Starship Kaiyō

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RP: YSS Kaiyō Mission 33: Usowotsuku

Booth

William smirked and winked at the bar maid, taking a puff from the cigarillo and blowing smoke rings into the air. Tapping the ash into the tray, he returned his full attention to the net.

Cyberspace

In the network, he slowly 'walked' forward and approached the menu prompt. It had been fairly easy to reach it despite the obvious security surrounding the space. This must have been the public domain access. He needed to get in the back door to find what he was actually looking for. Taking that into account, he had a feeling 'camera' wasn't going to show him what he was looking for and certainly not something he should be trying to view mid op. Staying on task, he selected 9, to see what more the prompt had to offer.
 
Beaded Stairwell

An ID-SOL... The last time she had a run-in with one that wasn't William, it took half the squad to take him down, so it was probably wise not to get into conflict with this one, but she had to command some respect if she wanted to be taken seriously at the same time. Not really a line she had to tow before, but she reckoned she could pull it off. Getting mad at being called a cat wasn't going to get him to take her seriously. And neither would acting tough. Such a thing would only work if she was an ID-SOL herself. Something about males and their dominance hierarchy. Unless this one had a thing for-- no, best not to overcomplicate the situation. Just play it sly and to the point.

"Hmm... Considering there's a huge slab of meat in front of this little kitty, I think I might be in the right place for who I'm looking for." She slowly crossed her arms with a smirk on her face, leaning back slightly to make it look like she was taking in more of his form, but also to make sure she couldn't be grabbed too easily if he suddenly went hostile.

After making a show of looking the doorman from head to toe, she spoke up again. "Me and a couple of friends are looking for Ramios. We got wind that he's the one to talk to for, how should I say this... exotic kinds of information. Very valuable stuff that'd be wasted on cloud hoppers, and we're looking to do some business. Wouldn't happen to find him behind you, would I?"

She scanned his features to see how he was going to react, trying to glean what information she could if he feigned ignorance or if there was an approach she could push to help convince him.
 
Barroom

The longer Molli contemplated the taste of her drink, the more she almost started to like it, maybe. It reminded her of her dad's coffee, and how he wished she'd give it a chance to grow on her. "...Yeh, it ent bad..." she murmured, begrudgingly conceding to Will's dissenting opinion. Sitting here and not quite acting like a moping mess while the rest of the crew dug up information in a more efficient way was making the Nepleslian feel mighty useless. She recalled seeing Sif walk off toward the bathroom, and without saying a word, Molli left her seat to go and find the shieldmaiden. Maybe she was onto something more cunning, something that could use some help.

She was about to enter the bathroom when a familiar voice caught Molli's attention from further down the way. It was Sif's voice, and it was coming from behind a tacky looking curtain of orange beads. If she squinted, Molli could make out Sif's distinctive white mane. There was nothing else for it, then; she walked through the curtain to join her partner.

Beaded Stairwell

Molli entered the area as Sif finished speaking, but she didn't need to know the context to understand the situation. Guys like that ID-SOL, with their suits, shades, and intimidating silhouette were put in front of doors to more important places -- places that plebians weren't meant to see. If Ramios had to be anywhere, Molli would've betted on him being behind that door, somewhere.

Sidling up beside Sif, Molli threw an arm over her shoulder and put on a bemused expression. "Thought ah told yeh Neko need en escort here?" she said, before looking at the bouncer the way an apologetic parent would. "Ah'm sorry, she's jus' lookin' out fer me. Real doll, this'un," Molli briefly batted her eyes at Sif, "Ramios said t'meet 'im 'ere, off th'book stuff, y'unnerstand." It was a bold-faced bluff, but Molli had a gut feeling she needed to spin a convincing yarn in order to be taken seriously. In the moment, she felt like a teenager running scams in the clubs again.

What'd ya tell him? Molli said to Sif through her thought implant, Let's try 'n get our stories straight. Was thinkin' we go for 'the boss kept us a secret.'
 
Beaded Stairwell

Molli's arrival was unexpected but a boon. Surely two enterprising customers are better than one. Though she had to quickly do a recap to get their stories straight. A smile curled up at the corner of her lips, trying to act like she had been caught doing something she shouldn't have while she responded to Molli. 'I told him that we and a few friends heard that Ramios was the one to go to for valuable information that would be wasted on street gangs, and that we were looking to do some business.'

There was already a hitch in the façade between their stories, but it was nothing they couldn't salvage. They just needed to keep from cracking. 'Sounds fine by me. I'll follow your lead. Should we assume our NMX names if he asks?'

Refocusing on the doorman, she gave a cool half-hearted shrug and an expectant look. She still had a question he had yet to answer.
 
Beaded Stairwell

Small crack aside, they'd mostly landed on the same path. At worst, they looked like green as grass amateurs that might be taken advantage of in a world they were woefully unprepared to enter; in itself a sort of boon, if their opposition underestimated them. 'Yeah, if he asks,' replied Molli, who concentrated on not letting her lips subconsciously mouth the words she projected into Sif's head. 'Jus' gotta keep actin' like we're supposed t'be here, and that we've got information he wants.'
 
Bar

Aratani could have cozied herself into the barstool and stayed talking to the barmen and watched the world turn inside One More for the Road. There was something very familiar and comforting about it all. So much so that she looked back at the booth and William inside of it and considered if she was a Nepleslian raised on Yamatai like him. It would explain her proclivity to getting greasy with a wrench in hand. She grabbed the silvery crown of her head and had a quiet, private laugh at her own silly thought, though. It was outrageous for a Neko to think and with a shake of her head as if pushing out the thought, she turned to the barkeep.

"What's your name?" Aratani said as she pulled some extra DA out of her pocket and slid it over the bar. "For anything a normal tab wouldn't cover."
 
Bar

"You can call me Saxon for now," the bartender told Aratani. He scooped up the bills she'd arrayed as an offering quite neatly in one pass of his left hand and then tossed the stack into a brass vase behind the counter. "Good tips go a long way. I'll see you next round," he thanked her, and then moved on to take a drink order from another patron—a "tall" Phod standing five-foot-two—who was staring at Atarani with a grimace wrinkled across his lips. Evidently she'd taken enough of Saxon's attention, but he looked eager to bury his pudgy snout in his next pint and so quickly forgot the Nekovalkyrja when he was attended to.

After he'd served up the piggy alien's drink, Aratani could hear Saxon tell another bartender, "Going for a break. Handle things here until I'm back." To which the other guy, a wiry guy taller than Saxon with a big grin and a purple mullet, confirmed by nodding while he worked.

Cyberspace

William wasn't offered very many more choices from this access point, but the rest of them shed light on the first page's selection. Both customers and, it seemed, the bar's proprietors used the same access menu. He could tell he'd run into security challenges if he went deeper into any of the options. The Nepleslian's choice now was whether he'd try to scrape the surface for information or brute force his way through whatever digital guardians were employed here.

Code:
<MAINFRAME ACCESS>
<"ONE MORE FOR THE ROAD, WHERE EVERY DRIVER IS DESIGNATED">

MENU (CONTINUED):
1. MUSIC 2. GUNS 3. MAINTENANCE 4. SCHEDULE 5. PAYROLL 6. SECURITY 7. BACK

SYNTAX GUIDE: SPECIFY <1> thru <7>

Behind his avatar, William could tell that the cyberspace fortress' gates had closed behind him. Several of the guard programs patrolling the ramparts above stopped their march and peered down at him through the pixelated palms and made a show of watching his presence here more closely. Perhaps their behavior was nothing. But William was the only person logged in here, and there were no signs that individual sessions were partitioned, so maybe he wasn't behaving like a typical bar guest at One More for the Road. At the end of the day, though, he hadn't been ejected from the server yet.

Stairwell

The ID-SOL guard, it seemed, was a very cool sort of guy. Neither Sif nor Molli's words moved him. The mountainous man's expression didn't shift at all, and the gaze hidden beneath his shades cut a beam so high over their heads that they had no hope of swiping at it from where they stood. He was entirely unflappable. So whatever he thought about their story remained a mystery.

"No Ramios up there," he told them. "And I don't deal with information. I only deal with the list, which you still aren't on. You haven't justified yourself, so I think it's time to go."

It was right about then that the curtain of orange beads parted again. Into the now-cramped stairwell came the bartender, Saxon, who looked a little surprised at first and then chuckled. He swooped past Sif and Molli and right past the ID-SOL guard.

"Don't fold 'em up too much, Rook," Saxon said. "Their friends just ordered and paid. They got that off-world money," he told the sentry in passing, and then proceeded up the stairs. Once Saxon's footfalls faded, quickly obscured by the bar's lively thrum, the big ID-SOL crossed his arms again in Molli and Sif's face.

"Alright," Rook said. "Things are busy upstairs, you get me? No space for you two right now. Wait your turn. Now scram."

Booth

Rio heard a lot of chatter while she listened. Some passers-by, apparently enlisted Nepleslian Marines, had bragged about their romantic exploits—just before and what they planned to get up to in a few minutes. Another nearby table was host to someone burdening their companions with a life story about being related to a famous starfighter pilot, which seemed ridiculous to both Rio and obviously to everyone else in earshot because there were no famous starfighter pilots. But one bit of info amidst the ceaseless din of drunken conversation stuck out to Rio as she nibbled on her fruit candies.

A table of low city gangsters were hooping and hollering about how the Twenty-Eight Gumtrees a few hundred klicks uptown were blown sky high because they crossed the IPG, and how Ramios was about to be out a few million DAs for the trouble. Apparently the Gumtrees owed him big time, and Yoldeen wouldn't be paying back any of his debts for the next few decades at least!
 
Stairwell

Molli hurriedly pressed against the wall when Saxon strode by, and the ease in which he passed by the bouncer made her feel like a kid who was stubbornly barred from leaving the kid's table at dinner. She let the faintest frown form at the bouncer's insistence, her annoyance far from an act at this point. "Ah heard 'e were in there," Molli said, pointing to the door. "'N ah also 'eard 'e's lookin' fer information on someun th'Chimeras were lookin' for." The Chimeras were an old-school gang founded by a small community of Aberwahn that carved out a niche in the most inhospitable stretches of industrial Funky City. They were known for three things: being incredibly reclusive, viciously cunning acts of brutality on their rivals, and their unflinching loyalty to those who pay them.

Their leader was also one of the many, many men that wanted to see Molli's head on a spike after what she did to her old racing sponsor.

"Airbike street racer, legendary 'hind th' handles, screwed over loadsa gangers. Ah know where she is, 'n ah ent leavin' til ah get com-pen-say-shun," Molli side-eyed Sif. It's a bluff, dunnae know if they're even looking for her, still. She raced 'round these parts, though -- maybe I'll jog his memory.
 
Cyberspace

William noted the gates shutting behind him, and the programs noting his presence. This wasn't great, but all he could do was press ahead. He did make sure his own defenses were up, though. He strengthened his firewalls and prepared some countermeasures for any attempts to probe into his mindware. With the choices available, he had two real options. The first was to select security and see if he could access the security cameras. Alternatively, he could comb through the schedule to see if their target had a room booked. Security probably had more defenses to access than the schedule, so he decided to try accessing it first. Selecting 4, he prepared a few password cracker programs and set them to deploy the moment he was prompted for one to access the schedule.
 
Stairwell

The bartender's sudden arrival signaled that the rest of the team made some headway to getting in touch with their man, but the ID-SOL was still being difficult. The upstairs was "crowded", as if she bought that. But not like it was a smart choice to storm up there. But with Molli putting a bit of pressure on him she could perhaps sprinkle something in? Maybe try to keep themselves from being forced out of the area, or try to build some kind of rapport. If the bartender was already up there to add them to the list, then they were already set.

That's a heavy 'If' though. Their first contact tried to burn them, and they didn't have a guarantee that this one wouldn't do the same. So even if she and Molli managed to guile their way up there, they would be cut off from reinforcements. 'Might be better if we got some distance for now, we can take a look around the other areas in the mean time since the crew seems to have secured an audience with the broker.'

"I'm sure we'll be fine waiting a bit longer," Sif told Molli before addressing the ID-SOL with a more playful approach. "You promise to save our spot? Not that I mind getting another eyeful of you, but you might start developing a taste," she said with a giggle and a wink before turning with Molli so they could start down the hall.

'You think I got him flustered? A tail flick could have sealed the deal, but I have mine tucked in.'
 
Stairwell

For as much as a hardhead like Molli wanted to keep chiseling away at the bouncer until he let her in, Sif's coolheaded response broke through to the stubborn girl. Their situation was like a race; sometimes you had to let off the throttle to avoid a crash. After jutting her chin up at the ID-SOL to make it clear that this wasn't over, she accompanied her Neko companion down the hall. Molli gave Sif a side-eyed glance, their privacy affording her a chance to reconcile how a fearless warrior could be a pretty damn convincing flirt. Molli wondered if there was some part of Nekovalkyra creation that considered beauty and charm a part of their of their identity, and another part that felt a little envious that she hadn't been born with those same gifts.

'I'd have been flustered. You're, uh, really good at flirtin',' Molli leaned her head back and cast her gaze down to confirm that Sif did, indeed, have her tail tucked in, before quickly walking normally again. Try- Try a little, uh...sashay. With your hips. Er- Nevermind, he's gotta be charmed with ya. Who wouldn't be?
 
Bar Booth

For a moment, Aratani considered following Saxon out. She could tell they were going for a cigarette break and the idea of stooping so low and imbibing in one while in Nepleslia made her elf ears look droopy and forlorn as she made her sway back to the booth.

"Bartender knows Ramios but says he's busy and to check back later." William was deep in hacking mode so she mostly addressed Rio. "Find out anything? Where's Aiko? Or Sif or Molli?"
 
Booth

As Rio listened to the various conversations throughout the bar, her expression was one of amusement between bites of her snacks. Hearing the bar patron's various stories and inebriated chatter was actually pretty entertaining. Each table or occupied booth was like a different channel on a television. Outlandish stories, broken hearts and intimate adventures mixed with the mundane filtered through booze. If it wasn't for being on a mission, Rio could have simply sat and listened for hours. But work came first and it was far from hard to listen in on the rowdy group of gangers. She wasn't too surprised that the news had already spread, the squad had left a pretty big mess after all. But it was the fact that Yoldeen and the Gumtrees had owed their current target money that really caught her ear.

When Aratani came over to the booth Rio scooted in to give her a place to sit "Is that so? Well I heard the Gumtrees got in a big fight with the IPG and got blown away. Seems they owed our dear friend Ramios a hefty bag of money. A couple million DA's worth of hefty." Rio offered up her half eaten bag of fruit snacks while motioning her head further into the bar. "They scattered towards the back."
 
Stairwell

'You think so? I was worried I might have laid it on too thick,' Sif said, scratching the side of her cheek, wondering whether or not she should divulge that the lines she used were taken straight out of Nepleslian literature. Considering the contents of said literature, she thought it was better left unsaid. The hip swaying suggestion wasn't bad, though it probably wouldn't have the intended effect. 'I'll give it a try next time. I think my cloak would just hide the swaying. But you really think I got what it takes to charm people like a classic femme fatale?'

When they got out of the hall, instead of going back to the booth, Sif's attention went to a different location, the gambling hall. Looking at Molli with a smile, she pointed with her head towards the tables. "Can we take a short detour? I'm curious what games they're all playing. I've read that having ladies by your side while gambling is good luck, so they probably won't mind us spectating, right?"
 
"Nah, y'ain't too thick," Molli said on impulse, her gaze briefly shooting down to Sif's legs again, "A-Ah mean, men're stupid -- y'gotta really stress stuff fer 'em." Molli found it strange to be the one giving Sif advice on these matters, having assumed that her right arm was already confident and aware of her appearance and the effect it'd have on others. In the time they'd spent together, she was realizing how much it had an effect on her. "Wiv fur minks 'n th'silk dresses wiv th'slit all th'way up ta-" Molli made a 'V' shape with her hand and placed it high up on her thigh, "Here? Why not? Yer already drop-dead gorgeous. Could watch some holo-vids t'get some references, ah know a few. Ah love th'old gangster shows wiv the grizzled detectives..." For a moment, Molli almost forgot that they were here on a mission -- Sif, at least, was on the ball.

"High roller tables prolly ent out front," Molli said, rubbing her chin as she started at the players, "If we slide up tuh sommat what looks like 'e's good enough fer a backroom visit, maybe 'e'll think we're 'is good luck charms 'n take us wiv 'im..." she shrugged, it wasn't the worst idea in the galaxy. "Sure. Um... y'do the talkin', though. Ah ent ah charmer," Or much of a looker, in her own opinion, at least compared to Sif; but her bodysuit accentuated the right curves, so maybe if she shut up and bat her eyelashes, she could pass as appealing to a gambler.
 
Cyberspace

William's assumptions about network defenses had been correct. The schedule subroutine he'd chosen was easily defeated by his password cracking software, with twelve character slots on a flat entry prompt scrolling from their initial asterisk and then through the alpha-numeric Trade typeset until "-asswordlol-" resolved in green. The system subsequently alerted him that the password had been accepted and replaced the passphrase entry box with a digital passageway that folded outward by expanding the prompt's simple wirelines out until the digital threshold was big enough for William's avatar to walk through.

Beyond, he found a computerized simulacrum of an old-timey archive room filled with boxy document cabinets and stacks of punch timecards on a few tables. Once he was inside, the plain portal behind his digital likeness shrank and minimized until it was a single vertical line in green, which then shortened into nothingness. The filing system for this bar's scheduling system didn't appear to be particularly sophisticated. Whoever was responsible for it seemed to have a habit of haphazardly using click-and-drag to update employee schedules and receiving notes into one dump folder on the manager's desktop. Luckily for William, that meant newer items were at the top of a pile on a table right near where he came in.

Most of what William found at first was extremely mundane. When the bar's staff came and went. How long patrons indulged in the establishment's myriad vices—and, when applicable, with whom customers satiated themselves upon—and what needed to be replaced from bottles of cheap liquor to crates of pleasure pills that could keep everyone going as long as profit demanded. There was no mention of Ramios as far as the ID-SOL cyber sleuth could find.

But he kept coming across a repeated receipt, uniquely cached here amid payroll forms and inventory bills. The only thing of its kind, the note recoded a daily delivery of "Real Bad Stuff" to "The Gecko Room" at the same time (which was soon enough to hang around and witness). It was almost as if the file was used as a reminder, checked off when complete, and then deposited here in the schedule archive rather than something placed here to be referenced by some manager or barman.

Booth

"You forgot ya pitcher," the bushy blonde barmaid said with a friendly cosmopolitan drawl, placing the jug of beer Aratani had ordered down on the table from her tray along with a set of pint glasses for everyone. She followed up with Rio's milk, delivered in a frosty masskrug glass that definitely held more than the little Neko could comfortably imbibe. And then she placed her hand flat down on the ugly marble table and slid it toward Aratani.

"Sax left this for ya, too," she said plainly enough and drew her hand back. What was left was a simple cream-and-blue poker chip with a pink lizard within a golden circle emblazoned in the middle. "Gecko Room's in the back. Down the hall with pink neon past the supper club's bar. Hard t'miss it!"

Then she skipped off as if the whole thing was entirely normal, not even asking if Rio, Aratani, and the jacked-in William needed anything else.

Molli and Sif

Surveying the dining-slash-gambling hall's attractions while they formulated their plan from the broad footpath, the pair of Star Army snoops looked pretty conspicuous. But at least they looked like a pair of girlfriends on the town rather than two Uchuugun soldiers. At least for now.

Three steps below them, the expansive chamber was even livelier than the main barroom, which seemed subdued in comparison. Here was where patrons ate and drank to excess at their round tables and in the booths. Most groups tossed cards or dice back and forth across piles of poker chips or straight cash, and nearly every other scoundrel here had a big blaster on their hip—or at least a pretty companion attached to his (or her) arm, clinging there ready to cheer on a big win or inject some chemical relief into their partner's neck to soothe a bad loss. The smaller of One More for the Road's two bars was off against the back wall, and a half dozen feet to its left was a double wide hallway ringed with three fuchsia neon tubes.

Both Molli and Sif spotted Aiko standing there at that secondary saloon between a pair of ID-SOL. The guys wore suits, but it was hard to tell if they had plain clothes or flashier attire. Whether these men were customers or security like the bouncer Rook they'd met wasn't clear. The princess was easy to see. Even without the bellflower hair ornaments that identified her as Ketsurui royalty and put together the puzzle that revealed her famous identity, she was nonetheless breathtaking and impossible not to notice. Everybody in the bar had probably glanced at her at least once, and some of those with the opportunity kept their eyes locked on her statuesque Nekovalkyrja form while she stayed in eyeshot.

One of the big Nepleslians was leaned down speaking uncomfortably close to Aiko's face, and then grabbed her left arm to tugged her along with him. She staggered for her first step in protest before finding her stride. The other ID-SOL quickly took up a place on her right side and wrapped a hand around her waist, trying to act as smooth as possible while doing what he thought could keep the woman restrained. Sif and Molli knew their Chusa could fell both of these dudes in quick succession—and indeed probably fight her way out of the entire bar—but Aiko seemingly declined to do so as they watched her and the pair of brutes move toward the pink neon hallway and disappear into its shadowy depths.
 
Cyberspace

William's search, while finding lots of mundane information, gave him a kernel of intel. The 'real bad stuff' goes on in the gecko room. He set a subroutine to dig deeper into what the bad stuff was, and while it did its work he began crafting his own entry.

He created an invoice with a 5000 DA deposit for entry to the gecko room for him and the rest of Kaiyo crew. He even added the 5000 DA from his own account. It wasn't like he spent his cash on much anyway. The reservation was under "Junior" and guests. With that done and the funds deposited he slipped the invoice ontop the pile.

Booth

He left the subroutine to keep searching the archive while he returned to the real world, just after the barmaid left. William also clocked the gecko chip. He opened a mental connection with the others at the table. 'Seems you already got a way into the gecko room. The bars subnet only said that real bad stuff' goes on back there. I also slipped an invoice to get me and the rest of the crew into the back.' He looked to Rio. 'You're with me. Molli and Sif too. Try and get ahold of them Rio. Aratani, give us a little head start then follow us in.' With that done, he downed the rest of his bourbon and took a deep drag on the cigarillo. Blowing twin trails of smoke through his nostrils, he stood, offered his hand to Rio and finally spoke aloud. "Now, I believe we have an appointment. Shall we?"
 
Neon Pink Hallway

Hopeful hearts, delusional dreams, and dealers that didn't bat at an eye at the fortunes gained and lost -- gambling always told the same stories, whether you tossed your chips in a high class casino or a tucked away hovel like One More for the Road. Molli stood close to Sif as she watched the tables, hip swiveling to the side and arms tucked beneath her chest to try and give the impression that she was hunting for a high roller to root for. Their "plan" was more so a loose framework of an idea without any real foundation or legs, but Molli wasn't about to let herself be useless in her own city if she could help it. Eventually, she started to notice that nobody was looking her way; or at their cards. She traced their gazes to the bar, where a solitary princess stood, statuesque and stunning, with two intimidating ID-SOLs on either side that made quick on their attempt to lead her away.

Molli elbowed Sif in a panic, "Look- Look," she jerked her head at to the scene of Aiko being awkwardly led down a darkened hallway, then immediately stormed after them at a rapid pace. 'GoonshookedAikonearth'smallbar,' Molli's mental voice shot out to the others as rapidly as her own jackhammer heart, and as she strode boldly into the hallway, her hand reached for the shoulder holster beneath her jacket.
 
Neon Pink Hallway

Sif's eyes scanned the tables, taking guesses at what games they might be playing based on what they were using and how many cards the players had in their hands and how many were flipped up on the table. While she never played any of the games herself, she's seen enough scenes to make a pretty good guess that they weren't playing go fish. No, it was more likely to be poker.

But before she could truly unveil the mystery, she felt a gentle elbow to her side as Molli brought attention to Aiko getting taken away by a pair of ID-SOLs. By the looks of things, she wasn't being taken away willingly, yet she also didn't put up much of a fight. Had she not fully recovered from her strange shift of demeanor from before, or was she acting helpless on purpose?

'That doesn't seem right. Let's lay low for a while. I'll check in with Aiko if she needs assistance,' she said telepathically, shifting her body to move towards the bar, as if she was going to grab a drink, grabbing a hold of Molli's hand as well. Outside their mental communication, Sif wore a smile as she moved closer to the bar, letting a mask of excitement paint her features for the barkeeper who might appreciate another customer.

'Are you in distress?' Sif sent a telepathic message to Aiko, 'Molli and I are nearby.'
 
Neon Pink Hallway

Molli was prepared to go loud for the sake of the princess, but a cooler head -- specifically, Sif's -- prevailed. The nekovalkyrja had gripped Molli's right hand to halt her advance, her species-characteristic strength far superior to the Nepleslian's, enough to nearly throw her off-balance from the veritable mountain of a woman that had grasped her. She glared at Sif, opened her mouth to protest, but settled on a petulant huff instead. She let herself be led to the bar, where she sat next to Sif and awaited Aiko's answer.
 
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