Francine (Foggy) Nelson (
bestavocado) wrote2018-11-09 09:21 pm
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After her meeting with Matt Murdock, which certain did not make her day any less stressful or complicated, Francine heads home to knock back a few shots of something alcoholic and then spend the most of the rest of her night hanging over a toilet bowl.
The next day, Rosalind isn't feeling any more inclined to listen to reason about accepting Fisk as a client, and since the 'Sharpe' in the name of their law firm most definitely does not refer to Francine, there's not a hell of a lot she can do about it - just suck it up and pretend that the thought of representing Wilson Fisk is the only reason she's feeling queasy today. Of course, she's assigned work on the case because her mother might as well get some use out of the very expensive education she paid for Francine to have. And if there's one thing that she is good at, it's doing the groundwork.
She spends most of the day familiarizing herself with the full details of the case and hiding in her office to avoid running into Rosalind again, which is only partially successful. Rosalind stops her on the way out to wrangle her into lunch tomorrow because they shouldn't let their little work disagreement come between them as mother and daughter - though, honestly, Francine suspects she's either about to be set up on a blind date with someone influential or other or get another reaming out. She's not looking forward to either of them, regardless.
So she's already stressed and a bit jumpy when she heads home, and when she sees the devil waiting for her in the shadows, she all but jumps out of her skin. "What the fuck?!"
The next day, Rosalind isn't feeling any more inclined to listen to reason about accepting Fisk as a client, and since the 'Sharpe' in the name of their law firm most definitely does not refer to Francine, there's not a hell of a lot she can do about it - just suck it up and pretend that the thought of representing Wilson Fisk is the only reason she's feeling queasy today. Of course, she's assigned work on the case because her mother might as well get some use out of the very expensive education she paid for Francine to have. And if there's one thing that she is good at, it's doing the groundwork.
She spends most of the day familiarizing herself with the full details of the case and hiding in her office to avoid running into Rosalind again, which is only partially successful. Rosalind stops her on the way out to wrangle her into lunch tomorrow because they shouldn't let their little work disagreement come between them as mother and daughter - though, honestly, Francine suspects she's either about to be set up on a blind date with someone influential or other or get another reaming out. She's not looking forward to either of them, regardless.
So she's already stressed and a bit jumpy when she heads home, and when she sees the devil waiting for her in the shadows, she all but jumps out of her skin. "What the fuck?!"

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After months of waging war against Wilson Fisk Matt had thought he'd finally brought the man down. Fisk had been exposed, arrested, accomplices were being rounded up by the authorities and the district attorney's office was ramping up to prosecute.
But then, suddenly, momentum started to ebb. The push forward started to slow. Fisk hired an expensive and formative law firm to represent him, which was to be expected, but as soon as he did things with the case started grinding to a halt.
Nothing was happening, and the more Matt pushed as an attorney the more he was told to hold position and be patient. That the case was still coming together. Angles were still being analyzed. Deals were being considered.
Deals.
Matt hadn't put everything on the line for a deal. He wanted justice. He wanted Fisk out of his city and paying for his crimes.
No sooner had 'deal' been mentioned than rumblings on the street began. Fisk was gone, but not for long. When those began Matt decided to hell with patience. He wanted answers, and action.
Standing in front of one of the ones who make up part of Fisk's legal team, Matt is the imposing vigilante; devil horns, grim expression, clenched fists and grating voice.
"You represent Wilson Fisk." Not a question, a statement to let her know exactly what and who has brought him here.
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Jesus Christ, she hates this case.
"What do you want?" Her voice is stronger and less afraid than she actually feels, and her fingers are inching slowly towards her purse, where she has a can of pepper spray.
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Her words come out pretty even, but her heart rate gives her away, not just that she's afraid, but that there's more under the surface that her composure is trying to hide.
Matt's glove creeks as his fist tightens then opens, dropping like a gunslingers hand to the sticks holstered against his thigh.
"Don't," he warns her as her hand reaches towards her purse; aware of what she's thinking about trying and confident he can move fast enough to knock anything out of her hands before she has the chance to use it.
"I want to know what you're working on for Fisk. What he's up to and the deal you're trying to make for him."
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She might be able to talk her way out of this. Or at least talk.
"I'm not at liberty to discuss his case, and I'm definitely not breaking attorney-client privilege to someone dressed as the devil." A breath. "So just to be clear, what are you threatening to do to me if I don't tell you what you want to know?"
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Canting his head, he regards her.
"I'm sure you've seen and read the news, what they've reported I've done. It'll be just the same as it was for all the others who tried to stand in the way of my bringing down Fisk."
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Surprising even herself, she tosses her purse and the pepper spray inside to the ground. "But if beating up attorneys for doing their jobs is your thing, I guess I can't stop you."
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For a moment he's stumped for what to do. Her reaction isn't expected, or even sane, given the circumstances, and it gives him pause.
"Representation is one thing, facilitating criminal enterprises is another," Matt counters. "Your firm is in Fisk's pocket, just like the accountant Leland Owlsley's, and the construction firm Union Allied, and the police and other officials who are being weeded out for their corruption."
Shaking his head, he says, "I don't want you. I want to stop Fisk, for good. Even in jail now he's putting things together and you, and your mother, knows what those are."
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It's steadfast enough that he can tell she believes what she's saying about Fisk's right to representation. Matt admires that, and maybe even her standing her ground against him.
Still, it's mostly frustration felt as he realizes she's not the mark he needs.
"You don't know, then," he declares, disappointed in himself as much as he is in her.
His whole bearing shifts, from standing in threat over her to shifting to take his leave.
"I'll get to the DA," Matt promises. "If I were you, I'd verify that I am the man's lawyer, and not his pawn."
'Lackey', she called it; the term would be fitting, especially if it was unknowingly.
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Beat.
"And when I said chat with the DA, I didn't mean under threat of bodily harm. Just so we're clear."
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"And don't worry, counselor, I won't tell him you sent me." That said, Matt recedes into shadows and then he's just gone.
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It wouldn’t hurt to do a little more digging, surely. As a member of his legal team, it is part of her actual job to know everything about the case and about Rosalind’s plans for how to argue his innocence as she possibly can. It’s more difficult to manage than it should be, honestly, particularly with her mother interrupting her all the time and the headache that’s taken up more-or-less permanent residence in her skull.
(She’s eating, sometimes. Not often. Mostly she’s not hungry. Her stomach is tied up in knots, and when Rosalind takes her out to lunch and insists she eat something, she picks at a salad that ends up in the toilet, but it’s fine, it’s just stress.)
The pieces of the big picture are scattered everywhere: Fisk’s old contacts, money being shuffled around, odd expenditures in her own firm, strange meetings with Fisk’s men. It’s not exactly proof, not yet, but it is reasonable doubt—enough to justify talking to her mother. Enough to justify a long panic attack in a bathroom that typically goes unused because of an unpleasant smell that no cleaner has been able to banish yet. Afterwards, she’s shaky and exhausted and just wants to go home, but she has to go talk to her mother now before she has time to think too much about the implications and chicken out.
She talks to Rosalind in her office, in privacy; she starts out non-confrontational, asking innocently about the anomalies she’s noticed. Then she pushes, points out that—obviously this not what’s really happening, but it looks like their firm is helping Wilson Fisk to rebuild a criminal network with ties in the justice system that could skew his fair trial. A part of her is hoping for an innocent explanation.
On anyone else, the slap Rosalind delivers would be inconsequential. A nasty bruise. But her bones are weak from a lifetime of malnutrition and the impact sends her head spinning and her body stumbling back to the floor. She’s not really aware of what happens after that, but she’s told later that her mother was the one who called an ambulance.
The next thing she knows, she’s waking up in the hospital with a fractured cheekbone and an IV dripping nutrients into her starved body. Once she’s checked over by a nurse, Rosalind visits her briefly to inform her that theatrics like her little fainting spell won’t do anyone any good, that she’s not an attention-seeking teenager anymore and shouldn’t act like it, that she’ll attribute Francine’s hysterics earlier to low blood sugar and doesn’t expect to hear anything more of their conversation ever again.
Francine lets her fingers drift gently over the bandage over her cheek (a casualty of her fall, the official story says, fractured against her mother’s desk when she fainted) and nods quietly, says yes when it’s expected and goes back to sleep after Rosalind leaves.
When she wakes up again, the windows are dark, and she’s not the only person in the room. “Do you really want to beat up someone in a hospital bed?”
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During daylight hours he works on putting together the case against the man. Pouring over everything not only to build evidence and the presentation for the courtroom, but searching for clues to what Fisk is trying to put together so that Matt can tear it down.
Nights are spent following any leads he comes across, trying to beat answers out of anyone who may have them.
From one end of Hell's Kitchen to the other Matt has waged as Daredevil, but tonight he's out of the neighborhood and back where he started.
Everything he's gathered has led back to here, and it's his intention to confront the lead attorney on Fisk's team this time, but in his daylight life he finds out about the daughter and that alters his plans.
Setting aside Fisk for one night, Matt makes a visit to the hospital.
Standing across the room, he probably still makes an imposing figure, but for the moment he displays no signs of threat. Although, if Francine looks for her call button she'll find it no longer within easy reach.
"What happened?"
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Her thoughts skitter over the word right.
"Why do you want to know?"
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He listens to her, hearing the grate of bone in her cheek (fractured, not broken), the agitated grinding of her stomach, and still that not so steady weakened heartbeat.
Machines chirp, saline drips, the nurse making rounds is down on the next floor and won't be by this room for a long while.
There's the scent of blood in the air, and tears, and the lingering acrid tang of bile.
"I want to know if I was right," he replies.
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If she won't talk about one, they'll talk about the other, and if she won't venture anything on either it's easy to assume the two are related.
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Usually by returning the favor, but most of them do end up with the police, eventually.
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"In my line of work it's the most effective method."
Still, he's not here to talk about his M.O.
Switching subjects, he comes back around to his being here tonight, and this time he's not pushing for information, but approaching it with empathy, and actual concern.
"Are you going to be alright?"
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Still.
"Convincing me you care would be easier if you hadn't set the tone for this relationship at 'threatening bodily harm'."
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"I've taken up this fight with Fisk for awhile now. I know the kind of monster he is. It's made me... less tolerant of the people who associate with him."
Especially given that all of the people who surround Fisk are one kind of monster or another themselves.
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