those who falter and those who fall {troylus}
Jan 6, 2016 21:36:26 GMT -5
Post by Lyn𝛿is on Jan 6, 2016 21:36:26 GMT -5
[googlefont="Tangerine:400"]
Val Gerard
{and so it must be and so it is written
on the doorway to paradise}
Over the years, I have arrested many thieves, many scoundrels. They say that a Peacekeeper's eyes see all the worst that humanity has to offer, and with my experience, I firmly believe it to be true.
I still remember when I was just a rookie, on my second District assignment the first time I caught a thief. That man had broken a window, stealing a delivery crate full of bread from the bakery and spouting a mouth full of excuses when I tracked him down. Unaccustomed to proper procedures due to the regrettable lapses in security back in District 12, I had inquired to my supervisor as to the punishment that might befit the thief. After all, a Peacekeeper must always defer to the legal code of the District they are assigned. But my supervisor that day had only shrugged and said, "We allow leeway for our Peacekeepers to determine the punishment. You might whip him, or sentence him to hard labor, or cut off his hand - really, it's up to you."
I dislike such matters of choice, on principle. Everything is either black or white, right or wrong, and there should be no question what should be done for any given crime. But my supervisor had bade me choose, and thus I spent the night in indecision, praying to Ripred to tell me how to proceed with the thief's penance.
That was my greatest failure, for come the morning the thief had escaped the prison, never to been seen again. That man still niggles at the back of my mind, and I vow to never again make the same mistake.
"I was taking them back because they were stolen goods," the boy pleads as I drag him off. "They should be returned to the proper owner." Hmph. Like I'd believe that sorry excuse. Even if the laptops were stolen, he should have reported it to us instead of stealing them from the shopkeeper. And for all I know he's lying, taking the flimsiest thought from the top of his head.
"Save your breath, save your tears," I growl at him as we finally reach the police station and I guide him to a cell, shoving him in and locking the door. With the thief now temporarily restrained, I turned back to examine the laptops I was still holding. Several of them were dented or broken from the fall, but otherwise looked new, as though they'd come fresh from the factories.
Frowning, I scribble down their serial numbers before delegating further inspection to another Peacekeeper. If the shopkeeper was knowingly fencing stolen goods from the factory, then he must be arrested as well.
{and so it must be and so it is written
on the doorway to paradise}
Over the years, I have arrested many thieves, many scoundrels. They say that a Peacekeeper's eyes see all the worst that humanity has to offer, and with my experience, I firmly believe it to be true.
I still remember when I was just a rookie, on my second District assignment the first time I caught a thief. That man had broken a window, stealing a delivery crate full of bread from the bakery and spouting a mouth full of excuses when I tracked him down. Unaccustomed to proper procedures due to the regrettable lapses in security back in District 12, I had inquired to my supervisor as to the punishment that might befit the thief. After all, a Peacekeeper must always defer to the legal code of the District they are assigned. But my supervisor that day had only shrugged and said, "We allow leeway for our Peacekeepers to determine the punishment. You might whip him, or sentence him to hard labor, or cut off his hand - really, it's up to you."
I dislike such matters of choice, on principle. Everything is either black or white, right or wrong, and there should be no question what should be done for any given crime. But my supervisor had bade me choose, and thus I spent the night in indecision, praying to Ripred to tell me how to proceed with the thief's penance.
That was my greatest failure, for come the morning the thief had escaped the prison, never to been seen again. That man still niggles at the back of my mind, and I vow to never again make the same mistake.
"I was taking them back because they were stolen goods," the boy pleads as I drag him off. "They should be returned to the proper owner." Hmph. Like I'd believe that sorry excuse. Even if the laptops were stolen, he should have reported it to us instead of stealing them from the shopkeeper. And for all I know he's lying, taking the flimsiest thought from the top of his head.
"Save your breath, save your tears," I growl at him as we finally reach the police station and I guide him to a cell, shoving him in and locking the door. With the thief now temporarily restrained, I turned back to examine the laptops I was still holding. Several of them were dented or broken from the fall, but otherwise looked new, as though they'd come fresh from the factories.
Frowning, I scribble down their serial numbers before delegating further inspection to another Peacekeeper. If the shopkeeper was knowingly fencing stolen goods from the factory, then he must be arrested as well.
OOC Notes
troylus
troylus