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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Lemons
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Lemons Resident Of The Bargain Bin

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Alto wouldn't have to wait long for a response, as a soft and somewhat monotone voice came back through his radio before too long: "Aissi reporting, Eight-Ball. I--I'll ride with you."

As the implant in her inner ear went quiet, Aissi slid backwards from her brief waiting-post, turned, and glided across the floor, dodging people as she went, until arriving at the active mech. It was just as well she take this one; it was shorter than the other less-occupied behemoth nearby, and she had no idea how she was going to get up it anyway.

When she arrived, close enough to touch the sturdy metallic chassis, she frowned slightly. This close, there was something that felt kind of...vaguely familiar about it, in a way that she couldn't explain. She reached out to caress an emitter on the side of the ankle...

...Before it lit up with a bright glow in response even before she made contact, and Aissi blinked as she began to slowly drift upwards, as though even the gravity that had kept her feet hovering a few inches above the ground had fallen away. Tilting her head back, she saw another of the emitters. And then another, and another, spiderwebbed across the mech's hardpoints all the way to the top. Taking a gamble and hoping it wouldn't result in her falling on her face on the hangar floor, she gave a small boost downwards.

A strange expression resembling a distorted smile grew on her face as she zipped upwards.

Beneath her, the emitter blinked out, and she felt herself slowing--before the next one in line went on in turn, and her upward momentum resumed. In this fashion, boosting from one hardpoint to the next, she skated her way up the side of the mech until she landed atop its shoulder, where she stabilized again. Jetting over towards the head, she settled at the corner of two plates of metal. Pressing a hand against each, she activated the electromagnetic clamps in her hands, and so anchored herself to the mech quite securely even as her feet remained aloft.

Then she turned and inspected the head for a moment before releasing the clamp on her right hand and lifting it towards the cockpit--along with her right Bladewing purely from reflex--in an awkward wave.

@Feyblue
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Supermaxx
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Supermaxx dumbass

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IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching planet's surface.
1421 hours // ♫ Encased In Steel ♫



Teddy rose from his seat with a lazy stretch, arms extending to the sky. He was rolling his shoulders in their sockets when he noticed Aissi was staring at him. Her mouth moved without actually forming any words for several seconds. All Teddy could do was smile. He didn't know her well enough yet to know how to put her at ease. Thoughtless words could be ordinance to the wrong person, after all.

Eventually, though, she found her voice: thank you.

"No problem!" He said, his grin widening as she made a quick retreat in the opposite direction. "Break a leg, kiddo."

Turning, Teddy approached his Grizzly with slow, deliberate steps. Best not to spook the girl. She took a confident stride as a challenge. The relationship between a pilot and their mech was different for every pairing. Some people thought of theirs only as war machines. Others knew every mech had a soul in its gears and pistons. Grizzly had a particularly curmudgeonly manner. If she thought her pilot too eager she was liable to slip a lug nut, pop a leak in a hydraulic line or a thousand other things. Every 'mechanical failure' was a reminder of who was really in charge here.

"Hey old girl." He greeted, patting her cold hide with the back of his knuckles. "We got a couple'a new cubs with us today. Let's bring 'em home safe, okay?"

Mounting up wasn't as easy as it was twenty years ago. Teddy could still remember the days when he could scramble up to the entry hatch without even touching the ladder. He wasn't so spry anymore, nor was he concerned with showing off for his fairer compatriots. No, he was fine carefully ascending the rungs built into the leg of the Grizzly.

The interior lights flickered on when the hatch swung open, even the string of multi-colored beads he'd hung along the ceiling. He'd done it to celebrate a yuletide roughly...twelve years ago? Disentangling them from the wiring proved too much of a hassle to bother trying to remove them.

A mechanical whirring from the front console triggered from the same motion sensor as the lights. A second later, the whirring was joined by the pouring of hot, caffeinated liquid into a thermos. Aberrant cores might fuel the mech but coffee fueled its pilot. Who could expect him to go into a firefight without it? Psychopaths, that's who.

Teddy fell into the torn leather of his pilot's seat with a contented sigh. It felt like the embrace of an old friend. He didn't bother with running another system check. All he needed was a quick glance at the lights flashing green as he flipped about a dozen switches in a row. Every screen, dial and monitor turned on at once. A powerful roar sounded as the MBM-78 came to life. The cockpit shuddered for several seconds on startup before finally settling to a dull thumping.

"Wonder who we're playin' with today..." He muttered, changing the main screen to the external cameras.

Lictor was talking the F.N.G through her first deployment. Newman was her name. Teddy hadn't gotten the chance to talk to the young pilot yet but he wasn't worried for her. She was duetting with the greatest warrior of their age. A living legend who'd felled a thousand thousand Aberrants while half of this team was still in diapers. The old man had her back. She could count on it.

Relief flooded Teddy when he found Aissi talking to the other new guy, Eight-Ball. He seemed like a nice kid. Making friends in the MHA was hard enough at the best of times. Being integrated with alien tech wasn't gonna make that any easier. Teddy was honestly surprised none of these hardened killers had taken a swing on her yet. Lotta people hated the Aberrants enough to do it, and he expected a whole lotta other folks would look the other way.

He tried not to think of the stats he'd seen on new pilot and connie fatality rates. Your chances of death were a hell of a lot higher first starting out.

"Should be easier to keep an eye on 'em if they're together." Teddy told himself quietly.

With Lictor and Aissi accounted for, that left just one last Constellation. Teddy couldn't hold in the groan that formed in his throat. Miss Zhejiang and her eighteen middle names. A noble hero of humanity, he had no doubt, but she seemed all too serious. A humorless killing machine. Maybe he was being unfair. Teddy hadn't actually spoken to her yet, and she had a reputation as an effective combatant.

Teddy opened up a comm channel with her. "Hey, eighty-five. Looks like we're the odd ones out. How 'bout it? Wanna be dance partners?"
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Raijinslayer
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Raijinslayer .

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Zhejiang paid cursory attention to the introductions given after her own while she traced a finger along the shaft of Brilliant Void. They were all warriors worthy of at least some measure of respect, but she could not bother herself with them too much right now. For no other reason then the fact that she might see them the next day. While they were not heading into the heart of danger, this mission was still an active battlezone. There was no telling what horrors might occur, or what changes to the plan might come about as a result of the abominabtions they face. In her own mind, she offered a silent prayer to both the Void Mother and Stone father to see them through this coming battle.

But if dying here is to be our fate, let our ends be glorious and let those who live remember us.

When the signal went out for them prepare for landing, Zhejiang was one of the first to move, sparing no time to greet or talk with anyone else as Brilliant Void lept to her hand like a loyal hound. IN the bright lights of the ship's corridors, she could swear ti seemed to gleam with an excitmenet rivaling her own as the Thrill surged within. A trick of the light, but one that made her fill at ease. The weight of her predeccessors was held within this artifact, and she would do well not to disappoint them with a poor showing in her first engagement. She would make the abominations bleed, of that she was determined.

Speak of the devil. . .
Zhejiang felt more than she heard the creature as it came into the hanger, the hulking thing seeming all to eager for the slaughter to come. As it approached, Zhejiang did not hide the disgust she felt from showing on her face, but said nothing to it. By the rules of engagement they were equals'and thus she had no stance to reprimand the thing for merely beign too clsoe to her. Much less ending it's miserable existence as would have been merciful. Luckily, it did not spend much time near her, pairing up with the young pilot from before as it floated up onto the back of his mech. Zhejiang was preparing to enter into her typical pre-battle rituals when a voice spoke to her through her com line.

"Hey, eighty-five. Looks like we're the odd ones out. How 'bout it? Wanna be dance partners?"

Zhejiang looked towards the Grizzly, blue eyes seeming to pierce into the cockpit to see the equally grizzled man within. She didn't quite respond at first, tilting her head a bit as if she didn't quite understand his words. Then, a small grin spread across her face as her body followed the tilt of her head,sending her entire form careening to the ground.

or more like into it.

Teddy would only have a moment to note the strange flash of purple and black on the ground were she would have been when a weight suddenly landed atop Grizzly. Before long, the blue eyes that had staring from far away now filled the viewport of one of the mech's cameras.

"Can you keep with anything in this tanker, Pilot Howser." Zhejiang voice took on a teasaing sing-sing as she tapped at the camera before hopping down the mech with an ease that appeared almost weightless. As she landed, she turned to give a small bow to the seasoned veteran before addressing him with a hand on her hip as she leaned against her spear. "If you think you can, then I'll be glad to work with a warrior such as yourself. Might even still let you call me '85'.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Xiro Zean
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Apprentice Pilot Kyra Newman
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching planet's surface.
1426 hours // @Raijinslayer@Supermaxx@Lemons@Fading Memory@Feyblue



Approaching her specialized robot, Kyra took a second to marvel at the sight of what must’ve taken dozens if not hundreds of hands to create. A sleek design that focused on maximizing speed and surveillance capabilities, the TC-730 Marble is effectively a repurposed model to suit the requirements for her ability to pilot it. Several features were removed in order to optimize the capturing of environmental information and threat recognition systems, the weight re-configured to support the electronics required for it while still maintaining a high level of mobility relative to other mechs. With a reverse-legged design to minimize energy use on lift-off or a burst movement option without burning fuel, relying on several miniature thrusters for more precise mobility, were it not for the ladders locked in place for a Pilot’s convenience she would’ve had trouble climbing up to the cockpit in the chest compartment, a hatch open on the machine’s shoulder.

The bespectacled woman nearly slipped off the rungs of the ladder when she heard the voice of her retainer call out to her, clinging for dear life as she did her best to listen to the old man’s barks. The veteran wasn’t even looking at her, focused on one of the two VVIPs of their personal mission, yet she was certain he would catch if she didn’t give her full attention to his words. She squirmed when he finished, eyes finally settling on her disheveled figure still wrapped desperately around the ladder, and the brunette had to physically gulp down her nerves before she replied.


“Y-Y-Yes sir!” Kyra physically winced when she heard the squeak that slid into her voice near the end, but thankfully it seemed that was all the old war dog had to hear before he leaped up to perch atop her robot faster than she could’ve even without the momentary distraction. Hurriedly climbing up after him and carefully heading to the hatch of her mech, she slid down the small chute directly into her chair inside, the seat perfectly modeled after the deep dive VR machine she used to play with in the comfort of her home. For a moment, the young woman relaxed, eyelids closed and enjoying the familiar cushions beneath her body despite her bum throbbing slightly from the impact.

Her eyes shot open at the sound of a company jingle, one that she heard thousands of times before when booting up her favorite competitive title. The interior of the cockpit was pitch black, save for the white lettering of the name ‘Emerge Program™’ before the darkness slid away as the Heads-Up Display lit up her surroundings. The screen displaying her surroundings filled her sight, her periphery filled with hovering gauges and meters that near perfectly represented the status of her machine. Others lined the bottom, numbers and bars that notified her of her weapons and movement capabilities, most of them filled to the max save for a grayed out box that signified absent back-mounted equipment. The center of her view was lined with a cross hair, measuring lines helping her gauge the relative distance between her and a target, as well as a smaller simplified version of pertinent information such as energy levels and currently loaded ammunition in a small reticle beside it. Forgetting the time and effort it would’ve taken for the developers of her mech to translate actual systems into gamified stats, Kyra grasped the two controlling mechanisms in her seat and was happy to see her machine raise the automatic rifle in its hands in response. She was home.

The HUD lit up with the words ‘Welcome Back, Agent’, the tagline any player of Ironclad Core would know by heart, just before the right side of her view filled with the portraits and names of those currently keyed to the general radio channel. Her immersion immediately died as soon as she saw the list, the maximum team size within the VR game only reaching around twelve. Though minimized for the sake of visual clarity, she counted over forty names of only half she could recognize, their ranks signifying them as members of the platoon joining the Pilots and Constellations on the mission, as well as Rigel who was currently set to mute and Lictor who was no doubt listening to the conversations thrown about on the open channel.

Another two names added themselves to the list soon after, Eight-Ball and Aberrant Integration System Subject One- she quickly renamed it to ‘Aissi’ -joined the channel. Unlike the other names on her team list, Alto’s displayed what she expected from her VR game, a life bar and small symbols briefly summarizing his diagnostics popping up beneath it. She’d never had a chance to be fielded alongside other mechs before, and the sight made her feel both relieved and nervous. Kyra hoped she wouldn’t have to watch that gauge deplete on-duty.

Though her fellow newbie Pilot attempted to fish for a partner, Aissi had responded before she could, the view she had of the half-Aberrant riding up alongside the experimental machine Alto piloted being a surreal experience. It was like watching a game bug in real time, despite it being very much real and not a recording issue in the slightest, her systems entirely in the green. She polished her glasses anyway, yet another immersion breaking movement Kyra had to ignore as she opened her mic to speak to the two still on the open channel.
“Um, due to the disparity between the deployed number of Pilots and Constellations, it was decided before the mission that Mission Control would allow the pla- th-the units on field to decide their own composition of groupings... S-So long as each Pilot had at least one Constellation assigned to them.”

Which wasn’t telling the full story, but the Pilot wasn’t sure how much of the mission briefing she was supposed to share with the rest of the crew. The levels of information between members seemed off, with certain members kept in the dark of things that should’ve been pertinent for all involved, and the young woman didn’t want to step on any toes if she could help it. Besides, the listed pairings were near identical to what eventually formed, if the Orbitae woman standing atop the last unstated mech was any indication, so all happened as it should-

“How interesting.” Kyra just barely stopped herself from physically whirling her mech around to the source of the voice, coming not from the voice comms but from the physical audio picked up by her sensors. Seated atop the opposite shoulder from where she had entered her robot, the figure of Dombay sat atop the metal plating, legs dangling off the side and their sheathed sword politely laid atop their lap. Eyes perpetually closed, they still happened to turn exactly to where her imaging systems were displaying the surroundings from, ‘looking’ directly at her through the screen. “Then, please pardon my sudden arrival, but I prefer to ride alongside Miss Newman and Master Lictor.”

She never saw when or how they got onto her mech, none of her systems reacting until they’d settled onto the shoulder. The small map on the top right corner of her HUD, lighting green with moving dots that symbolized friendlies within her current surroundings, hadn’t registered them until just before they spoke, the small green dot atop her own and next to Lictor’s as if it’d always been there. Kyra wasn’t sure how to react, to respond, but before she could the minimap widened, more information flooding into the reconnaissance systems as the hanger door began to open.

“Ladies and gentlemen, time to head out!” Rigel’s portrait on her screen lit up as she saw the figure of the muscled man approach the slowly opening door, the skies murky with smoke and air that was no doubt as difficult to breathe in as it looked with the level of planet Corrosion their destination suffered from. Turning to the assembled group of soldiers, Constellations and mechs, Rigel threw out his arms to either side, the smile on his face somehow more manic now that they landed as he shouted with his loudest voice yet. “Welcome to Alora!”

Then the skies lit up with missiles, shells and laserfire, the symphony of discharged artillery completely drowning out everything else in the world.






Red Giant Ahkari Ganju
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching Princess D-47's Nest
1430 hours // @Eisenhorn@McMolly@Asura@vietmyke@OwO



Though the skies above were murky and dark, the sun shrouded by the clouds formed overhead along with the air being murky and inhospitable, Ahkari watched from the hotel’s cracked windows as it shone bright with the last of humanity’s might.

It wasn’t easy, but through the combined efforts from the desperation of the situation, promises levied that would be upheld even if she were to suffer an untimely demise, and every last bit of familiarity they had as fellow inhabitants of the planet, the Red Giant had convinced the acting general to support her operation. They needed a distraction, and he gave her one, with every last bit of the forward base’s remaining firepower designated with one, singular target: the Nest. The economical cost was immense, and no doubt the shrinks riding in the space cruisers were already chewing the Brigadier General out for wasting precious resources when the planet-side mission was effectively considered a failure. She would have to buy Lenard a case of expensive brandy the next time she saw him for his help, if only to alleviate the migraine he would develop.

Ahkari had a faint hope that perhaps the enemy was weakened enough by the constant battles that the barrage could somehow inflict a decisive blow, but at the end of the day, it was a useless endeavor. Already, she could see several of the discharged shells exploding prematurely, the defensive measures of the Aberrants immediately responding to the oncoming threat as reactionary balls of plasma met the artillery fire halfway and causing both projectiles to end mid-flight. Small shapes in the distance flew up to meet the rest, aerial forces using their very bodies to protect the mother base to force an early detonation. While fewer in number, the devastating beams of light created by stationary rail and laser cannons were much more difficult to intercept, and yet before they could attempt to dent the metallic ‘petals’ of the Nest, the shimmering presence of a powerful barrier stopped them in their tracks, absorbing the energy of the assault until it dwindled to nothing.

Expected, but disappointing. What mattered, however, was the enemy’s response afterward.

The Constellation twitched as she felt the ground rumble, the Aberrant force rising from the urban jungle as if merely awoken by the level of firepower that would’ve leveled several sectors of the city had it reached its target. From her periphery, she saw many of the soldiers raise their weapons, the distant sound of approaching aliens sending them all into high alert. The purple-haired commander had informed the rest of her company the details of what would happen, and even warned them to stay still and not engage with any passing force except on her command, but even she was palming her spear when the enemy came into view.

A colossal force seemed to rise from the streets themselves, a wave of Pawn-Class Legionnaires crowded ear to ear as they filled the city with terrifying numbers, the asphalt of the road disappearing under the mass of the swarm as they progressed toward their destination. At a towering nine feet each, their bodies were covered in a blood red carapace that protected only the most important areas such as joints and vital points, the visible flesh pulsating and raw as if the skin had been peeled off. Baying and shrieking echoed through the surroundings, thousands upon thousands of voices cried for bloodshed, an evolved feature created only to instill terror into the heart of humanity. As Aberrants required neither food nor water, they possessed mouths and vocal cords for no other purpose, empty of even teeth as they stampeded past the hotel without a second glance.

The mass of bodies, so copious they frequently bumped each other into the buildings surrounding their path, would frequently cause the walls of the hotel to crack and the supports to groan while the blades that replaced where hands would be scraped against the concrete, the fearful sounds of certain weak-willed soldiers thankfully drowned out by the haunting wails of the Pawn swarm. Flying above them were several squadrons of surface-based Knights, aerial fighters and drones darkening the skies that were but a moment ago ignited with fire, along with the Bishops that silently commanded the horde. To name every type of Aberrant that passed them by would be a severe undertaking, and after the seventh variant she stopped attempting to keep track, yet knowing that they could’ve brought such a force upon themselves should she have proceeded with her original plan made the commander shudder.

Even after the deluge of bodies had ended, Ahkari didn’t dare make a move until the rumbling stopped, the sight she beheld no doubt mirrored on every street and corner of the city facing the forward base. To think that the Aberrants were able to repopulate their forces to such an extent… It was unlike any other operation of this scale she’d experienced in her many years of serving as a Constellation. An unnatural level of ability for a single Princess.

Perhaps it was the fault of the Queen that birthed D-47. However, the Dorothy bloodline of the Aberrant hivemind were known primarily for their ability to birth an impressive personal guard, not a high reproductive capability. But the thought of said guards reminded the commander that her mission had only just begun, and though she would’ve given it more thought if she had the chance, time was of the essence.


“Alright.” Keyed into a radio frequency reserved only for the squad leaders, platoon commanders, Pilots and Constellations, Ahkari notified them all that it was time for action after a quick check with her surveillance officers. “Move out. We have to reach the target before they figure out what is happening.”

The Constellation wasn’t naive enough to believe they’d drawn out every defending unit situated around the Nest, though the light show almost certainly cut the number by a significant margin. They couldn’t keep up stealth at a quick pace, with seven mechs, twelve mobile vehicle weapons, at least a hundred and fifty soldiers, the sounds of their engines and footsteps at any notch higher than glacial would alert anything with functioning ears, so she eschewed it near entirely. She’d just have to rely on the Aberrants hopefully treating the forward base with a higher threat level than it actually was, and a bit of luck.

With nowhere near as much gravitas as the swarm that passed through minutes ago, Aurigae’s company passed through the war-torn roads, the rumble of wheels on asphalt and grumble of worried soldiers seemed louder than usual, the empty streets devoid of life save their own. Unlike the hotel, the rest of the city was nowhere near as meticulously cleaned, the bodies of humans and Aberrants alike left where they lay. Destroyed infrastructure stayed as it was, fires flickering in any direction one chose to look, and the unmistakable smell of ionized air left behind where plasma weapons were used. Grimly, Ahkari wondered how many piles of ash were once people, and if one day they’d create technology that could piece a disintegrated family back together again.

But that was neither here nor there. Though they were left unmolested for an hour, more than she thought was possible in Aberrant infested territory, their luck ran out by half of the next. So close to the Nest that she could almost see the finer details of the structure in the distance, the Constellation was unsurprised to see the welcoming party that stumbled upon them.

Rounding a building only a block ahead of them, a surge of Legionnaires, thankfully more of a lake than an ocean like what had passed them before yet still numerous in numbers, and the Bishop-Class Spearmen that led them. As their namesake suggested, Spearmen used a long rod of alien metals as long as they were tall, a powerful twelve feet that, while smaller than even the smallest forms of human mecha, they used to dangerous effect. Unlike a human, who would use a dangerous point to defeat opponents with their superior range, an Aberrant needed no such tactics. With overwhelming might, they simply swung their ‘spears’ as if they were mere sticks, buildings torn in half by the sheer strength of their physical prowess. Technique was not a lower form Bishop’s strong suit, but rather relying entirely on their natural ability.

A privilege of the strong.

Ahkari noticed the handful of Jetsam flying along with the Spearmen, and upon sighting the human group, immediately began to wriggle their bodies and reveal the beam weaponry hidden beneath their ‘scales’. With the size of the forces roughly 2:1, with the commander counting upward of two hundred of the Pawns and counting as they surged around the corners of buildings, the Constellation gripped her spear tightly and allowed it to extend to its full size, the hiss of pressurized air exuding from the weapon.


“Engage the enemy!” The commander cried out, the screams of hundreds of Legionnaires melding with the roar of her soldiers as she immediately leapt toward the building ahead of her, the air around her pushing the woman forward rather than slow her approach while she heard the sound of gunfire ring out behind her. Running along the wall, her eyes were set on the Spearmen, who began to simultaneously scale the buildings around them in unison. Eight in total, she barely had just enough Constellations to keep them from descending upon the infantry and ripping them apart, but as they fanned out to avoid her entirely the Constellation grit her teeth.

From first glance, they seemed to have realized the threat she possessed, and were planning to wipe out everything else before dealing with her. And, as she attempted to intercept a duo that were a bit too close to each other to both avoid her entirely, she changed the frequency of her radio to a select few.


“Constellations, catch those Spearmen! Pilots, keep the Pawns off them and get them in position!” The spear in Ahkari’s hand roared, spewing the air built up within it, and she hopped onto the handle just before it began rocketing through the air. With no visible technologies to control it, the spear was entirely piloted by her Anomaly, the air currents guiding her spear as it made its path through the skies toward her two targets. Intercepting them just as they twisted to see her approach, she kicked off her spear as it flew directly into one, the point clashing with the rod raised in time to keep it from skewering the alien through the head while the other wound its ‘spear’ around with a wild swing to remove her head.

A powerful burst of wind adjusted her mid-air so that the weapon swung harmlessly away from her, yet she still felt the air around her warp from the force of the attack. Bringing her hands together, she thrusted them simultaneously palms first toward the assaulting Spearman, the air between her and her target compressing until it violently burst, rocketing her down to a building while careening the Aberrant into the sky, the flash of its barrier indicating the absorption the blow.

Her spear, having kept pressure on the other opponent even during her short scuffle, suddenly retreated as it flew to catch her before she could land, the two Aberrants meeting on a rooftop as Ahkari floated above them, seated on her spear once more. Eyes narrowed, she could only wish her fellow Constellations luck, slowly lowering herself to meet the two rapidly approaching Bishops with her feet on the ground, spear twirled into a readied position.

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Soldiers of Aurigae’s Company
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching Princess D-47's Nest
1604 hours // @Eisenhorn@McMolly@Asura@vietmyke@OwO



The situation below was just as dire as on the rooftops, the soldiers immediately finding difficulty in mowing down the Legionnaire swarm. Despite their lack of full body carapaces, their resilience trumped any other species of Pawn, what little armor they did have being all they required to keep up their charge. Mangled limbs, torn muscles, destroyed organs, if it weren’t a killing blow the Aberrant would simply continue moving until it was, their screams a promise that they would return the suffering tenfold if they were to reach the firing line. The numbers were too plentiful for only infantry to deal with, and though the human side had Pilots to support, they too were under duress.

“I need anti-air support!” One yelled over the radio channel, his voice crackling as a laser clipped the head of his mecha and damaged the communication systems. The Jetsam above, while a mere dozen compared to the Legionnaires below, were an annoying presence on the battlefield. Slippery as eels, they dominated the sky, keeping the Pilots’ attention with barrages of small yet dangerous laserfire. While they couldn’t destroy a mech outright, with enough shots the integrity of a machine’s armor could become compromised, and a lucky shot could damage an important system. One of the other Pilots was already in dire straits due to the first barrage disabling the firing mechanism of their main gun, relying on a secondary hand cannon to support the struggling infantry ignoring the waste of heavy ammunition, and a handful of the infantry were drowning in pools of their own blood despite the main force of the enemy being entirely melee-focused.

“Why don’t we get someone to deal with the Bishops first!” Another cried, the six other Spearmen in various forms of progress in closing the distance to the human forces. One, close enough for the Pilot to fire at, deflected the charged rifle beam with a swing of its ‘spear’ before throwing their weapon at the mech with devastating force. The Proto-Class Constellation, who had chosen to interact with a group of Pilots rather than the mingling of both parties that had occurred between the other three Mains with two Pilots, barely managed to divert the path of the thrown spear with their sword, yet the crater that formed around where the rod stabbed into the street only a few dozen feet away spoke volumes to the enemy's strength. Sweat dripping from her face, the Constellation’s hands shook as she felt the Bishop’s gaze lock onto her shivering figure, clutching her blade tightly as the superior being leapt to engage her.

“What about the boots on the ground?” The last of the Main-Class Constellations called over the rest of the chatter, attempting to contact Aurigae and failing as he met a Spearman just as it attempted to eliminate his Pilot by plunging from above, sparks flying as his sword locked with the Bishop’s weapon to keep it from stabbing down atop the mech they dueled upon. His shoulder, visibly burnt by a stray laser blast catching him off-guard, stung as his foe deepened the blade lock, the tip of the spear easily digging a hole into the reinforced metal. “They’re going to get overrun!”

With so many fronts to deal with, and the last of the Spearmen beginning to descend upon the human forces, the chaos of the battlefield sprouted in earnest.






Main-Class Maximus Solignis
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching planet's surface.
1603 hours // @Raijinslayer@Supermaxx@Lemons@Fading Memory@Feyblue



”What a farce.

The Constellation would’ve spit into the dirt beneath his feet if he were a lesser man, his longtime partner standing only a few steps behind as they stared out into the distance, the city proper a mere handful of miles away. The wave of red approaching their position made him finger the pommel of his blade, his eyebrows furrowed as he briefly thought of how they came to this situation.

Not long after the Eorman’s useless attempt to raise morale was stifled by the timing of the artillery barrage, new orders had come in from surface-level command. Rather than the original plan of being directed to deal with stragglers that the main force had neither the time nor resources to eliminate, they were assigned to join the left-most wing in defending against the oncoming Aberrant swarm. After being informed that they were dealing with the aftermath of a diversion tactic to land a decisive strike in the enemy’s heart, Maximus had immediately spoken against allowing their platoon to join the engagement.

Fifty men was not a number worth factoring into plans involving wide-scale tactics, the composition of which held much to be desired. While the quality of infantry was high, his soldiers having survived many combats to still be following him to this day, it was the elite units that he argued were unprepared. Three Stardust-Class Constellations and two greenhorn Pilots were not a sturdy defense force, and although he had full faith in his direct superior in the infamous Lictor and the veteran Pilot of the Grizzly, he could not entrust his back to untested talents in a brutal firefight.

One such figure came to the forefront of his mind, and a glare was sent toward one of the figures over his shoulder. The rest of the force were waiting behind the barricades, the chest-high fortifications just barely enough to take cover from arced plasma and beam weaponry, and his eyes settled on a black and red figure atop the experimental Corvo, her sleek colors striking against the background of the murky sky. As if marketing herself as an easy target.

The Aberrant Integration System, Subject One, should not be on this battlefield. Hell, she should not be anywhere near a site where soldiers, high-strung from battling Aberrants for two months straight, would be confused by such a figure within their presence. Already, both he and the Eorman were forced to suppress several potential incidents with both the infantry and Constellations on site who had attempted to terminate her on sight. After which, none of the other platoons had attempted to approach theirs, keeping to their own sectors and ignoring his to the best of their ability. He was certain that, if their sector were to be overrun, not a single hand would come to their aid until the abomination was snuffed out.

Her existence was a liability to the forces on-planet, and were it his choice she would’ve been shipped right back to orbit if he’d gotten his way in the conference with the acting general. Yet, the Brigadier General wished for her to stay, along with their other experimental project, continuing the testing process despite the change in situation. This was no longer a controlled scenario as they had hoped, but the people in charge wanted to see how their weapons functioned, regardless of the results.

Weapons. Hah. Warned as he might’ve been by the honorable Lictor, Maximus had observed the subject since the moment he was assigned to monitor her abilities, and he saw no weapon in her eyes. A useless civilian in a metal body, too timid when faced with the barest modicum of intimidation, careful with her movements as if finding her body unwieldy. A true warrior treats their swords as part of their body, and yet despite it being a literal case with her own, he could see no cohesion between her spirit and her blades.

There had been a moment of doubt in the hangar, as they prepared to depart from the ship, that he’d sensed a hint of something more. The presence of a caged beast awoken for a brief instant, yet when he turned to check his premonition, all he felt was her diminutive presence once more. If she were to be an abomination, rising above what was designed for her station, the fact that she could not even act like one made the Constellation grit his teeth.

The others tied to machines were no better. A fresh-faced Pilot in a fancy new toy that would crash and burn the second he faced something stronger than a breeze, and the other even more timid than the half-Aberrant, no doubt a shackle her retainer would be forced to babysit. Even the Stardusts were a disappointment. An Orbitae heir struggling with their Anomaly at her age was laughable, and the other…

Maximus shook his head. He could not understand why he continued to be saddled with failed projects.


“It’s not that bad,” his companion finally spoke, the old man grinning despite the rumble of the ground beneath their feet. The mechanical first whirred as the Eorman rose it to pat his back, tapping it with surprising gentleness. So the bastard could control his strength if he tried, huh? “This beats standing in a wasteland, bored out of our minds watching the youth grow without us and nothing else, right?”

“Standing in a wasteland, waiting for death to descend upon us is no better,” the Solignis claimed, eyes narrowed as the first howls of the Legionaires reached their ears. A disgusting lot, bloodthirsty in ways other Pawn variants were not. Could the Princess burrowed in this planet not have produced something more quiet and less resilient?

“Well, you could say something to your men. I can only rally morale for so long.”

“The fact that you waste your breath with such nonsense baffles me. Soldiers follow orders, and I have very good soldiers.”

“They follow you to hell and back, Max. At least show you care a little bit about them.”

“It is not they you are attempting to encourage. I will not be seeing any of these recruits’ faces again after this operation, so why bother.”

Maximus sighted the first wave of targets among the throng, Bishop-Class Outlanders, their distinctive disc-like cranial structure and chrome metal bodies easy to point out in the sea of red. At a similar level of difficulty to Spearmen, their bodily structure was similar to a praying mantis. With scythed arms made for snapping weapons and bodies caught in their grasp like twigs and miniature thrusters replacing wings, they were one of the lower form Bishops designated as “Constellation Killers”, designed solely for targeting a priority target and catching them unawares for a quick and easy termination. Not unlike how Constellations themselves acted. Their actual ability to reach that title, however, was lacking compared to higher form Bishops, at best able to deal with a preoccupied Proto if they were lacking in the awareness department.

A simple matter for someone of his or the Eorman’s caliber. Not so much if they were to isolate one of their wards.


“Ye of little faith,” said Eorman chuckled, yet even with his jovial front Maximus could tell his companion noted the presence of the Outlanders as well, his smile not quite as wide as it usually was. “But isn’t that a strange sight. It’s almost as if they know we have greenhorns in our ranks.”

“You give those monsters too much credit,” the blond growled, his already shot mood lowering further as he unsheathed his silver longsword, tongues of flame climbing from his hand and enwrapping the blade. The familiar noise of mid-range artillery filled the air, the first wave of enemies entering their firing distance as explosions made temporary holes in the swarm, only to be filled again moments later. For a second, he hesitated, stopping his feet from moving just as he was about to go and engage the enemy. He could feel the Eorman blink rather than see it, the surprise radiating off the large man’s figure when he hadn’t immediately departed to deal with the threat.

Instead, with an irritated sigh, Maximus tapped his earpiece, entering the general radio chatter for the first time. The pleased gaze of the Eorman annoyed him even further, and so he was unable to keep the loathing from his voice when he spoke to the platoon.


“Men, prepare to greet the enemy. Pilots, reserve ammunition for stemming the tide in opportune moments. Constellations, work together to deal with any Bishops that get past the Eorman and myself. Sir Lictor and… Teddy Bear, support the recruits if need be, otherwise remain on standby. Keep an eye out for Dwellers. None of you are allowed to die unless I order it. That is all.”

Before he could hear any responses, he pulled the communications device from his ear and threw it to the Eorman, cutting the man’s laughter short and forcing him to fumble to keep the expensive piece of equipment from falling to the ground. “Eorman, you’re with me. Try to keep up.”

“That’s my line!” Maximus heard the grin rather than saw it, already rushing out to deal with the Outlanders he’d sighted among the red wave just as the first of the enemies came within range of the infantry fire. In his periphery, he saw other Constellations with their mech Pilots doing the same, no doubt coming to the same conclusion of dealing with the ambush-type enemies before they could get in range and use their abilities to their advantage. Without a Pilot of his own, his lone figure against the crying wave of Legionnaires looked like suicide, but the presence he felt at his back was all he needed for support.




Antares, disappearing along with Rigel into the sea of bodies, waves of flame and explosions caused by kinetic force rather than artillery being the only signs of their continued survival. Well, along with the occasional laugh of Rigel in the radio feed, still connected to the open channels.

Despite their efforts, not only was a sizeable swarm of Legionnaires entering the platoon’s sphere of influence, but in the throng there was occasionally sighted three figures. An Outlander flanked by two Spearmen, not engaging even as the Pawn army began getting chipped away by the infantry. Rather, they were standing just a short distance away, close enough that with but a few leaps they would descend upon the encampment like cats upon mice, yet far enough that their figures were easily lost in the crowd of bodies.

It wasn’t until the Legionnaires, their bodies piling up that the corpses began to act as shields for those that closed the distance to replace them, that they began to move. As the left-most wing, their group had nothing to protect their flank, expected to be the ones defending it all by themselves, and so it was expected that one of the Spearmen attempted to circumvent the firing line entirely to wreck havoc through the backline.

What wasn’t expected was that the other disappeared in the crowd, only to appear moments later crashing through the front, the swing of its rod immediately crushing three men as it closed the distance in an instant. Having defended itself using the corpse wall formed by the climbing bodies, it immediately made itself apparent, threatening to carve a hole for the Pawn swarm to breach through.

But, terrifyingly, the Outlander was nowhere in sight, its presence disappearing as it used the commotion caused by the Spearman to its advantage, its figure no doubt hidden somewhere among the red wave of Aberrants.
Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Lemons
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Lemons Resident Of The Bargain Bin

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This was what the end of the world must look like, thought Aissi.

As she stood atop the Corvo, she stared at the death that was unfolding before her, brilliant crimson eyes almost glassy as she gazed at the carnage. There was something...beautiful about it, in some twisted way. The chaos, the confusion; they stroked comfortingly against something deep in her brain, something she hadn't felt in any of the countless simulations she'd run back in the lab. The
knot. The bloom of plasma that had ripped across the Aberrant line ahead of them from the colossal cannon she was only a few dozen feet from, setting her ears ringing and her teeth on edge, only sharpened that feeling. It was all just so...so real. The Aberrants, the people, everything splayed out before her; it wasn't just fragments of stitched-together code being projected in front of her anymore. The sights of slaughter and fire, the sounds of pounding artillery and agonized screaming, of explosions and plasma and Alto's voice buzzing in her ear. The smells of boiling blood, scorched ozone, and the oil of shattered machines. The feeling of danger as blasts of annihilating light tore by her. As high off the ground as she was, it all still felt so close, and her heart was racing faster than it ever had. Her lips curled into a trembling smile. All the sims were so woefully inadequate. This was what it meant to be outside the lab. This was what it was like to live.

Before she could make another move or entertain another thought, another spike of the alien-yet-not feeling she'd felt in the hanger pierced through her brain again as the Corvo darted around, this time much stronger, and she sucked in a shuddering breath scented with gunsmoke. No longer just elation, but a delicious compulsion.
Euphoria. And not only euphoria, either. A seething excitement that she barely had the presence of mind to realize wasn't quite her own. The magnets on one of her palms released, and her taloned fingers raked down the mech's hull with the sparking screech of metal against metal as she fought against the urge to throw herself from the mech and butcher everything beneath her. An altogether out of place sound dripped from her mouth as the oh-so-alluring impulses coiled around her like smoke: "Ah..."

"
...A-haha..."

"
...AhahahahaaahAHAHA!"

She threw her head back as her laugh grew steadily louder and less controlled, and her Wingblades flared out to their full span and reared back like scorpion tails poised to strike. Laserfire sparked from the generator placed on each, then raced down the edges with a sizzling sound, engulfing them in a shroud of violent red light that shone through the gloom. The smoke had crawled its way inside her now, casting a beautiful haze over her thoughts. Beneath her, an Aberrant Bishop plowed through the defensive line, its spear crushing and slashing with brutal ease. She could feel her core pulsing in her back, beating with savage glee alongside her heart. The laugh finally cut off and, although a choked-back giggle mangled it, a single word was spoken into Alto's cockpit as she succumbed to her desire:

"
Descending."

If there was a response, she couldn't hear it, or understand it; words dissolved into the haze and turned to garbled radio static in her head. The only thing that mattered was cleaving and slicing and tearing and
KILL KILL KILL her target and anything that tried to get in her way.

She ripped her fingers from where they'd seized in the Corvo's hull, leaving jagged gashes in their wake. The sound of scraping metal shredded against her ears once more, and she shuddered at the beauty of it, a crazed smile that bared far too many teeth spreading across her face. Then, body taut with nerves and joy, she released her final clamp and activated her engines again. They roared to full throttle in a split second, and she screamed forwards at a speed she didn't know she could reach, cleared the edge of the Corvo's shoulder in the space of a blink, and catapulted herself into space. Blazing over the throngs below like a meteor and descending on the Spearman before a single laser could hope to draw a bead on her, she snapped her Wingblades forward. With all the force behind her strike, her engines running at top speed, and her absurdly fast descent, they seemed nothing so much as twin bolts of red lightning.

She was AIS S1.

She was built to fight.


Made to kill.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Mcmolly
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Mcmolly D-List Cryptid

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For what it was worth, Ahkari and Odessa’s strategy had worked well. The patrol they encountered was surely magnitudes smaller than what they would have faced otherwise, though Selene found herself worried for whoever it was on the receiving end of the Aberrant horde. Whatever composed their ranks, the creatures always found a way to compensate for their shortcomings with bestial rage.

For now, however, it would do to focus on the task at hand. The patrol’s vanguard reached them quickly, swarming like locusts around the Pilots and infantry. She moved instinctively towards the latter as the wave of Pawns grew closer and more ravenous, but Ahkari’s orders stayed her feet. Bishop Spearmen. Selene’s eyes darted across the battlefield, searching out the beasts as they began to scale the surrounding buildings. Those who could avoid the commander did so, scattering out with clear intent: devastate the fragile backline of foot soldiers and damaged mechs.

Smart. Rude, but smart.

She looked for the closest one, but found herself distracted by the sonic crack of a spear embedding itself into the road. The Constellation who had deflected it scrambled to recompose herself, shivering like a leaf even with her sword in hand. Selene searched but could not find her name, so she was likely a lower rank, which meant that even disarmed the Bishop had better odds than her—and the Pilot.

Selene was moving before she made the decision, already dashing down the street towards the charging creature. It was, predictably, much faster than she was, and for as much training as she did, no amount of time on the treadmill would make her close distances so quickly without a little assistance. So, she would be assisted.

One hand clutched Pleiades’ hilt, the other extended out towards the stuck spear. Air twisted around the invisible force of her Anomaly as it shot out and took hold of the weapon; she could not feel the coldness of its alien metal, but she could feel the pressure of the grasp as if she were holding it in her own two hands. Another ghostly limb took hold of the haft, then another, and another, and she could feel in the muscles of her soul how they held taut. Selene braced, and some otherworldly force within her flexed.

Nebulae pulled, hard, and wrenched her forward off her feet with the force of an Aberrant-scale line drive that sent her rocketing down the street. Briefly, she did not know where she was. The drab Aloran ruins whipped by her in a meld of gray and brown and pallid blue and at some point in the extended moment of her leap she saw color in her periphery. The angry reds and yellows and oranges of fire, the chromatic splashes of Aberrant blood, the suffocating, brimstone whorl of a dying sky. Althea’s crumbled skyline morphed, she saw spires ablaze and writhing, as if alive, falling into the lake of fire the earth had become. It was easy to become disoriented, but Selene knew these feelings, these visions, and focused on only herself and the Bishop.

They collided, and Alora snapped back into focus around her. Nebulae cushioned the impact, and Selene crouched parallel to the ground with her feet planted on the Aberrant’s invisible barrier. Pleiades’s half-broken blade burst with ethereal AB energy as she drew it, simultaneously slashing and kicking herself away. The barrier fizzled into reality, straining against the blow and force combined. Nebulae pried the spear free as she sailed backwards; Selene clenched her fist, and as she landed she threw her arm forward in a pitching motion. The spear hurtled past her in a near-imperceptible blur and slammed into the Aberrant’s weakened barrier, shattering it like glass. The creature flew onto its back several feet away, skewered through the shoulder. As it scrambled back to its feet, Selene glanced at the Proto Constellation.

Hello! That was a wonderful save, well done!” She smiled, resisting the urge to ask for her name. She could grab it and the Pilot’s later. “Would you go assist the infantry, please? I think they would appreciate it very much.

And with that she returned her attention to the enemy. The Bishop pulled its spear free with a furious hiss, but Selene didn’t give it time to regain its composure. She was on it, feigning action that made the creature panic, and swing its spear like a club to try and swat her away. Nebulae caught it, but did not halt or slow its momentum at all. It pushed Selene along the arc, and when the apex of its swing tilted up, the ghostly arms brought her with it and sent her flying high overhead. The world spun and twisted and for a blink everything was fire once more. Nebulae gripped the ground on either side of the Aberrant, and she righted herself in the air, poised above the bewildered spearman like a storm cloud welling with lightning.

███, ████████, ███, █████, █████, ████, ██

Nebulae pulled Selene down with blinding speed and surgical precision, carrying her right past the Bishop’s neck. She slashed out with Pleiades, and her anomalous limbs helped her land with a soft roll back to her feet.

Alora. This was Alora.

The Bishop's head fell away from its body, and it collapsed in a heap.

Selene regarded her surroundings again, as if to reassure herself. Panicked calls for aid still rung through the comms, and with the threat partly reduced, she surveyed the battlefield for anyone else who might need a helping hand. With how small their group was, they couldn’t afford to leave people to fend for themselves. Everyone from the infantry to commander Ahkari counted. Everyone.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Eisenhorn
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Eisenhorn Inquisitor of some Note

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"I have to entertain myself somehow Sab, seeing how high of a debt you can build up certainly applies." At the mention of Sabine's last ration pack being with hungry hungry Constellation defeated any hope of claiming a pack of smokes from them a lost cause, and he dismissed it from his mind. Fortunately the medipen was used to alleviate the worst of the burn, though at the comment on being a stick in the mud he shrugged, almost idly, replying in kind. "If having an appropriate outlook in the situation is a stick in the mud, we can call it that, sure." Howe felt like something was off about Selene, watching her and Sabine go back and forth in regards to one night stands and crashing house parties. Neither of which were exactly familiarities to him, he preferred his funds go to drinking and not alimony, even with a certain pilot often footing the bills for the nights out. Especially, if he was being blunt, but that would be something to consider the next time shore leave was granted for drinking to the latest victory or defeat. Or he'd finally a fight that would leave him dead and it would all very suddenly not be his problem, not that he was about to go wandering the city waving a big 'shoot me' sign quite yet.

Hungry hungry Constellation introduced herself as Rudis, Howe immediately blanking on the name actually behind the callsign, he might remember it if they both got out of this alive. The remark on gifts got a cocked eyebrow from the pilot, wondering if this particular batch of Constellations had some fixation on gifts or it was a social expectation he had failed to clue in on this whole time. No, someone would have told him off by now if he was supposed to have a gift shop in Vickie, he had space in the co-pilot module half the time he could theoretically install one there. Assuming there was some tactical advantage to peddling cheap souvenirs to the Aberrant. "If I knew we needed to hand out gifts I'd have installed a gift shop. I'd wager anyone here is plenty bold, given no one is arguing about the impending death or glory thunder run on the Princess."

It turned out their illustrious leader had managed to secure a diversionary attack, powers that be be damned, and at the news of that Howe mounted up, clambering up to Vickie's cockpit while making an offhand remark. "Co-pilot's seat is open for the first Constellation to get up there if they want to hitch a ride before we make contact." Settling into the Frame, Howe had a moment's privacy, brief as it might be, to settle in with a low sigh. The cockpit was, to the eyes of many who peeked inside, heavily industrial. Brose Arsenal tradition, its a lot harder to break a heavy duty lever or switch panel than it was a fancy electronic touch screen. Most everything had several levels of redundancy, though she lacked the customization one might expect from a seasoned pilot. The only thing out of place was a coin on a string, a challenge coin from the last regiment to make it off New Alexandria, tied to the cover that protected the charges that would launch the cockpit, and co-pilot module if it was still attached, out the back of the Frame to relative safety. Or straight into an Aberrant's waiting maw, more likely, but Howe had tied that challenge coin to the cover for one simple reason. A constant reminder that you couldn't just punch out and flee your problems, that was how you got situations like New Alexandria. Having spent enough time, few as the seconds were, reminiscing on the challenge coin Howe brought Vickie from stand by to fully online. About time they got to give the Aberrant a bloody nose again.




The order to move out as the incoming barrage was intercepted and worked as a distraction was a welcome one, Howe moving himself to the lead of the pilots currently present. He had the armor and kit to make first contact with any non barrier threat, the clicking of the 20mm sweeping back and forth barely audible over the heavy, thoroughly unsubtle footfalls of the Frame as it moved forward, Howe scanning for contacts alongside everyone else that was operating as part of the task force moving in on the Princess. It was surprising how long it took to actually make contact with the Aberrant forces, nearly an hour by his estimate, but once the order came down to engage, Howe grinned to himself as he pressed forward, 20mm autocannon already opening up in a steady barrage of rounds being sent down into the incoming Legionairres. Howe positioned himself at the fore of the group, providing an anchoring point of the firing line. Close quarters weaponry, up armored, and more than willing to take a few hits for the other pilots, constellations, and infantry meant that was the best place for him. Picking his masses of Legionnaires carefully, he would fire off the Shotgun carefully, maximizing as much of the damage he could do with each shot as possible.

"Rabbit, your on AA duty, clear the skies! Damaged Frame, on me, cover my flanks and use me for cover. We're on infantry support." Howe spoke with a calm tone of voice, though he caught himself smiling as he brought the arm of his frame up, taking the worst of a strafing run by the Jetsam on the thickest of the additional armor, watching the indications show no damage he had to concern himself with. Nothing critical, and he maneuvered Vickie to better support the infantry, ammo feed on the 20mm steadily ticking downwards while he put the shotgun to good use, scything through ranks of the Legionnaires with each blast. Spying an opportunity, he disabled a safety measure on the shotgun and began slam firing, sweeping the shotgun back and forth across the incoming Legionnaires with precise motions. He aimed to maximize the damage he could do in the shortest span possible, 20mm making up for the minor gaps left by each blast of his shotgun that prevented overlapping buckshot.

Howe watched from the corner of his eyes as the power levels on Vickie's reactor surged to meet demand, a song in her own right, a voice long forgotten by the use of Aberrant Cores in everything. The roaring 20mm interrupted by the sheer booming volume of the shotgun announced to the infantry that Mech support had been able to peel off and reinforce their line. In the thickest part of the battle line was where Howe loved to be, and it was where Dunkirk would be easiest to see. Reaching down, an automated mechanism clunked loudly, detaching one of the several Frame sized Fragmentation Grenades the CQB package came equipped with. Now was a perfect time to introduce the Aberrant to an old trick. Rearing an arm back, the rhythmic thumping of the shotgun paused long enough for the grenade to be hurled towards the center of the swarm, far enough away to keep the infantry out of the fragmentation zone but well enough in the middle to maximize damage. If they got too close, or the firefight ran long enough to run low on shotgun ammo, the reinforced manipulators would work wonders making the Legionnaires pay dearly for every one of their lives. Assuming they could muster enough Aberrant carcasses to earn them, which remained to be seen.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Feyblue
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Feyblue Lord of Floof

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Alto was hardly an expert on the subject, but he was pretty sure missions usually took longer to derail than two steps out the hangar door. He hadn't even been able to get Corvo to run a battlefield scan before the ground had started shaking as the large city on the horizon started getting pounded into dust from orbit. The higher-ups had played it cool, almost immediately announcing a change of orders as the entire squad rerouted away from its planned deployment running cleanup... and straight towards the front lines. A diversionary tactic -- still just a supporting act for some unseen primary offensive. Hardly anything more to worry about than their original goals, he was assured -- but the unease that slipped into the stale air of even his own sealed cockpit suggested otherwise. The ones who should have known best -- those veterans of a thousand-thousand battles -- were uncertain of something. That, alone, painted a far more accurate picture of what was to come than any number of calming words.

Yet closer still was a certain intoxicating thrill -- an eager excitement that belied the shyness he had expected from her introduction. He glanced over to the Corvo's shoulder to see the tall redheaded woman perched there, waving her arms and one of her blades almost casually. He was halfway through awkwardly returning the gesture when he realized she couldn't see him anyway -- though the intensity with which her stare focused on him through the Corvo's optics almost made him think otherwise. She might have been a fellow rookie, but it seemed like she was anything but nervous, despite the last-minute switch up.

Of course, Alto wasn't nervous, either. He had never once been nervous. He wasn't just some greenhorn, after all, nor was this just any old machine. He was an elite of Kabral, clad in the finest steel forged by its greatest minds. If they wanted him to take a walk, he'd stomp anything that got in his way. And if they wanted him to fight...

He checked his ammo counts again. One canister in the chamber, five more in the loading rack. More than enough to kill anything that moved, but not if he wasted it. This wasn't some sim where he could just try again if his gun ran dry.

Low output, then. High speed, wide dispersal. He didn't need to level a city block just to kill a few pawns. Missiles first to thin their numbers, then one good sweep to pick off the rest. And if any got through, he could still fall back on his blade. Just like the simulations. A few small fry probably wouldn't even be able to break through the A-EM Field without getting up close and personal anyway.

And yet, that sense of unease in the air only grew as they arrived at their assigned position, and the dust cloud on the horizon started getting closer. Every step his unit took had felt strangely... light. He'd expected gravity on such a big planet to weight him down far more than it actually did... even if its core was probably mostly hollow by now. Just how much had the Aberrant fed to push this world to such a deplorable state? And just how many new troops had they birthed to launch the very attack that his unit was now preparing to receive?

His squad, and only his squad. He'd noticed it as they passed through a forward outpost on their way here -- the way the soldiers he passed by stared up at them, the way their eyes felt set to gouge holes in his unit and its passenger. Again, he thought back to how she'd made her introduction back on the transport, and to the lingering, acrid scent of disgust he could still sense wafting their way from the elite Constellations at the front of the pack. Hell, even without his Anomaly, he probably could have realized it by now. But with it, he'd already long since been able to recognize the familiar weight of their disdain. They were important people -- people with much better things to do than entertain some disappointments who couldn't meet their lofty standards.

It was a pretty low thing to think of one's own supposed allies, but Alto was more or less certain now. If he or his new partner screwed up, there probably wasn't anyone who'd bother trying to help them out. Maybe the old man might at least make a token effort, but even that was a long shot -- his mind was like a frozen lake. It'd be easier to get mercy from an Aberrant than to rouse his sympathy.

No. He wasn't nervous. And he wasn't going to need help, either. Not from that man. Not from anyone. If anything, they'd be the ones thanking him, when all this was said and done.

It was just that the sky ahead was suddenly terribly dark.

It was just that the air he tasted was suddenly terribly cold.

It was just that he had realized that something else was tasting the same air as him, hearing the same way, but thinking different thoughts.

it was silent. IT was deafening.

it was empty. Yet IT filled all emptiness with ITself.

it was reason, cold and pitiless.

And IT was passion, burning and all-consuming.

Was it hunger, or was IT hate? Was IT rage, or was it joy? Was it one taste, one voice -- or was IT many?

There was no simulation in any galaxy that could have prepared him for the enormity of that which he felt staring back at him -- staring through him, upon that horizon. Yet before his resolve could crumble beneath that hideous strength, another sound rejoined the discord, and with it came clarity.

It was the shrill ping of countless radar contacts, and a dozen target locks.

Far too many to be counted. Far too few to be seen. Far too heavy to be endured. Far too fleeting to be known.

No, no. it could never be known. IT could never be understood.

But iT could be destroyed.

Alto's hands clenched around the controls, and his thumb jammed down upon the launch trigger. Upon the Corvo's back, its missile pods unfolded, sending a shower of a dozen missiles scattering into the air, arcing upward, then plunging down into a broad arc of crimson flames. A moment later, a low electric hiss turned to a shrill whine as he dragged his crosshair all along that arc and held down the trigger. Infinity's gaze narrowed upon him, and he answered its provocations in booming thunder and defiant light. The bass thunderclap of the magnetic accelerators joined the thrumming shrill aria of the combusting air and exploding plasma in destructive euphony.

"Eight-Ball, paving the way! How's that for a red carpet?"

It was only for a moment, but a moment was surely all that those elites would need. Amidst the shimmering heat haze and the red-hot rubble, a path had been gouged straight down the middle of the enemy's front line -- a path into which Rigel and Antares vanished a moment later, leaving the rest of the squad to hold their ground, conserve their ammo... and stem the red tide which rapidly closed ranks to fill the gap he had momentarily created.

"I hope you all brought earplugs," Alto said quietly, his gritted teeth slowly remembering the shape of their customary grin. "Because the show's only just begun!"

He laughed -- and somewhere in the back of his ears, someone was laughing with him. Laughing with a mad joy that should have set his soul on edge. And yet, the euphoria beside him proved more familiar than the chaos ahead of him. He could feel it swirling around him, dancing with the adrenaline boiling up in his own veins.

Right. He wasn't nervous. He had never been nervous!

He was just excited!

Another wave. Another shot, thumbing the trigger and sending pulses of searing violet across the tide of red. Carapaces melted, limbs fractured and crumbled, bodies squirmed and writhed, trying to drag themselves clear of the VESPER's scorching rays, only to fall before the firing line. The first canister still had 47% of its fuel left -- another two, maybe three shots if he used it carefully. With five more to go, how many would he fell before the Constellations finished their own bloody work and put this horde to rout?

Yet just as he was beginning to grow complacent, from the glassed wreck of the front lines, a hateful visage burst forth, diving into the defenders' ranks with reckless abandon. Alto scarcely had time to line up his shot before it was already too close to fire, forcing him to pull it again for fear of incinerating his own comrades.

"Warning: Target identified as Bishop-class, designation 'Spearman.' Corvo's voice chimed in, accompanied by the acrid taste of fear from those on the ground in front of the beast -- reminding him of a fact he'd almost forgotten in the heat of the moment.

His weapons would have no effect on that thing. But if he did nothing, then the troops on the ground were about to get slaughtered! Unless --!

A metallic scraping, like nails on a chalkboard, echoed within his unit's hull, and a moment later, a blur of red tore across his vision. He scarcely even registered the word his otherwise nonverbal partner had said before her intentions had already made themselves apparent.

He couldn't hurt that thing... but she could. And the horde behind it, which might otherwise have hurt her...

That was a different story.

"Roger! I'll cover for you, Aissi!"

Jamming the throttle forward and yanking the joystick to the left, he felt himself suddenly become lighter as the Corvo's finned wing binders shifted, and the Craft system sparked to life. Repelled by a flickering canopy of azure light, gravity and air gave way, and the grey colossus lurched forward, skating sharply across the ground to circle out away from the enemy that had breached their lines, driving himself outward along the farthest edge of the left flank.

It was a position that, in just a few moments, would be completely cut off from the rest of the squadron, if the Spearman wasn't dealt with soon. But it was also a position where he could fire his shots right down the full length of the enemy's advancing front line!

Just a few seconds. One more shot would decimate the ranks of those trying to follow after the Bishop, then he'd have to fall back to the safety of the trenches. But if it gave that experimental girl the opening she needed to shore up their ranks and keep the line from falling... His Corvo could handle that much, right?

He sighted his shot. He thumbed the switch. The output raised, the aperture narrowed. The accelerators whined as their coils burned brighter -- as every last ounce of gas left in the canister catalyzed into a raging storm.

Then he pulled the trigger.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by vietmyke
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vietmyke

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"Aw, Howie, I like her. She's fun~" Sabine said to her fellow pilot, obviously referring to Selene, despite the Constellation still being well and truly still a part of the conversation. "That one too- I love a pair of big, strong arms." The pink haired pilot said about Rudis, "Does that make me sound basic?"

Any confirmation or denials about how basic Sabine mightve been were quickly thrown to the wayside as the Commander's attack was approved, the orbital strike rolling in like thunder and lightning from the heavens. It wasn't the first time Sabine had seen an orbital bombardment, and it wouldn't be the last, but Sabine always enjoyed the occasional combat fireworks display. Though the fireworks did mean it was time to go.

"Sucks to be the poor fucks that have to deal with that mess." Sabine snickered as she quickly broke down her hammock and began packing away her gear back into her mech with practiced efficiency. "Give me a holler if you want a lift!" Sabine called to the Constellations as she climbed into the White Hare's open chest cavity and disappeared within, the door closing moments later, sealing her within the darkness.

Settling in her seat, Sabine flicked a few switches before buckling herself in, the inky darkness of the cockpit giving way to the world around her as the cockpit flickered to life. The walls of the cockpit formed a seamless 360 degree display of the world around her, her helmet glass filling in for some of her HUD elements, as data scrawled over the rest of the screens. Sleek, modern, intuitive, with her years of experience and a control system perhaps tailor made for her, at some point in time the White Hare had eventually started feeling like a second skin to Sabine, her hands falling naturally onto the controls and augments automatically syncing to the systems.

"Good luck boys~" Sabine's voice echoed through both the local tacnet and the mech's external speakers as the White Hare kicked up a mechanical foot and flashed the moving infantrymen a peace sign.


It was wishful thinking to hope that they could avoid all the aberrants in their path- not that Sabine in particular wanted to anyway. A more rapid strike with just mechs and Constellations mightve had a chance at slipping through, but with infantry and vehicles, they were moving at the rate of their slowest units. It wasn't long before they were set upon by by a wave of Aberrants.

"Don't blow everything just yet fellas." Sabine's lilting voice crackled over the squad net, the muzzle of the White Hair's beam cannon flaring as she put down some suppression fire. "There's still a royal bitch out there."

Normally, a horde of pawns wouldn't have been an issue, but the Knights that had dropped them off seemed to be sticking around, Sabine ducking into cover as a burst of laser fire streaked past her and into the impromptu foxhole of a trio of unfortunate infantrymen. Howie was quick on the draw, vocalizing Sabine's thoughts before she had a chance to say anything.

"Just admit you like watching my ass when I fly by." Sabine drawled over the squadnet, and while Howe couldn't see her face through the polarized faceplate of her helmet, it was easy to tell she was winking. The proverbial ass of the White Hare was already lifting off the ground as Sabine kicked off into the sky, its limbs folding in as she switched to flight mode. The thrusters flared bright blue as the machine screamed into the sky, rocketing through the formation of Jetsams, sonic boom disrupting their flight path. Her helmet was forced into the back of her seat as the cockpit struggled to deal with the sudden increase in G-force, Sabine relying mostly on her peripherals and her own sense of spatial awareness to keep her hands on the controls, pulling into a stall turn to send her careening back down towards the irritating knights.

Sabine banked her mech, taking herself on a collision course towards the first Jetsam she saw. At the last moment Sabine pulled up hard on her controls, and triggered her unit's transformation sequence again, the aerospace fighter shifting back into a bipedal mech in time to collide with the Jetsam feet first, as though she were on a mech sized skateboard. The White Hare's thrusters flared as Sabine forced the Jetsam to turn with her, putting it between her and another Jetsam. She planted the barrel of her beam cannon against the surface of the Knight and fired once, then twice, the high powered beams punching through one knight to hit the second.

Sabine barely had time to savor her kills when a warning appeared in the corner of her vision, laser fire scraping across her mech's armor as she instinctively kicked off the knight she'd been riding and strafed to the side. The attacking knight screamed past her, the White Hare shifting back into flight mode to give chase. The nose of her mech flared as Sabine pressed down on the firing studs, a stream of bright blue bolts flying after the Knight as Sabine chased it down.

"Howie! Give me a burst of 20s, 2 o'clock high." Sabine called out, her voice like syrup over the tacnet, her mech quickly passing a firing solution over to his Vickie.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by OwO
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OwO what's this?

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The sign to prepare came before Rudis could flex and get Sabine to touch her muscles. It was go time. Walking back to the cobblestone pillar where she once sat, she gave it a nice smile as though it were an old friend. Her hand reached down to grab it, the stone parting like liquid as her hand grasped a hold and slung the pillar--one as large as she was--over her shoulder. Her preparations were much shorter than any of the soldiers or pilots. She just needed her baby and she was ready.

As much as Rudis was unsuited for moments of subterfuge, she was at least decent enough to stay still as the initial waves of beasts passed. The ruined hotel cracked, creaked, and groaned as the abberants passed. Really, they were ugly bastards. Maybe that's why they were so angry all the time. Being flayed at birth didn't quite seem like a nice childhood. Now working in the mines with a mining drill in one's hand? That was a good upbringing. But one that Rudis could barely experience before her training began.

The creaking stopped. Orders came in. It was go time. The pilots leapt into their coffins. Howe and Sabine made offers of transport--one that Rudis wouldn't refuse. "Well don't mind if I do." Rudis replied as a wire latched onto Dunkirk's co-pilot module and zipped her up. Of course, Rudis didn't enter. She couldn't be assed to try to fit her lovely big rock pillar inside. Instead, she rodeo'd the thing as it dragged her out to fight.





It wouldn't be a milk run. No, they were too slow to abuse any sort of shock and awe tactics. Already, they were beset by the horde--a mixture of chaff, jets, and spears. With a smile and two knocks, Rudis leapt off Dunkirk's large frame to meet the enemy deep in front.

The ground nearly creaked as she landed. Though, her landing was nothing compared to the cratering landing of spear to ground. Already, bullets, lasers, and plasma were flying through the air. It was a familiar scent. The burnt powder. The ionization. The aerosolized dirt and dust. Being a constellation was about days like this. Not sitting on base or in a field hospital. Just a simple goal: to move forward and leave an aberrant corpse-filled wake.

But she couldn't dwell on the feelings of a battlefield. No, not as a spearman charged at her.

But Rudis didn't respond in kind. For someone as hotblooded as she was, it was expected that she'd boldly charge into as many bishops as possible. But she was savouring every moment of this. She was subduing her excitement. It didn't do much good for her if she was a brainless mad dog in combat. No, Jean could at least drill that into her head. Always be thinking. Look at the smallest details. Abuse the smallest opportunities. It was the fighting style of someone born with a brain better than their body. Someone born weak. Someone who was intimate with defeat.

The second nearest bishop approached her in a sprint. It didn't attempt to throw its spear. No, it was better served keeping it on hand. It wasn't like Rudis was trying to pepper it with meaningless shots.

In a flash, the distance was closed. A brutal slash from the side came for Rudis' head. It was a brutally quick attempt to end her, but one met by a simple response. Physical-type aberrants were predictable. They, for the most part, still respected some laws of nature. From its foot to its palm, it had to swing as a human did. But it wasn't sly. No, these bishops were much too strong for that. They had been born with immeasurable strength. Strength had never once been combined with thought beyond an animalistic instinct.

With a step and lean back, Rudis dodged the swing by a hairs breadth. The wind generated by the swing screamed as the spear tore through the air. The pressure cut her from ear to nose. It was shallow. She could deal with scratches. What was important was finishing this as fast as possible.

Without so much as pause, the spearman readied itself for another strike. Its muscles tightened as it redirected the force of the initial swing upwards. It coiled and stretched before springing its spear down, an attempt to crush her to a mixture of paste and mist.

Rudis had taken another step as the spearman began to coil. The beast had missed Rudis by another hair's breath. Its spear collided with the ground. The earth shook. It was enough to send any normal person to the ground. Even a constellation would be unbalanced if not prepared. But Rudis didn't move. She didn't brace for the impact nor did she leap to avoid it. No, she calmly stood her ground as a wave of force cratered where she once stood. As the concrete beneath them broke and indented in a wave, the ground beneath Rudis' feet remained unaffected by the powerful blow. Concrete was merely processed rock, after all. It was simple enough to manipulate.

Again without pause, the spearman prepared a third strike. It leapt back, and coiled its body once more. It was going to be a brutal thrust. With all of the force it could muster, the spearman pushed forward to finally try to skewer Rudis.

She dove forward with pillar in hand. Fearless--she was meeting the aberrant head on. Their weapons screeched as she deflected the thrust with one of her own, the alien metal scratching the rocky surface as she rode the inside lane underneath the thrust. Twelve feet were bounded in a single stride that had left her briefly untouched platform of concrete shattered. She now stood feet away from the spearman and dug in. Still carrying the momentum from her leap into danger, she thrust the pillar directly at the torso of the spearman.

It was a cannonshot. Louder than whatever guns the pilots were using. The ground that Rudis stood on cracked and crumbled, her footprints leaving shallow indents in the concrete. Her muscles screamed and strained as she drove the pillar into the barrier. It shattered immediately, a devastating shockwave emitting perpendicular from the strike. Revealing half of a sword, the pillar instantaneously became a tornado of shrapnel that launched at the now defenceless aberrant.

The spearman was still standing.

On a technicality.

Its entire upper torso had vanished, leaving behind a pair of legs that stood in a cone of dust, debris, and destruction.

"One."

Holding the pillar in a brief moment of respite--if one could ignore the gunfire flying overhead--concrete and stone flew and coalesced back around the exposed blade. She'd already begun to work her appetite back up.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Fading Memory
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Fading Memory The Final Flame of a Fiery Bird

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Lictor was adjusting the settings of his tactical HUD into a comfortable opacity in the final moments before the disembarkation. It was a familiar and comforting adjustment. One that brought him forth from the fog of memory. Younger hands and younger eyes faded from his senses until his weathered and gloved hands were all that was left to his mind. The same motion, smooth after thousands of identical moments of practice. The act was pure muscle memory, but in this moment he allowed the act to be deliberate and to center him for what was to come. In the same breath he completed the adjustment to perfection, his pistol seemed to rise from its holster and into his hand before rational thought could notice. His hands did not tremble or waver as the sidearm held its lethal trajectory towards Dombay's head. Lictor's finger was not on the trigger. He did not speak. His aura had shifted subtly in the span of that single breath. The sudden presence had triggered something deep within the veteran warrior. For that briefest of moments, a cataclysmic weight had shifted in the universe and driven Lictor's body into action.

His hand relaxed, the pistol deftly flipping in his palm as he returned it to its holster.

"Fucking hell, stardust, take the stairs like the rest of us. Save your energy for this fight. I don't want to be carrying your head back to the Dawn for rejuvenation."

Lictor may be a White Dwarf, but his reflexes were still as lethal as ever. He shifted atop the mech and took a knee. The bay doors opened. Orders came through. It was time to kill. He toggled the safety on his rifle. He touched a hand over the strap of Carnifex's scabbard.

His voice rang through the shortwave communications with a rumbling authority after Antares' speech;

"They're a-comin'. Kill them all."

From atop Kyra's steeled vantage, Lictor knelt and surveyed the battlefield. A lot was already happening at once, and he naturally maintained his perch with the incredible speeds the rookie pilot was sustaining. Eight-Ball was on a rampage, and whilst the laughter coming through the shortwave was less than ideal he could see the burst of practical effectiveness the young man was putting on display. A clean swathe had been blown open towards the Bishop, and the girl was moving like a homing missile towards the Spearman currently acting as a battering ram through the front line. Lictor shifted focus to the HUD and the display of area mapping overlayed with friend-or-foe designation pings. Dombay was on the move, and Zhegiang was in the vicinity. Three rookies to the brazen spearman. Lictor shifted and slammed a fist atop the cockpit to get Kyra's attention. His blow reverberated through the machine to physically thrum against her flesh.

"Detour to flank. Get me to that Spearman."

He pinged the location on his HUD and shared the destination to her control rig.

"I want to be back to the front with those kids before they get themselves killed, Newman, so give it some ass. This is the tip of the spear."

The mech lurched, and Lictor rolled with the movement this time. He fell back off the head of the machine and fell down its back, reaching out with a single hand and onto the back of the waist. He swung on his arm and mounted the hip as Kyra sent the machine into its altered course, rifle rising into his hands as he braced back against the metal. Another step, and the optimized machine fell into its blistering stride. Comms chatter echoed in his ears as wind tore at his exposed flesh. Acidic ichor tang filled the air as Aberrant and Human blood mingled in the diminishing atmosphere. Plasmic discharge singed ozone as an Abberant battery cascaded into an adjacent combat sector. Gunsmoke overwhelmed all else.

The gun felt light in his hands. The rumbling of the machine's indescribable stride harmonized with his own braced form. Carnifex was warm on his back, even through the scabbard. He thumbed the fire selector into semi-automatic. Kyra's next mechanized footfall carried them over a tide of Legionnaires. Lictor surged into action.

A sickening squelch of ichor plastered itself across the battlefield as Kyra took a very direct path across the battle line towards the disrupted flank. Those Abberants that did not become mere splatters of flesh underfoot clung to the sides of the mechs legs and began to try and inefficiently gnaw into the armored plating on the legs. A few began to scale up the mech even as the wind tore at their flesh. Those were the first to die.

Lictor leaned over the left leg from his position at the hip, and as its footfall struck the ground he fired two pinpoint shots. The first struck the highest Legionnaire square in a barbed foreleg joint, snapping its grip free mid-climb. This made its maw widen in a scream of rage; the second rifle round went through the roof of its mouth. As its body went limp and tumbled from the mech, Lictor shifted aim and fired a methodical stream of high velocity rounds down the left leg until the Legionnaires that steadily clambered onto the mech's limbs every few steps grew wise to the lethal precipitation. Pressure mounted at Lictor's back. He stopped firing and ducked without looking.

A scything limb struck where he had stood just a moment before- yet his avoidance was languid and relaxed. His duck lead to the release of the rifle, allowing it to fall in its sling against his chest. The next moment he surged upwards with a punch that cracked through carapace and left a viscous detonation in its wake. His momentum did not stop. He followed through with his punch and threw the Legionnaire from the mech and far to the ground below. The next breath he was grasping onto the ladder at the base of the spine and swinging himself around the waist of the machine to the right leg, where the impact of his kick rocketed the next Abberant to scale over the machine's armored legs flying into the horde below. He took the situation in at a glance. His HUD revealed that his desire for speed was being met; Kyra's brazen path across the horde was faster than he had even anticipated. It just meant he was having to get his hands dirty. Another footfall hit the ground. Another few abberants began the climb. More bodies fell from the mech in fruitless endeavors of bestial madness...

Kyra leapt, clearing the last few hundred meters to come hurtling like a meteor through the wall of Abberant corpses on the left flank. Lictor braced for the impact by gripping onto the ladder on the spine and letting his rifle fall limp in its strap. A mist of ichor exploded into existence, painting Kyra's machine a new hue of blood-gunmetal as she stuck the landing and skidded across the oncoming wave of flanking monstrosities. Lictor's visor kept his eyes clear. Discipline kept his mouth shut. Instinct drew him forth towards his foe. This lapse of speed, the skidding, trench-digging, impact of the mech's feet into the ground served as Lictor's dismount.

He dropped into the bloodmist even as Kyra regained her pace. She was free of her taxi duty for sixty seconds. The fall from the mech's waist was long enough for Kyra to already be several paces away before Lictor hit the ground. He fell into a crouch, eyes piercing through the bloodied visor as he pulled the strap of Carnifex and loosened the blade on his shoulder. The weapon slid down his arm where he caught it in his hand, holding the scabbard below the hilt. He rose to his feet and spat onto the ground, Aberrant ichor mixed into his spittle. The mist was settling as the Abberant surge regained its footing.

"Check fire. Lictor on site. Keep fire wide of the breach." He barked into the shortwave communications to the nearby soldiers. "Bishop sighted. Execution in progress."

His visor flared, sighting the telltale warnings of a--

Carnifex glowed as he drew it forth from its scabbard. The partial draw cleared enough of the protective material to reveal two feet of the wide, flat, blade which he raised defensively before his body. The laser struck the flat of the blade squarely. Lictor felt the surge of power radiate into him through the blade. Carnifex cleared the scabbard in full. Lictor pulled the scabbard back up onto his shoulder and tightened the strap as he held the now-bared blade in hand. The mist cleared at last. The tide of Abberants was already nearly upon him-- and his prey was surging with it. Lictor planted his feet and whirled Carnifex in hand.

The first swing arced through the air. With it, Lictor expelled the radiation he channeled. A bright light emanated from Carnifex, the blade itself growing dull as this liquid mono-cord of energy flowed from its edge. The arc radiated out from Lictor, following the sword's swing, into a widening semi-circle of death. It was as if the air were a pond, and Lictor a stone cast into it; the ripple of energy eviscerating the Legionnaires directly before him. The Bishop's barrier held. Lictor's next swing, blade now dull, was to deflect the tip of the spear.

The blow would have pierced through a mech's armor or a bunker's shell- but it did not land where the Spearman intended. What appeared to be an almost lazy circling ward with Carnifex caught the spear just behind the head of its lethal point and smashed the Spearman's aim skyward. The point passed over Lictor's shoulder and buried itself deep into the earth just behind the immobile man. His blade halted against the spearhaft, and his left hand rose to half-sword the wide blade as the Bishop was trapped in this precious moment of inertia. He could feel the strength of the Bishop trying to wrench the spear down and crush him- but he rose against it. His slice followed the spearhaft, Carnifex's edge burning into a glorious blaze as he wrenched forth. Carnifex met the barrier and demolished it, its fiery arc honing the sword to a razor's edge.

The Bishop's spear-arm was split in twain down the length of its forearm where it severed completely at the elbow. The bishop leapt back as Lictor followed through on his slice, the half-sword maneuver whirling into a scything blow as his hand fell back to pair with the other on the hilt of Carnifex. The initial arc missed and the Bishop leapt over Lictor to reclaim its spear- but Lictor planted his foot in an earth-trembling stomp and halted his whirling slash, immediately turning to swing the blade vertically upwards as the Bishop landed with its remaining arm grasping the spearhaft. It pulled its weapon free at the precise moment the foremost six inches of Carnifex carved vertically along its spine from hip to neck at a slight angle. The Bishop collapsed forward. The golden arc behind Lictor faded after these precious few seconds of cleared space.

He stepped forward onto the Bishop's back, stomping down onto its exposed and severed spinal column as the monstrosity still tried to rise despite the complete failure of its body. Carnifex rose aloft-- the dulled blade already beginning to glow again from within. Carnifex fell in a blazing arc. The bishop was split fully in two, its horrible symmetry besmirched only by the devastation of its right arm. Lictor took six paces forward. Each step brought the scabbard down off his shoulder, cleaned the blade on its shroud, then returned it to its secure housing within its leaden home. Each step brought the tide of Abberants through the breach in the flank closer to his position. Each step brought the thunder of Kyra's mech closer.

She only had to slow down slightly for Lictor to leap upwards and catch himself on the hip of the Mech.

"Rejoin the front." He barked to Kyra as he braced to reload his rifle.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Supermaxx
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Supermaxx dumbass

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IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Surface Landing, Left Flank of the Battle Line
1603 hours // ♫ Every Planet We Reach Is Dead ♫



The MBM-78 Grizzly stomped down the Galea Dropship's ramp, every step thundering with the sound of two hundred tons of steel. Its racket only ended with it dropped into the grey, sloshing mud of Alora's surface. They'd finally arrived. Teddy pulled back on the throttle and applied the break lever, slowing the Grizzly's plodding advance twenty feet off the ramp. He paused to take in the apocalypse.

According to reports from the fleet, corrosion levels were dangerously high, and a glance along the horizon proved as much. What few trees still stood were shriveled husks gasping out poisonous air. Even locusts wouldn't feast on these crops. And then there were the cities. Dear God above, the cities...

Teddy's eyes started to glaze over only a couple of paragraphs into the 'acid rain' section. He closed the report. The days ahead would be grim enough without knowing the gritty details. Besides, the truth was obvious to anyone who bothered to look: Alora was bleeding to death.

"Let's give 'em hell, eighty-five." Teddy called over comms. For Alora.

The noble Zhejiang al Mortuus-Orbitae had grown on him, he must admit. Watching her apparate atop his mech made his eyes shine with a childish glee. No matter how often he witnessed them, constellation phenomena never ceased to amaze in person. It brought him back to crowding around a vid screen with his siblings to watch the defenders of humanity stand tall against the Aberrants that killed their home. Even now, he could hear the heroic brass and strings they always played in those propaganda casts. Then the seal of the MHA would flash in golden metal, and the baritone-voiced announcer would implore you to speak to your recruiting officer today.

Teddy wondered if a Stardust like Zhejiang understood what she meant to the infantry setting up fortifications below them. Did she see the awe reflected in their eyes? The desperate plea for salvation? He couldn't imagine what that did to a person- to be seen as an avenging angel instead of flesh and blood. Teddy knew he would've crumbled under the weight of their expectations long ago if that were him.

He tightened his grip on the control sticks. "Stay close n' remember to be vocal, okay? Can only have your back if you tell me where you're goin'. I know you're quick so I won't bother tellin' ya to stick right on me. Just gimme a heads up 'fore you get all teleporty. You lead, I follow."

It wasn't long before the rumbling began. Athousand biomechanical aliens descended upon them like a crimson tide. Among the legionaries marched plenty of bishops. Some were the typical Spearmen, designed to crash through a front line like a hammer through stone. They were a blunt weapon. Stupid, predictable, but dangerous if underestimated. Teddy had seen their like more often than he could count. They weren't what worried him.

The disc-headed, blade-armed Outlanders were. They could tear a Constellation apart with a single lucky swipe. Teddy knew from experience just what it looked like when an overly confident connie let themselves get swiped. It wasn't pretty watching an angel die.

Maximus 'Antares' Solignis gave orders to the team as easily as most people breathed, his experience and confidence woven through every word. He and Eorman would hopefully focus on those Outlanders so they never had the chance to challenge the Stardusts.

"Wilco, Antares. Good huntin.'"

The X-66 Prometheus Rotary Cannon spat out a thousand rounds and change over the next three minutes. Teddy kept his groupings tight and tried not to overkill the legionaries, damnably difficult as it was. Those bastards could be leaking out their metal guts and missing three limbs and they would keep on coming. He had to be careful to track the path of the destruction the two Main-class connies were cutting in the back line as well; wouldn't be great for his career if Teddy accidentally misted one or them with a stray round.

Among the swarm, Teddy could see three Bishops had escaped the duo's whirlwind of destruction. Lictor had smartly pulled Newman to the side and isolated one of them, taking it apart amidst a mob of pawns. They seemed to have the situation well in hand.

Aissi, Dombay and Zhejiang were descending on a second spearman on the leftmost flank, Eight-Ball providing them cover fire. Teddy felt his heart beating in his throat, even as a wall of plasma from Alto's strange rifle consumed a dozen pawns. Despite their lack of combat experience, they seemed to be holding their own.

Teddy spotted the Outlander hiding among the second wave of legionaries descending on the gaggle of greenhorns. It was moving low and quick, hoping the tide would obscure its approach long enough to leap on an unsuspecting target.

"Behind!" Teddy yelled, sweeping his Prometheus around. He cranked a switch in the cockpit and the cannon's thump thump thump turned into a screeching, continuous brrrtttt as its rounds per minute maxed out for just a moment. A barrage of gatling fire turned the Outlander's screen of pawns into a fine powder. The toughened crimson bodies of hardened biomass and mechanical armor may as well have been cardboard for all the protection it gave. The Prometheus hitched a moment later, internal cooling systems forcing a halt as the barrels glowed bright orange with heat.

The Outlander pounced, its shield blazing to life amidst the hail of bullets. It couldn't have cared less about the wall of lead- it only head eyes for the connies.

When it needed to, the Grizzly could haul ass. Teddy slammed the throttle against its housing as hard as he could, and the cockpit began to shake violently with the sudden forward momentum. The beta-class Aberrant core in his guardian shield flared to life just as the Grizzly's two hundred and twenty-five ton body slammed into the Outlander's outstretched claws. The two shields flared, energy crackling as they intermingled. The Outlander's core was far stronger, however, and it soon won out- throwing the Grizzly onto its ass with a titanic thud.

"Agh, damn it!"

Looming over him, the bishop raised a bladed arm to drive it straight into the Grizzly's cockpit.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Asura
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Asura it hurts

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Odessa

Location — Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora

Interacting@Xiro Zean




Relief.

That was what Odessa might have felt, had she not been a more seasoned warrior. Relief that her senior had the good sense to reconsider their advance. Relief that the military men attached to them had the good sense to listen to a veteran Aberrant-slayer. Relief that their mission was marginally more likely to succeed as a result.

Such a luxury was not hers to enjoy.

Instead, she felt nothing more than familiar serenity, an emptiness she knew well, devoid of positive and negative. As the atmosphere far above them lit up with the wrath of man and his nemesis, filling the very skies with the rumbling staccato of artillery fire and plasma, she thought only of the storm within—the rumbling of her internal thunder. When the screeching of a thousand or more monstrosities echoed through war-torn streets, rattling the will of those around her with the threat that they might yet turn their soulless gazes upon those few souls hunkered down in the hotel, she kept her mind on the great storm to come, whose wrath would fill her veins with heavenly zeal and remake her flesh as a weapon that could humble the false Gods of the Archenemy's host. Even as the horrific screams of their foes died down in the absence of that great horde, now shambling for the front lines so many miles away, she could feel the kiss of Okeanos' heavens upon her nape, every minuscule hair standing on end in its presence.

"Alright," The call to move came on from high, stirring Odessa from her reverie long enough for her eyes to drift to their intrepid leader, "Move out. We have to reach the target before they figure out what is happening."

And so she did. Like some silent specter, she drifted through the crowds of soldiers checking their weapons and muttering their prayers, every step guiding her closer to the behemoth of steel and circuitry that would escort her to their place of battle. It would not be much longer after she scaled the giant and settled herself upon one of its great arms that the reverb of motors and the hum of thrusters filled her ears. Soon, the dank, depressing ambiance of a building now deprived of its purpose was replaced with fresher, but no less dreary skies of Alora. It seemed to her as though the very world itself mirrored that of her own: dark clouds gathering in preparation for the fury they would soon unleash. An auspicious omen, perhaps, were she allowed the mercy of hope.

But such a luxury was not hers to enjoy.




The reprieve of open skies and clear ground came to a predictable end sometime thereafter. Given such time to reproduce, it was of no surprise to Odessa that the Archenemy proved numerous enough to maintain a presence of sentries nearer the nest even under all the wrath that the Brigadier General brought to bear against their teeming horde. But the efforts of humanity's lesser combatants had done its job. Instead of a great flood of gnashing teeth and radiant beams, they faced only a swell, the likes of which could be broken against their host like a wave upon the cliffs.

"Engage the enemy!"

The rallying cry went out, and all as one both groups seemed to ignite into a flurry of activity. A thousand sharp cracks rang out below as the infantrymen unleashed all they had upon the armored carapaces of their foes, and Odessa's balance shifted as the iron giant beneath her banked sharply to the right to fulfill its objective and strafe the gibbering swarm far beneath them. The very act seemed to bring the tempest within her to the surface. She could feel it swelling, deep in the marrow of her bones, in every sinewy fiber of muscle, down nerve that familiar buzzing, burning, aching surge. It beckoned to her. Yearned for her to call upon it. Her body and mind as one hoped for it, desiring to unleash that which had stirred within her since they first departed their impromptu lodgings.

A luxury she could enjoy.

Two hard knocks against the cockpit of her escort informed the pilot within that their duty to her had been completed. A gentle push thereafter saw her leaving its embrace, free-falling towards the planet below. The winds whipped about her face as she plummeted toward the ground, but the thrill it provided was as a raindrop amidst a cyclone when compared to the rush building within her. The impact of her feet touching scorched asphalt barely registered in the face of the energy that surged within her, building and building and building. Her eyes found their focus in the face of the Aberrant threat just ahead of the makeshift host of infantry she had dropped into. The Pawns meant little to her, the Jetsam only marginally more. Her gaze instead searched until it landed on the leadership of the motley assortment of monsters. The high-caste—Bishops.

Hulking and monstrous, one would be forgiven for comparing them to the steely humanoids mankind brought to bear. Odessa knew better. No matter how mighty the firepower of their mechanical brethren might have been, there was no hope for them to puncture the barrier of a Bishop. It was the threat posed by these grotesques that necessitated the presence of humanity's greatest defenders in the first place. They were the closest equivalent amongst the Archenemy to Constellations, and the great foe that she had been brought to Alora to do battle against. The monsters spread out to better dispatch the force of humans invading their stolen territory, and her fellows went in turn to meet them. The less experienced among them might have gone in fear, in the face of their enemy's might, the likes of which tore concrete asunder like so much wet sand.

Odessa had no such fear. She had seen the most divine of the Archenemy's armies firsthand. In the face of such Gods, she could only find the Spearmen before her wanting by comparison.

Heavy boots met the street below one step at a time as the power within seemed to dance up her spine and lick at her fingertips. There were eight foes to be felled, and only six Constellations to be spared. Their leader faced off with more than her fair share, as was to be expected of a Red Giant. It was like as not that Ahkari would be sufficient to defeat the entire patrol of Bishops by herself, given the time. But every moment spent dispatching the high castes, one by one, would leave the others to wreak havoc upon their infantry. Even as the Stardust among them struggled to deflect a blow and found herself in the care of a more veteran Constellation and Rudis dispatched of one of their number, another descended upon the nearest support vehicle to the front line, bringing to bear the tip of its monstrous blade. Even the thickest armor of a human transport would puncture like so much tissue paper in the face of such an assault, and with it so too would those unfortunate souls inside now hurriedly moving into reverse.

Every inch the vehicle retreated, the energy within her seemed to surge. She breathed through the euphoric pain until it was nothing more but a passing squall. She breathed as the rapture threatened to consume her. The black clouds above whirled within her mind's eye, and yet she remained atop her mountain peak, at the eye of the storm. Every breath seemed to coax them to rumble. Every step seemed to dare the clouds to lash out. Once. Twice. Three times. By the time her boot met the ground for the fourth time, and her lungs emptied, the world itself seemed to slow to a crawl. The frenzied infantry carriers. The charging behemoth only meters away from it. The thousands of bullets whizzing about the air froze in that most exulting of moments.

Then, the world seemed to move all at once, and Odessa moved with it.

In the space between heartbeats, she was gone, leaving only a concussive blast and shattered roadway in her wake. The Bishop's spear lunged forward like some horrible, hydraulic viper, lashing out to claim its prey. But its fangs found no such purchase in its quarry. The razor-edge of its gargantuan stopped meters shy of its intended target, the horrendous force behind its wild attack coming to a creaking halt in the embrace of a woman so much smaller than it as to beggar belief. The servos in Odessa's gauntlets whirred and hissed as her fingers bit down like the jaws of some equally horrible beast along the very tip of its spear. Her arm almost seemed to vibrate as every strand of muscle she had clenched with a might that could only be described as superhuman. Riding the lightning had carried her to the defense of her allies, and in that stunning moment, it filled her with the vigor to halt juggernauts as one might halt a tossed ball, coursing through her body like an almighty circuit.

Whatever intelligence the beast possessed rebelled against the ludicrous notion of what its misshapen eyes saw. It jerked backward with such force that one might have expected Odessa's arm to come with it. But her body held strong, muscles in her back tensing like so many steel cables as they maintained her stance. Her knuckles were surely as pale as milk beneath the heavy, cobalt metal encasing them, her fingers exerting force such that they might well have shattered the spear between them before letting go. The monster tried again and again to free its weapon, each time only managing to budge the defiant warrior holding it hostage a matter of centimeters. It roared in protest and yet found little more than icy aurum eyes staring back at it, unflinching, unfeeling.

Its fellows were not so heartless. Another Bishop, having clamored atop the ruins of a nearby building to find an angle of attack on the unguarded infantry beyond, turned to face them. A bestial roar hearkened its arrival. Even an animal could understand pack tactics. Attack her flank while she was busy holding off its fellow hunter. Fell greater prey by working in tandem. One could even call it intelligent if they did not know any better.

Neither intelligence nor might, would carry the day for them, however. The second Bishop launched itself from the building in a shower of broken concrete and glass, rocketing down like a reaper from above to bring death and desolation upon her. She waited there, in the eye, for it to arrive. The storm blazed all around her, but she did not flinch from it. She welcomed it in the same way she welcomed her opponent's challenge. It was only in that split moment before the alien weapon came down to render her as paste that the skies opened once more. The ground shattered once more, metal met metal, and Odessa nearly buckled in the face of a blow that embedded her boots well into the ground below.

Nearly.

But a child of Okeanos did not wither in the face of such tribulations. A thousand thousand tiny needles seemed to prick all along her arms as she held both Spearmen at bay, the Heavens blessing them with necessary strength for the herculean endeavor to come. Their might combined, they might well have managed to tear her in two by pulling in unison, but such a fate was not one she intended to face. There was not even enough time for her heart to beat once between the second Bishop's spear finding purchase against her gauntlets before her back heaved mightily, and she turned, hard as hard could be, first at her shoulders, then at her hips. Her legs cut through the earth that encased them as she spun, pulling so hard that the first Bishop lost its footing and the second, still airborne from its assault, found itself caught up in the momentum of the Constellation that held its weapon so firmly.

Were they truly intelligent, they might have simply let go of their weapons in that moment and freed themselves from her grip. But their attachment to their weaponry would prove to be their downfall. In one cataclysmic show of might, Odessa hefted both Spearmen into the air, one held aloft in each arm. Once they were both deprived of the ground below, and only then, did she finally let loose. Not her grip, no, but the tempest swirling within her. The lightning within flowed like the waters of a mighty dam let free, and sparks of electricity danced along every inch of the horrible monsters caught up in her momentum. It surged and crackled and roared until finally, with a whine, the barriers that had bedeviled her more mortal companions broke under the flow of her anomaly.

And in the fraction of the second to follow, that which still flowed within her gave her the strength to bring her arms together, swinging the Bishops into each other. The circuit was complete at that moment, and the storm passed through them as it had her.

But they were no children of Okeanos. Day became night in the face of the flash to follow. Thunder boomed loud enough to shatter what glass remained along the ruined avenue they battled upon. The stench of ozone filled the air.

And when the sun returned in the wake of her great undertaking, there was little left in Odessa's grasp but blazing slag. Hot ash and ember rained down on her cheeks as she used the remaining strength in her arms to toss the half-melted spears and the remnants of the Bishops now fused to them to either side of herself, each landing with a heavy crash. Another breath, to clear the euphoria. Another breath to come down from the rush. Without ceremony, Odessa wrestled her leg free from the earthen prison it had been driven into, and soon her steps continued, leading her further into the battle. There were more foes to fell. Her storm could not yet be allowed to pass.
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Hidden 2 mos ago Post by Raijinslayer
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Raijinslayer .

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So this is how it is.

Zhejiang watched the two experienced constellations charge into the throng of monstrosity with rapt attention, every sense heightened to the sounds of combat and slaughter even with the grand distance between them. Carapace beign crushed, guts being rent, limbs going flying. The sight of Aberrant ichor doused the ground around the two like an expressionistic masterpiece, and it sung to the Thrill within her. But from her vantage point atop the Grizzly, she laso noted that things wer enot going to plan. The forces here were in greater number than expected, and while war was never safe, she noticed how they were now down to just one veteran Constellation to maintain the backline.

"Could this be. . ." Zhejiang stopped herself from finishing the sentence, banishing thoughts of that dark silhouette from her mind. She could still hear, she could still feel, she could fight. When the Constellation's eyes opened again, it was too lock sights on the intruding Spearman. The Abomination and its partner had already engaged it, the manic laughter both seemed to share playing over the coms. Despite herself, she had to admit that they were doing well. . . but not well enough. Not against that thing.

"I'm heading over to assist the abomination and the new blood, keep distance and stay safe, Teddy. This junker ain't that maneuveable wouldn't due to have you get caught in it's claws." Zhejiang gave a nod to one of the Mech's camera's before leaping forth to enter the fray, her form vanishing in mid-air as a portal appeared before her. It was not long before she appeaered a fair distance way, her form twirling out of the dimensional tear as she hopped from one to the other, covering an immense amount of distance in the blink of the eye. While the Abomination was faster, reaching the Spearman before Zhejiang could even engage, the Mortus Constellation showed her own combat prowess as she ducked and weaved thro Alto's plasma fire like a shadow.

Behidn the dirt spray of each shot she appeared like a phantom to tear through the weaker abberrant soliders that survived, Shinign Void cutting through carapace and flesh like butter before she slinked back in to the shadow of the Void to appear elsewhere. While the Thrill had her thing in its grip, unlike the Abomination, she knew better to give into it. Aberrant's like the Spearman weren't so foolish as to duck behind enemy lines like this. So, while Alto and the abomination clashed directly with the Bishop-class abberrant, Zhejiang stayed back, picking off stragglers and waiting for the hammer to dro-

"Behind!"

There it is.

Zhejiang turned from impaling an Abberant to see her own partner engaging the missing Outlander head on. A brave tactic that likely saved her or the Abomination's life. But one that seemed ready to cost them there own, as the monstrostiy lifted a bladed arm to tear into the Mech's cockpit.

Zhejiang took a deep breath as she drew her arm back, her will focused entirely on stretching her abilities as far as they would allow and then even further still. She hissed as, even through the Thrill, she felt her body light up with pain as she pushed herself to the very limit. But she pushed through it and, when the black tear in space opened before her she didn't hesitate to launch Shining Void through it with all of her strength. She didn't expect the spear to manage to pierce the field in just one strike, not ofr a BIshop class. But it would hopefully distract the creature as she dove into a portal to appear a bit closer.

From Teddy's perspective, he'd see the Spear clash against the Outlander's barrier before vanishing, hearing a voice both through his Com link and audio link as Zhejiang called out to her Foe from a short distance away.

"Stop playing with unworthy prey, monster. Zhejiang Erica Teteh Almark Trace Aeolia Julianne Nova Trine Alzmille Lenore Chandra Ral Shagia Kycilia Lucille Jacqueline Agrippa Elysia Paraya Verlaine Haro Tieria Kelly Sune Stabity Drasso Visch Milla Romanof Rosso Christine Sys Lichtendahl al Mortuus-Orbitae LXXXV, Stardust class, Callsign Signus and I have come to challenge you." Shining Void appeared in her hand as she once again drew back her arm, launching another dimension-crossing throw at the creature before backing away.

Draw some distance from Teddy, draw it towards either Lictor or the abomination, whoever I can manage. Zhejiang thought as she summoned Shining Void once more to her hand, prepared to either harrass the Aberrant once again, or dive in for a stronger blow if it didn't take the bait. Come on creature, let's see what's quicker: Your blades or my spear.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Xiro Zean
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Xiro Zean Redundant Writer of Redundantness

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Proto Etta Ishilde
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching Princess D-47's Nest
1607 hours // @Eisenhorn@McMolly@Asura@vietmyke@OwO



Etta was no stranger to the warfront. For thirty-six days she’d been fighting alongside the others upon Alora’s surface, clawing for every inch they could reclaim of the miles taken by the alien threat, working with Constellations, Pilots, and infantry alike for a brighter future. With how much death had happened in that mere month, one would think that by now she’d be used to it, that the thump of her heart beating in her ears had become familiar rather than terrifying.

That was not the case.

With her master fighting elsewhere, the numbered sword felt clammy in her hands, whether that be to the sweat dripping from her every pore or the numbness of deflecting a Bishop’s strike was unclear to her, each breath she took somehow louder than the sounds of conflict below. Her mouth felt incredibly dry, the suffocating air of a dying planet no doubt making it worse and her body shaking from the strain of being alive.

Though the Spearman had no visible eyes, Etta felt it could sense the fear in her gaze. Its head cocked to the side, as if confused by her hesitation, only to close the distance between the building it was perched on and the mech she was using as a platform within seconds. Squared at the ready, teeth grit, the Constellation was as prepared as she possibly could to meet it.

Only for the tension to boil over when a blur knocked the Bishop off-course, the comforting figure of a Main-Class doing her job for her in a whirlwind of motion. Etta barely recognized her superior’s order, eyes fixated on what she one day hoped she could achieve. The curve of the silver-haired woman’s fragmented blade resembled the crescent moon, the conflict concluded with a flash of silver, the Constellation standing as the victor and the Bishop beheaded.

The Proto's attention returned soon after, quickly bowing at the waist and seeing the head of the mecha she stood upon bending in her periphery as a gesture of respect. She had to make certain she wouldn’t be a liability for her savior.
“Yes ma’am. I will not let you down!”

“Barry!” Etta cried soon after, her attention turned to the horde of Pawns that filled the streets with their own blood and gore. The other Pilots had rallied behind one of the older armored units, forming a phalanx as a united front against the red tide. Four frames were a devastating defensive force, but five would do much better. Above, a transforming frame chased down the Jetsam and forced them to abandon their peppering tactics, another joining her in pursuit while a spec of a figure fell from the sky toward a pair of Bishops. “Join the other Pilots’ formation, I’m putting my boots on the ground.”

“Godspeed, star child.” Her Pilot, referring to an affectionate nickname occasionally stuck to the lower ranked Constellations, sped off as she leapt from the robot’s head, cooling her head during the several dozen feet descent and drawing inward. Her heart stilled, and with it the air around her landing point, a slope of ice forming from the ground up. The peak met her foot, her fall turning into a slide down to the city below, the construct breaking apart from the tip down with the pieces following in her wake. When the ice turned to asphalt, the air around her was replaced by the faces of human soldiers and the screams of the enemy, while a salvo of cold death continued long after she had stopped.

Broken shards, unwieldy and imprecise, had narrowed into precise stakes, spears of frost stemming the assault upon her fellow men while leaving them untouched. A mere dozen foes had fallen with more taking their place, but it had been enough of a delay to allow a half-second to finish reloading, saving precious moments where lives could have been lost. Etta’s sword followed soon after, her feet bringing her to the forefront and her blade saving a man just before he could be gored by a Legionaire’s arm. A Pawn was nowhere near as terrifying as a Bishop.


“Constellation!” She heard one yell, a mixture of warning for his comrades of a friendly, relief for the support, and awe at her mere presence filling that singular word.

“I’ll keep them off you, keep them off me!” She shouted back, sword singing once more as alien blood spilled onto the pavement. Frost emanated from the wound that formed, the corpse suddenly exploding as the blood expanded outward, deadly branches of frozen liquid stabbing into the owner's immediate comrades. The barricade of bodies and ice shattered beneath the weight of the wave a handful of seconds later, but the cacophony of reloaded bullets kept them off just long enough for her to swing again. Over and over, this situation played out, her ice constructs maintained shorter and shorter as her heart beat faster from exertion. Despite being consumed in constant combat for the next handful minutes, ears ringing from the constant stream of gunfire too close for comfort and the screams of the hellish foe, the trio of explosions that threatened to make her deaf permanently caught her off-guard.

One, a destructive shattering, the earth itself torn asunder as the fragments of what was once a terrifying enemy scattered in so many places that even in the pandemonium of cutting down chaff Etta had seen it. Another, an ear-piercing boom, a plume of smoke, flame, and gore as a mecha-sized fragmentation grenade cut down a sizable portion of the swarm, the numbers nearing a countable amount. The last, a thundering roar, the flash of lightning signaling an end to another duo of Bishops that refused to be ignored. Senses overloaded for a mere moment, she hadn’t noticed the scythed arm that got past her guard until it dug into her shoulder, eyes wide when the blade threatened to lop off her arm entirely.


“Focus, Equuleus.” The pain in her shoulder was still present, yet the immediate threat disappeared as the wind blew past her body, her assailant and the wave of Pawns behind it thrown aloft by a whirlwind. Her master’s spear flew between them, passing through each of the Legionnaires as if they were made of air themselves and leaving their bodies unmoving when they crashed back down onto the ground. By her side, the leader of the operation frowned, hand held out to catch the spear as it returned while the other checked her wound. “It’s deep. Can you move it?”

“Y-Yes Master.” Every fiber of muscle screamed when she tried, but thankfully none of the important tendons or ligaments were cut. Or if they were, it wouldn’t be a problem for using the limb within the immediate future. Teeth clenched together, she kept the pain from her voice as best as she could, knowing they couldn’t afford it in the present moment. “I’ll bear with it.”

“Everyone, we need to move!” Aurigae’s command reverberated through the ranks, broadcasted through every communication channel within the company. “Every second we waste is a second closer to everything we’ve done being for nothing! Clean up as you go, anything we leave behind will die out as soon as we kill the Prin-”

Her master paused, and it wasn’t difficult to see why, the ground beneath their feet rumbling as a portion of the street several miles away began to crumble away. The earth itself parted to greet the colossal figure rising from its depths, and the words her Master said next quickly made Etta open her comms to call over her Pilot for support. “Now! They’re deploying a Walking Shrimp!”

Mobile Fortress-Type Rook-Class Aberrant ‘Walking Shrimp’. A common sight on large-scale battlefields and distinctive by their tripedal movement and massive size. Towering over cities at an average two hundred feet in height and a length comparable to a military aircraft carrier, their name comes from the several dozen cannons that line the ‘belly’ of the entity in a similar manner to a shrimp’s legs. That is not to say it lacks anti-air capabilities, however, with its shell lined with lower yield rotary cannons meant to deal with aircraft using rapid-fire suppression. With devastating power comparable to a starship but as a ground-based combatant, its presence after a two month war is a shocking development, as the resources left on the planet shouldn’t have been enough for production of such a high material unit. The sleek and untouched red carapace, visible even from a distance, was indicative of the fact that it hadn’t seen a single ounce of combat before this very moment.

To make matters worse, the scuffle seemed to be attracting more Aberrants the longer they stuck around, the baying of incoming Legionnaires already filling the streets once more, the several dozens still around crying out as if to direct them where to go. And more likely than not, they’d be escorting more Bishops along with them.


“What the hell is that thing doing this far back?”

“Thirty-six legs. Haha, is that a new record?”

“Get your act in gear corporal, that thing can level a city block!”

“The DSG won’t be enough if that thing discharges in our direction. 44% Diffusion ain’t gonna cut it.”

“Don’t mess with me, bastard,” Aurigae growled under her breath among the explosion of radio chatter, near inaudible beneath the dozens of voices clamoring at the sight of the red behemoth. Etta couldn’t think of the last time she’d heard her master swear. The commander reopened her connection after a moment, mounting her spear that hovered a few feet off the ground. “No delays! If we don’t vacate fast, we’re all dead.”

“We’ve got wounded Commander!” One of the NCOs declared over the general comms, the man himself running up to join Etta and her master a moment later. “Six down, twenty-three wounded. Four of the APCs got damaged in the scrum, two decommissioned and the other two were jammed. We won’t be able to get everyone out unless we buy some time to get those last two running again.”

“We aren’t doing too hot either, ma’am.” A Pilot’s voice chimed in soon after, a damaged frame moving out from behind the leading old mech. “The Jetsam got Richie’s main thrusters and left leg. Kindred’s radio’s out and I’m not sure how much of this she can even hear. Hell, I can barely see out of this damn thing, and my guns either ain’t working properly or are out of ammo. We’d need a few minutes to figure out some solutions, otherwise all we’ll be doing is slowing you down.”

“We don’t have time for this!” The commander yelled back, the underbelly of the Walking Shrimp lighting up despite the incredible distance between it and the company. “You’ll have to figure it out on the move, pack up what you can and get going!”

“Just go!” Another PIlot, assumedly Richie, cut into the conversation, his immobile suit waving the Constellation off with one arm while the other attempted to move the broken leg to mediocre success. “Anyone who can’t keep up just has to stay behind. We’ll keep them off your tail for as long as we can!”

A barrage of light and sound lit up the streets around the company and made the rest of the conversation forcibly cut off, vaporizing beams of light carving trenches in the city as they passed around and above the human group. Buildings were demolished, streets annihilated, the surroundings near unrecognizable in an instant as the Walking Shrimp’s first salvo just barely missed their position. The incoming patrol became visible, the walls dividing the two groups destroyed in the bombardment as the swarm of Aberrants closed in, filling in through the opening.

“...Damn it!” After a collective moment of shocked silence, the casual brush with death felt all throughout the company, Etta’s master voiced her anger at the situation. The pain in the commander’s voice was palpable when her next order was announced, a hint of reluctance shining through despite her best efforts. “Anyone who can spare it, help these heroes hold out their defensive position for as long as you are able. Then follow our lead.”

Etta’s Pilot moved up next to her, the lowered hand scooping her up as she jumped into its palm and setting her back onto the robot’s head. She glanced back at the unit choosing to stay behind, around a third of their ranks using the unusable vehicles as cover with the three damaged mechs acting as fire support. The Constellation knew she'd never see any of their faces again, and her heart froze without her prompting.

“The rest of you,” Aurigae continued, her spear speeding forth as several Bishops attempted to block the way to the Nest. With a violent twist of her outstretched hands, two of their chest plates caved in various places, and from experience the disciple could tell that the small gaps of air within their armor had compressed and crushed the vulnerable tissue beneath, the victims falling powerlessly to the ground as their cores flickered desperately in an attempt to resuscitate themselves through power alone. The leading Constellation let out a warm breath, shaking from the exertion of her Anomaly, yet her anger was as cold as Etta’s ice. “Help clear the path. We’ve got a monster to kill.”

Hidden 1 mo ago Post by Xiro Zean
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13th Batallion, Alora Defense Corps
IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Approaching planet's surface.
1608 hours // @Raijinslayer@Supermaxx@Lemons@Fading Memory@Feyblue



Before the battle had ignited in earnest, it had been collectively decided by the thirteenth battalion that they despised the newest additions to the front line. Not just by the soldiers, nor the captains, not even as a command from the lieutenant colonel in charge. It was a decision made by the whole hearted agreement by each man and woman in the unit, a hatred sprouted by the mere presence of the platoon that guarded the leftmost flank.

Over the past two months, they’d seen thousands come and go in defense of their planet, people from all walks of life fighting alongside them for the sake of humanity’s survival. They laughed, they cried, they died, all in service of the greater cause that they may one day retake their homeland.

The group that settled with them, shoulder to shoulder, could not be counted among those people. Support sent when none had come for several days, just after the orbiting command shuttle had declared the mission effectively lost? Whatever they were on the planet for, it wasn’t to save it, and were it not for the change in the state of the war the soldiers would’ve never seen the new platoon in the first place.

The rumor of what existed within their ranks had spread like wildfire, the bruised Constellations and reprimanded soldiers detained and brought back to base adding fuel to the fire. Some called it a weapon, others a monster, but the through-line of every shared story was that it was nothing like anything they’d seen before. Personal mobile suits were rare but well known, and the use of automated androids had been tested several times before. The thing within the new platoon was neither of those things, and the fact that it was compared to the former two was a frightening mental image.

So when the defensive line was drawn and soldiers got into position, none of the officers attempted to close the several feet long gap between their battalion and the supporting group, understanding that one should never speak an order they knew wouldn’t be followed. Especially when they would be reluctant to follow it themselves.

The battlefield, while terrifying and frantic, was a comfort in comparison, the hundreds of thousands of hours they’d already spent clearing the red wave in previous engagements making the onslaught only slightly worrying. Legionnaires were a dangerous variant of Pawn, unrelenting in ways others were not, and their tenacity only rivaled by the malice they radiated from simply existing. But it was that same durability that made delaying their charges simpler than expected, the pile of bodies formed from each dying Legionnaire an obstacle the others were forced to climb over, their fellows still alive despite their wounds and making themselves a nuisance for the fresh meat that attempted to take their place.

The beginning salvos of gunfire were spent inflicting disabling rather than fatal wounds, the flat plain of the wasteland quickly becoming an obstacle course for the Pawns behind the fallen. Each following barrage piled on the bodies, creating barriers that would protect the Legionnaires further behind from the piercing rounds but delaying the initial rush from crashing against their defenses at full force. Playing a fully defensive long game, the Constellations supporting them preserved their strength, the Bishops that attempted to break through having none of the chaff to obscure their approach and being dispatched swiftly. A coordinated effort forged through trial and error, experienced in ways that at night they wish they weren’t.

In comparison, when the soldiers of the battalion would check on the platoon beside them, they could only scoff at their inability to hold fast. The overwhelming difference in manpower was a factor for certain, but what truly cemented the platoon’s failures were the elite forces. The platoon had prepared for the battlefield with three mechs, yet not a single one had stayed behind the defensive line, leaving the soldiers to fend for themselves while the armored suits threw themselves directly at the tide of red. Their efforts were no doubt as useless as cutting the sea with a knife, and the infantry were going to suffer for it.

With so little to observe of the defensive line on that side, those free to do so watched as the thing of the rumors was dispatched by the Bishop, its swan dive with acceleration boosted by the thrusters on its body unceremoniously halted as the Spearman leapt up to meet her rather than wait for her to reach terminal velocity. The scuffle midair was brief, followable even by the few human infantry who took a chance to watch as the Bishop adjusted mid-air, the weapon’s outstretched blades used as a fulcrum for the tall, lanky figure to flip onto the experiment’s back, sending her crashing to the ground with both wings locked by its spear threaded in the gaps between them.

The eventual fate of that thing was left unobserved, the soldiers’ attentions caught as a loud whirring faintly rose from further up the flank. The following beam was bright enough that the dark sky momentarily resembled the night for those closest to the defensive line and the noise loud enough to develop tinnitus, those soldiers having a front row seat to the concentrated beam of plasma that carved not only through the Pawns by the flank, but into the firing zones of the battalion and the defensive corps beside them. A mech pilot of the latter had just barely gotten out of the way of the following blast, and from the way their frame stared silently in the direction of the beam’s source was indicative of the stream of curses the Pilot inside was no doubt complaining to his squad with. A weapon of that power on a medium-scale mecha was impressive, the devastation inspiring, yet the choice of angle when the user was on the furthest flank made it difficult to think that the Pilot was anything but a rookie.


“Dwellers!” The call rose from within the battalion's ranks, the dirt beneath their feet parting as bulky figures peeked from the soil, sharpened claws stabbing into the legs of unsuspecting infantry before pulling both themselves and their targets beneath the ground. The Pawn-Class Dwellers were an annoyingly effective utilizers of subterfuge, their large sizes barely an issue when it was completely enveloped by the earth. Slipping beneath the soil with one meant certain death for the common foot soldier, and after the first warning several of the soldiers immediately went into overwatch, acting as “mole exterminators” that dispatched the tunneling foes with heavy buckshot into the briefly exposed underbelly when the Dwellers attempted to steal one of their own.

While the initial attack had taken the battalion off-guard, the defenseless infantry of the neighboring platoon were most certainly having it worse, and of the fifty that had come to the battlefield, an officer counted only thirty remaining after the first sneak attack. Which seemed to be the straw that broke the camel’s back.
“Men, support those soldiers! We can’t let the enemy take the flank!”

Quickly, a company split off from the battalion to support the remaining members of the platoon, terminating the Dwellers who attempted another pass on the group the alien’s must’ve realized were the easier prey. A wide berth was given to the breach in the front where the weapon existed, but none of the soldiers could continue ignoring their fellowmen when they were dying through circumstances entirely out of their control.

The NCO who led the battalion sent to reinforce the gutted platoon was going to make certain that whomever was responsible for this lack of coordination was getting canned, that was for certain. He grumbled when he heard that the commander of the unit had left to deal with the Outlanders, a respectable reason at the very least, but if by the end of this conflict he didn’t have a list of the others within the chain of command he was going to have someone’s head as compensation.





Hidden 1 mo ago Post by Supermaxx
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Supermaxx dumbass

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IC 286.08.16 // Petrichor-8 System, Frontier Planet Alora // Left Flank of the Battle Line
1603 hours // ♫ Hell Broke Luce ♫



The world was all smoke and noise and light. Teddy's head swam, the klaxons mounted inside his cockpit screeching a discordant tune. Danger, they screamed. As if he didn't know that already. With no small effort, he dragged his head high, blinking the spots from his eyes. There was a blade twice as long as he was tall jutting through his cockpit. Following its entry point to its exit, it went straight over his chair- right where his thick, stupid head would've been if he hadn't dove to the floor. Every bone in his body ached from the impact, but at least he could still breathe.

Throwing himself into the fray had been a stupid, bone-headed, moronic move.

To his right, the comm system blared with eighty-five's blustering voice. She was challenging that thing, alone. The one thing she wasn't supposed to do.

"Damn it," he wheezed, pressing his shaking palms to the steel underneath him. He pushed himself up onto his knees, propping his back up against the console as he took a moment's rest.

Then the proximity sensor wailed. Prawns descending on his location. Seconds away.

"Damn it, damn it, damn it!" Teddy fumbled his oversized fingers for one of the pouches on his webbing. Upper left row on his breast, furthest to the right. Inside was a needle. Pull off the plastic covering with one hand, drag back his sleeve with the other. Inject. A rush of adrenaline erupted through his bloodstream. His senses widened, sharpening every noise all at once until he felt like his brain might explode.

Teddy threw his weight into the cockpit's throne, strapping on the restrains as he opened his comms. "Platoon, tighten this formation right the hell now. I'm not losing this flank. Pull back and form a defensive line."

As he spoke, Teddy took hold of his control sticks and took in the damage. Left arm was inoperable with severe damage to the torso connection joint. Primary sensor array in the head was simply gone. Secondary array in the chest had taken over immediately. The tech was older, clunkier and generally less reliable. His monitor was filled with grainy, gray footage of the exterior that few others could've parsed at a glance.

"Hit the dirt, Zhejiang! Now!"

Outside, the Grizzly finally stirred. It did not rise to meet the foe that descended on it from every direction like a pack of ravenous dogs. Instead, it rolled on its back and lifted his right arm to the enemy. The Augsburg Autoshotgun underslung its wrist barked its protests, loud and clear. The first wave of legionaries ate a faceful of krakenshot flechettes. Four inch long knives exploded from their plastic shells to cut the pawns to pieces. The bear's claws were fierce things, even now.

Teddy ignored a warning light and cranked the overclock on his targeting computer. Needed to be faster. Ignore the shaking in his hands. Just nerves.

Rolling, the Grizzly flung its weight into the other side of the horde. Its left arm was useless as anything but a battering ram, so that's what Teddy used it for. Legionaries clung to his armored hull, ripping and tearing at the plating to get at the meat inside. Teddy bashed his left shoulder into the swarm, ignoring the loosening arm joint as he held them back long enough to clear his right and sweep the shotgun around to deliver death with express postal.

The pawns eating at his hull died just as their comrades had.

"What's a couple hundred more?!" Teddy thundered. "Come on! A few more, let's go!"

Rising to a knee, the Grizzly grabbed its Prometheus cannon from the mud and rested its barrel on its raised knee. Wielding the stolen fire of Olympus, the cannon roared its defiance. The Grizzly had to rotate its entire body to change its firing angle, chewing apart the already well-tread ground beneath its feet. All around him, the enemy fell in great droves. For all his smiling and assurances, death was Theodore Howser's lifelong profession.
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Hidden 1 mo ago 1 mo ago Post by Eisenhorn
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Eisenhorn Inquisitor of some Note

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"Wouldn't have to watch for your ass if it wasn't hanging out for the Aberrant to chase."

Howe's reply was calm and level, contrasting the intensity of the violence he was sending downrange into the oncoming threats. The arrival of a Constellation, shouted by the supporting forces, was well received. Howe altered his firing patterns to account for the gaps in her attacks, the empty space between each swing being met with 20mm and scything blasts of buckshot. Ammo reserves were depleting steadily, but not enough to worry him yet. He would worry when he ran out of options to fight with, which hardly ended when he ran out of ammunition. Sabine requested a burst of 20mm, the firing solution received and processed across the display, a quick glance between reloads of the shotgun confirmed they were good. Vickie, one would think almost begrudgingly, allowed the 20mm to swing and bark a precise burst of rounds on target, shredding the already wounded and beleaguered Jetsam while Howe continued engaging the incoming remains of the current batch of threats. It was during this brief gap in firepower that not only was the constellation wounded, but another Pawn leapt for Dunkirk during the same gap.

Only to meet the reinforced grasp of Vickie, catching it by the torso midleap and squeezing, crushing the life out of it before hurling it forcefully back into the remaining Pawns as they were torn apart by the return of the Constellation Commander. About time, and now that the violence had paused for a brief moment, Howe prepared to get moving when the presence of a new threat threw the entire plan into the dustbin. Walking Shrimp, Rook Class, Howe had a particular disdain for that particular breed of Aberrant, but what didn't add up was it arriving now, after months where it could have done so much more work. It was held in reserve, Howe was increasingly certain, to counter just this sort of maneuver. However, that could be mused on later, right now they had marching orders to keep moving. Problem, the infantry and other pilots were in bad shape and would not be able to keep up as they were. Listening to each pilot's reported issues, Howe began speaking firmly, a touch coldly, as he approached the mech with the damaged leg.

"If you can't see, fight unbuttoned, being blind will kill you even faster than being exposed, check your manipulators for jams, otherwise your going to have to fight up close. Richie, on my mark I want you to rev the broken leg's hip actuators like you were trying to jump, I'm going to hold the leg in place so you can maintain at least some limited mobility by warping the parts together, maintenance crew will hate me for it though. I can't do anything for your thrusters, but you'll be mobile. Get Kindred to salvage one of the down and out APC's radio kit to act as a patched in fix. Ready Richie? MARK!"

On his command, Howe jammed the damaged leg back up into the actuator well that normally held the leg in place and moved it smoothly. This was a patch he saw back on New Alexandria, where any mobility was better than none during the fighting withdraws as the planet died around them, the goal going from reclamation to withdraw, to survival and back to a mad escape that couldn't afford to stop moving. It would keep Richie moving, for what it was worth, and once it was done Howe maneuvered Vickie back towards those still able to move and fight under their own power. Then it was desperate survival, now it was desperate prevention, how little things changed. The Shrimp needed resolved, but right now Howe could not readily help with that. Wrong combat package for engaging the thing, and he lacked the maneuverability to meaningfully help engage the Rook. Given the circumstances, he was best kept here holding the line. Compared to the elements that could keep moving on the Princess, he was the slowest, the rest would be able to move significantly faster without having to wait for him.

"Commander, I'll hold here and buy as much time for repairs as possible. We'll see what happens from there, ideally catch up before things are decided."

With that Howe maneuvered his frame to the best spot to protect the most people as he could, noting the current damage reports from his own diagnostics. His armor had taken a beating, ammo was starting to reach the point where he might have to start worrying about repurposing weapons into bludgeons, reactor was looking good though so there was that. Making sure everything was topped off, Howe listened to the howling Aberrant that surrounded them, the sound of more moving in just deciding things for good as he watched the group head off. No, no now was the time for him to dig his heels in, metaphorically, and put himself squarely between the Aberrant and those who were compromised, and he turned off his outbound comms for a few moments reflection as hostiles closed in. Last stands were tricky things, especially buying time for other people to act. By the time you go down, you can't know whether or not your stand meant anything or not, had to hope or have faith, if you still believed in such things.

"Right then, let's see if the Aberrant take us seriously or not..."

With that Howe reactivated outbound comms and stood ready, armor damaged, munitions lower than anyone would like, but unbowed and in the best shape of all the Frames that stayed behind despite the previous engagements. If it was time for him to join the rest of New Alexandria, he'd make damn sure it would cost the Aberrant dearly. So dearly they couldn't divert to protect their Princess, even if he couldn't keep the Shrimp from engaging further. Let them come and see, then, let them come and see.
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Hidden 1 mo ago 1 mo ago Post by Lemons
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Lemons Resident Of The Bargain Bin

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Aissi was no stranger to pain.

Quite the opposite, really. Between years of experimentation, augmentation at even the basest level, and the not entirely uncommon rejection, she'd endured a great deal for just about as long as she could remember. So much so that suffering could be argued, and argued well, as the single most unifying and defining experience of her life. From the cruel sting of the scalpel as it carefully flayed her open, to the crushing electricity of nerve girdles being set into her skin, to the agonizing sense of a million needles tearing through her as the biomechanical muscle fibers fused into her own…Aissi was good at being in pain.

This was…very different.

Even when she was in pain in the lab, she’d known on an instinctual level that no matter how excruciating it might be, she wasn’t in any real danger. It’s not like they wanted to hurt her or anything, it was just an unfortunate side effect. And the whole thing was totally controlled. But as the Bishop slammed into her, then whipped around her faster than she could even process it and pinned her Bladewings back with its spear as she screamed bloody murder; as she slammed into the ground with its knee planted into her back and tasted blood; as she felt, rather than heard or saw, the doomful hand raised above the back of her head, even as she writhed beneath the monstrosity. The knee was still pinning her to the dirt. She gasped for air, but her breath was gone; and though she tried to struggle, all she could do was claw helplessly at the earth. This was a different pain. The frenzied pain that comes with the knowledge:
I’m going to die.

Then there was a sound like a breath of wind passing over her, and the pressure on her back was gone. Sucking in a huge breath through clenched teeth, she raised her head in time to hear, “I suggest you dust yourself off.

She stared at Dombay unthinkingly for a split second before her synapses sparked again, and with an impulse of her engines, she launched herself back upright. “
I shall attempt to give you an opening. Three seconds is all I can afford with this difference in ability.” In response, Aissi gave vent to a furious growl, spat out a guttural “Understood,” and flashed forward again.

More carefully this time, though. Even furious as she was, the
knot had tightened, and the smoke was gone.

Dombay followed nimbly alongside, their steps light as they joined Aissi in her charge, the Bishop meeting them halfway with its spear already mid swing to cleave them both. The flash of steel and the twang of metal rang out as their sword diverted the strike, long metal rod passing harmlessly overhead. Rather than send the Spearman off-balance, however, the monster redirected its force into a stab, whirling its weapon around to spear straight through Aissi.

In response, her auxiliary jets fired and she zipped to the side just enough to clear the spear’s trajectory, then cranked her engines to their maximum safe limit. Burning pain crawled up her legs as the heat dispersal proved inadequate to manage the overclocking. Hissing in sharp breaths, she locked her biomechanical hand around the Spearman’s weapon, hoping that it would add even one more second to their opening. Then, raising her glowing Wingblades high, she let her momentum carry her straight into the Bishop and brought them down on the barrier like hammerblows: once, twice.

Flickering into existence, the spherical defense of the Spearman fizzled upon contact with the blades, the second follow-up strike negated when the Bishop released its spear to create space. Only for Dombay to fill the gap the opponent made to escape, sword mid-swing. Despite the Spearman still clearing most of the strike, their sword tip struck the barrier yet again, the energy field flickering desperately yet maintaining its form.


“Shallow.” Aissi would hear her fellow Constellation mutter, just before they were sent flying as the Bishop struck their body with a powerful kick. Several tons of force were sent straight though the white-haired figure who tumbled toward the infantry while the Spearman attempted to take on Aissi once again, reaching for its lost spear.

As Aissi watched Dombay soaring away, leaving her alone with the Spearman, something between a growl and a moan seeped from her. The space created was too much and Dombay was gone. If it got its spear again, she was going to die. No more time for “safe limits” now: her engines roared into full meltdown, blazing white-hot. She knew immediately that they weren’t going to maintain full function for long from this point on. But with any luck, her sheer speed would suffice. She narrowed her eyes as the world blurred by. She had enough time. She could do this. She had to.

Right as the Spearman was taking hold of its weapon once more, she slammed into it with a sound like a freight train, screaming as she caught the Bishop between the tips like insect mandibles. The already weakened barrier appeared, fizzled, strained, caved…held. The shield went unscattered. But still, Aissi huffed a breath of relief. The barrier hadn’t been dispersed, not fully. But the first foot or so of her Wingblades had pierced through before they were stopped.

And the first foot was enough.

The Aberrant began to struggle, no doubt sensing the rising energy levels of the figure in front of it, yet the spear in its grip would not budge. Despite having overpowered the half-human beforehand, its weapon refused to move regardless of its strength, and despite having no eyes its head rose to ‘look’ past Aissi’s shoulder.

At that moment, the Wingblades’ laser coating erupted inwards like artillery, turning the Spearman’s barrier into a furnace. For the briefest moment, the sphere of the barrier glowed with the fierce and perfect red of a dying star. Then the barrier ruptured as the Bishop within was vaporized and erased, and the wild light was released straight into her face.

The explosion flung her almost as far as the kick had Dombay, and it took a considerable amount of effort to get herself falling the right way down. All she had time for after that was pulling her now dimmed Bladewings in tight so they wouldn’t hit anyone. Then she followed after Iona, careening down along the human line and carving trenches into the ground with her needlepoint feet before slamming facefirst into the ground. Her engines were clearly malfunctioning; she would’ve been able to stop before she collapsed otherwise, and the vents were spitting out red sparks. While still working, her antigravity wasn’t as smooth, either; weak enough that her momentum had overpowered it.

The first to rise was the white-haired Stardust, one hand supporting their upper body while the other clutched their cloak to their stomach. Though they’d survived a blow that would’ve killed a normal human outright, their internal organs would still be a mess of gore and paste, yet as the soldiers not occupied clearing Pawns came to support them the Constellation rose a hand for the men to stop.
“Her first,” they ordered softly, gesturing to the crumpled, sparking form of Aissi not far from their position. The footmen paused, the reluctance, hesitation and fear clear in their expressions as they glanced between Dombay and the research subject. The Constellation’s eyebrows were brought together, and while they didn’t change their expression any further, the soldiers felt the air around them become eerie while fixed by the figure’s closed eyed expression. “She saved your lives. She deserves this at least.”

Though slow, some of the men began to approach their abominable ally, unsure for an entirely other reason as they had no idea how they should give first aid to a half-Aberrant. Meanwhile, two soldiers helped Dombay to their feet, another parting their cloak to check the state of their guts as the Constellation lost all strength in their body. Hopefully only temporarily.

Aissi let out a thin, almost silent groan as she propped herself up on one arm, watching with some trepidation as the soldiers crept closer and trying to ignore the searing pain that ran the length of her legs. Forcing them that far past their limits had heated them much hotter than they were designed to be, and she was paying the debt now. So with a few bleary blinks, she she reached her other arm out in the universal unspoken plea:
Help me.

They did not.

A bitter taste grew in her mouth as, unable to rise under her own power, she watched them standing there, pretending not to see her. A deep sadness yawned beneath her, and she dropped her eyes. A moment later, though, she heard a pair of footsteps coming towards her, and turned her head in time to see a soldier that couldn’t be much older than her approaching. Another soldier grabbed his shoulder and attempted to mutter something into his ear, but the young man shook him off before reaching down to grasp Aissi’s outstretched arm. It took some doing, but with his help she eventually regained her footing. Aiming at a pile of equipment, she took a deep breath and gave a tentative engine pulse.

She was pleasantly surprised, then—as pleasant as things could reasonably be at that moment—that while the pain was still very much present, there was still some measure of thrust. At the very least, she was functional. Moving slowly to avoid overtaxing again as she waited for the heat to dissipate over what felt like an eternity, she arrived at the pile, leaned up against it, and switched off her antigravity. Her feet sank into the ground, anchoring her in place. Eyes falling to exhausted half-mast, she slid her gaze laconically from the young man who’d helped her up to the injured Dombay.

When she spoke, her voice was ash; The alien ecstasy had gone, leaving her feeling empty and vague. It was deliberate, methodical, like she was struggling to get even just two words out: “
Thank…you.” Then she tilted her head up to the sky, closed her eyes, and was silent.

The gaze of the soldier, barely older than she, lingered for a long moment after Aissi had closed her eyes. It took the bump of another to get him to snap out of it, yet even as he loaded his rifle and returned to the firing line, his eyes continued to occasionally glance in the direction of the scrap heap where two heroes lay. One man, one monster.
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