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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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mickilennial The Elder Fae

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PROLOGUE


Michael Graham was never good at interviewing.

Back in Denver-Vegas, he had risen to the role of a prominent battlefield commander through experience and luck. He wasn’t someone they sent out to interview prospective pilots and see if they were a good fit for the company. But he supposed that was a lot of the problem. He wasn’t at a company anymore.

New Anchorage was a loose confederacy, not a budding corporation. Given their placement in the middle of nowhere in frozen Alaska, nobody important was concerned about the influence they had been mounting for the last few years. Hell, had it not been for a set of specific circumstances Graham wasn’t sure he would’ve offered his help to New Anchorage. Circumstances that had him regretting every minute of the detail for the greater part of thirty days. Raschke, the principal leader of the community, had tasked Graham with getting the NC Program up to “industry standard”. A standard that Graham had neither the clout nor resources to live up to.

The black-haired Denver native wasn’t sure how he was going to structure New Anchorage into something resembling order when all he had was his experience as a soldier in Denver-Vegas and a enough of foresight to know that independents would flock to New Anchorage out of the need to find work that was a little more secure than going from paycheck-to-paycheck with all odds stacked against them. Graham supposed that was why he not only ended up with a list of pilots interested not only from the American wastes but also overseas. What kind of life in Australia and Europe had led three people to Alaska of all places? How much blemishes did they have on their record? Had he not done some digging already he would have assumed they were raiders trying to legitimize themselves; to run away from their torrid pasts.

Though, that assumption was partly true.

The assortment of pilots had done questionable things, lived through terrible circumstances, and survived by the skin of their teeth in situations that had the odds stacked against them. Every single one of them had lost their families. One of them was a fourteen year old girl who had been piloting since she was nine-years-old.

He wasn’t sure what the consensus would be among the old guard about hiring someone like that, but New Anchorage needed pilots and she seemed eager to contribute to the settlement. He couldn’t imagine what her motivations could have been, but Raschke had told him to take whoever jumped at the opportunity as long as they had never participated in the slave trade. At the very least, not a single one of the recruits had done so. As he continued to make note of such things he looked over to the glass of liquor that was next to him. There was a consideration before he shook his head, deciding that it was not the time for it. There was a long day ahead.

His eyes moved back to the hue of his computer screen.

There was a lot to unpack. Raschke had approved of the pilots coming on for a trial run; to see if there was any latent chemistry issues between the original pilots under his predecessor and these news ones. Graham assumed there would be issues, undoubtedly, but if he could bring some sense of order he hoped he could manage them. He didn’t expect to turn them into the finest soldiers by the standards of a corporate board of directors. There was no way in hell he could take a bunch of wasters and greenhorns and turn them into what he was, or more accurately, what he used to be.

“An hour until orientation.” He muttered, noting the time.

Leaning back in his chair, Graham took a light breath. New Anchorage was a mess, but at least it was far better than when he arrived. He wanted to give no false appearance of the operation being a casualty of complacency. There would be no rookie mistakes if he could help it. With the new pilots arriving he needed to be prepared and while he wasn’t seeking to impress a bunch of edged-out mercenaries and over-eager idealistic kids he did want things to fall into cohesion. A military operation like this needed to be a well-oiled machine. And considering he was getting the cogs, he believed he had everything else to get them started.

When they arrived he would treat it like any other operation with new recruits. Familiarize them with the base, key military officers, and give them one final chance to see if they agree to his terms. While he wasn’t exactly running a corporate military organization he did still need to instill mandatory routines to get things into shape. After all that was finished he could see about getting in contact with his sources from the last fifteen plus years of his life to see what kind of contracts they could deal with. He didn’t need to get in-between the ruling corporations right now and as long as the contracts didn’t interfere with corporate policies or make New Anchorage quick enemies he could work with anybody.

He pushed back up from his chair as he routed his codec to the base’s speakers as he had done when he had decided on announcements.

“This is Commander Graham. I know many of you are still adjusting to the change in military administration, but the new pilots will be arriving within the hour and I need things to be in order. I want all personnel to look busy by that point. I will be reassigning the NC squadron sometime following the acquisition of these new pilots. Thank you.”
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by DruSM157
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DruSM157 Nobody

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Smith's Rest | Public House
January 16th, 2677

“Coffee please. Black’s fine.” The young man shifted in his thick jacket; even in the temperature controlled areas of Smith’s Rest, he still couldn’t find any real warmth. He was used to heat after all; spending years working in the southeast and southwest. He’d braved dust storms, hurricanes, beasts and raiders, but he worried that it would be the cold that would eventually do him in.

“Not used to the cold?” The proprietor of the public house inquired, handing him a steaming metal mug.

“Can’t say I am,” the man muttered, sipping at the mug before recoiling from the heat. “Damn that’s hot! Good though,” he added, attempting another sip.

“You’re not one of those new pilots that have been hired, are you?” The man suddenly seemed a little worried at the young man’s demeanor and attitude.

“Well I’m here for orientation and interview,” he added after another sip. “But it’s not uncommon for pilots to get cut from a job due to lack of information and knowledge. Sometimes you have to build a reputation in an ar-”

“We know about mercs.” The proprietor snapped. “We don’t need mercs. We need pilots.”

The man brought the mug upwards, swallowing the boiling liquid with one gulp, before convulsing slightly due to the heat. He placed the mug on the counter and handed his credit chit over. “That’s good news then, because I am a pilot.”

He stood up, smirking at the man, before stepping outside. It was oddly silent until the sudden howl of the man’s voice sounded through the metal door. FUCK THAT WAS HOT!

Alan Fouren stood looking out a thick glass window into what seemed like endless roving snowfields. His mouth still burned, but he felt he’d made his intent clear; at least until he failed to stick the landing with that last attempt to appear tough. He wasn’t here to be a flashy merc, but he wasn't here to be a sniveling yes man either. He’d cut his teeth over the years and had come highly recommended, even though he’d asked his contacts to downplay his achievements. It wasn’t humility he was after, it was insurance.

“Goddamn it,” he muttered under his breath, feeling another chill set him on. Was this psychosomatic? Just the sight of ice making him colder than he actually was? He pulled the neck of his jacket tight, and turned from the window, continuing down the hallway. It was almost time to head to the base for this mysterious orientation. It was going to be a short tram ride to the operations base, and he was supposed to meet some suit there. It was all too formal for what he was used to; back in the day it was simple.



Alan walked into the smoky office in Cutter’s Split, somewhere a few hundred klicks north of Vegas. It was a dry climate, rocky with some vegetation here and there. There was a large expanse of nature north of Cutter’s Split, a giant deciduous forest full of all sorts of violent flora and fauna ready for travelers to get too comfortable surrounded by what little greenery was left. He’d done some work there before, but he knew this was different.

“Got some news for ya, kid,” Old Deek, the main contact for any job north of Vegas, had called Alan in as soon as he’d arrived. If Deek called you, you checked in quick: especially if it dealt with a lucrative contract.

“What kind of news? More work out towards the rainy coast?”

“Nah, nothin about fuckin with Red Star or Volkov shit. This is about that little issue you asked me to look into.”

Alan’s face hardened and he placed both palms flat on Deek’s messy desk, pushing credit chits and papers aside. “Did you find it?”

“Just a rumor. Out in Alaska. I got you an in, too. Old Denver soldier, some folks in my network knew him: he’s apparently calling for pilots up there.”

“Scrapper job?”

“Nope. They want full-time pilots.”

“What the hell do they have up there to call for that kind of call?”

“No idea. But the guy’s the real deal. No idea why he went all the way out to Alaska from Denver, but don’t try and fuck with him. He’s a trained killer. Company boy for DV.”

“I ever kill any of his friends?”

“Naw.”

“Alright. Get my info out there then. Keep it subdued; don’t put any fancy bullshit about me in there either. I’m just a pilot, that’s all.” It was time to head north.



Beep. Beep. Beep.

Alan’s datapad brought him back to reality, and he looked at the time.

He started down the hallway, and towards the tram. He’d arrive just on time, and find a place towards the back of the group, keep his head down and get through it. Graham worried him though. Alan was a scrapper, a waster and a dependable worker. But he wasn’t a soldier. But then again, this wasn’t a City either. He’d have to see exactly what was coming up. He’d improvise if he needed to. He was a survivor, after all.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Ladypug
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Ladypug

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Smith's Rest, New Anchorage | Inside HQ
January 16th, 2677


For the first time in a long time, Percy Moore was having a quiet, but still pleasant, moment with the little human being he held dearest to him. He was sat down on the bed of their shared room, brushing Ana's hair for her while she colored in a coloring book Zach sent with them. There's really not a lot of fun kid stuff on the base, but Percy would rather her be bored with him than at risk with Zach - not after how badly he'd failed Ana and Percy the day of the attack that nearly stole his daughter away.

Oh, why Percy has a room to himself while the others have to deal with barracks? Simple, actually. During the switch-over from Sophia to Graham, Percy took that moment of confusion amongst the higher-ups to demand that he gets his own room with Ana - again, he didn't trust Zach to not fuck up again, so he figured the best move would be to just move Ana here with him. Obviously he won that small victory - likely because there were far more important matters for them to attend to than to argue with him about room arrangements, not because he was a smooth talker. He didn't care why he won, though, because he won and that's what mattered.

After he'd moved Ana's essentials and made sure she was all set that day, he 'stole' a couch-bed from the empty room down the hall so they could both sleep comfortably - while Percy didn't care about sharing a bed, especially if it was just his child, Ana was beginning to. That's normal, of course, and Percy wasn't offended by it. It was a sign of her growing up, but... Percy stopped mid-brush stroke. God, Ana's eight now. He remembers when she was just an itty bitty baby, still wrapped up in blankets and huffy from crying her little heart out - the lil chubby cheeks, the cute little button nose that absolutely had to be squished, and her hands - god, her hands were so, so very small. Now look at her. His tiny, squishy baby girl was eight now. Where the did the time go?

Oh, wait, he actually knows the answer to that - or, at least, he knows where the last year or so's gone. It's gone swirling down the shitter. It started with when he got that positive compatibility test, and it only got worse from there. The recovery period from the surgery was hell on them both (Ana had to be his little nurse for a good while); the first few missions he, Eli Jackspar, and Madison Cole went on together were.. well, nobody died, but it wasn't a walk in the part - the first mission definitely was not, given how non-cohesive the trio were; then the attack on Smith's Rest happened just this past June - Ana still has nightmares about it.

Setting the brush down at his side, he wraps his arms around Ana in a tight hug, resting his chin on the top of her head. He felt her trying to turn and look at him, but she is sufficiently trapped in his embrace. She giggled a little, flinching in obvious preparation for some kind of silliness to go down.. But then she relaxed again, curiosity prompting her to ask, "You ok?"

Percy didn't reply right away - he needed that second to gather all of his thoughts. He knew that Ana knew all of the things he was about to say, but given the hell she's been through lately, maybe she needs to hear it all over again. Maybe she needs to hear how she's strong, intelligent, resilient, hard-working, persevering. Maybe she needs the extra reassurance that everything's going to be alright now. Maybe she needs to hear him say I love you. Shit, how long has it been since he's just said those words out of the blue to her? He used to do it so much, but then everything went all fucking crazy - he could only say them just before he had to go off and do something that could kill him. "Ana, I-"

"This is Commander Graham."

The both of them just about leapt out of their skin when those words boomed over the intercom.. Well, not literally boomed, but it was loud enough to shatter the relative quiet that was there.

"I know many of you are still adjusting to the change in military administration, but the new pilots will be arriving within the hour and I need things to be in order. I want all personnel to look busy by that point. I will be reassigning the NC squadron sometime following the acquisition of these new pilots. Thank you."

Percy mouthed a bit of a mocking "Thank you" and grimaced, causing Ana to stick her tongue out with him in solidarity. After about a beat of silence and recognition, they both giggled. Ruffling up Ana's just-brushed hair, Percy stands up, stretching from sitting there cross-legged for so long. He's already gotten bitched out a couple times for not doing what he was told to do - not usually by Graham himself, but by other staff - and he'd rather not continue to get bitched out - or worse, getting bitched out by the Big Guy himself. Yeah, nah. Not today.

"You better go, Dad," Ana says, apparently having the same idea as Percy.

"Yeah yeah, I know," Percy leans down to kiss Ana on the top of her head, "You sit tight, ok? I won't be gone long."

"I love you."

Well, shit. She beat him to the punch. He smiles anyway, though - something about hearing your kid say I love you makes everything feel... right. Just before he shuts the door behind him, he replies to her, "And I love you, ya brat."
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Supermaxx
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Supermaxx dumbass

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In Transit | Old Harbor-Smith's Rest Tramway
January 16th, 2677

The tram was cramped, loud, stunk of dried urine and Demetrius couldn't decide which of those annoyed him the most. Whichever dumbass had designed the transport decided to shove twenty-eight seats into a box that could comfortably fit maybe fifteen passengers; if there were actually enough people there to fill every seat, Demi was confident he would've chucked himself out of the emergency exit half an hour into it. Thankfully there were only seven or so of them, but that was still five too many in his humble opinion.

Maybe it'd be more bearable if three seats down from him there wasn't a passed out drunkard that had soiled himself sometime since he got on the tram. The stench was bad enough, but then he had the audacity to start fucking snoring. Every time he drew in air through that fat nose of his, Demi felt a primal desire to smother him into silence.

'I need to finish this before I actually snap.' He thought, turning his attention back to the plastic and steel box he held in his palm. The front cover had been removed, revealing a mess of circuitry and wiring that it's creator had failed to organize in any reasonable way. It was such a haphazard design that Demi wasn't all that surprised it had just stopped working that morning when he stepped off the ship that had carried him from Vancouver to New Anchorage. Something about the bitter northern cold must've screwed with the internals, somehow.

Honestly, though, he couldn't blame the AutoBeat for not wanting to work in a freezing hellscape like this. 'And here I thought Scandinavia was bad. Christ.'

"You makin' any progress?" A familiar voice from just a seat over called, a slight, unintentional sing-songiness to it.

Demetrius didn't look away from his work when he answered Mara, focusing on soldering a new diode into the music player. "Mountains of it."

She let out a slight chuckle, sliding over from her chair into the one directly next t him. "Y'know, lil' brother, you could always talk to me to pass the time. Doubt you'll be done with that thing before we get to 'Rest anyway."

"I could, that's true," Demetrius slid a pair of safety goggles over his eyes and plucked a mini-torch and a handful of electronic parts out of his toolkit. It was probably a bad idea to do this kind of sensitive work on a train, but he was bored out of his mind and it kept his hands busy. "I won't. But I could."

Mara gave an exasperated sigh and slunk down where she sat, moving her arms up to rest behind her head. "You're a real dickhead sometimes, y'know that?"

"And you're a real airhead all the time. Nobody's perfect."

"It's just..." She sighed again, struggling to come up with the words that she wanted to use.

Demetrius could see that she was flipping her old Black Steel ID tags between her fingers out of the corner of his eye, and he mentally braced himself for a painful and awkward conversation that neither of them really wanted to have; it was necessary, probably, but that wouldn't make it any better in the moment.

"Just spit it out already. No use floundering over phrasing."

Mara shifted, her smile faltering somewhat. "It's just that, like, the two of us are on our own now. For the first time...ever, really." She spoke softly, her eyes shifted down toward the metal she held in her digits, her own name staring back up at her. "Nobody else we can rely on anymore 'cept each other. I figure that means we should probably learn to get along better, y'know? Learn how to talk to each other, and-"

The sound of a heavy guitar rift and the pounding of drums suddenly filled the cabin, thundering out so loudly that it even managed to wake up the passed out drunk. "Finally." Demi grinned and plugged his headset into the AutoBeat, cutting off the blaring music, much to the gratefulness of the two other passengers. "Sorry, what were you saying?"

She turned her head away from him, resting her cheek on the frost-covered glass of the tram's window. "...Nothing."

Demetrius shrugged and lifted his headset over his ears, grateful to have his music back.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by NuttsnBolts
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NuttsnBolts

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Smith's Rest | Orientation Room
January 16th, 2677

There was a frozen silence in the air when the electronic commands of the new leader distorted their way through the ceiling speakers. A digital reverberation indicating there was most likely a wiring problem within this one particular room; an estimation which would eventually reveal how some moisture had crept its way through the walls and iced over an electrical terminal — if such a thing could ever be proven. The exact location of such a minor breach would be anyone's guess, but the irritation it caused every time an announcement was made only last a mere minute. It was to be expected given the state that New Anchorage had been left in.

Understaffed, underfunded; Under Continual Construction should have just been printed onto a sign and placed permanently on the front door for the world to see. The current crew was trying their hardest to make a difference to the place but every step taken forward only revealed more work that had to be done. If the word really got out about the real state of the base the major corporations would never even have a second thought in showing interest in the newly growing operation.

However the game had changed wHen the decision was made to obtain a new set of recruits.

"Duncan!"

A bellowing voice overshadowed the volume of the busted speaker as the doors to the orientation room retracted open with a hydraulic hiss, the cooked smell of coffee beans wafting out as an indication of where the lone male had been apparently hiding.

He had been caught, right in the middle of the act, sneaking another cup, midway through pouring of all things. The sudden summons of his name cause his body to clench up, splashing some of the contents onto his already soiled shirt. He groaned, not for the fact that his adopted daughter was the one who caused this travesty, but knowing how half of a good brew was on his clothing rather than in his belly.

"What's up short stuff?" Duncan replied disoriented and distracted with the task of now trying to find a napkin from within the cupboards, one which would hopefully soak up some of this unfortunate spill.

"What does Graham mean we gotta look busy? That dude hasn't allowed me to do anything and he goes on with stupid stuff like 'You're grounded until further notice'. Like, I'm not twelve, but his double standards are ridiculous…"

Duncan glanced at Madison to see her best childish impression of some smug politician; complete with a voice and pose to suit. "It's all good Mads, I wouldn't worry about it. He's just trying to make a first impression for the newcomers... but you are the only one who busted their NC to a point where you had to be carried back. So of course he's gonna be hard on you."

"But — that's not my fault!"

"Mhmm… and this new coffee stain here isn't my fault either but I'm the one cleaning it up."

He dabbed his shirt, noticing the stalemate expression on her face as it screwed up with complete displeasure, an expression of knowing she couldn't win. There was no point arguing with him now and Duncan knew she would eventually come around, given some time.

"C'mon," he chirped as he walked by, running his hands through her long hair to mess with her mini tantrum. "Don't you wanna see who's arriving?"

It was Duncan's way of telling her what she should be doing without ever actually instructing her with what he wanted from her. Reluctantly, she agreed, and followed him out into the hallway.




In Transit | Old Harbor-Smith's Rest Tramway
January 16th, 2677

The tram ride into Smith's Rest was an absolute marvel to behold; the finest of zero-point-five star travel for what appeared to be a bunch of shit-kickers looking for a lucky break. A literal zero expenses spared experience complete with the fresh fragrant aromatherapy of regurgitated vomit and a rattle that was surely rusty metal grinding together within the walls. If this was any indication to what Tahlia would be walking into, she knew that it would turn into one hell of an excursion trip.

She could see the snow through the grime covered window, feel the cold creeping in through the thin glass, and reluctantly pulled her cold body out of her chair for a good old stretch. Even that little moment of feeling the blood rush through the body couldn't be enjoyed fully with the abrupt interruption of noisy rock music blaring out for no more than an eternity.

"Ah, for fucks sake!" Stopping mid way through standing up to cuss at yet another part of this trip which had tested Tahlia's patience. "You know what, fuck ya."

The irritated woman waved her hands dismissively at the unfolding events before an unconscious reaction to reach into her jacket's inner pocket and extract out a scrappy pack of cigarettes. If she couldn't have her nose or her hearing she could at least enjoy the taste of tobacco, and it was now her time to subtly piss off the other passengers.

"Ya got fucken Chucky Chunder here stinking up the joint, and I have to hear that shit?"

The cigarette was being lit as she spoke, choosing to disengage from the group and keep to herself as she stepped over towards the filthy window for a change in view. The former Red Star leader planted her forearm on the dirt smeared glass, resting her forehead on that same forearm and stared out vacantly into the winter white. She could see they were close to their final destination, with civilisation gradually littering the landscape at a growing pace.

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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Mcmolly
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Mcmolly D-List Cryptid

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Smith's Rest | HQ Tram Station
January 16th, 2677

One two-three, one two-three.

Eli tapped her fingers on the table, entirely absent. Even her own thoughts keeping time in her head sounded distant, or so engrained that they were nearly unreal. She sat at a small table by the tram station, eyes transfixed upon the rails like she was waiting for them to rattle with the incoming transport. Her coffee, untouched since she’d sat down, was cold now. Most things at the station were cold, given the open ends. Between the wind and chill, there weren’t many people around who weren’t explicitly paid to be there. She wasn’t sure if that same motivation applied to her. It wasn’t why she was here, sitting alone at a table, waiting for a trolley full of new-blood, but it was perhaps a justification.

A particularly harsh breeze flooded through the station. She adjusted her scarf—the only not-strictly-in-code addition she’d made to her uniform—and sat up straight, legs crossed, fingers trilling, staring.

Her data-tool beeped. It beeped three times before she blinked herself out of her trance and answered the call without checking the ID. It would have been a bad habit, if anyone but her sister ever called her.

“Lizzy?” Vera asked. “Where are you? Did you hear the announcement?”

She sounded strained, Eli guessed she’d been running simulations all morning. Vera was the…proactive sort. Ever since she was tested, even before the surgery, she’d accompanied Eli to the facility’s gym, and started each morning with a run through the hangar so she could marvel at the NC’s. As soon as she could hook up to the simulation pods, that had taken a priority spot in her routine.

It would have made Eli proud, if it didn’t disturb her so deeply.

“Lizzy?” Vera asked again.

Eli cleared her throat. “I did, yes. I heard it.”

“So where are you? Graham said he wanted us to look busy. Guess he wants to make a good impression on the new guys.”

“It ought to be them concerned with making impressions,” Eli said lowly.

Vera was quiet for a moment.

“Are you waiting at the tram station? You’re gonna stare at them, aren’t you?”

Eli’s fingers stopped tapping, her lips pursed. “I’m observing the band of wasters and mercenaries Commander Graham has seen fit to invite into our home, and trust with the safety of our people.”

“God—hold on…” there was rustling on the other end of the line. “I’m on my way down there.”

“I do not need chaperoning, Vera.”

“You’re gonna look like some kinda goblin, I’m coming down. I wanna see’em too, anyway. Maybe try and get’em in a good mood before Graham, y’know, ruins their day. See you soon!”

Vera cut the call. Eli pinched the bridge of her nose, and tried to go back to watching the tracks. But it was no use now, Vera had a knack for making Eli feel entirely aware of herself. It was the sort of social awareness she lacked on her own. So, instead of doing anything useful, she sat there, feeling awkward, trilling her fingers off-time, until Vera appeared in the tram station.

She’d thrown on a uniform jacket and shorts over her pilot suit, and that seemed to be enough for her to deal with the cold. That, and the ushanka perpetually snug atop her head.

“Heya,” she said, taking the seat opposite Eli. She looked out at the tracks either direction. “Not here yet, huh?”

“Not yet. Soon, I imagine.”

Vera nodded. “I’m excited. Not that you all aren’t great, but, man, I can’t wait to meet some new pilots. I bet they’re gonna have so many stories.”

“Don’t get too attached,” Eli said. “Even if they all manage to stay, they still have to survive.”

“I think someone’s afraid they might make a friend.”

Eli shot her a scowl, but it was weak. Vera giggled and sat back, taking the cup from the table and peering down into it.

“This is…coffee.”

“People drink coffee,” Eli said, certain of it.

“It’s cold. And you hate coffee.”

Eli rolled her eyes. “By all means, take it.”

“No thanks,” Vera said, setting it back down. “I don’t need to be this short forever.”
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Ladypug
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Smith's Rest, New Anchorage | Inside HQ
January 16th, 2677


It was almost exactly after the door shut behind him that he realized he didn't have any idea what he could do. All Graham said was that he wanted all personnel to look busy before the new pilots got here. But exactly how he was supposed to look busy, he wasn't sure. It wasn't like there was a lot he could do - or, rather, there was plenty he could do, but he'd likely break it and the someone with any actual skill that was hired to fix it would have to both correct his mistake and then fix the original problem. It's happened before, it's likely to happen again. Really, like, he could try to repair the half-dead and flickering lights that he's currently walking under, but if he did it was likely that he'd accidentally snip the wrong wire and whoops, the whole building has no lights! Again, it's happened before, but instead of the lights it was his heater. In the middle of winter. Yeah, that wasn't a fun few days.

With a shiver of remembrance, Percy simply picked a direction to walk and... walked. If he walked with purpose, he'd look pretty busy, wouldn't he? Actually, what does a walk with purpose even look like? Walking quickly? Shoulders back, up straight? Making sure every step has that distinct contact with the floor? Honestly, don't all walks usually have some purpose behind them? Whether it's just to getting from point A to point B, or to get out of the house, or to clear your head after an argument - who just walks for absolutely no reason? There's always at least a small purpose to it. Who just decides that they're going to walk and.. that's it? Well, wait. That's sort of what he's doing right now, isn't it? Walking with no purpose. He's walking just to walk, in some hopes that purpose walks into him, and not the other way around. All he did was choose a direction and decide let's go this way. Why, he didn't know.. But now that he's thought about it, what even is this way?

You'd think after basically living in the base a while he'd have learned where everything was, but all he was sure of was where the barracks are, where the mess hall is, where the hangar is, and (more recently) where his and Ana's room is. If someone asked him where a bathroom was right that moment, he'd have no fucking ide- Oh, wait, he just passed one, actually. Cool, now he knows. Or he'll forget as soon as he's turned this corner after reading the sign above the arch reading 𝙷𝙰𝙽𝙶𝙰𝚁. Maybe he could find something to do in there.. and hopefully not break anything.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by DruSM157
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DruSM157 Nobody

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Smith's Rest | Tram
January 16th, 2677


The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars.


Alan chuckled to himself reading the heady and verbose language on his datapad. He’d struggled to read Kerouac for years now, but at least he was finally making some headway. He remembered finding this particular holo-novel somewhere odd in the Southwest. Not all cities and settlements shared the same data, and some holo-novels (and even rarer, actual books) had been lost over the hundreds of years and the new corporate wars that were going on.

How many actual novels had he compiled now? Three hundred? Four hundred? His datapad’s memory was vast, and when he had the credits he tended to purchase as many novels as he could. He’d been teased for a long time about it; wasting money on a holo-novel when he could spend a few more credits on a vid. He’d spent many nights on the road with caravans trying to drown out the sound of adult holo-vids while he devoured chapter after chapter of Tennyson or Hemmingway. There was just something about the words and the image he could create in his own head that made holo-novels so enticing. He went back to the next passage and-

The eruption of music caused him to jolt up in his seat on the tram, and suddenly his senses kicked back into overdrive. The smell of dank piss, other bodies pushing against him, and now the jolt of music caused him to quickly shut off the holo-novel and take in his environment. And then came another racket: a female voice; with an accent, he just couldn’t place. She’s a foreigner, with an accent like that. And that kind of slang. Which means she’s got to be a pilot. But why the hell is someone from out of the states here? His attention switched to the murmuring twins, with their accents. Foreign pilots. What the hell kind of outfit was this Commander Graham putting together up here?

As the tobacco began to permeate throughout the tram, he grimaced but did not cough or lobby a complaint; he’d spent so many years in smokey and dingy places the smell of tobacco was a calming sensation in a way. He couldn’t stand the damn smell, but he’d been forced to get used to it, much like many things in his life. He tried to think about his situation in Alaska now, and what he could make of it. First off was the place: Smith’s Rest was independent. None of the big corporations had made a play for the area, and the main issue seemed raiders and the standard animal problems. Usually, that would call for your local NC pilots; settlement pilots driving scraped together NCs, helping protect the place. But here were pilots from all over, and the smoking woman had some years on her.

A veteran. Vets cost money. But beyond the pilots here was the commander himself: a DV vet who had made a name for himself in the past. Alan had talked to a few contacts in the Vegas area and had been a corporate boy until 3 years ago. It surprised Alan that he’d never crossed paths with the man, but the divide was a large area and he was personally happy he’d never met anyone that had climbed the corporate military ladder. But here he was, about to have to meet him.

It was the idea that a military commander leading a settlement’s barracks that unsettled Alan. He was used to the communal nature of so many settlements; everyone pitches in for the greater good. Military meant hierarchy, orders, training and never disobeying orders, regardless of how sick they made you. That last part worried him; he wasn’t a raider or a slaver. He wasn’t afraid of killing raiders for cash, but he wasn’t prepared to get involved in some kind of war.

And who else on the tram could be a pilot? He scanned the tram, squinting his eyes at some of the passengers. Too old. Too frail. No neural connector-oh no. The bright red shock of red pouring from a cap and the petite frame was indistinguishable; hell, he could probably pick her silhouette out in a crowd if it came to it. How long had it been since he'd walked out on her after that last mission outside Denver? He bit his lip and anguished over it all. She wasn't looking his way, but he had no idea if she hadn't noticed him or if she was giving him the cold shoulder. After all, she had the worst damn attitude of anyone he'd ever met.

The jolt of the tram brought him back from his thoughts, and he knew what was about to happen: It was about time to meet the new employer.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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PART I


The voice of Matthew Alvarez could barely be heard over the sound of screeching metal and hot steam as the tram finally had arrived at New Anchorage’s operational base.

After Graham had asked him about reconfirmation about the time, Matthew had decided to prepare for the greeting as it was a great deal of his job as operations administrator to do so. Truth be told, while he preferred Graham’s direction compared to how Sophia handled things there wasn’t much of a difference in terms of adding new pilots to the roster. He had done it when Stein Kalfox was incorporated and here he was doing it with the new recruits that came in for their application. Then again, half-a-dozen pilots would take tasking more thoughts than one or two. But he had tasked mundane non-NC pilots in greater amount, so he figured this wouldn’t result in much difficulty. He stood there with datapad in hand as he adjusted the glasses on the brim of his nose.

As he awaited the doors to open and the New Anchorage passengers to exit, he waved one of the depot coordinators over. His tone was flat and quiet, but somehow through all of the racket he was audible. “Ms. Pryde.”

“Yes, operations administrator?”

“I want the transport units working fast and efficiently. Each NC should be in the NC hangar before Graham steps foot in there. Do you understand?”

“Yes, I’m on it.”

If there was one thing Sophia abandoning New Anchorage did, it was increase the efficiency of the NC program. One of the central reasons he was quite favorable towards Graham’s organizational overhaul was that Graham brought a much needed structure with him; a structure that had been lacking in previous years. Though, there were many differences of opinion about Graham as soon as he showed up and started “barking” even though Matthew disagreed that the barking was unwarranted. He thought back to the complaints he had heard in the last month or so with some of his peers likening Graham as a “despot” and “corporate wolverine”. Matthew had been more than happy to give the former head of NC analysis his official dismissal. Infantile emotions had no business of existing when there was a job to do. But New Anchorage recovered from it and was all the better for it. Good riddance.

Ending his thought, he nodded as his hands waved her off, “Good. Go.”

Matthew flipped through the datapad with a pen as he looked over the dossiers he had compiled, though he did so briefly. While he remembered the information in his memory it was still was helpful to look it over. He was good with information and knowledge… less so with faces. He just hoped Raschke and Graham knew what they were doing.

As the doors to the tram opened up he cleared his voice.

His hand flipped to her dossier on his datapad as he looked to the individuals that took initiative in their posture and form, but Matthew Alvarez wasn’t from a military background so it didn’t invoke much for him personally. There were a lot of interesting individuals even discarding their appearance of a disorganized motley crew of lost discarded toys. But in a lot of ways they were to become Graham’s toys now, assuming they agreed to his terms, though the reality was that they were already familiar with the contract New Anchorage gave them and they signed eagerly. He wondered if anyone of them had read it in greater detail when most of them were so ridiculously desperate. But desperation led to many things such Graham’s operation. But they could always resign from their position if they wished. He wondered which ones would actually stay on for more than a week given his overview of what Graham had planned for them.

Not all of them were NC pilots though. Graham and Raschke had sent out contracts for people in financial, military, logistic, and maintenance fields as well as asked for people by name. When Graham arrived Matthew was to direct the non-pilots to their designations and familiarize them with their accommodations and responsibilities. He stopped to think what could’ve been taking Graham so long? But before he could pursue the thought for much longer a voice cut from behind him.

Graham’s.

“Alvarez.”

Matthew turned his head and there he was, as expected. Graham must’ve done a routine check to see if everything was in order before meeting with the recruits.

“Bring me up to speed.”

“No absences as far as I can tell. But they seem to be as heterogeneous as described by our reports; their dossiers are up-to-date excluding information we could not acquire that was deemed confidential. There shouldn't be any issues going forward.” Matthew stated as he pointed to the two aforementioned pilots as if making a note of them before handing over the datapad to Graham.

He nodded as he looked to the group.

“Non-pilot staff will go with Alvarez. Welcome to Alaska."
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Supermaxx
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Smith's Rest | Transit Station
January 16th, 2677

That 'conversation' with Demetrius went about how Mara expected it to. It mirrored all the other little talks she had tried to initiate with him ever since they left the battalion to strike out on their own. He always found some way to brush her off; had some excuse to keep from engaging. Mara couldn't shake the feeling that he'd conveniently lose his characteristic bluntness and honesty the moment that particular topic came up. There'd be something else, something more important he needed to do with his time. Or he wouldn't 'hear' her talking to him in the first place.

Maybe that was why Demi was always pumping that garbage into his ears.

'Doesn't help that I forget how to talk every time I try it, but...'

Mara's train of thought quickly found itself derailed at the sound of some other passenger yelling at them, apparently unhappy with Demi's choice in music. Her accent was thick and exotic, hailing from some corner of the world Mara had never been- if she had to guess, it sounded close to some Oceanians she'd heard in holovids in the past. But what was someone like that doing all the way up here? Not...that she had any room to talk in the 'a little far from home' department.

For the briefest moment Solon felt a heat rise to her ears and a choler build in her throat, her natural instinct being to meet hostility with it in equal measure, but she knew picking a fight before she was even on base was a good way to get her contract shredded. She needed to choke it back if she wanted to make a good first impression. "Sorry 'bout that." Solon forced a grin, deliberately relaxing her posture. "S'not my first choice either."

It seemed to work, too, as the other woman broke off to gaze out the window, allowing Mara to breath a quiet sigh of relief. If the Aussie had decided to escalate Solon couldn't guarantee she'd keep her cool for long; that was something she was getting less and less capable of as the days ticked on.

Demi hadn't so much as blinked during the brief confrontation, so zoned out he might as well be on another planet.

Not much time passed before Smith's Rest came into sight. The tram started to slow and the passengers began to gather what belongings they'd brought on with them in preparation to step off. Mara slung her duffel bag over her shoulder and stuffed Demi's own into his lap in the process, keenly aware of how likely he was to leave it behind.

Stepping off the tram and into the transit station brought with it a great sense of relief. She was glad to be done away with the stench in the train, and even if the air in 'Rest was stale and a bit musky, anything was better than what she was leaving behind.

The misfit band of pilots, workers and settlers found themselves greeted almost immediately by two figures. The man with the datapad appeared to be some kind of administrator or coordinator here to make sure the tram was running on time and no cargo or personnel were missing. It was the man standing beside him that really interested Mara. Tall, strong-jawed, and eyes like a hawk- she knew a military officer when she saw one, and from what she'd heard there was only one man in New Anchorage that carried himself like a real soldier.

Mara was less-than-subtle about making sure she was one of the first out in front, leaving her brother lagging behind as she did so. She snapped a quick salute for Director Graham, her soon-to-be commanding officer. She knew enough about outfits like this to know how hellish it was to be on the XO's bad side. Anybody with a brain would know to start brown nosing the second they could. "Reportin' for duty, sir!"
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by DruSM157
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Smith's Rest | Transit Station
January 16th, 2677


You want to get yourself killed quick, walk into a job without any information. Those words stuck with Alan when the tram slowed to a crawl at the station. He stuck to the middle of the pack, letting the excited young pilots hop out and kiss all the ass they wanted. He had a reputation for being pleasant but he was not a saluting, ass-kissing, step in line kind of person. He was used to those kinds of pilots trying to work their way up to some kind of corporate position. Going from indies to corporate wasn’t unheard of, but it wasn’t exactly common either. It had been somewhere in his fifth year piloting that he got a letter of recommendation from one of the job contacts in Denver, offering him an interview with the brass at one of the Northern Bases.

Alan had declined.

Now here he was in the middle of the frozen north, having already signed the preliminary documents, to do what exactly? Play soldier for, who? This man? He’d seen a picture of Graham-not a great quality one-but enough that he knew exactly who the man was, standing in his stoic pose as he greeted the new pilots. Alan was busy eyeing up the others coming in and where they fell in with him; there were the foreigner pilots: twins and the woman with the thick accent.

He eyed some of those walking with the other man, Alvarez. Desk jockeys and people probably at a higher pay-grade than his; but one particular character piqued Alan’s interest. He’d seen the man’s face before; somewhere in some news article on the net. He turned to see another figure to join the pilots, and that gave him the biggest shock of all: an older woman, grandmotherly in her stature. The fact that he could eye her neural connector on her neck scared him. Was she some old codger who got tested? Or was she a vet? He didn’t know which idea messed with him more.




"It’s a job down south, near Lonestar. Just a simple caravan job. But it’s in a town called Serath. Don’t know if you’ve heard of it before.”

"It’s the retirement community for pilots, right?”

That’s what he’d thought. A place for old vets to settle down and relax in their twilight years. Folks had murmured about it before, but he’d never thought to travel there himself. Maybe he’d see what a possible future for him would be.

When he got there, he saw what it really was. Men too feeble-minded to walk. The smell of piss permeating the rooms. It wasn’t a retirement home, it was more of a hospital for the insane. Not everyone’s like this, he remembered someone, an aide or a nurse telling him, but the effects of Polaris Shift still aren’t too understood. The fact that any of them live into their 40s is a miracle. The oldest guy there looked like he was an elder. But how old was he? 50? Being a pilot did not promise an easy life. No, being a pilot meant you threw your future away.




How would this old woman fare next to the others? How did she look so healthy? These were all questions haunting Alan as he did his best to keep his composure from the cold. Alan looked around the group of pilots, surprised at the number that had gathered. “Gee-zus,” he muttered to himself, visible air escaping his mouth, “are we startin’ a goddamn army?”

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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Lonewolf685
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Smith's Rest | Transit Station
January 16th, 2677
Dark. Cramped. Dirty. Felt just like home, but with signifigantly more leg room. Agatha Smith enjoyed the space without reservation, stretching her legs out far and wide while in her hands was a ring. It was looped through a laynard Agatha kept tucked in her jumpsuit, but with the long journey to New Anchorage, her hands were begging for something to be occupied with. The metal was actually titanium for all the effort Albert put in to make it polish like silver. Her lips curled fondly, running her fingertip along the smooth interior till it bumped upon a single blemish.

"A good mechanic, but he didn't have the hands for jewelry." Agatha laughed, having many hours to get comfortable with the dirth of space around her. There was something about an aged pilot that had people wary of approaching, like she was liable to either stab them or hurl shit at them. I'm not that old. Ticker's going just fine and mind's dandy.

It was something she hadn't had an issue with before, snug and out of the way amidst her scrap yard. Well, formerly her scrap yard. Whoever wanted the mountains of junk was free to move in now, or so the sign she'd left said. She lingered on that thought but couldn't muster up any regrets to see it go.

The screech of deceleration preceeded the racket of shifting metal and groaning super structure, drawing her attention to the front of the train and the new chapter of her life ready to be written on the platform. She didn't hesitate to get to her feet, grasping an overhead rung for balance as she rode out the last stretch. Turning the ring about brough forth a socketed gem, it's yellow luster convincing sweet Albert it was Topaz.

It made for a better name for their first little one then Heliodor.

Pressing the wedding band to her lips, she let herself enjoy the coolness of her spouseness' craftsmanship before stowing the band beneath her lays of clothing, flush against her skin. Albert never would have wanted to see this, and Agatha wouldn't fault the man for his softness.


Stepping out of the train gave Agatha her first good view of the pilots now seperate from the auxillary personnal keeping everything else afloat. Her face was the very picture of wry amusement, from the minute quirk of her lips to the loose parade rest she assumed beside a rigid Solon. Mara's stiff posture and distinctive accent made her think of some of the more righteous mercenaries she'd known in the past. Sticking to their contracts like dogs with bones, mauling subordinates who threatened it with lazieness, greed, or good old fashioned incompetance.

As the line formed she put her attention straight ahead, finding two men overseeing the disembarkment of the train with a cool detachment that implied authority. The first she dismissed as quickly as Mathew had them, while the other was a handsome man. The kind the Companies would put on a promotional poster with him behind a desk with a great, basking in the radiance of everything the corporate ladder could reward you with.

Yet here was the man she'd taken the contract from. Someone either desperate or daring enough to let her on without a fuss. Michael Graham. Commander Michael Graham, if she felt like being proper.

"Agatha Smith. Eager to work with you." The aged pilot said to the small gathering, holding to her ease even if it set off the Solon twins. She was far too old to worry about the feelings of those almost a third her age over something so simple as an introduction.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Ladypug
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Smith's Rest, New Anchorage | The NC Hangar
January 16th, 2677 (Before the New Pilots Arrive)


By the time Percy arrived in the NC Hangar, he was slightly winded and had to stop at the large doorway - if he had just walked straight to the hangar it wouldn't have been so bad, but he kept getting turned around. Stupid shitty scarcely legible signage. Maybe if he'd grabbed his reading glasses it wouldn't have been as awful, but he didn't. He could go and get them and come right back, but it'd be a pain in the ass now that he's here, so whatever. He'll live.

After an explosive exhalation of breath (which, really, wasn't all that loud given the size of the room and the volume of the activity inside) he steps over the threshold dividing the halls from the hangar, and continues to take steps inside until he's standing in front of, but a ways away from, the trio of NCs. From down here, they're imposingly large - even Madison's, which is technically the smallest, is huge. To either side of the Mad-Cat is the Blur, the sleek, stark white, sword-wielding mecha belonging to Eli; and the Papa Mike, the muddled brown-and-green eyesore with not a lot going for it. Fitting for someone that was called the weakest link. It's not even super specialized like the other two, with a rifle, a piddly little missile launcher, and a laser sword. With that said, he's looking up at the mechs and Percy observes that has the range that Madi and Eli just don't - sure, they can go in swords slashing and claws tearing, but without him hanging back with the rifle and taking potshots with the missiles, they'd be easy targets. One well-placed hit on them and they'd be dead, if not very badly hurt. Hell, that exact thing almost happened to Madison during the attack back in June. Thankfully the damage was only to the machine, and not to her. They're both way too young to get snuffed out, but Madison especially.

Percy can still remember what he thought when Madison (and Eli, too, really) explained that she signed up for the NC Program. Are you fucking insane? You have your whole life ahead of you, and you want to do this? But what he'd actually said was.. Well, nothing. He just nodded to let her know she was heard, and he said nothing. Maybe he should have said something. Like he was one to really talk, though - when he was 19, he was on the ass-backwards schedule of staying up all night and sleeping all day doing basically fuck-all other than getting drunk. But that's better than signing yourself up for death the rest of your life, isn't it..?

"Percy?"

Percy is snapped from his inner thoughts, turning his head and immediately going from shock to confusion- "Zach?"

"The one and only," Zach says with that shit-eating little smirk he gets when he thinks he's being cute. He gives Percy a good slap on the back before giving him a quick side-hug - his usual greeting when they're not at each other's throats. "I didn't expect to see you today, bud."

"I could say the same thing to you, bud." Percy winces slightly as he realizes how hostile that sounds - but since when did they start calling each other "bud?" Where did that even come from? He stumbles over his words in some attempt to redeem himself, "I-I mean, were you-? Did Graham-? Well, I'm- I'm here 'cause.. Well, I'm a pilot, I have to be, but I was told to-" he accentuates this next part with air-quotes, "look busy."

Zach rolls his eyes, but he's still grinning a little as he speaks, "I'm pretty sure he said for personnel to look busy, not pilots."

"Well.. Yeah, but he said all personnel, and.. I am a personnel. Right?" And, on the subject of being personnel, Percy winds it back around to the question at hand- "I know that you're not, Zach. So... Why are you here?"

"Oh, I'm just playing handyman for like.. A week, at most." Zach replies, "Said they needed some more hands on deck for a bit. Might as well - I've got nothin' better to do since you took Ana."

Percy nods a little bit. Zach's always been way better with the whole engineering thing than he ever was. With that said, Percy didn't really have any goals coming into this hangar, but perhaps a goal has found him, like he'd quietly hoped for. Just as Zach went to give a little wave and turn around, Percy asks, "Alright, well.. Is there anything I could do to help?"

Zach keeps walking, forcing Percy to lightly jog to catch up before then falling into pace. Zach then answers with his own question, "Do you think you can avoid starting an electrical fire?"

"...Probably?"
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by NuttsnBolts
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Smith's Rest | Transit Station
January 16th, 2677

With the new recruit's arrival the tram journey had finally stopped, destination: Smith's Rest. Tahlia peered out the window towards her new place of work, finishing her soothing cigarette which she had purely lit out of frustration, knowing with a degree of certainty she would be entering into a land of hungry dogs and military nobodies. A weird sensation of deja vu from a decade long forgotten, stepping into what would be the lower ranks once again to receive orders and follow commands; the song may have changed but the dance was still the same.

Attack…

Shoot…

Kill…

One-two-three. One-two-three…

For an NC pilot the dance would never change.

It was a hard lesson for the former Red Star to understand at first, one that was forced onto her from the day she was admitted into the NC program. An endless cycle of vigorous training schedules which would leave her bruised and battered, followed up by a series of long sessions where she was plugged into a Neural Core for hours upon end. Red Star only demanded the best out of their pilots and sifting through the weak at a young age was one way they guaranteed their quality. If you broke, you were dismissed — to place it kindly; however if you survived you would just become another cog in the machine.

This is one reason why Tahlia held back as she let the others disembark the tram the instance it arrived at Smith's Rest. She wanted to assess them in the same way her previous corporation assessed her and her comrades, and by doing so a couple of the pilots had already took her notice before the two European youngsters who decided to create an unnecessary ruckus. One of which held a real yankee accent, commenting on the possible idea that they were about to start an army.

"Someone didn't do their research before applying," responding coldly as she dropped her duffle next to the feet of the scrapper, "Yer feral bush-pig wouldn't be signing off an app form with Commander, ey?"

Tahlia let out a cocky chuckle whilst a fresh ciggy entered her lips, muttering to the man as the flame flickered before her face — purely for the fact that he never made a peep during their trip and hadn't annoyed her. "Fucken imagine that. You call out to all these pilots from across the lake and you pull a swifty. Deadset I'd be pissed!"
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Smith's Rest | HQ Tram Station
January 16th, 2677

“That one’s cute.”

“These are pilots. They are here to bring the threats against New Anchorage to heel, and, if they stay, they may have to lay down their lives for it. These people are not here to be our friends. If you’re going to judge them on their physiques, it should be in regards to how well they can handle themselves in a fight. Even then, that hardly matters compared to how well they can pilot.”

“That one’s cute, too!”

Eli pinched the bridge of her nose. “Vera this is not appropriate behavior for a pilot.”

“Well, like you keep telling me, I’m not a pilot yet,” Vera said. There was a little bite in her voice, but she was still smiling. She stuck her tongue out playfully at Eli and turned back to the newcomers.

They didn’t look like much. It was hard to tell the weather-beat of a veteran from the grime of needing a shower and a washing machine. Then again, none of them here had ever been much to look at either. Raschke was, generously speaking, a “man of the people,” the pilots and staff were nobodies, some of whom weren’t even natives. Even Sophia had been a haggard woman, blown into her role like an icy tumbleweed, and gone just as quickly. No, she thought. Not gone. Deserted. She left us.

Eli regarded the newcomers more heavily. If only she could know from a look who meant to help them and who, like Sophia, would betray them. These people would sign their names and make their pledges, but those were words only, and for all her shortcoming’s in understanding people, Eli knew better than to trust them by their words.

Or, she thought, eyes falling upon the commander. Their ranks.

“Ohmigosh,” Vera said, sitting up in her chair. “Hey, I think that one’s a kid. Lizzy, look, that one—she’s a kid!”

“I see.”

Vera’s smile twitched. She searched for something in the air, and then her eyes went wide. She hopped out of her chair, said something about practicing sims, and then scurried off.

Eli was tempted to follow out of concern, but she’d have had no luck voicing them. It was all Vera talked about nowadays, piloting. Whether it was simulations, speculating about her own NC, worrying over her own capabilities, or, perhaps worst of all, waxing about her conversations with Stein, there was no escaping it. Eli had no issues with piloting, and by all accounts she should have felt proud of how much effort Vera was putting into it. But she didn’t. She couldn’t. All she felt when they talked about the future was dread, and guilt. One day, sooner now than later, Vera would do for New Anchorage exactly what Eli expected of every pilot: she would put her life on the line.

Eli got up from the table, unfocused. She cast one last glance over the newcomers, then left for the hangar.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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Smith's Rest, New Anchorage | Transit Station


What were the odds?

The plucky, red-haired teenager pressed her tongue against her uppermost canine, thinking over the situation she found herself in. A bunch of would-be pilots, some she recognized, and the “boss” or one of them, she guessed, was meeting them on head-first. Of all the things she had experienced her lifetime as a pilot, this one made the list as the strangest. But Ryn wasn’t a corporate hire. She barely recognized executives and commanders due to the fact that throughout her time as a pilot she mostly had generally found employment in the midwestern territories or in the deep end of the divide. Most of the jobs she took were in the more chaotic, independent north; the stretch of land between what was once called Iowa and Saskatchewan.

She had once told a friend that she preferred working far and away from corporate oversight. It was “easier” she had said, though the truth of the matter was she didn’t understand it.

Yet here she was. Her first real “corporate” assignment, or well, tryout. The message on her holotool several weeks ago had mentioned there would be secondary interviews and trials going forward, though there was no real information on what they were looking for in New Anchorage. Just load your NC on a train to Alaska, do the trials, make the grade. In her mind she had little doubt that she could handle it. But Kathryn Dradht was not a girl who was lacking in confidence.

“So. What’s the deal with this place?”

The comment was blunt, lacking respect or manners, but as far as Ryn could figure it was a question that was on everybody’s minds.

The dark-haired commander remained silent for a moment as he considered the question.

“New Anchorage?”

As he explained his answer the other man began to escort the non-pilots out of the depot, leaving him with the Ryn and the rest of the prospective pilots. Ryn wasn’t really a master of reading people but she could tell that her new maybe-boss had a lot on his mind that he wasn’t exactly disclosing.

“To strip it down into the basics? It’s a coalition of settlements that want to push back against key threats surrounding the region. I suppose it’s not very different from places like Blackstone Harbor or Dead Springs. A place that has survived on the skin of its teeth and only one or two NC pilots for the last few decades. I intend to take a proactive approach in making New Anchorage safe and secure.”

As he clipped the datapad that was in his hands to his utility belt, he moved his hands behind his back and continued speaking.

But Ryn's attention wasn't on his posture, but more of the fact that he decided to mention Blackstone Harbor. She wasn't sure why he went out of the way to compare Blackstone and this new place in Alaska, but it wasn't going to make her feel like she was finding a new home. This was a job. Nothing could replace what she had in Blackstone. She raised a brow as he began to lead the group outside and toward the base itself.

“But, no. This isn’t an army. Don’t expect me to be training you all to be soldiers, only capable pilots who follow orders and live up to expectations, and the only expectation I've been asked to test you for is if you can fly, shoot, and protect a handful of settlements. Any other questions?”

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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by DruSM157
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DruSM157 Nobody

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Smith's Rest | HQ Tram Station
January 16th, 2677


I suppose it’s not very different from places like Blackstone Harbor or Dead Springs. A place that has survived on the skin of its teeth and only one or two NC pilots for the last few decades.

Graham’s voice seemed to echo around in his head in his mind, and he realized why the man had used both those specific examples. The girl who’d spoken up, Ryn, was someone he knew all too well. He’d already been worried of her walking over and punching him in the face on the tram; but he’d survived unscathed so far. But Blackstone; that was where Ryn was from. She’d talked about it from time to time during missions. Never really opening up, but simple information like that was simply candidly handed off when he’d talked about his own home.

Dead Springs was an example of a town’s plans gone awry. He’d only been 15 when he’d tested for neural compatibility, and they’d thrown together a group of NCs ready to work for the town by protecting it and doing jobs for it not too long afterwards. It’s how he’d gotten the Wolf; which at the time was barely scraped together with scrap and maintenance parts. It’d taken missions, a lot of learning and his own grit to make his NC an actual fighting machine, but they’d become reliable in no time.

Reliable enough that Dead Springs wanted to go indie. And that was enough to get the attention of raiders. Thing was, Alan had fought his fair share of raiders, and raiders didn’t pilot shiny new corporate mechs, nor did they fight with military-led precision, backed by some bastard in a shiny gold machine.

”Let’s hope we’re not trying to be like those places. With the pilots you’ve gathered up here, I'd expect you want us to go bigger, stronger. No chance of getting wiped off the map.”
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Supermaxx
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Supermaxx dumbass

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Smith's Rest | HQ Tram Station
January 16th, 2677

Demetrius stood near the back of the group, his shoulders hunched and his head held low. The strap over his chest was digging uncomfortably into his skin, weighed down by the heavy bag resting around his lower back. One of his headphones had been brushed to the side so he could at least hear what was going on around him, though Solon obviously wasn't paying all that much attention. His eyes were down on his boots, tracing over their many flaws: stains in the dark leather, a patched over hole or two, a clump of some unknown material still stuck on the bottom that refused to be washed off. They'd seen better days, that much was certain.

'Guess we all have, though.' He silently mused. 'Some more than others.'

The voice of his new XO briefly drew Demi's attention back to the moment at hand, answering some question or other by another pilot. An explanation of what, precisely, New Anchorage was meant to be. A coalition of independent settlements was a novel concept. Not a unique one, he knew, but one that didn't tend to last all that long. Small communes could survive on their own fairly well by ducking under the radar of raiders, but they were little more than agrarian survivalist colonies. True settlements of any kind of size had to rely on corporations for trade and security- standing alone they'd either starve or get bulldozed over by marauders, or any of the other, innumerable threats that roamed the Wastelands.

He had heard stories of burgeoning micro-nations, however, in places like Afrika and Asia, where there was such a vast landmass that states could survive without making contact with corporations for decades. When they did make contact, though...they didn't tend to last a whole lot longer.

Clearing his throat, Demi spoke up, his curiosity getting the better of his desire to remain unnoticed. "What do ya mean by 'key threats?' Last I checked there was nothin' but snow and trees out here 'till ya hit the horizon."

His first thought was irradiated wildlife, or maybe a cabal of raiders or two. But that didn't quite line up with the facts. Anchorage had hired out at least six new NC pilots. That was a ridiculous amount of firepower by any standard, enough to go toe to toe with all but a professional military force. Graham mentioned that they'd been surviving by the 'skin of their teeth' before, so something prompted them to invest so heavily into security. Demi didn't know much about this commander, but he didn't look like the kinda idiot to waste resources.

'Just what the hell's out here that could spook these guys so bad?'
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Ladypug
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Ladypug

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Smith's Rest, New Anchorage | The NC Hangar
January 16th, 2677 (Before the New Pilots Arrive)


Percy huffed out a sigh of exasperation as he dug through his friend's toolbox, both looking for a voltage tester and trying to organize the tools inside as he spoke, "Zach, come on-"

Zach, currently in the ceiling, glared down at him from above. "Percy, I'm gonna say it one more time before I kick you in the teeth. Don't. Touch. Anything else."

"You know I didn't mean to zap you-"

"Yeah, but you did, and you almost started a fucking fire. You promised you wouldn't do that."

"No, I did not," Percy insists, "I said I probably wouldn't start one. There is a difference-"

"Oh my God, I'm going to kick you-" Zach grumbles, taking another few moments to peer down at Percy - apparently he's gotta make sure that Percy sees the disappointment in his eyes, "I swear, Pierce. I'm gonna do it, I'm just gonna fuckin' punt you in the-" After another curse in Percy's general direction and an explosive exhausted exhale, Zach apparently gives up on being irritated. Good, Percy huffs as he sees Zach's hand descend, doing a bit of a "come hither" gesture, "Voltage tester, jackass?"

"I'm still looking for it, asshole." Percy retorted as he started to get more frustrated with the mess that was Zach's toolbox. There's zero sense of good organization - like, the tools are only broadly sorted by the type of tool. Screwdrivers are with screwdrivers, wrenches are with wrenches, et cetera; but even then it's still all chucked in willy-nilly. How does Zach work like this? How is he, let alone anyone he's working with, supposed to find anything in this chaos of a toolbox-?! "Oh, here it is." He went to give it to Zach, but just as his hand went to reach the rest of the way, Percy pulled it back to examine it further - for whatever dumb reason, he always mixes up stud finders and voltage testers. "Wait, I think I'm wr-"

Percy could almost hear Zach's eyes roll out of his head with how done he sounded, "What color is it?"

"Orange?" Percy says turns it over and around in his hands, looking for any and all identifying marks on the thing as he continues, "Sort of looks like a datatool, kinda? There's a red and a blue wire sticking out of the bottom-?"

"Yup, that's it." Percy finally hands the voltage tester to Zach - but instead of a thank you, he gets a little snide remark. "Stud finders don't have wires, y'know."

"I-" Percy scoffed, trying to look offended that Zach thinks he's that stupid - even if he is, in fact, that stupid. Even then, like- how did Zach know? "I know that-!"

"Then why is that whenever I ask you for one, you give me the other? You do it a lot."

It doesn't really matter what Percy says now, because anything he tries to say will just make it worse. But if you were to just glance over the two, could you really tell the difference that fast? Really? Honestly, probably. Definitely. Absolutely, 100%, you could. For one, a stud finder doesn't usually have any numbers on the front face, and the voltage tester very obviously has wires coming out of it; on top of that, the stud finder is significantly smaller due to the lack of all electrical crap a voltage tester needs to... y'know, test voltage? It's pretty easy to pick the two apart.

With all those thoughts in his head, Percy's face burned in embarrassment as he replied with maybe a twinge more hostility than he'd meant to imply, "Shut the fuck up, Zach - or I'll start another fire."

"Uh, no you won't."

Percy grins a little bit, "Yeah, fine, but I could - and I can do it better than I can help with this, obviously. I mean, really? If I really wanted to, there isn't much you can do to stop me."

"I could remind you that our daughter is in the building, though? I don't think she'd be a fan of being set on fire."

Percy's tongue clicks against the roof of his mouth, letting another beat of quiet pass before he replies, "You got me there, Zach. Y'got me there." Of course Percy wasn't really going to set the place on fire - not intentionally, anyway. Obviously. That would be stupid- no, it'd be beyond stupid. They're just fucking with each other. That's how they usually spoke to each other, too - constantly nagging and vaguely hostile but not really intending to actually hurt the other person. Maybe they did in the past, but they've come to at the very least tolerate each other's presence, for Ana's sake.

"Hey, catch-" Zach tosses the hunk of plastic down to Percy, who catches it with the grace and poise of an epileptic walrus - he would have been more graceful if he'd gotten a little more warning, I swear. Seriously though, Zach is such a brute sometimes. It's good, in some circumstances, but.. jeez, man. "I think we're done here."

"Oh, finally," Percy says as he puts the voltage tester back, folding the toolbox into itself to become more easily picked up. He stands up as he continues, "I was getting sick of this shit."

Zach scoffs as he climbs down the ladder, "I'm the one doing all the work." When he hits the floor, he starts to walk, wordlessly prompting Percy to follow.

"Yeah, but I'm the go-fer - the dumbest job in the world."

"How befitting, then, that it goes to you," Zach says, socking him in the shoulder playfully, "the dumbest man in the world."

Ouch.

"Ha-ha." Percy smiles back at him, but... No, really, that hurt. It usually wouldn't - it's Zach saying it, afterall - but with all the batshit stuff going on around him and everyone here asking what, exactly, he's thinking and why he's doing the things he's doing - like, why did he bring Ana here instead of leaving her with Zach? What the hell did he sign up for this for if he loves Ana like he says he does? Is he not aware of the risk? And who does he think he is, signing up for this with no previous military experience? Did he not know what the hell an NC was until he signed up or something? All that shit and more, just... buzzing around in his head lately, so yeah, being called the dumbest fuck on Earth stings, cause that's kind of how he feels right now. He knows that's not how Zach meant it, but- Ah, fuck, there he goes again. Brooding. Moping. Being stupid.

"Oh, uh- how's Ana, by the way?" Zach asks, pulling Percy from his own train of thought, "Is she, like, y'know, good? Bad? Is she adjusting well to the move? And she absolutely, for sure, has Bunny, right? Cause I keep checking over her room to make sure he wasn't left behind, and I couldn't find him, and I know she loves that thing to death-"

Percy laughs, more genuinely this time - he forgets that sometimes Zach can be just as smothering dad to Ana as he is, if not somehow worse. Plus, hey, a change of subject! That was very much needed. He wonders, briefly, if Zach is reading his mind or something. It feels that way. "Yeah," Percy replies, "she's alright, and she has Bonbon."

"Oh, he's Bonbon now?"

"Yep - has been for a little bit, actually."

"Oh," Zach says, a little softer. Sadder? Maybe? Before Percy can really ruminate on that one, Zach continues "I swear, she changes that plush's name crazy often. First it was Baba, then it was Baby, then it was Bernie, Basil, Bot, then it was Bastion, after that it's Brownie and Bunny, now it's Bonbon? God-"

"At least there's a battern- Uh-" Percy snorts - god, so many B's. It's bucking him up, now. "A pattern to how she names him."

Zach struggled to contain his little snicker, "Did you do that on purpose? God, you did, didn't you?"

"No, I didn't. Honest. Come on, my sense of humor isn't that bad, Zach! Really?"

"Really. It is."

"Pft, whatever," Percy playfully shoves at Zach's arm. He and Ana cringe and laugh together when he cracks his jokes, that's all that matters to him - whether anyone else finds it funny is a bonus! "But anyway, yeah. Yeah, Ana's good, has everything she needs to not go nuts-o in here."

Zach lets out a little sigh and a shrug, "Alright, if you insist."

...And again, something about the way Zach said that makes Percy wonder. Maybe it was his tone - that half-defeated sounding voice - maybe it was his expression - a slight grimace, but.. It made him think. Like, he already knew that Zach was against the idea of Ana coming to live on-base with him, but after the shitshow that happened in June? Well, you already know how he feels about that, and if you don't, here's a summary - Tough shit. You fucked up. Surely Zach was aware of that - Percy pitched a fit over it a couple times, afterall. She could've been whisked away never to be seen again, or straight up fucking died. Yeah, he's not taking the risk. Not again.

"Yeah, well," Percy sort of shrugs, "I do."
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Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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mickilennial The Elder Fae

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PART II: Questions & Answers


“Much like the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountains, there isn’t a lot to show out here. Settlements like Smith’s Rest have had to rely on what pilots they could scrap together and the generosity of strangers for as long as Alaskans have been surviving out here.”

As Graham led the group out of the transit station and into the snow he began explaining the situation as briefly as he could with the information he had.

“The Alaskan fauna have been growing in number as of the last few six or seven decades and the amount of capable pilots operating Alaska have minimized to unoptimal numbers. That’s without considering the scum who profit off murdering, stealing, or robbing people. Settlement defense is at an all-time low and that’s not even accounting for anti-corporate fearmongering. There is a lot going on underneath the snow and trees out here.”

Graham figured it was a fair enough answer, though another voice from the assortment of potential pilots arose faster than he expected. A follow-up question at that, as well.

“معذرت ميخوام. But I have a question regarding these threats. What would you consider an unacceptable action during an operation or on base? What lengths are you willing to go to achieve New Anchorage’s goals and your own? My previous employer was pretty ruthless and ordered us to do some unfavorable measures. I would like not to have that happen again.”

Graham thought about this question often because it had been one that came up with valiant cries of morality that many people had shot at him in the past; cries he had rejected entirely. The first part of the woman’s question was one that was often directed about how far was morally or ethically acceptable with things such as slavery, raiding, genocide, and so forth being accompanied with the conversation. While Graham viewed all of those things as bad he didn’t think so for the same reasons as his peers. It brought him back to a talk he had with the second member of the trinity back when he was still just a simple NC pilot... it had been after the Elysian War.

“That is a very large question.” He stated as he stepped outside to the white fuzz of a “mild” snowstorm before turning his head. “This obviously goes beyond simple insubordination and circumnavigation of authority or regulations.”


“If what you are asking is if I am going to turn this unit into a bunch of rapists, slavers, raiders, and thieves then the answer is most definitely not. However, let me make something abundantly clear to all of you. I don’t believe in children’s fantasies of ‘good’ and ‘evil’. I believe in the absolute principle of order. A concept that promotes excellence, professionalism, integrity, organization, and heart. I will tell you that I will do everything in my power that I can to make New Anchorage efficient with no empathy for fantasies of my officers. There is no place for it in my organization. None.”

He took a light breath, the cold air leaving his lips.

“If it requires me to be “unfair” than I will do it. If that scares you… then resign right here and now, and take your tail between your legs and get the hell off my base. I refuse to have pilots who get a little queasy around decision and shake when the cards are drawn.”

His brows narrowed as his turned head looked over the group in their entirety. If his response struck a nerve, then that was the intended reaction. He wanted to see what their expressions looked like with such a response. Despite his exaggerated sternness in the moment there was still no lie. He did not want people who second guessed themselves or New Anchorage. That was how people died for no good reason.

“So what of it? Are any of you rabble not worth your spit? Are any of you unable? Tell me now.”

The woman raised a brow but did not fire an immediate reply back, though her discomfort with his response was obvious.
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