[He should be able to fit it in his backpack. It’s one of the reasons he’s preferred as a courier—people see a 12-year old boy on public transit with a backpack slung over his shoulders and don’t think anything of it. After all, it’s much easier to believe he’s a student on his way to a lesson than to assume anything illicit is going on.]
The price is $◼◼, [Boba says, taking into account both the size of the packages and that they’ll be delivered within the city.] Upfront.
[The question—the second one in particular—gets a faint hint of a smile from Boba as if he’s remembering some private joke.]
No. But my family is used to working for… [What’s a nice way to say “criminals?”] ...people who like things done discreetly.
[He’d leave it at that, but there’s part of his pride that chafes at having to do such menial work—and wants to hint at what he did before.] This is kind of a step down from my old job.
[Boba regards the man for a moment, trying to gauge how he might react. Boba has already told a few more powerful clients about his previous professional experience, hoping they might become interested in his skills as something more than a courier—but they hadn’t believed him. This man might not either.]
I was a bounty hunter before I came here, [Boba says, preparing for an incredulous response.] Like my father was before me.
[Alfie is a little surprised, but the added bit about his dad makes him less so. He's assuming it's an apprenticeship type of situation, where his father does the real heavy lifting as he trains his son to one day take his place. The wording makes him pause a little - like his father was a bounty hunter, not is one? - but he'll leave that alone for now.]
I followed in my dad's footsteps, too. Not bounty hunters, mind, but the same side of the law.
[When Alfie responds with neither horror or laughter, Boba seems surprised—and then relieved. He leans back in his seat, watching the man with more curiosity than suspicion now.]
Import, export. Protection services. That sort of thing.
[He levels a calm gaze at Boba. There are all, of course, carefully-picked euphemisms - and if the kid is as good as he thinks he might be, he expects him to pick up on that fact.]
[Boba hears those words and thinks smuggling and protection rackets. It’s not unexpected given what the man had said about being on the same side of the law and Boba's reaction shows no surprise.]
[He pauses for a moment.] That, and this. [Saying so, he rests a hand on the table and forms a fist. Then, he knocks sharply on the wood—or at least, that’s what he appears to be doing. Yet, for all that he’s clearly knocking on the table with enough force to produce a sound, the action is completely silent. The same will happen if Alfie attempts to knock on the table himself—so long as Boba is in contact with it, there is no sound.
Maybe it’s not the flashiest power, but the ability to be completely silent—and to extend that silence to anything he touches—is a valuable skill for any discreet courier.]
[Damn, that's impressive. Alfie doesn't use his own powers much - he doesn't want to come to rely on them too much, and then be at a disadvantage if and when they're taken away - but he has a healthy appreciation for their uses.]
[Boba drops the aura of silence enveloping him, a slight smile flashing across his face just briefly before it shutters back behind his professional facade.]
[As wary as Boba has been throughout this encounter, there’s less hesitation when he reaches out to shake the man’s hand now. It’s always nice to find a client who takes him seriously—and who sounds like he could be a reliable source of future work.]
no subject
No. I just use the subway or bus.
[He’s saving up for a hoverbike, though.]
How big is the box?
no subject
[He holds out his hands, measuring out an imaginary box that's about one foot tall and two feet wide.]
pretend i listed a reasonable price for this transaction
[He should be able to fit it in his backpack. It’s one of the reasons he’s preferred as a courier—people see a 12-year old boy on public transit with a backpack slung over his shoulders and don’t think anything of it. After all, it’s much easier to believe he’s a student on his way to a lesson than to assume anything illicit is going on.]
The price is $◼◼, [Boba says, taking into account both the size of the packages and that they’ll be delivered within the city.] Upfront.
no subject
[Alfie says easily. It's a good price, and while he's not opposed to haggling, he usually doesn't for something like this.
With anybody else, that might be where he ends things, but here he can't help but ask curiously:]
How did you get into this? Is it a family profession?
no subject
No. But my family is used to working for… [What’s a nice way to say “criminals?”] ...people who like things done discreetly.
[He’d leave it at that, but there’s part of his pride that chafes at having to do such menial work—and wants to hint at what he did before.] This is kind of a step down from my old job.
no subject
[Alfie raises his eyebrows. Please go on.]
no subject
I was a bounty hunter before I came here, [Boba says, preparing for an incredulous response.] Like my father was before me.
no subject
I followed in my dad's footsteps, too. Not bounty hunters, mind, but the same side of the law.
no subject
What kind of work did your father do?
sorry for the slower replies! hiatus etc.
[He levels a calm gaze at Boba. There are all, of course, carefully-picked euphemisms - and if the kid is as good as he thinks he might be, he expects him to pick up on that fact.]
np!
I see why you’d need a courier.
no subject
no subject
[He pauses for a moment.] That, and this. [Saying so, he rests a hand on the table and forms a fist. Then, he knocks sharply on the wood—or at least, that’s what he appears to be doing. Yet, for all that he’s clearly knocking on the table with enough force to produce a sound, the action is completely silent. The same will happen if Alfie attempts to knock on the table himself—so long as Boba is in contact with it, there is no sound.
Maybe it’s not the flashiest power, but the ability to be completely silent—and to extend that silence to anything he touches—is a valuable skill for any discreet courier.]
no subject
Can you do that while walking?
no subject
Of course. I can use it whenever I want to.
no subject
[Alfie says, holding a hand out to him across the table.]
I have got a feeling that we're going to work well together.
wrap?
Likewise.
OOC
OOC