Hard Boiled
Heartless Glow In The Dark Fire Breathing Dragon
"You should be glad that only person had to pay the price for the lack of training that cost you this in the first place."
Charlie had no response that could adequately portray his disdain for this man. His comment, followed by the blatant disrespect towards Sybille, flushed almost any chance of further cooperation down the drain, unless it would be for the direct benefit of the fellow Mall dwellers. He only hoisted his bag once again onto his shoulder, and stepped back into the group while the Lieutenant bagged Kat.
He put his hand on Sybille's shoulder, honored that she'd stick up for him and the rest of the group, but reminding her it was futile."Lack of training!?" She took a step forward to the soldier. "I'm sorry, as I recall, you didn't even manage to fire off a single round just now. The DHQS sends only three people to rendezvous with the Mall and the soldier type among you can't even aim his fucking gun in time?" She stopped herself, embarrassed, and stepped back away from the man. "Uh... listen, I-..."
"Time and a place," he patted her with a dull expression that portrayed a clear message: these people are not here for us, do not rely on them. They'd learned that the hard way, and he hoped the rest of the crew got the memo.
Charlie rubbed his hand against his heart as Teddy read a prayer. He was never particularly religious, but once again he appreciated the formalities Ted practiced towards the deceased. Perhaps he wasn't as erratic as he appeared.
There was still a lot for Charlie to process, but over the years, even before the Crash, he'd learned to stow away thoughts to be explored at a later date, a talent he'd been practicing very well recently. Ash and Jordan, however, appeared much more distraught in the moment. He decided against attempting to console them for the moment, they probably wouldn't want to hear what he had to say right now. He didn't even know what he'd say.