[ And she could say what his anger says about the whole question, that it isn't that he used the word in a strange way so much as his reaction was telling. But that's inflammatory, and she's not here for that. ]
And how does it work, exactly? Is it the same song all the time?
Yer a type of copper, aren't you Ms. Anderson? Yer profession before ya came here ta be a warden fer tha bastard. An agent from tha...what was it...all those silly little letters strung together... [He waved a hand dismissively in the air.] Why come here ta play with all tha inmates, lass? Seems a bit of a downgrade. You get tired? Bored? Need ta fix a mistake?
He isn't dead [ she says carefully ] he was Taken. Warped and used by something referred we call the Dark Presence.
Nor is he 'someone'. His name is Jaakko Koskela. He and his brother were the organizers of- [ she pauses ] think of it like a neighborhood watch for the boogeyman. Except, believe it or not, they were effective. They kept the town safe.
Problem being that they did it by calling their little club 'the cult of the tree'. Add cult plus ritualized murders...
[Collins stared at her flatly and blinked once or twice in silence. He looked very unimpressed with her story.]
Cultists are always dumb. [He shook his head without sympathy.] Real ones, fake ones, they always do dumb shite with real consequences. People never learn.
[He cocked his head to one side.] So you caused tha man to end up in tha clutches of some horrible monster and yer cryin' about it, tryin' ta solve it by trustin' another bullshite monster ta fix yer mistake.
[ My favorite part of serial killers: the ego mania. Everyone is stupid but them. Glad to see some things remain true around here.]
Sure.
[ She doesn't look bothered by the judgment. Mostly because the staggering amount of ignorance behind it renders it pointless. He wants to dismiss her, he's not listening already. She gave him a piece of herself and he spat on it.
But she decides to test something, turns the internal radio inside of her up, lets the war drums thrum as a warning. ]
[From the way his head tilted to the opposite side and the shift in his expression, it was obvious the change in the music got his attention. However, it didn't seem to do much as a cautionary notice. He drew closer out of curiosity as if the music were a lure rather than a warning.
He was smiling as he leaned over the table, hands on it to keep him balanced.]
Dangerous prey. Does that make you dangerous, or simply good at trackin'? Do ya like ta go out yerself? Or point and watch tha hounds chase fer ya?
[1930s mindset. Not bothered by either option, doesn't seem to care about that sort of social expectations, but used to women giving directions not being in the field. Aware from time here that later society seemed to get rid of that expectation.]
[ There's a face journey, where at first she's a little insulted, and then she considers the fact that he's clearly from an earlier time. All the same? ]
...well, that just makes ya sound incompetent. [Till she tacked on that second part.] Shoulda just led with tha second part and let tha competency speak fer itself.
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Ya never heard of natural talent bein' called a gift before?
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[ And she could say what his anger says about the whole question, that it isn't that he used the word in a strange way so much as his reaction was telling. But that's inflammatory, and she's not here for that. ]
And how does it work, exactly? Is it the same song all the time?
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[He finished his circle around her.]
You owe me questions fer tha ones you kept askin'.
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[ She has no problem sharing that. She wears the jacket often enough. The second part is harder. But she's keeping her word. ]
I'm here to fix a mistake, save someone who-
Let's just say that if it weren't for me, they wouldn't have been in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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[He made a noise somewhere between a scoff and a laugh. Government officials, Jesus.]
What's tha matter, lass. You leave someone behind ta die? People die every day; it's natural. Everyone here needs ta learn that if ya ask me.
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Nor is he 'someone'. His name is Jaakko Koskela. He and his brother were the organizers of- [ she pauses ] think of it like a neighborhood watch for the boogeyman. Except, believe it or not, they were effective. They kept the town safe.
Problem being that they did it by calling their little club 'the cult of the tree'. Add cult plus ritualized murders...
[ She trusts he can do the math. ]
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Cultists are always dumb. [He shook his head without sympathy.] Real ones, fake ones, they always do dumb shite with real consequences. People never learn.
[He cocked his head to one side.] So you caused tha man to end up in tha clutches of some horrible monster and yer cryin' about it, tryin' ta solve it by trustin' another bullshite monster ta fix yer mistake.
Funny.
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Sure.
[ She doesn't look bothered by the judgment. Mostly because the staggering amount of ignorance behind it renders it pointless. He wants to dismiss her, he's not listening already. She gave him a piece of herself and he spat on it.
But she decides to test something, turns the internal radio inside of her up, lets the war drums thrum as a warning. ]
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He was smiling as he leaned over the table, hands on it to keep him balanced.]
Do you enjoy tha hunt, Agent Anderson?
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I wouldn't do what I do otherwise.
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You can't guess?
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Dangerous prey. Does that make you dangerous, or simply good at trackin'? Do ya like ta go out yerself? Or point and watch tha hounds chase fer ya?
[1930s mindset. Not bothered by either option, doesn't seem to care about that sort of social expectations, but used to women giving directions not being in the field. Aware from time here that later society seemed to get rid of that expectation.]
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My partner is usually the one trailing after me.
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Sounds like you need a quicker partner, lass.
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Not at all. Casey knows what he's doing. We've both got strengths and his is keeping us grounded.
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[Still smiling, still amused.]
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Never.
But we can cover more ground handling different aspects of an investigation.
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Of course. You work together ta finish tha job. Quickly, efficiently, thoroughly.
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We got called in for the cases no one else could crack.
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[Trying to impress someone or not, if clarity was what she wanted that was not quite it.]