Dirk Strider (Ultimate) (
uber_marionettist) wrote in
silph_co2020-01-17 12:50 am
Don't Do It Boy (He does it anyway)
Who: Dirk Strider and Handsome Jack
Where: Goldenrod Rocket Base
When: Mid January
Summary: Dirk is just BORROWING that Ditto, okay
Rating: PG13, brief (joke) mention of Dirk's frequent deaths in canon
The logic was sound.
Dirk isn't in the habit of awarding himself undue accolades, so the average bystander could be well assured that this statement is both completely true and fully merited. His logic was not just sound, it was fucking flawless. Team Rocket's labs are pretty damn slick, and he knows for a fact that considerable resources are appointed for their use. Ditto is a unique--and uniquely useful--Pokemon, one which he also knows (through his two goddamn jobs in the aforementioned labs) can be found in some of those labs.
Conclusion: the simplest and most practical way to get ahold of a Ditto for temporary training purposes is to 'requisition' one from the Rocket Labs.
There's no way in hell he's going to risk his narratively positioned career trying to smuggle one out right under the noses of dozens of loyal Rocket scientists, not to mention actual security. Not that he doesn't think it's possible. He's a goddamn ninja. He could do it.
But why would he do that when he can just walk in at a less than licit hour and just-as-illicitly 'requisition' one for private use?
That was the idea, anyway, and right up through the part where he actually left the lab in question, it was fine. Everything was... underwhelmingly straightforward, actually. He'd known security was more focused on keeping non-Rocket personnel out of things (spin tiles and passworded doors are easily traversed if you're a Rocket yourself) than policing those within the organisation, but he'd still been wary for some kind of.... he didn't know. An alarm system? Even a basic one? But when scientists took Pokemon in and out of different labs all the time, that didn't appear to be something they'd installed.
Okay.
Just the cameras, then. Which are embedded in statues. Which--unlike ledges--can be scaled, handily preventing any record of his passage to and from the labs as he vaults over each one undetected.
So there he is, getting his parkour on with the sick flips and acrobatic fucking pirouettes off some symbolic chunky kaiju things.
And that's when his assumption that ass o'clock traffic would be deader than his own headless corpse(s) makes an ass out of him.
Where: Goldenrod Rocket Base
When: Mid January
Summary: Dirk is just BORROWING that Ditto, okay
Rating: PG13, brief (joke) mention of Dirk's frequent deaths in canon
The logic was sound.
Dirk isn't in the habit of awarding himself undue accolades, so the average bystander could be well assured that this statement is both completely true and fully merited. His logic was not just sound, it was fucking flawless. Team Rocket's labs are pretty damn slick, and he knows for a fact that considerable resources are appointed for their use. Ditto is a unique--and uniquely useful--Pokemon, one which he also knows (through his two goddamn jobs in the aforementioned labs) can be found in some of those labs.
Conclusion: the simplest and most practical way to get ahold of a Ditto for temporary training purposes is to 'requisition' one from the Rocket Labs.
There's no way in hell he's going to risk his narratively positioned career trying to smuggle one out right under the noses of dozens of loyal Rocket scientists, not to mention actual security. Not that he doesn't think it's possible. He's a goddamn ninja. He could do it.
But why would he do that when he can just walk in at a less than licit hour and just-as-illicitly 'requisition' one for private use?
That was the idea, anyway, and right up through the part where he actually left the lab in question, it was fine. Everything was... underwhelmingly straightforward, actually. He'd known security was more focused on keeping non-Rocket personnel out of things (spin tiles and passworded doors are easily traversed if you're a Rocket yourself) than policing those within the organisation, but he'd still been wary for some kind of.... he didn't know. An alarm system? Even a basic one? But when scientists took Pokemon in and out of different labs all the time, that didn't appear to be something they'd installed.
Okay.
Just the cameras, then. Which are embedded in statues. Which--unlike ledges--can be scaled, handily preventing any record of his passage to and from the labs as he vaults over each one undetected.
So there he is, getting his parkour on with the sick flips and acrobatic fucking pirouettes off some symbolic chunky kaiju things.
And that's when his assumption that ass o'clock traffic would be deader than his own headless corpse(s) makes an ass out of him.

no subject
It's weird. It's really friggin weird. And this is coming from a man who paid millions of dollars to surgically alter another human being into looking just like him.
But hey, Dirk. It's been a long time since there was an assortment of the grunts that Jack most finds himself dealing with, and it's kind of nice right now. Except that overall he's pretty sure he's working with absolute crap.
But then there's this kid.
"So you've actually got more'n two brain cells to rub together, don't ya?"
no subject
This is not, strictly speaking, the most nonsensical thing he could have said. It is, in fact, a lot more informative than most replies he was likely to give. Which is, in itself, something of an accident. Jack's repeated not-quite-backhanded 'praise' is really jamming the gears in the erratic machine of Dirk's extremely black-and-white ego.
It's almost easier to focus on literally anything else. Almost, because it's impossible not to think about it. He's pretty sure this dude told him weeks ago that he didn't give a shit. Now this.
"Not that I care, but why are you even talking to me? Let alone why you're talking to me like that. Did I miss something?"
What the fuck is happening here, and why the fuck is it happening now, to him. He really needs a fucking answer, but if there is one facet to Dirk's greater persona that rules him, it's that Dirk Strider is incapable of shutting up once he's said something that can backfire on him. Logorrhea, like addictions, run in the family.
"Private is basically a grunt, just a better pay grade of gutteral inarticulation. Sub-standing scrubs, subservient to... fuck, literally anyone. Sure, I was under the impression 'grunt' was a titular suggestion and not an instruction, but on second thought, I'd say it's more of a minimum requirement."
no subject
Jack shrugs. There's no real agenda here, no angle he's working. He's just roaming the halls looking for a distraction, and Dirk is what he's found.
"I'm bored, essentially? Don't flatter yourself or anything, it's not like I was looking for you. You just happen to be here and I've got nothing better to do right now. I mean, you're the lucky one, you get to hang out with me! But just because you're in the right place at the right time."
Incapable of shutting up is a trait they both share.
Okay NOW I can tag you on the fourth wall lmao jUST HAD TO MAKE SURE
Oh.
The tense background radiation of paranoia ebbs noticeably--at least from Dirk's internal perspective. Externally it's not really any more noticeable than anything else Dirk is thinking or feeling. Which is to say, a bit more than he believes, but a whole lot less than would ever be helpful to someone who did give a shit.
He has a whole repertoire of behaviours he deploys specifically for cuing people into what he wants them to see, though. In this case, he crosses his arms over his chest and leans against the heavy statue with a purposefully casual air, like he ain't got a care in the fucking world. He's still hiding from its eyes, though, those ever-watchful cameras very much on his mind.
"Oh, if that's all, then. Here I was afraid you had some kind of ulterior motive."
no subject
The brightest crayon in the box was still just a crayon in the box. Jack's agenda, at least with Rocket, is relatively clear. Advance to gain some real power within the organization. Sure, he's gonna ride grunts to the top, but that's just what you do. Dirk's already proven he can do his job and not fuck up, he's already doing everything Jack asks.
"I've got two houses. I got level hundred Pokemon. I got ten cats that shit money every day, I'm good, champ."
This is a lie, but it's one Jack almost believes himself.
no subject
Dirk's moment of relief from paranoia is somewhat reduced by the emphatic tone of Jack's denial. The fact that he won't stop using condescendingly paternal appellations is icing on the shit cake. Bud. Champ. Kid.
"I don't know your personal life." He keeps his tone even, neutral. Firm. If there is one thing Dirk Strider has mastered, it's a monotone.