Chapter 16: A Student Reporter
(A big thank you to
Siatru, and to
Grig9700 and to
Sunny for beta reading this chapter. It's been a while, eh? Thank you for your patience.)
I woke up bright and early on Christmas morning, well rested and full of energy, to find Ohgi already up and stirring a pan full of eggs on the hotplate. As I untangled myself from my sleeping bag and clambered to my feet, I saw Naoto was still asleep, crashed out on his bed, still in his worker's overalls. Apparently, the team had gotten back safely the night before; I sincerely doubted that Ohgi and Naoto would have let me remain asleep if one of our comrades was in danger, and I couldn't imagine Naoto blissfully sleeping away the morning if something had gone wrong.
It seems like they didn't need my help after all.
As I rubbed the sleep from my eyes, I tried to figure out why that prospect annoyed me so much. The plan had been inspired by Ohgi's idea, but I had been the one to actually work out the details; nobody, myself included, could reasonably say that I hadn't been involved in the operation, that I hadn't done my part. At the same time, I had gone out of my way to go to bed early and on a full stomach so I could use every scrap of my magic to bail out Naoto, Tamaki, and the others when the plan inevitably went off the rails – and yet, here I was, accepting a plate of eggs from Ohgi with a mumbled "Good morning", still wearing the oversized t-shirt and sweatpants I'd worn to bed the night before.
That's it – I'm all pent up! The answer, I realized as I took a bite of scrambled eggs, was obvious. I'd practically been bouncing off the walls the last few weeks as my arm and side recovered, and only Kallen's invitations to join her on trips to the Settlement, along with the promise of a return to my typical work at the end of this week, had kept me sane. I had gotten myself all worked up over the possibility of going out and getting some exercise after three weeks, and now that I had been denied that release, I was unreasonably irritated.
That's all there is to it. I like peaceful work, but exercise is important for a stress-free life.
"So? How'd it go?" Ohgi looked up from his own plate and glared sternly back from across the table, refusing to answer until I'd swallowed the mouthful of breakfast and asked the question again.
"Well..." Ohgi drew out the last syllable as he pushed a forkful of egg around on his plate, considering his answer. "I think it's safe to call it a 'qualified success' overall." Seeing my inquisitively raised eyebrow, he hastily continued. "Everybody got home safe, and it doesn't look like the Brits tracked anything back to Shinjuku, which is the good thing. The other good thing is that Tamaki confirmed at least three Purists died last night – he got one, Gin got another, and Gin and Inuyama ganged up on the third. So, we got what we came for, and we got away clean." I nodded, and Ohgi popped a hasty bite into his mouth, and quickly chewed and swallowed before continuing.
"The bad part is what came after. It's still hard to tell what happened exactly, but some time after the team retreated, buildings suddenly started being lit on fire. I could see the glow from up on the roof – especially since it looked like all the fires were in the Honorary Britannian neighborhoods, so, y'know, close to Shinjuku." Ohgi put down his fork and leaned back in his chair, rubbing thoughtfully at his chin as he looked off into the middle distance. "I could hear the sounds of yelling and screaming from the roof too, not to mention the sounds of lots of angry people breaking a ton of stuff." He looked back at me, and winced sympathetically, no doubt at the expression on my face. "I can only assume that someone saw the uniforms the team was wearing, and decided mob justice was in order."
I scowled as I nodded my acknowledgment, my earlier concerns about the well-being of my comrades and my own annoyance swept away by the sudden flood of worry, anger, and... a little bit of guilt. I had known that it was all but inevitable that the Honorary Britannians would be at least partially blamed for the murders we had committed, but I'd hoped having the "Honorary Britannians" be led by an apparent Britannian would direct the blame more towards other Britannian factions, with the Honorary Britannians treated as the blunt instruments of their foreign officers. The worst I had expected was a handful of show trials of unlucky soldiers on trumped up charges, followed by executions. That would have further blackened the Purists' name, and undermined the loyalty of the Honorary Britannian troops, but it would have been limited in scope and the only Japanese to die would have been the ones who had sworn themselves to the armed service of our occupier. Instead, it looked like the Purists had taken the excuse I'd handed them and initiated a pogrom. It was impossible to tell the scope of the damage at this point, but unquestionably civilians had suffered – men and women doing their best to do as the system demanded in order to live the best lives they could. And I was partially to blame. I had followed in the footsteps of the rebel groups of my youth, only I'd been smart enough to attack outside the ghetto so the retaliatory scourge would fall on someone else's back for a change.
Before I let myself get too far down that train of thought, I paused, and re-examined the facts as I understood them: Agents under my direction and in disguise had murdered a handful of soldiers in a glorified street fight, and in response the Britannians had... organized a mob attack on their own loyal collaborators?
None of this is your fault – if anybody's at fault for troops running wild in the streets, it's their idiot leaders who couldn't or wouldn't control their men. Besides, the Britannians were the ones who invaded us, and who have engaged in mass executions as a matter of policy; taking ownership for their fuckups is simple stupidity. The latter thought was probably more in keeping with the truth of the matter – the Britannians had proven themselves as vicious in their treatment of their "loyal subjects" as they always had been when handling the conquered population of Japan. Whatever had happened last night had little to do with my actions; three dead Purists and a flash of Honorary Britannian uniforms had proven to be the catalyst, but the hatred and contempt for the Honorary Britannians had clearly predated Christmas Eve.
All of this talk of fault was meaningless anyhow – the Britannians weren't going to back down and reform their corrupt system to something more equitable and efficient, and I wasn't going to stop fighting against their tyrannical, murderous, and exploitative system because they killed some of the millions of Japanese that lived as functional hostages under their cruelty. All too often, blood was the price for meaningful change, and changing Area 11 was always going to be expensive.
Besides, if the enemy wanted to butcher their loyal soldiers and their families in the street, who was I to disturb them in the midst of making a mistake?
"We need to find out what's going on in the Settlement." I set my fork down on the emptied plate, taking a moment to marvel how eggs had gone from the rare luxury item they had been when I'd met Ohgi and Naoto back to the common ingredient they had once been. "Clearly, something unexpected happened last night. If you're correct that the Settlement's been taken over by roving mobs, that could present an incredible opportunity to strike before the Administration regains control; on the other hand, if those mobs are heading towards Shinjuku after they finish off the Honorary Britannians, we need to know that too so we can prepare a welcome for them."
Ohgi nodded. "Inoue already knows something's up in the Settlement today, and she'll let Tamaki know once he gets up. Nagata's hanging out with the 5th Block Safety Committee right now, ready to pass on the word if it looks like that mess is coming our way. Souichiro and Chihiro are at the hideout, ready to break open our supplies if we give the word."
"What about the others?" It was still something I had to consciously remind myself of, but our small cell was growing by leaps and bounds. Besides Souichiro and Chihiro, the four former gangsters – Hojo, Hina, Gin, and Inuyama – were unquestionably part of our organization now, having gone on multiple combat missions with Naoto and conducted themselves well. Kasumi, one of the former slave prostitutes who had accepted Chihiro and Naoto's offer to join us, had taken on the role of Inoue's dedicated assistant, wanting little to do with violence in general and the former gangsters under Tamaki in particular, while four other freed slaves had begun combat training under Souichiro, Tamaki, and when she was free and in Shinjuku, Kallen.
"Aina and Misato are at the hideout with Chihiro and Souichiro, ready to help hand out weapons if the need comes – apparently, Chihiro's taking the opportunity to drill them on the range while they're waiting." Ohgi smiled at that, clearly proud that his one-time student had inherited his dedication to teaching. "Hojo and Makoto,"-one of the other former slave prostitutes-"are on a roof near the southeast checkpoint keeping an eye open to see if any troops start moving in." The southeast entrance into Shinjuku, along with the southern entrance, had the largest gates and were the most likely path into the ghetto for any armored elements. "Hina's keeping watch over the Rising Sun while Kasumi and Inori are helping Inoue hand out the daily food boxes."
I nodded my thanks at Ohgi.
It's such a pleasure to have competent and proactive comrades. Ohgi completely lacked Weiss's professionalism, but he was starting to approach Vi... Visha's ability to preemptively handle the details before I'd thought to deal with them. "Thank you, Ohgi."
I darted over to the clothes I'd carefully laid out last night, in the event I needed to rush off to do battle at a moment's notice. Retrieving my current burner phone from a pant pocket, I punched in Kallen's number from memory as I made my way over to the furthest corner of the room from where Naoto was snoring. No need to distract Kallen with the background noise, and no need to wake up my sleeping leader.
Fortunately, Kallen was already up and answered on the first ring. "Something's happening in the Concession!" Her voice was breathless and stressed as she picked up the phone and immediately got down to business. "I can see at least three plumes of smoke just from my window!"
"Are you in danger right now?" I hadn't expected the rioting to get anywhere near any of the noble neighborhoods, since that's where the Purists lived, but perhaps someone had taken the opportunity to settle a score or two...
"Eh? Oh! No, they're all pretty far off. Do you know what's happening?"
I quickly filled her in on what Ohgi had told me: Our unit had successfully exfiltrated after leaving multiple Purists dead in the street, hopefully fulfilling the requirements of our backers, and now the Honorary Britannian neighborhoods near Shinjuku were on fire.
"Past that point, it's all speculation." I shrugged, hoping the gesture would carry through my voice. "Ohgi and I think it's likely that the Purists are the ones behind it all, but we don't have any concrete evidence of that."
There was a pause for a moment, but I could hear Kallen's heavy breathing on the other end of the line. After a few seconds, her voice came back in, taut with emotion. "W-why... Why do you think they're doing this? What's the point of killing the H-Honorary Britannians? They've done everything they were supposed to..."
The answer that immediately leapt to my mind was a trite "nobody likes a traitor", but didn't ring true – the Honorary Britannians forsaking family, culture, and tradition in favor of loyalty to Britannia fit what I understood Britannia's ideals to be perfectly. Besides being inaccurate, a flippant answer like that would have been cruel; it didn't take an experienced officer and manager to tell that Kallen was deeply worried by a potential Honorary Britannian purge, and thanks to my trip months ago to the Stadtfeld Manor, I knew exactly why she was so concerned, and so I chose to answer the question she hadn't asked first.
"I'm fairly certain your mother's safe, Kallen." The sharp intake of breath told me I'd read the situation correctly, but I pressed on before she could butt in.
Kallen's worried and scared for her mother – once Naoto wakes up, I'm sure he'll be too. "She lives in a noble manor, and nobody's going to go house to house forcing nobles to hand over their domestics to the mob; more importantly, she's got the eye of a noble – two nobles, in fact, the Lord and Heir of House Stadtfeld. She's probably the safest Honorary Britannian in the city." I paused, letting those words sink in. Over the phone, I heard Kallen take a deep breath, slowly reigning her anxiety and fear back under control. "Besides, she's not a soldier, and I'm going to bet that the Honorary Britannian soldiers are probably the priority target for the mobs, if the Purists really are behind whatever's happening."
"Because our comrades wore Honorary Britannian uniforms." It wasn't a question. Kallen had, of course, been deeply involved with the information gathering process for the plan, and she'd known what the uniforms we'd stolen were for.
"That's definitely the bloody shirt they'll be waving, yes." I acknowledged, making my thoughts clear on the grounds for that excuse. "And if a few men dying in a brawl were enough to touch off a murderous assault on their fellow loyal subjects – including the soldiers most motivated to zealously carry out any order given – clearly there's more to it than just that. These sorts of things don't just happen, Kallen. Whatever happened last night's been coming for quite some time, and we just happened to hand the bastards an excuse. Don't let them paint our hands red with the blood they've shed – our hands are going to be bloody enough by the time this all ends as is."
Amazingly, Kallen laughed at that. It was a familiar laugh, a jeering laugh laden with a bleak humor, one that reminded me of the trenches, and of passing sandbags down a row of soldiers from where they were being filled in a relay trench to the forward-most line.
Back on the Rhine Front, enough men had been pulverized by artillery that loose body parts were far from uncommon. During the bad times, when the typical barrages had accelerated to constant drumfire for hours, if not days – when it was days, that always meant our sector had been chosen for Francois assault – only mages could leave the trenches without at least a fifty percent chance of death, and our time and energy were too valuable to spend on evacuating corpses. The fallen had been buried into the walls and floors of our dugouts and trenches, and as the men who had buried those unfortunates were themselves killed, the exact locations of all the bodies had been forgotten. When it came time to dig dirt out of the sides of the trench or the floor to fill new sandbags, however, those dead had returned to our awareness, and more often than not the sandbags we'd passed man to girl to man had rotting flesh mixed in with the sand and the loam. It had become a common joke for someone to call out what part of "Willy" was in each sandbag, along with an adjective. "Willy's dirty hands here" were passed down the line, followed by "Willy's shit-filled guts here". It had been hilarious, down in the dirt and the constant stench of death, covered in fleas. We had laughed, infantry and mages both, at the cruelty of the world and how small we were.
That was the laugh I heard from Kallen, and I knew that her worries, while not past, would not trouble her again. In the worst pits of that muddy hell, it was the men capable of cynical laughter in one moment, and breathtaking feats of heroism in the next, who could truly be counted on. I knew Kallen, and while she was still young, she had already proven herself to me. I knew I could count on her.
Besides, she's not as young as I was when I went into the trenches near Kaiserslautern.
"Oh, I guess they will be, Tanya, I guess they will be." Kallen took a moment to clear her throat, coughing on what sounded like a vaguely manic giggle. "Anyway, how can I help? Should I head over to Shinjuku right away?"
I smiled fondly into the phone, watching Ohgi crawl onto his bunk and fall asleep after a night up keeping watch for our comrades returning from the belly of the beast. "Not quite, Kallen. Right now, our first priority is information – we need to find out what happened last night after Naoto and Tamaki retreated, and we need to find out what the Britannians think is going on. At the moment, you seem the best placed to get answers." I thought back to her notebook full of names and connections. "Do you think any of your school connections with loose lipped parents know anything?"
"No clue." Kallen's answer was depressingly quick. "Milly might, since she seems to know everything, but I don't want to ask her. She'd immediately ask why I'm interested, and she's already way too curious about me."
That was a disappointing, although not unexpected answer. Kallen's antipathy towards Milly had subsided into the background of her reports, but that didn't mean it had faded in the slightest. Considering the second-hand accounts of her behavior I'd read in Kallen's notes, lines like "Milly tried to grab my breasts", "Milly implied that I was trading sexual favors for grades", and "Milly commented on how tight my school swimsuit is" interspersed between gossip about military activity and overheard speculation on Clovis's growing affiliation with the Purist Faction, I could fully understand why Kallen was so angry with the other girl. Unfortunately, budding sexual offender or not, the same reports made it clear that Milly was a startlingly intelligent young woman who had a deep network of informants that supplemented her access to her grandfather's files. If she had heard anything of use through her connections, which included the children of Purist officers and of the noble families that sympathized with and backed those officers, I might have to order Kallen to bite the bullet and ask the walking HR headache for a favor...
I suddenly realized that Kallen was still talking, and hastily dragged my attention back to our conversation. "-be a bit risky, but I think it would be the best way to get some answers. Plus, it worked before, so it might work again."
"I'm sorry, Kallen." I apologized with a grimace at my own wandering thoughts.
Always pay attention when your employees are speaking! Doing otherwise will make them feel undervalued! "I was distracted. What did you say?"
"Well, uhh..." Kallen coughed self-consciously through the phone, and I could practically imagine the stubborn blush spreading across her cheeks. "I was just saying that I could try the student reporter excuse again. Something's obviously happening, so I could just tell anyone who stops me that I just wanted to get a scoop for the student paper. And I know it might be a bit risky, but I don't think anyone is going to get super upset with an idiot schoolgirl sticking her nose into serious matters..."
"Excellent idea." My praise was sincere, but I made an effort to inject an extra dose of enthusiasm and relief into it to make up for inadvertently tuning her out earlier. "Be careful, bring your knife, and let me know if you need any help or backup – I'll be waiting with Nagata, and we'll be on our way as fast as possible if you need us."
---------
Several minutes of reassuring her friend and leader that
yes, she did in fact know what she was doing when it came to dressing up as a student reporter later, Kallen finally managed to end the call, shaking her head with fond exasperation.
Tanya was frighteningly intense in all that she did, which was mostly an advantage when it came to waging war on a brutal, evil occupation while running a charity as a side gig, but her tendency to micromanage could be intensely annoying at times. Kallen had actually brought that up during one of her increasingly rare visits to her brother's apartment, and while Naoto had commiserated with her frustration, he had also pointed out that Tanya's controlling behavior shouldn't be seen as some sort of implicit criticism or a lack of faith. When Kallen had first met Tanya, she had already seemed extremely self-possessed and utterly confident, stopping short of arrogant only because of her incredible skill.
And because of a moment of kindness and reassurance on a nameless Shinjuku street. Naoto, on the other hand, had first met Tanya when she still flinched whenever anybody moved near her, always anticipating an attack. The way he'd told it, even convincing her that she could eat their food had been a struggle, even though she was obviously hungry, and that hurdle had only been cleared once she'd been convinced she'd earned her meals. Her controlling behavior now, Naoto had pointed out, was definitely a reaction to growing up in a ghetto where life was cheap and food was scarce even for hard workers and strong backs.
"Besides," Naoto had said, draining the last of his cup of watered-down rotgut, "she couldn't do anything about her mom dying last summer. I bet you she's thinking that if she plans everything out just perfectly, none of us are gonna die. So far, she's been right about that."
That had been a sobering thought, and a bleak note to end their meeting on, but both Kozuki siblings had work to do for the Cause. That private moment of darkness, of the knowledge that "so far" could only go for so long, had been a reminder about how incredibly lucky they had been. Although he no longer openly, or even quietly, tried to convince her to back out, Kallen knew that her brother still wanted her as far from the front line as possible, and his enthusiasm about her intelligence gathering operations was very poorly concealed.
"But Big Bro, those operations are why I
need to stay. It's something only I can do for the Cause," Kallen muttered to herself as she hastily dressed, pulling on the stylish outfit she'd worn during her trip into the Settlement earlier in the week. After a quick look in the mirror, she swapped out the blouse in favor of a white button-down, so she could wear her school tie for that extra "schoolgirl reporter" flair. As she carefully brushed her hair into the right amount of stylish dishevelment to complete the look, a knock came from the door.
"Enter!" Although Kallen kept looking into the mirror, her eyes were fixed on the reflection of the door rather than her face, and her hand crept close to the compact with its concealed knife. She had a standing order that the servants weren't to disturb her in the morning on weekends or holidays, and her stepmother never came to her room herself, preferring to summon her to the parlor on the rare occasions they were forced to speak.
Who the hell could that be...?
The door opened slightly, and to Kallen's mild surprise her mother, her real mother, slipped inside, smoothly closing the door behind her. The facade of the perfect maid held for a second, before her mother's posture cracked as it only did when they were alone and in private and she rushed across the room, enfolding Kallen in a hug and pulling her to her chest. To Kallen's surprise, she could feel her mother shuddering against her, and felt a warm wetness in her hair where her mother had buried her face.
"M-mom? Are you okay?" Gingerly, Kallen wrapped her arms around her mother and returned the hug, desperately running through the list of possibilities for this uncharacteristically uncontrolled behavior. "Are the other servants messing with you again?" A tightly controlled knot of rage began to pulse in her chest, and Kallen strove to keep the traditional Stadtfeld temper under control.
This isn't the time to fly off the handle. "Did that bitch hit you again?"
"Kallen, please, please..." Her mother's voice was deeply stressed, full of nearly uncontrollable fear and worry. "Please tell me Naoto's okay. I heard from Ohgi yesterday that he was going into the Concession for a job but... But I haven't heard from him since... Since... Kallen, please..."
Oh, Naoto, you idiot! "Don't worry Mom – I just got off the phone with Tanya. Everybody got home safely. He's sleeping in his apartment right now." Kallen winced as her mother's embrace tightened just a bit more, and immediately began making her brother's excuses. "He probably got in super early, Mom! He didn't want to wake you up! I bet you he was gonna call you as soon as he woke up!"
"That stupid inconsiderate idiot boy!" The hug suddenly turned vicelike. "Thinks that just because he's a big grown man I won't haul him over my knee? Make me stay up all night thinking he was dead or hurt while the whole damned Concession goes crazy? That no-good idiot boy! I raised him better, Kallen!"
Kallen soothingly rubbed her mother's back, trying to convey sympathy while she kept an eye on the door.
Hope nobody's close enough to hear a bunch of angry Japanese... And I hope she remembers I'm not Naoto before she breaks my ribs. "Mom, Mom... You're right, Mom. He's an idiot. But he's alive, and he's safe... So, uh... Can you let go?"
Thankfully, her mother got the message, releasing Kallen to her relief. For a moment, her mother looked like she was about to continue her rant, before visibly taking a moment to calm down. Then, to Kallen's rising sense of dread, she took a moment to look her daughter up and down, from her school tie to her booted feet. "And where might you be headed this morning, Mistress Kallen?" The tone was asked in a sweet tone, as subservient as any maid's voice should be, but in Kallen's ears the words sounded as heavy and implacable as an oncoming sledgehammer.
"Well, uhh..." Kallen coughed nervously, damning the embarrassed heat she could feel on her cheeks. It was amazing how repairing her relationship with her mother had suddenly given her "maid" the power to make her feel like a child again. "Tanya asked me to find out what exactly happened last night, so... Ahh... I was going to go out and take a look...?"
For a second, Kallen was certain that her mother would, despite their status as maid and mistress, try to put her in time out and confine her to her room for the rest of the week, only allowing her to leave for school. She wouldn't have had the power to enforce any such edict, but Kallen doubted that would stop her mother, worked up as she was after a night wondering if her eldest child was dead.
After a moment, though, her mother sighed, shook her head, and wrapped her arms around Kallen again, not the crushing embrace of worry and anger but a light hug, reassuring herself that her daughter was still there, and reassuring her daughter that she wasn't about to be subjected to maternal fury. "You're just like your brother." Her mother's voice was warm in Kallen's ear. "Stubborn and stupid, and far too brave for your own good." With a last gentle squeeze, Kallen found herself released as her mother retreated back across the room, back towards the door. "Should I have the car brought around for you, Mistress Kallen?"
Kallen gulped down the dense wad of emotions blocking her throat and hastily rubbed the tears from her eyes.
You were always there, Momma, looking out for me and Naoto... "N-no, that's fine. I don't want anyone to know where I'm going. I'll just catch a bus or something."
Her mother turned as she opened the door. "Mistress Kallen, haven't you heard that the public transportation system has been temporarily shut down in light of last night's... events?"
Dammit! No, Kallen had not realized that little wrinkle when she'd volunteered her services to be Tanya's eyes and ears.
I can't call a driver -the bitch will know I'm out and about, and might start asking questions... I need a ride... Hey, wait a second... A few days earlier, Kallen had accompanied two of her fellow members of the Student Paper to do a story on the Motor Club, and to take pictures of the club members with their personal vehicles. To her surprise, one of the members of the Motor Club had been Rivalz Cardemonde, the same young man she'd convinced to sign the papers making him the nominal director of the Rising Sun Benevolent Association. Rivalz had posed with a motorcycle with a sidecar, smiling proudly under a pair of dorky goggles and a bicycle helmet Kallen doubted was rated for use on a motorcycle.
Kallen darted back to her desk and scooped up her phone, frantically paging through her contacts, and letting out a sigh of relief once she reached the "R's". She'd asked for Rivalz's number after she had convinced him to sign the papers, and he'd been all too eager to give it to her, nearly dropping her phone as he typed it into the new contact. She'd never had a reason to use it before, and thankfully he'd never tried to call or text her after the first exchange of confirmation texts, but now...
"Thank you, but the car won't be necessary." Kallen turned back to her mother and smiled. "I've got a guy." Immediately, her mother's eyes narrowed and Kallen felt her already red cheeks light up anew as she realized what her mother had just heard. "No! I mean, he's got a motorcycle!" As soon as the words were out, Kallen knew that she hadn't helped her case.
Her mother glared at her for a moment longer, before shaking her head. "I didn't say anything when Naoto went to live with Ohgi, so I won't say anything to you. Just... Be safe." And before Kallen could dig the hole she'd fallen into deeper by trying to correct her mother, the door closed, leaving Kallen gaping open-mouthed at the polished wood.
Rivalz picked up on the third ring. "Kallen? Is that you? I'd totally forgotten you had my number! Merry Christmas!"
Kallen smiled vapidly at nobody, staring at the distant plumes of rising smoke from her bedroom window. "Merry Christmas to you too, Rivalz! Have you finished unwrapping your presents yet?"
Rivalz chuckled. "Ah, you know it! I got a pretty good haul this year – how about you?"
"Oh, my family doesn't really do Christmas – especially since Daddy's still back in the Homeland." Kallen easily slipped into her role, letting her sentences end on a rising inflection, full of peppiness. "Anyway, my stepmother is still sleeping in, and since I didn't have anything to do today, I figured I'd try to get some work done for the school paper. Wanna help me?"
There was a pause, before Rivalz responded. "Umm... Sure, I guess? I don't really have anything going on for the next few hours, and then I need to meet up with a buddy..."
"Great!" Kallen chirped before he could try to back out or make excuses. "I'll text you my address! Bring your bike – I'm gonna need a ride!" She smiled at the sound of a hasty acceptance.
And now to make sure he doesn't get cold feet. "Thanks, Rivalz! You're the best – I really need help, but I'm also really happy to go on a ride with you!" As he sputtered in her ear, Kallen disconnected the call and sent two texts, one to Rivalz with her address, the second to Naoto warning him that he'd better be ready to grovel for forgiveness from their mother.
Twenty minutes of waiting by the gate of Stadtfeld Manor later, Kallen climbed into Rivalz's side-car, swapping out her flat cap for a helmet.
Wish I hadn't bothered to fix my hair up – it's all gonna be crushed flat by this thing.
As he revved his motor, Rivalz yelled a question over the noise, still managing to sound tentative about talking to a pretty girl while doing so. "So, uhh... Where are we going, Kallen? You didn't actually say what you were doing for the paper over the phone, you know..."
And finally the penny drops.
Kallen lowered her own pair of goggles into place over her eyes, looked up at Rivalz from her lower position in the sidecar, and smiled up at him. "As a reporter, I want to figure out just what happened last night – and to do that, we need to go to the Honorary Britannian neighborhoods, over by the Shinjuku Ghetto."
As expected, Rivalz was less than thrilled. He immediately killed his engine and turned to her, eyes wide and incredulous behind his goggles. "Are you insane?! Kallen, that whole place is still on fire!"
"Then we'd better get there to take some pictures before someone decides to put out all the buildings they set on fire!" Kallen retorted, momentarily forgetting her mask. Seeing Rivalz's eyes widen in surprise, she immediately started backtracking. "Sorry, it's... Look, this is important, right? Something
big happened last night, and nobody's talking about it yet – they're only saying people should avoid those areas. But that's where the news is happening! I need to get there and get the story before this all gets swept under the rug!"
Rivalz still looked conflicted. "But... It could be dangerous, you know..."
Sensing that he was wavering, Kallen moved in for the kill. Reaching out, she rested her hand on his outer thigh, currently at the rough height of her shoulder, and leaned in, ignoring his sudden blush. "Rivalz, we're both clearly Britannian – nobody's going to mess with us. Besides, don't you want to have a little...
adventure?" Kallen felt dirty as she added the seductive twist to her last word, but stamped her qualms down.
Anything for the Cause, for my mission. Tanya's counting on me.
Thankfully for Kallen's dignity, her last appeal seemed to have tilted the scales; Rivalz's gaze firmed, and he nodded, earlier reluctance seemingly forgotten. "You're right. It's important that the student body knows what's happening in the world around them!"
Kallen just nodded and smiled, concealing her embarrassment and rising impatience as best she could. "I'm glad we're on the same page. Let's get going – the news isn't going to write itself!"
As a far off church bell tolled nine, Rivalz took the nearest highway exit to Shinjuku and followed Kallen's directions as she guided them towards the outpost she had visited the previous week. She doubted that the Britannian officers in charge of the pocket installation would be as eager to offer her hospitality as before, to say nothing of indulging a cute student reporter and answering interview questions, but Kallen remembered how eager the younger soldiers were to talk to her and how they spilled everything they knew at the slightest hint of feminine interest.
I'm sure they'll be falling over themselves to talk about how they beat up the uppity Elevens.
Kallen deliberately kept her thoughts on the process of preparing to fawn over bloody-handed butchers, doing her best to sink into her noble Britannian persona. It was easier to don the mask of the perfect aristocratic daughter, benignly interested in the affairs of those below her and so supportive of His Majesty's men in uniform, everything that Kozuki Kallen hated. Focusing on shaping the perfect simpering smile was easy, and staying focused on the possibility of information gathering made it easier to ignore the rising feeling of guilt as her sidecar rolled past shops with broken windows and a burnt out car.
We're pretty far from the outpost... and that's where the unit we stole those uniforms are... With practiced effort, Kallen shoved that line of thought down into the dark and turned to examine her driver for the day.
Rivalz looked, unsurprisingly, shaken by the property damage all around them. As they passed a pharmacy that had clearly seen an attempt at arson, judging by the thick black smudging over its smashed in windows and broken door, he gulped hard enough for Kallen to see from her position in the sidecar.
This is probably the first time he's ever seen anything like this. Kallen supposed she'd be equally disturbed if she hadn't seen the immediate aftermath of Mister Asahara's little surprises, or if she still didn't carry around foggy memories of the Conquest. She'd been out of the worst of it, but Naoto hadn't always been able to cover her eyes fast enough back in those chaotic months.
Kallen reached up and gently patted the side of Rivalz's leg. She didn't have any personal grudge against the boy, and he'd been quite helpful – unbeknownst to him – with the Rising Sun; she could spare him a bit of reassurance. "It's probably gonna be worse once we get closer to the outpost." It only seemed fair to warn him.
Plus, it'd be a shame if he lost his lunch while driving the motorcycle. "If you want to drop me off here, I can go on alone."
Rivalz looked shocked at the idea, stealing an incredulous look at Kallen before turning his eyes back on the road. "Hell no! I'm not gonna dump you off by the side of the road in the middle of a war zone!" He shook his head. "Let's just get this over with, so I can get back home."
Kallen just nodded.
Well, can't say I didn't try. She looked up at Rivalz, and approvingly noted that the boy's expression had firmed up.
It's strange... He's my age, but for some reason it feels like he's way younger... Hell, Tanya feels older than him, especially when she zones out... Her age or not, innocent or not, so far Rivalz had risen to the occasion; Kallen hoped that he'd continue to prove reliable moving forwards – his name was on too many important documents, and a mental break would draw unwanted attention towards the charity he "sponsored".
Despite the handful of junked cars and the abundance of garbage strewn across the street, Rivalz skillfully navigated his mechanical steed, sidecar and all, down the cluttered roads of the Honorary Britannian neighborhood. To Kallen's vague discomfort, the streets were eerily deserted, without a single pedestrian in evidence as they cruised down the roads littered with evidence from the previous night. A few minutes, and many vandalized buildings, later the white-washed concrete of the outpost's walls emerged from the endless rows of shops and apartment high rises, coils of razor wire glinting in the winter morning sunlight over the top of the surrounding roofs.
Despite the bravado of the Britannian flag waving over the strong walls, the installation had an undeniably defensive air, like an injured boxer preparing to ward off incoming blows. Unlike the last time Kallen had visited, the steel bars of the gates were raised and the smaller pedestrian entrance had been chained shut. As Rivalz slowed to a stop on the frontage road in front of the garrison – the raised road spikes prevented them from actually approaching the sealed vehicle entrance – Kallen noted that the paint around the pedestrian entrance was blackened and peeling, and the concrete peeking out from under the institutional eggshell cover was chipped, as if someone had spent a considerable amount of time hammering away at the wall.
Kallen raised her cellphone and quickly snapped a picture of the chained gate surrounded by the halo of soot.
So the mob definitely came here last night... Did they get in? Through the lens of her camera, Kallen noticed what looked like a deserted triage site on the parade ground between the two Honorary Britannian barracks, a row of cots with bloodstained linen surrounded by discarded fatigues and soiled bandages. She could vaguely make out several men sitting against one of the barracks walls flanked on either side by a pair of armed soldiers before her view of the interior was abruptly obscured by a Britannian uniform.
"Oy! What the hell are you lookin' at? Get the fuck outta here!" The approaching soldier who stepped out from behind the wall and into the frame of the pedestrian gate, voice thick with the accent of New Belfast, gesticulated from behind the steel bars, one hand waving the pair of teenagers off while the other rested on the rifle hanging from his shoulder. "Get outta here and get yerselves home, now!"
As soon as she saw the gun, Kallen felt the familiar rush of icy heat as her adrenaline spiked. The coal of fury at the Brit bastards who had come from beyond the sea to ravage her people that always smoldered in her belly flared to life at the possibility of a fight, while the cold water of discipline kept the inferno tightly controlled, leashed until it was time to make
them the victims for a change.
But that time isn't now – and you're not a Kozuki. Not right now.
Quickly hitting the 'Record' button on her phone, Kallen summoned up her memories of how confident and
righteous Tanya had sounded in that ruined office a block from Shinjuku-gyoemmae Station before responding. "What happened here last night?" she yelled back, feeling Rivalz's rising anxiety like a palpable pressure on her back and ignoring it. "Who tried to break down the gate? Did anybody get hurt?"
Two more soldiers appeared behind the first. "Last chance," one of the new arrivals shouted back, a sergeant's chevron painted on the breastplate of his uniform, as he raised his rifle in their vague direction. "This is a restricted area. By Prince Clovis's order, we have the authority to open fire on all potential threats. Leave immediately."
As the barrel of the rifle swung their way, Kallen began to repeat her questions, but Rivalz apparently hit his tolerance for danger. The bike's engine roared back to life, and Kallen barely had time to stop the recording and shove the phone back into her pocket before they rocketed off down the street. Spurred by the threat from behind, which Kallen was almost certain had been a bluff, Rivalz sped off at breakneck speed, recklessly weaving around debris. Only a few blocks away, though, he was forced to slow to a more reasonable speed as the debris thickened, stopping entirely at a three way intersection jammed by the cadaver of a burnt out delivery truck. The wheels had melted and the interior of the cab was just a mass of blackened plastic, but the steel frame still completely blocked the roadbed.
As the engine sputtered and died, Rivalz stood up from the bike and staggered away, nearly collapsing to his knees before catching himself against a nearby streetlight. From the sidecar, Kallen could see his body shiver as the adrenaline flood of a near-death experience stimulated every muscle with the need to flee. She pulled the helmet and goggles off, unnoticed sweat instantly chilly on her face and scalp in the midwinter air, and took the opportunity to stand up from the cramped confines of the sidecar, booted feet crunching on shattered glass.
Hope Rivalz paid for self-sealing tires or something.
Stretching her back, Kallen took a moment to look around. The area had been nice enough, once, with a barbershop, a liquor store, and interestingly enough, a tattoo parlor all in a strip mall sharing a parking lot, while two three story apartment buildings framed the third leg of the intersection. The tattoo parlor in particular was a sign that this was a neighborhood of people determined to adapt Britannian foibles, as tattoos still made most Japanese think immediately of the
yakuza. All of those observations faded into irrelevance as she looked back at Rivalz, and at the streetlight he was leaning against.
The rope was short, incredibly so. Only a foot at most between the arch of the streetlight and the grisly burden dangling over Rivalz's head. Distantly, Kallen noticed that a pair of ladders presumably looted from a hardware store somewhere had been left in the parking lot, one buried in the shattered windshield of a minivan, and she wondered how the uniformed soldier had been forced to climb that rickety aluminum scaffold, particularly with his hands bound. She could only imagine what must have waited down below on the street to make him climb that ladder to the waiting self-appointed hangman and the noose, far too short for neckbreaking but the perfect length for an agonizing death by strangulation.
Moving carefully, as if too sudden an action would disturb the sepulchral tranquility of the scene, silent but for Rivalz's harsh breathing and the distant sounds of traffic, Kallen pulled her phone out of her pocket and snapped one, two, three pictures of the hanged man, taking care to capture the unit and rank badges still visible on his shoulder and chest. The face was mangled, cheekbones broken and eyes swollen shut, but the agony was clear on the gray features; member of His Majesty's Armed Forces or not, Kallen was grimly certain that nobody had pulled on the poor man's legs to speed his exit from the world.
Ever since she had realized that the rising smoke came not from the ghetto but from the homes and businesses of Honorary Britannians, Kallen had wrestled with her emotions, trying to figure out what she should feel about the sudden wave of fratricidal violence that her rebel band had helped unleash. A cruel voice, the same one that had once sneered at her mother's weakness, had savored every burnt building and smashed window, each piece of evidence that Britannia's bootlickers were getting kicked by their masters, that their debasement had been a futile attempt to escape the horrible situation they'd abandoned their countrymen to. Another voice, one that carried Naoto's assurance and Ohgi's caring tones, pointed out that Honorary Britannian or not, Eleven or not, these were people who were suffering, the majority of whom had probably only been doing the best they could to keep their families healthy and safe, and that nobody deserved to be murdered by a mob of the worst of Britannia.
A third voice, one that sounded eerily like Hajime Tanya, said that it didn't really matter how Kallen felt about the hanged man, nor about the family he left behind or the community that had been devastated in the same murderous wave that had swamped the Honorary Britannians of the Tokyo Settlement; all that mattered was that the image of an Honorary Britannian in the uniform of the Britannian Army hung from a streetlight by a Britannian mob was political dynamite, if used correctly.
The bastards gave us the rope to hang them when they hung you. Kallen found herself talking to the nameless soldier, already reduced to an object absent of life, and soon to be reduced to a mere propaganda point if she did her job correctly.
I don't know who you were, or what you did in life, but I'll make sure you serve Japan in death. Anything for the cause. She inclined her head slightly, the closest she could let herself go to bowing her respect towards the deceased while in the company of a Britannian.
In the company of a Britannian... Suddenly, Kallen remembered that Rivalz was still leaning against the post, taking deep, calming breaths, completely unaware of the boots dangling ten feet over his head.
Shit! I've gotta get him away from there before he realizes I just let him stand under a corpse!
"Rivalz," Kallen began, letting a little bit of Kozuki Kallen, insurgent, slip into the honeyed voice of Kallen Stadtfeld, socialite. "I need you to come over here. Right now." Rivalz started to turn towards her, an inquisitive look on his face, looking around for whatever it was that she'd seen.
Dammit, just come! His eyes widened, and Kallen cursed internally as she realized she'd spoken that thought aloud. "Look, just... trust me. Get over here. Right now."
Rivalz shrugged, and trotted over to her, glass crunching under his sneakers. His face was still slightly ashen, but that typical puppylike smile
so young, so innocent, had returned beneath his goggles. "What's up, Kallen? See something cool?"
Kallen felt her heart break slightly.
I was such an idiot to ask you for a ride... I'm sorry, Rivalz. "Rivalz, we need to get back on your bike to leave, but when you turn around, you're going to see... something. Something really bad. I need you to understand that I didn't know, didn't expect this, and I need you to know that there's nothing we can do to help. Okay? You got it?"
Rivalz cocked his head, a look of confusion and uneasy amusement on his face. "Umm... Sure, I guess?" He chuckled. "Man, you sound pretty freaked out, Kallen! Last time I heard a warning like that, Nina was changing in the Council Room and Shirley was too embarrassed to just spit it out! I had no idea what she was talking about, so I just walked right in! Man, that Nina's tiny, but she slaps like a gorilla!" He laughed again, clearly expecting her to join in on his amusement.
Kallen had no idea what to say to that. It was like Rivalz had come from some totally different world, a far kinder and gentler world, one alien to her experience. She realized she had no idea what to say, how to couch the unspeakable in mere words. It dawned on Kallen that this was a window into "her" own culture, the culture of her father, the world of young nobles that she'd come to late and had always felt estranged from, unable to truly relate to her peers thanks to the memories of the Conquest and memories of Naoto coming home with bloody knuckles and torn clothes night after night. The Britannians were unquestionably monsters, but their children were, in a horrible way, innocent – not blameless, but innocent and thus ignorant – of the world around them.
And so, Kallen said nothing, unable to find the words to soften the blow, and merely watched as Rivalz turned from her, curious at what she had seen. She watched as he first looked side to side, before noticing the dangling boots and looking up.
For a moment, Rivalz just stood in place, before he staggered, rocking back on his heels and stumbling as his face twisted in revulsion in his attempt to get away from the grisly bundle of meat and cloth and nylon and vomiting into the gutter. The first effort was the most productive, but by the third and fourth retches the young man had fallen forward onto hands and knees, coughing and spitting and trying to expel the contents of an empty belly. He was heedless of the glass that carpeted the ground, and Kallen could only hope that he hadn't accidentally shoved too many shards into his hands when he'd fallen; she didn't know how to operate the motorcycle, after all. She didn't know why she suddenly felt so helpless, demoted to a mere spectator in a personal tragedy, mutely standing and watching the death of innocence.
I... I don't know what to do here.
In a way, Kallen found she could relate to the young Britannian, who'd stopped vomiting but still knelt on all fours, trembling and twitching over the acrid bile; She'd been horribly naive when she'd followed Naoto into Shinjuku, demanding to join the fight for Japan's future. That blithe ignorance of the facts of life had vanished forever as she'd stared into the desperate eyes of the first man she killed, and it was only thanks to Tanya's intervention that she'd survived not only the desperate fight, but also the aftermath as sudden awareness of what she had done had come crashing down.
How had she done it back then? I got angry at her, she threw the anger back at me... Comforted me... Reassured me... and told me that it was all for the Cause...
Kallen felt the gears inside her mind shift back to life. She wasn't some genius planner, but she didn't have to be – she had a template to follow from someone who was, and enough intelligence to know how to mold it to fit the scenario now that the roles were reversed.
Anything for the Cause... I know how to deal with anger, so the first thing to do is get him angry.
Kallen stooped down over Rivalz, hooked her arms under his armpits, and rose, dragging the surprisingly light boy back to his feet. He mumbled some vague protest before sagging in her arms; so she grabbed the collar of his shirt and briskly shook him, leaned him back against her side, and turned him back towards the hanging man. With her free hand, she tilted his head up towards the body, moving her own head beside his to look up with him at the unfortunate victim.
"Don't look away now, Rivalz!" Kozuki Kallen commanded, shaking the hapless Britannian again by his shirt as she spoke into his ear. "You've spent seventeen years looking away, but no more! This is Area Eleven – this is Japan – and this is what life is like! That man might be wearing a Britannian uniform, but he sure looked Eleven enough to the crowd!" She noticed that Rivalz had begun to stiffen up again, and slowly reduced the amount of his weight she was supporting. "That's what Britannia really looks like – so what're you going to do about it, Rivalz Cardemonde?"
Whether because of the shaking or the yelling in his ear, Rivalz seemed to have been shocked back into awareness; when Kallen took her hand off his head, he didn't slump forwards again. His eyes, overflowing with tears, were wide open and clear, and locked on the hanged man. Kallen looked down and saw his hands, which were thankfully only slightly cut up, had begun to curl into fists.
Good.
Kallen let go of Rivalz's collar and stepped back. "Well, what're you going to do about it, Rivalz? What are you going to do next?"
"What can I do?" Rivalz's voice was a husky shadow of what it had been only minutes earlier, devoid of the peppy enthusiasm and rough with raw emotion and lingering bile. "What can we even do? This... What the fuck, Kallen? We're just kids, this... this is way beyond us. What... What the hell happened here? Why the hell are we even out here?! Who did this to him?" As the questions kept coming his hands kept twitching and tightening, harder and harder, until he suddenly winced, the apparent stab of pain temporarily halting his spiraling thoughts.
Shit, gotta take care of that. There might still be glass in there.
"That's what I'm trying to find out."
Time for stage two. Kallen stepped up beside him and put a hand on his shoulder, squeezing firmly before pulling him into a one-armed hug of sorts, pulling him into her shoulder the way Naoto did to Ohgi when they drank. "I told you that the people needed to know what the Administration is keeping quiet, right?" She squeezed him again into her shoulder, before letting go and turning him around, forcing him away from the horrible sight.
"Now, lemme see your hands – let's see if you managed to get any glass sunk in there, eh?" Kallen tried to inject a bit of humor into the sentence, but it fell flat in the somehow dense December air. Wordlessly, Rivalz proffered his hands, palms up, and Kallen winced. There were a number of thankfully shallow cuts across his fingers and palms, but the base of his left hand was sporting a puncture wound of some sort, and twisting her head Kallen thought she saw a small shard glistening in the wound.
Hope there's something left in the liquor store to rinse that out...
Rivalz was surprisingly stoic as Kallen carefully plucked the shard out of his hand, and only winced slightly and hissed between clenched teeth as she carefully poured a small plastic bottle of schnapps she'd rescued from where it had rolled under an overturned shelf. On the off chance that there were any particles of glass that she couldn't see in the cuts, she poured a bottle of water from the trashed convenience store over his hands too.
Surprisingly, Rivalz broke the uneasy silence first. "Well, Kallen... you asked me what I was gonna do now..." He sighed, looked up at the body and jerked his eyes away, hunkering his shoulders as he deliberately turned his back towards the streetlight. "I just don't know. What the hell am I supposed to do?"
Stage three. "What do you think about that, Rivalz?" Kallen gestured at the corpse, and while he didn't follow her hand, she knew by his flinch that Rivalz got the message. "What do you think about all of this? This is an Honorary Britannian neighborhood, Rivalz – these people are all Britannian subjects, sworn to the Emperor's service – but someone came through and destroyed this place. Who do you think did it?"
Rivalz grimaced. "Well... It
could have been Numbers, I guess, jealous of their former countrymen who found a better life, but..." He shrugged. "That would've been all over the radio, and the police and the army would be all over the place."
Good to see he's got a functional brain, when he chooses to use it. "If I'm being honest... I think it was probably the Britannian citizens – y'know, not the nobles, not the wealthy or the soldiers. Just all the lower-class guys that came over from Pendragon once the Concession opened up."
Wait, what? Kallen's face must have reflected some of her confusion, because Rivalz quickly explained that his father, while a noble, was relatively low ranking and had to engage in business to support his household, instead of the classic noble occupation of collecting rents. As a result, he'd made sure Rivalz got a part-time job as a bartender in one of the clubs he owned. "...and I don't think anybody hates Honorary Britannians more than poor Britannians. They work twice as hard for half the wage, so lots of places would rather hire them than citizens."
"Really?" Kallen was fascinated. She knew, of course, that lower-class Britannians hated Elevens just as much as the nobility did – after all, Naoto hadn't been fistfighting aristocrats before her father had scooped them back up – but she'd always chalked that up to typical Britannian bigotry. From what Rivalz said, there could be more solid reasons for the surprisingly intense hatred their neighbors had always had for them – not to mention the hatred the Britannian maids at the Stadtfeld Manor had for her mother. "You think that would lead them to go on a rampage and start lynching people?"
Rivalz shrugged uncomfortably. "Not by itself, not... But if someone gave them permission, or got them all stirred up and led them here? Well... there's lots of angry Britannians who'd love to do this kind of thing."
"Very interesting..." Kallen looked at Rivalz with fresh eyes. At school he frequently acted like an idiot, obsessively following that bitch Milly around, begging like a puppy for scraps of attention, but here and now he seemed remarkably insightful. That said, Rivalz clearly didn't know anything substantial about the rioting that had broken out last night, nor had she expected him to.
But I bet the soldiers know what happened – the outpost was definitely attacked last night, and judging by that triage site, they had casualties. Which means...
"Are you able to drive your motorcycle with your hands all cut up like that? We should get to the hospital to get your hands checked out."
And while you're getting stitches, I'll bet there'll be lots of angry soldiers happy to tell a pretty girl about how strong and heroic they were last night.
"Yeah, I can still drive. I've hurt myself way worse when I was just learning." Rivalz smiled slightly at that, a hint of his usual cockiness returning along with the self-assurance. "But... I dunno about going to the hospital. I don't think my hands are that bad, honestly, and... I kinda just want to go home right now."
Kallen could understand that desire entirely. Tanya's support after her first kill and subsequent body disposal had been key, but she hadn't felt safe again until she was inside the comforting security of Naoto's embrace. That said... she needed to get to the hospital to try and talk to those soldiers as fast as possible, so she could get her report back to Tanya as quickly as possible.
Sorry Rivalz... But anything for the Cause.
"What, you're just going to head home and bury your head back in the sand?" Kallen carefully modulated incredulity into her voice, with just a hint of disappointment. "You're free to go if you want, Rivalz, but you're not going to be able to escape from all this, not without leaving Area Eleven. You've seen the truth – good luck forgetting it now."
Satisfyingly, Rivalz's brow furrowed as he raised himself up to his full height.
Yes, get angry! "I'm not running away, dammit! And that wasn't what I said I just... I can't do anything about that guy, just like you said, and I don't see how I can do jack shit for anybody else here!" He leaned forward, trying to use the height of his lanky frame to assert dominance, but Kallen was unmoved.
It's the shorties you really need to watch out for. "And why the hell do you care, huh, Kallen? Why do you care what I'm gonna do? More importantly, how the hell are you being so calm about all this?!"
"This isn't my first time seeing a dead body, jackass!" Kallen shot back, practically nose to nose with Rivalz, glaring at him through his
stupid goggles. "We need to get the story out! The people need to know what's happening here in Area Eleven! You just said you don't know what happened or why, and I sure don't know either – but remember the outpost? They were definitely attacked last night! They took casualties, and I bet the wounded went to the hospital! So that's where I'm going! Are you gonna help me or what?"
Rivalz glared back for a second, before clenching his teeth and nodding once. He stepped back and took a deep breath, and rubbed at his face. "You know that you're not gonna be able to publish any of this in the Ashford Gazette, right? Milly might have some weird tastes, but she's not gonna let you talk about"-He gestured vaguely at the vandalized shops and the hanging corpse silently observing their conversation-"in her school paper. Even if she doesn't stop you and you manage to bully the rest of the club along, the Principal is gonna shut you down."
Kallen let herself calm back down too.
Time to be conciliatory. "I know, but... This is important to me, Rivalz. I want to make sure that
this never happens again, and that means making sure everybody knows it happened this time, as well as finding out how it all started." She felt like she almost had him, just a bit more... "You want to know what you can do? Help me make sure this doesn't get swept under the rug by getting me to the hospital so I can get some interviews before someone tells the injured to keep their mouths shut."
"Fine." The word was curt, and Rivalz practically bit it off. "I'll get you to the hospital, but as soon as you're done there, I'm either taking you home or I'm out, got it?"
The trip to the hospital was thankfully uneventful, once Rivalz managed to carefully back his motorcycle away from the jammed intersection. Traffic was still light on Christmas morning, so shortly after the 10 o'clock chime, Rivalz turned onto the exit for the Princess Nunnally Memorial Hospital. The building was, even by Britannian standards, ostentatious, jutting out like a rococo tooth against the surrounding construction, ivory walls encrusted with architectural follies and statues of angels bearing swords and caduci. Despite the hospital's somehow
frilly appearance, the building buzzed with activity; ambulances scooted past Knightmares emblazoned with the golden crown of the Royal Guard standing vigil at the entrances of the main lobby and the emergency room, while patrols of guards with the same emblem maintained a perimeter around the structure and got in the way of hustling doctors and medics.
Rivalz and Kallen were stopped halfway down the entrance road into the hospital's grounds, but between their obviously Britannian features and Rivalz's dripping red hands were quickly waved through. "I'd advise you to avoid the ER, sir." The guard said as he stepped back and waved them through. "It's currently swamped with casualties." The man, rebreather dangling around his neck, grimaced. "Disgraceful showing, that, and on Christmas Eve too! Anyway, if you go to the main lobby someone should be able to look at your hands fairly soon."
"Thank you, sir," Rivalz replied politely, while Kallen gave the royal guardsman her best vapid smile. "I appreciate it."
True to the guardsman's word, the lobby was nearly empty, with a receptionist keeping watch over twenty odd Britannians seated in the waiting area. To Kallen's delight, while most of the Britannians were civilians – some injured and waiting for discharge paperwork, others clearly waiting for family members – there were three soldiers scattered around the room as well. As Rivalz followed a nurse down a corridor, disappearing into the bowels of the hospital, Kallen made her way over the nearest soldier, a young man sporting both a private's single stripe and a neckbrace, plus a veritable turban of bandages securing a large pad to the left side of his head that completely covered his ear.
As Kallen approached the bandaged soldier, she realized with astonishment that she knew him; it was difficult to tell from a distance, thanks to the bandages, but the bandaged man was clearly the same young soldier who had bragged about his familiarity with the local brothels while Kallen had been waiting for an interview appointment with one of the outpost's officers.
What the hell was his name? J-something, I think... Carefully, Kallen flipped open her phone and activated an audio recording app before sliding it back into her jacket pocket.
"Hey there," Kallen chirped as she dropped into the seat across from the bandaged man. "What happened to you?"
"Eh?" The soldier boy jerked back in surprise, before blinking and peering at her through bruised eyes. Kallen noticed one of his eyes didn't quite seem to be tracking her and kept drifting off over her shoulder. "Hey, you're that reporter chick! I remember you from last week, right? What're you doin' here?"
"My friend needed a few stitches – fell on some glass." Kallen smiled and shook her head. "It doesn't look too bad. What happened to you?"
"Shit, it's a long story." The boy tried for a smile, but winced as his left cheek tugged at the adhesive tape holding the pad in place. "Just a hell of an awful night. Why? You gonna write about it?"
"Well..." Kallen made a show of pulling a pocket pad and pen from her jacket's inner pocket and flipping the pad open. "I'm always down for a good story... And you look like you've got an incredible story to tell, tiger." As she spoke, Kallen drew on her memories of Milly Ashford and made a show of looking him up and down, letting her eyes slowly trace up his legs as she leaned forward slightly, somewhat regretting the buttoned up dress shirt she'd opted to wear today, topping the coquettish display off with a wink. "Looks like you've had it rough – but I should just look at the other guy, right?"
Predictably, the Ashford-like appeal, subtle as a sledgehammer, was more than enough to loosen the man's tongue.
Guess the head injury didn't actually hit anything important – he clearly doesn't think with that head.
"So, one of my buddy's was out late, yeah? He had leave, so he went to have a good time. Anyway, sometime late last night there was a big punch-up between those Purist bastards and the rest of us, right? Well, some of those fuckwits got deep-sixed, but after the police broke it all up, they started goin' around yelling that they'd been attacked by Honorary Britannians – in uniform! - with knives, and that the Honorary Britannians had been there to rape Britannian girls, and that's why the fight had started! Stupid, right? But get this – the police totally bought it! None of the Purists got arrested last night, but I heard that, like... fifty or sixty of us regulars did! It's total bullshit!"
Kallen nodded appreciatively, jotting down notes as she listened.
So the police sided with the Purists, huh? Well, they're definitely richer than rank and file soldiers... And if they were alleging it was in the defense of women, well... They've got the whole chivalry bullshit thing...
"Anyway, my buddy said that while the police were busy screwin' around, the Purists started saying that this was just the first step, and that the Honorary Britannians were gonna rise up and rape and kill all of us and set up their own Area Administration! Fuckin' stupidest shit I've ever heard!" The soldier had begun to lean forward, cheeks flushing red as he began to speed up, before wincing and leaning back.
"Anyway..." The soldier took a calming breath, and deliberately slowed himself down. "Anyway, all the idiot civvies that were also goin' to the bars and the brothels and stuff started rallying around the Purists and calling their friends over, and soon enough bad shit started happening. My buddy hauled ass back to our outpost, so we had some warning. The Old Man doubled the gate guard, and issued guns to the Honorary Britannians. I was out there with a few of my buddies, watching over the vehicle gate. Y'know why I know that whole Purist line is a crock of shit? Because I'm buddies with a few Honoraries, and Andrew and Keith didn't look like they were about to start murderin' us even when the Captain gave 'em guns and ammo."
Kallen nodded again, making approving sounds as she scribbled down notes as fast as she could, blazing through page after page of notebook paper.
"Anyway, a whole mob of the bastards showed up, waving torches and baseball bats and swords and shit. Y'know what the really stupid part of all of this was? We had guns, but we weren't allowed to use 'em or even load 'em until we got the order to do so! So we've got this mob of assholes comin' up the street and we're not allowed to fire any warning shots or even close the gate!" The soldier had begun to accelerate again, but stopped and took another deep breath. "Stupid, stupid, stupid. But they started off polite enough – they just asked permission to come on base. The lieutenant who was in charge of the gate wanted to let them on through, but the Captain came out himself and told 'em that the base was a restricted area, and none of 'em would be comin' in. One of the Purists said they'd heard that rebel Honorary Britannian troops were musterin' here, and the fact the Honoraries on guard had guns was proof of it. And that's when they stopped bein' polite."
The soldier lifted a hand and pointed at his head. "They grabbed Andrew and pulled him out into the street. I tried to haul him back, but one of 'em whacked me in the head with somethin'. I woke up in the middle of the quad with one of the medics shinin' a light in my eyes. I don't know what happened after that, but I heard gunfire a couple of times. Guess the Captain finally gave permission. Anyway..." He shrugged, and winced. "That's all I know. Hope that's helpful."
"It really is," Kallen fervently affirmed. "This is a huge help. It sounds like you were really brave... I'm sorry, I'm totally blanking on your name."
"Jacques. Jacques Helgelien." Jacques smiled with the right side of his mouth. "Pleased to meet you, Miss...?"
"Stadtfeld. Kallen Stadtfeld." Kallen quickly scribbled down
Private Jacques Helgelien in the margin of her notes. Taking a quick look up, she saw Rivalz emerge from the hallway, a fresh bandage wound around his left hand. She turned back to notebook, and quickly wrote her "student" phone number down on an unused page and tore it out. "Here, this is my number – call me if you remember anything else." She leaned forward and pressed the page into his hand. "And, Jacques? I think it's really impressive that you stood up for your buddies like that – Honorary Britannian or not. You did good."
Jacques smiled again as Kallen got to her feet. "If I'd known standin' up to those Purists fuckmuppets would get me pretty girls' phone numbers, I'd've started doin' it way earlier. See ya around, maybe?"
The hopeful note was obvious, and Kallen gave him a smile that was halfway sincere.
He did get hurt trying to help a Honorary Britannian – a Japanese. Guess not every Britannian can be a total bastard. "Maybe. Heal up fast first, though!"
Kallen turned and left Jacques behind on his waiting room chair, joining Rivalz as he waited by the door to the hospital. "How's the hand doing?" Kallen asked by way of greeting as she pushed the door open and held it for Rivalz.
"Not too bad – turns out, stitches aren't too bad once they've got you all numbed up." Rivalz followed Kallen outside, blinking in the sunlight. "Honestly, the worst part was the
tugging sensation when they... Well, y'know."
Kallen nodded. "Yeah, I can see that feeling pretty weird." She paused. "Wait, they gave you an anesthetic?"
"Yeah, but just the local stuff." Rivalz blushed and looked away. "The nurse said she didn't want me to act like a baby while the doc was stitching me up..."
Kallen resisted the temptation to laugh. "Well, I'm glad they took good care of you. But, that probably means you shouldn't be driving, right?"
Rivalz fiddled with his helmet, which he carried in his less damaged hand. "Well, they did say something about waiting fifteen minutes or so, but I'm pretty sure I'm okay..."
I should probably get back home so I can make my report to Tanya as soon as possible... But today's gone bad enough already that driving with a numb hand feels like taunting fate. "Don't worry, I've got time," Kallen assured Rivalz, smiling reassuringly as she held up her notebook. "I'll just take some time to get my notes cleaned up while the medicine wears off."
Rivalz shrugged. "If you want. I think I saw a vending machine back in the lobby, so I'm gonna get myself something to drink – you want anything?"
As Rivalz wandered off in search of refreshments, Kallen made her way towards the currently deserted bus stop at the edge of the hospital's patient drop-off area. Thanks to the currently halted public transportation system, she found the kiosk deserted and the bench completely free of any nosy onlookers. Taking a seat and checking that she was out of sight from the hospital entrance, she pulled out her phone and terminated the recording, before starting the playback. Thankfully, despite the phone's concealed location in her pocket and the frequent interruptions of the hospital intercom, Jacques's responses were still clearly audible.
I'll have to figure out some way to clip it up... I wonder if my laptop at home has any audio editing software?
Kallen was startled from her musings by the sound of raised voices coming from the parking lot. "I don't care what yer here tah do! Prince Clovis has given the order – no press!" Pocketing her phone again, Kallen peered out around the wall of the bus shelter, and saw a blond man standing in front of a truck marked with the logo of a local news channel arguing with one of the royal guards. "So you'd better get back in yer truck and go back out the way yah came before I come back here with the sergeant, got it?"
"And I keep telling you that I've got permission to enter!" The blond replied, volume just below a yell but clearly testy. "The studio cleared it with the Administration three days ago – it's just a human interest piece, it's got nothing to do with... whatever the Prince is worried about."
"No. Press." The guard was unmoved. "Not today. Come back tomorrow, I don't care. Just get yer damned truck out of my parking lot."
"Fine." Wisely, the man decided to capitulate. "I'll get the cameras loaded back up, and we'll be on our way."
"Good. You'd better be gone by the time the next patrol comes through in ten minutes." Satisfied, the guard continued on what Kallen supposed was his patrol route through the parking lot.
This is it! Between the pictures and the interview...! Sensing opportunity, Kallen grabbed her notebook and darted out of the bus stop, jogging over towards the news truck and slowing as she approached. The blond man had turned around and was apparently directing two considerably less well dressed Britannians as they loaded crush-proof plastic boxes that Kallen could only assume contained camera gear back into the truck.
Not lifting a finger himself... And a ponytail, really? Ugh...
Kallen slowed to a walk as she came up behind him. "Excuse me? Mister? Why were you trying to get into the hospital?"
The man spun on his heel, long bangs and ponytail flapping, a flash of surprise and annoyance briefly visible before vanishing under a plastic expression and a vaguely condescending smile. "Hmm? Why do you think?" The smile slipped for a moment, and Kallen caught a glimpse of irritated anger before the mask returned, although the smile was decidedly sharper as the blond apparently decided she was nobody of consequence, and thus a perfect target to take out his frustration on."I'm trying to do my job as a reporter! Something happened last night, and nobody's talking about it. The Prince is trying to keep it all quiet, which means it must be interesting indeed. As a journalist and a producer, my job is to present history to the masses as it unfolds, but thanks to these damned guards I can't get anywhere close enough to anybody who knows anything to even ask for an interview!"
"Well, lucky for you, I just came from the hospital," Kallen replied, interrupting the ongoing rant, and held up her notebook. "And wouldn't you know it, I'm a student reporter with my school paper and I just got an interview with a soldier who was wounded during the action last night – I've got my notes, and I've got it all taped too."
The mask didn't slip this time and the oily smile remained firmly in place, but Kallen noticed the way the self-described journalist's eyes widened with poorly-hidden surprise. "A school paper, huh?" he scoffed incredulously. "And you conducted an interview with a soldier? Wonderful." He shook his head with disdain, the smile taking a turn for the patronizing. "Do you really think your little club newspaper is going to print any of it – or that your school's administration would allow it if you tried?"
Kallen, recognizing that the man was deliberately trying to get her angry, clamped down on her desire to pound the smug bastard's flawless teeth into his skull, and instead forced herself to smile back at him – and if that smile was a tad bit smug, which she was reasonably certain hurt worse than a fist to the mouth, well, smugness was the preserve of young nobles wherever the Britannian flag flew. "Probably not – but I couldn't just let the story go untold either. Plus"-Kallen dropped the smile-"as soon as I saw the smoke rising this morning, I just had to know more."
The man's expression had gradually smoothed out as Kallen spoke, and as she wound up he offered a nod of mild respect that didn't reach his calculating eyes. "And now you've got an interview you can't do anything with," he concluded, much to Kallen's relief.
Thank God I didn't have to propose the idea myself. "Perhaps we could help each other out?"
Kallen gave a tentative nod, squashing down both the personal gratification and the budding nervousness.
This guy's a total shark – I'd better count my fingers when I'm done with him – but if I can get the word of what happened last night out in the open like this... A little extra bait first. "Perhaps we can – and before I got here, I took a trip through the Honorary Britannian neighborhoods where the...
events... last night happened. I've got some photos that might interest you too."
And now, the offer. "Look, mister...?"
"Reid. Diethard Reid, with Hi-TV."
"Look, Mister Reid, I really want to develop my skills as a journalist, but I'm having problems." Kallen remembered the resentment Reid had shown at the restrictions put in place by the Administration. "I didn't do a good job playing the political game with the rest of the student paper's staff, especially the editor," she 'admitted' in a heavy, despondent voice. "So I've been stuck with all kinds of boring stories and puff pieces – nothing I can really sink my teeth into."
Diethard smiled at that. "Tragic!" he proclaimed, voice dripping with cynical pity. "Truly tragic to see an enterprising young reporter brought down like that. But!" He theatrically raised his eyebrows, as if he'd just been struck by a marvelous inspiration. "But I could see my way clear to giving you some tips, one journalist to another." He slid a hand into his jacket and Kallen tensed slightly, but he only pulled out a business card. "Here's my card – it's got my personal email on it. Send me a sample of your articles, and I'll see what I can do, along with your interview notes, the recording, and those pictures." He smiled as Kallen took the card. "Who knows, if those notes are good enough and the articles aren't too terrible, I'll maybe talk to a few people and see if I can't get you listed as a stringer for a few publications I know."
Asshole. "Sure – I'll shoot you an email as soon as I get home. Just - use the damned things, alright? Make sure everybody can see what happened. It'll get lots of interest, I promise."
Diethard smirked. "I'll be the judge of that, Miss...?"
"Cardemonde." Kallen replied immediately with the first name that came to mind.
No need to let this piece of shit know anything about me. "Kallen Cardemonde."
"Uh huh. Sure. Well, I'll be waiting on your email." Diethard waved, before turning on his heel and walking back towards his truck. "Don't be a stranger now!"
Feeling in dire need of a thorough handwashing, Kallen shoved the card into her pocket, next to her phone, and retreated back to the hospital's entrance, walking past yet another patrolling soldier as she exited the parking lot. Rivalz was waiting for her near the entrance to the main lobby, soda can in hand, and as soon as he saw her coming he chugged down the remaining contents of the can and pitched it into a nearby garbage can.
"Where'd you wander off, Kallen?" Rivalz asked by way of greeting. "I leave for a second to get something to drink, and when I turn around, your ass is gone."
"Sorry." Kallen smiled apologetically at Rivalz, but surprisingly this tried and true tactic failed to soften the boy's frown.
Guess the pain from the anesthetic wearing off makes it hard to be hormonal. "I saw someone who looked like they needed some help."
Rivalz shook his head with irritation. "Well, I hope they really needed help with... Whatever it was they needed, because I'm running late now."
"Running late?"
Oh yeah, he said he had an appointment of some kind when he picked me up...
Rivalz scowled. "Yeah, running late. And as much as I'd like to just go home and try to forget about this whole fucking day, I'm not gonna leave my buddy hanging." Kallen tried to look as apologetic as possible, and Rivalz unbent slightly with an exasperated sigh. "Look... I'm meeting him at the front gates of Ashford. I heard from the TV in the lobby that they're startin' to reopen some of the trains in the outer neighborhoods, so you can catch a train home from there, right?"
Kallen hastily checked her mental map of the train routes. "Well... If the J train's running..."
"Great." Rivalz dropped the helmet onto his head and started walking towards the parking lot Kallen had just come from. "In that case, I'll drop you off at Ashford. Let's get outta here."
Kallen pursed her lips, almost swaying at the sudden spike of anger.
Does he think he's the only one who had a bad day?! That I'm not upset about finding a brutally murdered man too? Dammit, I had to talk to a fucking journalist too! Rivalz's back was turned towards her, and he was unquestionably weaker than her... Kallen took a deep breath, held it for a moment, and let it go, taking the angry heat with it.
Calm down – he's had a very bad day. He was traumatized. More importantly, you've got a job to do and he's got the motorcycle. Be a professional, and don't embarrass yourself. Calmly, Kallen followed Rivalz to the motorcycle, slipping into the sidecar and quietly donning her helmet.
The ride to Ashford Academy was, in fact, entirely quiet. Traffic had begun to pick up as Christmas morning masses let out and prosperous Britannian family's started heading out for brunches and lunches; the need for Rivalz to focus on the increased traffic volume gave both riders an excuse to ignore the other and brood over their own thoughts.
Kallen was glumly certain that, even now, teams of street sweepers, tow truck operators, and handymen of various descriptions were repairing the damage of last night, hiding black scorching under fresh white paint and towing twisted and broken cars off to the salvage yard. Soon, the only evidence of the events of last night would be in the memories of those who had perpetrated the violence and those who had survived it to bear witness.
And in the pictures I'll be sending to Diethard. I hope he finds a way to get them on TV. The thought made Kallen smile just a bit. The Britannians were awfully fond of slapping a fresh coat of paint over their atrocities – or in the case of Old Tokyo, building a shining new city on the grave of the old – but it would be damned hard to wipe away the lynched Britannian soldier's face from the collective memory of the viewers.
Kallen smiled to herself, imagining the storm of panic and futile rage that would sweep through the Viceregal Palace in such an event. No amount of impassioned speeches and pretty words from the Prince would ever extinguish the embers of doubt that twisted face would kindle in the hearts of Britannians and Honorary Britannians alike. She closed her eyes and savored the image of an occupation turned against itself, as the servants suddenly realized that there truly could never be peace with the monsters from beyond the sea.
And as soon as the Honorary Britannians realize that, no Britannian will be able to so much as drink a cup of tea without wondering if it's been poisoned! Kallen's lips twitched, and she daydreamed about her stepmother realizing only too late that the white powder she'd spooned into her tea hadn't been sugar after all.
As soon as the old bitch dies, all those bastard Brit servants who hurt Mom are the next to go!
Soon enough, Rivalz slowed to a stop once again, turning his engine off and dismounting from the bike. Kallen forced her eyes open, surprised at how tired she already was when it wasn't quite noon, and pulled her borrowed helmet and goggles off, leaving them in the sidecar as she clambered to her feet. Rivalz hadn't waited around for her, and instead was animatedly talking to a boy Kallen vaguely recognized as Lelouch Lamperouge, Vice President of the Ashford Student Council and, according to the gossip, the premier heartthrob of the Academy.
Kallen had never spoken with Lelouch personally, even though they shared a few classes – even when she'd been working on establishing her network of gossips, she'd avoided speaking with him. He was silent and brooding, only speaking in class when called upon and never volunteering any answers, but somehow gave off an impression of incredible arrogance, and somehow seemed ignorant of how wherever he went in Ashford, a current of attention and hushed conversations followed. He was, in fact, part of the reason why Kallen had thankfully never had to deal with the Student Council as part of her club duties – all the male members of the club wanted to take the work so they could ogle Milly (for some reason), and all the other female members were equally desperate to take on the extra job so they could drool over Lelouch.
Frankly, Kallen couldn't understand the appeal. To her, he seemed mentally aloof and physically weak.
The perfect young Britannian noble – honestly, he's a perfect match for Milly. They deserve each other.
However personally distasteful Kallen found the young noble, she found herself reluctantly impressed at how, with the rise of a single inquisitive brow on an otherwise emotionless face, he managed to reduce Rivalz to a self-justifying babble as the other boy attempted to explain away his tardiness – unnecessarily, in Kallen's opinion, since Rivalz was the one providing the service.
Is he really that embarrassed? Still emotionally volatile from this morning? Or does Lelouch have some kind of hold on him? If so... What does he know, and why is he using it today...?
As Kallen mulled the possibilities over, trying her best to bring all of her intelligence gathering skills to bear as she smiled politely and dutifully waited to be introduced, Rivalz began to garble his way through an account of the last two hours.
"Look, it's not my fault I'm late, Lelouch - I didn't oversleep this time, promise!" Rivalz spoke so fast he tripped over his words, while Lelouch remained pointedly unexpressive, although the second eyebrow began to ascend to join its comrade. "See, I got a call this morning from this girl - Kallen, Kallen Stadtfeld, do you know her? - who had my number because I helped with her volunteer organization thingy and she needed a ride because the public transit was all shut down and I thought it would be short so I helped her out! B-but…" Rivalz's voice halted and slowed to a stop, and he made a choking noise deep in his throat. Kallen felt a flicker of worry, but he took a deep breath and continued a second later. "But… Oh man… Buddy, shit went bad in the Concession yesterday. You might wanna call your contact and make sure the game's still on… Oh man, there's… It's really bad, man." Rivalz's flow of words tapered to another three or four second halt, before he visibly forced himself to continue. "Anyway, as soon as I realized I was running late, I got here as soon as I could. And, uh… that's why I'm late."
To his credit, at some point during the semi-coherent explanation, Lelouch's impassive expression had thawed to a degree; as Rivalz finally spluttered his conclusion, Kallen realized Lelouch had an expression of acute concern, though whether for his friend's wellness or in regards to the news he brought she couldn't tell. Then, a moment later, a pair of startlingly violet eyes darted over to her and the look of honest concern vanished like it had never been, replaced by an amiable mask.
Kallen was somewhat surprised at how obviously false that welcoming smile was, how it entirely failed to reach those intense purple eyes... Those eyes, full of an utterly terrifying intelligence and a charisma that burned like a bonfire, compared to which her brother's magnetic draw seemed like a candle... Suddenly, Kallen found herself entranced by those eyes, as if the entire world, Rivalz and the Academy included, had fallen away, leaving only herself and Lelouch Lamperouge.
They're the wrong color, but... somehow, he's got Tanya's eyes... But that was wrong too, because even Tanya at her most dazzling didn't have the supreme confidence that practically dripped from those eyes, and even Tanya at her angriest didn't have that blazing coal of complete and total insanity Kallen could see burning in the heart of those beautiful, soulful, mad eyes...
And then, Lelouch blinked, and the moment was gone. Kallen nearly staggered back, but threw herself into her noble persona, drowning Kozuki Kallen in the gossip-hound Kallen Stadtfeld. She smiled prettily as Lelouch approached her, and politely accepted his handshake, proffering the back of her hand for a kiss as she followed the memories of her etiquette training by rote, desperate to hide any crumb of individuality somewhere far away where this monster and his horrible eyes wouldn't see it.
Why is someone like this bothering with school? What the hell is he going off with Rivalz to do, on today of all days?
Lelouch smiled knowingly at her, and for a moment Kallen's heart skipped a beat.
What does he know?! What did Milly tell him? "Well, I can certainly understand being late when such a beautiful girl calls for assistance." He chuckled with amusement, and Kallen dutifully tittered along, wondering why speaking with a fellow student was making her feel more uncomfortable than looking at the hanging man earlier had.
He knows... God, it's because he knows, he knows...! He's toying with me, just like Milly! "It's nice to meet you, Kallen. I've heard good things about you from Milly – she seems to find you quite... Interesting." Lelouch's lip rose in a sardonic smile as he emphasized the last word, and Kallen smiled back, ignoring the feeling of a phantom rope around her neck tightening.
"It's good to meet you too, Lelouch, at long last. You're the Vice-President of the Student Council, right?" Kallen let the small talk flow, doing her best to ask obvious questions and offer noncommittal answers and vague comments, desperate to survive without betraying any more of her secrets than she feared this stranger wearing the face of a boy already knew.
After a short yet excruciating eternity, Lelouch finally appeared to tire of toying with her, and "begged her pardon" so he could get to his "prior appointment". Without letting a shred of the sudden relief surging through her escape, Kallen bid him good luck and a good day, even curtseying as etiquette dictated, forgetting that she was wearing pants. Fortunately, instead of calling her out on her
faux paus, Lelouch anticlimactically hopped in the sidecar and left, Rivalz speeding off down the road far above the posted limit.
Kallen let herself sag against the brick wall belting the Ashford Academy grounds, letting the tension flow out of her into the ground. A moment of relaxation and a deep breath later, and she was back on her feet, phone in hand as she began to trot towards the nearest maglev station.
Tanya needs to know about the lynchings – that could change everything with the Honoraries! - and I need to get the pictures off to Diethard before the five o'clock news! ...And if I stay around here too long, that creepy bastard might come back... Kallen sped up, driving the urge to shiver with discomfort into her feet as she accelerated.
All for the Cause, Kallen, all for the Cause... And, hey, at least he didn't try to grab me... Unlike Milly... Scowling, Kallen brought the phone to her ear, ready to deliver her initial verbal report.