@hellfireisms gets a random starter
The flashes of lighting and the quaking of the earth reminded Devlin easily on how mankind had a way to make unnatural disasters. He was young when he had enlisted in the army, needing to do all he can to take care of his many siblings and a mother who was there and not there at once. The responsibility fell on this shoulders and it was to the point where he felt as though he had no choice. Devlin knew he had to join because that would ensure security and some finances to take care of them. Besides his younger siblings in a few years would be older and can fend for themselves just as well as he can. He knew that he had to set an example, because that would trigger the others to follow suit. The world was tough, and to make it- he told the rest, you had to be tougher than the world itself.
He was excellent in what he did, at least that is what the leader of his sanction said. Devlin was a quick learner, the most obedient and got results. He could carry artillery but what got him recognized was how he could carry two grown men at once in his back and run fast enough to save their lives. He ran towards safety, to the campsite where the nurses were, and if he hadn’t done that the soldiers would make it. It wasn’t easy, since Devlin nearly passed out in attempts to it and there were a few bullets lodged in his calves and back. It was his heart, the selflessness and how he was naturally heroic that got him to where he was now.
A new agency sought Devlin out after the war. They recruited him easily and if he was being honest, he took it right away because he wanted out. He didn’t want to be on the field anymore, not when he had memories now that cannot be erased. He was tired of waking up in the middle of the night, sweaty and disoriented because he cannot stop his mind from making him relive images on lost comrades. The memories sent his gut wrenching, feeling empty because he saw no glory nor victory. He knew this was not for him, no matter how much others were hell-bent on stating he actually was the best.
The agency made him an intelligence agent. This was a new life for him, one that he adjusted well because instead of mindless violence, it was targeted violence. Some might argue violence was violence, but he knew that if he had a chance to take out a few men who were making the world a terrible place, he would gladly take part.
Interesting. He read her file, and how much they gathered from her. He couldn’t focus however, not with this springtime rain that was turning into quite the hurricane. He can fell the tall building’s foundations rumble, threatening the impenetrable fortress that was their agency building. He ignored it.
It was time to meet her. He was going to interrogate the girl but the moment he laid eyes on her, he was stunned. Emotions poured into him unlike any other, and he remembered a scene from the village that he was in almost a decade ago during war. He saw a little girl who was trapped like she was, with her arms bound. Devlin knew that she was supposed to be the enemy but instead he saw a helpless little girl, and without thinking had freed her. It was something he knew that he would get kicked out of the force if anyone found out.
It was like… the world was making him relive that moment all over again. Taunting him.
She kept looking at him, so he finally addressed himself: “I am Devlin. How are you feeling today, miss?” There was a gentleness in his voice. The interrogation room had microphones and people examining them constantly, so he had to be careful. He wanted to break her out, but also he wasn’t going to be reckless about it. Plus, he convinced the agency to trust his methods, to get information by being warm and inviting. Hey, if that surprisingly worked for the past three gang leaders, then why won’t it work for her? The ex-soldier did have a certain charm that brought ease to others.
“You look weak, how about we get you out of that, and then have something to eat? What are you hungry for?”