ᴊᴜᴅɢᴇ Cassandra Anderson (
wronganswer) wrote in
barrayar2018-09-03 12:27 pm
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Anderson keeps her senses tuned in even as she zip-ties wrists together, mindful that she is extremely vulnerable as the only officer surrounded by a group of burly bare-knuckles cage fighters. Fortunately, so far it seems like her gun is keeping them at bay; Judges are entitled to use lethal force when attacked, just about the only thing that gives them a prayer given the typical numbers of criminals they face. Her mild precognitive abilities and her gun combined tend to give her enough of an edge, but it's not perfect, and she still scans the minds around her as she works, efficiently lining up and reporting perps over her transmitter.
She falters and stops mid-word, then resumes her sentence, speaking into her shoulder mic. "All set, Control," she finishes. "Five for pick-up. I'll stay until transport gets here."
"Understood. Stay safe, Judge."
"Thanks," Anderson answers shortly, cutting the call. She turns at last to the final fighter, the second member of the third match-up, and the only person she hasn't cuffed in the wake of the hastily dispersing crowd. Anderson folds her arms, leveling a gaze at him. He's an intimidating figure, and if she hadn't felt his mind herself at the periphery of her attention, she'd never have guessed he was here for more than blood and guts and money.
"It's not too late to make that six. Tell me why you got caught up in all this, and maybe I won't haul you in." It's a sincere offer. She got a vague sense of him as a person, an unexpected depth of... integrity? Loneliness? Desperation? That last is felt as a keen edge. But she's a mind-reader, not a soothsayer. She doesn't know much more than that, and she can't afford to enforce the law on feelings alone. She needs justification if she's going to let him go.
She falters and stops mid-word, then resumes her sentence, speaking into her shoulder mic. "All set, Control," she finishes. "Five for pick-up. I'll stay until transport gets here."
"Understood. Stay safe, Judge."
"Thanks," Anderson answers shortly, cutting the call. She turns at last to the final fighter, the second member of the third match-up, and the only person she hasn't cuffed in the wake of the hastily dispersing crowd. Anderson folds her arms, leveling a gaze at him. He's an intimidating figure, and if she hadn't felt his mind herself at the periphery of her attention, she'd never have guessed he was here for more than blood and guts and money.
"It's not too late to make that six. Tell me why you got caught up in all this, and maybe I won't haul you in." It's a sincere offer. She got a vague sense of him as a person, an unexpected depth of... integrity? Loneliness? Desperation? That last is felt as a keen edge. But she's a mind-reader, not a soothsayer. She doesn't know much more than that, and she can't afford to enforce the law on feelings alone. She needs justification if she's going to let him go.
no subject
That risk never stopped him from fighting. He went wherever he could for that much needed adrenaline spike, far more visceral than anything a drug or VR could offer him. Majima had been less than thrilled, though, when during downtime between his matches, he discovered that the fighting ring had side businesses. That was hardly unusual, but they weren't selling drugs like old world concessions-- they were putting price tags on the loser's bracket, on ticket scalpers, on anyone squatting in the building upstairs. Sometimes on specific organs.
Then the raid sprang on them not long after Majima started wailing on the organizer in a blind fury. It figures that all of this bluster would end like a fart in the wind.
Then the Judge says five, and unless he lost more brain cells than he realized, he suddenly isn't part of the lineup. Majima narrows his eye at her and flexes his fingers. Blood still cakes his knuckles while bruises start to form there, but he still barely feels it.
"Thought they carved mercy outta your dictionaries years ago," he finally drawls, and his voice is more tired than he expects. What people down on street level did just to survive never got any leniency from the Judges, and he doesn't know why the hell he'd be an exception. "I came here to knock some heads, not sell 'em," he spat. "You oughta be lookin' for the people who organize this damn thing, not the people gettin' tricked into it."
no subject
His accusation isn't far off from the truth on Judges lacking mercy, but Anderson's never been a very good Judge.
"I agree," she says placidly. "I can commute your sentence if you're willing to help me take them down. You up for it?" Probably this a motive that makes more sense than straight mercy, and she's not lying. It's much easier to take down a crime ring if you can flip the small fish and work your way up, and Anderson's style has never been busting heads until the truth falls out. She's not Dredd. She doesn't like leaving collateral damage behind.
no subject
The idea of being a snitch typically made Majima's blood simmer. However, the showrunners here weren't his people, and as much as he did what he had to in order to scrape together cash, they crossed a line. Working with a Judge, of all people, though--
Majima slumps against the closest wall and pulls a cigarette from his pocket. He lights up and takes a long, contemplative drag. He surveys his half torched surroundings, the wrecked cage arena, and the men already in cuffs, some eyeing him with disdain, and others lost in the thoughts of the hole where they're about to spend their next decade or so.
"Why me?"
no subject
She cocks one hip slightly and sets her hand on it, wholly unintimidated. She has the flat affect of a Judge, at least, but it's learned, hard and recent.
"I'm a psychic. You're even unhappier about what they've been doing than I am. I can trust your motivation." Most people in this situation start considering, idly or in earnest, whether they can violently escape rather than deal with her. He isn't. It's interesting, to Anderson, and frankly a bit of a silent relief after how much foulness she sees in the heads of criminals, day in and day out.
As for being psychic-- she's never tried to keep it a secret and she won't start now. Anderson doesn't always declare it, but acting like it's shameful is giving in to the bigotry, and being duplicitous or self-aggrandizing just isn't in her. Psychics are talked about with so much rumor given how rare they are -- and how it's even more rare for them to survive to adulthood, able-bodied and unlynched -- that whatever he's heard is likely to be a jumbled mishmash of who-knows-what. Anderson just is who she is. She doesn't have the patience, if she ever did, for explaining herself to everyone she runs across.
no subject
Of course, he'd heard all the urban legends, all the horror stories, but Majima didn't see the point in ganging up on psychics. They were born that way, probably because of one of the million ways the environment had been completely fucked, and they were just as miserable as everyone else. However, that didn't mean he relished the thought of someone reading his mind. He simply didn't pay psychics any attention, and just sort of hoped they'd return the courtesy.
Just his luck that the first one he's really talked to is a Judge.]
Who's gotta be psychic to figure that out? Tryin' to goddamn auction me--
[Him, and a hundred other people who probably couldn't handle whatever that meant. Majima snorts smoke through his nostrils. She's taking advantage of his anger, and he knows it, but frankly, he doesn't give a shit. He nods to her other arrests with poorly disguised disdain; if she's booking them for something more than fighting for a buck, then good riddance.]
Send them packin', then. I ain't goin' anywhere.
no subject
And she does try to let people keep their minds to themselves unless she has justification otherwise, which means, threat assessment complete, Anderson's senses simmer to a duller, broader awareness of potential threats than active mind-reading. ]
Good, [ she says decisively. ] The truck should be around soon. I'll meet you back here in thirty minutes, and if you're gone, I'm tracking you down and hauling you in.
[ Having a conscience and some empathy doesn't make her a moron. Anderson knows too well how good people can be at lying, and Majima might be as subtle as a brick to the head with his intentions lining up with his words, but in her estimation, that's a rare trait. Her learned caution is self-protective. ]
WOW ALL THAT STYLE SWITCHING my bad
"You're really in the shit now, Goro."
What the hell was he thinking? Who would ever want to talk to him again if they got wind he was a rat for a Judge? Then again, who would find him significant enough to give a shit? And who could say she wasn't going to just toss him in a cell anyway? Majima clambered to his feet and started to pace until he found an abandoned leather jacket to wrap around himself.
By the time the Judge returned, Majima had cracked into some concession beer cans and whittled his cigarette down to the butt.
I figured you were VERY TIRED, hahaha
She comes back out of uniform, in simple jeans and a somewhat tattered black hoodie, her Lawgiver and badge hidden under the overlarge hem at the small of her back. The only thing left of her Judge's attire is the heavy black combat boots, unremarkable enough of her own. Anderson is running her hands through her hair, fluffing it out and tousling it to look messy, as she approaches.
She's pleasantly surprised he didn't run. Anderson really wants to take out these assholes. It's what gets her up in the morning -- putting away criminals who really deserve it.
"Come on, there's better beer than this a block away. I want your story before we go cracking heads." Not that she's going to drink -- she's serious enough about being a Judge, no matter how much she disagrees with the Hall of Justice sometimes, to follow the mandated rule to stay dry and celibate even off-duty -- but she knows how people work.
no subject
"Didn't think you could take all that shit off."
Not that she would want to in this neighborhood, but without a visible badge, she might pass.
"But if it ain't free, it ain't better." Regardless, Majima crushes the empty can in his hand and tosses it over his shoulder. "As long as it doesn't stink like junkies."
He doesn't bother to close his jacket or hide his tattoo-- a bar this deep in the slums wasn't going to have a dress code.
no subject
She feels like she's lying enough as it is.
Shrugging a little, Anderson sets off to lead the way. The crime scene is cleaned up by now, nothing needing to be bagged or tagged with a Judge on the scene, sentencing complete, perps hauled away. It leaves an odd, empty, echoing atmosphere around the ring. "No promises. I've just 'overheard' a lot of people planning on going there."
WOW SORRY THAT TOOK FOREVER
Outside, the smell of ozone mixes with the chill in the air. Majima buries his hands in his pockets and slinks along the dirty sidewalk. He sticks to the right side of the street so he can keep his good eye on the alleys.
"Right. Just milk for you, huh?"
Neon lights splash different colors across them while car engines roar overhead. A squad car siren blends in among them, and Majima looks at Anderson with continued skepticism as they near the bar.
"They really okay with you doin' this?"