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(no subject)
When: 3/23 late evening
Where: The apartment
What: Belle recovers an item from a pulse, L sees potential for opportunity in it
It had been quite a day. After her morning appointment, Belle had set aside an hour to place reminder calls to her semi-regular patients, only to realize that her planner containing their phone numbers and notes about their cases was nowhere to be found. Checking the entirety of her office, the car, and asking her coworkers had not turned up any signs of it and trying to recall the last time she remembered looking at it had conjured only memories of leafing through it briefly just before entering the coffee shop Lazarus had asked her to meet him at before the attack on the city.
Her thoughts, throughout the day, kept returning to Expresso Yourself as she tried to remember whether she had seen or used the planner since going there, only to find that she could not recall. The idea of it sitting among the wreckage, waiting for some city worker to discover it and invade information that was not theirs had made itself at home in her head as hours passed, needling at her more and more. By the time five rolled around, she had started to wonder if it might be possible to go and check for it.
By seven, she had made her decision, and by seven-thirty, she was parking her rented volkswagon as close to the wreck that had once been the coffee shop as she was able. The ceiling having been removed meant no immediate threat of cave-ins, which went a long way toward encouraging her to pick her way toward the collapsed mess that had once been a back hallway. If her planner was anywhere, she'd reasoned, it would be in the back "office". ....however, her efforts at making progress had been prematurely abandoned at the sound of nearby footsteps on the pavement. A look outside had found a roving officer training his flashlight's beam over her car.
Belle of a few months ago would have readily stepped out to meet him, explained what she was doing, and asked for help. However, this Belle - the one who was aware of secret numbers, impossible powers and forms, and who had narrowly escaped grievous injury twice-over in the last two months by means she could not explain, had gone with an impulse. As the officer had swept his flashlight's beam into the coffee shop, she had hidden from him. As he'd advanced, she'd retreated, carefully matching his steps with her own to remain out of sight. Their brief game of cat-and-mouse had ended abruptly when his radio had crackled to life with an officer requesting relief from his guard post in the downtown area. Her would-be pursuer had, thankfully, stepped out of the wreckage to offer to be there shortly.
As they discussed the specifics, Belle had continued to back away, slipping out of Expresso Yourself entirely by way of a broken wall, across a narrow alleyway, and into the toppled husk of its neighboring building. There had been a stairway leading downward and she'd taken it, relying on her instincts to lead her somewhere safe.
The basement level of the building was dark, but not nearly as damaged as the upper floors had ended up. Employing her phone's screen as a flashlight, Belle had found herself in a long, dark hallway, serenaded by the backdrop of a broken pipe's running water.
Behold the sweetfish river running through my beloved hometown.
The words had surfaced in her head so deliberately, she had startled, wheeling around to see if someone had spoken to her.
You who seek the Golden Land, follow its path downstream in search of the key
She had stood there, stark-still in the darkness for several minutes trying to make sense of it. There was no river, and no "downstream" unless...
At the end of the hallway had been a door, hanging slightly ajar. Under normal circumstances, she would have found it offputting, but present ones drew her to it, wondering if something within might provide her an answer as she'd traveled the length of the hall. Instead, waiting to greet her on the other side, had been a jumble of custodial tools, spilled chemicals, and various other debris. Disappointment had welled in her, realizing it hadn't even been worth getting her hopes up over.
It wasn't until she'd turned to shut the door again that she'd seen it. On top of the overturned janitor's cart, something that she was sure hadn't been there a moment ago, glinted in the dim light her phone offered. It was an easily-recognized object she'd seen countless times in cartoons and movies, but never in person. The gold bar shone proudly, devoid of dust or debris, as if it had been put there for her to find it.
In the end, her planner had been completely forgotten, and she'd returned home with it cradled in her jacket. Current circumstances found her in the living room, with the gold ingot placed on the coffee table in front of her, staring at it intently, and realizing that now that she'd gotten it home, she had no idea what to do next.
She didn't want to entertain the idea that it might be real, as that would present an entirely new set of problems for her. With the city in disarray and people displaced from their businesses (some from their homes, most probably) something like this was very dangerous to have. A finger reached out to trace the engraved figure on its face. It looked to be a one-winged bird...or at least a bird being shown at an awkward angle. As for how it related to her...
....well, she had no idea.
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Nodding briskly, he left the car and made his way into the restaurant, ordering the first thing with ice cream he noticed on the menu and joining the dark-haired, lopsidedly grinning man at one of the tables.
Mack stood up, drawing L into a tight embrace, which L returned almost automatically.
"Chess Man. You look like shit," Mack laughed, puffing tobacco-scented breath close to L's ear. "Better than the last time I saw you, though. Have a seat."
L did so, smoothly going through the motions of their well-practiced hand-offs.
"Be right back. Bathroom," Mack said, slipping the ingot into his pocket. A tense few minutes passed as he presumably verified, himself, that the gold was real. When he returned, he was beaming.
"Finish your ice cream. I've already told my guys what to put together for you. We can't give you quite what it's worth, but fuck, I've never seen gold that pure. After this... I hope we're square, for what I let happen to you."
L chewed his lip, staring at the tabletop, giving two slight nods. "Yeah, we're square."
"I've missed you, Chess Man. Glad to hear it."
Twenty minutes later, L's slender frame was swallowed up by the van, and a duffle bag was nudged toward him. Mack mouthed "call me," and he was left, alone, with a heavy duffle stuffed with cash.
He had called the taxi well in advance, so fortunately, it arrived promptly. Paying the driver, he lugged the bag up the stairs, letting himself into the apartment and softly closing the door behind him, in case Belle was already asleep.
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It had been her pulse that had brought the damned thing into the world, after all...even if it was his connections that would ultimately see it safely gone from the apartment.
In the end, she had gone back to the apartment and forced herself to sit and watch TV, determined that if he did not turn up by eleven-thirty, she would get SOME description of a search going for him.
She had so convinced herself that this was inevitable as time had ticked on that she almost didn't believe it when she heard the front door open, close, and lock, followed by a familiar, uneven shuffling gait.
"L?" she asked, fumbling for the remote to turn the television off.
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He knew that she would be, if he actually told her about the encounter and the amount of trust he placed in hardened criminals... but there were some things she didn't need to know.
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He no longer had the ingot, anyway...
"Did the two of you come to an agreement...?"
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