Red and BluesA Story by The Orange SauceBased on Mirror's Edge (spoilers!) (ignoring the comics) Set during the construction of the Shard, Faith is on an assignment when the situation gets serious.Gunshots echoed
as Faith ran down the hall, her bag bouncing against her left leg with an
urgent, deadly rhythm. Seconds earlier:
"Drop the bag and put your hands up, or we will open fire!" She had been waiting in a square room. Her
client had already left, the information lay safe in her messenger bag, and she
stood in front of the doorway. Faith always made a point of conducting handoffs
near the exit; it made escape easier in case the police--blues--caught wind of
it. Her trained eye
counted three. Three blues, probably all they sent, but reinforcements were
still a possibility. She could take three on, certainly. Four, on a good day.
More, perhaps not. Either way, hitting a police officer would raise their
threat level from 'trying to chase her' to 'hunting her down with a vengeance.'
Faith slipped a small smoke bomb into her hand. Fighting might not be the best
plan, but distracting them would work just fine. Hopefully. "Runner,"
a police officer said, "Drop the bag. Now. Or-" She slid the pin
out with her thumb and tossed. Instantly: a cloud of smoke, three disoriented
blues, a door slammed open with a loud metal thunk. She figured she had maybe a few seconds before they started
chasing; adrenaline gave her an extra burst of speed down the hallway as she
scanned for exits. Paintings lined
the walls. Modern art; streaks of paint slapped across the canvas. A few doors
down on either side of her, but none looked like escape; more like offices. Then,
at the very end of the hall, to the left
of a giant window, a flash of red. Instinct told her what sat behind it: an
elevator! Her escape route. Faith elbowed
open the door, and behind her she could hear the three blues--more? She
couldn't tell--giving chase. A gunshot cracked the window behind her as she
stepped through, concentric cracks spidering out from the hole. She was no
stranger to gunfire. Her job--transferring unapproved information--was illegal,
and when you do illegal things in an Orwellian police state the police tend to
get slightly annoyed. About four or five times per month she had to face live
fire, so she was used to it at this point; nevertheless, it did help get the
rest of her adrenaline to her brain. Taking a sharp
left turn, the elevator beckoned from her right side. Her gloved right fist
mashed the button, and by some stroke of luck the doors smoothly slid open. She
dashed inside. She pushed the
button labeled "Roof Access" with her index finger, taking a deep,
calming breath, and stood in silence, staring at the bright green walls and
stretching her legs. The silence didn't last long, though; the comms unit in
her left ear buzzed underneath her pitch-black hair, and she reached up to
reopen the call. Instantly the
indignant voice of Mercury blazed through the tiny speaker. "What the
hell, Faith!" he said, "Where have you been?" "Busy." "No s**t you've been busy! The police
chatter is off the charts, and there you are, right in the center of it with
your comm off!" "What?"
Faith said in what was unmistakably a snarky tone. "I needed some quiet
for once, Merc." "And
gunshots are quiet?" "Those
weren't exactly on the menu for this job, were they?" His voice shifted
back to his usual, caring self. "Whatever. The important thing now is getting
you out. You in the elevator?" "Yeah.
Heading for the roof." "Let me
check the map." Merc's fingers clacked against an ancient mechanical
keyboard, and instantly a 3D map of the
city sprang up on his monitor, the Shard--still unfinished--towering over the
rest of its skyscrapers. Within seconds Faith's current position flashed green. "Alright.
Looks like your best exit is south. Head towards the Raposa building, and take
a right just before it. Celeste has a hideout there; she's between jobs at the
moment, you can stay with her." "Got it,
Merc." The elevator shook to a stop and rang open. "Elevator's open.
Let's go." "Get a move
on, Faith," he said before cutting the voice connection. She stepped
outside. Though she may
have lived in a gutted AC tower, the rooftops of this city were her one true
home. Ever since that rainy day at sixteen, quietly slipping out the window
into the cold wet night, she had been running and running across white roofs
and blue walls. Memories of the November Riots still shone like floodlights in
her mind: protests against the governments "information security"
that they violently crushed. It was when she broke into Merc's base of
operations, squeezing herself through the ceiling, that he decided to take her
in, become her surrogate parent, train her in parkour; now she worked as a
runner, delivering illegal information across the city so she could live in
relative comfort. It was the best job she could have dreamed of. Faith leapt down
to the next building, rolling at the bottom and continuing on. Ahead of her,
behind air vents and giant rectangular AC units, scaffolding caught her eye,
with translucent-blue plastic sheets of blue and one bar really white but
appearing red to her. Building up speed, she springboarded up on some boxes and
grabbed the bar, swung on to the thin metal pathway within. It only took five
seconds for her practiced arms and legs to reach the top of the catwalk.
Pausing for a moment, Faith checked behind her. Gunshots. Blues
had finally reached the roof. She kicked off, eyes frantically scanning for
paths. One in particular jumped out at her: wall-run, jump to the wall next to
it, turn around, push off to the roof. Not many people could do that. She
could. Glancing back,
she saw that her pursuers had been left behind, trying to figure out a route to
her new location--with less parkour. She sighed in relief--until the voice of
Merc echoed in her ear. "Bad news,
Faith." His voice carried a feeling of urgency, and she knew what he would
say before he said it. "There's SWAT guys on the building ahead of you.
You'll have to go all the way around Raposa if you want to get past them." "Or I could
cross through the Shard." Not much was
capable of startling Merc, but that caught him completely off-guard.
"Sure...wait, what?" "Going
around would take fifteen minutes, at least. So instead I'm going through the
Shard. Three blocks west, two south, right? Check the map." "Yeah, it
works on paper, but it's still the Shard. Sure, it's under construction now,
but it's also going to be the main government building for the entire goddamned
state! The surveillance there will be bigger than the rest of the city
combined! Even CityEye won't be able to beat the Shard." "Understood,
Merc." A pause.
"You're still going." Even without any visuals, he could perfectly
picture the excited look on her face. Faith didn't
respond. "Alright," a resigned Merc said, "get yourself killed
if you really want. I'm gonna get me some more coffee." His comm blinked
off. She took a sharp
right, crossed a relatively flat building and found herself staring at the
brilliant-blue scaffolding surrounding the building-in-progress. None of the
workers were on the job--not on a Saturday--which meant she could easily sneak
through the thin metal pathways. The next step was
easy. Formulating a path, Faith sped towards the top with unerring precision,
running up ramps and off walls, the soft klaxon of her feet on metal giving the
dance its rhythm. Fingers grasped the curled grey edge and she pulled herself
up on the highest platform--nearly the highest point in the city--her feet
sliding gracefully on the cold hard sheet. But now was not the time for
enjoying the view. Looking ahead, a mass of irregular girders and temporary
platforms coated the top, some intensely bright, some excessively dark, and the
only way across was to sort of hop from girder to girder and hope you didn't
slip before you reached the bright red crane sitting on the opposite end.
"Not like I have a choice," she muttered to herself, and she reached
out to test the first beam. Stable enough.
Quickly she hopped from the scaffold to the first bar, and from the first to
the second. For a moment, it all felt easy; for a moment, she was home free. Then a sniper
round drilled a hole in the metal next to her, missing her neck by only a few
centimeters. A lesser lady
would have panicked. Which doesn't mean she didn't, partially; as her body
ducked down and her hands leapt to steady herself and her eyes spotted the
smoke trail spiraling from the shaft sliced through the metal, she felt her
pulse rise to unhealthy levels and an involuntary gasp issue from her mouth.
Despite that, Faith managed to stay focused enough to remember how to handle
this situation: analyze her environment, identify who and where the shooter is,
escape from him as soon as possible. The first was
arguably the hardest. The metal bar on which she sat measured maybe a yard or
two long and two feet wide, enough for her to survive but not enough to allow
the freedom of movement she wanted. Faith still had the option to leap to the
next platform; except this one was the only platform with any semblance of
cover. Identifying her
assailant proved to be a slightly easier task. The bullet came from somewhere
above her, and there was now only one building which still reached above the
Shard: the building just north of it, formerly the tallest building in her city
(well, still the tallest, but not for long). If you stood on the highest point
on its roof--the exit of the maintenance-access stairway--you could just barely
hit faith's location. She squinted. Her would-be
killer's body stuck out just above the white protrusion; she strained to
discern his features. He wore a mask; he held a high-quality sniper rifle; his
mostly-white body suit blended well with the blank tiled slate that was the
wall. What she couldn't see: the sniper's feminine curves, a tear escaping her
squeezed-shut left eye, her white-and-black-gloved finger trembling by the
trigger. The important
thing, though, was that she knew the sniper's location. Running like wildfire
through calculations, Faith's brain marked a route through the maze of girders
that would afford the fewest chances for unwanted bullet strikes. Hop to one
beam, swing under the next, land on the catwalk, run to the edge, slide down
the crane arm to the safe building below. Every break between the sheets could
mean an extra hole in the side of her head, so she would navigate past most of
them, but there were still three on her route, so time would tell whether she
made it through. Faith took a sharp breath and pushed off. She leaped. No
shot. She swung. Still
nothing. She let go of the
bar and her feet touched steel and a shot rang out above her and she tensed her
muscles in expectation of death. As soon as Faith realized she wasn't, she
decided to hazard a glance at the assassin. A perfect
opportunity--he was reloading! Seizing her chance, Faith ran at maximum speed
down the girder to the outer wall and practically flew onto the crane, sliding
to the bottom and disembarking with the grace of an olympic gymnast, landing
with a somersault on the hard, shadowy floor. It was a few
seconds before Merc's voice slowly flowed from her comm. "...Wow," he
said at the speed of molasses, "I've got no idea how you managed to do it,
but you did that with style. Caught a lucky break with that sniper, huh?"
When the only response he received was the sound of her footsteps, he asked her
again. "Faith?" The tired runner
stayed silent, still denying that she hadn't been fatally shot and that she wasn't
falling down the Shard to the depths below. Absentmindedly, heartbeat still
sprinting, she jogged toward Celeste's hideout without really thinking, leaving
the Shard--and its specter--behind her. Eventually, Faith
reached the hideout and sat down, collapsing into a cheap office chair. The
place looked modest; it had a few chairs, an impromptu bedroll, a table, and
Celeste's laptop, complete with an ethernet cable connecting her to the
building's internet. Her friend was nowhere to be seen. Relaxing, she started
to open her bag, rhythmically tapping the combination to its complex lock. Faith's messenger
bag had two compartments. One, the upper one, held items for delivery; that one
she wasn't supposed to touch outside of a handoff. The other one held her necessities:
laptop, portable hard drive, notebook and pencil, cheap prepaid phone, some
money, a picture of her sister Kate--an officer. Sliding out the laptop and
stealthily grabbing the ethernet cable from Celeste's, she started typing a few
notes when her comm came back online. "You willin'
to talk to me now?" his gruff voice asked through the low-quality speaker. "I should be
dead." Surprised, Merc
sat silent for a moment. "But you aren't, Faith, and that's what matters,
right?" "He nearly
hit me, with that first shot. I felt the bullet fly by, felt the shockwaves
when it hit that metal plate. He knew what he was doing." "Faith-" "That second
shot flew right over me, Merc. Barely a foot above my head; I could feel it fly
past. I don't know what he did--twitched, blinked, whatever--but that bullet
was destined for my head, and it was something that goddamn sniper did that
made it miss!" "Jesus,
Fai-" "I'm alive
at his mercy, Merc. I'm alive because
of him; I owe my life to a stupid blue
sniper. How am I supposed to live with that?" Both sat silent.
Eventually Merc spoke up: "I know you; I know you can get through this.
You've survived a lot of close calls before," he offered. "Not like
this. Not this close." She continued
typing, and Merc sat behind the mic at his computer, trying as hard as he could
to place the words he wanted to say. After a minute or so of thinking he gave
up. "Hey, is Celeste there?" he asked, changing the subject,
"She's not on a job at the moment." "No,"
Faith said in monotone. She could have said more, but she was still having some
trouble re-establishing her connection to the material world. "Not showing
on the map." A few quick keystrokes confirmed it; he saw Faith in the
hideout, Kreeg on a job out west, himself in his AC unit home, but no sign of
Celeste. "She didn't shut off her comm, did she? Because if she did I am
going to kill-" At that moment
Celeste strode into her hideout, a paper shopping bag in her left hand, her
right hand pushing open the makeshift door. When Faith came into view she
jumped. "Hey Faith," she said, "Didn't expect to see you
here." "Hi
Cel." Nothing else; just typing. "Why're you
here? Something interesting
happen?" "Just a
short encounter with some blues." She turned silent once more and the
typing stopped; without the familiar clack of keys the air seemed to thicken,
silence strangling both runners. "Oh, just
running some errands," claimed Cel. "Food, you know--can't live
without it." Her voice wavered, and underneath her clean white sweatpants
her legs trembled; her black-and-white-gloved hands twitched. Sitting down in
her seat and opening the laptop, she hoped Faith wouldn't question further. Her
hand shook too much to hit the power button. Faith didn't
respond, going back to typing her notes, and Celeste breathed a long inward
sigh of relief. If only she could tell her, tell her the secrets weighing her
down, tell her why she did what she did, tell her that they were friends, tell
her that she was still her best. Tell her what was coming. Tell her to get
ready.
But she couldn't,
and as the laptop turned on Celeste stayed silent, leaving Faith to face the
dangers her future held. © 2015 The Orange SauceAuthor's Note
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Added on November 22, 2015 Last Updated on November 22, 2015 Tags: video games, mirrors edge, prequel, fanfiction, faith, celeste, merc Author
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