Follow the Fool (part 7 of 10)

a Phoenix Wright fanfiction by CantFaketheFunk

Back to Part 6
The fact that she had no idea where she was didn't disturb Adrian 
Andrews in the least. She could certainly infer much from the 
surroundings. Outside the thin white curtains that fluttered in a gentle 
breeze, the blonde American could see a stretch of thin, pearl-white 
sand that stretched as far as her eyes could perceive to either 
side—pure white, gently glowing in the dying light of the setting sun. 
Past that, there was an endless, vast expanse of water, the fiery orange 
light of the sunset glittering off the gently rolling, crystal-blue 
waves in a very storybook manner.

That, plus the blazing hot weather (though tempered by a cooling sea 
breeze that smelled of salt and memory) told Adrian that she was, in 
fact, somewhere tropical—though the skyline she could make out bordering 
the beach looked an awful lot like Hamburg, Germany... and there weren't 
any beaches like this anywhere near Hamburg... but then, that knowledge 
was firmly pushed to the very back of her mind where she didn't let it 
worry her at all.

More specifically, though, she was in a hotel room, a large (if not 
extravagantly so) room with all the facilities one would expect out of a 
modern, up-to-date establishment. The entire room felt fuzzy and muted 
like it was in watercolor except for the vibrant beauty out the open 
sliding-door window, and the large king-sized bed Adrian was currently 
sprawled across in a most undignified manner.

Adrian sighed contently, giving a little yawn and stretching, the white 
button-down shirt she was wearing completely unbuttoned giving a little 
flutter as the sea breeze caught it. She sank back down onto the bed, 
resting her head in the lap of the other figure in the room, a young 
blue-haired woman who was sitting up in the bed, clad in a simple black 
sleeveless shirt—her legs concealed under the bed covers—calmly perusing 
a legal brief. Franziska von Karma gave no outward indication that she 
was even aware of the other woman's presence, though she did idly start 
playing with a few stray strands of Adrian's hair that had fallen by her 
slender free hand.

The blonde woman smiled warmly at nothing in particular, feeling the 
ever-so-slight sensations of her hair being played with send subtle 
golden tingles up and down her spine. She could feel those warm final 
rays of the setting sun caress the bare skin of her legs, and let 
herself sink into the bed, enjoying every last sensation. Slowly and 
almost subconsciously, Adrian started running the back of her hand up 
and down her companion's legs, only a thin layer of blankets between 
their skin... she smiled, watching the dying embers of the sunset glint 
off the thin gold band encircling her ring finger.

Franziska made a soft, barely noticeable noise deep in the back of her 
throat, a sort of "Mmf" sound that was her only reaction as her dark 
eyes continued to dart back and forth rapidly, scanning the multi-page 
legal document. She briefly stopped playing with Adrian's long hair to 
turn the page, a matching ring glinting in the sunlight as she did so. 
"How can a lawyer write a fifty-page document and call it a 'brief,'" 
asked Adrian teasingly, a laugh in her voice if not her body.

Without averting her eyes from her work or missing a beat, Franziska 
responded, "You've seen my bookshelves in my office, correct?" The 
American woman made a small affirmative noise, and her partner continued 
simply, "that's how."

The two lay there for what could have been an hour or thirty seconds, 
the only measure of time the slow, lazy descent of the sun to the 
horizon, the only sound the ruffling of paper as Franziska turned 
through the pages of the document. Adrian shifted positions, turning 
onto her side and hugging her knees to her chest, still running a 
slender finger across the rise of her partner's lower body.

"I'm not distracting you, am I?" she said at last, adjusting her glasses 
with her free hand as she did so.

Franziska looked at her, averting her gaze from her work and arching a 
blue-gray eyebrow inquisitively. "...a bit," she admitted with a shrug 
and what might have been the barest hints of a teasing smirk, "...but 
not excessively."

There was no mistaking Adrian's grin for what it was. "Would you like me 
to distract you excessively?" Her tone was playful and gentle, oddly 
familiar, as if she'd said such things in her mind thousands of times 
before, just... never out loud.

That blue-gray eyebrow remained arched, and Franziska cocked her head to 
the side just slightly enough to be noticed. "I would like to finish 
re-reading this brief in peace, Adrian." She gave what sounded like a 
resigned sigh, closing her dark eyes and setting the document off to the 
side. "...but I suppose I could allow you to do so," she said at last.

Adrian sat up, feeling the bed bounce beneath her as she shifted, 
sitting astride the German woman's legs and brushing some golden hair 
from her face, shaking her head softly. "Oh come on," she said, a mock 
whine in her voice that certainly was not mirrored in her sparkling 
eyes. "You enjoy it just as much as I do."

"I... didn't say I didn't," said Franziska, and Adrian could see the 
little differences in her face that most people would miss that plainly 
registered a deeply concealed amusement. "Did you ever hear me say 
that?" As she spoke, she reached out, slender fingers gently plucking 
the thin glasses from the other woman's face, folding them, and setting 
them to the side of the bed on top of the discarded legal brief. "You 
were going to leave them on again and they were going to break," there 
was the definite hint of a lopsided grin on her face, barely visible but 
there nonetheless. "Foolish girl..."

Adrian ran a hand through her hair, brushing it out of her face as she 
leaned in, enfolding the other woman in a warm embrace. "....your fool?" 
she said in a soft whisper right into Franziska's ear, resting her head 
on the other girl's shoulder contently, a flood of warmth infusing her 
entire body.

There was a pause, and Franziska von Karma nodded at last. "My fool."

The blonde woman could feel the warmth of the other woman's cheek on 
hers as their heads gently turned, her breath hot against her cheek, the 
soft wetness of her lips just about to brush across her own—

—Adrian Andrews' eyes slid open to the gentle, warming light of morning 
seeping through the windows that on any other morning would have been 
energizing and accepted... but today was rather unwelcome.

With a heavy sigh, Adrian sunk deeper into the pull-out bed she'd been 
sleeping on, eyes closed. Part of her wanted to try and get back to 
sleep and recapture that moment, but she knew that it was gone, 
dispersed into the early morning sunlight like a cloud of dust. 
Damn...She pulled the covers up to her neck, trying to wriggle as deep 
into the mattress as possible, hoping to try and capture that complete 
warm glow she'd felt in the dream, but to no avail.

She sat up, yawning and brushing some hair from where it had fallen into 
her face during the night's sleep. Though she couldn't see the clock on 
the other side of the kitchen counter, it was late-early morning. 
Franziska was long gone by now... off to work. Adrian sighed again, 
crossing through the open bedroom door and the immaculately kept bedroom 
of her host, pulling off her nighttime shirt as she turned the shower 
on.

The water and steam were hot, rejuvenating as they enveloped her body, 
but it was an external warmth, and external warmth was certainly not 
uncommon back in Los Angeles during the summer. Adrian closed her eyes 
as she ran her fingers through her long golden hair, trying desperately 
to recapture those last few moments of the dream. It had just been a 
dream, and she'd known that it had just been a dream... but that warmth 
had been different. Total, complete, from the center of her being 
radiating out through muscle, skin, and bone alike.

Come to think of it, Adrian couldn't recall ever feeling that warm, 
that... safe since... well, ever. She had a good memory, too—it had just 
been such a completely enveloping feeling.

Adrian almost laughed to herself, looking down at the rivulets of water 
splashing on the synthetic porcelain bathtub. I'm such a sap. Stupid... 
stupid romantic fantasies, that's all. And look how I let it get to me. 
It was silly, really. She should really stop thinking about such things. 
Naturally, though, she wouldn't.

She dressed, her long locks wrapped in one of Franziska's towels to help 
them dry, trying to purge that silly little dream from her mind, not 
thinking about the feel of the other woman's skin against her own, the 
soft whisper of clothing on satin, the heat of her lips...

...Slightly frustrated and realizing that she was blushing despite 
herself, Adrian was acutely aware of the fact that she was failing to 
put such thoughts from her mind rather spectacularly. "Welcome back to 
the real world, Adrian Andrews," she said half under her breath, trying 
to ground herself firmly in reality. It had been silly, meaningless sap, 
and she knew it.

Her train of thought was suddenly interrupted by the apartment door 
opening. She looked up, a bit startled, to see Franziska step through 
the door carrying a small paper bag in her hands. The young prosecutor 
saw Adrian and nodded. "Oh. You're up. Good morning, Adrian."

"M-morning," Adrian tried not to stammer, feeling her face grow hot as 
every little detail from that wonderful dream she'd tried (and failed) 
to push from her mind came crashing back. "I... I thought you were at 
work already."

Franziska shook her head, and walked over to the table where the blonde 
woman sat, placing the paper bag on its top. "I... decided to go in late 
today, actually. I thought that maybe... you would like to see where I 
worked. Perhaps it would be more interesting than having obscure local 
history shoved in your face for yet another day."

Adrian smiled softly. "Hans wasn't that bad. He was a darling, really."

"...perhaps. Anyway, I saw you were still asleep, so I went and... I 
bought us... I bought breakfast," Franziska said a little bit too 
hastily, pulling the contents of the paper bag out. As she set a 
croissant in front of the blonde woman, their hands brushed for the 
briefest of instants, and then the two reflexively pulled away as sparks 
stung their skin.

There was silence as the pair looked at each other, and Adrian was very 
aware of the blush coloring Franziska's cheeks that mirrored her own 
almost exactly. Their eyes met—and then split, looking everywhere but 
directly at the other. Adrian could feel her heart start to pick up its 
pace.

Franziska shook her head, forcing a short, sharp laugh. "Static 
electricity." Adrian nodded silently as Franziska sat down a bit harder 
than she would have liked, busying herself by scrutinizing the jam and 
toast in front of her.

In her dream, neither of them would speak for eternities on end, just 
lying together in the silence, and it felt so rich and right... Adrian 
quietly nibbled at the croissant Franziska had bought for her, staring 
at her plate and the surface of the table, refusing to let her eyes 
wander anywhere near the other woman. She could feel her heart pounding 
beneath her breast, so hard and fierce she felt it would burst from her 
chest if not restrained.

Neither of them looked at the other in the heavy, thick silence. It was 
stifling, almost excruciating, but not for any of the reasons that 
Adrian would have expected. Last night, Franziska had confessed to 
having feelings she simply didn't understand—She's never felt them 
before—that for anyone else would have been obviously... well, deep 
attraction if not outright love. Adrian was not a stupid woman by any 
stretch of the imagination, and had anyone else said those words, would 
have pegged the underlying emotion exactly in less than a heartbeat.

Was it so different just because it was Franziska? She had certainly had 
a unique life... but she was, on some level, human flesh and blood like 
everyone else. Adrian saw her eating her breakfast out of the corner of 
her eye, like everyone else did. What made her so different? Why was she 
second-guessing the admission from the person she wanted to say it most?

The air was heavy, oppressing, and choking. "It's very good," said 
Adrian at last, haltingly. "Thank you for... for getting it." She didn't 
look up from her plate.

"Oh. You're... welcome," returned Franziska, in that voice that had so 
easily and smoothly and seductively whispered in her ear—her breath was 
hot on her cheek—not an hour before. It was the exact same voice, but it 
felt so different, so jarring. The two of them fell silent once more.

Why? Why was it so different, and excruciatingly stifling? In that 
watercolor room by the infinite ocean, everything had been so easy... 
she had felt warm, safe, and light. Here, she felt very much drawn in to 
the physical space of Adrian Andrews, confined to a fragile, vulnerable 
body.

There was a part of her that wanted to dismiss everything Franziska had 
said—the meaning behind those frustrated, passionate words—as fantasy, 
her assigning depth where there was none. A part that wanted to 
desperately believe that Franziska did not feel anything of the sort, 
because that would make everything so easy. If that were the case, then 
Adrian could watch from the sides and love from afar, like she'd done. 
It was safe, and it was simple, and she was used to it.

If Franziska's words had meant what she thought they did, though...? 
Their hands joined, fingers entwining together in their own little 
embrace. No... that... that was dangerous. Extend yourself too far, 
leave yourself open and honest and true... and you would find yourself 
at the mercy of the cruel Fates.

If Franziska felt that way... it terrified Adrian to think of what would 
come. Utterly unknown, unpredictable, and possibly treacherous. In the 
watercolor room, she had known that the other woman held a massive part 
of her... but that had been wonderful. She had been open and extended 
and vulnerable, but had never felt so safe and protected in her entire 
life.

And here the two of them were, eating breakfast together in such an 
awkward, choking silence that Adrian half wanted to just stand up and 
scream if only because it wouldn't be silent anymore.

She was not a stupid woman. There was a tension between them, a spark 
that had been more than just static electricity. Adrian was perfectly 
aware of how she felt, but the heavy, pendulous quiet might as well have 
been a neon sign declaring Franziska's reciprocation. Though that 
nagging part of her refused to stop denying the possibility, Adrian knew 
how the other woman felt. She was absolutely certain in ways she hadn't 
even known existed.

Franziska von Karma had feelings for her. She was sure of it.

Adrian had watched for three years, loving from the sidelines as Celeste 
Inpax lived her life. It had been easy, it had been comfortable, and it 
had been safe.

But it had never... it had never felt like that. Franziska is not 
Celeste. She feels... she feels something. I... I want it to feel like 
that.

The blonde woman forced herself to look up, to look at Franziska, who 
noticed the motion and lifted her eyes to see what was going on. Those 
dark eyes that had been the same but so different in that quiet room 
locked with hers, and Adrian fought the immediate impulse to flinch and 
look away. She felt flutters in her stomach, and somehow knew that 
Franziska was feeling the same way.

She also knew that Franziska would never admit it. In the dream, Adrian 
had found herself daring to take the lead, taking initiative... it had 
felt right. Franziska would... she wouldn't... Adrian didn't even know 
if the prosecutor's fierce pride would let her admit what she felt even 
to herself, let alone anybody else. If either of them was going to make 
the first move, it... does it have to be me?

It would be so easy to not do it. To convince oneself that it was just a 
trick of the mind and fall into the silent, distant love she was used 
to. Extending herself like that was horrifying, but Adrian also felt a 
sickening lump in her stomach at the thought of just letting that warmth 
and safety slip away.

Adrian realized that she had to make a choice. Either way she chose, 
there could be pain and heartbreak, or there could be wonderful warmth 
and safety... either way. There was no safe choice. There was no right 
choice. There was only her choice.

The eye contact was like a sizzling live wire—though you wanted to break 
it, your body wouldn't let you let go. Slowly, despite herself, Adrian 
smiled silently across the table at the prodigy with the sea-gray hair, 
a faint smile that was felt more than seen.

It might have been her imagination, but she thought she saw the corners 
of Franziska's mouth turn up in an incredibly slight, minute way. And 
then, so perfectly timed it might as well have been rehearsed, they both 
suddenly broke the contact, looking anywhere but at the other.

"So..." began Franziska, a slight waver in her voice that was quickly 
masked as she continued to speak, "...to the Prosecutor's Office, then?"

Adrian nodded bashfully, still consumed in her own thoughts and 
realizations. "...right. Okay." Neither one of them spoke as they 
cleaned up their breakfast and left the apartment, nor did they speak on 
the agonizingly long drive to the tall building that housed the legal 
system of one of the biggest cities in Europe.

--

Franziska didn't know what had been running through her head when she'd 
come up with this absolutely brilliant plan, but she couldn't imagine 
for a single moment that it would be anything even remotely related to 
logic or reason. Oh yes. You're distracted by her to the point where you 
cannot work. The obvious solution, then, is to bring her to your 
workplace where she will be right in front of you. Truly your best idea 
in ages, Franziska.

The other woman had pushed one of the two chairs normally reserved for 
more official visitors and clients to the side of the room where she'd 
no longer be blocking Franziska's access to her massive bookshelf. 
Franziska hadn't told her that she didn't really need to get the 
bookshelf unless she was dealing with particularly obscure law—and 
certainly not when she was being asked to perform a simple task that an 
adding machine could do just as effectively.

In fact, they'd barely said more than a few words to each other all day, 
ever since breakfast. Franziska's eyes kept flicking up over her desk in 
the briefest of glances at the other woman before she caught herself and 
forced her gaze back to the pile of papers on her desk... at least for a 
minute or so. Brilliant idea, that. Thankfully, the "already done" stack 
was dwarfing the "yet to do" stack, though they still didn't seem to be 
changing size all that quickly.

Over the week that Adrian had been here in Hamburg as Franziska's guest, 
things had... changed. The differences had started small and 
innocuous—an odd feeling of ease and comfort that could have meant 
anything at all, really—but had slowly grown in size and pace. The 
pebbles sliding down the hill had started an avalanche. Franziska, heir 
to the von Karma legacy, who had seen countless scenes of death and 
destruction and confronted the true scum of the world without blinking 
an eye, felt butterflies fluttering around in her stomach at the mere 
sight of a shy blonde American woman.

The whirlwind had been building and building, gathering more and more 
momentum until it threatened to consume her entirely. Franziska knew she 
could not ignore it and could not escape it, so she opted to confront it 
instead. If there were any single place on the entire planet where 
Franziska von Karma was absolutely certain she was in complete and utter 
control, it was here. Her office, the Prosecutor's Department... she was 
in command, firm and unyielding. It was her altar, her temple—if she 
were not in control here, she would not be in control anywhere.

So, unsurprisingly, it was particularly vexing to the young prosecutor 
that she could not concentrate here, of all places. She had tried to 
confront the thundering momentum of the whirlwind, and she had failed. 
Franziska refused to admit defeat, though—her cheeks hot, she poured 
every ounce of her normally-iron will into forcing her attention and 
gaze down to the numbers and writing on her desk. The prodigy would get 
this done if it killed her.

"Franziska..."

She looked up in an instant, her concentration shattered at the sound of 
her name. It had been soft, quieter than even a whisper—barely more than 
a breath. In her ears, though, it had been thunderously loud. Franziska 
felt her cheeks grow hot, though attributed it to shame at not being 
able to concentrate. Over in her chair, she saw Adrian smiling softly, 
eyes closed behind her glasses, looking up at the ceiling.

"Yes? What is it?" said the prodigy at last.

Startled out of her reverie, Adrian jumped a bit in shock, reflexively 
adjusting her glasses (her spare pair, that she'd thankfully had on her 
to replace the pair Franziska had stepped on the previous afternoon). 
"I-I'm sorry... what did you say?" She asked, smiling sheepishly, 
looking down at the floor. "Did you say something?"

Franziska arched an eyebrow, tilting her head to the side. "You... said 
my name just now."

The effect on the other woman was rather striking. Adrian blushed 
fiercely, looking at the floor even more intensely. "N-no...! No, I 
didn't say anything like that at all," she denied, looking up and giving 
what was obviously a forced smile, her face still dark red. "I... I 
guess I dozed off, but... I didn't say your name."

Despite Adrian's denials, the young gray-haired woman was absolutely 
positive that she had, in fact, heard correctly... yet she refused to 
push the matter. "All right," said Franziska, frowning to herself at her 
heart's sudden, inexplicable decision to start pounding furiously. With 
that, she returned her attention to the payroll calculations, trying not 
to think about anything at all other than Sergeant Gudmund's salary for 
the moment...

"I'm not... distracting you, am I?" Adrian's voice was soft, hesitant, 
yet almost... dreamy. Franziska looked up and sighed to herself, cupping 
her chin in her hand and resting her elbow on the hard wood of her desk.

"...I only have thirteen more payroll calculations to go through, 
Adrian. You don't need to concern yourself with it," she said, sighing 
again.

The blonde woman cocked her head to the side, the slightest hint of a 
teasing smile on her face. "How many did you have left when we got here, 
though?"

Franziska paused, looking to the side hesitantly before replying. 
"...seventeen," she admitted. "Yes, you are distracting me, Adrian. 
However, you are not distracting me..." she paused, searching for the 
right word, settling on "...excessively."

She'd intended her words to be reassuring and soothing. If anything, 
though, they seemed to have the opposite reaction—Adrian looked shocked, 
the heavy blush returning to her cheeks, looking very much like a doe 
wide-eyed before the oncoming headlights. "O-oh," she managed, pressing 
a hand to her breastbone. "Th-that's... that's good, Franziska... I'm... 
I'm glad."

Adrian stood up suddenly, quickly. "I... I have to use the washroom, 
Franziska. Could... you tell me where it is?"

"Left out of the office, down the stairs, third door on your right—that 
takes you to a little lobby. The ladies' room is at the end of the 
second hallway. I can... show you, if you'd like."

The other woman shook her head quickly. "No, I'm sure... I'm sure I can 
find it on my own. Don't worry!" With that, she practically ran out of 
the room, leaving a rather confused and stunned Franziska behind.

What was wrong with her? When she'd arrived in Hamburg, Adrian had still 
been the same shy, insecure person at heart—though she'd seemed calm, 
accepting of that, and from that happy and cheerful, excitable even. 
Something had changed in the path of the whirlwind, though, and now the 
American woman was acting much like she had four months ago...

No, that wasn't quite right, Franziska corrected herself. There was 
definitely a marked change from the Adrian she had last seen in the Los 
Angeles Detention Center to the Adrian that had just practically fled 
her office... yes, she was jumpy, stammering over her words and the 
like, but... it was different. She reminded Franziska of a tea kettle at 
boiling point...

Her hand still stung from the shock of static electricity over 
breakfast, which was strange. It hadn't been a particularly strong 
shock, and there was no mark on her hand, but for some reason Franziska 
was perfectly and acutely aware of the exact spot where their hands had 
touched. ...strange.

Franziska scowled, for her heart had started to race again. She wished 
it would stop doing that. The beautiful prodigy looked down at the small 
stack of thirteen papers filled with names and numbers, numbers that she 
had to ensure added up to equal the correct number. Franziska was 
logical, she was good with numbers.

If she hurried, Franziska estimated that she could do these thirteen in 
just over six minutes. Putting every last bit of her focus into this one 
last task, she set her pen to paper, making quick calculations, her 
writing hurried but still impeccable as always. Twelve left... then 
ten... then seven, then three, then two... then one more...

...she was done. It had taken her just under eight minutes, though—she'd 
missed her deadline, Franziska realized with a silent frown. 
Disappointing, but then again she hadn't expected Patrolman Alders to 
have so many individual wage corrections that she'd been forced to 
double-check in order to ensure accuracy.

Adrian still wasn't back, and though the little sinking feeling deep 
beneath her breast hadn't yet blossomed into full-blown worry, Franziska 
was slightly concerned. The other woman was capable, certainly able to 
follow simple directions to get to the restroom. Yet she had seemed... 
not in her right mind, and while Franziska didn't think she'd go do 
anything particularly foolhardy, it couldn't really hurt to check.

Making sure the now-single stack of papers was neatly in order, 
Franziska got up from her desk, turned left out of her office, walked 
down the stairs, and turned the handle, pushing the third door on the 
right in to find the little lobby she'd directed Adrian to. The other 
woman was sitting on the carpeted floor to the side of the door, kneels 
pulled to her chest.

The blonde woman looked up at Franziska, smiling softly. "Hi, Franziska. 
Don't worry, I found my way."

Letting the door close behind her, the young attorney offered her 
companion her hand, helping her stand on her feet. The two of them held 
that grip for a second more than what would have been 'proper' before 
releasing, and Franziska felt that jolt that she knew was most 
definitely not static electricity this time around. Adrian sighed, 
leaning gently against the door, running a hand through her long hair, 
not meeting Franziska's calm gaze.

"Adrian, is... is something the matter?" Her voice was calm as it 
usually was, but there was a warmth in it that Franziska herself was 
surprised by.

"No," Adrian shook her head before pausing and amending her statement, 
"Well... yes. But... it's... nothing's the matter, not like... not like 
you'd think, anyway." She laughed softly to herself, taking her glasses 
off and rubbing her eyes briefly. "It... it sounds so stupid out loud. 
It doesn't make any sense."

Franziska crossed her arms in front of her chest, tilting her head to 
the side inquisitively. "I'm inclined to agree. At least, I would be if 
I had any idea what you were referring to. What is it, Adrian?"

She could see the hints of a blush forming below Adrian's kind, gentle 
eyes, though it was a far cry from the dark red flush she'd worn earlier 
in Franziska's office. Adrian laughed again. "I... Franziska, when... 
when you have to make a choice, how do you make it? What's your secret?" 
For the first time in what seemed like all day, Adrian looked directly 
at the German girl, a hopeful expression on her face.

The question didn't require much thought, for making weighty decisions 
was part of her daily routine. "Simple. I weigh each choice on its 
logical and practical benefits and drawbacks. It often becomes... 
easy... to distill most decisions down to that, if you have practice."

Adrian smiled almost wistfully, closing her eyes and letting a silent 
chuckle shake her body. "Now... how about we throw all logic, reason, 
practicality... just toss it out the window? How would you do that, 
then?"

Franziska paused, momentarily startled. "Then, that would only leave..." 
She stayed silent for a few moments, thinking to herself. "...in the 
complete absence of rationality or logic? I suppose then I would just 
choose what I felt was the most... right. Whichever felt like the best 
choice—though I can't see any real situation where logic and reason 
wouldn't be a factor."

"You'd be surprised," said Adrian with that same half-smile on her face. 
"I... was afraid you'd say that, and that doesn't make any sense either. 
I should be glad to hear you say that... I should. And... I guess I am, 
really." Adrian started to rub her temples idly, shaking her head from 
side to side.

Feeling herself start to get annoyed, Franziska arched an eyebrow. "Are 
you going to tell me what this is about, Adrian? Or are you going to 
simply keep babbling foolish nonsense like a foolishly foolish fool?"

Adrian's voice was soft but clear. "...your fool?"

She looked at Franziska with that same sad smile on her face, though 
there was something in those deep, dark eyes of her that caused every 
muscle in the young prodigy's body to suddenly tense up. There was a 
desperation in that simple gaze... a longing, a desire, a need so 
powerful that it made Franziska's entire body shiver. That single look 
told Franziska what a week of conversation had failed to do.

"I... wh-what... and..." stammered the young lawyer, finding every 
single word in her extensive vocabulary wiped from her mind in an 
instant. Franziska suddenly found it hard to breathe, feeling her face 
grow hotter than ever before, past the point where even she could make 
an excuse for it. "I... what are you... my fool? You... you aren't 
making any sense."

Franziska had tried to fight the whirlwind, and now she knew without a 
doubt that she had lost. Still, her pride refused to just... submit.

If Adrian had seen Franziska's reaction to that single look—and it was 
almost impossible to have missed it—she gave no indication that anything 
had changed. "I... nevermind... that was silly." She laughed again, a 
pensive tone in her voice. "Has something ever seemed impossibly easy 
and impossibly hard at the same time to you before? I mean... it could 
just slip out. But... it... I never could have imagined that it would be 
this hard."

Adrian leaned heavily against the door to the small lobby, sighing once 
before speaking. "I... Franziska, I... oh my God... why is it this hard 
to say?" For once, the blush on Franziska's face eclipsed that on 
Adrian's. "Franziska, I keep thinking, and I keep asking myself question 
after question and I keep... coming back to the same thing." She took a 
deep breath, looking the other woman directly in the eye. "Franziska... 
I... l—"

There was a thunderous crash that would have made both women jump, 
startled out of the intense moment... if it hadn't come from the 
powerful, sudden opening of the door that Adrian had been leaning 
against, sending her stumbling forward, crashing first into Franziska 
and then into the wall of the room.

Franziska made a slight yelp at the collision, eyes closing 
reflexively—and opened them to find Adrian's face not two inches from 
hers, a deep flush mirroring Franziska's own, eyes wide... the two of 
them were pressed up against the wall thanks to inertia, in what might 
very well have been an embrace at any other moment in time. Neither of 
them looked away, focused on the other... "O-oh..." said Adrian quietly, 
under her breath, barely a whisper.

So close... they were so close together... their eyes locked on one 
another, the gentle warm puff of each others' breath... it would be so 
easy just to lean in, lean ever so slightly closer... without realizing 
it, they were leaning in ever closer, slowly drawing together...

"Oh! I'm... not interrupting anything, am I?"

Startled, Adrian and Franziska quickly pushed away from each other, the 
gaze that had been only for the other now fixed on the man who had 
entered the room with such a... boisterous entrance. Gunther Hertz stood 
there, stroking the stubble of his beard with an expression on his face 
that suggested he found everything rather hilarious. "Oh... I, uh... was 
interrupting something. Wasn't I?"

Whip or no whip, if the phrase 'if looks could kill' had suddenly become 
reality, Gunther would have been a smoking stain on the carpet, so 
potent was Franziska's glare. "What. Are. You. Doing. Here?!" she 
snapped, every word precisely cold, enraged, and venomous. Her hands 
immediately went for her whip before realizing that it was still in her 
office—had Adrian not been standing right there, she might well have 
attempted to throttle him.

Gunther paused, flashing a lopsided grin and tossing his ponytail over 
his shoulder. "Perhaps legal machines like your self are unfamiliar with 
the concept, Miss von Karma, but us mere mortals have biological needs. 
The men's room is right over there. Surely, such a finely honed mind 
like yours can piece that one together?" He laughed bawdily, switching 
to English. "My deepest and most arduous apologies to you two lovely 
ladies for interrupting whatever liaisons might have been occurring... 
though perhaps it might be wiser to hold them in a more private area 
than the public restroom lobby, hmm?"

Still blushing fiercely, Adrian gently put a hand on Franziska's 
shoulder, as if sensing the other woman's desire to tear the defense 
attorney limb from limb with her bare hands. "If... you were just going 
to the bathroom..." she paused, a rather confused look on her face, 
"Why... why make such a... forceful appearance?"

"Oh, my lovely rubber-tree, I am glad you noticed. I have always 
believed... that every entrance should be as dramatic and noticeable as 
any that have come before it!" he pointed dramatically at the two to 
punctuate his statement. "You never know who could be on the other side 
of the door! Perhaps the Pope! And then, he would be quite impressed, 
wouldn't he?!"

Though she appeared to have her more... violent emotions in check, the 
white-hot rage had not left Franziska's voice. "Shouldn't you be 
pestering the police on one of your foolishly foolish little cases, 
Gunther Hertz? Isn't there someplace else you should be?"

Gunther grinned, shaking his head from side to side and holding his arms 
out wide. "Nope," he admitted, idly stroking the stubble on his chin. 
"As a matter of fact... I was hoping to see you, O Lovely Maiden of the 
Prosecution Stand. I was wondering if you would be gracing us with your 
presence tomorrow night..."

"...tomorrow night?" Adrian asked as Franziska simultaneously and 
immediately declared, "absolutely not!"

The male attorney frowned, smoothing the top of his light blond hair and 
turning to Adrian. "Tomorrow night, my fluorescent carnation, is the 
annual mid-summer's Policeman's Ball. Quite the event, really—live band, 
almost everybody from the Police Department and Prosecutors' Office 
invited! Truly a smash!" he chuckled heartily, dusting some dirt from 
his vest.

Adrian looked even more puzzled than before. "You just said that it's 
only for Police and Prosecutors, didn't you?"

Gunther waggled his blond eyebrows in a rather disturbing fashion. 
"Yes."

"...and you're a defense attorney, right?"

"Also yes!" chuckled the flamboyant man, giving a slight golf-clap in 
front of his face.

"So, you aren't exactly invited, are you?"

"Oh, of course not!" Gunther clapped again, chuckling as he did so. 
"Quite the deductive reasoning, my chamomile gumball! Keep working at 
it, and you might just give the little kitten herself a run for her 
money someday!" Franziska found herself really wishing she hadn't left 
her whip in her office. He held a finger up in front of his face, 
wagging it from side to side. "No, I am not invited. However, I've never 
let a silly thing like permission stop me before!"

Franziska's eyes slitted, her voice even and deadly. "We will not be 
attending your frivolous, foolish event, Gunther Hertz. Go waste someone 
else's time."

Her companion shrugged softly, looking at Franziska and tilting her head 
to the side, her long blonde hair cascading over her back. "I don't 
know, it sounds kind of... fun, doesn't it, Franziska?" The corners of 
her mouth turned upwards in a hesitant but visible smile.

The prosecutor's tone of voice softened ever so slightly—and only 
slightly—as she turned to the American woman, a scowl on her face. "It 
is foolish, and extravagant, and a waste of time. A foolishly foolish 
event for foolish fools to foolishly consort with other fools in a night 
of alcohol-driven tomfoolery."

Gunther laughed again, deep and loudly. "Precisely the point, my dear 
Prosecutor! Though... I do admit that last year's was rather dull... 
though being caught, thrown out, and spending the night sleeping in my 
car certainly put a damper on things."

"You are a fool who learns nothing from his many foolish mistakes, 
Gunther Hertz," snarled Franziska, once more itching for the familiar 
feel of her whip in her hands. "You still plan to return, even after 
last year's debacle?"

Opposite her, the flashy defense attorney clucked his tongue. "Oh, but I 
have learned from my mistakes, Miss Prosecutor. For example..." he 
tossed his cape over his shoulder dramatically. "I will not make my 
grand entrance through the front door and attempt to bluff my way past 
the Master of Ceremonies and the ushers this year! That is a mistake I 
have certainly learned from!"

"I certainly hope to see the two of you there," he grinned again. "But 
alas, I must take my leave of you! There are places to go and people to 
see! ...in all likelihood," he admitted, "though I don't know where or 
who they will be, precisely! I am off!" With that, he left with as much 
of a grand flourish as he had arrived, leaving the two women alone in 
the small lobby.

Onwards to Part 8


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