Chargé d'affaires//Molly, Floss & Eleanor
@a-shadow-far-cast
As Eleanor paid close attention, she couldn’t stop the wheels from turning. The blades of grass beneath her boot, the leaves that fell from the trees, the strong and steady brick of the structures and the people that resided within them...
Eleanor Novak was, legally, queen of it all.
The weight of everything and everyone pressed down on her shoulders. But \she knew it needn’t be that way. “If there is a more opportune time for change,” she lamented, “I’d hate to see the cataclysm that precedes it... But you’re right. The power’s in my hands. And I don’t have to wear a crown to do good. Two ideas that that are leading me to another...”
Before Eleanor could finish her thought, Floss’s phone pulled her attention away. Lissy, no doubt. As Floss sat on the tree stump, Eleanor saw movement in the corner of her eye, deep in the trees. She studied it for a while before the saw hints of brown fur. She readied her rifle took a prone stance and waited. It was not unlike the waiting games she played as a Naval officer. But her target here would move far sooner than an enemy soldier on the field....and to miss wouldn’t mean immediate danger--
A fool’s thought. Eleanor tossed it from her head. She wouldn’t dare miss.
It poked its head from the cover of the tree it stood behind--a sizable buck, at least 300lbs, maybe more. Eleanor’s finger was primed to pull the trigger when a thought intruded upon her focus and destroyed it.
She was the queen of the deer, too.
The trigger was too firm to pull. Eleanor stood from her position and turned back to Floss, who had an earful to say. The whole circus was coming with an unconscious O-Ren in their care. “Well, I guess Pan is relying on her friends rather than avoiding them. Finally. We should probably tell Molly she’s on her way....and....”
Eleanor looked to the trees once more and found them empty.
“We should probably order out. That deer is long gone. While we’re figuring that out, we can see if my old cellar survived.” Eleanor began to disassemble the rifle. “Not my finest hunt. But we all have our off days.”
Floss’ brain spun with that old scientific fascination. Despite everything, and perhaps due to her own past, she still had a morbid curiosity for poisons. Whoever had cooked up the one in the report was good...But she was better.
“We’ve got nothing less than a delegation about to land on us, pretty much literally. Sounds like they’re not wasting much time about it either.” A shrug. “Oh well, you’ll hear no complaints from me - there’s good Italian and Cantonese places in town. Maybe I should drive in and pick it up myself, get this sequence running ahead of time. The University wont give me any trouble over it.”
Floss’ boots moved slowly over the moist grass, a thoughtful look on her face. She was good at keeping secrets, it was part of the job. But she respected Eleanor too much as a colleague and a human to keep this particular hot coal in her pocket much longer. She watched her expertly disassemble the rifle. A light drizzle was starting to fall.
“But before all of that.” The words were almost abrupt, she stopped in her tracks, eyes cast slightly downward before rising to meet the eyeline of the markswoman.
“I wanted to get something out of the way before Molly joins us...And half of the Japanese underworld not long after that.” She bit her lip.
“I sent an email to Pan. About Agnes, about the Somnia programme. I don't know exactly where you stand on it. There are calls for justice, reasonable calls, but I thought maybe...Maybe I could engineer a non violent solution, something to permanently disable the hypnotic capabilities.”
The light mist of rain clung to the dark curls of Floss hair like dew in a cobweb.
“If you don't find that sufficient for justice I’d accept it. I respect your opinion. But...I for one don't long for anymore causalities.”
Her expression had a tinge of pleading to it. “What do you think?”
-
The garage door spooled open, and when Molly climbed out of the Jeep she couldn't help a backward glance at the back seat of the car. Empty. She shook herself and set out down the driveway, Floss hadn't made any special effort to cover her steps, it wouldn't take long to find her and Eleanor.















