"I told you I have nothing to do with Sector 12." he said tiredly, "We're both hungry." He shook his head as he made his way past her, he could feel himself becoming a cranky. That's probably why they were both on edge, food. Maybe eating would relieve the tension. He ignored her vocal protesting when he began opening cabinets. She wouldn't shoot him, not if she was that paranoid about leaving her house. She wouldn't risk the sound of a gunshot. Still, he scowled when she took a seat at a kitchen table not far from him, she should know better than to point a gun at someone without pulling the trigger. "I'll prove I'm not with Sector 12. Do you watch movies?" he peered into the fridge. Eggs, and various unused condiments, aside from that it was nearly empty. "The bad guys never cook dinner. Sometimes they use poison in drinks, sure. But never a full on dinner."

"Are you an idiot?" she said after he continued to ramble. He paused mid-step. Her question didn't seem like an insult, rather, her voice held a real octave of stress. He understood it. By offering to cook rather than placing her under arrest, he was effectively throwing her off balance. He needed to remain calm if he ever hoped to learn more about her.

"I'm just someone who acts like more of a desperate jerk when he's hungry." There was a small cupboard to the side of the fridge, he crossed his fingers. He figured he wouldn't get a personal word out of her anytime soon. Not that it mattered. He might not have been book smart, but he certainly wasn't an idiot. He had his own ways. You can tell a lot about a person using only the contents of their pantry, he concluded:

Organic kale, grass-fed butter, fair trade coffee: Upper-middle class female, liberal, and preachy with control issues. Terrorist threat.
Hamburger Helper, left over pizza, cold cuts, a bag of weed: Typically young, mostly male, thin but out of shape, single. Identity theft.
Vitamin supplements, dirty blender, chocolate bars, diet cola: Young sexually deprived female or workaholic male with diagnosed anxiety. Suicidal.
Steak, iceberg lettuce, Oreos, Ketchup: Middle class family of four. Embezzlement.

A half a bag of corn chips and a fully stocked liquor shelf. On the surface it might have said a lot about her, but that would mean ignoring an entire trail breadcrumbs. Figuratively at least, he frowned while tracing the insides of an upper shelf. People who usually ate this carelessly would be just as careless in keeping a house clean. Her kitchen however, was practically spotless. He knelt, opening a bottom cabinet and studied the inside with a practiced eye. In order to piece together more of the story, you must always pursue the trail of clues- even an absence of clues often provided just as much to be suspicious.

He scratched the back of his neck, "Hmnn..."

"Today was my grocery day," she smiled, but glancing up, he could tell that it wasn't a very friendly one.

"I'm still getting aquatinted with the arsenal," he replied briskly.

He continued to search. There weren't any drugs in the kitchen, which confirmed his hunch about her being in trouble. She must at least believe there to be danger. Why else would she have to have her groceries delivered? It wasn't like she was rich, not while living in this neck of the woods. He bit down on the bottom of his lip as he reached around bottles of vodka. Way in the back, seemingly forgotten and half empty were small jars of seasonings. Bingo. He picked up a jar of cinnamon.

Ben smiled. Of course, of all things it had to be cinnamon. His own mother had used it quite liberally in her own cooking. It went into stews and pies; chicken, chocolate, fruit, and even in his coffee. That's because the spice was, on it's own distinct and by the same token versatile. He looked over his shoulder, giving her a thumbs up. She had been watching him intently as he rummage around in her kitchen, resigned yet intrigued. For a moment, he found himself staring at her. Cinnamon is also practical. It's sweet and uniquely comforting. Any kitchen, no matter how barren, would be incomplete without it. His fingers clasped firmly around the jar as he stood up. He grinned, holding it up to his ear and shaking it a little. Cinnamon. How interesting. Slowly but surely, I think I'm catching on.

"French toast..." she tilted her head, hair spilling over one shoulder. "I didn't ever think of that."

"I have six younger sisters," he unbuttoned the front of his uniform and draped it over the back of a chair, "I can get creative in the kitchen when I need to." It was a little cool for only an undershirt, but he didn't want to risk dirtying his uniform with anything other than blood or dirt. Especially breakfast, Benedict grimaced at the thought, he'd be laughed right out of the station.
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