A look of curiosity formed on Lex’s face, wondering what this mysterious weapon of Ines’s was. But once she got the answer, her lips cracked into an amused smile. She shook her head. “I’m frozen with fear,” she chuckled. She didn’t doubt the other woman could land a mean punch. “The thugs who only learned how to fight on the streets wouldn’t stand a chance.” Though she wasn’t sure how fists versus a gun would pan out but hopefully they would never need to find out.
She shrugged playfully. Ines had a point. She was curious about who these other leads were, but not enough to go full detective mode. She just hoped they were reliable and didn’t have any ulterior motives. “Maybe you have one really good source, I don’t know,” she joked.
She didn’t want to be that person with the white knight syndrome, but knowing intimately how the Kovali operated, she couldn’t prevent some worry about what could potentially happen to Ines. She decided she wouldn’t verbally protest Ines’s insistence that she could handle herself, because that was probably true. To an extent. Her eyebrows then raised in surprise when the brunette expressed her willingness to learn how to use a gun. “Yeah?” she unintentionally spilled out, the surprise evident in her tone. She was not expecting that. “I could do that. It’s not complicated. If you can point and pull a trigger, you’ve got most of it down already.” Of course there was a bit more than that, but she wasn’t about to lay down months worth of Quantico training on her in one sitting. “And you don’t have to shoot to kill, if that’s a concern. Although I’m not sure if that’s a priority you’ll actually have if someone ever comes after you with the intention of killing you,” she said honestly. She was speaking from personal experience.
Her lips pressed together, eyes dropping to her cup at the truthfulness of Ines’s statement. This was quite the mess, Lex couldn’t deny that. There still had to be hope there was an end to this eventually. An end where preferably both of them were alive and it was the Kovali that didn’t survive it. She quietly took another sip in thought. She was pushed out of her own head at Ines’s question. She nearly forgot there was intention to her visit. She cleared her throat before she spoke. “Right. I thought you’d be more interested in the details of the raids when Irena Kovali got arrested. I was there when they raided Purgatory, so…” She did a bit more than just be present when it happened, but she was notorious for leaving out details intentionally. She put her cup on the coffee table. “The CPD found a mountain-load of incriminating evidence. Which everyone knows of course because the mayor made a big spectacle of it with her speech. But the evidence is actually pretty solid. Papers about everything. About the Carcones’ murder, the Pier bombing, what happened at the Taste of Chicago… shit that would make it really hard to cut down to a three-year prison sentence.” That was the hope, anyway. No judge in their right mind would give Irena Kovali, or anyone else linked to the crimes in the future, less than a life sentence. Right?
Ines offers an enthused nod that soon delves into some flitting stare as the images of her hands cradling a heavy gun comes to mind. For so long she avoided and even despised weapons of any form, knowing the harm they caused, far outweighing the good. Her father echoes then, how he taught her of the dangers; the severity of his words contrast and clash with the casualness of Al’s.
“Thanks,” Ines starts, absent, then blinks herself back to present, offers a hesitant smile. “Sorry, it’s a lot–” Her throat clicks as she swallows, a worry nested in the hollow there. “I’m not blind– I know I need to defend myself, it’s just…” Her eyes widen as her hand gestures to some unseen mass growing before them. “It’s hard to reconcile, being forced to become someone I’m not.”
Ines feels naked, in her own home and there is a hitch in her breath, a sadness welling in her eyes. “Sorry, I’m just tired,” she mumbles into the tea, smiles soft and clears her throat of the weight. It wasn’t meant to cover up, the exhaustion in her bones does lessen her hold; opens doors for the dread and despondency.
They are so unfamiliar with one another and yet the unknown parts of Al’s past makes being honest less daunting. Somehow, Ines feels comforted to be seen vulnerable by a near stranger, rather than bare her truths to someone closer.
Ines rights her posture, eyes glinting in interest. She leaves her half-empty mug on the cluttered table in favor of a pen and paper. Her scrawl is slanted and unintelligible as she jots down the key names and parts of interest; what was unknown to her. “This is big,” she says, lost in thought. “How has this affected the people on the inside? Do you know what’s being done? I can’t imagine they’re taking all of this lying down.”