Characters: Anyone and everyone from all three ships.
Content: The clouds are gone, revealing the long-sought world below.
Setting: The edge of the continent, near the blast site.
Time: After all the monsters have been fought and the ships head southeast.
Warnings: What you bring with you.
(
A hundred thousand things to see )
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Edgeworth stood behind him, just a little ways away, his good hand in his pocket and his metal arm at his side. He had watched Hisoka for just a moment before he announced his presence, to steel himself for the conversation ahead, and the younger man seemed absolutely entranced by the image below. Not that he could blame him: there was a whole new world down there, bigger and more vast than anyone had imagined. He had seen wonder, he had seen fear, but he had yet to see anyone who was apathetic about this turn of events.
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"Most of them," he said, as he walked to Hisoka's side. "The others should be safe and sound, or weren't even in the area to begin with."
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He turned his face towards Edgeworth. "This is a vast change to the world. It puts a whole new light on the future. What will you do, in this new world?"
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Edgeworth glanced away from Hisoka and towards the rim of the continent, and said, "However, if I do join in...it won't be with the military."
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"Do you have ideas of what you will do instead?" Hisoka asked.
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He glanced back at Hisoka, and asked, "What about you?"
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He added, "And as for me, well, it's kind of a long story..."
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"I have time to listen," he said. "That is, if you don't mind sharing."
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"I told you last year when we met at the Hanami Festival about my lost military records," he said. "I don't think I mentioned the man who contacted me via journal, a few months after I signed on to Serenity, a Major Thomson Delacroix of the Navy Personel Office in Bellcius. He informed me that the records had been found, and that I had never been deactivated, and he seemed to expect me to be a little bit grateful. But by that time, I was so angry that I wasn't willing to listen to him. I said I had already made a committment to Captain Reynolds, and I was not coming back. He was persistent, though. He said he had had me classified as being on special assignment pending my return to regular duty. He tried to blackmail me into making myself useful by spying on ( ... )
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Then Hisoka mentioned the blackmail. His eyes narrowed, and disgust warped into cold fury when he explained how he had very nearly been roped into a suicide mission. It was bad enough that they had doomed him to a bureaucratic limbo. But now they had to damn him to certain death?
"What conditions were they?" he asked slowly. His curiosity outweighed his anger, which was enough to keep his composure for now.
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Hisoka chewed his lip for a minute. He was thinking of how disorienting it felt to have expected, at the least, a very strange fate, and now to find he must make completely different plans. "You know, if the science people had been correct about what was down there...there is one thing I know for certain. I'd have brought that expedition home, or I would have died trying."
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His last words, though, brought the whole thing together. These weren't the demands of a selfish, overly ambitious whelp; they were of a man who was determined to do everything he could to lead a crew of doomed souls out of certain peril. Edgeworth's gaze flickered for a moment, and he asked, "What of the third request?"
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It almost made him dizzy, at times like these.
He took a breath and made the effort to answer the question, though. "There is a nasty note in my confidential file, up there in some gleaming cabinet at Bellcius Headquarters, where the whole Navy's personel records are. I have no direct evidence that it exists, and yet I know that it does. There would be similar notations in the files of the other six men and women who were junior officers on the Mary Rose and survived its destruction along with me. I wanted those comments permanently removed, for all seven of us. I particularly wanted it for those six, because I made the decision that brought us all under suspician. I don't know that ( ... )
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