Cops and Thugs Ch. 3 - Bad Party, Worst Host
FFN: https://www.fanfiction.net/s/14242641/3/Cops-and-Thugs
AO3: Cops and Thugs - Chapter 3
Summary: Vagatha finds herself WAY out of her element, in multiple ways, under pressure, and with a shaking, ambivalent trust. Charlotte tries not to blow up her furtive operation and the officer's trust on her face.
The lobby in Vox Tower consisted of a large party room. A free bar to the right, and a casino for all the guests to the left. In the center, staff had place down tables for all guests to eat, while at the very end of the room there was a dancing area with a small orchestra playing on top of an scenario. Sandy and autumn colors predominated around with some red and black splashes.
The party room was crowded with several small groups built by important figures. Lawyers, judges, politicians and doctors.
All of them had one thing in common.
They were highly profitable if exploited or manipulated.
But there was one kind in that party any criminal would kill an honest working family man to get their hands on.
The perfect option when someone didn’t want to get their hands dirty and a more than ideal pair of eyes in low streets. Perfect to send regard and messages with an intimate touch.
Meanwhile, Vagatha struggled to maintain herself composed, cool as metal. Such task was easier said than done when Charlotte insisted on dancing, her eyes bounced to every person they ever came close to and saw her face and could recognize her if she ever messed up this up, or with any of them or her mask fell.
“Is this an actual part of the plan?” Vagatha said as she adjusted her snake mask over her face. At least she was grateful. That ridiculous mask covered her embarrassment as they danced their way through the other guests nearby. The same thing could not be said about her chest and shoulders in the blue dress Charlotte got for her. At least she calmed herself by wearing some actual blue jeans beneath her dress.
“Would you believe me if I say yes?” Charlotte failed to contain a few chuckles. Despite she wore a wolf mask, it was difficult not to notice her glee. In the same way, it was hard for her not to shine on her own light despite she wore a black formal shirt and pants.
“You do not really think that is a good idea, or yes?”
At the other side of the party room, dozens of tables were set and about a third of the guests were at them, drinks on hand and laughs rolling off tongues already. At the same time, a bunch of services carts came in and out with full and empty plates and a group of waiters and waitresses took care of the guests. Knowing who was hosting the party, Vagatha wouldn’t eat nothing even if she was at the brink of starvation.
Charlotte tilted her head enigmatically. “Don’t worry. People in these parties are like, those small towns in the middle of nowhere, where everyone knows everyone…?”
“Well, these parties are like that, but the opposite. Everyone is busy with their own stuff.”
“I’d rather call it uninterest. Is like that saying goes, no one is truly lazy, they just don’t have the right motivation.”
Charlotte made Vagatha spin beneath her arm. The double agent cop stumbled with her own feet, and she would have fallen if not by the swift hands of her fox-masked companion. Charlotte grabbed her by her waist, putting her hand at her low back and she let out a small muffled yelp at the unexpected touch.
Vagatha lifted her eyes from the floor she almost fell to. When she looked back up to Charlotte, sunlight hovered upon her blonde hair. It shone as if it was made of gold.
Despite the masks covered most of their faces, Vagatha found herself making an effort to encapsulate that moment in her mind. She was unsure if Charlotte was doing the same, but the way she took her time to lift her up gave her mind time to wander.
“What are those?” Charlotte broke the silence.
“What are what?” Vagatha made an effort to keep her voice neutral, though she doubted she did a good job.
“This…” Charlotte tapped gently her fingers at Vagatha’s back, until she could feel them against a small bulge at one of her back pockets in her pants.
Hard. Circular. Small. Thin.
Vagatha didn’t know if she should feel angry or embarrassed, she just asked: “Did you expect me to come into this place without something to defend myself?”
For an awkward amount of time, Charlotte just stared at her, while still holding and keeping her from falling to the floor with just the lightest degree of gritting her teeth, then she chuckled, shrugged her shoulders, and pulled her up, but as she did just that, Charlotte grumbled in pain, she rushed to hold her left shoulder tightly and turned away from Vagatha.
“Y-yes!” Charlotte smiled at her. “You don’t need to worry about me! Just my shoulder, is still sore for our last…encounter. It doesn’t hurt as much as it used to! Don’t worry!”
“You already said that. I guess I should thank you for saving me. Even when you did not have to.”
“Oh, please! Don’t beat yourself like that. It was not your fault,” She assured as she insisted on ignoring and smiling through the pain. She adjusted her steps as they went back to dance to move her shoulder as little as possible.
“It WAS my fault.” Vagatha quickly turned her head around once she realized she had risen her voice. I was the one who shot first.”
“And you wouldn’t have shot in the first place if I had not, er, incited you to come to that…” Charlotte lowered her voice for a brief moment. “…To that abandoned school. It’s quite simple logic.”
“You cannot not blame just because I did something because you did something first.”
“Okay, I hear you, but! What if, it was the other way around?” Charlotte stared at her expectantly, praying for her to play along.
“Is like, I build a hospital. That hospital saves a cop, and that cop saves a person. Technically, one could say I saved that person, right? So if something good happened because of me, all is well! But when not, I can only deal with-augh!”
“No, no. Is just getting harder to ignore this shoulder soreness.” She stretched her arm stiffly but it only worsened her pain.
“Mind if…I…help you? When you pass enough time with cops, you get to hear how they complain from muscles pains. If you are lucky, you get to hear some of their, eh…remedios. I forgot the word.”
“Right. Let me try something.” Vagatha separated herself from Charlotte. Suddenly she was a lot colder than she knew, she walked behind her and put her elbow right beneath her shoulder. Then she moved her elbow in circles against Charlotte’s muscles.
“No! Is just…a little higher. I can take it!”
Being so close to her, Vagatha could see a little pass Charlotte’s black clothes and spotted where her bruises started. Reluctantly, she put her elbow over her shoulder and moved again in circles.
“Oh-ho! Ha! Hahahaha! It tickles!” Charlotte tried and failed to contain her laughs just as she failed to keep herself from twirling and curling over herself. The people around them looked at them weirded, as if they had grown a pair of limbs each right there.
Vagatha would have been too self-conscious and embarrassed, if it had not been for Charlotte’s laughter, sweet as the catchiest song that became a summer hit.
Vagatha found herself enthralled by it and wanting to hear it as long as possible.
“Higher! Ha-ha!” A little higher! I can take it! Yes, right there, ah. Okay, okay. I think that’s enough for now.” Charlotte turned around and took Vagatha’s hands between her own.
“No need to mention.” Vagatha reciprocated awkwardly. “But seriously, I would appreciate it if you keep it a secret.”
“Only if you keep mine.” She winked at her and a finger over her lips.
“What? What secr-oh. Oh.”
Charlotte couldn’t help herself but giggle. “Has anyone ever told you you look cute when you get nervous?”
“No.” Vagatha’s eyes half-closed. “Because when I get nervous, someone ends up hurt.”
“Nothing!” Charlotte raised her palms in front of her shoulders. Right when she had every intention to go back to dance, the blonde mob bumped into someone with her back.
“Sorry!” She said out of instinct as she turned around, finding she had bumped into a man tall like a tower.
The man slowly turned around, showing the edges of his owl mask. The sun shimmered through the colored glass panels at the ceiling over him. His eyes brightened red for a moment as he stared at them over his shoulder. The tall man’s eyes widened, he blinked momentarily. He turned to them, the red in his eyes vanished. He had a distinctive lack of facial hair. His actual black hair had a denotive combed grey lock. He wore an elegant yet simple dark blue suit with white details and a white puff tie.
Vagatha’s fear exacerbated by calling someone—anyone’s—attention. She could feel her fight-or-flight response crawling up her spine. Her hands twisted and shifted over her waist, as if she was looking for a knife—a large one would help her calm down, she knew—or anything spiky.
Her racing mind came to a halt when she heard Charlotte talk.
The blond woma ran from Vagatha’s side directly into him, who reciprocated with open arms into a tight hug. Stolas lifted her a few inches above the ground, rubbing the side of his head on top of hers.
“Oh, darling! I can’t believe it! I would have never guessed that is you! I mean-look at you! You’ve turned into a real woman!”
“Stolas…I can’t breathe.”
“Oh, sorry, sorry.” He let her go. “It’s been so long since I last saw you. I just wish it were under better circumstances.”
“This is the guy you told me about?” Vagatha stepped into the conversation.
“Yes, we’ve actually helped each other several times before. Some of my, er, “projects” wouldn’t have been possible without him. Legalities can be a real b-word.”
“Oh please, Charlotte. You’re giving me too much credit.” He laughed. “I just took the boring problems out of your way so you could spread your wings over this city, as the angel it so desperately needs.”
Charlotte laughed cheerfully as she rubbed her hair behind her ear. “I also think you’d look cute with wings, or fur too.”
“Perhaps. But enough of me, what’s your name, my lady?”
Vagatha had to restrain herself from pressing her lips in a straight line, instead her eyes fell into Charlotte, looking for reassurance and she nodded to her.
“It’s okay. He’ll help us with our plan.”
Vagatha breathed deeply as still as she could. “Jiménez. Vagatha Jiménez. Officer cop.” She extended her hand out of awkwardness, but Stolas reciprocated with great vigor.
“A cop!? How splendid! Oh, what a tight grip! I can see why you picked her! Ah-pleasure to meet you, darling. My name is Stolas Goetia, if you ever need help with legal troubles, I’ll be happy to pull a few strings. Now, now, I know it may sound like blackmailing, but I prefer to call it—“
“Shared interests?” Vagatha finished.
“How did you know I would say that?”
Charlotte laughed before she covered her mouth with her hand in a hurry before Vagatha continued.
“Shouldn’t we worry about your wife, or, whoever you came up with here?”
It was there Stolas smiled sadly, trying hard to keep up his self-sufficiency.
“I…” Charlotte stuttered. “I don’t think we need to—“ But then she was cut off by Stolas.
“It’s alright. It would be unreasonable of me to expect everyone to be knowledgeable about my personal life and my misfortunes.”
“So-sorry, I didn’t know she passed away.”
“Passed?” Stolas laughed. “I wish! But no, darling, we finally just got a divorce. It was the best for us. Anyways, I meant what I said. In fact, that’s the main reason to why I’m where here while you two…”
Charlotte shook her head with a nervous smile, arms crossed together in an X.
“…Are…doing whatever you need to. I’ll keep an eye on Vox.”
“Thanks Stolas. I know you’re risking yourself more than you should.”
“Nonsense! Anything for my little Via.”
Before Vagatha could get an answer, the clinking sound of a glass repeated several times. All of the guests turned to the orchestra’s scenario where a man with an fox mask stood proud and mighty. His suit light and warm brown colors like the party colors around him, with a black undershirt. Crowds gravitated towards him to kiss his ass as they showered him with praises.
“No, no. Thanks to you,” Vox laughed. “I hope you’ve been enjoying yourself, if you like what you’ve gotten so far, you should consider to…”
“We should get going.” Charlotte spoke over Vox quietly to Vagatha. “Keep your mask on and follow my lead.”
“Good luck,” Stolas wished as they strode away.
The two woman speedwalked through the crowds. Charlotte grabbed a glass with champagne, took a large sip from it and spilled the rest into a plant when no one was looking. Once they passed the crowds and into where the waiters pulled in and out food carts both full and empty. They continued on until the constant sounds of cookware was just a buzzing sound in their ears.
They walked past even further all that until they reached the a warehouse inside the Vox’s building that led to the emergency stairs of the building upwards. At the other side of the room there was also a driveway currently closed with a metal curtain.
Charlotte peeked around the corner, as she expected, she found a guard at the door to the stairs, dressed all in black with dark sunglasses.
“Wait, here,” Charlotte whispered to Vagatha.
“W-wait!” She grabbed her arm before she could walk away.” What are you gonna do?
“Clear the path. Don’t worry. You’ll know when to come in.”
Charlotte cleared her throat and entered the guard’s line of sight stumbling.
“Woooo-! Ho-haha! Hohoooo!” She laughed out loud. She walked as if she was about to fall in her every step.
“Hey! You! Stop it right there!” The guard shouted and stomped towards her.
Charlotte put her hands over her head over dramatically. “Oh please! Don’t scream so loud, my eyes hurt!”
“Why aren’t you at the party?” He turned her to have her face-to-face.
“I’m my oooooown party, didn’t you know!? If you want, I could invit-oh my god!” Her eyes opened wide upon seeing the guard and got closer to him. “Look at you! Such big arms! You must like, lift all the weight of the world with your—!“
Charlotte stopped abruptly, she covered her mouth with her hand and rushed to an open box nearby and threw up.
“Oh my goodness!...I think I just threw up my lunch!” Her hand rested over her stomach, clutching at it. Then her hand fell limp to her side, wrapped in a fist, as the shadow of the guard overlapped Charlotte.
Vagatha watched the encounter unfold. The guard was distracted.
The cop sneaked past the two of them until the door was just a few steps away. Her hand hovered over the doorknob, she stared back. At first, to make sure she had not been spotted, but then, she saw Charlotte.
She could leave her, let her ass get eaten get caught and save her own.
Her hand wrapped around the knob, but it refused to turn it. Vagatha clutched her teeth trying to get herself to do what needed to be done.
Her hand fell limp for a moment before she walked away from the door towards the guard and Charlotte as quietly as she could.
Vagatha pulled a retractable stick from her pants beneath her dress. She drew the weapon open in one swift swing, a distinguishable CLICK sound popped and the guard’s ears raised up subtly, but it was too late by then.
Vagatha hit him in the head. His body became stiff as he straightened himself, as if anger and hot blood rushed to run through his veins, but then he fell onwards. Charlotte stepped aside before his body crushed her, instead, his body knocked over the trash can.
“What did you do!?” Charlotte turned to Vagatha.
“What? You said I would know when to come in!”
“I meant it as in, you walking through the door. That was my distraction for!”
“Well maybe next time be more specific!”
“I had it under control, see?” She opened her hand and showed a small pepper spray.
“You seriously thought to take him out with that?”
“Yes?” Charlotte stared down at her pepper spray with kicked puppy eyes. “You know, what? Just, help me hide the corpse-I-I mean the bod…the-the guard…you know what I mean.”
The body of the guard ended inside the box Charlotte pretended to throw up at. Before she put the cover on top of the box, she took the guard’s radio.
The two women crossed the door and began to climb the evacuation stair upwards—Charlotte went first, leading the way—much to Vagatha’s discomfort— She would have been in charge, but this was not her plan and she was not here out of will. The night Charlotte had revealed her about what she planned, Vagatha could tell she had been told solely what she needed to know and little else, she only realized this after she had the time to process it, and come to terms to not ask too much for the fear she may end up sleeping with the fishes.
The spiral of stairs went up as far as Vagatha could see when she peeked out the handrail. Countless stairsteps later, Charlotte stopped at a door. She opened it as quietly as she could and peeked inside of it. She turned to Vagatha and nodded at her vigorously.
They entered a small corridor leading to a circular hallway connecting several halls to a nexus they walked into. At the edge of the circle, past the glass handrail, they could see the floors below all the way down to the party taking place at the first floor. Vagatha glanced above the crystal handrails.
After sneaking around, they two found a corridor. By the way Charlotte giggled with childish excitement, Vagatha could only suppose—not to mention pray—they were going into the right direction.
They passed by a private cinema room. The tables around were filled with open alcohol bottles, broken glasses, plastic cups and white powder in straight, thick lines over the tables and seats.
Mid-way as they crossed pass it and turned around a corner, Charlotte stopped suddenly, and her cop companion could only bump her face against Charlotte’s back.
“What is—” Vagatha asked as she peeked above Charlotte’s shoulder. A shadow hovered at the end of the hallway around the corner, growing larger by the second.
Vagatha’s first reaction was to retreat backwards to where they came from, only to see another shadow coming at the entrance of the hallway.
Next to them Vagatha found a door, the janitor’s closet, and shoved Charlotte inside as quickly and quietly as she could. After she herself entered, the two of them hid at each side of the door, Vagatha signed vigorously with her finger over her lips as footsteps outside drew closer.
They could see two silhouettes through the frosted window.
“Hey, dude. Thought Vortex had taken your place.”
“No one has heard from him since the last hit he was involved.”
“Bet they caught his ass.”
“I actually talked to him the night before that, you know? He said something about someone breaking into his house and they stole his—”
“Viper-10, where you are? Your post is empty.”
The radio Charlotte broke the fragile silence inside the closet. They looked around confused, followed by a few quick:
Their exchange only left the option to check the janitor’s closet.
Whereas the guards were left confused, Charlotte and Vagatha were left with a compacted hysteria.
“WHY DIDN’T YOU TURNED IT OFF?!” Vagatha whispered screaming. It took her all of her willpower not to twitch her hands around Charlotte’s neck right on the spot.
“WE NEEDED TO KNOW WHAT THEY ARE DOING!”
“NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND!”
Vagatha turned to every direction inside the closet, hoping to find some secret passage like they were in a movie.
Meanwhile a silent chaos grew, and pending doom approached the door, Charlotte had remained eerily silent. Her eyes fixated both at Vagatha and nothing.
Gears turned inside her head, her shoulders became wider, her head tilted up and she breathed back to life.
“Give me your handcuffs.”
“Give them to me! There’s no time!” Her hands frisked through Vagatha’s dress until her hands reached her handcuffs at her pocket. “Do you trust me?”
“What?” Before she could begin to process what she meant, Charlotte put the handcuffs at her. Not only she stopped there, she grabbed her own pepper spray and put it right on the holes of her mask.
“Please don’t hate me for this.”
“Who’s in there?!” One of the guards outside demanded. He nodded to his partner and he raised his gun.
Without waiting any longer, the guard dashed into the door to reach for the knob and opened the door with a wide swing.
“AAAGGH-!” A scream exited from the closet, as unexpectedly it came and caught off the guards, so it vanished, replaced with continuous heavy, yet suppressed sighs.
Inside the closet, Vagatha rested weary against the closet’s wall, head limping, her arms bended against her back held reluctantly by Charlotte. The cop’s eyes were tightly closed, her lids covered in an ugly red, open-mouthed and breathing heavily.
“And you stay there!” Charlotte said, then she pretended to just notice the guards’ presence.
The four of them stayed where they stood, all expectantly to see what the others would do. One of the guards spoke first.
“Why did you leave your posts?!” Charlotte shouted at them with the bossiest and filled with authority voice she could muster. “You better start doing your goddamn job or I’ll break your asses with my foot!”
“I-we, thought there was—
“You thought nothing! While you two slothful idlers were thinking, this brat managed to get up here because of you!” Charlotte slid Vagatha out of the closet grabbing her by her shoulders as gentle as she could.
“And who the hell are ya, to begin with?!”
“You should be grateful I’m not your boss, so you better get out of here this instant, and I’ll overlook this before I report this—”
“Viper-10, where are you? Status report.”
Charlotte’s radio picked it up where she left it. She tried to pretend to saunter, but the two guards stepped in front of her, just enough to give her a loud and clear image.
So she needed to give a louder and clearer one.
She gently left Vagatha resting against the wall, and then shoved her way through, pushing one of them with her shoulder against them. When finally she managed to give them her back, she allowed to swallow the heavy gulp obstructing her throat and cleared it.
“This is…” Charlotte stopped to think for a second. “This is Viper-2. Viper-10 is missing. I caught a potential suspect. Over.” She added quickly after a moment of hesitation.
Charlotte didn’t need to turn around to feel the guard’s eyes burning the back of her head, still she couldn’t help herself but to peek behind anyways. The radio remained silent for about twenty seconds, but for Charlotte it appeared to be an eternity.
It didn’t help her feel on control the way the guards shifted their guns at their hands. So lightly, yet so eager. Her mind raced with a dozen ways to get out of there, and each and every single one of them ended with her and Vagatha kicking the bucket.
“Understood Viper-2. Bring the suspect to the boss’ office. We will join you soon.”
Charlotte lifted her eyes from the radio up to muster her best “I told you” face, but cracks of “Can you disappear?” filled her eyes. She grabbed Vagatha by her shoulders and prompted her to walk with her. To Vagatha’s credit, she pretended to struggle under her grip and tried to break free.
“Let’s go,” She said, loud enough so it was clear she didn’t just meant Charlotte. “Come on, move it, people! We don’t have all day! The quicker you escort me, the quicker you can get away from this,” she said on purpose avoiding their eyes.
One of the guards growled, no bothering to hide it and the four of them got on their way through the second floor.
Vagatha’s eyes had just started to recover from the pepper spray. Charlotte looked slyly down into the lobby, hoping for her ace under the sleeve not to get into too much trouble for what he was doing for them.
For Stolas, Charlotte was a sort of a daughter, and just like any competent mentor, he would worry when he spent too long uniformed about her, while she was doing something so dangerous as trying to take down a politician running for mayor.
But as he re-learned to be honest with himself, he knew he would be even more worried if Charlotte didn’t do what she needed to do. What this city needed to do.
Pentagram city would be a darker and more gruesome place without all of her selfless actions.
And yet, Stolas couldn’t help himself but to roll in this mental loop. He could only pray that cop she was working with covered her back half as much as she knew Charlotte would cover hers.
The cheers and praises brought Stolas out of his mind, as Vox continued keeping his audience wrapped around his finger.
“…offer. As we give them their rightful and well-deserved place. These, once-delinquent citizens have been reformed in my new rehabilitating program. Criminals jailed for all kinds of crimes. From violent ones, whom have been casted by our beloved, but faulty city, to those honest, working family men caught in the need to form part of the criminal underworld. We are making the effort to get them all under our wing.
“Once our offered volunteers conclude this progam, we give them a new job and life, based on their previous one. We do so with the objective of making the transition easier and less volatile, putting our reformed subjects into a familiar environment.”
Vox’s smile grew a bit sharper. “I called this program ‘Good demons.’ You’ll see, the other day I—"
“You love to hear yourself talk, don’t you?” Stolas interrupted his speech. People around him stepped back, as if he had ignited himself in flames out of nowhere, giving him a direct line of sight with Vox across the crowd.
“I give my people what they want. All of my people.” Vox raised his arms to his sides while looking at his guests. “What I don’t know is what are you here for. Is not for appearances and most definitely not for your ex-wife,” He sneered.
Laughs briefly filled the room. Stolas couldn’t help but look over his shoulder with narrow eyes and clenched his fist.
“No need to gloat about it, Vox. Is not a secret. Everyone here knows Stella is this close to divorce me.”
“At last. Good for her. But the question remains, Goetia. What are you here for?” His voice grew darker. He walked towards him until they were face to face. Vexation meeting with mockery.
Countless eyes rested over him. If he slipped up, someone would notice. Someone would know. If it was not Vox, with his complete attention at him, monitoring his smallest reaction, it would be someone else.
“I’m here to make sure you stay in your place, Hamill,” Stolas affirmed.
A laugh scrapped its way out of Vox throat before he asked, “What is that supposed to mean?”
“Don’t play dumb. Not with me, but with your guests.”
Vox rolled his eyes as he turned his back to Stolas. “Everyone knows I was a convicted man, but I changed myself so that people like me could become useful once more. I’m not the one here chained to the past.”
“Is one of those citizens here?”
Vox stopped on his tracks and Stolas raised his chin. He’s got him.
“I’ll spare you the embarrassment and conclude they are indeed not here, because, what? They are busy? They are not prepared yet?”
“And they won’t be,” Vox said, looking at Stolas over his shoulder before turning back to him. “I can only change those who want to change themselves. If you don’t believe me just look at me!”
“Bullshit,” He thought before speaking. “How high was the reentry ratio from your ‘rehabilitated convicts again?”
“I never said it was perfect.”
“This city needs a cleanse. From the lowest streets I myself started from. All the way up to the high spheres with all those so-called ‘good doers’ that run this city. The enforcers of their short-sighted agenda, many who I’ve had the opportunity to meet.
“I’m the one to achieve what this city deservers! So power is given to the people it belongs to.” Vox raised his arms. “My people.”
A few members of the public clapped as soon as Vox finished. Slow at first, fastening their claps as more guests joined and the cheering.
Everyone clapped except Stolas, refusing to fall under Vox’s political nonsense. He could only hope Charlotte didn’t succumb to her own pressure.
The two guards escorted Vagatha to Vox’s office at the top of his penthouse. His office blocked by a double door. Vagatha shoved her way through the guards while still holding Charlottebefore leaving her body and face rest against the wall as gently as she could before she grabbed the doorknob, but couldn’t turn it. She gave a quick glance at Charlotte, who realized her problem as well.
“You’re dismissed.” She managed to said without choking and recomposed herself turning to them. “You better hope I don’t see you away from your posts again or the very last thing you’ll be good for will be using your corpses for Halloween decoration. Imagine people passing by your hanging, rotting bodies on the street and they smile at you.”
Vagatha’s inert body tensed. She could hear them cursing to themselves as they walked away.
Only when they were way past the corridor’s corner Charlotte allowed herself to deflate like a balloon and bended her body like a puppet without a hand holding it.
“I was not too rough with you, was I?! Oh god I think I overdid it back there!” Charlie apologized as soon as she was certain they had privacy.
Vagatha grumbled. “Fuck… my eyes…” She removed her mask and put her fingers over her red, teary eyes.
“Wait wait wait. Don’t do that! I’ll get you water.”
“Oh yeah. Sure. You can go and ask the guards who escorted us if you ask them nicely.”
Charlotte repressed a sorry moan. “Maybe we can get something inside here,” She said looking at the door. She frisked her hair and pulled a small clip and kneeled in front of the door.
“You know how to pick a lock?” Vagatha asked dumbfounded.
“Yeah! I mean, how do you think I got into your apartment that night?” She smirked at Vagatha until she heard herself out and saw the baffled expression at Vagatha’s face. “Wait…Now that I think about it…” Charlotte turned away back to avoid blushing and focused back on the door.
“There we go!” She cheered, but Vagatha immediately hushed her down. “There we go.” She repeated in a quieter voice.
They rushed inside and left a big internal sigh once Charlotte closed the door, allowing herself to relax for a second until Vagatha pulled her to see her face-to-face.
“Care to explain what is this nonsense!?” She said while removing her mask and pointed at her red eyes.
“So so so sorryyyy! I swear I only did it to sell the act! I promise I’ll make it up to you!”
“I couldn’t care less for your promises,” She grunted as she looked around the office. To her luck, she found a rather large tank fish resting on a thick black wood slab with golden finishes at the edges. The tank contained a couple slim fishes that looked like someone had cut the tentacles of a dying, malnourished and sick octopus. Vagatha thought of just diving her head into the tank fish, but looking at those weird fishes’ black eyes sent shivers down her spine and a bad feeling. Instead, she grabbed an empty whisky bottle nearby and filled with the tank’s water and poured it over her eyes.
While Vagatha took care of her eyes, Charlotte explored the office like a child entering into their parents’ bedroom while they were asleep. One wrong step and the all the people below would find her out just because.
The rest of Vox’s office was just as luxurious as the rest of his building. Furniture that would cost one year of Vagatha’s salary each, and at the end of the spacious room, a large window that touched the floor and the ceiling, giving a vast view over Pentagram City as far as her eyes could distinguish until the buildings blended together. And just in front of the window. A desk with a computer.
She hurried to the computer, already turned on. Great. She looked at her pocket and pulled out an USB drive, she smiled to herself before she plugged it into the CPU. “Thanks, Baxter, I owe you one.” Charlotte went through the security measures like butter. She would have gone file after file, but she figured time was not on her side so she made a copy of everything she could get her fingers on and moved it to her drive.
As she expected that would take an awful amount of time, but she could bare it.
After his verbal sparring with Vox, Stolas stayed at the bar pretending to drink his problems away, but the man had to drag himself out from his half-pseudo self-pity. A group of six guards walking in unison, all led by a guard with knife scars on his face and the tattoo of a snake going down his neck, before his black suit uniform. All of them speed walked until they escaped Stolas’ sight.
He drank the rest of his glass in one quick sip and rushed to get to a quieter, eyes-empty zone. He reached for his phone and dialed a number until someone answered.
“Hey. Listen, I need…no, I can’t go to your place. I need to ask you a favor.” Stolas peeked a view outside, just in time to see the guards getting on the elevator before the door closed. “How fast can you gather your crew?”
The dubious legal duo upstairs were still waiting after 25 minutes. Even amidst the relative calm they had, Vagatha’s unrest remained at her side, always waiting for the second shoe to drop.
Both her eyes and mind bounced on how many ways could someone get inside.
Breaking through the window, blowing up the ceiling. Someone already inside the room and she had not notice.
That last possibility wasn’t too off the mark, considering how she ”encountered” in her own apartment the person who dragged her to trespass and steal private property.
She just wished this get over already.
“What are we even looking for?”
“I’ll know when I see it!” Charlotte hopped her head above the monitor with a bright smile and tilted her head, but as soon as her face hid back behind the screen, Charlotte let a deep, quiet sigh…
What she saw was slowly crawling its way into her top ten worst things she’s ever seen in her life. She had to force herself to click through.
Click, Click, Click, Click, Click, Click, Click, Click, Click
The sound of the party zoned out of Charlotte’s mind as her ears rose like a dog hearing the mailman coming. She raised her head and saw Vagatha had taken a picture of Charlotte in Vox’s chair with her phone.
“I wanna make crystal clear, after this party is over, you and me are never going to see each other again?” Vagatha put her phone in front of Charlotte’s face, showing the picture she just took. “If you ever come close to me, I’ll send this to Vox and tell him who you are and what you’ve done. Are we clear?”
Silence ran through the office, if Charlotte focused enough, she could believe she heard all the happy guests dancing and laughing on the first floor. Vagatha expected for the moment Charlotte dropped her act and threw an unhinged threat at her on how she intended to gut her and her family. Cold and calculated, or burst in the heat of rage, whatever.
“If something goes wrong, is there anything you would like me do for you?”
Vagatha turned to her like if she had just grown-up horns on her head out of nowhere.
“Why you would care about that much for me? “I have things more urgent to deal with, like not getting killed and hang up on the place you brought me in.”
Charlotte’s smile quivered. Her eyes fell down on the screen. The information copy was eighty percent of the way. She sighed and whispered to herself. “I guess making the city a better place doesn’t include me.” Charlotte spun on the chair as she let herself melt on it, staring at the large view behind her. “Makes sense.”
After the new realization, Charlotte couldn’t say nothing more, and Vagatha couldn’t be bothered to bark back at her. Maybe this “job” had not been as endangering as they would have thought, but it left them with just that flavor in their mouths.
In the new gloomy silence Vagatha could spot light vibrations on the floor, like if the party below had suddenly decided to raise their fun a few notches up.
“Quiet,” Vagatha hissed. She attuned her ear to eliminate background noise as she walked on eggshells closer to the door. Footsteps. As quick as they came, they stopped. She put her ear next to the door and her senses filled with a cold, deep, mechanical click before she could drop herself down to the ground with less than a second to spare.
The party below hushed. They tried to guess from which direction had that sound come. It did not help Vox’s guards rushed to him, pushing aside guests. Only Vox himself remained the most unfazed, staring at the ceiling in his office’s direction, as if he could see what was happening through the walls until one of his guards grabbed his shoulder.
“Sir, we need to put you in—”
“Tak me back to my office, now!” He pushed his hand away and walked into the elevator without a care for his party anymore.
“Vox!” Stolas called out to him. “What’s going on!?” People need to know! Vox? Vox!?” Stolas got into his way before he could leave.
“Get out of my way Goetia!”
Vox tried to walk around him, but Stolas always moved to where he’d moved. One of Vox’s bodyguards grabbed him by his suit, punched him in the gut and tossed him to the floor.
Charlotte peeked one eye from the side of the desk, only to see for a second the bullet hole in the door lock before it was kicked wide open by the guard with a snake tattoo, he stood at the door, pistol in hand emanating a powerful aura, like if he owned the place, or would make it his own.
Striker and Charlotte made a moment of visual contact, too brief and yet too long. Each could see the other’s soul.
He raised his gun directly at her head with deadly precision.
She could already feel the bullet in her head…