Waking carried a sense of disappointment along with it for the first time in a long time. Klavier actually sighed in irritation when he realized where he was. Damn it all. So they hadn't managed to move quickly enough to cover as much ground as they had hoped. It was a shame, really. Last night had actually proven to be relatively productive. If
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"Not at all. Just a few cuts, and it's almost healed." They'd been a little more than surface cuts, but the rest of that was completely true. Now her leg just kind of itched.
Lana cast around for a new topic, one that didn't involve monsters or shouting or even the research she and Ilia had done. Something safe, or hopefully so. "Do you have a new roommate?"
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Lana seemed willing to shift the conversation elsewhere. Now that she'd gotten a chance to apologize in person, that was perfectly all right with Ema. "I do. Her name is Aigis. She was Kay's roommate before. That's how I knew Kay was really gone." She paused, briefly, and frowned again. "I was scared that was why we hadn't seen her. Whoever she was supposed to meet is going to be disappointed."
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"Do you know anything about that case?" Lana wasn't sure Ema did; she had no real reason to remember it beyond perhaps the minor sensation the Yatagarasu had been in the papers, but Ema never ceased to surprise her. Sometimes for the good. Come to think of it, hadn't Edgeworth involved in that mess somehow? Von Karma sticking his nose -- and his protegé -- into as many pies as he could manage? Something like that ( ... )
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Lana said it was a case. What case led to a prosecutor dying that didn't involve Joe Darke?
Oh, this was going to frustrate her until she got an answer. Even a few bites of her muffin weren't enough to trigger her memory. "His name sounds kind of familiar, but I don't remember why. Maybe I read it somewhere? What case are you talking about?"
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"There was a smuggling ring," she began. Still was, most likely, but alarming Ema would distract from the story. "International crime syndicate. Much bigger than the local precinct, but this was where it all started." And ended. Or should have, though Kay's outrageous claim to the Yatagarasu name was proof enough that it hadn't. "The Yatagarasu stole evidence against the smugglers, and sent it to the newspapers. That put the department in the unenviable position of trying to capture the only lead we had on the smugglers."
In retrospect, that all seemed very simple. What else had been going on? Had White had his fingers in the smuggling ring as well? It was beyond frustrating -- all these fragments of information, and there wasn't a thing she could do but wait, possibly to watch history play out in the same inevitable fashion it had already done ( ... )
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"He -- Byrne Faraday -- might appreciate a chance to talk to your new roommate. Just to hear how Kay was doing." There wasn't any hiding that Kay had come and gone -- the bulletin board had made that beyond clear. "I just...might not mention the Yatagarasu around him if I were you."
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Still, Ema trusted her sister's judgment. If Lana thought it was a bad idea, it was likely a bad idea. The subject of the Yatagarasu was officially off-limits with Prosecutor Faraday.
After some thought (and a few more mouthfuls of food), she added, "I'll talk to Aigis and tell her to get in touch with him. And if he wants to talk to me about her, I'd be willing to do that, too. Even if I haven't met her back home yet, we were still friends. I think he'd like to know that she wasn't alone here."
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There was one more thing that they did need to talk about, though. "Anything happens, I'll look for you on Main Street, down at the end where the buses let off." Outside might not be the best idea, though. Hmm. "Or in the bookstore. That's down that way, and the shelves would make good barricades." Planning for a zombie apocalypse was a bit outside her jurisdiction, but she couldn't help trying.
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Ema nodded at Lana's emergency planning, taking the idea of a possible zombie apocalypse with grave seriousness. It had happened before, so it'd be irresponsible of them not to plan for it, just in case. "Hopefully we won't need to do that. Even if there is a zombie uprising, it's possible that the cold temperatures will work to our advantage. Scientifically speaking, without an internal source of energy and constant bloodflow, they'd freeze."
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Neither of them were well-equipped for such an occasion; Lana had the benefit of self-defense and gun training, but without a sidearm the latter was useless and the former only a weapon of last resort. All they really had were their wits, which right now Ema was doing a better job at at least trying to use.
"It's a better strategy than than threatening them with lawsuits." Lana pursed her lips, as if seriously contemplating the matter. "But we don't want to advertise that we're still in possession of braaaains." She drawled the last word out reached her arms out in the playground version of a zombie, and reached for Ema.
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