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Opinionated nerd for hire.

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Colonel Wayne considered the proposals from the new arrivals.

The pilot from Maxwell's scrappers was new, and Gaius was hesitant to put an untested pilot into the line of such heavy fire. On the other hand, he'd watched them reassemble the salvaged Catapult and take it on test runs. The woman had an aptitude for Mech piloting, which was encouraging. More to the point, adding the Catapult to the fighting force, alongside Saarinen's Archer, would nearly double the amount of long-range fire that Ziska's Raven could direct.

"Very well," the Colonel nodded, "Partanen, you're in. You'll be on the second-line alongside the Archer. Between the two of your mechs we'll be stretching our LRM reloads fairly thin, so make your shots count. That mech isn't as heavily armored as the Archer, but the jump jets give it more maneuverability, so if anyone gets too close, put your lasers into them and then jump to cover."

Looking over at Ms. Jeong and Mr. McCord, Gaius felt a mix of relief and trepidation. In truth, they wouldn't have been nearly as successful in this campaign without the support provided by Cassandra's deep pockets and way with words, so he knew she'd be certain to secure a deal with the FPA to get those Thumpers. With those artillery batteries and the combined firepower of the Knights, it might be possible to turn this raid not just into a diversionary action, but a successful assault to take the fort itself.

On the other hand, he knew that every dealing the Green Knights made with Cassandra Jeong put them that much deeper into her pocket. They were already in debt to her, and sooner or later, she was going to come to collect. Obviously they had a common enemy for now, but once Federov was toppled and the Crimson Fists were dead, who's to say where she would want their guns pointed next?

"We'll discuss the price for securing support from the FPA on completion of the mission, Ms. Jeong," he said, knowing he was kicking yet another can down the road, "but in the immediate moment, the sooner you can get us those guns, the better."

"As for Mister McCord," he said, turning to the pilot of the Marauder, "You'll be with myself and Ms. Wyatt. They won't be expecting another Mech on the field, and the spot I've chosen for the duel has plenty of heavy woods for concealment. You're a hell of a shot with your PPCs, so I'm going to count on you to be my insurance policy. We'll stick you in the woods where you can remain powered-down until the Crimson King and his entourage enter the field, and I'll lure him into a clear line of fire for you. Bear in mind, this is still a delaying action; if we spring the trap too quickly, they'll turn around and leave. But the instant I give the signal, or if the other Crimson Fists decided to join in, you'll power up your Mech and aim for the enemy Battlemaster's head."

Headhunting wasn't exactly considered 'honorable' combat, but the Colonel knew full-well that the Crimson King had no intention of a clean duel. Gaius believed in the honors of war, but he knew better than to hold his enemy to the same standard.

"On the other hand," Colonel Wayne continued, "If I don't give the signal, or if the odds are so stacked that another Mech on the field won't tip the balance in our favor, you will remain shut down until the Crimson Fists leave the area, then take Ms. Wyatt to safety."


"...most recent trial for Weapon X was largely a success, though subject is growing rapidly unstable..."

"...can be so much more than what they want to make you, all you have to do is..."


"...drop the good-little-soldier boy act, runt, let the hunger drive you..."


"...displaying worrying signs of resistance to our behavioral conditioning. Suggesting full memory wipe unless..."

"...unless you have something to hold onto, something to believe in, they'll never let you be more than..."


"...an animal..."


"...a perfect weapon...."

"...a lost soul, wandering alone..."


"...living only for the hunt, for the fight, for the kill..."


"You're not like any other subject we've ever had...."

"...you're not like any other man I've ever loved..."


"You are Just. Like. Me."


"Logan...."

"Logan..."


"Logan...."


"....wake up!"

I open my eyes, looking up at a cloudy late-afternoon sky. I'm lying in the back of my old pick-up, and Kitty is standing next to it nudging me in the side with a stick. "I got us to the closest town. You wanted to pick up some supplies, right?"

Rubbing my eyes, I sit up and see that we're in the parking lot of a Loblaws supermarket. The truck's suspension groans as I climb out of the truck, stretching. "We'll have to be quick," I say, "Lots of cameras in big stores. Anyone comes looking for us, we don't want to be on film too long. You haven't gone in and bought anything yet, have you?"

Kitty shakes her head. "I don't have any cash on me. And after you skewered my phone, I didn't want to know what you'd end up doing to my debit card."

"Good," I nod, before opening the passenger's door and reaching behind the seat. "You don't want to leave anything that can be tracked. Cash only."

"I just told you," Kitty rolls her eyes, "I don't have any--"

Pulling out an old duffel bag, I open it up and root around until I find what I'm looking for: a stack of about 10,000 dollars. Kitty's eyes grow wide when she sees the money, and even wider when I hand it to her.

"I go into town on the occasional beer run," I shrug. "I'm coming up on the last of my rainy-day money, but this should be enough to get us to New York."

"Where'd you get that?" Kitty asks, uncomfortably. "Are you, like, a drug dealer or something?"

"Nah," I say, pulling out a stack of cash for myself. "It's my retirement fund. Chances are I got it from the same people who are after you now."

"Oh, that's much better," she says, her voice thick with sarcasm. "Do I even want to know what you do for them?"

"Did. Past tense," I correct her. "These days I don't do anything for anyone. I just mind my own business, at least when I'm not smuggling teenagers across the country."

"And that reminds me," she says, "I've been so focused on figuring out whether or not you're a serial killer that it didn't even strike me to ask where you're trying to smuggle me to. What's in New York that you're so dead-set on?"

"Fair question," I say. "Ever hear of Charles Xavier?"

For just a second, I see her eyebrow raise, her lips purse, a flash of recognition in her eyes, which she immediately tries to bury. "Not really," she lies, "he's some old mutant activist guy, right?"

I think about calling her out on the lie, but I can't exactly blame her for not being straightforward, not when I haven't given her any real reason to trust me either. I'll let it slide for now, but I keep in mind.

"He's the Mutant rights activist," I tell her, "and he's set up a place for people like us. Well, like you. Kids with a future, but who need guidance, protection. It's a haven for mutants, yeah, but it's also a school. Full Ivy League level education, and they teach you how to get a handle on your abilities."

Kitty thinks about it. "So...it's like Hogwarts? Just, y'know, without the problematic author?"

"The hell's a hog-wart?"

"God, how long have you been living out in those woods?"

I shrug. "What year is it?"

Kitty laughs, I grunt, and we head into the store to load up.




Belle Reve Super-Max Facility
Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana


"Floyd Lawton."

On the other side of the massive slab of steel that served as the door to his cell, a man with shaggy black hair lay on his cot, staring at the ceiling. As a fly buzzed around the fluorescent bulb that washed the cell in a harsh white light, he made a pistol shape with his finger, drew a bead on the insect, and quietly made pow-pow noises.

"Floyd Lawton," the voice on the outside of the cell repeated itself.

"I know what my name is, thank you," the shaggy prisoner rasped, still keeping his aim on the fly as it flittered about the cell. "Did you have anything else to go with it?"

"I'm going to ask you to come with me," the voice said. "On a matter of international security."

"I don't do security," Lawton dismissed the stranger, "In fact, it's kind of the opposite of what I do."

"Trust me," the voice answered, "we know exactly what sort of thing you do. High-level contract killing, under the alias 'Deadshot.' Eighty-two confirmed kills, estimated another hundred-fifty unconfirmed. Forensic evidence at the scene of your crimes suggest a level of accuracy with pistols, rifles, submachine guns, and automatic weapons that would break every world record if they were ever written down. Number one on the FBI's most wanted list for six years until they finally caught you."

"I did get quite the reputation, didn't I?" Floyd chuckled.

"And we'd like you to live up to that reputation," the voice said.

"Who's 'we?'" Floyd asked, his curiosity piqued.

"Who 'we' are," came the answer, "isn't as important as we can do for you. Ten years off each of your sentences..."

"Bringing my total down to a mere two hundred and sixty years," Lawton scoffed. "You'll have to do better than that."

"...and visitation rights for your daughter."

Lawton sat up. "Who's the target?"

"I know reputation means a lot in your line of work," said the stranger. "Your type likes to compete, make names for yourselves, give yourselves code-names and callsigns and keep up with each other, so you know where you stand."

"What's that got to do with who the target is?"

"I've got a codename for you, 'Deadshot,'" the voice said. "A real blast from the past. Does the name 'Wolverine' mean anything to you?"

The air went out of Floyd Lawton's lungs for a moment.

"...holy shit..." he said.

"We're putting together a crew," said the voice, "of people like you. People with nothing to lose, but everything to gain. We're going to equip you with everything you need to get the job done. We're going to provide you with a network of full support in the field, giving you information in real-time on your target. And when the job is done, we're going to give you better accommodations to spend the rest of your sentence in comfort."

"Or you'll give us a pine box and a hole in the ground when the Wolverine cuts us to fucking pieces," Floyd scoffed.

"Sure, maybe you'll get the chance to die a hero," came the answer, "or the opportunity to become a legend. They say the Wolverine was the best your line of work has ever seen. You take him down, what does that make you?"

Floyd thought about it for a long moment, before the voice said, "or I walk away from this door, never come back, and you rot in this hole forever and never see your daughter again. Your choice."

This time, the pause was just long enough for Deadshot to clear his throat. "I'm in."

"Good to hear," the voice said.

The door swung open, and standing in the door, not even bothering with a security escort, was a stocky black woman in a charcoal-gray suit. Just her very presence made Lawton stand up, halfway standing at attention before he realized what he was doing.

"My name is Amanda Waller," the woman introduced herself, "Assistant Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. Welcome to Task Force X."


That one looks good to me
Well, we do have that spare Catapult.
I need to get more than a single post in for Jonah/Ghost Rider before I start futzing about with collabs just yet.
Dinah is APPROVED


Colonel Wayne considered each of his Knights' questions, and tried to answer as many as possible.

"The concerns about engaging with the Crimson King are valid," he began. "I expect he'll want to keep me alive long enough to put on a show, but I don't believe for a second that any one of the Crimson Fists will be interested in a fair fight. Sabotage to the Mech is practically a given, as is the notion that the other Fists will be waiting in the wings. In fact, I'm counting on it. The more of them are waiting to take me out, the fewer of them will be at the Fort."

At Marit's comment, he glanced at his prosthetic hand. "The neural link controlling my prosthetic will interfere with my ability to wear a neurohelmet, that's true. As much as I'd like to, the simple truth is I'll never be able to pilot a Battlemech the way I used to. But I don't need to beat the Crimson King; I just need to stay alive long enough to keep him busy. And my Battlemaster still has enough armor on her that even sustained fire from an entire lance won't bring her down easily."

Glancing over at technician Wyatt, the Colonel gave her an appraising look. She'd definitely come a long way since the coup, from a talented but reserved weapons tech to being able to parlay with a Comstar Precentor. He'd began to lean on her for her burgeoning abilities as the 'face' of the Green Knights' operation, but in truth her real expertise was still working with Mechs. "Wyatt: as per your request you're coming with me. Assuming the Crimson King is going to hedge his bets, you're my best chance at sniffing out sabotage. I'll see if I can get someone else to negotiate with the FPA for use of those Thumpers."

Looking at his Mechwarriors and the crew of the Von Luckner, he went over the tactical overview. "As for those of you conducting the assault on the fort, the first phase of this operation is simply to draw their fire. Ramrod and Desperado, the two of you keep moving, hit what you can where you can, and bring your fire on whatever provides the biggest threat in the immediate moment. Assuming we are able to get the Thumpers on our side, Alley Cat will be instrumental in calling targets. Family Man, I want you to take an elevated position and put that PPC to use against any armored assets that come in for backup. Giggles, your Archer has enough armor to absorb a lot of the small fire, so don't be afraid to brawl, but listen for Alley Cat's signal to provide fire support as well. Merry-Go-Round, as the Mechs clear the way and draw fire, your crew will come up the pass and blast through the fixed positions."

"In the event that Sgt Dalton gets hung up, we go to plan B,"
he continued. "Any mech with functioning hand actuators will need to enter the complex and start opening doors. If prisoners aren't able to get to the underground tunnels, we may have to physically pick them up and carry them out. Obviously, that means you may have to choose who you take and who you leave; I'm confident that I can trust in your discretion on that."

Taking a deep breath, Gaius said, "There's a good chance that I don't come back from my duel with the Crimson King. In that event, tactical command of the Green Knights is entrusted to Lance Commander Daschke, with advisement from Sgt. Dalton. Logistical command and coordination of the civilian contingent will go to Captain Roth, once she's freed from the Fort. Once operations on Espia are concluded, you'll all receive your share of payment in full, and you'll be free to discuss the future of the command from there."
<Snipped quote by AndyC>

If we're truly week one, I like the idea that Waller is SHIELD and not head of one of the other hundred alphabet organizations. It doesn't make sense for all of them to already exist.


Yeah. DC has way too many "we want to have our own version of SHIELD but can't stick to any one concept so we've got like a thousand shadowy organizations with acronym names" groups, so i figured it'd be cleaner to just lump them all into SHIELD. Since that's what they're all pretending to be anyway.
It doesn't appear that Hamazasp Sulser would be able to fit in this lore, would he?


Depends on what they were doing at the time; this game takes place a few years before the Rasalhague one. And because the two RPs aren't necessarily canon to each other, you can always make edits to fit. There are ways to work in some new Mechwarriors, depending on what ideas you've got.
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