11-12-2014, 07:54 PM
It seemed she wasn't fond of the liberal use of the term, and he had to agree with her. It was slung around far too often in the early part of the century, back when regions like Dominance V had been a hotbed of insurrection and violence. Not that that had changed much considering the events of recent weeks, but there had at least been a time of peace there, perhaps the longest the region had ever known. But until he could admit to the public the true purpose of his prototype task force, anti-terrorism would have to do.
"You may be new to Dominance I, Miss Pirozzi, but you come with recommendations. It isn't just anyone who can find work at the heart of the CCD, and you got your foot in the door through personal merit, not who you know."
As she began sorting through the stack of papers she needed to sign off on, Drayson turned to his computer. It was about as advanced as could be expected for one of his position, but he hardly used the thing for anything beyond checking emails and doing reports. It drove some of his people nuts how much he insisted on actual face-to-face discussion for things most would leave to video-calls at best, or simple emails.
"I cannot promise the pay will be any better, but I won't hesitate to guess the workload will be more time consuming."
His people were already tracking various unexplained crimes or incidents in Moscow. Robberies, disappearances, strange sightings. All the sorts of thing that regular police had always struggled to deal with and almost always ended up in cold case files to never be solved. It was just a matter of time until something sparked that they could respond to.
"You may be new to Dominance I, Miss Pirozzi, but you come with recommendations. It isn't just anyone who can find work at the heart of the CCD, and you got your foot in the door through personal merit, not who you know."
As she began sorting through the stack of papers she needed to sign off on, Drayson turned to his computer. It was about as advanced as could be expected for one of his position, but he hardly used the thing for anything beyond checking emails and doing reports. It drove some of his people nuts how much he insisted on actual face-to-face discussion for things most would leave to video-calls at best, or simple emails.
"I cannot promise the pay will be any better, but I won't hesitate to guess the workload will be more time consuming."
His people were already tracking various unexplained crimes or incidents in Moscow. Robberies, disappearances, strange sightings. All the sorts of thing that regular police had always struggled to deal with and almost always ended up in cold case files to never be solved. It was just a matter of time until something sparked that they could respond to.