Nate Ford (
leveraging) wrote in
dear_mun2015-03-11 05:39 pm
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Voice-testing, homeless, you know the drill...
Look, uh... mundane? I don't know what you're worried about, you've got some experience at this thing.
[ . . . what ]
No, just... run with it for a second, will you? This roleplay you're doing - you're basically just pretending you're someone else, right? And your goal is to... what, compromise people with feelings, emotions, manipulate them like putty in your hand, right?
That's really not that different from what I do. What I did before. Though, to be fair, our kind of roleplaying was far more expansive... and involved... and meant to defraud people who deserve it, but that's beside the point...
[ . . . Nate, Nate. No, I do not want to be compared to you as a conman, okay? This is different. DIFFERENT. ]
My point is, you're worrying about this more than you should be. So just... relax, take a deep breath, straighten yourself out and let me talk. It's not that hard.
And if all else fails... we've got backup plans. Use them.
[ . . . what ]
No, just... run with it for a second, will you? This roleplay you're doing - you're basically just pretending you're someone else, right? And your goal is to... what, compromise people with feelings, emotions, manipulate them like putty in your hand, right?
That's really not that different from what I do. What I did before. Though, to be fair, our kind of roleplaying was far more expansive... and involved... and meant to defraud people who deserve it, but that's beside the point...
[ . . . Nate, Nate. No, I do not want to be compared to you as a conman, okay? This is different. DIFFERENT. ]
My point is, you're worrying about this more than you should be. So just... relax, take a deep breath, straighten yourself out and let me talk. It's not that hard.
And if all else fails... we've got backup plans. Use them.
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[ Forgive him if he sounds stunned, because, well. That was the last thing he was expecting... ]
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[ There's a wistful smile on his face as he recalls the job. ]
. . . you know, my son... he wanted to go there once. Made a promise that I'd take him there on his 13th birthday.
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[She knows that look. She's had that look.]
When did you lose him?
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Eight years old. Diagnosed with a fatal illness... it went terminal, and he died on the operating table. Couldn't afford his treatment since my old employers refused to fund it.
[ He still doesn't particularly like talking about it too much, but at least now that he's had some time to reflect - and screw over his old employers in revenge - he can at least talk about Sam without feeling barely repressed rage on the subject. ]
... he would've been 17 this year.
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My husband would've been 42. We lost him five years ago. Murdered by the brother of a man he helped to put away, when he was walking to get our son from school.
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[ Ouch. Nate knows THAT feel too well - he can't help but laugh a little wryly as he fetches a bottle of scotch. Where did he get it from?
Either way, he pours himself a glass, but gets another one and offers it to her with a sympathetic gesture. ]
Gotta love how the world is, huh? Good people die young, and we're stuck picking up the pieces from the void they leave behind while no one stops the ones responsible...
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[But he gets a polite smile of thanks for the offer anyway.]
Guess that's what I try to do. Even the score as much as I can, though I'm worried I'll be rendered totally ineffective here in a couple of months. I might just retire and take my pension.
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[ There's another sad smile as he raises his glass before downing it in a few gulps. ]
I know how that feels... before I retired, I was involved in helping people suffering from problems caused by people like that. The rich and powerful who were out to screw the common people.
... of course, as someone taking up where the law left off, my methods for doing so weren't exactly on the up-and-up, but... I like to think we did some good in the world regardless.
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[She smiled over at him, before extending her hand. He'll note the engagement ring.]
I'm Karen, anyway, it's nice to meet you.
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[ Nate extends his hand to hers in a handshake - incidentally, he's also got a wedding band around his finger. ]
Yeah... can't begin recalling all of those whom we helped with our... "extra legal aid". It's hard being honest people in a dishonest world; my team and I made sure that it wasn't any harder for them than it had to be.
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[Karen shakes his hand with a small smile.]
Sounds like my kind of people. All I ever wanted to be was a cop, going back to the first grade. I think that's part of why I stay. I would literally have no idea what to do if I left.
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Was going to be a priest, but then that didn't work out. Became an insurance investigator, chased people around the world... then turned around and became a thief and criminal mastermind.
[ Nate shrugs. ]
Got out of the game because I knew my luck would eventually run out. Still, it's... been an interesting few years.
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[Karen's not judging. One of her CI's is a recovering meth addict and dealer, for crying out loud.]
I mean, as long as you're happy that's what matters, right?
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[ Though the mun headcanons that he still gets dragged into cons and other shenanigans despite his best efforts to be retired. ]
Yeah... yeah. Honestly, I feel much happier than I've ever been, after everything that's happened.
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But at the same time I can't shake that feeling like I'm at the end of a chapter and it's closing whether I want it to or not, you know?
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[ Nate pauses for a moment as he stares into his glass. ]
Everyone has those kinds of moments when you're standing at a crossroads like that. Me, by the time I retired I was reconciling three things at once - the man I was, the man who I became and the man that I wanted to be.
Chapters close all the time, but that doesn't mean that it's completely over. That's why it's called a chapter, because the next one's only beginning.
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[She hates to admit this.]
After 20 years there's part of me that hates to just walk away from a career I've loved so much and put so much into.
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But if you still like the work, then... maybe you should go for that, too. Because honestly? You're the one who'll be standing by your decision, and not everyone else.
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But I don't know how to do my job without going all the way. I'm not one of those cops who'd be happy sitting behind a desk or writing traffic tickets.
[She shrugs.]
I have time to figure it out. Seven more months until the baby comes and then maternity leave. My lieutenant's already informed me there's no negotiation on that part.
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Seven months... they fly by faster than you'd realize.
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[She laughs, and shakes her head.]
Kids. Best thing you ever do.
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[ He smiles wistfully again as his mind wanders... ]
Sometimes I wonder... what it'd be like if Sam had survived and recovered from his illness. How differently things could've gone.
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[She nods a little. Thinking of all the things she knows she did wrong after her husband died.]
You keep telling yourself it's not your fault but it takes a long time to sink in.
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