Nov 30, 2010 15:05
There was little to be said of the daily business that went on. He allowed himself to be shuffled, mind embedded too deeply in things he shouldn't be dwelling on. The night was over, the shadows had vanished, and there was little more than bad memories to be left in their stead. This was logic, pure and simple, and should have been reassuring but
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leela,
kirk,
s.t.,
badd,
anise,
england,
sam winchester,
amaterasu,
niikura,
taura,
franziska,
claire bennet,
peter parker,
snow,
lunge,
ruby,
mello,
brainiac 5,
xemnas,
the flash,
minako,
stefan,
watson,
peter petrelli,
soma,
mele,
damon,
kanda,
two-face,
tomoe,
isaac,
erika,
edgar,
neku,
maya,
zack,
kratos,
l,
sechs,
scott pilgrim,
gumshoe,
aigis,
izaya,
sora,
claude,
guybrush,
elena gilbert,
dean winchester,
gant,
buzz,
grell,
guy,
kairi,
gaara,
depth charge,
kibitoshin,
ilia,
rita,
lightning,
castiel,
fai,
yue,
sasuke,
claire stanfield,
ema skye,
mccoy,
the master,
scar (tlk)
Granted, he wasn't so sure he was willing to believe her fearless shtick. There wasn't anyone in the world who didn't worry about something. If not the danger of a monster attack, then something else. It just depended on the person, and suffice to say that he wasn't impressed by her bravado. "Fine. Are uou used to fighting, then?" If she was going to try and feed him information about how tough she was, then she might as well go the whole nine yards. Who knew, maybe she'd be worth keeping around if she was that comfortable with the idea of monsters. Or maybe she was just a military type, though she didn't really fit the part.
Or she was insane, but... beggars couldn't be choosers in this place.
Either way, she wasn't letting her line of questioning end there. Harvey let out a sigh. Apparently it was too much to expect her to put two and two together. Then again, there were a lot of ways to get burn wounds, from a motorcycle accident to arson, so perhaps he was asking too much of Little Miss Fearless.
"Not exactly. But let's just say that it was people, not monsters, who were responsible." If that wasn't an obvious enough hint that she should stop asking questions, then he didn't know what was. He took another sip of his drink and then crossed his arms over his chest, making sure that his body language was as closed off as his tone. Honestly, the Joker was more of a monster than some of the things he'd seen in this place, but he wasn't going to delve into a conversation about semantics now.
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She really should have taken the time out to bully Sam into giving up her knife between coaching him into being less afraid of his abilities.
"Not exactly a UFC champ, but I know enough to know what I'm doing." Understatement of the year. Back before she'd figured out damsel was the way to get Sam feelin' important, she'd proven herself plenty good at holding her own. Three of the seven sins would have attested to that if they were still alive. But, it was better to keep her talents to herself, particularly in the beginning and particularly until she decided who'd be useful. Not who she could trust, just who would be useful.
"Guess it'd be a waste of time asking the same of you if you let some jackass light you up." The frankness and the digs weren't going to stop anytime soon. It felt like a good springboard, and besides, her assessment of him now that he was up close and personal and giving her some half-cocked answers hadn't exactly pushed him into the 'useful' category. Not like Roxas, where she had to play nice to get somewhere.
She could be as bristly as she wanted, and it'd either push him into proving his usefulness for the sake of his pride (men were so predictable that way) or she wouldn't lose all that much in pissing him off.
"Just how long have you been playin' their little game of Survivor, anyway? Top contender so far's two weeks into his sentence." There was a slim chance of getting a legitimate answer with how she'd judged his fighting skill without bothering to ask, but whether or not she got a response would be a.) a good measure for how well he took to that kind of retort and b.) worth trying regardless. All a part of seeing what she was in for.
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An unfair assessment, maybe, but thus far all she'd been doing was blowing smoke.
While he'd been handling her devil-may-care attitude pretty well up until that point, her next jab was enough that he ended up tightening his grip around his cup with enough strength to bend the plastic slightly. (Which wasn't a huge feat, but it was still noticeable.) He set it down and then fixed a one-eyed glare on her.
"I didn't let anyone do anything," he snarled, feeling his bandages pull around his mouth somewhat painfully. If she thought that anyone would allow something like this to happen to them, then she really didn't know much at all. Either way, he wasn't going to tell her anything about his combat ability or lack thereof (he'd be able to shoot her head off easily enough if he was given half the chance and the right inclination), and so he said no more on that subject.
He didn't see why he needed to answer any more of her questions after that, and so he didn't bother. He hadn't agreed to an interrogation, and she wasn't earning herself any favors. If she wanted to get his cooperation, she'd have to do better than that. "Let's just say this," he grumbled. "You aren't getting out of here any time soon, no matter how tough you think you are." Maybe that would take her down a few notches, or at least it would retroactively when two weeks passed her by and she was still stuck here.
Then he'd find her and watch her eat her words.
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If he was lucky, anyway. Otherwise, he'd have to settle for an air of mystery and apparent, unbridled doubt.
"Gee, real accurate time measure you got there. What, the sun decide to stop rising for a couple days or something? Throw you off?" She rolled her eyes. Useless. His level of cynicism alone helped answer the question, though. A while. Until she'd met some more varied groups who'd spent different amounts of time holed up there, she couldn't really compare and rationalize, but it was definitely getting up there.
Hell. This guy might've been locked up longer than Sam. Difference being, of course, guy with a face like that had to have some legitimate issues to work through. Sam, on the other hand, only had issues that lay outside these goddamn walls, and the longer they were kept from that job, the pissier Lilith was going to get. She fought down the instinctive shrug at the thought. Pissy and creative. Two things that didn't look good on the queen bitch of Hell.
"So, what, I'm too new to warrant a real answer, or is this your own personal orientation program? 'Cause I gotta tell ya, Scarface, I'm not exactly feelin' the love."
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The irony there was that he knew that he had played his part in what had happened to him. He'd taken risks that he shouldn't have, bolstered by his own confidence, and had been forced to pay the price for it. Worse than that, he'd dragged someone else into it, and her fate had been far more severe than his own.
Maybe that was what smarted so much about this conversation. This girl was acting like she was on top of the world, but if she wasn't careful she'd end up the same as him; she'd fall on her face because she got in over her head, and yet she wouldn't even acknowledge the possibility that that could happen.
It wasn't his problem, and he wasn't going to warn her. But it still bothered him.
"Neither am I," he pointed out as he looked her in the eye, not seeing any need to hide behind his bandages. If it had been up to him he would have walked around all day without them (what did he care if people lost their appetites at the sight of him?), but that obviously wasn't going to happen. "Love has nothing to do with this. Insulting someone to their face isn't going to make them inclined to help you, sorry to say." He would have thought someone her age would have figured that out by now.
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But maybe expecting this guy to be hardened to the ways of the world and understand how life worked was too much. After all, he was disfigured, not 80, apparently he hadn't had time outside to learn his hard life lessons before he got comped a trip to Shutter Island.
"Look, princess, if I hurt your delicate feelings, I'm sorry. Really, I am. But, I'm not here to mess around and play nice, I'm here to get the facts and go. It's called being honest. So, big friggen' deal if I hurt your self image, I'm sure it's not the worst you've gotten." That much she was sure of. Whether it was to his face or not, someone was bound to have made a nastier comment. Probably someone responsible for taking care of that gaping face wound, in fact.
Empathy was a joke. No two ways about it. There was no way she was gonna suddenly start skipping through fields of flowers and offering to hold hands just because Two-Face here decided she should feel sorry for him and play nice. She gave a shrug that indicated that was all there was to it and went back to her pizza. He could cope and decide if he wanted to tell her more or not. If he didn't, though, well … she wasn't moving, and she had food to finish that was a lot more interesting than his piss poor attitude.
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This was stupid. He shoved any thoughts or hold-ups he had about what she'd said to the side for now.
"Maybe not," he said with a wry smile, "but I'm kind of shocked you haven't learned that that kind of behavior isn't going to earn you any favors." Maybe some people thought that her attitude was endearing or attractive for whatever reason, but that definitely wasn't the case for Harvey. She was just working on his last nerve at this point.
"Even if you get all the facts that you want, it doesn't mean you'll be going anywhere," he pointed out, still refusing to give the answer to her question. There were countless other people she could ask. There were tons of people here who had taken notes about anything they could find, and as far as he knew? It hadn't gotten them a thing.
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"Maybe it's gotten me favors in the past. Hell, maybe you're just not hangin with the right crowds." A quirk of an expectant eyebrow as she gave a kind of challenging smirk at that. It was a good feeling, the superiority of being able to make that snide remark, even if it was probably misplaced. He'd been there for a while, and he was right: she should be doing everything she could to get in his good graces.
But, he was still talking, wasn't he? Vinegar would at least get his attention. The honey would be added as necessary at a later date. That was how she operated, and it had done her pretty well so far.
"You sound like a guy who's got a lot of facts, though. So, color me interested. You decide to cut the uptight hermit crap, I'm Ruby. Figure the bulletin's speedy enough to get ahold of me if you decide you want to. But, trust me, sweetheart, you got no idea where I'm capable of getting. Place like this, I figured you'd have learned to not let a pretty face fool ya." It was like her own private way of sharing that she wasn't useless. She wasn't going to open her heart and have some hippie, hand-holding kumbaya, but she had her own experiences to bring to the table that, she felt, definitely kept her from being just another brick in the wall.
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It was just that part of him still had that noble, do-the-right-thing in mind. But it was over and dead, and he knew that he was going to have to accept that eventually. He knew it made no sense to get all uppity when someone made a jab at him while also being willing to shoot someone in the face if they didn't fit his moral compass, but... that was what being two-faced was about, wasn't it?
Though as she continued to talk, he started to feel like she was getting onto the right track. He didn't care about her name so much, but now she was at least trying to prove her worth, along with acknowledging that yeah, he knew more than she did. He eyed her for a moment before slowing nodding his head as he took another sip of his shake.
"I'm Harvey," he started. "And it's not your pretty face that's got me questioning your ability. I just think you're overestimating how much you can do here, but you'll get it eventually." He'd had to fall on his face a few times before he'd gotten the picture, but it had happened eventually. "So, tell me, why would I want to get a hold of you? Aren't you more interested in what I have to offer?" He could play this game. He knew how to use words to his advantage, after all.
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But no demon was left with zero chips on the board. And even if she wasn't sure how limited she'd be -- the fact that Harvey had pinpointed that one unsettled her a little, but she didn't let it show -- she knew it wouldn't be beyond the point of usefulness. Nothing was gonna put her beyond the point of usefulness as long as she still had the six hundred years' worth of work with a knife and a kid eager to provide one.
"Because, Harvey," she emphasized his name as she spoke in an almost catty way, as if she were holding it over him somehow that she'd gotten that much out of him. It was a success -- a small one, but it proved that he wasn't some kind of vault. "I take the honor code very seriously. You scratch my back and not only will I scratch yours, but I'll do what I can to make sure nothing else on you gets a scratch."
Demon informants, Ruby didn't hesitate to kill. Hell, most humans didn't matter either, but she was in short supply here and the fact that Harvey was obviously toting some serious experience wasn't going missed. She'd pay her dues in bodyguard duty if she had to. The guy obviously wasn't built for fighting, but she was. She'd been strung up and carved into an animal made to do just that.
"Believe it or not, I'm good at what I do. I've been doin it a long time. Place like this? You could use a girl like me on your team. But, I'm not expecting you to take my word for it, and I'm sure as hell not gonna sit here trying to convince you. Which is why all I'm saying is that when you come around, you can come around."
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Even if she started to explain that she had a certain code that she followed when it came to working with people, Harvey still had to acknowledge that she could be lying through her teeth. The fact that she kept that cover of sarcasm and confidence up no matter what she was talking about meant that it was hard to tell if she was speaking lies or truths.
Granted, if she was lying, it would become clear rather quickly, and then he could just make sure to never associate with her again. The real question here was if it was worth the risk. Harvey knew that he had a shortage of allies, and Ruby seemed like the sort of person who would turn a blind eye to some of his less admirable qualities. That was what he'd liked about Jason, for instance. It was tiring having to watch himself when he was around someone like Jones, he had to admit.
He didn't need to come across as desperate, though, mainly because he wasn't. He'd made progress here; it just hadn't really gotten him anywhere. He'd seen and experienced plenty of things, but none of that had led him any closer to escape. That was the real problem, and that was what Ruby would eventually realize for herself.
"Fair enough," he said after a pause. "If you're so resourceful then I'm going to assume you've already got plans for tonight." So did he, but he could have invited her along to come with him and Jones -- though he wasn't sure what the other man would have thought of her. "Still, maybe another time." He wasn't going to say no to some extra help. For now, he'd wait and see just how long she lasted here.
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"All booked up," she confirmed, choosing not to clarify beyond that. Ruby wasn't exactly the type to go around showing all of her cards -- just the ones she needed to show to be taken seriously. Vague claims and curt assertions would get her much further, and there was no telling how information flowed in a place like this.
She stood up, grabbing her tray in a dismissive way that indicated she was putting an end to this conversation here and now, understandable considering there wasn't much they were gonna give each other until they were at less of a stand still. Her peace had been made, and it seemed he'd given all he was ready to. Time to mull it over and a chance for her to rack up favors were the next step, which meant she could dump her tray and get outta there.
"Be seein' ya, Big Guy."
There wasn't a question to it. They'd be back here again and when they were, she'd get something more out of him than a vague handwave and body language indicators as to how long he'd been there and how much he knew. That much, she was determined for.
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Like Jason, it seemed that Ruby was better taken in small doses. It seemed odd that he was relating someone like her to that punk kid, but he didn't want to think too hard about it. He didn't really want to acknowledge that maybe Jason had filled a role that he'd taken for granted until he'd left.
He stood up from the table not long after Ruby, more than happy to be ending things. The shift also seemed to be tying up, so they were more or less on schedule.
He didn't know what the "Big Guy" thing was about, but all he did was nod to her and give a half-hearted wave as he scooted his way toward the Music Room.
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