Nov 26, 2010 14:48
With breakfast finished and a new acquaintance made, the Scarecrow's mind turned to his other friends. The disappearance of Depth Charge's friend had brought back memories of how he'd felt when Kaiji went missing: helpless, useless, as though he should have and could have done something more to find him. If only he had his brain, then maybe he
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leela,
kirk,
s.t.,
gambit,
tsubaki,
anise,
minato,
the doctor,
goku (dragonball),
niikura,
taura,
claire bennet,
peter parker,
snow,
lunge,
lana skye,
ruby,
mello,
soren,
brainiac 5,
xemnas,
minako,
stefan,
tsukasa,
watson,
mele,
damon,
two-face,
erika,
tifa,
the scarecrow,
matt,
maya,
ishida,
yukari,
zack,
kratos,
rubedo,
haseo,
jo,
bella,
scott pilgrim,
kaito,
aigis,
elle,
izaya,
austria,
claire littleton,
sora,
prussia,
chuck,
leon (so2),
buzz,
dean winchester,
guy,
kairi,
venom,
depth charge,
kibitoshin,
ilia,
lightning,
rita,
castiel,
katniss,
riku,
yomi,
aerith,
sai,
yue,
claire stanfield,
edward cullen,
ema skye,
mccoy,
scar (tlk)
Gant strolled the room and scanned for something or someone entertaining. Really, this place kept him cooped up in the Sun Room at least once every day. He was going to go stir-crazy at this rate. Then maybe he might actually fit in here.
He passed one patient already cozy on one of the couches, but was forced to do a double-take. Was that really... Baddo? Well, wasn't this a surprise! First the daughter of the prosecutor Badd had been partnered with so many years ago, and now the detective himself! Who was next? Mike Meekins? Now that would definitely be overkill.
Smiling cheerfully, Gant took the seat next to the hard-boiled detective and clasped his hands. "Baddo! Is that really you, or am I just seeing things?"
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"Gant," he said, voice cold as arctic winter. Gant looking well and happy, which in itself was annoying. Nobody who violated their badge so violently deserved a moment's comfort. "How'd you manage to swing an insanity defense, you old scumbag?" The man was depraved, but Badd was pretty certain he wasn't all-out crazy.
Badd hadn't been fond of Gant even before SL-9 went down. The man was far too friendly and laughed too much, and Badd didn't trust anyone who laughed at inappropriate times. After Gant's promotion he'd grown more bothersome (what with having to actually follow his orders) and after his arrest he'd lost what few positive aspects Badd thought he had. Skye hadn't deserved what she got and what he'd done to her sister was just...disgusting.
Hurting kids was one of the few things that made Badd deeply consider leaving the justice system out of the proceedings entirely.
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How disappointing. It was obvious from how he spoke that Badd had come from a time after Gant's arrest, so Gant didn't try to correct him for not adding 'Chief' before his name. Bothersome. And it could cause trouble down the line. But Badd would be harder to get rid of than little Miss Ema and her Yattawhatsits friend of hers. Should he even risk it? It would probably be best to just remain out of Badd's sight in the future. Unless he could persuade Badd to put those past transgressions to the side while they both fought against the institute. Hmm...
"And you offend me. After being caught so thoroughly, do you believe I would honestly had tried to back out of the proper punishment?" To think Badd thought so little of him to expect Gant would try to get off by pleading insanity. He had respect for law. Had he reached a proper trial before his sudden transfer to Landel's Institute, he would surely have pleaded guilty. He knew there was no stopping justice done, not after Wright had caught him in his own trap.
"Besides," Gant grinned again, unable to help himself, "death row would be a godsend compared to a place like this!" It was true. There had been many times when death had definitely sounded better than all the terror this place could offer. Oh, how innocent it would be for someone to believe otherwise. "I take it you haven't been here long, eh?"
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Well.
Abused it to cover up murder, anyway. Justified revenge didn't count as personal.
"Shipped in this morning," Badd growled, shrugging one shoulder and turning away from Gant. "Some kind of filing error." Though come to think of it, it had been afternoon when the trial ended. Had he really slept that long or had some outside force coerced him into it? Mental note: check self for needle marks. "If this is better than death row then death row must be cushy. Even with all the crazy people I prefer it to where they used to have me."
It was tempting not to raise any kind of fuss at all and just relax until the system found him again. But that wouldn't be the right thing to do.
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He was severely tempted to give the man a friendly slap on the back, but his common sense and the aura the detective gave off told him that would be a baaaaad idea.
"Oh, fresh off the ship then!" Gant wasn't too surprised. It would be hard to not notice someone with a presence like Badd around. He chuckled and sat back in the seat, making himself comfortable. "Afraid it's not some filing error, though. You've been secreted away just like the rest of us."
He almost wanted to correct the old investigator. Gant hadn't ever stepped foot inside death row as a prisoner, he'd barely even felt the cuffs on his wrists when he woke up here, but better to just let it be.
"You know, if you really wanted the inside scoop on how it compares to death row, you could always ask Manny." He glanced sideways at the detective, curious to see his reaction. "Manny's here, so you can even ask him what death feels like, if you want. Though he might not tell you. He's always been a stick in the mud like that." He kept his voice just as jovial as ever, but this was actually a test. A test to see just what Badd knew or believed. Of course, Badd could think all he wanted. But that wouldn't change facts. Unfortunately.
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He turned to Gant, aghast. "Manfred von Karma? I thought they stretched his neck out years ago." All right, so maybe Gant was only the second to last person Badd wanted to see here. He gave the room a quick scan, as if to make sure no other foul members of the legal system had crept in, and then settled back on the couch again. As if it mattered, anywhere that wasn't the courtroom would probably be hell to Mr. Perfect Prosecutor, but Badd would have to avoid him too. Or gloat. Actually, gloating sounded like a much better option.
Badd returned to the more relevant part of Gant's comment. "What do you mean, secreted away? Who would want a couple of ex-cops moved from one prison to another?" And what possible tie was there between him and a pair of murderers?
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It was Gant's turn to be surprised shortly after. Years? Really? "W-well, only about a month ago, my time." He chuckled nervously, hoping the man wasn't being literal. What a thing for an old colleague to say about another. But then again, Badd hadn't held the same relationship with Manfred as Gant had. Which reminded him, he hadn't really gotten to plan any investigations with him here yet. Last time he had saw old Manfred had been two days ago. Surely... surely the old goat hadn't been released. Hmm. Some snooping was in order.
And another surprise! "Ex-cops, you say?" As in plural? Baddo, Baddo, Baddo, what have you been doing since my time?
Right, back to his question. "No one really knows for sure why we've all been given aliases and brought here. I've met a slew of odd characters in the last few days. Naturally, one would think the Head Doctor was trying to gain something by holding us for ransom. That sort of thing. But that doesn't seem to be the case."
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It was not a good place to hold people for ransom, of course, not when the windows weren't even barred. Gant had the same knowledge and skills Badd did, he should have tried an escape by now. von Karma, too, if he'd ever actually been here, and anyone who had both sanity and strength left. If Gant was right it was a common occurrence and a large enough group could easily overpower the nurses. So...why was Gant still here?
Heh. Badd again teased the invisible lollipop stick, this time with an air of smugness. "Yeah. Ex. Haven't you been reading the papers?"
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Gant sighed and shook his head. He would have never guessed such a devoted man to the law would get himself into enough trouble to get arrested. Or at least that's what Gant assumed had happened to Badd since he had mentioned the press. Retiring old detectives didn't usually make headline news.
"'Fraid I haven't been reading them, not since the morning of the last day in Lana's trial. And that was about, oh, five days ago." He hummed in contemplation, picking at the bangs falling in his face. "That's the last day I remember before coming here, anyway. And just so you know, you shouldn't expect to get the chance to read a newspaper here. You can't find anything here with dates on it, or the time even for that matter. It's rather bothersome." He shrugged. "I'm not even rightly sure if we're in America anymore, and this certainly isn't California as far as I can tell."
Now then, time to see how Badd reacted to that kind of information.
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If they had needed the thief of truth back during KG-8, they needed him even more after it became crippled. Between von Karma, Gant, the embassy and whatever the heck had happened with Edgeworth, it seemed like things were far worse than Faraday could have imagined. The system was rotten to the core, and the only way it seemed to be getting fixed was by tearing out the corrupt organs piece by piece.
"Sorry to say justice's been moving on without you, chief," he said, with a quirk of his lips that was almost a smirk. "Remember that thief I was chasing? The Yatagarasu?"
Badd wasn't normally a gloater. Showing off was for people who had something to prove. But he wanted to gloat, wanted to tell Gant what he'd been hiding under the very nose of the so-called paragon of justice. Really, they'd done almost the same thing. Badd had just done it right.
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"Think whatever you want about me," Gant said, offering the man another shrug. "I won't back down when I say the last thing I remember was that last day in court. Just walked out of the courthouse and..." He held out his hands. What else was there to say?
"Has it now?" Ugh, that irked him. He kept a smile on his face, but did he ever want to just punch the other man in the nose for that comment. If they'd been back at the precinct and he'd still be chief, Gant would have taken Badd up to the office for one of his infamous pipe organ recital punishments. Sure, sure, he had been sure himself that justice would continue on without him, at least as long as they had Wright on the side of justice. But that didn't mean Badd had to rub it in that his reign was a thing of the past.
"Hmm, the Yatawhatsit?" Gant feigned a confused look, more to hide his surprise. Well, well, well. The truth behind that might finally be revealed, more than little Kay Faraday had those few nights before. How exciting. He forced a look of acknowledgment and beamed. "Oh, yes! Now I remember! The thief left a sort of calling card with a special mark on it. Stole a lot of information. I think someone suspected of being the Yatagatasu ending up dying, or something like that." He was pretty vague on the details. It felt like it had been years since he'd been able to look at any police records. He could use a refresher course, but it was coming back. Bit by bit.
He quirked an eyebrow at the other man. "Why do you ask?"
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"They caught it. Or one of it, specifically. The reason the police couldn't get their hands on the Yatagarasu was that it wasn't a 'he' or a 'she'. It was a 'they'. One was Byrne Faraday--he was the guy accused, a better prosecutor than von Karma could hope to be." His prosecutor. His friend. A less frequent star of Badd's nightmares after Yew's belated arrest.
"One was the backstabbing bitch of a defense attorney who killed him." He pronounced the epitithet as if spitting it. Hell was too good for the nameless worm.
"And one was the Yatagarasu's man on the inside. A detective who made sure the Yatagarasu never left a shred of evidence behind..." Badd made a plucking motion at his lips, as if extracting a lollipop for dramatic effect. The slight upturn of his lips turned into a full-on smirk.
"Ever."
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So one of them had been Faraday. Gant could have told Badd that before, since little Kay had already supplied that information to him a few nights ago. But then the defense attorney that was suspected of the murder (and never brought to justice after, if Gant remembered right) was also a part of the team. And then, well, Badd made it sound like he was the one that had been the detective behind the Yatagarasu, but that couldn't be true. It had to be someone else. Badd wasn't one who would ever take up that kind of double-agent job...
"You're kidding, right? You..." Oh. But Badd was the highest detective chosen to work the Yatagarasu cases. He had every opportunity imaginable to screw with the evidence and fix the crime scenes without anyone else the wiser. Why, Gant had held that privilege a few times himself in his day, and he certainly had worked it to his advantage.
Gant couldn't stand it. He threw back his head and laughed, unabashed. A few of the patients around them stopped and stared, but then moved a few paces further away rather than tried to listen in. That suited Gant just fine. Badd's tale, it was like some cruel joke that just ended up being true, and how cruel it was. "Ho ho ho, oh, Baddo, you certainly know how to tell a good story. I have to admit, I'm impressed."
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"Faraday and Yew committed the thefts and I made sure to become the head detective for the case so I could destroy our tracks before anyone else got to the scene of the crime. It was just doing what you were doing, but in the name of a good cause instead of grabbing power and stepping on your friends and comrades to get there."
What Gant did was unthinkable, despicable. What Badd had done he'd done for justice that couldn't be gained in court. If there's been any other way he'd have taken it, even someone as honest and idealistic as Gumshoe could understand why they'd taken the path of the Yatagarasu. But his eventual arrest was justice too...not for the thefts, Badd had to admit to himself, he had no desire to be punished for a little B&E. It was his failure of duty and living on while better men were cut down that he considered his greatest crimes.
...maybe he did need to get a little therapy.
Badd's tone turned derogatory and he glared at Gant in disgust. "And I didn't have to kill anyone to get away with it." Put a gun to Prosecutor Edgeworth's back, maybe, but he'd gotten over it. "Were they even all guilty, those men you put away? Or are you as bad as von Karma?"
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Gant didn't much like how the old detective was insinuating he only cared about power and justice be damned. Well, Gant wasn't going to argue with him. He'd already let loose some steam on Dent about that at breakfast. He could handle those kinds of remarks again for a time. It wasn't like he really cared what Badd thought, anyway.
The ex-chief fought a roll of his eyes and merely gave Badd a gentle smile before answering the man's accusative questions. "Now, now, you don't honestly think I would put away just anyone, do you? I may have... bent the rules now and then, and yes, I had to take out a roadblock or two on the way. But I wholeheartedly believe that every man or woman I brought to justice was guilty of their crimes."
And that was the haunting, chilling truth.
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It was hard not to make the comparison between himself and Gant, both officers of the law who'd broken their oath and thought it was the right thing to do. Gant probably felt no remorse over his deeds and regret hung over Badd's head like a dark shroud every day of his life, but a criminal's tender feelings never had anything to do with their guilt. Badd consoled himself with thinking that at least he'd stayed true to his principles, if not his duty.
"You know, I always did want to see the look on your face when you found out what I'd been up to," he mused, idly stroking the stubble of his cheek with his thumb. "Too bad you beat me to the handcuffs."
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