InnocentThorns
Bad decisions are kind of my thing.
"Could you stop grinning? It's freaking me out."
Maggie glanced at her reflection in the compact she was holding, "I didn't realize."
"The hell you didn't," Malcolm replied, glancing at her from the driver's seat of the van marked 'Caruther's Bros. Cleaning' on the side.
She let out a huff of a laugh and opened a tube of crimson red lipstick, applying it carefully.
"Maybe."
"Maybe for once you could look a little serious about this," he groused. "You are breaking into a heavily guarded military facility."
"Just like I've done a million times before."
Malcolm snorted, "I swear you like this."
"Of course I like it. I might go as far as it brings me joy, Malcolm."
"That's twisted, Maggie."
"Is it?" Maggie asked, her light tone gone.
"Yeah, kinda."
After a moment she just shrugged and opened the passenger side door, slipping out. Running shoes crunched against the old gravel access road where they were parked, and she looked back up at Malcolm wordlessly. He knew what to do if she was not back in a half hour, or forty five minutes, tops, as he put it. But the thought of being abandoned never bothered her.
"You look like a clandestine secretary on laundry day."
"You say the most flattering things. Well, see you in a bit."
Maggie took off at a job, knowing the was not wrong. The vibrant red lipstick did not go with the dark gray yoga pants, the navy blue t-shirt, or the black zippered hooded sweatshirt. But it did go with the neat bun into which she had gathered her chestnut hair, and then daintily wrapped it with a black satin bow. Nothing went with the tight ballistics gloves she was wearing though.
When she got further down the road, trees thinning and the road easing into pavement, she pulled the hood up over her hair. Looming before her was a massive, heavy gate of metal, barbed wire at the top. There were surveillance cameras at the top of the support poles, and in the relative silence of the unofficial back door, she could hear the mechanical whir of them spotting her.
Experience took over, and she lowered her head, avoiding direct contact. Se knew the second she destroyed those cameras, she would be found out, but it stuck with her, all she had been forced to learn. At least this way, something kind of good came from that whole mess. Those cameras would be the first to go, though.
White gold energy crackled around her gloved hands, and Maggie let loose enough electrified plasma to not only shut the cameras down, but melt their insides and knock out most of the camera network. Eyes in the sky out of way, the gate was up next. Her pale green eyes went up and down the length of it, trying to decide how to get rid of it.
In the end, she just tore through it first by freezing the metal with a layer of silver blue supercold plasma and then shattering it with the regular violet plasma she produced. Walking through the convenient hole she made, Maggie recalled the schematics of the base that she had memorized, and headed to the right.
The first batch of soldiers she came across never had a chance. They were wearing government-issued superhuman handling gear, but she was in a destructive mood. They opened fire, only to have bullets ricocheted back at them. Her plasma made a good shield, semi-permeable so that oxygen could get inside, and kept any of them from hitting her.
Once they had exhausted their first round of clips, she moved, plasma grabbing soldiers, tossing them around like dolls, though they hit the ground hard enough that none of them got up again. Certain they were all down and not at all caring that some of their necks were at gruesomely absurd angles, Maggie continued on until she came to the main building she was searching for.
"Magnolia Vartan! You are under arrest! Lie down on the ground and place your hands by your head!"
The sound of guns being cocked was deafening. Maggie turned from where she had been freezing the wall and lifted her hands on either side of her head. Another group of soldiers had made a semicircle around her, guns at the ready. Her focus found the commanding officer and she smiled.
"Really? You know who I am just by what I've done? That's...actually kind of cool."
For that reason along was why she did not kill him. The others were casualties of her snap judgment, and bullets that hit her sudden plasma shield dropped to the ground harmless before she just allowed electrified plasma to jump from gun to gun, stopping their hearts. They were alone then, her and the commander, and he dropped his gun in surrender.
"Please. I have a family."
Her amused smile disappeared into something cold and unreadable, "That makes you special now? Gives you the right to help them force people into service?"
The commander could tell there was no real right answer here, so he kept silent. Maggie trapped him in a dome of plasma, and unlike her own shields, this was not microscopically semi-permeable. He immediately began to gasp for air.
"The correct answer is no," she said with an eerie calm. "No, you don't have the right."
After he gasped and clawed at the plasma a moment or two more, she let him go, watching him drop, still alive, before she tore her way into the facility. From there, it was a point of getting to the detention wing. Leaving a trail of soldiers behind her, she ignored the wailing sirens and glanced at the security screens.
There was someone in the cells, just as the intel had told them. Going to his door, she froze the hinges and tore them off, the door falling off to the outside. Walking over it, she stepped inside and pulled back her hood. She held out a hand to the occupant of the room, aware that she probably looked exactly like what she was. A terrorist.
"Want to get out of here?"
Maggie glanced at her reflection in the compact she was holding, "I didn't realize."
"The hell you didn't," Malcolm replied, glancing at her from the driver's seat of the van marked 'Caruther's Bros. Cleaning' on the side.
She let out a huff of a laugh and opened a tube of crimson red lipstick, applying it carefully.
"Maybe."
"Maybe for once you could look a little serious about this," he groused. "You are breaking into a heavily guarded military facility."
"Just like I've done a million times before."
Malcolm snorted, "I swear you like this."
"Of course I like it. I might go as far as it brings me joy, Malcolm."
"That's twisted, Maggie."
"Is it?" Maggie asked, her light tone gone.
"Yeah, kinda."
After a moment she just shrugged and opened the passenger side door, slipping out. Running shoes crunched against the old gravel access road where they were parked, and she looked back up at Malcolm wordlessly. He knew what to do if she was not back in a half hour, or forty five minutes, tops, as he put it. But the thought of being abandoned never bothered her.
"You look like a clandestine secretary on laundry day."
"You say the most flattering things. Well, see you in a bit."
Maggie took off at a job, knowing the was not wrong. The vibrant red lipstick did not go with the dark gray yoga pants, the navy blue t-shirt, or the black zippered hooded sweatshirt. But it did go with the neat bun into which she had gathered her chestnut hair, and then daintily wrapped it with a black satin bow. Nothing went with the tight ballistics gloves she was wearing though.
When she got further down the road, trees thinning and the road easing into pavement, she pulled the hood up over her hair. Looming before her was a massive, heavy gate of metal, barbed wire at the top. There were surveillance cameras at the top of the support poles, and in the relative silence of the unofficial back door, she could hear the mechanical whir of them spotting her.
Experience took over, and she lowered her head, avoiding direct contact. Se knew the second she destroyed those cameras, she would be found out, but it stuck with her, all she had been forced to learn. At least this way, something kind of good came from that whole mess. Those cameras would be the first to go, though.
White gold energy crackled around her gloved hands, and Maggie let loose enough electrified plasma to not only shut the cameras down, but melt their insides and knock out most of the camera network. Eyes in the sky out of way, the gate was up next. Her pale green eyes went up and down the length of it, trying to decide how to get rid of it.
In the end, she just tore through it first by freezing the metal with a layer of silver blue supercold plasma and then shattering it with the regular violet plasma she produced. Walking through the convenient hole she made, Maggie recalled the schematics of the base that she had memorized, and headed to the right.
The first batch of soldiers she came across never had a chance. They were wearing government-issued superhuman handling gear, but she was in a destructive mood. They opened fire, only to have bullets ricocheted back at them. Her plasma made a good shield, semi-permeable so that oxygen could get inside, and kept any of them from hitting her.
Once they had exhausted their first round of clips, she moved, plasma grabbing soldiers, tossing them around like dolls, though they hit the ground hard enough that none of them got up again. Certain they were all down and not at all caring that some of their necks were at gruesomely absurd angles, Maggie continued on until she came to the main building she was searching for.
"Magnolia Vartan! You are under arrest! Lie down on the ground and place your hands by your head!"
The sound of guns being cocked was deafening. Maggie turned from where she had been freezing the wall and lifted her hands on either side of her head. Another group of soldiers had made a semicircle around her, guns at the ready. Her focus found the commanding officer and she smiled.
"Really? You know who I am just by what I've done? That's...actually kind of cool."
For that reason along was why she did not kill him. The others were casualties of her snap judgment, and bullets that hit her sudden plasma shield dropped to the ground harmless before she just allowed electrified plasma to jump from gun to gun, stopping their hearts. They were alone then, her and the commander, and he dropped his gun in surrender.
"Please. I have a family."
Her amused smile disappeared into something cold and unreadable, "That makes you special now? Gives you the right to help them force people into service?"
The commander could tell there was no real right answer here, so he kept silent. Maggie trapped him in a dome of plasma, and unlike her own shields, this was not microscopically semi-permeable. He immediately began to gasp for air.
"The correct answer is no," she said with an eerie calm. "No, you don't have the right."
After he gasped and clawed at the plasma a moment or two more, she let him go, watching him drop, still alive, before she tore her way into the facility. From there, it was a point of getting to the detention wing. Leaving a trail of soldiers behind her, she ignored the wailing sirens and glanced at the security screens.
There was someone in the cells, just as the intel had told them. Going to his door, she froze the hinges and tore them off, the door falling off to the outside. Walking over it, she stepped inside and pulled back her hood. She held out a hand to the occupant of the room, aware that she probably looked exactly like what she was. A terrorist.
"Want to get out of here?"