pugsmuggler (
pugsmuggler) wrote in
circle72012-03-02 03:12 pm
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Intermediate Communication Studies 202
The Eldabaran Gracia campus was as industrial as its students, overwhelmingly modern, with sweeping hallways gilded in glossy white and textured aluminum, doorways shaped from frothy blue glass, and ceilings the arced up like a whale’s ribcage. Eldabaran Gracia was not a school of excessive grandiose, but it was a school of considerable wealth. It had to be. Being a reputable school of technology and science among a galaxy full of competitors required up-to-date resources and tools. Of course, Eldabaran’s far-reaching range of technological equipment were not for play, and enrolled students became increasingly aware of this their first year — several dropped out within the first semester. Everything was focused, clinical, and serious, and newcomers certainly couldn’t help but notice how remarkably clean everything was, from the pale-washed walls to the reflective, slick floors.
Calibri would have noticed on that particular day, that the halls weren’t, as they normally were, populated with students poring over notes last minute or having conversations about recent test results. The halls were instead quite empty. Class 318-C, Intermediate Biochemical Pharmacology and Toxicology, was similarly empty. A class that normally hosted around 50 students (give or take) now hosted lines of empty desks and unused lab equipment. Down the stadium steps of the classroom and sitting with his feet propped up on center desk in front of the projector screen was Garamond, reclining back in the professor’s chair with a small glass of brandy. He smiled when Calibri came through the doorway.
“Good to see you again,” Garamond said. “It’s been what? Two years? How old are you now?”
Calibri would have noticed on that particular day, that the halls weren’t, as they normally were, populated with students poring over notes last minute or having conversations about recent test results. The halls were instead quite empty. Class 318-C, Intermediate Biochemical Pharmacology and Toxicology, was similarly empty. A class that normally hosted around 50 students (give or take) now hosted lines of empty desks and unused lab equipment. Down the stadium steps of the classroom and sitting with his feet propped up on center desk in front of the projector screen was Garamond, reclining back in the professor’s chair with a small glass of brandy. He smiled when Calibri came through the doorway.
“Good to see you again,” Garamond said. “It’s been what? Two years? How old are you now?”

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Finishing off what was left in his drink, Garamond dropped it off on a tray carried by one of the waitstaff. He led Calibri to a few faces he thought the boy might have better luck with, and he did for the most part, although all his interactions fell slightly short of tact and any kind of emotion. It wasn't long before another waiter came by and offered Garamond a drink, pointing out that a man at the leftmost corner of the room had sent it to him.
Garamond narrowed his eyes, not recognizing the man in the corner, but exchanged a thankful not to the waitstaff as he walked off. Garamond glanced down at the drink. "Huh."
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Calibri, who specialized in mixtures of this exact sort, did what any person in his shoes would naturally do - putting a hand against the bottom of the flute and without even taking it out of Garamond's fingers, he tipped the glass to the side and took a sip.
"Don't drink that," he said, after both swallowing and swilling it around in his mouth once or twice. "It's..." What was that word they always used on campus? "...Spiked."
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"With poison," Calibri clarified.
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Under normal circumstances, Calibri’s grip wouldn’t have stopped Garamond. After all, he could easily lift the boy off of the ground with that arm, but there was something about the stiff-handed urgency that caused Garamond to reel back from the drink and pay attention to Calibri. He’d almost spilt it. A lucky break that he didn’t, given the price of his suit (although one wondered exactly how hard it would be for Garamond to replace something like that).
“Poisoned?” Garamond echoed in question, and a silence seemed to chill the space around them, a few party guests looking on with worried or disbelieving faces.
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Immediate danger apparently avoided, Calibri nodded and let go of Garamond's sleeve. "Technically, it's only a mild drug that will cause paralysis an hour or two after ingestion, but it has been known to leave permanent damage in the neural synapses. So yes, categorically speaking, a poison."
Was this a test?
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His glance tore through the crowd looking for the man he’d spotted just moment ago, but to no avail. The man had disappeared into the sea of guests. The crowd stilled, and there was a soft rumble of voices as nearby guests began to speak about what had just transpired, questioning if it was safe to drink the punch, or remarking that Garamond’s student was just making a scene. The buzz of whispers continued for a moment, expanding even beyond the small circle of observers around Calibri and Garamond.
And then there was the clap of a gunshot.
Everyone scattered.
The clap sounded again. Twice. Garamond couldn’t gather the time look for its source before he was forced to move with the wave of the crowd. People were tumbling over one another to get to the door. He dropped the glass and took Calibri to his shoulder, his back shelling the student from the direction of the fire. “Change of plans,” Garamond said, sweeping Calibri forward towards the door. “We’re getting you back to school.”
Test or not, it seemed the party was over.
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What a waste.
He would have been more surprised at the turn of events if he were less aware of the nature of his sponsors supposed businesses, or if he were less aware of the nature of human beings in general. They seemed so eager to get rid of each other all the time anyway. The only thing that struck him now, though, was the sheer chaos that the three gunshots had caused and how easily it reduced the stuffy posturing of the guests to frantic sprinting and tripping over their eight-inch heels.
What a mess.
"Security?" he prompted, looking up at Garamond when he could spare the moment. "You should call security."
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Garamond, with some space to himself, unbuttoned his coat and unsheathed a gun that had been concealed away in a holster beneath it.
"Hurry and head back, take the stairs," Garamond ordered. "You’ll be followed if I go with you."
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"What are your chances of survival in this situation with the current known parameters?"
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“Judging by what you said he’s not out to kill me right away, but I could be wrong,” Garamond’s glance turned to Calibri. “You didn’t drink enough of that stuff to down you, did you?”
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Suddenly, he stopped.
This wing looked familiar - these drab walls and these scuffed tiles. This was one of the ceremonial buildings that was technically off-campus, but laid so close to the area that they were often considered an extension of Eldabaran Gracia properties anyway. It was not uncommon for such buildings to be appropriated by the school as extra classrooms when classes became too large, and often they were connected to the other buildings via sky-bridges or underground passageways, like the true university establishments. That could only mean...
Instead of heading towards the door, he darted back to the stairs and slipped into the basement before breaking into a run.
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"Couldn't have picked a better time to show up, could you?" Garamond mumbled out.
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It hit the ground with a dull thump and shattered, releasing a sudden yellowish mist into the air, the liquid inside whatever container he had thrown turning into gas as soon as it hit oxygen after being jostled so violently. Almost immediately afterward, strangled coughing and slightly-panicked swearing echoed from the end of the event space.
"It won't kill them," said Calibri, ducking back under the highest stair and peeking over it like a small animal. He did have his own life to watch over, after all. "The supply closet in the Chemistry wing didn't have the right tools to create something fatal."
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Before he could say anything else, a stray shot flying out of the doorway caused Garamond to duck. The tear gas had ballooned throughout the space of the square room, and Garamond, keeping his gun trained on the two men, used the distraction to back up to the staircase where Calibri was crouched down in hiding. He would have made a break for it then, but the gas didn’t seem enough to keep his pursuers at bay.
One of the men came clambering through the doorway. He was a mess, sputtering and coughing, but he could still somehow gather his energy enough to aim his weapon towards the staircase. Garamond’s aim was quicker, however, and unhindered by the gas. He ended up shooting the man right between the eyes before the pursuer could even line his shaky hand up with his target. The man collapsed on the ground, limp and bleeding.
“If anyone asks you didn’t see that,” Garamond flashed a quick smile. “Purely self-defense anyway, no cause for alarm.”
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"I did leave," Calibri pointed out, scooting down a few stairs more. If his calculations were correct, either the remaining man would be too objective-driven to give up and just make an angry, panicked charge at Garamond, or he would turn tail and run for his life, the latter of which was the more intelligent option, although Calibri placed little faith on that being the most probable one. Even on Krellida, there was an absurd amount of blind loyalty between members of a sentient species.
How odd.
"He's coming," he informed Garamond shortly, before retreating to the lower flight of stairs, out of range and out of sight. Just on cue, the last man burst through the yellow haze, gun trained on nothing at all considering he couldn't see, and charged towards the stairs.
Meanwhile, Calibri undid the annoying cuff buttons on his dress shirt. These terrible human customs.
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The man discharged a shot from his firearm at no one in particular. The ricochet of the bullet caused Garamond to crouch defensively. Even kneeling down on the stairs, Garamond could still pick out a good shot. He fired, an the second man came down like heavy lumber. Garamond picked himself up and, covering his face partially with his handkerchief, made his way over to the bodies.
He searched them, eventually recovering some identification. They were carrying some contraband as well, which Garamond also pocketed. With everything he needed in tow, he headed back to the staircase, pulling out his communicator and sending out a message to take care of the bodies. He removed his handkerchief, wiping his eyes once to rid massage out the slight burn of the gas.
"Unless there's someone I'm forgetting, I think we're done here."
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Then, "Does this happen often?"
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"What were they after, that they would chase you all the way out here?" he asked, just as the sounds of confused shouting and the drumming of many footsteps began to echo down the hall. No one had alerted the security, but no doubt what remained of the staff on campus had caught wind of the chaotic situation by now. Of course, they were too late to catch the action, albeit they were just in time to cause more trouble should they catch Calibri and Garamond idling around on the first floor with weapons in their hands, dressed in suits for a conference that was probably not well-advertised, given its clientele.
Without waiting for Garamond's command, Calibri ducked back towards the underground tunnels that led to the other parts of campus. If possible, he would rather just avoid a mess altogether.
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"Not sure what they’re after,” Garamond said. “Information, most likely."
He turned to Calibri.
"You're pretty calm for a kid that just saw two men die."
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And then, because the body was nothing if not traitorous, the rest of his limbs finally decided that they had had enough and that the poison he had ingested would take effect right now, he suddenly tripped over his own feet and crumpled to his knees.
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"You OK, kid?" He asked, pulling Calibri into a straightened stance. "Didn't take a hit back there, did you?"
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