Tick tock.
Ennai idly thought about the how the moment of the heist was getting further and further away. The longer they took to get involved, the harder a case it would be to solve and the less neat it would be to wrap up. The dolls were a minor theft, low priority, but it seemed like it should be important to start the kids off with a win. Team-building and...the like.
Ennai sighed, once again grasping full-well how out of her depth she was. ACME was supposed to be a healthy learning environment, and as much as Ennai wanted them to be field ready, they weren't. Hand-holding or no. Learning these things at a young age would give them an advantage, sure. But taking them out in the field before they had all the necessary survival skills...it was irresponsible. Things can get out of hand so quickly for even in the smallest cases...But no, Ennai had no teaching experience. As much as she wanted the JDs safe, she knew that she was probably on the wrong end of things.
Still... her mind trailed back to the awaiting case.
It's so easy to lose a thief. Things go missing all the time... Ennai thought, watching Kidman trying to sneak out again from the corner of her eye.
She was turning away from the curious selection of guns that the junior detectives were in line to shoot, moving toward the girl-- to intercept or follow she hadn't made up her mind-- when Joe Kerr beat her to it.
Listening to their conversation she began to feel more at ease than she had in ages. It was perversely comforting to be reassured that things were rarely ever what they seemed. It was the thing she loved so much about flora. Plants grow everywhere. Even in places as seemingly uninhabitable as ACME.
Still, as with much of what was going on in at the academy, something about it was simply off to Ennai. Where she had been, no one would ever conduct their word choice so freely. Everyone just knew better. And the ones who didn't, didn't last long. Maybe it was all the freedom of speech people were afforded in these parts. The US. The UK. Denmark. Maybe it made them soft.
It's what got Mom killed.
She shook her head, pulling out her hair tie, letting her long, dark brown hair tumble out, and then re-tying it automatically. She had only been back in the US for a couple of years, and the transition had been...trying. Two years of staying in the same place working as an analyst, unable to finish the work she had started back in Bursa. Unable to rectify the things that had gone so wrong in Baghdad. Simply existing in the US sometimes felt worse than what happened with Ax in Baghdad. No. That was a lie. Nothing was worse than that. Ennai was in over her head back then too. She was always in over her head. Since the start.
But the intelligence community was different in an office.
She woke up in a cold sweat one night out of two for the first year she was back. She thought that maybe it was just DC, and that returning to San Francisco for this job would get her back to normal. That focusing on getting the kids prepared to handle whatever comes their way would get her gears running again back to normal again. But normal for her was pretending to be something she wasn't. So Ennai found herself slipping back into a lie to do her job efficiently.
Some of the other teachers had gone to inquire after Kidman, so Ennai went to Nace kneeling to scratch Goliath, who was coping astonishingly well with the gunshots. "May I?" she asked smiling hopefully, hand already partially extended. Zack finished taking his shots. "Star Wars fans are we?" She stood up, and looked over at Zack, cocking an eyebrow. "That's all good and well, but if you've any intentions of passing my class I suggest you start toeing the Trekkie line. Brown-nosing will take you
miles with me."
She stood back watching Nace shoot with the contented pleasure that one gets when watching a master at their trade.
"Is there a reason our transport is still fired up?"
Ennai looked over her shoulder hearing Ivy's question. She spoke loudly enough to address all the students.
"I believe," Ennai said seriously, "that it means that it's time for your real field trip to finally begin."