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Recent Statuses

6 mos ago
Current =W= forever. Today's jam: Jamie (acoustic.)
6 mos ago
Waldo took some time off and finally found himself.
4 likes
7 mos ago
Why shouldn't you argue with a dinosaur? You'll get jurasskicked.
3 likes
7 mos ago
This book on anti-gravity is so surreal, I can’t put it down.
3 likes
8 mos ago
Just type.

Bio

Howdy. I'm Dee. Been tabletop RP'ing since '90 (D&D 2, 3, 3.5, Rifts, Palladium, D20, Pathfinder, Shadowrun) and writing collaborative fiction for nearly ten years (JvS, represent!) In my day-to-day existence, I'm a theatre technician, a parent, I tend to work too much -- and writing is my escape. I take it pretty seriously.

I'm a pretty big fan of Sci-Fi (but I'm pretty selective about what I read,) Post Apocalyptica, certain Fantasy works (though I prefer my sword-and-sorcery via tabletop...) and Zombies. Used to watch a lot of movies, and read a lot, but having a three-year-old stymies that quite a bit. (2022 edit: the three year old is now nine!)

Some character inspirations: Harry Callahan, Max Rockatansky, William Munny, Snake Plissken, Tyler Durden, Cpl. Hudson (RIP,) Severen (RIP,) Peter Venkman, Malcolm Reynolds, Han Solo (to be continued...)

I tend to look for small groups of dedicated, talented writers who post regularly and love the unknown of spontaneous or semi-planned RP. Hit me up with ideas!

Most Recent Posts

Replies coming!
I was going to allow as much as a week... sometimes the wheels turn slowly, gotta allow for RL.
@Xandrya-- based on the contents of your last post, we'll have to wait for @Force and Fury to reply before I can give you any more to react to, since you have done things to / with his PC that requires a reply.

"H-hello?" she managed to whisper.


There was certainly movement. It was dark as pitch, but after a few moments of allowing her eyes to adjust, she could make out another form. Clad in the same orange prison garment she wore. It struggled a little, but then lay still. She could hear its laboured breathing behind what was sure to be another gag.

Something had changed. It was still. Very still. And the temperature in the air had shifted, she was sure of it. Or maybe it was the dew, or the cold sweat running down her spine. No -- something about her location had changed. The sounds. The animals -- they were gone. It was like she had fallen into a hole in the world. But then, off to her left, a sound. Monkey? Bird? Now off to her right, farther away. What was that? Hyena? A scream. A call of some sort. Now behind her. The sounds began to overlap, from all sides, all directions. The warped, twisted "calls of nature" that it didn't take DeLuca long to realize were the taunts of... people. Shrieks. Cries. Mimicry, if you could call it that. These were the calls of the depraved, the lost, the barbaric. How far? Maybe 150 feet. Coming from where? Seemed to be all sides. The only consolation was, at least for the moment, they didn't seem to be getting any closer. Louder? Yes. More plentiful? Yes...






G R I D - S Q U A R E 4 4 - E


All was silence, once the helicopter departed. No return trip, then. my bags are packed... I'm ready to go. The zip-ties wouldn't be terribly difficult to cut, but he'd need to do it soon. They'd been cinched tight, and circulation was becoming an issue, his fingertips turning blue, and feet numb. All around were the sounds of nature, a cacophony in his ears. Sounds he hadn't heard in an age... I'm standing here outside your door, I hate to wake you up to say good-bye. Heat. Humid, stifling heat that caught in your throat, and set a powerful thirst about a body... heat like the noon-day sun in a roasting pan, in hell. A gull of some type set down on a boulder not far from him. But the dawn is breaking, it's early morn, the taxi's waiting, He's blowing his horn. There was no sign of anyone, anywhere. And though it was freeing, and he could almost rest easy knowing the Man wasn't breathing down his neck, the Gull mocked him. Already I'm so lonesome I could die...
Yep. I'll just keep checking in. No rush. A good apocalypse has plenty of time on its hands.
No big thing!
@Ztlabraptor211

I was going to write all the insertions, just to space out the arrivals... but keen Deacon's arrival. It's good. I'll reply to both tonight. 😊
IC is up!


A B S O L O M


...more precisely, over Absolom. Or maybe, over the water surrounding Absolom. Absolom... Absolom... the inmates had whispered it, over and over. In discussions over three hots a day. In the yard. On little pieces of paper passed from cell to cell. Absolom. It was like a fart in the wind. Nobody could pin it down, but it damn sure existed. In the hearts and minds of the poor, misguided, fucked-up souls still rotting in their 6X10's, Absolom was either Boogeyman, or Saint Peter. Choking cloud of Sarin gas, or the sweet scent of 'No. 1 Imperial Majesty' perfume. Detroit, or Beverly Hills. There were a thousand different theories. Most of them bullshit. All of them far-fetched.

Nevertheless, at this very moment, two inmates -- #4542378-E6B (Berthier, Jacques) and #4777345-F7F (DeLuca, Olivia) -- were strapped into their seats aboard a helicopter, bound, gagged, and blindfolded. And, as guard Tim Olson looked at his watch, they'd be coming around any time. Some took longer, which never went so well for the Fresh Fish. One way or the other, awake or not, when they arrived at the LZ, it was cut and run. If they weren't conscious by that time, so be it. Still, Tim hoped these two woke up... he had money on DeLuca lasting more than a week.

Olson took a quick look around at the cabin. There were six guards, three on the fore bulkhead, separated from the cockpit by a hatch behind Gunny's seat, and three against the aft bulkhead. All were fully armed with an array of weaponry, and wore black tac gear, head to foot. Two waist gunners manned the twin 7.62mm mini-guns on the Huey, and in the fore compartment sat the pilot and co-pilot / gunner. It was a standard deportation drop. No goods. And aside from a few tense moments, and a very tight timeline, nothing was out of the ordinary. Tim checked his chron, signalled Gunny. Five minutes.

One was stirring. The other was either still out, or acting like it. It didn't make a good goddamn bit of monkey-shit difference to Gunnery Sergeant Mike Evans. These would go out, just like the rest. Whether they hit the ground running, or like 150 lbs of ground beef, made no difference to Gunny. He gave the signal to his men, and various weapons locked and loaded. The two waist gunners leaned out on the landing skids of the jet-black chopper as the noise, and the wind, changed. The chopper engaged its' whisper mode, and though not entirely silent, became far less deafening, which was a feat of engineering that Gunny didn't fully comprehend. Two of his men affixed night-vision goggles, and all gave the thumbs-up.

Red light on. One minute. Gunny gave the signal, the op was a go. The chopper banked now and again, decreasing in altitude and speed. Olson withdrew his knife and readied himself for the order. Five weapons pointed at the two prisoners. Five weapons, and Tim Olson's box-cutter. The chopper slowed again. Lurched. Updraft. They were over the target.

Green light on. Tim moved precisely, carefully, cutting the two straps holding the prisoners in a single, deft slice. Gunny nodded, and Tim grabbed prisoner DeLuca, while Cormier grabbed prisoner Berthier. Their movements were practiced, fluid, economical. Each prisoner was unceremoniously tossed out the open side doors of the Huey, as it hovered six to eight feet off the ground. The only difference this time, as opposed to the many other drops Tim Olson had been a part of, was that he removed prisoner DeLuca's blindfold while he sent her out, palming the cloth as he did so, and stuffing it in a thigh pocket. It would fetch a good dollar on the dark web.

On Olson and Cormier's 'Clear' the chopper gained altitude and flew off, barely on-site for more than ten seconds. Not a shot fired. No contact. Nothing. Absolom was dark like the night sky. In less than a minute, there was no sign the helicopter had ever been there.

On the ground, Berthier and Cormier had landed less than twenty feet from each-other. Their wrists and ankles were zip-tied, and they were still ball-gagged. Berthier was also blindfolded. At first, all was chaos. Disorientation, weightlessness, nausea (coming around from the heavy sedative) and the trauma of a near-ten-foot fall from a moving vehicle (mind you, not moving too fast.) Everything around them seemed to be in motion. As if they had been sucked into a tornado. But as the chopper departed, the chaos diminished. Stillness, and heat. Humid, sticky, so-thick-you-could-tatse-it heat. And slowly, the sounds of nature. Bugs, the occasional bird.
Sorry -- crazy week at work. Haven't really been here at ALL. But I'm going to put up the IC tonight. Not ALL characters will be inserted in my first IC Post. Those that are, may reply and act right away.

Thanks for patience.

-Dan
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