Jason Compson IV (
whatisay) wrote in
thecapitol2015-11-03 11:17 pm
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Such Convenience in Regret After the Fact [Closed]
WHO| Jason and Sinclair, then Swann; Jason and Wednesday; Jason and Emily
WHAT| Jason takes Wednesday to a photoshoot, and gets caught doing shady business.
WHEN| Week 6, except Wednesday, which is pre-Arena
WHERE| Sinclair's lobby, the Tribute Center, a shi-shi photoshoot, the D7 Suite
WARNINGS| Typical Jason warnings: bigotry, abusive dynamics, general asshattery.
I. Sinclair, then Swann
There's something about courting Sponsors that always makes Jason feel like a dog begging for scraps at the table. Whether or not it's part of the job description, it's degrading, and Jason spends most of the time wishing whatever establishment he's in would catch fire or that his business partners would suddenly find their drinks full of poison.
It's all the worse this time for being across from a man who last saw him behind glass in a cell.
He strides up to the front of the bank lobby and waves down the receptionist. "Jason Compson, here to see Augustus Sinclair? I tried to get an appointment in but I don't know if it stuck or not."
II. Wednesday
As a general rule, Tributes aren't allowed in Jason's car. Wednesday's one of the few he'll give leeway to, although Virgil has to stay in a carrier. Jacques, in a kennel in the back seat, keeps chattering at the scent of the spider and grasping at the thin metal bars. The drive isn't long, and it's even pleasant, Jason speculating on
Today, it's a photoshoot at the reptile house. Jason has to check Jacques at the door, and then Wednesday's taken to the styling area. Lights, makeup, costumes, and bustle that disturbs the poor animals kept in aquariums not even ten feet away. Jason barks orders between checking on his other Tributes' schedules on his phone.
"Alright. I want a bit of her input on the clothing. And minimize the makeup, we're going for creepy child, not jailbait. She's ten." He smacks away an Avox who he deems is brushing Wednesday's hair too slowly, taking over the way he used to run through his mother's hair about a decade ago. "I have half a mind to send the mute half of you to reprogramming and fire the rest of you. This should already be dollars in the bank."
III. Emily
Things have almost returned to a normal pace in the District Seven Suite, monkey aside, with a few Tributes still with a chance in the Arena and Cassian with such limited say in the wardrobes that his only work as a Stylist seems to be procuring fabric. Jason's control over the budget has become somewhat tyrannical, but other than that there have been fewer outbursts from anyone, fewer bruised Avoxes and broken mugs. Jason's waited up night when Emily's been bid on and now, with her Citizenship, only stays late when he has more work than usual.
"Emily, did you run these expenditures past me?" He looks up at her when she walks in in the morning. The monkey is sitting on the coffee table, chewing on a still-wrapped bon-bon. "I expect Cassian to have his hands in the cookie jar, but not you."
WHAT| Jason takes Wednesday to a photoshoot, and gets caught doing shady business.
WHEN| Week 6, except Wednesday, which is pre-Arena
WHERE| Sinclair's lobby, the Tribute Center, a shi-shi photoshoot, the D7 Suite
WARNINGS| Typical Jason warnings: bigotry, abusive dynamics, general asshattery.
I. Sinclair, then Swann
There's something about courting Sponsors that always makes Jason feel like a dog begging for scraps at the table. Whether or not it's part of the job description, it's degrading, and Jason spends most of the time wishing whatever establishment he's in would catch fire or that his business partners would suddenly find their drinks full of poison.
It's all the worse this time for being across from a man who last saw him behind glass in a cell.
He strides up to the front of the bank lobby and waves down the receptionist. "Jason Compson, here to see Augustus Sinclair? I tried to get an appointment in but I don't know if it stuck or not."
II. Wednesday
As a general rule, Tributes aren't allowed in Jason's car. Wednesday's one of the few he'll give leeway to, although Virgil has to stay in a carrier. Jacques, in a kennel in the back seat, keeps chattering at the scent of the spider and grasping at the thin metal bars. The drive isn't long, and it's even pleasant, Jason speculating on
Today, it's a photoshoot at the reptile house. Jason has to check Jacques at the door, and then Wednesday's taken to the styling area. Lights, makeup, costumes, and bustle that disturbs the poor animals kept in aquariums not even ten feet away. Jason barks orders between checking on his other Tributes' schedules on his phone.
"Alright. I want a bit of her input on the clothing. And minimize the makeup, we're going for creepy child, not jailbait. She's ten." He smacks away an Avox who he deems is brushing Wednesday's hair too slowly, taking over the way he used to run through his mother's hair about a decade ago. "I have half a mind to send the mute half of you to reprogramming and fire the rest of you. This should already be dollars in the bank."
III. Emily
Things have almost returned to a normal pace in the District Seven Suite, monkey aside, with a few Tributes still with a chance in the Arena and Cassian with such limited say in the wardrobes that his only work as a Stylist seems to be procuring fabric. Jason's control over the budget has become somewhat tyrannical, but other than that there have been fewer outbursts from anyone, fewer bruised Avoxes and broken mugs. Jason's waited up night when Emily's been bid on and now, with her Citizenship, only stays late when he has more work than usual.
"Emily, did you run these expenditures past me?" He looks up at her when she walks in in the morning. The monkey is sitting on the coffee table, chewing on a still-wrapped bon-bon. "I expect Cassian to have his hands in the cookie jar, but not you."
I
It's with a lively step that Nina leads Jason through the Panem Northern Bank halls, every so columns hung a portrait of President Snow along with the Board of Directors. They all seemed to stare down at the commuters, warning them to not try anything funny with their enterprise and with Panem itself.
Behind the solid oak doors with the plaque A. Sinclair, Esq. Sinclair Solutions, was a sprawling office, complete with one of the best views of the Capitol's financial sector, a place in the metaphorical Mount Olympus, high above the mortals that served them. The smirk on Gus's face was...dangerous to say the least. It's the same one he uses with investors and business partners, but this time?
Behind Augustus was a man in a simple suit, tall and built like a swift tank. This was Delta, Sinclair's personal Avox, once known as Johnny Travis, a former Peacekeeper who was sentenced to this for highly questionable acts. To have him here, it made sure that guests to the office wouldn't try harming Augustus.
"Thank you Nina...send up some tea for Mr. Compson and cancel all my other appointments for today. He and I have a few things to talk about," Gus spoke as he stood up from his chair. Miss Carnegie nodded and got to work on the request while the venture capitalist offered an empty chair.
"Figured with your family history, alcohol isn't a preference."
There was a lot to talk about indeed, the folders all carried the Compson name.
Re: I
"You'd be right. Can't stand the smell of it."
Jason can immediately tell that something's off, and it has nothing to do with Sinclair's mute bodyguard - most Capitol officials who can afford them have those. It's all in the folders on the table, which Jason glances at out of nosy habit, always wanting to know a little more about the next person than they do about him. It's a vain hope this time.
"I wasn't aware that we had more than Wednesday Addams and Alain Johns to talk about." He settles into the chair and allows himself to be served water with a lemon wedge.
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"Did you really think I wouldn't catch onto your scheme?" he asked point-blank. "If you did, you're a bigger fool than I thought."
This ploy was a chance for Jason to confess to the crimes he's committed. Not out of good will of course, Gus thought the man was at home when he was in prison. In fact, it was Cassian's assault left the door right open for Sinclair to investigate the strange transactions happening in his back.
"I'm mighty disappointed in you, Compson. I wouldn't try lyin' to me right now, wouldn't look good in a court of law."
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"I don't know what you're talking about."
For as many nights as Jason's spent tossing and turning, wondering if he's about to be caught using Ben's funds inappropriately, forging his uncle's checks, shuffling around the appraisals of the Compson home to pay a lower tax rate, he hasn't actually planned for what he'd do if it happened. He's only feared, coughing up paranoia without expectorant.
And now, backed into a corner, he does exactly what Sinclair advised him against.
"Mind sharing what it is you're accusing me of?" He palms his pocket. "Can I smoke, by the way? If you're going to hold me here, that is."
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"Go ahead," he shrugged it off and merely opened the folders for Compson to see the paper trail he's left behind.
"You're lookin' at least five counts of fraud, misappropriating restricted funds for the care of a disabled Capitolite, check forgery, asset value manipulation, check kiting an' that's just from my banks," he calmly explained, but emphasized those last few words, as if to point out the stupidity of hiding this. Panem Northern was one of Sinclair's biggest ventures, of course he'd take care of it like an always-hungry beast, devouring the world around it. "I've already had people from the other banks start checking for your other accounts. Wanna try again?"
Gus is not making this easy but why would he? The only thing saving Jason from being escorted by a Peacekeeper is that Swann has enough on her plate.
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"I'm guessing the reason you haven't called the Peacekeepers on me already is because you don't know if I have accomplices or not."
Jason keeps a calm demeanor, one that only a Capitolite can really manage, growing up as a child who was always monitored and spied on, whose only sense of privacy started and stopped at the bone of his skull. He wonders if he could get Sinclair to drop it entirely if he admitted it was Swann's idea.
But he wouldn't do that. Not to her, at least. This is as far as he'll go, reminding Sinclair that Jason's contacts will all be investigated - and Swann's inheritance is large enough that that would be several months of a fragile woman being audited and scrutinized.
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Sinclair wasn't about to let it go and they both knew that much. This was one of his creations and to see it used for fraud (at least fraud he didn't already know about) was just plain rude. Plus it's Compson, a man so driven by bitterness that not many Capitolites would defend him.
"Or we can settle this in court. You decide."
To say there isn't some delight in all this would be a lie that even Gus can't hide. Because he sincerely hoped Jason wouldn't stoop so low as to involve Swann to save his own hide.
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He feels ill, thinking that he could probably go to Swann and just ask her to make this all go away, to dump money in his account for the repayment or even worse, just ask Sinclair nicely. It might work. Jason feels like he couldn't be more emasculated by either if he were castrated on live television.
"I can pay it back in installments, maybe. But funerals are expensive, Sinclair. You know well as I do that I'm not sitting on a mountain of your stolen money."
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"There's no maybe here, Mr. Compson," he stated in a cool drawl as Nina came back with their drinks. "You know the law." And we both exploit it to the ends of Panem "Besides, we both know your mother's estate couldn't cover the funeral expenses. Your associates were very generous."
As if it were any secret that the Honeymeads covered some of that. Sinclair knows somewhat of Swann's involvement. Man up, Compson.
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Asking Swann to pay for some of the expenses was the lowest point of a long downhill slide that started when Jason's niece robbed him and only steepened when he took back the Escort job. It's as if the last part of himself that knew who he was, that took any value in that, crumbled inside him.
"Maybe it's because my associate wanted to keep me on my feet because she's my girlfriend." As in, not yours, Sinclair. "She offered. I didn't ask. I don't go expecting things from her, unlike certain other people in the room. Don't think I haven't seen the way you look at her."
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"I won't even honor that comment so let's stick to the verifiable facts of the matter: you stole money from my bank and now I expect it back. If you're going to fling mud at this enterprise, you might as well have the cash on hand. Or you could ask for a pardon given your economic circumstances."
You want to feel like you're a victim of the system? I will gladly oblige, Jason. Because no one uses Augustus Sinclair's heart against him and he regretted showing that extra bit of attention towards Swann Honeymead. It made him vulnerable to the likes of Compson, who think they can push him around out of some pathetic need to feel miserable and justified in their existence.
Now Jason had the chance to walk away from his mistakes with one caveat: he had to beg for it.
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Of course Sinclair is, and were the situations reversed, Jason would do the same. Jason would put his foot to the man's back and hold him down and take his money and then turn him in anyway, for nothing but the petty, fleeting satisfaction of it.
He blows a smoke ring at the ceiling and transmutes all those nerves into anger. The alchemy comes so easily to him. It has since adolescence, turning anything that hurts into something that moves outwards.
"Alright. Cuff me right now." Jason holds his wrists out. "Ruin Swann's life. Since your feelings for her aren't a 'verifiable fact'."
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II
She sits through styling very stoically, even as they paint her lips black and glue on long false lashes. She's mostly quiet, talking almost solely to Jason, and even then, it's only to ask for some water. But when he starts brushing her hair, she huffs out a quiet little breath and looks at his reflection in the mirror.
"Do you think this will take very long? I have ax-throwing practice tonight, and I wanted to take a nap before that."
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Wednesday's face in the mirror gives him the heebies. She looks like a corpse but exquisitely painted, pale and blanched with exaggerated eyes, like one of those photographs people take of their open-casket funerals before they turn the deceased into a gem. It's the perfect effect.
"Could you practice throwing your axe at Ruffnut? She needs to work on her survival instinct. As in, finding it at all."
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She frowns a little as she casts her mind over her recent expenses in her pre-coffee haze, but it's long since become standard practice for her to run everything past Jason. It just wasn't worth his wrath not to.
"Every penny I've spent is accounted for. Is there anything in particular you think I've missed?"
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"There's fourteen assi missing, and I know it didn't come from Cassian, because his credit card has to go through me no matter how small the purchase is." Jason pulls his pen from behind his ear and chews it, not fully aware he's doing so. He drags his fingers through his hair.
Fourteen assi is a pittance. It's a cup of coffee at a mid-level cafe. And yet it's bothering him, because if it isn't Emily then he's gotten sloppy somewhere, and that could get him caught.
(The monkey slams the candy against the table.)
"Coffee's made, by the way. Get it now before the Tributes wake up."
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She frowns a little as she tries to recall whether she'd spent any money that wasn't out of her personal allowance without notifying Jason, and is positive she hasn't done so. "You have my accounts. If it's not on there, I didn't spend it."
She grimaces a little at the bitterness of the coffee and adds a couple of sugar lumps before sneaking one to the monkey. "Are you sure you haven't miscounted somewhere?"
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"If I thought you could do the math for this I'd have you doublecheck." That's also a lie. He doesn't want anyone else looking at the bookkeeping until he's cleaned up any indiscretions. It's not that he doesn't trust Emily in particular so much as that any person who knows what he's up to is one more variable intruding on his private concerns.
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"If it's that big a deal, I'll replace it myself." Not that that means she took the money in the first place, but it seems like the simplest solution to get him to stop worrying about it. "It's not really that much money, after all."
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"Look, just tell me if Cassian says anything. For all I know he's using the wrong credit card because they all look the same to him. I says people like that don't know what an assi's worth." He gets up and tosses the papers down with a smack onto the table. It's one of the few things he and Emily will share true understanding about, the fact that money is finite, but not one Jason would admit to having in common with a Districter.
Former Districter. He doesn't even say much more to her, just storms out with his hands in his pockets, leaving the incriminating documents on the table of a person he doesn't suspect is savvy enough to recognize embezzlement.
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She takes a minute to open the post that's been sent to her at the Training Centre, then reaches across to take the documents, leafing through them casually, not expecting to find anything that Jason hasn't already noted but figuring it can't hurt to double check. Even to her untrained eye, though, it's obvious that something is wrong. Her brow furrows over with worry as she reads the figures, getting a very bad feeling in the pit of her stomach.
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He comes back in about half an hour later in something of a better mood, not because he figured out where the missing fund was going but because he found a good way to hide it. It'll take withdrawing from Ben's account and shuffling a bit around, and that's a hassle, but Jason's pretty sure he can make the paper trail lead to Maury.
There's a sick satisfaction in being able to take snipes at his errant uncle from afar.
"Oh, you decided to give a look at the math? Don't bother. I'm going to the bank to get it sorted anyway."
It doesn't even occur to him that she would have noticed anything. Everyone knows most Districters can't count past their fingers and toes. He sets a coffee in a paper cup down on the table for himself, having not brought one for Emily or even considering that it might have been polite to do so.
"Stop looking at those. You'll give yourself a headache. I'm going to shred them anyway."
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Jason freezes for a moment, partway towards putting one of his cigarettes to his mouth. Then he resumes the motion with a sort of affected ease, reminding himself that Districters are stupid, uneducated, practically illiterate. She doesn't know what she's talking about.
"Like I said. I'll take care of it."
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