It’s hard, sometimes, to be a Turk. People
don’t understand us. They see a bunch of elite professionals in
suits, with weapons, who do Shinra’s dirty work. We’re people
too. But I guess there must be something different about us,
knowing about the things we go through. Our lives are different.
I suppose a regular person gets up in the morning, goes to work,
and makes little, mediocre decisions about the little things
that happen outside the Shinra building, then goes home. Work
happens with a familiar regularity, for civilians.
For Turks, work is in spurts and lulls and is
all the time, because we’re always on call. When Shinra says
jump, we ask how high, and all that. Work happens based on
whether or not there are terrorists in Gongaga, or a hostage
taking in Mideel, or riots in Sector 4. Our decisions affect our
colleagues, our friends. The people we live and work with. A
choice I make can change whether or not someone important to me
lives or dies. Having to make choices like that can make you
want to step back and really think about your career.
I talked to Tseng about all this. He suggested
that maybe I should write my thoughts down. He told me that it
helps some Turks to put their experiences down on paper, where
they’re tangible. So much of what we do is done in secret,
without the public knowing. It helps to have a record, so at
least someone will remember. Well, this is my record. I don’t
know how much it’s going to help me, but I might as well try.
Maybe I should put down a bit about myself,
first. My name is Rosalind Kramer. I grew up in the slums of
Midgar. I’m twenty-three years old and I just graduated from the
Turks Academy. I entered at nineteen with firearms as my primary
and Materia Technology as my secondary specialty. I have light
blonde hair and green eyes, I’m five-six and I weigh one hundred
and twenty pounds (give or take). I’m trained in several forms
of unarmed combat, and I’ve entered the Turks at a level that
will help me optimize my career for promotion to squad leader.
I started my first day on the job the same way
all Turks start: patrolling Sector 8. Every Turk starts their
career by patrolling Sector 8. Sector 8 is a relatively calm,
quiet sector. The only thing that makes it stand out, really, is
the newest Mako Reactor. However, regardless of how unlikely it
was that anything was going to happen, I was on patrol. It
wasn’t likely anything of any significance was going to happen,
but it was tradition. Tseng assured me of this when he called me
outside the gates of the Sector.
“It’s company tradition, Rosalind. Reno
started out here. I started out here. Senior Commander Veld
started out here. I remember it, clear as day, and so will you.
You never forget your first mission, so treat it with respect
and make it a good one. It may not seem like anything important,
but you must learn to treat all of your assignments as though
they are top priority.”
I really admire Tseng. He’s calm and
levelheaded, and he treats all of us new recruits with respect,
even though he’s second-class and we’re only fifth or sixth. He
has ethics and morals that are almost above what most people
expect from the Turks. He truly believes in doing every job to
the fullest, be it a standard patrol or guarding the President
himself.
“Roger, sir. Leave Sector 8 to me,” I
answered. I’ve been taught that you always treat your superiors
with respect. They’re your superiors for a reason.
“Have you got any Materia, Rosalind?” Tseng
asked. “I can review a few basic techniques for you, if you’d
like. It’s important to always be prepared for whatever might
come your way.”
“Thank you, sir, but I think I’m fine.” Even
considering how much Tseng respects us recruits; he sometimes
forgets that some of us have spent all our time in the Academy
handling Materia.
Tseng was silent for a few moments before he
answered. “All right, Rosalind. Be careful and good luck.”
I thanked Tseng again and hung up. I put my
PHS away and started out on patrol. It felt really good to be
doing my job. All my training was kicking in and I walked down
the streets on full alert. Even though this was a small time
mission, I finally felt like I really was a part of the action.
I’ve dreamed about being a Turk for years. I knew as soon as I
got out of reform school that it was what I wanted to do.
Nothing is more important to me than being the best Turk I can
be.
Tseng said that you never forget your first
mission. Something always happens to make it special for you. My
first mission was maybe a little more special than most Turks’,
because of what happened when I came around the corner.
I don’t know what it was about them, but I
guess it was instinct that made me duck back into an alley.
There were two men standing in the street, talking. They looked
rough, were dressed in old camouflage fatigues, and they both
carried weapons. They were only knives, but I pulled out one of
my revolvers anyway.
The first one spoke and what he said startled
me. “At last, we’re drawing nearer to the day of Shinra’s
downfall. Don’t let this get messed up.”
“Down with Shinra!” the other one answered,
saluting.
Immediately, I thought of dropping back, out
of earshot, and calling Tseng to report this. There was a pair
of men openly speaking of the downfall of Shinra. Now, that
alone wouldn’t have been a threat, but the fact that they were
obviously militant made me suspicious.
Apparently I didn’t act quite quickly enough
though, because my PHS rang. I almost froze up as the two looked
right at me. “Uh oh…” I murmured, backing up just a bit.
“Who’s that!?” The first one had his knife out
before he even recognized me as a Turk.
The second one’s knife was out almost as
quickly, but he knew who I was. “That uniform…that’s a Turk!”
I was a little frightened, but the adrenaline
in my veins was already making me bold. “What are you talking
about?” I demanded.
“You overheard our plans!” the first man
accused, brandishing his knife. “That’s not good for you, girl;
we’re going to have to get rid of you!”
Then they jumped me. You always see in the
movies how the tiny little heroine easily fends off her
attackers with some obscure kind of martial arts and doesn’t
even break a sweat, but it doesn’t work like that in real life.
I’m a small person. I don’t weigh all that much and even if it’s
mostly muscle, I’m not going to try and take on two guys with
knives (who each look like they weigh more than two of me) with
only my fists.
So I shot them. Once each, in the throat,
clean kills. They didn’t suffer. And they weren’t my first. I
cried, the first time, back when I was still a trainee. I don’t
cry anymore, but it still makes me feel cold all over to watch
someone die.
My PHS was still ringing by the time it was
over. It hadn’t taken long, but when I answered, Tseng still
sounded a little worried. “Rosalind, are you all right?”
He sounded kind of panicked actually. I guess
having a new operative in the field would make him nervous. “I’m
all right, sir. I just encountered some hostiles. They have been
dispatched.”
“Hostiles? In Sector 8?” Tseng asked
incredulously. “Who were they, Rosalind? Thieves?”
I shook my head, even though Tseng wasn’t
around. “No, sir. They looked militant. They said something like
‘Down with Shinra’ and spoke of the company’s downfall. It
seemed like they were plotting something.”
“Down with Shinra…” Tseng echoed distantly,
like he was thinking about something else. “We need to know
more,” he said abruptly. “This could be nothing, but it might be
something important. I think you should see if you can find any
more of these men. I’m going to report to Commander Veld. I’ll
be in touch soon.”
“Yes, sir.”
As soon as I hung up I switched my phone to
vibration mode. I was angry with myself for making such a rookie
mistake. I should’ve known better. I would be more careful from
then on.
I moved on down the streets, on the alert.
Just one attack is enough to get the blood rushing through your
veins and now I was jumping at every shadow, my revolver in one
hand, and the palm of my other hand on the handle of my
automatic. It might not sound very exciting to stalk through the
streets of Midgar, looking for enemies, but it really and truly
is. There’s such a feeling of exhilaration combined with
something that would be terror, if you weren’t a Turk who isn’t
supposed to get scared about these kinds of things.
I cut through a back alley and reached a main
road. It was clear, but I got a distinct feeling that I was on
the right track. My PHS rang, or rather, vibrated. “Rosalind,” I
answered crisply, knowing it was Tseng.
“Track down and capture any more of the men
you see. We’re sending crews to collect the bodies of the two
you dispatched. As well, you’ll be getting support. Good luck,
Rosalind.”
“Yes, sir.”
Now I had orders. I hung up and ran through
the streets. I wasn’t patrolling anymore. I was hunting. I ran
quickly and quietly, staying in the shadows. There are a lot of
shadows in Midgar at dusk. It wasn’t long before I heard voices
around a corner.
There were two of them again, both in faded
khakis, but this time with guns. They looked like machine guns;
cheap knockoffs of Shinra models, but still effective.
“I’m going to take the front. You stay to take
the rear.” The voice was authoritative, commanding. It sounded
ex-military to me. I shuddered.
“Oh, man, I don’t wanna take the rear. Why
can’t you stay here and I go on ahead?” This second voice was
whiny and sounded anxious. And young. If these were rebels, they
were from varied backgrounds.
“You have a machine gun. You’ll be fine.”
So they did have machine guns. And the older
one was confident. I wasn’t happy about this. Two men with
automatic machine guns who I wasn’t supposed to kill.
“But that’s not fair! Why can’t we stay
together?”
“Because I’m the one who knows our orders and
our orders are to split up! Stay here, I outrank you.”
The best I could hope for at this point was to
tranquilize them.
“But that’s not fair! Just tell me what to do
and I’ll go on ahead…”
I crouched in the darkness and started to
assemble a collapsible dart gun from the inside of my jacket,
still listening to their conversation.
“We’re in charge of securing this route. I’m
going to go on ahead, you stay here or I’ll report you.”
I wasn’t about to take on them both at once. I
waited until the older man had moved up the street, out of sight
and earshot, before I took out the young man. He never saw it
coming. He might’ve heard it, the faint hissing as the dart left
the pneumatic barrel, but he was down before it made any
difference.
Then there were shouts from behind me. “Shinra
traitor!” and “You’re not getting out of here alive!”
There were two more of them. I can’t
understand why they shouted. I had turned around before they had
even drawn their weapons. They may have been militant, but I
don’t think many of them were very well-trained. The first was
down before he was within ten yards of me and the second fell
shortly after, still fumbling with his weapon.
Then the phone rang. I had no idea that I
would receive so many calls during a mission, but I suppose this
one was important all of a sudden. Of course, it was Tseng.
“Rosalind, what’s your status?”
“I’ve taken down three of them, sir. All
tranquilized no major damage.”
“What kind of tranquilizer are you using?”
I glanced at my gun and the label of the dart.
“Curare, sir.”
“Hmm. If you think of it, could you use to a
multi-party Sleep Materia? Curare tends to be a little dangerous
and we don’t want any of these men damaged.”
I holstered my weapon and took out a greenish
blue gem, slipping it into an armlet around my wrist; a Sleep
materia. I put in another gem, Lightning, just to be safe. “Will
do, sir. If I may say, sir, they may be well organized, but they
aren’t well trained. They’re…with a few exceptions, amateurs.”
“Really? But they are coordinating attack
movements? Interesting…I have to report this. There are more
agents moving in and gathering information as we speak. Your
support should be there soon. Hang in there, Rosalind. I know it
seems tough, but you’re doing splendidly. I think you entered
this company with a bit of a low rank. If this goes well, I
might put you in for a promotion.”
“Th-thank you, sir!” I couldn’t believe that.
From sixth class to fifth in just one day! I felt lightheaded;
it was such a wonderful thought.
The ranking system of the Turks is a series of
seven levels. When Turks come out of the Academy, they’re
assigned a rank based on the abilities they’ve demonstrated. I
had graduated at level six, the lowest possible, because seventh
is only there as a buffer for demotions. A sixth-class entrance
into the company was about average, fifth-class was relatively
decent, fourth-class was impressive, and third-class was
uncanny, but not unheard of. In any case, a promotion this early
would be wonderful.
“Who are you people?” I demanded, once I’d
hung up my phone, walking over to the one who was still
conscious and crouching down beside him. “What are your
motives?” I felt a brief surge of guilt; he wasn’t much older
than me. He had dusty brown hair and grey eyes, and he was
barely conscious. “What do you hope to accomplish?”
“As if I’d ever tell you, Shinra,” he gasped,
glaring at me. “AVALANCHE has their reasons.” I’ve never looked
at someone and seen hatred like I saw in this young man’s eyes.
It was upsetting. I’m a good guy, one of Shinra’s finest. He was
the bad guy, and I was only doing my job.
“What have the Shinra ever done?” I asked,
grabbing his shoulders.
He stared at me like I was crazy, then he went
limp. Curare is a fairly fast-acting toxin, but he’d been
fighting it. I let him go and got up, moving on. I wanted to get
after the young man’s partner; the one I thought had been in the
military. He sounded like he might have some information for me.
So I kept running, towards the reactor, where
the other man had gone. “AVALANCHE.” Who were they? Terrorists?
I had a frightening thought. They were headed towards the
reactor; what if they intended to do something to it? Mako is a
safe power source, when handled by professionals. In the wrong
hands, it’s an unstable and dangerous weapon. Massive
destruction would follow, if these people reached the reactor.
I forced the thought from my mind. It was
unthinkable. If they tried to damage the reactor, hundreds would
die. They could destroy the entire sector. It was beyond my
understanding. They could have no possible motive for killing so
many innocent people.
I was angry, when I caught up with the
military man. I wanted to attack him with my bare hands, never
mind my weapon. He saw me coming and he saw I was unarmed, so he
put away his machine gun and smiled at me. He wanted to fight
just as much as I did.
I stopped about five yards from him. It was
suddenly silent in the streets and I could feel the tension in
the air. I hated this man. I have no other explanation but the
adrenaline. We stood there for a few moments, hating each other.
Apparently he had a reason. I didn’t. I just hated him.
“You aren’t getting past me, Shinra.”
“Who are you?” I asked him. My hands were
clenched at my sides, but I was ready. I could see him flexing,
tensing up to attack. He was bigger than me, but older and
slower. I was confident I could take him.
“It doesn’t matter. This is the end for
Shinra.”
He lunged at me, hands outstretched. I
wouldn’t have been able to avoid him if he’d charged me, but I
managed to duck under his grasp and kick him in the stomach. He
was definitely older and slower. When he’d doubled over from the
blow to his midriff, I slammed my elbow down on the back of his
neck and he crumpled to the ground. I might’ve killed him. I
don’t know, because I ran on.
The Mako reactors are huge, steel buildings
that tower up above the sectors, supplying power to the
surrounding area. They’re a marvel of technology and they should
be treated with the utmost respect. Each reactor is surrounded
by a ten-foot high concrete wall and can only be accessed
through certain gates, from a vehicle with special security
clearance.
By the time I reached the reactor entrance, I
was breathing hard. I ducked into one of the passageways near
the entrance to get my breath, then froze as I heard people
approaching.
There were three of them, all in the motley
uniform I was starting to get accustomed to. One of them carried
a large package on his back and was apparently the leader.
“All right! The path to the reactor is clear
and we have people guarding the way. I’ll go start to place the
explosives.”
My knees started to shake at that point. There
were explosives. I couldn’t believe it. I sank down in the
little alleyway I was hiding in and did everything I could not
to be sick. They were seriously going to try and destroy the
reactor. Thousands would die.
Mako isn’t like regular electrical power. The
pipes that carry Mako energy to the houses of Midgar are spread
out through the entirety of their respective sectors. Mako is an
efficient energy source because it transfers and intensifies any
kind of energy inputted into it. The smallest jostle to one of
the right pipes in the reactor can cause a slight power surge.
The energy generated by an explosion would be carried through
the pipes at a hundred times its normal force. The threat to
Sector 8 was very, very real.
The leader was doing something with his pack,
setting up the necessary charges. I really felt sick and
frightened for the first time since the mission had started.
Thousands would die, and I would be one of them.
The explosion came soon after. Or it felt like
it, at least. It must have been at least two minutes before the
charges were set, but it seemed to fly by. When I looked out
again, they had cleared out and a red light was flashing by the
entrance. I could distinguish between the ringing of the alarm
and the ringing in my ears. I ducked back just in time as the
explosion came. I felt the heat and the streetlamps flickered
above me, but as the dust cleared, the world was still again.
I peered around the corner. Two AVALANCHE
members came to stand guard in front of the door while the rest
swarmed in.
My PHS rang. As usual, I knew it was Tseng,
but this time I was panicked when I answered it. “Tseng! They’re
going to blow up the reactor! Oh, Tseng, it’s all my fault…I
shouldn’t have let them get this far. I should’ve gone around
and cut them off before they reached the reactor. Tseng, what do
I do?”
I was ashamed of myself as soon as I’d said
it. I was panicking. Like a common soldier with shell shock. I
felt like a child. I was trained to be immune to this, but here
I was, sitting in the streets, on the very verge of breaking
down crying. I’d even forgot to call Tseng by his proper title.
“Rosalind, calm down. We know of the
situation. This is important, Rosalind. Normally, they wouldn’t
be able to breach the reactors inner defenses, but they’ve
chosen the gate that leads to the underground access tunnels.”
“I…I’m sorry…”
“Don’t worry, Rosalind. It’s not your fault.
You have to listen to me. They do intend to blow up the reactor.
You must stop them at all costs. There will be thousands of
deaths if you don’t.”
“R-roger.” This must sound crazy, but I felt
better to have orders. Tseng has a very calming effect on
people. An objective is a very reassuring thing to have and it
was exactly what I needed.
I stepped out of the alley and drew my
weapons. “You there! Step away from the reactor gates!” I
ordered, striding towards the two AVALANCHE guards, covering
both of them.
They attacked me. They had only knives, again,
with foot long blades, but it was a frightening fight
nonetheless. I panicked slightly and let off a few shots that
didn’t find their marks, and earned myself a cut on the
shoulder, but I took both of them down.
I heard footsteps behind me, and more yelling,
and I whirled around almost before I knew what I was shooting
at. I took down one with a lucky shot, and then managed to bring
the other two down after that, finishing the ammo in both my
weapons. But not nearly as quickly as I should have. I was
scared. Three had almost been too many for me and I was sure
there were more coming.
I was right. There were six of them and they
came at me from all sides. It was like with the military man,
they kind of hung back and they all put away their weapons, like
they wanted to get their hands on me and tear me apart.
“A Turk, hey? Not even you can take care of
six of us at once, Shinra,” one of them snarled at me.
I had backed myself up against a wall, and I’d
frozen up. I was too scared even to try and reload my guns. I
thought for sure they were going to come and kill me. Suddenly,
I felt a strange kind of acceptance of this and I braced myself
to take down as many of them as I could if I had to go. “If I
have to die, I’m bringing as many of you as I can with me!” I
shouted in a final challenge.
“Get her!”
I’m not entirely sure what happened next, but
I suddenly had company. A shadow flew over my head and someone
landed in front of me in a blazing flare of electricity. The air
hummed and crackled and the AVALANCHE members scrambled back as
two of their number, the one who’d yelled and another, suddenly
fell on the ground, twitching and sparking.
“Hiya, rookie! Man, I wish my first mission
had been as exciting as this. Goddamn boring Sector 8. You’re
gonna make history, kid, y’know that?”
It was Reno. I’d met him once before, at my
inauguration. But I really can’t count that because when I say
“met” I mean “saw” and when I say “saw” it’s as in “saw him
passed out beneath one of the beds in the barracks from an
overabundance of ‘celebrating.’” I’m not sure he knew I was one
of his subordinates. I’m not even sure he knows he has
subordinates.
Reno is quite tall, compared to me, and he’s
very thin. But good looking all the same and only two years
older. He’s got long, wild, red hair he wears in a ponytail but
what he doesn’t tie back is always sticking up because he
handles an electrostatic weapon. He’s also…I don’t really know
how to describe it, but he’s always moving. If he’s walking,
he’s also swinging his arms or rolling his shoulders or twirling
his nightstick. If he’s standing in one spot, he’s rocking back
and forth on the balls of his feet or bouncing up and down. If
he’s sitting, he’s fidgeting. If you talk to him, not even his
eyes stay still. Apparently he sleepwalks, too, but I wouldn’t
know anything about that.
“R-Reno, sir! I…I thought you had other
orders,” I stammered. I was very flustered to have a third-class
Turk as my support. I had been hoping for someone a little
closer to my own rank.
“Oh, hell. Orders change, rookie. ‘Sides, I
was in the neighborhood and I heard all the shooting. Now, let’s
move things along, I’ve got a hot date tonight.”
The AVALANCHE members who had scattered with
Reno’s arrival were back and there were two more of them. “We’ll
kill the both of you, Shinra!”
I remembered the materia I had and before
anyone could do anything I’d blasted three of them with white
hot electricity. Reno took advantage of this to make a move on
the other three.
“You’re not bad, rookie!” he informed me
cheerfully, electrocuting one of the men. “There’re a lot of
these bastards. Keep the materia handy. Easier than taking ‘em
one at a time.”
“R-right, sir,” I stammered.
“Well, I’m going to go clear out the others
coming from the west.” Reno waved his nightstick off to my left,
sounding like he was referring to a trip to the grocery store.
“You stay here and take care of any others that come your way.
I’ll be back, rookie. Try not to miss me too much.”
And then he was gone. I know I run fast, for a
Turk, but I’ve got nothing on Reno. It must be because he’s so
thin and there isn’t much of him to move from one place to
another. Probably one of the most agile operatives we have.
More AVALANCHE members came, in ones and twos.
They tried to attack, but I think the sight of their comrades
laying dead in front of the gate probably unnerved them. I took
them out with my dart gun. I didn’t feel like killing any more
of them if I didn’t have to. When they’d stopped coming, I went
after Reno.
I caught up to him as he finished off a man
with a bandana and a pair of brass knuckles on each hand.
“All done!” Reno announced, turning around and
grinning at me. “What’d you say your name was? Rebecca?
Rosanne?”
“I d-didn’t and it’s R-Rosalind, sir.”
“Don’t call me sir, Rebecca.” Reno squinted at
me, shouldering his nightstick. “And stop stammering. C’mon,
let’s get back to the reactor.”
For a few moments I wished I had someone else
as my superior. Reno was breaking all the rules I knew about how
to treat those who command me. “That’s where they’re headed,
s-sir…Mister…Agent…”
“It sure seems like it, doesn’t it, Ramona?”
Reno informed me patiently, walking briskly back to the reactor.
“And it’s Reno.”
“Uh…Rosalind.”
Reno stopped and gave me a strange look. I
found it very humiliating that he could look at me like I was
crazy, given the way he acts. “No, sweetie. I’m Reno, but you
can call me whatever the hell you want, I guess. I’m going to
call you ‘rookie’, okay? It’s easier.”
“Y-yes, sir.”
“Don’t call me…” Reno trailed off and grinned
as we reached the reactor gate. “All right. Whatever the hell
you want. You go on ahead, rookie. Only so many went in there,
right? I’ll hold any more who come, then I’ll catch up with
you.”
I aimed over his shoulder at an AVALANCHE
member coming up the alleyway and shot him. Reno whirled around
and fired a blast of electricity from his own weapon, taking out
the other two who had followed. Then he gave me a shove towards
the reactor.
“Get going, rookie. You’re stealing my thunder
and I’d like to get at least a little bit of the glory coming
out of this mission.”
“How like you, Reno,” a dry voice commented.
A young man came out of the shadows. He wore
standard brown khaki, like most of the other AVALANCHE members,
except a little lighter and the only camouflage he was wearing
was a bandana. He looked older than me, but not much older than
Reno. He had dark hair and eyes, and would’ve been kind of
handsome if he didn’t look so murderous.
I entered the gate, but I stopped to watch
before I went down. I couldn’t help it. Even if he was crazy, it
didn’t take much to get attached to Reno and I was worried about
him already.
“Who the hell are you?” Reno asked the
newcomer, arching an eyebrow curiously.
The stranger ignored the question and looked
around at his fallen comrades. “You’ve made short work of my
men. I hadn’t expected you would be here, Reno. Though, you are
the fastest of the Turks. If anyone was going to get here first,
it would be you.”
It was hard to tell, but I think I could sense
a little tension in Reno’s manner, because he stopped moving. He
held still and stared at his opponent, sizing him up. “You seem
to know a few things about me,” he remarked casually.
The man shrugged. “It’s common sense. Know thy
enemy. Basic battle strategy. Whatever speed you lay claim to;
you’re not nearly as…quick as I am.”
I sensed something behind this, a strange kind
of insult I didn’t understand. Reno’s grip tightened on his
weapon, but he remained nonchalant. “I’ll let that pass. Know
thy enemy, huh? Well, let’s get acquainted then, shall we?”
The man smiled. “Certainly. My name is Shears,
and I believe I shall kill you. It will be a pleasure.”
I started to climb back up the ladder I’d
started down, but a glance from Reno stopped me. “Go, rookie,”
he ordered tersely.
“B-but…”
“I’ve got this guy,” Reno assured me, dropping
into a catlike stance and starting to circle Shears.
“Oh, we won’t know until we test that out, now
will we?” Shears asked, raising his fists and flexing powerful
muscles.
“Be careful, sir…” I called, climbing down the
ladder. If he answered, I didn’t hear him as I splashed down
into ankle deep water. The lights were out in the normally
bright tunnels beneath the reactors, making them dark and
confusing. This was probably to hinder the AVALANCHE members and
unless one has taken courses on how to navigate them, it’s easy
to get lost. I was running through the passages within minutes,
intent on getting to the reactor core.
Every once in a while I’d run into an
AVALANCHE flunky, but I took them out with tranquilizers before
any could raise the alarm. I was soaked up to my waist from
splashing through the water, but all I could think about was my
objective. It had dawned on me once again that thousands would
die if I didn’t reach the reactor and prevent the setting of
this bomb.
I came to the control room. I kicked the door
down and fired my last tranquilizer dart at the man standing
guard. He was down before he even felt it. But he wasn’t my
objective.
There was a man crouched in front of the core
base, located underneath the actual reactor. He was wiring and
arming a small bundle of what looked like dynamite. Not much,
but definitely more than enough. Weaponless, I leapt at him. I
was acting on purely feral instincts. I grabbed him by the back
of his jacket and dragged him away from the bomb.
“No!” he yelled. “We’re so…close…”
I slammed him against the wall, hard, until he
went limp. Then I dropped him. I stood in silence for a while.
And then I sat down on the floor and started crying. The reality
of the whole thing came crashing down on me. I crawled over to
the bomb and tore it apart, throwing its components into the
water.
After I’d calmed down, I wiped my face off,
and tried to clean myself up a bit, because I realized Reno was
going to be coming soon and I couldn’t look like I’d been
crying. When I was sure I’d gotten to the point where I could
speak normally, I pulled out my PHS and called Tseng.
“Rosalind? What’s your status?”
“I…I’ve stopped the bomb, sir,” I reported.
“Excellent, Rosalind! I knew I could count on
you. I promise you a promotion at least. You’ve averted a very
major crisis, and the city thanks you for it. Report back to HQ
with Reno.”
“Yes, sir.” I snapped my phone shut and looked
around. Reno hadn’t come after all. In the back of my mind, I
was worried about this, but I dismissed it. Some ragtag
AVALANCHE member couldn’t possibly be too much for a third-class
Turk. But I hurried through the tunnels anyway.
When I climbed out of the tunnel, I saw that
I’d come out into a very bad situation, and that a third-class
Turk apparently isn’t a match for this particular member of
AVALANCHE.
Shears had pinned Reno up against the inside
of the wall surrounding the Mako reactor and was pounding a fist
against his open palm teasingly. Reno’s nightstick was abandoned
a few feet away and I could see he was in a bit of trouble.
Evidently Shears had been toying with him.
Reno spotted me before Shears did and made a
final lunge at his opponent, launching a roundhouse kick that
made the AVALANCHE member stumble back momentarily. “Get outta
here, rookie,” he ordered, gasping a little. “This guy is
trouble.”
“You’re finished, Turk,” Shears growled,
regaining purchase and retaliating with a solid punch to Reno’s
chest, sending him stumbling back against the wall, and then to
the ground.
“Sir!” I almost climbed back down into the
tunnel when he didn’t move. I stopped, though, and climbed back
out, straightening up and glaring at Shears. I circled left,
towards Reno, and Shears let me, allowing me to get the wall at
my back so he’d have the advantage.
“He was all talk. And he couldn’t even live up
to that,” Shears scoffed mockingly, as I crouched down and
touched Reno’s chest to ensure he wasn’t dead. My hand came away
bloody and I looked up to see strands of barbed wire wrapped
around Shears’ thickly gloved hands. I winced, but I knew for
sure now that I couldn’t flee. There was no way I would leave a
live comrade at the mercy of someone like Shears. “You’re next.”
Unlike the others, Shears didn’t jump me. He
waited for me to discard my weapons and move a respectable
distance away from Reno, before he let out an outraged bellow
and charged me.
It was the hardest fight I’d had in my whole
career, which, although rather short, still hadn’t prepared me
for Shears. He was fast. My preference is to take down
fist-fighters from a distance with a gun. I fought as best as I
could, but my training in hand-to-hand combat is limited and it
was all I could do to hold him off. And the only reason I think
I managed even that was because he was worn out from fighting
Reno. I had lost none of the respect I had for Reno as a
superior, even if he had lost. Shears was tough.
I managed to get in a lucky blow and sent
Shears staggering back, clutching a bleeding nose. “So you’ve
got some meager skill,” he sneered, wiping the blood from his
face and glaring at me. “But I’m through playing. I’ll make you
wish you’d never heard of Shinra, girl!”
He kicked me once, hard, in the stomach and I
almost felt myself lift off the ground. I hit the wall and fell
down, landing hard on my knees and throwing my hands out to keep
myself from falling on my face. I knew then and there that I was
beaten. It’s the feeling you get that no matter how hard you
try, you can’t get up. I felt like that, but I wasn’t sure
whether Shears would kill me or capture me. I almost hoped for
the former, because I wasn’t sure I could hold up under the
torture that was sure to follow if he captured me.
I was spared the answer to this question, as
another AVALANCHE flunky came running up. “Mr. Shears, sir!
Fuhito wants us to report to Junon!”
“Damn…” Shears murmured, glancing at me. I
felt a chill run down my spine. He’d really been looking forward
to finishing me off. He turned to his subordinate. “Finish these
two.”
“M-me, sir?” the messenger stammered.
“B-but…they’re Turks…”
“They’re just about played out. The blonde
will give you no trouble, but you may want to wake the thin one
before you kill him. Just so he knows.”
I was chilled. These people were inhuman. How
could they hate us so much? We’d never done anything to them. I
saw my chance, as Shears ran off. There was a discarded handgun
a few feet away from me. I glanced at the AVALANCHE goon. All he
had was a knife and apparently he was a little reluctant to use
it. He looked over at me and I cringed and cowered in fear,
hoping to add to his squeamishness.
It worked, because he turned around once he
saw I wasn’t going anywhere and crouched down next to Reno. I
suppose he figured that it would be easier to kill someone who
was already incapacitated. I almost thought I saw Reno move, a
little, but he didn’t react when the AVALANCHE member shook him,
so I guess I imagined it.
“Hey! Hey, Shinra, wake up!”
While the man was distracted, I lay down on my
stomach and stretched my hand out towards the gun. It was out of
my reach by about a foot and I didn’t want to risk too much
movement that would attract the AVALANCHE member. But I still
had to move fast, because he was going to be killing my superior
in very short order.
I heard Reno groan and I knew then it was now
or never. I pushed myself forward and grabbed the gun, and sat
up. I fired three times at the AVALANCHE member, who had touched
the blade of his knife to my superior’s throat, and hit him
twice in the chest and once in the head. He was down in a pool
of blood before he’d even turned around.
Reno sat up and touched his hand to the cut on
the side of his neck. “You know, rookie, there’s such a thing as
cutting it a little too close.”
“I…I’m sorry, sir.” I was ashamed. I should’ve
acted sooner.
Reno seemed to sense my embarrassment and
waved it away. “Hey, no problem. Thank you, rookie. I owe you
one, okay?”
I felt a little better. I don’t think Reno was
mad at me. I don’t think Reno is even very capable of getting
mad at people. “Are you all right, sir?”
“Been better, been worse, gonna be all right.”
Reno got up and winced a little, stretching. “What about you,
rookie?”
“I’m fine, sir. Tseng says we’re to report
back to HQ.”
Reno suddenly looked dismayed. “All the way
back to HQ? Man, I just came from there!”
“B-but, sir…it’s our orders…” I stammered.
Reno waved a hand dismissively and picked up
his nightstick. “Hush, rookie. C’mon. We’re going to go find a
ride.”
It really made me nervous to be subverting an
order like this. When Tseng said get to HQ, I assumed it meant
to drop whatever I was doing and go straight to headquarters.
Reno apparently didn’t understand this. “I…I don’t know, sir. I
think I’ll walk.”
“Rookie,” Reno began, turning to me patiently.
“You’re not doing anything wrong. We are going back to HQ. We’re
going as fast as possible. But the fastest way to get there
isn’t always the straightest path. It’s the shortest distance,
maybe, but not the quickest route. Trust me, rookie. I outrank
you for a reason.”
“A-all right, sir.”
“Good! C’mon, now, there are more of our
people back near the entrance of the sector. We’ll hook up with
some transport there.”
I followed him through Sector 8. He didn’t
take the main roads; he wove through whatever alleys he could
find. And he chattered the whole time. I had never casually
conversed with one of my superiors, so I don’t know what I was
expecting, but certainly not a stream of inane babble about
whatever came into his head. I was flustered. I honestly didn’t
know how to talk to him.
We caught up with a flatbed truck that was
taking agents back to HQ and climbed on. Reno climbed up on the
roof and leaned over the side, sticking his head into the cab.
“Hello, Ernie!” he greeted the driver cheerfully.
“Heya, Reno. You look a little roughed up,”
the truck driver observed, grinning. “You all right?”
“Oh, I’m fine. Is that Loretta in the
passenger seat?”
Loretta is a second class Turk. She’s one of
the best there is and one of my heroes. She’s tall and strong
and she doesn’t take nonsense from anybody. I assumed she was
here to coordinate the gathering of the AVALANCHE terrorists
we’d taken down. I wondered how she’d deal with Reno, who had
changed sides and was now looking into the passenger window.
“Hi, Loretta.” Reno beamed at the young woman
and winked. “If I told you, you have a nice body…”
“I’d break your fucking neck,” Loretta
finished calmly, with the barest hint of a smile. “Same as last
week.”
“Oh. All right, just checking. Thanks,
Loretta.” Reno sat back up on top of the roof of the cab and
beckoned to me. “Come up here, rookie.”
“Uh…if it’s all right with you, sir, I’ll stay
down here,” I mumbled, keeping my eyes down and huddling in the
corner of the truck box.
“Rookie, come up,” Reno said firmly, thumping
a hand on the roof of the truck. “That was an order.”
I climbed up. I can’t disobey a direct order,
even if it comes from somebody who seems crazy.
“I’m going to marry Loretta,” he informed me
pleasantly, loud enough that I was sure the woman in the cab
could here. “I’m going to marry Loretta, and then we’re going to
run away together and make love three times a day and six times
at night!” He almost shouted that last part.
I blushed. It was very unsettling to have one
of my superiors speaking about one of his superiors like that.
“S-sir…”
“What do you think about that, rookie?” Reno
questioned.
“I…I…does she even like you, sir?”
Reno blinked. “Of course, she likes me.
Everybody likes me.” He looked at the rest of the Turks, who
were riding in the bed of the truck. I suddenly realized we had
an audience and I blushed even more. “Everyone here who likes me
raise their hands!”
Every hand in the bed of the truck went up and
I could see most of them were smiling.
“Don’t you like me, rookie?” Reno appealed
childishly.
“Uh…of course, I like you, sir…”
“How much do you like me?”
“As much as I’m supposed to, sir.” I squirmed
away to the other side of the cab roof. I did like Reno, but he
made me very, very nervous.
“Do you like me enough to…”
The truck suddenly jerked to a halt. I was
sitting with my legs over the back of the cab, so I swayed a
little but kept my seat. Reno had his long legs pulled up to his
chest and fell off the front of the cab onto the hood of the
truck.
“Leave the rookie alone, Reno,” I heard
Loretta order from inside the truck, amidst poorly muffled bouts
of laughter from the rest of the Turks. “Unless you want to go
ass over teakettle off the front of the truck again -- and next
time we’ll keep driving.”
Reno scrambled back onto the roof of the
truck, grinning broadly. I don’t think anything gets him down.
“Loretta gets jealous,” he informed me, winking. “Loretta is the
moon and the stars and the sun to me. I just have to remind her
from time to time that I’m the same for her.”
“S-sir…could you please stop talking to me? I
really don’t know what to say,” I pleaded, covering my flaming
cheeks with my hands.
Reno seemed slightly taken aback by this and
maybe even a little confused. “Wait right there, rookie.” He
leaned over the side of the truck again and grabbed one of the
side mirrors, snapping it off and sitting back up. Holding it up
and rubbing off some of the mud that caked it with his sleeve,
he passed it to me. “Whaddaya see, rookie?”
“I…I see myself,” I answered, bewildered.
“There’s a reflection, then? You’re not some
soulless undead creature with no mind of your own?”
“N-no, sir.”
“Oh. Well, then what is it?”
I was confused. Maybe I would ask Tseng for a
transfer when I got back to HQ. I didn’t think I could handle
being commanded by someone as crazy as Reno. “What is what,
sir?”
“Why don’t you like me?”
“I do like you, sir…but…I don’t know how to
talk to you. You treat me like…like…an equal. I’m your
subordinate.”
Reno held still for about ten seconds and
looked at me. Really hard, the same way he’d looked at Shears.
“You know, rookie, I’m going to tell you something,” he said
finally.
“What, sir?”
“You are my first subordinate. I’ve never
commanded anybody before. There are fourth and fifth class Turks
out there who’re commanding squads of five or six people. I’m
third class, and you’re the first person Shinra’s let me
command. My partner manages a couple other new recruits, but I’m
in charge of you. And I haven’t a hot clue what I’m supposed to
do with you.”
“O-oh…” If this was supposed to reassure me,
it didn’t.
Reno sighed. “Jesus, rookie, quit looking at
me like I’ve grown another head. I’m just trying to say that
we’re on the same base here. I don’t know how to deal with you,
and you don’t know how to deal with me. And I think we’re both
doing it wrong.”
“So what do we do, sir?”
“Let’s try something. I’m trying very hard to
treat you like an equal, and you’re trying very hard to treat me
like a superior. Let’s switch. You treat me how you would if I
was somebody normal and I’ll treat you the way I would if I
considered you my subordinate.”
I squirmed nervously. I didn’t know what he
meant. “Normal, sir?”
“A friend. A colleague, maybe, if friend is
too hard for you. Another sixth class.”
“Uh…all right.” I fell silent for a few
minutes, until I realized Reno expected me to make the first
foray into conversation. “What do I say?” I whispered.
“You could start with, ‘Hello, Reno.’ It works
for most people,” Reno advised, grinning a little.
“H-hello, Reno,” I repeated, feeling a little
stupid.
“Hi, rookie,” he answered patiently. “How are
you feeling?”
“I’m feeling…I feel…really, really stupid,” I
said honestly. I’m not good at talking casually with other
people. I spent all of my high school years at a military
academy and then the rest of my life in the Academy. My father
was a military man and he made me treat him as such. Almost
everyone I’ve known has been either my superior, or my
subordinate.
Reno laughed. “I think that’s a good thing,
rookie. Human emotion. I’m proud of you.”
“I don’t mean to be so difficult, sir. I’m
just…not very good with people.”
“Don’t worry about it.” Reno held out a hand
in a gesture of friendship and I accepted it. He might be crazy,
but I really do like him.
“All right, people, crisis averted! Everyone
still likes me,” Reno announced to the rest of the Turks in the
truck as we turned onto the road leading to the Shinra HQ.
“Shears doesn’t like you,” I remarked.
Reno paused. “No, I suppose he doesn’t,” he
agreed slowly. “I’m not too fussy on him, either, though, so it
doesn’t count.”
“Who were those people? Who is AVALANCHE?” I
asked, hoping Reno might’ve had more information than I did.
“I have no idea, rookie, but I don’t like it.
They know about us. Shears did, at least. He knew about how I
fight, how I act…you could sense it in the way he talked. I need
to talk to Tseng about it.”
“Are we going to report to Tseng?”
Reno nodded, sliding off the roof of the cab
as we pulled into the Shinra parking lot. He offered me a hand
down, but I got down myself. “C’mon, rookie, we’ll take the
elevator.”
I followed him as he headed briskly towards
the front lobby. I was tired. Reno didn’t seem to be, but I was
getting the distinct impression that he had more energy and
stamina than I did. “I’m tired, sir.”
“I know, rookie. I’m not exactly fresh as a
daisy myself. We’re done for the day, though. I’ll handle the
report to Tseng myself, if you like.”
“No, thank you. I need to tell him what I
found out. Shears said they were going to be going to Junon.” I
wasn’t about to pass up the opportunity to talk to Tseng about
my first mission. Weary though I was, I was proud of how well
things had gone. Then the door of the elevator slid open and I
nearly had a heart attack.
Senior Commander Veld stepped out of the
elevator, flanked by two second-class Turks. I snapped to
attention and threw my best salute. Reno straightened up a
little and smiled at the Commander. “Howdy, sir. We’re just on
our way up to report to Tseng.”
“Very good, agent,” Veld answered. His voice
was deep and commanding, but he didn’t seem offended by Reno’s
casual mode of address. “I heard about how well things went
today, Reno. Look for a little something extra in your paycheck
this month.”
“Well, thank you, sir, but it really wasn’t
me.” Reno jerked a thumb in my direction. “She was the agent on
patrol and it was her who defused the bomb, not me. I just hung
around and got my ass kicked by some AVALANCHE goon.”
As much as I liked Reno, I could’ve killed him
right then and there. Commander Veld turned to me and smiled.
“Ah, yes. Rosalind, our newest recruit. Brilliant work today,
agent. I’ll be handling your promotion personally.”
My knees were shaking. I felt like I was going
to be sick. I was talking to Commander Veld. “Th-th-thank you,
s-sir…” I stammered faintly.
“Mmm.” Veld returned his attention to Reno,
who was grinning at me like an idiot. “I’m afraid I have some
bad news for you, Reno. We’ve had several reports that AVALANCHE
is moving towards Junon.”
That got Reno’s attention. For the first time
since I’d met him, he looked a little worried. “Yeah, Rosalind
heard that. The President’s in Junon. You think they might try
something?”
Veld nodded. “Right. I want you and your
subordinate here to get on the next flight overseas and protect
President Shinra.”
“Roger, sir. We’ll be out of here in an hour,”
Reno answered dutifully, saluting. I think Veld might be the
only person he treats as a true superior. Even so, he doesn’t
salute very well.
“Good luck, agents. You’ll be further briefed
upon your arrival in Junon.” And then he left.
I stumbled into the elevator and as soon as
the doors slid shut my knees buckled and I broke down crying.
“Hey! Hey, rookie, what’s the matter?” Reno
asked, sounding surprised. “Are you really that tired, rookie?
You don’t have to come to Junon; you’ve done more than enough
for today. I’ll go on my own, if you like…”
“It’s not th-that…”
Reno sat down beside me on the elevator floor
and patted my shoulder a bit awkwardly. “Aww, rookie, quit
crying…what’s the problem?”
“Th-that was Senior Commander Veld…and he knew
my name!” I managed, embarrassed.
“Commander Veld? Well, of course he knew your
name…you’re a Turk! He knows all of us. He only handles the
promotions of the damn good ones, though. Cheer up, rookie…”
The whole thing was very emotional for me.
Commander Veld is the highest-ranking Turk in the Company. I’ve
dreamed of meeting him. He commands all of us, and he’d just
told me personally that he would be handling my promotion. “I’m
just kind of shocked, I guess,” I explained, wiping my nose on
my sleeve. I needed to change into another uniform. I was an
absolute mess.
“Why are you shocked? Commander Veld’s just a
regular guy.”
I stared at Reno. “Regular? H-he’s the
commander. He’s like a celebrity. It was like meeting some kind
of superstar. I adore Commander Veld!”
“You’re weird, rookie,” Reno laughed. “But I
like you. We just need to figure out how exactly to make you
understand that rank isn’t everything.”
“Not to everybody, I guess.”
Reno nodded. “Definitely not to me. I kinda
hope you get a couple more promotions, rookie. I think you’ll be
better at talking once you’ve got some rank on me.”
“Oh, I don’t think that’s going to happen,
sir. You’re a third-class, and I’m only sixth.”
“Fifth. That’s a level in a day. Of course,
getting from sixth to fifth isn’t really that big a
difference…the only real change is in pay. But it still usually
takes recruits a couple months of specialized grunt work. You
did it in a day.”
“It was just luck, sir. Any other sixth class
could’ve been on patrol tonight,” I said modestly, embarrassed.
Reno shook his head. “But not just any sixth
could’ve done what you did tonight. It’s your first day, rookie,
and you saved an entire sector.”
“W-well…you’re still likely to get ahead of
me, sir. You’ll probably be second-class by the time I get my
next promotion. You’re very good, sir.”
Reno grinned, but somehow it didn’t seem very
sincere. Kind of half-hearted. “Well, thank you, rookie. But
it’s a lot more likely for you to pass me than for me to get
promoted to second.”
“Why’s that, sir? Is second-class very hard to
obtain?”
“Rookie, for me, it’s impossible.”
I didn’t understand what he meant. Any
promotion was attainable if one worked for it. “Oh, sir, I’m
sure you’ll get it someday. Does the promotion officer not like
you?
Reno laughed. “I told you, rookie, everybody
likes me. Nah…it’s complicated. Don’t worry about it.”
I might have pressed him for an answer, if the
elevator doors hadn’t opened. It was time to go prepare for our
next mission. I couldn’t believe it. I’d met Commander Veld and
in the same twenty-four hours, I would be meeting the President.
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