Pvt. Abner (
remnantrecruit) wrote in
ravenrock2020-05-22 07:37 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
(no subject)
Time & Place: A.) Washington D.C., 2274 | B.) Enclave-controlled Detroit, 228X
Description: A.) Bellamy and Abner’s first mission together | B.) The Gang Solves A Murder
Content: It’s Fallout, you know the drill
A.) Introductions
This is a retrieval mission. One of our own, a traitor to the cause. You'll be accompanying Agent Rook. He has the details, along with a photograph of the target. Your duty is to assist with the retrieval and protect your superior from any harm in the process. You'll be meeting him outside the main gate at 0600 tomorrow. Do you understand? Good boy.
It was a quarter to six when Abner took his position by the gate, folding his arms tightly over his chest. February was fucking cold, and his civilian disguise didn't offer much in the way of insulation. At least they'd given him a scarf—as much to hide the shock collar as anything else, but it kept his face warm. He pulled it up to cover his nose as he scanned the area.
There. Someone else was emerging from the bunker. Smaller than him, almost child-sized. Was that supposed to be his superior? He stood at attention as the figure approached, just in case.
- - -
B.) Whodunnit
Abner remembered in flashes. Blood. Bruised knuckles. The sight of someone’s face being pummeled into a wall, over and over until it looked more like a crushed melon than a human head. And before that—a whisper in his ear, a voice he didn’t recognize, saying words they weren’t supposed to know.
Do you remember your training?
So yeah, he’d definitely killed someone. That wasn’t the important part. The important part was that he hadn’t done it alone. Someone, somewhere, had the controls to his brain. And that was blatant misuse of Enclave property.
He’d turned himself in immediately, of course. Fully cooperative. Now all that was left was to sit patiently in the interrogation room, hands folded on the cold metal table in front of him, waiting for the detective to ask his questions.
Description: A.) Bellamy and Abner’s first mission together | B.) The Gang Solves A Murder
Content: It’s Fallout, you know the drill
A.) Introductions
This is a retrieval mission. One of our own, a traitor to the cause. You'll be accompanying Agent Rook. He has the details, along with a photograph of the target. Your duty is to assist with the retrieval and protect your superior from any harm in the process. You'll be meeting him outside the main gate at 0600 tomorrow. Do you understand? Good boy.
It was a quarter to six when Abner took his position by the gate, folding his arms tightly over his chest. February was fucking cold, and his civilian disguise didn't offer much in the way of insulation. At least they'd given him a scarf—as much to hide the shock collar as anything else, but it kept his face warm. He pulled it up to cover his nose as he scanned the area.
There. Someone else was emerging from the bunker. Smaller than him, almost child-sized. Was that supposed to be his superior? He stood at attention as the figure approached, just in case.
- - -
B.) Whodunnit
Abner remembered in flashes. Blood. Bruised knuckles. The sight of someone’s face being pummeled into a wall, over and over until it looked more like a crushed melon than a human head. And before that—a whisper in his ear, a voice he didn’t recognize, saying words they weren’t supposed to know.
Do you remember your training?
So yeah, he’d definitely killed someone. That wasn’t the important part. The important part was that he hadn’t done it alone. Someone, somewhere, had the controls to his brain. And that was blatant misuse of Enclave property.
He’d turned himself in immediately, of course. Fully cooperative. Now all that was left was to sit patiently in the interrogation room, hands folded on the cold metal table in front of him, waiting for the detective to ask his questions.
Re: B.) Whodunnit
“Yes sir. Private Abner, special asset.” He sat up straight and nodded sharply, the closest he could get to a salute. “I’ll do my best to help with your investigation, sir. It’s just—“ An uncomfortable shift in his chair, a glance to the side. The officer didn’t know, did he? About what he was, what he could do.
“I don’t remember, okay? Don’t even know who I killed. My brain...doesn’t work right sometimes. I don’t remember killing him. But I wasn’t on chems. And I swear to God it’s not something I would’ve done on my own. I’m a good d—“ He caught himself. “A good soldier, sir. I was following orders.”
no subject
"You have to remember something. If not about what happened? Up to the murder, after the murder. You've got a powerful guy upstairs telling us that whatever this is? You were the gun, not the finger on the trigger. Now I could get into all sorts of bullshit metaphors about smoking guns or fingerprinting or whatever... but I want you to focus.
"Even if it's sounds, colors, people you saw beforehand. Go over everything with me to the moment you lost track, and what happened after."
He readies his pad, about to scrawl some notes, knowing on the other side of the mirror Ben is at it even more diligently. Two different accounts to make sure no detail is missed.
no subject
“I was...on patrol,” he recalled haltingly. “Near the outskirts. Heard reports of raider attacks. They sent me alone, of course, that’s my job. Don’t remember seeing any civilians around either.” No witnesses. Had they planned it that way?
“Then...someone grabbed me, I think. Grabbed my coat. Was about to fight back, but...” He shook his head. No good way to explain that part without giving too much away. “They said...something...to me. Might’ve been a woman’s voice, but I’m not sure. That’s when I went away. After that I remember...I remember tasting blood. I think I bit someone. And I remember the mess it made.” He’d been covered in gore when he turned himself in. The thin t-shirt they’d given him instead showed far too many of his scars for comfort, but it couldn’t be helped.
“...Sir, help me out here, please. Who did I kill?”
no subject
"Agent Paul DePleur. Worked security at the Mayor's office."
Detroit's Mayor went strictly by his preferred title of Mayor. It had been that way before Enclave had come. Small concessions, like not displacing Detroit's entire power structure, for the sake of integrating with the population. But in reality, the power structure remained in name only; Enclave had its own personnel in those offices, and its own staff defending them.
Paul DePleur was pure and ruthless at his job. But there was one aspect to the man Hank sympathized with. "Had a loving wife. A daughter. Reputation for getting the job done. And for some reason there's evidence he just let you walk up to him. Didn't run, didn't have much of a chance to defend himself. Acted like you walking up to him should be the most normal damn thing in the world."
He waits for any light of recognition in Abner's eyes. Even a shift of posture.
no subject
“Agent DePleur,” he said, keeping his voice carefully even. “Yeah, I know him. Knew him, I guess. I was assigned to guard the mayor a few times. Public events and stuff. It looked good to have something like me up there with him, you know?” The dehumanizing phrasing slipped out instinctively, a habit he was too far gone to notice.
“I saw what Agent DePleur did to people. I know they were criminals, they deserved it, but...” He grimaced slightly. Flashbacks to Raven Rock—blood, bruises, a metal gauntlet crunching into his cheek. “It was ugly, sir. He had a lot of enemies. I just don’t know who would still be, uh, capable of doing something like that once he was done with them.”
no subject
He really didn't know, huh?
"Something like you? You're just a private, Abner. But last I checked privates were still people." He makes the observation as if he wants a further explanation. "Did he have any enemies that he never laid hands on? Or did you know him well enough to tell?"
no subject
“You said he was married, though—suppose it could’ve been his wife? Like I said, it sounded like a woman’s voice. And if he was like that at work, I hate to think what he was like at home.” Pure speculation, but it was all he had. “Do you know if she’s Enclave too? It would have to be someone with inside information...”
Someone who knew his trigger. Or someone who could’ve gotten ahold of it. And if one unauthorized person knew...well, he didn’t want to think about how many others might.
no subject
He tips his head. "Well. Anyone it could have been? Has an alibi. You. They used you to deliver the murder weapon while they went and did the killing. So I need to figure out when you heard this person speak-" to see who would have an alibi for that "-and where exactly it was."
He scratches at his chin scruff, face twisting up a little as he throws a questioning gaze at the two-way mirror. "Think you could recognize the voice?"
no subject
He shut his eyes again. That morning’s orders floated in his head, slightly foggy but still clear enough for him to backtrack. “They sent me on patrol at 600 hours. I was...out by that old Red Rocket station east of town. You know, the one where the raiders like to set up, with the rocket painted to look like...never mind. That’s where they grabbed me. I remember that part.” His forehead furrowed in thought. “Took me...I want to say, maybe an hour or two to get there from the base? The sun was all the way up, at least.” Clear blue sky, an empty wasteland, and then nothing afterwards but static and fog.
“I don’t know where I was when I killed the agent, though. I barely even remember coming here. How long has it been?” He glanced around the room for a clock, finding nothing but a bare lightbulb and a wall-length mirror, for some reason.
He took a moment to squint at his reflection. Christ, he looked exhausted.
no subject
"Did someone order you out there, do you go there with any sort of regularity, or could there be some reason for someone to know you were out there. Because if not? Then you were followed. If yes? Then you were specifically researched and set up..."
Because, it seems, Abner could murder people and just forget. Hell of a bonus for confidentiality. He's important enough that the mayor and the Captain are vouching for him, he's a private, and he keeps referring to himself as a thing.
"It's been twenty-five hours."
But the investigation of the crime scene and jumping through the hoops of bureaucracy ate a hell of a lot of time. Especially when it seemed, at the beginning, they'd have an easy case with a cut and dry killer. Nope. They're gonna have some bullshit.
no subject
“I was under orders,” he said. “They send me to check out raider territory a few times a week, if I’m not on special duty. Handful of places—the Red Rocket, the old church, that one movie theater on the south end. Sometimes I have to clear out an infestation, but it was empty this time. Well, except for the killer, I guess.” All things considered, he would’ve rather had raiders.
“Didn’t see anyone following me there, but whoever did this would’ve needed access to Enclave information anyway. They could’ve intercepted my orders somehow—I don’t know the exact schedule they keep me on, but it has to be written down somewhere. Everything is.”
no subject
-On schedule, see who placed orders.
-Check out activities of wife.
-Figure out why it's okay for this guy to kill people and why he's allowed near public figures while having this problem.
-Also why he's a private and placed near public figures.
He tucks the tablet to the side, keeping the questions hidden for now. "You're not wrong. The fucking bureaucracy pit is a mile deep. I'm sure we'll find something. But it's my guess that if someone knew how to check or set your schedule, they know a few slight of hand tricks with paperwork."
But he's sure he can figure it out. People slip up talking all the time. Even the very best.
"So tell me, could someone be wanting to get you in trouble? Didn't give a fuck about DePleur. Just wanted you out of the way."
no subject
“Besides, my superiors already know I couldn’t have done this alone.” Good dogs don’t bite their owners. “If someone with access to that information wanted me out of the way, they would’ve just decommissioned me right then and there. This was about Agent DePleur. Had to be.”
A slight hint of concern passed over his usually blank face. “Wait. Speaking of superiors...they do know about this, right? I was supposed to be back at base by now. I don’t want them to think I deserted.”
no subject
He leans forward, fingers knit together, brow furrowing. "So... you just... do what your told. No questions asked. No evidence because you don't remember it? Am I somewhere close? But only your superiors are supposed to be able to give those orders.
"But none of your superiors would have wanted this guy dead. And you didn't recognize the voice of anyone you knew."
He sucks on the inside of his teeth in thought, clicking a couple of times.
"Could you have been loaned out without your knowledge? Your superiors didn't want to get their hands dirty with somethin' so they just passed it on to someeone else to pass the order onto you?"
no subject
“It wouldn’t be the first time they loaned me out,” he admitted. “I’m only supposed to be used for military operations, but some of my superiors don’t care about that.” They usually limited it to household chores and the occasional underground cage fight, though. Never unauthorized assassination. At least not that he could remember.
“The only reason someone would do that is if they knew I would recognize their voice, right? All that does is make the suspect list longer.” He sighed and shifted his increasingly numb legs into a more comfortable position—the questioning was going nowhere, and it was becoming obvious that he wasn’t either. “Sir, I don’t mean to be disrespectful, but...I’m sure you know more about Agent DePleur than I do. Is there anyone you think could’ve wanted him dead?”
no subject
Some sick things. But he's getting an idea. Maybe the voice'll be the one thing they can use. He taps the desk with his knuckles, gets up, and says, "Wait here. You need a bathroom break, knock on the door. This might take me a little bit."
Hank exits then, goes outside to find Ben in the next room, and takes his notes to compare the two sets. Behavioral and his own list of questions.
"That as freaky for you as it was for me?"
"Hmm." Ben grunts and shrugs. "Remember the time we caught the last mayor and the molerat-"
"Alright, yeah, alright. This is normal compared to that. But, y'know. Still freaky. Who do I talk to if I wanna become a dogwalker?"
"Dogwalker?"
"Yeah, this guy. Keeps describin' himself like an attack dog. I need to take him with me until he hears a voice he recognizes among the suspects. Who do I talk to about that?"
"Can't bring everyone in for a line-up?"
"I don't want these people to know they're suspects. Better to just lead him around, let him sniff. See what he digs up."
"Now you're the one getting creepy with the dog stuff." Ben thumps Hank's arm on the way out, catching words as he leaves.
"It's a good line! I'm a cop. That's the only perk to this work. Terrible lines. Hey.
You didn't answer my question!"
Though within the hour, he'd figured it out. Finally got through to the mayor himself. It's only then that Hank returns, putting a metal nuka-cola lunch pail with a thermos of soup, a baked potato and some cooked meat in it. After all, Abner had been in there a hell of a long time.
"Here. Eat this. Go home. Sleep it off. Meet me here at noon. Got it?"
no subject
"Sorry. Hungry," he panted, wiping his mouth on his arm. The detective's instructions had taken a backseat to his ravenous hunger, but he'd still managed to understand most of them. "I got it, sir. Noon tomorrow?" A curious head tilt. "You're...letting me go? Just like that?"
Apparently he was. Abner carefully got to his feet as soon as he was freed, grimacing at the pins and needles in his legs as he made his way around the table. He paused for a moment at the door, glancing back at the lieutenant before he left the room.
"I want to figure this out as much as you do, sir. I'll see you tomorrow. I promise."
-----
His superiors hadn't been...thrilled...with his new assignment. Still, Abner stood stiffly in front of the police station at noon sharp, sporting a bruise near his good eye and what looked to be a fresh burn mark on the side of his throat. At least they'd given him his jacket back. Minus DePleur's blood, of course.
no subject
Hank rolls up with the nonchalance of a jaded man, not especially caring about being there on time. He comes in, does his job, leaves. He's got a good investigatory history. The fact his success record is so good is what keeps him from being fired. The gold-star citizen status.
But his heart hasn't been in it for a while. Honestly he cares about the DePleur case more for the sake of his family and doesn't give much of a damn about the man himself.
"Hey there," he calls out as he gets closer, squinting at the fresh bruise on his already messy face. "Where'd you get the shiner?" He asks outright.
no subject
“It’s nothing, sir. Won’t get in my way at all,” Abner assured the detective. Not really a lie—he’d gotten off easy, given the circumstances. “What did you need me for today? Any new leads, or did you have something else in mind? I’m up for anything. They’re not even sending me on any more missions until the killer is caught. Apparently I’m a ‘liability‘, whatever that means.”
Took a lot longer than I thought because I felt bad today.
He almost wants to hold the guy in custody for his own protection. He might look into it. After all, if he's a hair-trigger then that's an excuse to keep him under observation, right?
"It means that if you're in close proximity to someone you need to protect and some asshole decides that they need to be dead, then they're in deep shit. So right now as far as I see it, I'm your mission. You keep an ear open. We'll do this case.
"Now, if you don't mind, let's go in. I'll get some water for this hangover and something to eat from the breakroom. I'll check in with the Captain and then we'll fuck off. And then we can fuck off."
He gestures loosely to the station before heading in.
no subject
“Understood, sir. I’m yours until this is over. One other thing, though, if that’s okay.” A deep breath, reminding himself that Anderson seemingly didn’t mind him asking questions. An oddity among superiors.
“What if someone wants you dead? Wouldn’t I be a risk then too?”
no subject
Some things it'll be better, for both their own good, if Abner doesn't know. And hopefully it should be in by tomorrow and nothing happens today. "Besides, I'm tougher than I look. I can stand up to a lot."
Sometimes more than a man with a wavering deathwish would like.
He heads by the breakroom where there's some food for lunch (he completely missed their breakfast run, but he always does). He grabs some of the cooked softshell because, lets be real, the Great Lakes had the best quality Mirelurks. Fight him. And some corn on the cob.
He tosses a pear to Abner because it looks like he'd need it.
"Here. Eat this," he insists. "Grab something else if you want it." Now, to that water so he can start eating away at this fucking ungodly headache. "Did your superiors say anything specific about DePleur or did they just converse with their knuckles and blunt objects?"
no subject
“They didn’t talk much about him,” he said. “Not to me at least. I did hear one of the scientists say they’d need to find a replacement soon.” It wouldn’t be hard—DePleur was ruthless, but he was far from the worst Abner had seen. Or experienced.
Indicating his face again, he added, “They didn’t blame me. They know I couldn’t have done it alone. But I’m not supposed to hurt my superiors. I deserved this. Worse, probably. You know the saying—good dogs don’t bite their owners, right?”
With that, Abner turned his attention to the food, devouring the pear—core included—before cautiously reaching for the mirelurk cakes. Nobody had stopped him yet, so he might as well take advantage of the meals while he could.
no subject
Then he moves the cup away. "I wonder if your superiors ever owned a fuckin' dog. I do. If it bit me, I'd wonder what went wrong that it wanted to."
He finishes stuffing his face and calls out a hello to Chris, buddy buddy with the guy, but that statement is lingering with him. He's had a bad feeling about some of the stuff going on up top. It's been chiselling away at him, that suspicion, but to cling to the last shreds of hope he's not wanted to know.
Maybe he should want to know.
Expendability is one of the issues of this place. It always has been. Hearing it, being reminded of it, is jarring in a way he can't quite identify. But there's a mother and daughter out there that need to find out what happened to their beloved fuckbag of a husband, so he needs to focus on that.
"Alright. Grabbin' my pack and then we're headin' out." He heads for a stretch of lockers to grab his goods, undoing the old school lock binding it shut (pre-war, scrounged early on) and pulls out a vest and a military pack that he puts on his back.
"We're talking to the wife and daughter first. We're not telling them that you're the killer. You're just my assistant on the case. Got it?"
being an adult with a job sucks shit, don’t do it
No, he couldn’t think about that. Not now.
“Your assistant?” he said quickly, jumping on the chance to change the subject. “I’m not trained for police work, but I’ll do my best to be useful, sir. Are these clothes okay, though?” He looked down at his uniform, green fatigues with the Enclave’s insignia stitched proudly on the chest. Not exactly fit for a police officer. “I don’t want people to recognize me. Especially if they’re involved in this whole thing. I’ll be decommissioned for sure if there’s another unauthorized murder.”
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
did this instead of working on my resume lmao
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)