ext_146728 (
tunafish.livejournal.com) wrote in
circle72010-10-20 04:05 pm
Garamond and Calibri Playdate :D
“I had a feeling I’d find you here,” Garamond was careful to close the door behind him as he made his way into the lab. He knew Calibri wasn’t fond of disturbances. “Hope you’re not busy. We need to get packed and going in an hour or so.”
Garamond sauntered up to the second-in-command’s working desk, carrying a brochure and a couple of tickets. He laid them out on the desk over Calibri’s notes, as if intentionally trying to deflect the other man from his work. The brochure advertised a convention for bioinformatics and other scientific ventures. “Here,” he said, pointing to the image of some strange, aquatic creature on the cover – an invertebrate from the looks of it, possibly a Cephalopod. “You wanted to see this, didn’t you?”
Garamond sauntered up to the second-in-command’s working desk, carrying a brochure and a couple of tickets. He laid them out on the desk over Calibri’s notes, as if intentionally trying to deflect the other man from his work. The brochure advertised a convention for bioinformatics and other scientific ventures. “Here,” he said, pointing to the image of some strange, aquatic creature on the cover – an invertebrate from the looks of it, possibly a Cephalopod. “You wanted to see this, didn’t you?”

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He snapped his goggles up onto his forehead, picking up one of the tickets. The price, of course, was no concern to such high-ranking members of Circle Seven, but their organization didn't really deal in academic studies other than, perhaps, the physics of Getting Rid Of People, and the idea that Garamond knew about such an event was kind of puzzling to begin with, even for a logical person such as the poisons expert. Hence, upon lifting his eyes over the edge of the small sheet of paper, Calibri asked the most logical question that came to his mind right after. "...Is there someone attending this that we are going to take care of?"
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“Well, never mind that," Garamond interjected himself, recalling the tickets back up into his hand and depositing them into his left coat pocket. "Go on and get your things sorted out, Calibri. Our reservation time was an hour ago, we’ve got to get moving.”
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The protest was more protocol than not - it wasn't as if Calibri was going to turn this opportunity down. Garamond had him pinned - he really had been trying to make enough room in his schedule to attend the convention. He could almost consider this an order. That gave him the perfect excuse. The boss had ordered it.
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In a little over an hour, the two arrived at their destination. Although a good two hours late for their reservation, they were let in without any trouble. Garamond seemed to command an aura of authority even over the convention staff – men who would have had no reason to be concerned or familiar with his name and background.
The convention was held in a dome a top a large, flat carrier ship. The floor area was exceedingly large, separated into neat squares by lights and red rope, each section displaying a presentation of some strange discovery or some a technological marvel that would help further the field. The halls were filled with professors and scientists, people that shared an interest in the field. Garamond felt rather out of place. After all, these weren’t the kind of people he typically affiliated with, but some of the sights were amusing all the same.
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The convention hall was a maze. There were rows of stalls and lines of rows, stretching seemingly endlessly from the grand, spacious hall. Every few paces, there was a large, column-like tank, extending from the high ceiling to the ground, where a specimen of aquatic life was swimming listlessly about, probably bored of being contained in such a tight space, but used to captivity by now. Some tanks were filled with clear water, some blue, some green, and some even a deep, blood red. Some tanks were nearly pitch-black, and these held the most interesting displays. Even from a distance, the occasional glow of the tank's inhabitants flared bright like fireworks in the night sky.
Calibri tugged on Garamond's shoulder. Unlike the other man, he didn't seem at all overwhelmed by the volume of information and people here. In fact, he almost looked excited (if only his range of facial expressions could show as much). "Boss. This way. There's a talk about to start on the biological leg structure of the Centennial Marocatan Septopod."
...What?
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Garamond was not a man who was well acquainted with scientific jargon. Unfortunately for him, the event offered no alternative for the layman. Walking past booths with titles like Quadroplanary Ectofibriac Sphere and Benthic Cephalopoda Ocular Organogenesis was a little more than overwhelming for someone who had simply volunteered as a tag along. Granted, being about specialized interests, there was an expectation that only those with specialized knowledge would be attracted to the event — and that was reflected by the fact that Garamond stood out like a sore thumb amidst the hoards of sleepy-eyed, awkwardly composed scientist types.
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Calibri, on the other hand, didn't even attract a second glance.
"Marocatan Septopod," the younger man corrected, finally stopping in front of a pair of heavy-looking double doors. The only indication that this was the right one was a number printed on the surface, a plain "9" in stenciled-white paint that probably corresponded to some map that they had passed near the entrance. Where and how Calibri had managed to pick out the location from such a fleeting glance was hard to say, but at the very least, they had found it. Placing one hand on the handle (no skin showing, covered with his sleeve), Calibri pushed into the room.
It was dark. The presentation had already started, and at the bottom of the lecture-like space, yet another eccentric old man with frazzled hair was talking and gesturing wildly about his topic of choice. Everyone else seemed to be paying rapt attention. Quietly and with painful politeness, as always, Calibri dragged the both of them into the nearest seats. In his element, he obviously had no qualms about treating the Boss this way, or maybe, in his excitement, he had simply forgotten the protocols involved with the person he was dealing with.
Nevertheless, it was obvious that he was happy. Not much of the emotion showed on his face, but it was doubtful that anyone in the organization had ever seen Calibri move quite so quickly before, even if he was naturally efficient. It took all types, perhaps.
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“So,” He turned to Calibri with a whisper. “What’s this guy talking about anyway?”
A few of the nearest seated members of the audience glared at him.
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Letting his hand fall, Calibri cupped it over his own mouth instead as he leaned to the side to say very quietly, "I apologize, Boss, but there are protocols to be followed here, as well. The lecturer, Professor Stitzbald," he clarified, "Is reporting his findings on a rare breed of invertebrate that was recently found on a gaseous planet at the farthest reaches of the known galactic system. It's quite a find, you'll have to agree." He nodded, as if confirming this to himself.
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He shifted back into his seat once Calibri was done explaining, his glance now shifting impatiently between the speaker and the crowd. Eventually, the drone of the professor was tuned out, and his boredom fell over him like a heavy blanket.
Minutes into the presentation, there was a small weight against Calibri’s shoulder. Garamond, having fallen asleep with his arms crossed, had fallen into Calibri’s side.
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"Bo-mmph!"
Very promptly, he leaned his head away. It took only a split second after that for him to realize the state they were in, and judging from the muffled amusement from their previously-irritated neighbors, it hadn't taken them much longer to notice either. With a dip in his brow being the only evidence of his long-suffering mentality, Calibri thought for a second before deciding that there was really no subtler way to do this. He shrugged the offended shoulder very slightly, barely enough to stir the other man, and cleared his throat. "...Boss. Boss, the lecture is finished. Please wake up."
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As it was, he just froze until he comprehended the situation, which only took a second at most, and, ignoring the curious glances of the people passing around them as they left the auditorium, placed a hand on Garamond's face. At first, he hit it lightly, alternating between pats on the cheek and shaking the man's shoulders, before, with an impatient huff, Calibri all but slapped his superior with a resounding crack.
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Still nested in Calibri’s lap, he curled his hands over the offended spot on his head, turning to glance up at Calibri with and indignant scowl.
“What the hell was that for?!”
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“So it’s over already, huh?” He yawned out.
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Most of the others had already left the scene, probably hurrying onto the next lecture of interest. Even the lecturer himself had long since collected his heaping pile of notes and wandered out the stage door, leaving the two of them in an evacuated auditorium, the lights on but low, set to a dim. To his credit, then, Calibri raised a hand to Garamond's face, feeling around the area of injury. The cloth of his sleeve separated his hand from making skin contact, but that was probably for the better - the mottled fingers were probably better off unseen.
Upon letting it drop, Calibri nodded. "It finished a few minutes ago. I don't dare say that you were enthralled by the exposition." And that made one wonder. Tilting his head back up, Calibri frowned. "How and why did you obtain the tickets, Boss? You are clearly no fan of this study."
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“Threats, blackmail,” Garamond answered, flat-toned. “You know, the usual.”
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“This event’s funded in part by a big name school,” The mob boss explained as he lifted Calibri by the wrist. “We’ve done a lot of ‘favors’ for that school, you could say, so it just kind of worked out in my favor.”
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