eastern promises {ariel & shae}
“So I’ve heard,” came her reply. An attack on a place like Purgatory would have been constituted as a massacre, but such death tolls are expected when a coup d’état is taking place. Normalcy was beginning to set into the fabric of life on the Citadel once more. But the stress of the war was placed on all the wards, the people who lived on the space station couldn’t ignore it any longer. That ignorantly blissful illusion of peace was shattered, the war was at their doorsteps and broadcasted on every video screen and radio. The coup left its scars on the steel that made up the walls. What secrets they held, the tragedies of executions and sleeper agents scheming their densely packed particles and molecules must hold. What the Lion of God wouldn’t give to pry them out with a crowbar or a laser so she could have the names of traitors who sold their species for coin or protection from terrorists.
The time was right; Ariel sought to capitalize on the Citadel’s new and sudden awareness to the war’s multiple fronts. She saw an opprotunity and she took it for herself, there was power in the information that was being circulated underneath the streams of legal channels of the military and diplomats, even the Shadow Broker. The markets were ripe for the taking. All of the interviews conducted seemed more like interrogations, the cold miasma of the officer’s demeanor meant on suffocating the other party into submission or fear. The pupils of her eyes were like eclipsed suns within a lakes of churning volcanic fire. “I sent you a message because you were recommended to me,“ the woman said, “Information, good information, is worth more than gold during these times. I believe that information belongs with the Alliance Navy and the other militaries fighting the Reapers. I’m here to make you an offer.”
Shae almost smiled. She hadn’t been selling the information she’d gathered so far from her exclusive grip on the security feeds. She’d been hoarding it. Proof of back-room dealings, illegal weapon sales, illicit affairs, covert operations, even the keepers seemed to be up to something. And all of this sat in info-cloud software connected directly to her omnitool and buried beneath miles of encryption. Password protected and triggered to delete if the pulse-recognition failed a benchmark test—upon the omnitool’s theft or her death.
