((This post takes place the day after the events of this post.))
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"The First Annual Royal Ball was a resounding success. Security was excellent; there were no public outbursts, no displays of violence. The entire detail is to be commended. That's the official line."
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This, Osric thought as he paced back and forth across the room, is going to be a problem. He splayed his fingers, clenching and unclenching his fists over and over, trying to bleed out the tension as best he could before it built to untenable heights.
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"Why the gag order?"
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"You know why."
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He had to bite down hard, then, and shove his tongue against his palate, because rising up inside him with all the bitterness of bile was a white-hot lump of sheer untempered rage. It burned on the way up, searing his gullet before catching in his throat, lodged there behind the Adam's apple.
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It was a battle he won for all of five seconds.
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He thrust his left hand up, pointing to his ear, and the catch in his throat let go. Had the gods been watching, surely old Oschon would have ceded his charge to the care of righteous Halone, for the Fury was in this man's voice and wicked daggers were his eyes.
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"I have a gods-damned pearl, Peak! I was close enough t'get the bastard's name, t'catch the glint of a knife, blood on the blade - fresh blood, Peak, I know it when I see it! - had him dead to rights, we could've take him then and there, all I needed was the go, and there WAS. NO. WORD."
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Down came the linkpearl as he dug it out and pitched it across the lieutenant's desk. The little marble-like bauble ricocheted off the wooden finish a mere two ilms from a rather ornate vase - the depictions were of a series of knights safeguarding a single Lalafell - and went flying off into the far corner of the office.
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"What's the point of an official shell if no one uses it?! What good does it do us? How many men 'n' women could be missing right now, or worse? How many, just so some peiste-begotten Sultansworn can cover his bloomin' arse?!"
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He paused for breath, chest heaving. The lieutenant spared him a single glance, then patiently rose from his chair, made his way to the bookcases along the wall, and stooped just enough to pick the pearl off the floor. The Roegadyn walked back to his desk, considering the little round sphere in his hand, then raised his eyes to meet Melkire's.
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"No need to hold back."
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Melkire's eyes flickered down towards the desk, then back up at the lieutenant's. He lurched forward, scooping up the intricate vase with one hand and hurling it with an inarticulate scream into the wall to one side. The work of art shattered against the sigil of Coin & Country as it collided with the Ul'dahn flag that had been pinned there; shards of porcelain fell to the floor in a cascade of ringing ceramic.
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He raised a shaking hand and swept it back through his hair as his knees threatened to buckle beneath him.
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"Are you done?"
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"...aye. Aye, I'm done. Thanks, Burning."
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First Flame Lieutenant Burning Peak merely nodded and passed the linkpearl back to its rightful owner. Melkire tucked the precious device back in place, lodging it against his ear canal.
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"...it was a stupid vase."
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"Every now and then, I would think the same. But it served its purpose, time and again, and would have continued to do so had you not broken it into pieces."
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Melkire exhaled, letting out a shuddering breath as he glanced at the lieutenant. He opened his mouth to reply, but Peak cut him off.
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"Think this through, Sergeant. Not counting Ser Jenlyns' men, the Sultansworn number less than a mere dozen. Their ranks are few. At this time, the Sultanate cannot afford the loss of even a single knight, even temporarily, to scandal and inquisition, and certainly not one held in such high regard as Captain Mynhier. That would be a grave blow, far worse than the loss of a single civilian - a civilian, I remind you, that may or may not have been murdered or kidnapped, a civilian who may not even exist. And that's not even to mention the public outcry and resulting unrest should the general population learn that there may have been even the slightest danger, the slightest chance of harm to them and their families. We'd be doing this Vale's work for him, whatever that may be."
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Chief Flame Sergeant Osric Melkire deflated, collapsing in on himself. Sighing, he pinched the bridge of his nose against the growing pain that was one colossus of a headache in the making, and nodded. Grim face gave way to weak smile as he looked up at Peak.
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"We still on for cards tomorrow night?"
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The lieutenant rolled his eyes. "Blind is twenty-five seals."
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"When are you 'n' the other boys going t'join us men in playing for some real coin?"
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"When the Amalj'aa give up on Ifrit and summon up a nice rainstorm instead."
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Osric barked a laugh, taking his turban from his belt pouch and tugging it into place atop his head, securing its mask against his face. He turned to the lieutenant, giving the man his appreciation in the form of a proper salute, then turned on his heel and strode past the uniformed Lalafell behind him, strode out the door of his friend's office.
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Said Lala's glance lingered after him as the great wooden door slammed close. "The man's deranged."
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"Insane? No. Unstable? Perhaps." The lieutenant sat down and started sifting through the papers on his desk.
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"Why hasn't he been discharged?"
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"Enlisted for life. It's service or the gallows; there's no middle ground, not for him. Those were the terms he agreed to when he made landfall at Vesper five cycles ago."
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"Then why hasn't he been... ah. You've been covering for him."
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Peak nodded. "I was there that sun, Kokojo. Swift, too."
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"Why?"
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"What, why shield him?" The corporal nodded. "Because,in the end, he's a good man, and we're sorely lacking for good men. He just has... issues... where injustice is concerned."
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Corporal Kokojo raised an eyebrow at her superior. "Osric Melkire, taking issue with injustice?"
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Lieutenant Peak looked up, and shrugged his shoulders."I never said he wasn't a hypocrite."
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She bit her lip as Peak returned to his paperwork, and finally asked, "Lieutenant, why am I here?"
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"You followed him here, didn't you? Doubt he realized you were there, what with the state he was in."
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"No, I mean, why was I allowed to witness... all that?"
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Peak sighed, laid his quill aside, and moved the last sheet of paper into his outbox before meeting Kokojo's eyes.
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"A cycle ago, I led a raid on a drug cartel operating out of the labyrinths at Halatali. Sergeant Melkire was our go-to reconnaissance scout. He was on the fast-track back then, promotions all lined up and awaiting ink. I sent him into that maze with orders to locate their base of operations and report back. No engagements." Peak grimaced. "He never returned. A few bells later, we sent in his second, who did report back, pale in the face and sicker than a wet chocobo. When we reached the sergeant, we found out why. Twenty men and women dead, cartel agents all. Broken. Beaten. Bones snapped, eyes popped, tongues torn, loins desecrated. And why? Because it wasn't just a drug cartel. Slavers. Cages full of women and children. Filthy. Starving. Alive. Dead. Abused. Violated. What he saw there set him off. He took them apart, and I can't rightfully say he was wrong to do so."
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The lieutenant waved a hand.
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"Those were Syndicate interests, though. So naturally,when the cash-flow dried up, they looked into it. Imagine their horror at what they found: an up-and-coming officer of the Flames, a Royalist, one who would not balk at meting out what he saw as justice, even going so far as to defy direct orders to do so. This was a threat the Monetarists would not, could not, tolerate. So they did what every viper does when threatened: they struck first. The sergeant was immediately detained by the Brass Blades upon our return to the city, and taken to the gaols. They wanted him dead; it took Commander Swift and I every onze of pull we could muster to keep him alive. We kicked it up to the top; a moon later, he was thrown out into the street, bruised and battered, cut up," Peak paused to gesture along his right eye and left cheek, "emaciated... but still breathing. Still alive."
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He picked his quill up off the desk and twirled it between his massive fingers.
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"They promoted him to Chief Flame Sergeant and transferred him out from under me, put him in charge of fresh recruits. That's the end of the line for him. There will be no more promotions. They will never allow him to command. And given the slightest hint that he's even thinking of turning his hand against them in any manner of direct fashion? They'll send him to the hangman and the noose."
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Peak sighed.
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"I can't watch over him anymore. He can't keep coming here to vent his frustrations in private, either. Eventually, he'll slip, and what was now just a fellow Royalist standing behind him might turn out to be a Syndicate assassin. He needs someone around to look after him, someone to kick him in the shins when he needs kicking, someone he can confide in, or he's a dead man. So."
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The lieutenant spread his hands, as if to accentuate the obvious. Corporal Kokojo looked back at the closed door. A good minute passed... then she broke into a lewd smile. "Well, I can't say I've ever seen him with his mask off before."
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Peak snorted and reached for the next stack of papers in his inbox.
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Peak'll explain things to Kokojo. Don't think the poor girl's ever seen me lose it like that before.
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Osric hesitated as he left the Hall of Flames and emerged onto the streets. He was officially off-duty as of the last bell. A drink at the 'sand would do wonders for his still-rattled nerves, but it was still early for that, and far too early for his appointment there later this evening. The Hyur sighed as he resigned himself to aimlessly walking down the length of Emerald Avenue for the next few bells.
Might as well hit up Sapphire while I'm at it. Thomys did say he wanted me to bring him one of those wind-up Raubhans next time I visit.
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A few bells, and then he could relax....
((To answer any questions regarding my touching upon the Ishgardian plotline, yes, I was IC and close enough to catch Erik, Xydane, and Kiht in /s and /em when a certain something was flashed. I'm not trying to intrude, just world-building. If there's a problem, e.g. something Osric shouldn't have been able to see or hear, please let me know! I'll fix it asap.))
Â
"The First Annual Royal Ball was a resounding success. Security was excellent; there were no public outbursts, no displays of violence. The entire detail is to be commended. That's the official line."
Â
This, Osric thought as he paced back and forth across the room, is going to be a problem. He splayed his fingers, clenching and unclenching his fists over and over, trying to bleed out the tension as best he could before it built to untenable heights.
Â
"Why the gag order?"
Â
"You know why."
Â
He had to bite down hard, then, and shove his tongue against his palate, because rising up inside him with all the bitterness of bile was a white-hot lump of sheer untempered rage. It burned on the way up, searing his gullet before catching in his throat, lodged there behind the Adam's apple.
Â
It was a battle he won for all of five seconds.
Â
He thrust his left hand up, pointing to his ear, and the catch in his throat let go. Had the gods been watching, surely old Oschon would have ceded his charge to the care of righteous Halone, for the Fury was in this man's voice and wicked daggers were his eyes.
Â
"I have a gods-damned pearl, Peak! I was close enough t'get the bastard's name, t'catch the glint of a knife, blood on the blade - fresh blood, Peak, I know it when I see it! - had him dead to rights, we could've take him then and there, all I needed was the go, and there WAS. NO. WORD."
Â
Down came the linkpearl as he dug it out and pitched it across the lieutenant's desk. The little marble-like bauble ricocheted off the wooden finish a mere two ilms from a rather ornate vase - the depictions were of a series of knights safeguarding a single Lalafell - and went flying off into the far corner of the office.
Â
"What's the point of an official shell if no one uses it?! What good does it do us? How many men 'n' women could be missing right now, or worse? How many, just so some peiste-begotten Sultansworn can cover his bloomin' arse?!"
Â
He paused for breath, chest heaving. The lieutenant spared him a single glance, then patiently rose from his chair, made his way to the bookcases along the wall, and stooped just enough to pick the pearl off the floor. The Roegadyn walked back to his desk, considering the little round sphere in his hand, then raised his eyes to meet Melkire's.
Â
"No need to hold back."
Â
Melkire's eyes flickered down towards the desk, then back up at the lieutenant's. He lurched forward, scooping up the intricate vase with one hand and hurling it with an inarticulate scream into the wall to one side. The work of art shattered against the sigil of Coin & Country as it collided with the Ul'dahn flag that had been pinned there; shards of porcelain fell to the floor in a cascade of ringing ceramic.
Â
He raised a shaking hand and swept it back through his hair as his knees threatened to buckle beneath him.
Â
"Are you done?"
Â
"...aye. Aye, I'm done. Thanks, Burning."
Â
First Flame Lieutenant Burning Peak merely nodded and passed the linkpearl back to its rightful owner. Melkire tucked the precious device back in place, lodging it against his ear canal.
Â
"...it was a stupid vase."
Â
"Every now and then, I would think the same. But it served its purpose, time and again, and would have continued to do so had you not broken it into pieces."
Â
Melkire exhaled, letting out a shuddering breath as he glanced at the lieutenant. He opened his mouth to reply, but Peak cut him off.
Â
"Think this through, Sergeant. Not counting Ser Jenlyns' men, the Sultansworn number less than a mere dozen. Their ranks are few. At this time, the Sultanate cannot afford the loss of even a single knight, even temporarily, to scandal and inquisition, and certainly not one held in such high regard as Captain Mynhier. That would be a grave blow, far worse than the loss of a single civilian - a civilian, I remind you, that may or may not have been murdered or kidnapped, a civilian who may not even exist. And that's not even to mention the public outcry and resulting unrest should the general population learn that there may have been even the slightest danger, the slightest chance of harm to them and their families. We'd be doing this Vale's work for him, whatever that may be."
Â
Chief Flame Sergeant Osric Melkire deflated, collapsing in on himself. Sighing, he pinched the bridge of his nose against the growing pain that was one colossus of a headache in the making, and nodded. Grim face gave way to weak smile as he looked up at Peak.
Â
"We still on for cards tomorrow night?"
Â
The lieutenant rolled his eyes. "Blind is twenty-five seals."
Â
"When are you 'n' the other boys going t'join us men in playing for some real coin?"
Â
"When the Amalj'aa give up on Ifrit and summon up a nice rainstorm instead."
Â
Osric barked a laugh, taking his turban from his belt pouch and tugging it into place atop his head, securing its mask against his face. He turned to the lieutenant, giving the man his appreciation in the form of a proper salute, then turned on his heel and strode past the uniformed Lalafell behind him, strode out the door of his friend's office.
Â
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Said Lala's glance lingered after him as the great wooden door slammed close. "The man's deranged."
Â
"Insane? No. Unstable? Perhaps." The lieutenant sat down and started sifting through the papers on his desk.
Â
"Why hasn't he been discharged?"
Â
"Enlisted for life. It's service or the gallows; there's no middle ground, not for him. Those were the terms he agreed to when he made landfall at Vesper five cycles ago."
Â
"Then why hasn't he been... ah. You've been covering for him."
Â
Peak nodded. "I was there that sun, Kokojo. Swift, too."
Â
"Why?"
Â
"What, why shield him?" The corporal nodded. "Because,in the end, he's a good man, and we're sorely lacking for good men. He just has... issues... where injustice is concerned."
Â
Corporal Kokojo raised an eyebrow at her superior. "Osric Melkire, taking issue with injustice?"
Â
Lieutenant Peak looked up, and shrugged his shoulders."I never said he wasn't a hypocrite."
Â
She bit her lip as Peak returned to his paperwork, and finally asked, "Lieutenant, why am I here?"
Â
"You followed him here, didn't you? Doubt he realized you were there, what with the state he was in."
Â
"No, I mean, why was I allowed to witness... all that?"
Â
Peak sighed, laid his quill aside, and moved the last sheet of paper into his outbox before meeting Kokojo's eyes.
Â
"A cycle ago, I led a raid on a drug cartel operating out of the labyrinths at Halatali. Sergeant Melkire was our go-to reconnaissance scout. He was on the fast-track back then, promotions all lined up and awaiting ink. I sent him into that maze with orders to locate their base of operations and report back. No engagements." Peak grimaced. "He never returned. A few bells later, we sent in his second, who did report back, pale in the face and sicker than a wet chocobo. When we reached the sergeant, we found out why. Twenty men and women dead, cartel agents all. Broken. Beaten. Bones snapped, eyes popped, tongues torn, loins desecrated. And why? Because it wasn't just a drug cartel. Slavers. Cages full of women and children. Filthy. Starving. Alive. Dead. Abused. Violated. What he saw there set him off. He took them apart, and I can't rightfully say he was wrong to do so."
Â
The lieutenant waved a hand.
Â
"Those were Syndicate interests, though. So naturally,when the cash-flow dried up, they looked into it. Imagine their horror at what they found: an up-and-coming officer of the Flames, a Royalist, one who would not balk at meting out what he saw as justice, even going so far as to defy direct orders to do so. This was a threat the Monetarists would not, could not, tolerate. So they did what every viper does when threatened: they struck first. The sergeant was immediately detained by the Brass Blades upon our return to the city, and taken to the gaols. They wanted him dead; it took Commander Swift and I every onze of pull we could muster to keep him alive. We kicked it up to the top; a moon later, he was thrown out into the street, bruised and battered, cut up," Peak paused to gesture along his right eye and left cheek, "emaciated... but still breathing. Still alive."
Â
He picked his quill up off the desk and twirled it between his massive fingers.
Â
"They promoted him to Chief Flame Sergeant and transferred him out from under me, put him in charge of fresh recruits. That's the end of the line for him. There will be no more promotions. They will never allow him to command. And given the slightest hint that he's even thinking of turning his hand against them in any manner of direct fashion? They'll send him to the hangman and the noose."
Â
Peak sighed.
Â
"I can't watch over him anymore. He can't keep coming here to vent his frustrations in private, either. Eventually, he'll slip, and what was now just a fellow Royalist standing behind him might turn out to be a Syndicate assassin. He needs someone around to look after him, someone to kick him in the shins when he needs kicking, someone he can confide in, or he's a dead man. So."
Â
The lieutenant spread his hands, as if to accentuate the obvious. Corporal Kokojo looked back at the closed door. A good minute passed... then she broke into a lewd smile. "Well, I can't say I've ever seen him with his mask off before."
Â
Peak snorted and reached for the next stack of papers in his inbox.
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Peak'll explain things to Kokojo. Don't think the poor girl's ever seen me lose it like that before.
Â
Osric hesitated as he left the Hall of Flames and emerged onto the streets. He was officially off-duty as of the last bell. A drink at the 'sand would do wonders for his still-rattled nerves, but it was still early for that, and far too early for his appointment there later this evening. The Hyur sighed as he resigned himself to aimlessly walking down the length of Emerald Avenue for the next few bells.
Might as well hit up Sapphire while I'm at it. Thomys did say he wanted me to bring him one of those wind-up Raubhans next time I visit.
Â
A few bells, and then he could relax....
((To answer any questions regarding my touching upon the Ishgardian plotline, yes, I was IC and close enough to catch Erik, Xydane, and Kiht in /s and /em when a certain something was flashed. I'm not trying to intrude, just world-building. If there's a problem, e.g. something Osric shouldn't have been able to see or hear, please let me know! I'll fix it asap.))