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New collab released and an update on the future of Futility! New players always welcome. roleplayerguild.com/topics/…
2 yrs ago
Finally some new Futility content is up! Two more collabs are underway/finishing up. We're writing longer-form content for this finale scene, so keep eyes out! Cyberpunks rise up.
3 yrs ago
Two or three 10-35 pages of Futility Collabs are coming, I promise. The time is nigh.
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3 yrs ago
Guild Cyberpunk gang currently popping off
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4 yrs ago
Slowly, Futility rises from the ashes. Very soon, I hope, we'll be able to wrap up this next round of scenes, but that's like 3-4 posts out at least. The hustle does not stop.
I am a writer and poet aiming to create surrealistic and abstract imagery in my work. I also greatly enjoy worldbuilding, roleplaying, and collaborative writing in general. I also work as a writing advisor, so I enjoy working with, critiquing, and supporting writing in most of its forms. If you would like to work with me with any piece of prose or poetry, let me know. If you have roleplay concepts, questions, or ideas I'd be happy to listen. For those that enjoy the projects I GM, contact me as necessary. PM at your will.
With the release of the big collab at Baolei Clinic, Futility Season 2 is entering its finale scene before we reboot for Season 3, (which may take a while). If anyone is interested in participating, we will have open slots throughout the coming scenes. Now is as good a time as any to join the cyberpunk crew and get involved.
As you can see, Futility has been a wild experiment in how to run collaborative writing exercises & campaigns. Recently, we've undertaken some enormous collabs which are just now being released and I want to thank all the writers that were involved in getting us this far. Futility has been a several year long Cyberpunk dream, and I'm eager to improve the experience for the people who have stuck with me.
With that said, I hope to continuously update the interactive style of the RP in unique ways for each writing to keep engagement high and keep the story interesting going forward. I owe it to the 10-12 folks that have made this RP something real in the long term. If there is any interest in joining, feel free to reach out. While I imagine these sorts of long term RPs can be intimidating to get involved with, I hope to make the user experience/onboarding process quite simple for those who are genuinely interested in contributing to a project like this. I'd be happy to answer any questions and customize the character process to your writing style. Reach out with questions or concerns.
And with all that said, here's a brief look at what's to come for the end of Futility Season 2:
Finishing off the scene at Baolei will be a collab lead by SandyGunfox and I, which will mark the last collaborative scene that will take place before the final scene: "the Debate Scene"
The Debate Scene, which was started off in the last post with Delilah and Lott, will cover the fate of the Reclaim at the end of the season, and link the cast together in a big way. Coming next will be a collab with our Pirate Party and Central Party crews backstage as the event starts.
Following the backstage collab, which is already underway, will be a scene in the thick of the debate's crowd, where our remaining cast will collab while simultaneously working towards individual character plots/quests.
I hope this provides some insight for players and readers. Thanks again everyone for helping make Futility what it is!
โI could never parse the monks' motivation. They seemed to mean well for the Reclaim, so I kept my campaign on friendly terms. That's it. Spend too long in that temple, or whatever it might be, and every seems to start feeling like they see something that others don't.โ
The voice sounded almost malefic... Playful and familiar, but perhaps it was just a distortionโas though spoken through a haze of smoke. The smoke, though, gave way to the dull colors of the Medivanโs sterile walls. Two floating red globes stared back at him, and based on the visual trails still clearing from his eyes Gabe could see the thing had emerged from a little rectangular slot conveniently carved into the ambulanceโs wall near the ceiling.
โGabe.โ The drone croaked through a blast of static before that black sliver of its body opened up beneath the rotors and lofted a small screen in front of Gabriel. The sinewy form of a familiar stick-like torso filled up the display. His pale torso was unmarked by metal or medicinal intervention, but his visage was covered by a mask with cylindrical red eyes above a protruding beak. Insect had the mask custom built to mimic some old medical motif, a symbol for doctors of that Insect would tell rich stories about to Gabe during their days together under lab lamplight. Even his drone looked a bit like the mask, with the screen pushed forth from within an avian beak. In the Reclaim, it was ubiquitous as a sign of the ripper docโs reach, recognized only by those seeking his black clinic.
โGabe,โ he said, then paused for a long moment, staring through the blurry display at his friend. โYou should take a day off...โ
โI donโt have time, man...โ Gabe muttered, barely conscious.
Insect waved a hand through the air to disregard the sentiment. He leaned forward, pressed his elbows hard against a reflective metal table. โLooked into the Dust you sent me. Compared it to some stuff on the street. Got it from a guy. Same sort of shitโtold me it came from space or something. Void Dustโ He stretched his limbs and contorted his torso like he was wringing a towel. With each offhanded flex, the muscles and tendons looked like steel cords beneath his skin, even despite his stick-like, gaunt build. โThing is, Gabe,โ
โThe two samples are completely different. I mean, theyโre the same thing at the core, but your plugโs is cut with something.โ Another long pause. Insect stared directly into the Medivan, like he was there, just beyond Gabrielโs periphery. Like he could hear the uneven, labored breaths of the dosed doctor. โYou alone?โ Insect asked, but he already knew. Insect turned to his side, mask lit up by a display out of the droneโs view. Then he started to fade from the feed, and a video came to replace him.
The video showed an amalgamation of cybernetics and gelatinous molds that seemed to mimic flesh, nerves, and tissue around an old E-Brain implant. Gabriel could have sworn heโd caught a glimpse of it moving. Insect injected an IV into the crude simulacrumโStellaโs Dustโthen zoomed the lens in on the video, focusing down on a specific cable jacked into the E-Brain that branched out into the mold. The cable shimmered, like rippling water more than metal alloy. The video cut off and Insectโs red eyes reappeared on the feed.
โAnd maybe itโs not showing up on a microscope slide.โ He drummed his hands on the table, clattering a beat to occupy space while he thought, then deviously steepled his hands together. โYou still got that blood filter? Can you simulate a circulatoryโโ
But he cut himself off, shook his head. He righted his crooked, hunched spine and it caused him to smack his head into a swaying lamp. โYou know what? Keep cool around your spacemen friends, Gabe. Maybe you want to know whatโs going on in their heads, but keep cool.โ
Gabriel laid on the floor, wondering if the drone which had appeared before him was merely a hallucination caused by the synthetic drug, or a real corporeal thing. When he finally worked up the presence of mind to respond, he pushed himself up off the ground and said: โ... Fuck, okay, so my sample was cut with something else? That explains why I was having a tough time with the formula. But I didnโt get this from a dealer, I got it from an addict looking for an alternative.โ Gabriel stood up and began fiddling with the aforementioned blood filtering device. While its purpose was more diagnostic than anything, it could be used to analyze the contents of alien bloodborne substances, including drugs. Gabriel bent down, removed a vial of pre-filtered blood from his miniature fridge, and using his free hand added a very small pinch of the sample that Stella had given him. โMaybe something in the compound I dismissed as an โimpurityโ is only active while bloodborne. Iโll see if the filter can detect it.โ Using the touchscreen on the futuristic device, Gabriel began to isolate the antibodies and chemicals in the plasma, until he had a rough idea of the substances in question.
As soon as Gabriel deposited the dust sample into the vial, his eyes saw a shimmering of their own within the blood. It looked like a web of sparks, but so small; so fragmented, it could hardly be discerned from floaters in the eye of any onlooker. The sample was, at first, about as expected. The machine would return readouts corresponding with Gabrielโs selected blood type, though it detected no foreign substances aside from metal alloys, trace offworld rocks and minerals, and a laundry list of psychoactive compoundsโmost of which matched Gabrielโs homebrew. Nonetheless, the results were distorted. The expected antibodies were gone one second, replaced with newly synthesized blood proteins, then the sample read clean again. The process repeated, like the machine itself was reading more than one sample from the same vial.
โThis shit is almost supernatural,โ Gabe mused, โno wonder I canโt replicate it...โ
Gabeโs focus on his work was snatched away by a cacophony from the droneโs speakers. It sounded like a vacuum or the droneโs rotors themselves amplified. On screen, Insect pressed a glass flask to the seal of his mask and the flaskโs solution started to disappear into the beak. Insect cleared his throat beneath the metal visage. โBut Gabrielโฆ You โpilgrimagingโ with the monks tomorrow? The debate, or somethingโฆ Dao definitely appreciates your help, so I figured he might want you around.โ
โYou know theyโre bound to have that guy souped up with new wetware if any of the monks actually care about what heโll say out there. You should try and get a scan on his augs. We can see what heโs got plugged in. Maybe even tune him up once we see what weโre working with. Of course, thatโs up to you, as an official patron of the shrine, or what have you.โ
Gabe nodded at this suggestion. โI know what heโs packing already, more-or-less. Some of the stuff in his arms I actually made myself. If heโs gotten more plugins lately, Iโm not aware of it.โ He paused. โWhy do you care what implants the guy has? It doesnโt impact anyone else one way or another.โ
โDonโt know why itโs on my mind,โ Insect said through a brief, splintering static on the screen. โDaoโs a good guy. Was a good friend for a short stint. Maybe I just figured the dudeโs got more impact in the Reclaim than people think. Running Baolei and other clinic operationsโฆ With no Black Clinic fees. You think heโs enlightened or thereโs something more to it all?โ
Gabriel thought amidst the silence. Insect had a point, and Gabriel had heard rumours of his connections to Gaea Naturae. If the mysterious biotech company were distributing anything particularly new and shiny, Dao would be among the first to get it.
Insect paused for too long, and Gabrielโs vision wavered again, like the static from Insectโs drone rippled out into the MediVan. The return of the Ripper Docโs voice only seemed to amplify the distortion, if only for a moment: โJust might be something worth looking into. If heโs got new ice, maybe youโll notice. Maybe thereโs schematics around the place somewhere. Or maybe you could scan him yourself if youโre clever enough. You think heโd mind?โ
โOh, and Iโll keep in touch about your little addiction project as well. Iโm sure I can dig something up, friend.โ Insectโs face faded away, and the screen retracted back into the drone which promptly fell to the floor as its rotors followed suit. The thing scuttled like a spider across the van and scaled the wall until it popped back into the slot next to the ceiling. In an instant, it looked like it had vanished altogether, or become part of the van. Gabriel couldnโt quite be so sure. The ripples intensified, then he heard a pounding from the back of the van.
โFucking hell,โ Gabriel muttered. He hated the cryptic manner in which Insect spoke, but odd as he was, he was one of Gabeโs most useful informants. Gabriel would follow through with the scan, but there was no way in hell that heโd divulge the results to Insect without some sort of incentive. As the effects of the drug began to wear off, finally, Gabriel turned around to answer the knocking at the door. โYeah... yeah Iโll be there in a sec. Fuck. Wow. Just... gimme a bit.โ
โOf course. All are welcome to gaze upon the operation, take part in our practice, and lend aid to the destitute of the Reclaim Zone. Allow me to introduce you to someone who may be able to better direct your inquiries, missโฆโ
"S'venia," she started as she looked over the monk in front of her. Her eyes flashed over the robes, the metallics of his body, and his face. Scanning the machine's intricate nature, S'venia could only describe the monk's look in a singular word; creepy. She found it weird how no matter which monk she encountered, that word was the only one ready on the tip of her tongue. She was sure one of these days she would meet a normal monk like the old told stories. Dressed in black, with a weird white-collar, that liked to preach about a man in the sky. She would not feel safe next to that type of monk either, but at least they were more upfront with their affronts. "S'venia Skor, but you can call me S've-.."
โWelcome to Baolei Clinic, Reclaim outpost of the Mekanedo Monastic Order,โ another monk interrupted. This monk looked more threatening than the last. More corporate even. "Oh no," S'venia thought as she looked over the woman as the new monk began to walk back through the doors, "monk human resources."
โYouโre welcome to examine our operation yourself, and while the other monks may be busy taking care of those in need, I believe I could answer any questions you might have.โ Dharma said.
"Thank you so much," S'venia responded as she flashed her smile. "I hope you don't mind," S'venia spoke as she tapped the control panel, turning her eye red. S'venia then unwrapped her computer and typed a quick command to her camera drone, sending it out to capture videos of those receiving care. She shifted her focus back to the human resource augmented monk and flashed another smile. "My name is S'venia, reporting for the South City Blues. This disaster that has befallen our city is unfortunate, regrettable, and devastating for those genuinely in need. I am not here to figure out what got us to this point," she paused as she flashed her arm across her body in an attempt to draw a line. "But I am here to show the people what good the Mekanedo Monastic Order is doing," S'venia paused as she did a quick spin around as she followed the monk further into the compound. "These people need help, and your order is providing it," S'venia started as she shifted her focus back to the monk. "I hope to help my viewers understand in simple terms what exactly your order does to help ease the pain of our fellow citizens," she paused as she smiled another 'genuine' smile.
Turning the drone's camera towards her face, S'venia paused itโs movement as she focused her attention on a figure in the background. With a twist of her wrist, the camera extended its neck out of its shell and focused. There was an individual here that she knew. How did she know this geriatric looking, clean clothes missing, old looking geezer and how was his face so remembered. And then it hit, it was Methuselah. It was the old man himself, Sโvei long forgot his actual name and had since relied on that โoldโ nickname she had created for her fellow believer in Dex. What was he doing here? She left that question lingering for a second as the drone camera lingered on the aged face before it hit her. He was augmented.
Through the change in his facial expression, she could see that he also saw her, but the look on his face was confusing. It was not the confused look that perplexed her, he was old, and his memory was probably fading. No, this look was much more concerning. It was like he saw a ghost.
โSo,โ Sโvenia started as she shifted the drone back towards the corporate monk, โcan you tell me how your group has handled the influx of patients in such a short time?โ
As the monk started to answer, their head would shift from side to side before turning its attention to one of the many instances of the โhelping the people mantraโ they recently adopted. Sโvenia, noticed the lack of awareness, shifted her focus towards the relic and attempted to wave and send one of her trademark smiles. The sight of the monksโ head-turning their attention back around forced her back to her job.
โThat seems like a challenge that you were not expecting. Have others offered their support to help?โ
โThe Mekanedo Monastic Order primarily works alone, but other HyperHuman Monks from around the coast help, as do the people of the Reclaim of course.โ
As Sโvenia finished the statement, she tapped an icon on her screen, and her drone locked its focus on her old โcompatriotโ. The droneโs lens latched onto the face of the older man. โWhat has life brought on you,โ she thought quietly to herself.
Darts missed the board left and right. Everytime Proctor reeled in the line, the hook was empty. His feet were locked in place, his mind being wrought in vain attempts to form some connection or fish some semblance of a memory out of the fog. The feeling of seeing a violet blur rush around the room, accompanied by her orbish camera imp, was so familiar it made him sick to his stomach. Between the two of them sat so many other empty husks of men and monks tending to them that to try and run across the room felt impossible, but the smile and wave told him he had been noticed too.
โSo she does remember something.โ
Something resembling jubilation fluttered up from his stomach, as if a small lantern had finally been lit within the fog. Before he waved back, she turned back to the tour guide that led her across the room, but he kept his hand up, ready and eager to return the attention as soon as her gaze returned to him.
A deep whirring in his ears told him his heart was beginning to beat with a pace that it hadnโt matched in a long time, and the cyborg wouldโve been woozy on his feet had he not learned to master his palpitations long ago. Still though, control had decayed over time, and his heart continued to whir something fierce. His stance widened to maintain balance, thanks to his knee finally listening to what his brain said after the repair. Surely to everyone around him he looked like a mad man, and few monks threw him glances that said as much. He hadnโt noticed, as his sights were still set on the violet blur across the room.
โA curious development,โ Sโvenia thought to herself as she focused in on the corporate monk ahead of her. โIf you can say, what are some of the biggest challenges that your order has overcome to this point?โ Sโvenia finished and listened to the response. Once again, the monk started off their response and eventually pointed towards an area. Using the timing, Sโvenia turned her attention and locked her eyes with the older man. She flashed him a big smile and a short wave before she turned her attention back to the monk. โI thank you for answering my questions today,โ Sโvenia started as she tapped a button on her computer, โif you donโt mind, I will take a look at your operations, take some stills and video, and I should be out of your hairs before long.โ Sโvenia smiled and waved and turned her attention back around towards the lost soul.
Dharmaโs smile seemed to grow even wider as Sโveniaโs questions came. She resided exactly where sheโd prepared to be. Perhaps that was why Dao was so fond of her running front-end operations like this. She spoke:
โBack when America was a fledgling state, its people turned against one another formallyโto fight en masse in order to settle disputes. Before bombs and bots and lasers and smart weapons and psyops, there was a man who volunteered in the field hospitals. Before medical science and biomedical technology were even namedโhe was The Wound Dresser. He wrote famous poems of what he saw, but dressing wounds was hardly enough. Most of his work, then, became not to dress wounds but to act as a chaplainโadminister rites and offer comfort in the last moments to the mutilated, shellshocked, living dead.โ Dharma paused and took a silent, breath, but Sโvenia nonetheless felt a sliver of cold air pass across her skin.
โWhat will you do when the Reclaim hemorrhages blood and severed limbs, crying for help and ridden with infection? What will we do?โ Dharmaโs eyes drifted, and dissociated into a distant nothingness.
The repeated acknowledgement drove Proctor forward, the restored mobility of his legs a welcome feeling. He began to weave his way across the room, not trying to draw too much attention as he made a bee line across the room.
โIs he,โ Sโvenia thought to herself as she spotted the old man meandering his way across the room, โI think he is,โ Sโvenia completed the thought. A large smile crossed her face, and she shot the man another wave.
โIโll leave you to it,โ Dharma said, and walked off. Despite the metallic sheen to her legs, she had no footsteps.
A few of the metal husks on mats began to protest as Proctor roughly strode past them, a few unintentional connections between his legs and their backs. Unwanted gazes began to scan the old man as he caused a sort of ruckus in an already chaotic room. He slowed his pace and with a sheepish grin motioned for the Sโvenia to come to his mat as he slowly retraced his steps back to his resting place. He sat crossing his legs as tightly as possible to leave room on his map for his old friend.
---
As Sโvenia squeezed in place to share his mat, Proctor scooted back bit by bit to give her as much room as they could get between the two suffering robots flanking them. He heaved an anxious sigh, and looked deep into Sโveniaโs eyes.
โOkay, so youโre Sโvenia. Could you, er, remind me who you are again, please?โ
Sโvenia stared at the older man before her as a breath escaped her lips. He had forgotten who she was. While it was true that the two were never extremely close on the campaign trail, Sโvenia was still taken aback by how quickly he had forgotten her. For her, it wasnโt all that long ago. She thought of the many interactions they, as a team, had. She remembered back to the many nights they all stayed up trying to plan an election. The many days spent working together. It had not been long for her, but it may as well have been a lifetime for him. Her eyes shifted to the ground as she pondered the request. How can you help someone remember when they are gone? More so, how can you introduce yourself to an old friend when you donโt know who you are? Sโveniaโs eyes lingered on the mat for a brief moment before they slowly rose back up, locking in place with Proctors, and a small smile spread across her face.
โI am the journalist,โ Sโvenia spoke as she shifted her focus down to her wrapped-up computer. Unfurling it in a quick motion, Sโvenia waited for it to power on as she kept Proctor in her peripheral vision. โThere was a time when we worked together. We tried to elect a good man to be the mayor of this district, Dexter.โ Sโvenia paused as she looked back at her companion. โDo you remember the campaign or Dexter,โ she asked as she pressed a few buttons on her computer. Various pictures floated into view on the screen, and she shifted her position so that Proctor could look at it. She flicked through the photos at a pace that was almost impossible to track. Eventually, she pulled her hand off the screen and pointed down towards it.
โThere you are,โ Sโvenia smiled as she spoke. โYouโre in the background in a lot of these photos,โ Sโvenia continued as she swiped on the screen again. โHere you are with Dex,โ Sโvenia paused as she let the image sit for a moment, โand here we all are in a group photo.โ Sโvenia shifted her focus back to the elder beside her.
โDo you remember any of that?โ
Proctorโs own eyes looked back at him from the screen down in Sโveniaโs lap, his own gaze as strange as the rest of the group. Some faces he recognized, yet couldnโt name or recall the stories of. It was reminiscent of all the times he had looked over embarrassing photos after a night of barcrawling. These memories were missed. He wanted them back like nothing else.
โDexter Campbell.โ His index finger hovered over the visage of the mayoral candidate, smiling amongst the colorful cast of outcasts and rejects that had been running his campaign. โI owe him. Just let me find the bastards that killed him so I can repay them in kind, and maybe then I can finally rest these weary old bones.โ
Proctorโs eyes shifted over to the blue eyes to the left, Sโvenia standing prim and proper with a large, charismatic smile on her face. The version of her that sat in front of him looked hardly different. Perhaps a mite less energetic with slightly darker circles around her eyes. She still exuded a sunniness uncharacteristic to the Reclaim. It stirred something reminiscent of comfort in him, knowing that someone else that had shared the ill-fated campaign as him hadnโt allowed the relentless destruction surrounding them to drag her down to the depths of despair that Proctor had come to know all too well.
โDo you know anything? About what happened to Dexter, I mean.โ His perplexed gaze returned to Sโveniaโs.
โI know more about what I donโt know,โ Sโvenia started as she flicked through a few more photos on her computer. โDo I know anything,โ Sโvenia thought to herself as the smile began to fade. Sโvenia knew the monster that assaulted the debate was unlike anything else unleashed on the Reclaim. It was fast, adaptable, and it was a ghost. There were never any leads she could find, no sources to track down, and she was no further along locating it today than she was on the day of the attack. What would she do if she was able to find it? Would she confront it in a dark alleyway as it returned home from the bar? Would she send an anonymous tip to the Enforcers? No.
Sโveniaโs eyes drifted back down to the tablet below. She paused the swiping for a second, her hand hovering just an inch above the screen. Sโvenia knew if she found the one responsible for the attack on the debate stage, it would not be her actual target. The world saw the beast for what it was, Sโvenia wanted to find its Frankenstein.
โI tried to track down any information I could, Proc,โ Sโvenia started as her smile returned faintly. โI checked under every nook and cranny, offered up a substantial reward for just the smallest crumb of information.โ Sโvenia paused as she allowed her hand to return to the screen. In an instant a code was typed, prompting a hidden folder to open up. Proctor would see many thumbnails with many interesting names. In a fast tap, Sโvenia opened the one titled โThe Truth About the Darkโ, and a slideshow of pictures began to play. The subject would be a familiar, if not terrifying, look at the assassin.
โWhen the assassin was on the debate stage, I did what I could to stop it from killing anyone else,โ she paused as she exhaled sharply, โall I got for it was these photos.โ Sโvenia paused as she allowed her smile to return more to full. She knew she had gotten more than any other reporter there that day. As they all ran for cover, as they all hid from the fight developing around, Sโvenia managed to do something. She managed to save someone. At least that is what she told herself. Sure, it may have been the corrupt Gatch. Sure, that may have ended up causing more harm to the district than the good that she did.
โIโll tell you what, if I ever locate whoever was behind that attack we can go after them together.โ Sโvenia nudged the shoulder of Proctor with her own. With a few taps, she closed out of the slideshow and closed the folder it originated from. She swiped for a second, eventually resting on a group photo once again. โMaybe that righteous firefight is what your old bones need, Methuselah.โ
Proctor attempted in vain to absorb all the various details of the assassin. The wall of fog in his brain would surely deny him any later recollection, despite his best effort. He finally broke his long glare at the screen to lock eyes with Sโvenia.
โYou help me get ahold of a few doses of Neurosynth, youโll have your own personal Watson. Without that, Iโll be just as useless in the gunfight as I am now.โ His gaze returned to the screen as he continued to talk. โI mean, look at me. The time since the campaign has not been kind to me. Some days I canโt even remember my own name. The only thing I remembered about you was your name! Itโs all soโฆ.far away from me. Like I have to grasp at straws to remember what city Iโm even in. Iโm in no shape for a fightโ His eyes fell to the exposed piston which had been freshly installed in his leg.
โSay less, Methuselah.โ
Perhaps it was a trick of his mind; perhaps remnants of a visit to Limbo were reflected in splotches and specks of color crossing Gabrielโs myopic gaze.
โJust bring the aug scanner with you, Angel. Just in case...โ Insectโs voice echoed back. Gabriel couldnโt be sure it was in his headโfading away with the last remnants of visual trails as his eyes adjusted to the Reclaim streetsโor if that spider-like drone still lurked somewhere nearby.
... but why does he need it? the doctor wondered. He tried to think of the reason for Insectโs insistence.
โDoctor Gabriel,โ Dharma called him. She had a habit of doing that despite his rather unofficial post at the clinic. A lot of the monks had similarly obscure backgroundsโsome schooling, some certifications, but mostly they knew their way around man and machine from tradework in the clinics. Dharma was like that too, or at least, thatโs what most assumed when Gabriel asked around. Dao hired her on, welcomed her into the fold and she quickly integrated, but she had no other references.
She greeted him at the doorway and gestured within. Her movements were like waves. First the flow, then the crash. Graceful, then abrupt. โLots of new patientsโand visitors. Some of your type maybe. Grinders with heavy mods, but not monks; classic Reclaim types; even a reporter today, so maybe keep an eye out. Oh, and some girl off the wire came and crashed her way into the dojo downstairs, I think.โ Dharma smiled, but her stonework gaze went past Gabriel. Her optics tremored like they were refocusing or pouring over an over-stimuli unseen outside of her AR.
Gabriel cracked his fingers and glanced around at the cavalcade of patients. โAlright, letโs cut into some people,โ he joked, โwhat types of augs are they packing?โ He pulled out his augmentation scanner.
A man stepped through the vagrants outside, scarcely acknowledging them. Combat boots too new for a run-of-the-mill Reclaimer, suspenders and a black polymer jacket to match, but it wasnโt rough-make recycled polymer. It was fresh, albeit scuffed up just enough to conceal a weave beneath. Off-duty kevlar.
โAnd heโs got a strap,โ Dharma said under her breath, more to herself then to Gabriel, but she looked at the doc afterwards. โAnything specific on your agenda today? Just let me know if you need some help or need to find anything. Or you can always play my sidekick for the day.โ She smiled at her own banter, perhaps to draw attention away from her continued scans.
โIโm nobodyโs sidekick,โ Gabriel retorted, a sly smirk spreading across his face, โthough if I had to pick someone to play lackey for, itโd definitely be you.โ Gabriel adjusted the Red Cross satchel on his hip and nodded. โJust the usual; give me whatever patient is worst-off and Iโll do my best. Iโve got enough spare parts in my van from last month to fix damn near anything.โ It is unclear whether he was talking about mechanical or... organic parts.
The newcomer ran a hand along his jacket, to smooth out creases made by the bulk beneath. His eyes flashed past the monks and their charges like they were pipework in the background of the Reclaim streets, but as he passed Howland, almost bumping into the psychiatrist, he smiled and bowed his head. Perhaps it was because he recognized Howland, too, was observing. Howland, too, could see his friendsโsame style black jackets, freshly scuffed polymer, moving tightly together. A small team of them circled the clinic while another posted themselves near an alley access door.
โSmogโs got the sky darker, even in the evening, doesnโt it seem?โ The lone jacket spoke to Howland, as though he thought heโd picked the right time, place, or target for small talk. He gave another friendly smile and started towards the doorway, but looked back. โGot business with the monks or just here for the spectacle?โ
โCall it a professional interest,โ Howland replied, without looking at the unwanted interrogator. Heโd abandoned the electric-green Reclaim-punk disguise and approached the clinic from another angle; having rejected targeting the clinic directly, there was no need to hide any personal presence. Perhaps the monks would be less guarded towards a medical practitioner.
โIs that...?โ Gabriel muttered to himself, squinting at a figure across the room, โHowland?โ The doctor smiled, waving a hand to beckon the other doctor over. โHowland! What are you doing here?โ He seemed genuinely happy to see the man, despite the direness of the circumstances and the mounting injuries which surrounded them. Gabriel had seen too much blood in his life to be phased by it.
Howland turned at the more recognizable voice, bringing forward a disarming smile. โGabriel!โ The doctor provided a good excuse to put some distance between himself and the black jacket, so Howland walked towards him. โI came to see if I could help - but with things turning violent, I thought it prudent to avoid getting myself hurt in the process.โ
Gabriel nodded. โNot a bad move. Iโm glad I picked a less violent lifestyle,โ he continued, โThough I still spend a lot of time dealing with blood.โ
โCanโt say I donโt miss my office right about now,โ Howland said with a wry grin. But his expression didnโt last, and his tone turned serious. โHow can I help?โ
Gabriel nodded. โHowโre you with surgery? Iโm sure lots of folks around here need it.โ
Howland shook his head firmly. โI can render first aid, but Iโm not a surgeon. Iโll leave the cutting to you, but Iโll lend my support.โ
โThereโs always someone looking for your assistance if itโs there. Are you a friend of Gabrielโs?โ Dharma said to Howland as she approached the pair and tapped Gabriel on the shoulder. โAnd in terms of your work, it seems weโve got a few candidates that need more than your spare parts. This could be a good place to start, your friend can join us.โ
โThe one with the reporterโ She gestured towards Proctor. โFull set of deteriorated limbs. Heโs some old merc type. APEX Furytech limbs and plenty of tin on the inside, too. Usually his type gets by, but it seems like Neurosynth deficiency.โ Dharma paused and took a few steps towards Proctor and Sโvenia. She raised one of her prostheses to wave Proctor over. When her arm moved, it was like liquid in the air, then straight back to a solid foundation though still subtly swinging with the resonance of harp string. Proctor saw the flash of her matte-black industrial limbs in his peripheralโa single hypnotic pattern, just distinct enough to be recognized as something other than visual aberration.
โSymptomatic dementia fromโฆ deficiency. No Neurosynth.โ She hesitated over mentioning the drug at all. โGot SPECS. At least I think so. Probably wouldnโt go so well if we really started opening him up Ship of Theseus style.โ
The sound of a small blast came up from the tatami beneath them. Dharma smiled, though hardly acknowledged the sound as she approached Proctor and Sโvenia. The man in the black jacket had entered the temple once Dharma had left its entryway. He went straight through the crowded room of mats and descended a staircase in the back. A series of soft orange lights flickered around a ring that carried the sequence around the templeโs interior walls. Dharma eyed it as it passed.
โGood to see youโre already back on your feet. Did what I could with your Striders,โ she said to Proctor. โHow are the rest of your augs? Howโs your head?โ Dharma, like the rest of the monks, sometimes had the habit of being circuitous in their verbal diagnostics.
โ... Good fucking Lord,โ Gabriel mused. Both his eyes and his bio scanners told him that this individualโs body was dying already. โAlright, can we get this guy on a bed? Iโm gonna need some... everything...โ the doctor trailed off, muttering to himself as he began to gather his tools and augment parts from around the clinic. He came back with what looked like a bin of scrap metal, but upon closer examination contained various spare parts that Gabriel had salvaged from augs over the years, most of which had small modifications and modernizations made to them. Anyone wondering what the doctor was working on in his van for so many hours every day now had their answer. โHey buddy,โ Gabe addressed Proctor directly, โhow many neural implants do you have?โ
โIโve got alternatives to Neurosynth we can use in an emergency, but all the knockoffs Iโve made are toxic in more than the lowest doses,โ Gabriel admitted, โAnd this guy looks like heโd need a lot.โ
A few moments elapsed. Proctorโs jaw sat slightly agape, eyes shifting back and forth from the various silhouettes that had approached him and Sโvenia and interrupted his visit to the past. Mouth shut and brows raised as he began to consider the litany of questions sent his way. He tried his best to ignore the shadows. Deep, pure black figures that stood amongst the crowd around them. They all stared at Proctor, even in spite of the absence of eyes. They hadnโt been there before. Their odious presence was all Proctor could focus on now. It took a moment, but his wandering gaze returned to Dharma standing in front of him.
โMy head?โ A chuckle, meek and unsure, escaped his lips. โFoggy. Like usual. The legs feel much better, thanks for that, butโฆ Not much to speak of when it comes to the head. Everything else feels alright, about as old and creaky as usualโ
Another voice cut in after the monkโs but it wasnโt immediately audible. Proctorโs attention had again been pulled away from those who stood in front of him, and towards the others that had shifted forward. Dark shadows had closed ranks around him. Proctor knew there was no way they could be corporeal beings, but that didnโt stop an intense dread from crawling its way up and down his spine.
His eyes shot forward again.
โNeural implants?โHis brow furrowed.โIโmโฆ not really sure. I think this is the only one.โ
He raised a hand which had begun to subtly shake, he hoped they wouldnโt notice, and tapped the large metal plate that encompassed most of the back and sides of his head.
โCertainly donโt do shit for memory, thatโs definite.โ
Proctor peered down at the box full of spare parts, raising an eyebrow.
โYou a mechanic or something? You donโt exactly look like a monk.โ His voice sounded more distrustful than curious.
โBetter than a monk,โ Gabriel replied cockily, โIโm a doctor. Got a medical license and everything.โ The doctor began to dig around in his bin, pulling out what appeared to be a robotic elbow joint. โAlright, so in laypersonโs terms, SPECS typically hits in cases where someoneโs augments donโt line up with what the brain wants to happen. The brain is highly adaptable, but not so adaptable that it can deal with a bunch of contradictory signals at once.โ
Gabriel continues: โMost of your augments, from a purely mechanical and practical perspective, are working just fine--although they could definitely use a tune-up. Much like a computer, an old aug can still perform its basic functions, even though it might slow down a bit with age. The issue is, the brain doesnโt change at the same rate as an old machine.โ
โThe issue here is that these old augs donโt do a particularly good job accounting for subtle, almost-imperceptible decreases in performance overtime. Both the brain and machines change with age. A car or a computer slowing down a bit is fine, but when working with the human brain, that shit has to be EXACT. When augs started coming out, we didnโt fully understand the effect these had on the brain. Newer augs have some of that buffer built into them, which is why Iโm about to replace your shoulders and elbows with something a bit more responsive.โ
Proctorโs face curled into something skepticism and confusion.
โUhm. That sounds nice and all but what about some โsynth? The hands and feet work fine, itโs just thisโฆโ A sharp, frustrated inhale โ...damn fog! One day I canโt remember where I live, others I canโt remember my own fucking name. The street shit only does so much.โ
Proctor gestured towards the disembodied elbow.
โMaybe thatโll help the stiffness, but I need something more than just that.โ
Sโvenia backed up slightly as the doctor started his assessment. She kept herself close to be a familiar face to Proctor, at least for the time being. Howland backed up and stood next to her. Visible only to Proctor, just for a moment amidst the incorporeal shades around them, Howlandโs clinical, detached look held something else in it. Not quite sympathy. Pity. A moment later, Howlandโs face was once more a mask of clinical concern. โThis isnโt exactly a sterile operating theater,โ he said to Sโvenia, under his breath.
The doctor frankly looked irritated. โFirst and foremost, my work isnโt โstreet shitโ. I worked with Gaea Naturae on their biomechanical interfaces, and Iโve seen this EXACT problem about a hundred times. Secondly, Synth is a great short-term solution, and can be used to treat SPECS with a proper supply,โ Gabriel replied matter-of-factly, โBut the more dissonance you have between what your brain says and what your augs say back to them, the worse your SPECS is gonna get.โ He sighed, trying his best to explain as best he could to the poor old man. โIf we just give you โsynth and send you on your way, thatโll only slow down the progression of SPECS in the short term. If you let me operate on you, I might be able to slow it down permanently. That shaking in your hands? Thatโs the sign of a battle going on between the parts of you that are flesh, and the parts that are mechanical. We need to make them get along.โ
โI canโt operate without informed consent, though,โ Gabriel adds, โAnd I can do way, way more for you if you let me open your neural implant so I can re-synchronize your augs. What do you say?โ Despite his coldness, Gabriel was entirely sincere.
โThat voiceโ Sโvenia thought as she froze in place. That voice was one she has heard before. It was familiar if a bit unknown. She fell into a memory pit as she thought over who it belonged to. Dashing between thoughts of the explosion at the square, and the moments prior, she came to the realization. โThe enigma, or the curiosity?โ She paused the thought as her head slowly shifted to take in the frame of the man beside her. โAhh,โ Sโvenia whispered under her breath as she shifted her focus back towards Proctor. โIndeed, but given the circumstances I donโt imagine we could find much better for Methuselah right now.โ Sโvenia paused as she unwrapped her computer again.
In a furious motion a command was entered and her drone turned its focus towards the pair. It hovered upwards a small distance before it settled in, and focused its lens on the pair. โI donโt think we have met Dr. Parker Howland.โ Sโvenia slid her glasses over her face as she turned and faced him.
โIโm Sโvei, reporting on this ongoing tragedy, pleasure to make your acquaintance,โ she finished as she shot out one hand towards the doctor while she pointed with her other at her drone. He was a curiosity, an aberration even, and Sโveniaโs own curiosity outweighed her fear of discovery. As well, his presence alone would be worth a few thousand interactions alone on a story.
โParker; itโs a pleasure as well, Sโvei,โ Howland replied. A smile flashed across his face just long enough to be polite before dropping; the circumstances hardly warranted an expression of happiness otherwise. โAlthough the circumstances could be better. I came here to help, but emergency neurosurgery is a bit beyond my skillset Iโm afraid.โ
โI understand that,โ Sโvenia paused. โI came here to show the good work that the clinic performs as the Reclaim sinks under her own weight, but all it takes is one look beyond the gates here to see that there isnโt enough room on this lifeboat to save all who drown.โ Sโvenia typed a command to her drone, causing it to pan across the crowd. As it did, she spotted a fresh deviant in the form of a black jacket. Interesting. What would bring an undercover to these parts?
โI will do what I can,โ Sโvenia continued as she turned towards Proctor. โWhile emergency neurosurgery is out of reach for the both of us, I am sure we both have skills that can help. Mine is to remind the people that there is still enough hope to cling onto to stay afloat for now,โ she paused as she shifted her focus down towards Proctor, โor to help remind one person who they are.โ As she finished speaking she watched the undercover man cross the clinic with a curious intent.
โYouโre in good hands,โ Dharma said to Proctor as her eyes followed the man in the black jacket disappear from view. Once heโd descended the stairwell, four others with unmarked gear entered the clinic and headed after him. Dharma started moving after them, hardly turning from the group of patrons as she did, though her eyes were tracer-like, honed on her mark. There were glowing crescents like waning moons, and the shapes rotated in her amber irises as she briefly locked eyes with Sโvenia, reacting to a stimulus or perhaps PROCing a scan based on some internal parameters. She disappeared down the stairwell.
An array of voices, whispers. Some real, some imagined. Proctorโs confusion was mounting. Between the barely audible murmurs between his old friend and a strange face that barely stood out from the shadows, or the jargon being flung his way by the doctor he was clearly annoying, his head was beginning to pound. The metallic angel spoke up, parting the avalanche for a moment.
Her reassurement settled him a bit, but the doctorโs words drew his attention back down to his hands, which continued with a slight tremor.
When did this shit start?
When his eyes met Gabrielโs again, there was little in the way of confidence to be seen. It was obvious he was frustrated and scared, almost in the same way a child in a strange place. What was there to be frightened of?
A strange place? Strange people?
There was no such thing as familiarity for Proctor anymore.
โFine. Letโs do this โoperationโ then. What have I got to lose?โ
Sโveniaโs concentration on the undercover enforcer, and the others that followed, was soon broken by the stunning stare of Dharma. Sโvenia immediately shifted the focus of her drone on a random patient at the clinic. Was there more behind those curious crescents than what met her eyes? Or would this be just another example of how wondrous some augmentations were? Sโvenia pondered the thought until the Dharma was well down the stairs.
โCurious development. Enforcers at the clinic,โ she spoke softly but audibly. โI wonder why they masked their presence from the crowds outside.โ A curious development that churned the waters. The enforcers never appeared somewhere without cause, Sโvenia knew this all too well. Whether this cause was just or not was made more clear by their apparent desire to blend in. They had something to hide. And when enforcers had something to hide, they had a story to tell. And Sโvenia knew she wanted to be the one who spoke their Truth to the world.
With a quick wave, Sโvenia turned around and started to look for a way down that would not draw attention to herself.
The reasonโs faded, but she knows it will โโ๐ธ๐๐ผ back in. Everything does. Pushing through the cloaked baldies and their homies was experienced more in still frames patched together with searing glares from bright lights blurring her sight.
The next she remembered, the studio was ๐ธ๐๐ ๐ผ๐๐ผ๐, all around her. Delilah stood center stage and the human-machine ophanim half-surrounded ehr. In front of her was Shade. Through all the haze and hot, piping proselytism, sheโd found him. Somehow. Like always. Because she was a fucking operator. Unconcerned. Unhinged. Periodically punctuating declarations with punches. Heart palpitations made her jump and jet torrents of flames and leaking coolant, spitting sparks from loose wires in the web of her AMALGA Deck and breathing in the fumes from its hot connection ports half-jammed with cement dust and particulate rubble.
The shaman, for a second, was forced to tear its gaze away from the Shade and, for a moment, remembered a connection to someone named Delilah. When she looked back, she saw Dao. His name conjured faith from a memory of fragmentation at Central Square. He spoke:
โWhere does your anger come from?โ
HeโDelilah thought, she was too dazed to speakโwas haloed by white light trailing off in Mandelbrot tendrils, like the ghosts of firing neurons branching past his skull. Or was it just another malfunction, twisting the Prophet Array. She tried to think of Shade and recall what happened. What had he taken? Money or information? Shade stepped into the center of the mat. She was moving before she realized, breaking from Daoโs gentle caress, taking hasty, heavy steps until she met him at the center and pumped back her arm; threw it forward like the machine it was. Her fist met Shadeโs face and blasted a cone of sparks like tracers in a shotgun thick enough that she feared it would ignite the tatami beneath them. The watching wall of spectatorsโ eyes lurched back and that pleased the Shaman.
โDelilah, waitโโ
She heard Shadeโs words after the act, like her senses had lagged several seconds. His voice reverberated and the lights seemed to shift with it. More radiant flashbangs, triggering slowly in time dilation. She heard the overclocked fans of the AMALGA Deck struggling to keep up and spewing hot air against her skin. Then, Dao again:
โFrom mistreatment. From mismatched, incompatible cybernetics strung together. A cloud with no centrality.โ
She tried to ignore him and stepped to Shade again. He flinched back, still crumpled down to two-thirds his height on a leg prosthesis with broken servos. She remembered.
โYouโve got my datastore. Footage of the [[[๐ธ ๐โ๐๐๐]]] in Central Square, scripts from the Knights Enterprises Heistm and moreโฆ You think you can just avoid me, hold that shit over me, youโโ
She couldnโt tell if she or Shade had lunged first this time, but he caught her hand in his grip and bent it at the wrist. For the first time in years, the joint felt filled to the brim with frayed nerve endings and atrophying muscle that convulsed in his wristlock. Delilah fell to a knee and almost threw up. More sparks sprayed from her hand; tendrils of smoke almost imperceptibly slipped from the ports of her AMALGA Deck.
โYou know Iโm a data archivist. I got that shit locked away, and it stays there.โ Delilah lurched and her wrist twisted in Shadeโs gripโlike muscle and clogged arteries morphed their way back into the chromium limb. โI had to go dark too.โ He glanced at Dao, with each word bubbling in his throat like he was choking on them. โYou knew. Security,โ Shade said, โover paranoia,โ as though it were a rehearsed mantra.
Delilah tried to parse his words, figuring there might be some sort of epiphany within them. There usually was, she thought, if you dug deep enough at any mundanity or absurdity. Then Shade had a baseball batโshe wasnโt sure where it came fromโand he cracked through her jaw before she could wrench her hand free. She collapsed.
โWhat happens to people like you, try to play pawn of chaos?โ โWhat happens to people like you, try to play pawn of chaos?โ
The Shaman growled something feral as a beast but unfeeling as a machine. She moved harmoniously, despite her wristed still pinned against her chest, sweeping Shadeโs legs and pouncing on top of him. She hoisted the bulk of the AMALGA Deck constricting her with its cords and slammed its pointed corner towards Shadeโs eye socket until the light in his optic went dark.
โThey become Lernaen.โ โThey become Lernaen.โ
โWe were partners,โ Shade said, โWeโโ
โ๐ฃ๐๐ ๐ฅ๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐๐ฃโฆโ Blood dripped from her chin onto the mats. Delilah only heard the sputtering fansโthe Deckโs omnipresent thrum of internal mechanical energy. It strainedโthe way it did when she ran the Prophet Array projectors too long,
The blood evaporated. Delilah was still kneeling, but the muscular agony was gone. Her wrist was ensnared in the cords of her deck. Shade was kneeling too, ten meters across the room. She looked back at Dao, who stood just beyond her.
But Dao had already turned away, leaving the murmuring monks to melt from their tight circle and talk in loose groups. Some of them conversed with Shade while others seemed keen on enlightening Delilah or discussing what had happened. Perhaps she should have stopped and took stock, to understand, but it didnโt quite cross the surface of her mind; whenever it did, she pushed it aside.
Dendrites of disconnected white wires still stood, though ethereal like floaters in her eyes. They receded, following Daoโs crown as he rounded a corner. She followed too, though tired, still carrying enough strengthโor at least enough deadbeat determinationโto bruise through any monks and denizens accosting her with curiosity like some treasured or pathetic oddity.
Dharma nearly ran into Delilah as she stumbled through the halls, almost automatically calling out a warningโYouโre not supposed to be downโbut she stopped herself, and recentered, looking for Dao. Delilah could have sworn sheโd seen those crescent eyes beforeโthe way they glinted and spun in reaction to any new visage.
The basement wallsโthough looking like they were made of layered paper backlit by orange lightโseemed to absorb sound. At times, Delilah followed only the remnants of the dendrites firing.
A dead end, and within, a storeroom.
Shelves of steel decorated with leftover medicine, old machine parts, and general maintenance supplies lined the walls. It was all sparse, the last bottles and buckets of the Reclaim, save for the black steel payload in the cleared away center of the room. It was like a trapezoidal prism, and nondistinct with its side clean of any labels. Whatever it was, the crate must have held a majority of the supplies, lest the monks were far deeper entrenched in the poverty of the Reclaim then they let on.
Delilahโand so Dharma stopped in the corridor just outside the storeroom to listen in, but caught only the tail end of some negotiation and subsequent orders issued. There was no door, so they saw clearly within. Other corridors split off throughout the Temple Underground, and one even led up a ramp towards a steel cellar door to the alleyway.
The man in the black jacketโwho Delilah, for some reason, recognized only by the name โTim Smithโโhad met up with his four identically-strapped companions. The goons raised the payload up with a lifting frame.
Dharma was a ghostโno footsteps, dancing the distance between her and Tim Smith and seizing his shoulder before he knew she was coming. She pinned his elbow to his ribs and cranked his hand at the wrist. Delilah felt ghost ligaments of her own snapping like rubber bands stretched too thin as she stood stuck, struck by spectacle and lost in paracosm. Smith drew on Dharma as he dropped to his knees, but Dharmaโs cyber arms struck like pit vipers even outside of her peripheral vision. She elbowed the pistol into the floor and Smithโs first round went into the tatami.
โWait,โ Tim Smith choked out before another of the monkโs strikes connected. He dropped his gun, and gestured back towards the payload. Two of the Enforcers had drawn sidearms as well, still struggling to hold two of the corners of the payload.
โYouโll destroy it,โ Dharma said. Her breath and her pulse sat at an unwavering baseline. Somewhere in her head, the altercation had never happened, or it wasnโt her skirmishing and she was still back topside tending wounds. โโif you drop it.โ
Despite her words, the Enforcers held steady their aim, though they exchanged concerned gazes with Tim Smith. If she engaged them, theyโd have to set it down first, or risk leaving the clinic empty-handed.
โWhatever you think you can do with that,โ Dharma started, โKnow from whose hands you pry it.โ She gestured towards the ceiling, concealing her own concerned scan for Dao. โAnd what resistance you might meet.โ
โIf they knew what you hadโwhat you withholdโmaybe youโd be surprised by how quickly your allies become your opposition when you fail to deliver.โ Tim Smith had retrieved his weapon and leveled it on Dharma. โAnd maybe your masterโand your mojoโarenโt all that you thought they wereโฆโ
โShould you try to leave with our supplyโ Dharma took a deep breath. โYou can keep ignoring our patrons, and trust in my deliverance.โ
โThe Reclaim is dying ground.โ The Artist knew. If anyone knew, it was her. Sheโd seen it before, but hadnโt quite seen the Reclaimโs descentโnot the whole of it. Her friend, the former street samurai, had though.
โWhy does a human so easily stake claim to it, then? For everything you haveโfor everything you could haveโyouโd give up everything for Scorched Earth.โ
The Artist took a step closer to the street samurai, and sat next to her on the edge of a high rise. Two blocks away they saw the block of old factories turned to campaign suites and government offices around Central Square. It buzzed with lights and sounds. Every time the samurai let her gaze rest upon it too long, she became disoriented and started to shake, like her whole body was full of haywire cybernetics. It wasnโt. That was just how she was.
โThis is your home, isnโt it?โ
โAsh and Toxin.โ
The Artist crossed her legs as she sat. The fiber of her cloth mask crumpled as she chuckled silently. โBut itโs just the concoction your people want. You say you want what they want, right? You say you see its endโฆ
โIn cacophonous motion. In its tremorsโฆ It rings,โ she paused and leaned forward so her torso was mostly over the open air, โlike an Anvil against my eyes, my eardrums, my skin, my teethโฆโ
โLike aโโ
โDeath knell...โ
โBut you think itโโ
โEntombed. Flesh beneath barbed alloys, steels, syncretes, plastics. The Cityโs a Golem overtop of it all. Even beyond its end, the Reclaim breathes in its tremor. And I canโt yet be sure if its artifice was the cause of it all.โ
The Artist laughed again, lofting her gaze to the dancing sigils and designs that plastered across her AR glasses. The street samurai, so often described as irrevocably detached, played the Artistโs game of metaphors perfectly. โFor someone so perceptive, you seem to forget a lot. Whatโs in front of you, you knowโฆ The steel skeleton of the reclaim is covered in a layer of its own biotic concoction. Really, your people are biohazardousโฆ and whateverโs left of the dead, when they reach their end, will saturate your entombed city with the seeds for its new mutant iterations.โ
โSublimeโฆ Everything you say.โ
The Artist would have said it the same. โBut you see itโthe city and whatโs to comeโฆ or something.โ
โYou see it too, donโt you? Your art, your wordsโฆ Doomsayers silk, spun from a weaver that sees fate all the same.โ
The Artist stood and swiped a hand through the air, accessing an interface unseen. The samurai, she figured, saw it though. She sawโor rather feltโit all. โMaybe I see beyond this little ledge, but nothing quite like you, Cas. I speak the City into existence, mutant iterations of my own malformed imagination, but you hear it in the tremors and speak back. I manipulate with paint and mandibles, but you are justโโ
โA watcher.โ
โA watcher.โ
โOr so it seems that way...โ
The Artistโs eyes traced a street bike as it raced through the Reclaim maze-like streets without a rider. It skidded to a halt 34 storeys beneath the two of them. They shared a final glance, or rather, the Artist looked towards her friend. The samuraiโs gaze hardly changed no matter the circumstances. So distant, but omnipresent.
โ๐๐ฃ๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐๐ โ๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฃ๐๐ฅ๐ >>> โฆ โHart Mediaโs continued coverage of the Reclaim Zone brings us to Central Square for the final debate of the Twin City Sprawl Council seat election. With the Reclaim as the last zone to be polled and counted, the electionโs results are scheduled to be announced before midnight.
โAnticipation for the event is palpable in the air. Central Square and Swathe Street have been overtaken completely by foot traffic. Itโs as though the zoneโs whole population is here, but people from all over the Sprawl are in attendance to promote and show support for a variety of causes.
โItโs hard to keep track of him, but incumbent Joshua Gatch and his team have been dug in for days in the Central Squareโs attached block of old industrial warehouses turned campaign suites. In a statement to Hart Media correspondents, a publicist for the Gatch campaign cites fears of increased danger in manufacturing facilities for an increased number of APEX contractors on site.โ
[[The broadcast cut to a skeletal woman in a dark suit sitting rigidly on a stool, neon jewelry interfering with the glow from the key lights to make her skin glow a troubling nuclear waste green. A graphic over the lower third incorrectly identified the woman as โLotte Ramona , Central Party Repโ. Dead eyes reflected the dead air, the broadcast entering into a standoff before the off-screen interviewer breaks the silence to repeat their question. The privacy curtain for the interview wasnโt quite pulled shut all of the way. Behind the woman an out-of-focus brigade of private contractors readied themselves to protect democracy while polishing their heavy artillery. Somewhere a producer was yelling at someone.
โIn light of recent events, the Mayor has seen fit to increase the level of security for tonightโs debate to assist the Enforcers and ensure that there are no unwanted interruptions to the democratic process. Knight Enterprise, a subsidiary of APEX Industries, as well as other APEX peace contractors will be present to see that this evening runs smoothly.โ Raised voices could be heard coming from behind the curtain as the interviewer prompted the rep. โIs that true?โ Behind her the crowd of goons seemed to thrum and vibrate with anticipation for violence. The rep turned to look over her shoulder at the action. Perhaps sheโs looking for an escape. The interviewer prompted her again. The repโs almost able to wipe the look of panic off of her face by the time she turned back around.
โSorry, what was the question?โ asked the rep before the question was repeated for the third time. โThe presence of APEXโs Bomb Squad is news to me, but rest assured the safest place you can be is here at tonightโs debate.โ Another question, muffled by the sound of large vehicles. โNo, there isnโt a bomb.โ Another question, this one drowned out by the sound of a helicopter flying overhead . โProbably in case there is one. I canโt say why theyโre here.โ Another question, silenced by a rallying warcry. The repโs eyes were darting back and forth, her hand fumbling with her wristwatch.
โMy NDA with APEX has nothing to do with this, I work for the Mayor. No, Iโm not avoiding the question, Iโm saying I cannot answer the question. Please, just stop asking me questions and listen: thereโs no place s-safer tonight than the debate, I can assure you. Please, if youโre out there, pleโโ
The image cut away from the representative, who was on the verge of tears, back to the smiling, plastic-faced interviewer as they thanked Ms. Ramona and informed her that they were unfortunately out of time. ]]
โSerena Petrukov arrived first thereafter with a small entourageโwhat she called an โenvoyโ of the Pirate Party. Candidate Walter Faren, representing the NLP has not yet arrived and hasnโt been located for further inquiry by Hart Media Enterprises for several days. While plenty self-identified HyperHuman Monks and their supporters have shown up to the event for Chen Daoโs campaign, but Hart correspondents have confirmed that Dao himself is still at the Baolei Clinic, a few blocks away from Central Square.
โNTP candidate Samsara Washington has been caught in briefโerโinterviews, he has been constantly on the move throughout the Central Suites facility, coordinating the arrival of a group of supply trucks that have flanked the facilityโs nearest lots and garages with deliveries.โ
[[ โMr. Washington, do you have any statements on your debate plans today?โ
โDo you have an official statement on the rumors of Amalgamation Corp.โs involvement with the NTP?โ
โWhereโs the rest of your campaign team? And what are you transporting in all the trucks?โ
โSamsara, is that your girlfriend that keeps following you around or just a stalker?โ
Samsara stood flustered and out of breath before the camera. He and Delilah hurried to unload crates and boxes from one of the NTP supply trucks like goons in a crime drama.
โAmalgaโ... shit. The NTP will make all of its announcements during the debate. This is a restricted area for the remainder of the debate to protect suite staff, so pleaseโโ Samsara could hardly get a sentence out before the questions came again. He was pushing a wheeled cart up towards the derelict back garage entrance to the Central Suites compound. As far as any of the Reclaimers or reporters knew, the complex wasnโt connected to the garage for security reasons. Nonetheless, Samsara seemed to be pushing two hefty boxes on the cart, which bowed in the middle from the weight of the boxes. He struggled to get it up a concrete ramp that led to a security door. โCome on, Del! I need some help!โ
Delilah looked half-hunched with her skin a mixture of sickly pale splotched with overheated red. Despite her demeanor, she was unloading faster than Samsara, though she only carried degrading cardboard boxes filled with what could have been mistaken for scrap electronics. She was without the AMALGA Rig wrapped around her, wearing a thick jacket to keep the cold out in lieu of the weave of tangled cords. Delilah could have sworn she remembered being lighter on her feet without the heavy cyberdeck, but each step without it still made her shin bones creak and grind. She turned to the reporters and the cameraman flinched back, as though he thought it wasnโt human for a brief moment.
โStay back, you pawns of Private Surveillance Equity! Iโm his hit-woman!โ Delilahโs migraine was getting worse. A voice, which she thought was her own spoke:
๐ป๐ฃ๐๐จ ๐ ๐ ๐ฅ๐๐๐,
, but she had
๐๐ ๐๐๐๐.
She felt powerless. Minute muscle fibers alternated, contracting and extending, as Delilahโs gaze flicked constantly between the doors and the reporters. She carelessly flailed her hand in the box and spilled a handful of microsofts from her box. The cameraman stepped forward and her sympathetic nervous system overloaded. It felt like she sprained her ankle when she jumped and backed up towards Samsara.
โPlease ignore my assistant. No time for questions,โ Samsara said as Delilah gave his cart the last push he needed to breach the door and duck from view.
Some of the reporters scrambled to grab at the microsofts, though each hesitated before one brave Hart Media rep. stuck the thing in the microsoft jacks along his neck. The broadcast went dead.
โSometimesโthe shit you say in front of the press makes me wonder why you havenโt blown your little alter egoโs cover by now. But I suppose you got that typical Reclaimer look,โ Samsara said to his companion. Delilah couldnโt help but wonder what he meant by that.
But he was right. Sweat beading over heat rash; still shivering despite being wrapped up in his trench jacket. She didnโt say anything.
โItโs fine when youโre going around playing hacker, but this is business. You canโt keep doing it when Iโm aroundโwhen Amalgamation is watching. And not in public. This campaign isnโt one of your RPGs. Makes me wonder why you still get a check from us while you spit in the face of NTP public relationsโฆ And my public relations for that matter. And you tankโโ He wanted to say moreโwanted to get personalโbut at a time like this, he knew better. Samsara gritted his teeth, twisted away from the little quarrel and pushed one of the overweight carts towards the stage. Delilah followed him, but stayed a few paces back. He interfaced with the metal crates on a tablet and they lit up at the edges as the contents booted up. Delilah heard the things inside skitter to life.
โMakes me wonder why you do keep me around. Is it just getting lonely around here? Or are NTP and the Amalga goons stonewalling you? I canโt help but notice we ainโt got no security personnel except for your personal detail from Extropy. Where the hell is Amalgamation? Where the hell are the NTP?" Her questions came one after another, tongue flicking like a snakeโs between her teeth, but she could hardly control where she started and stopped. Somehow her mouth felt numb, yet filled with sharp pangs of pain at the same time. โYou need me just as much, especially now. Even with all your little droids and your tech company blood diamonds, youโre like a little cybersecurity baby.โ She raised her firsts and shook them above her head. โIn fact, Iโm digitally beating the shit out of you in the Labyrinth right now!โ
โWhatโd you take, Delilah?โ Samsara was only half-paying attention. He answered a comms call from one of their security personnel, who was guiding another truckload of goods from Amalgamation into the suiteโs derelict bay.
โNot much. Not yet.โ
โMaybe thatโs why youโre irritable.โ Samsara stepped closer, and Delilah realized how tense she was, ever since they arrived at Central Square. She softened her shoulders. โI do need your help, especially now.โ
โYou didnโt answer me. Where are your corp. shill handlers? They really trust you and your droids to hand them the election with no help? Youโll get dropped as fast as Campbell, and Amalgamation wonโt risk it.โ
โMaybe you misjudge their reach.โ Samsara ran a finger along the metal crates. โAnd maybe you misjudge what theyโre trying to protectโฆ The election. This event. Its outcome. Not me. And for all that, theyโve done their due diligence.โ
โI need the position, for my sake, for Extropy Inc., Delilah, and they know that. Itโs just orders from here. And you know that.โ
The voice of Samsaraโs miniscule security detail came over the tablet intercom: โAnother two trucks are here. Same cargo. Finished unloading, now weโll send โem back.โ
โNo,โ Samsara cut in. โLeave one truck in the lot. Iโll take care of it.โ
โAll this shadowy bullshit. What sort of stage exhibition needs four dozen of these things? And where are all the trucks going? Donโt you need to cart them all back afterwards?โ
โWe will.โ He cut her off quick this time, sighed, and repeated his words: โWe willโฆ Just get them synced up, and make sure feeds are cut off from Labyrinth countermeasures, untilโ... If this goes wrong, Delilah, it goes real wrong. I gotta find Gatch before he goes on.โ He was already headed backstage. โAnd if something goes wrong, Delilahโโ Samsara took one last look back, a soft gaze upon her erratic eyes before his mirrorshades went opaque. It was time for Business. โFind me. We stick together. For real. Iโll keep you alive in meatspaceโฆ So long as you donโt drop yourself first.โ
๐๐ฅ๐๐ฅ๐๐. ๐๐๐...
They called it MINDSLICERโข on the streets,
โand even the dealer spoke to her in ALL CAPS from the moment they met.
She could feel it. Even now, the autoinjector in her hand vibrated with [๐ฃ๐๐ค๐ ๐๐๐๐ฅ] [๐๐ฃ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐๐๐][๐๐ฆ๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐] [๐๐๐๐]; a mind of its own. Or maybe Delilah was just trembling too much to tell the difference. Most people steered clear unless they needed it. Most netrunners who used it forgot why exactly they ever needed it. Delilah knew she needed itโnow more than ever. The thought of [๐ฝ โ ๐ธ ๐พ ๐ ๐ผ โ ๐ ๐ธ ๐ ๐ ๐ โ]โthe horror it brought with itโwas battled back by a feeling that hadnโt come around in a while.
[DUTY?] [WITHDRAWAL?]
On Samsaraโs security feeds, she watched his detail step away from the last shipment of drones.
No waiting. No games. An allyโs fateโor legacyโ could fizzle in absence or stand to remain. Delilah imagined another hacker turning a cheap pistol upon their own face, leaving quiet comms and no trace.
[NO] [NOT CITIZEN K]
She yanked the cables jacked into her neck taut and stabbed the autoinjector through a spot along the cable patched with electrical tape. Itโs payload melted on contact with the wires and followed the electrical current up to where her Electronic-Brain components met flesh. It bound to neuroreceptors and boiled or bubbled like that GREEN brand rock candy that leaves your mouth microbiome feeling like a pit of acid. Or maybe she just imagined it.
She didnโt feel sad, but she felt [BLUE].
Not angry, but the [RED] seeped back in.
Like she was still wearing the glasses, but in a brief and swiftly forgotten fit of convulsions, the glasses had fallen off when the first wave hit.
The AMALGA Rig was whirring and she was in the Labyrinth, but she still saw the crooked table with uneven legs, half-strewn with trash in the derelict suite that Gatch gave to the NTP. Still in multicolor. Pupils still dilated. With heart still racing from all the calories she still burned while just sitting up.
Samsaraโs security feed of the trucks in [BLUE]. A trembling hand clawed towards the screen.
The inside of the trucks through the [RED] lens. The autonomous droids were unpacked and waiting, but all their sharp spindly winds collapsed in on their bodies, like they were crushed into coffins too small.
And in Labyrinth, too. There, it seemed like she could see herself, but she wasnโt sure how. There were no cameras in the suites, especially in the derelict ones. No cameras faced the little crooked table, crumbling in real time. Not red or blue but ALL WHITE LIGHT. Like someone was watching her moves in cyberspaceโ someone there with her. At first, she thought it was the droids or Citizen K. But she was alone.
Then just the same way all her seizures started, there was a CLICK and her neck collapsed back. Dead weight, but the droids felt it too, and to them it was a spark of life.
Delilahโs effigy in the white light had long since vanished. But somewhere else, the AMALGA Rig still whirred, and the Prophet Array clicked on its projectors.
โIf you look deep enough into a mechanism, grinding its cogs to sparks, spiralling, shredding any foreign component that interrupts the inner workings of a great machine; it seems so vile, but then you start to understand why it exists. Because the decision is all yoursโlet the gears click on in lockstep or stick your hand in between their serrated saw blades and feel the metal edges. Feel them twist deeper towards bone. Youโll feel finality in agency.โ
โ๐๐ฃ๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐๐ โ>>.,๐๐๐๐ ?<<>..๐ฅ๐ ๐๐จ??>>.. โ๐{{>>... > <??๐ >>> โฆ โI called the station. We canโt cut the feed. Both vest cams still recording.โ
โRight,โ Salt said. โOutpost Two, Iโm coming in hot.โ The message reached Gloryโs radio only moments before the sound of the grappling hook smashing into the side of the unfinished structureโs concrete walls. Further below, Salt was already in the air, sailingโor rather fallingโafter the hook on its overextended rope. The grappling rope went slack when he crashed into the side of the building. He wheezed for air over the radio waves.
โReeling in. Iโll be right there.โ Salt triggered the industrial winch in his grappling gun, and sailed skyward, watching the edge of the building for Gloryโs outline.
Together, the commander figured, they could at least look like they emerged straight out of some buddy cop movie if they were going to get beatdown in the crowd below. He stuck a hand up blindly as he gasped for breath. Footsteps and shouts from below echoed through the unfinished stairwells below Gloryโs recon position, but their voices were distorted. The swell of sound could only mean that a rush of people from the crowd had entered the lower floors.
As Salt reached blindly up towards the edge of the roof he would find it answered with a comfortable and firm grip followed by words of assurance. โI got you. Cโmon.โ Hauling Salt up over the edge of the roof, Glory gave him a smile before giving him a reassuring clap on the back and cracking a joke in order to try and diffuse some of the stress of what they were about to have to do. โWell. At least you got to use it. Fun as you expected?โ With her brief joke out of the way, Glory resumed taking the situation seriously. โGot a plan for trying to extract or are we going to just dip into the usual playbook for something?โ
Now that Salt was secure, Glory turned her attention to the roof in general. In particular she focused on the door that sheโd forced open to get up here. Being the only access point to the roof it made for a double edged sword: It was the only way up, but it was also the only way down. Unless they wanted to try roping down to another floor, that staircase needed to be clear.
Gripping her gun firmly, Glory pulled it free of itโs holster and checked the chamber before nodding to herself and flicking the safety off. If Salt was watching closely he would see Gloryโs contacts flash briefly as the smartlink systems switched into their active state and synced with the weapon. It was ready whenever she needed it. Hopefully she didnโt, but being caught unprepared in this kind of a situation was a death sentence. It meant something special to interface in the midst of shockwaves. There will always be those amongst us that just operate, and when cocktails start flying from both sides, it helps to keep one eye on the patrons and the other awaiting some
next formula. A new idea. A way to ease and erase chaos, as easy as they do order.
Perhaps thatโs just formulaic hope. Praying for Some ditch effort conceptualization that sometimes never comes.
Stellaโs optics lit up with transparent readouts as a shockwave of displaced air shot past her. The bullet hit the brick six feet and seven inches away from the B - A - R. The measurement overlay melted away. At the origin, remnants of Turkishโs Bomb Squad cleared swathes through the crowd with the vehicleโs mounted turret. Those that remained outside the factory complex with the vehicles were already scrambling for seats, but their barrels remained focused on an enraged massโlike a growth of shadows. Remnant products of forces absent. Grounds run red.
The glow of her optic implants flashed orange on the glass of her respirator. The flickers almost blotted out the scene. Hyperactive motion receptors, flicking towards each disturbance in a radius around the B - A - R. There were a lot of them. Heart rate too high; still climbing. Skin too cold for the surrounding temperature and nearby blazing puddles. These sensationsโthey werenโt alien. They had their place but not here, in this chaos. Stella lived chaos, was its conduit in Limbo. It played out before her eyes, then replayed and replayed and replayed across the cartโs three monitor screens.
The indicator given to her by the goons came alive in vibrations. Its red indicator light flashed at her. It was a simple piece of tech on the outside at least. That was all the communication that was neededโone signal to take the next step. Another of the B - A - Rโs locked compartments unsealed and inside she could see another bottle. Optic readouts identified liquid benzene. Small thermite charges lined the compartmentโs interior.
A single instruction, โBartenderโโฆ Burn and turn...
A man stumbled into Stellaโs cart on a slow retreat. His trembling palm covered a gouged eyeโnot well enough. Stella flinched, and groaned as she threw her weight into the B - A - R away from three enshrouded members of the crowd that pulsed out from the central shrinking mass. She backed away until she felt brick against her back. They were coming closer. Another stray shot ricocheted off the derelict factory and left a bottle of gin in a puddle of shards. Stella ducked low behind the cart.
Unsustainable Heart Rate. Clouding Judgement.
Stella gritted her teeth. This Reclaimโthe surfaceโwas chaos of a different sort. There were too many factors flashing past. Too many to react. More than any one Mixologist could ever quite micromanage.
โBut, Solomon, the Limbo is a closed system; the Mixologist its membraneโnot a barrier, but fielding every intricate factor, letting the alien pass within and beyond. So you, membrane, disperse. Become its equilibrium.โ
Neon haze and star-filled views from the void erased the dangerโฆ
โWhat do Iโโ Stella said, but she was alone.
โIโd say it happens to the best of us, but...โ
โBut it doesnโt. The young Mixologist, perhaps, becomes enamored, lost in new experience, and wavers in the most important moments. The young Mixologist fears lack of preparationโฆ For the Alexandriaโs finest are themselves infohazardous. They change the concept of economy, of life, of freedom. You canโt prepare for that.โ
โWhat? What do we actually do?โ Stella realized she was pressing herself too hard into the metal counter of the Limbo Clubโs preparation station.
Just beyond the partition was a party of engineers who walked right past all of the clubโs defense systems. The turrets, the lasers sparked and fizzled as they entered. They were an envoy or somethingโthe detail had already vanished in her fog. Her BPM monitor went critical, and glinted against her iris. But it started to slow to the steady rhythm of the club as he spoke to Stella. He had the effect, not just on clients.
โDonโt tell me youโre worried. Is it because of the weapons? Believe me, sweetie, even worse folks have passed beyond our domain without you even recognizing the firepower. And rememberโฆ They are the patrons, but it's the Mixologist whoโs truly in control.โ
โOswald lets in a lot ofโโ She was cut off by the gunshot. He held up a pristine steel tray and Stella caught just a glimpse of the reflection. One of her clients was somehow crisp, still burning, but melting into the Limboโs red carpet. Her throat closed up, but somehow she still choked forward another quip. โSometimes you can just taste when a drink is tainted...โ
He placed another glass on the counter. Its contents shimmered in the low light. He put on a smile, and stepped out onto the floor. โCalm down, Stellโฆ Remember whose domain this really is. And remember that doses flow both ways.โ
โTo what extent is it right to do bad things for good reasons? And how may we identify those who do good things for bad reasons?โ A shaky hand held a crystalline martini glass. It wore a silken white glove that ran past a suit sleeve. Despite the tremor, two fingers curled back to smooth his cuff without losing a drop from the drink.
โAdvise,โ he said, and the dim lights came alive around him. โConstruct 3-2.โ
โYes, Valentine?โ
โWhen must you knowingly stop mass harm?.โ His gloved hand flicked high and slashed the air. The three drone monitors hovering in front of him revolved, their positions taken by a new set of three with multiple media sources of the crowds outside the APEX foundry. โHow many of those who know but donโt act push their deeds into unconsciousness?โ
โShould I run this question against a database of recent associates, Valentine?โ
His hand strangled the neck of the glass. He feared it would break. โNo. 3-2, get me on the bartenderโs feed. Two-way. The stage is already set. And open the remote controlled interface.โ
โYouโre sure you want to risk being seen connected to the Limbo Servant?โ
โWith haste, 3-2.โ
โYes, Valentine.โ The lights around him dimmed until only a stark spotlight remained. He adjusted his lapel. The camera drones in front of him twisted in on themselves and opened up with watching scanners.
โI suppose it doesnโt matter whether theyโre conscious or not. It only matters that they exist, but so do I, and perhaps thatโs enough this time.โ
Salt staggered when his feet found the coarse sediment of the rooftop. Glory couldnโt see his eyes, but she could tell something was off by the way he swayed. His hand gently pressed the side of his head, where a trail of blood dripped down from the side of his cracked visor. He took in a sharp breath and settled himself facing Glory.
โThanks. I, uhhโ wasnโt expecting my descent to involve so much downward momentum. More testing to be done before field operation next time.โ Salt made sure he was far enough from the edge to prevent his subtle swaying from sending him back down towards the crowd. โLet me think,โ he said and dropped to one knee. โExtractionโฆ Yeah, we can go down through the stairwells, but weโll run into the crowd on the way. Theyโre probably taking refuge from the APEX goons, or each other, or something.โ
Salt paused for a long moment, though not just to steady himself this time. He fiddled with the side interface of his visor, fighting its glitched state until his gaze was honed in and following something through the building below. โI got something.โ
โThree other Reavers spotted by the reconnaissance teams before they pulled out. It appears like theyโre chasing someone. Maybe the killer? If weโโ Salt paused, and turned to Glory. โWell, youโre in a better state. Iโll follow your lead. Can guide you to their infrared signatures from the rear, but we gotta move to make it.โ
Glory gave a few nods to Saltโs observations before taking a moment to close her eyes and think. Three Reavers that were in pursuit of an unknown party. No information about how they might be armed, and no information on any potential augmentations they had. With the violence and chaos that had taken hold they were likely running entirely on survival instinct, and so anyone who wasnโt one of their own would likely be seen as a threat. Intercepting them and bringing them in would look good, but survival was first and foremost on Gloryโs mind at the moment.
Wading into a situation like that wasnโt Gloryโs idea of a good time, but if they didnโt get moving they ran a real risk of being abandoned among the storm. Unfortunately, Salt had taken a nasty ding. Glory would have to cover him while they moved. A simple enough task in most cases, but due to the rapid and unpredictable movements of the crowds there were enough unknown factors to make her head spin.
The two paths that Glory could see laying before them were wading into the unknown or sitting around waiting to see if the next person to show up would be help or harm. Neither scenario was optimal, but a choice had to be made. Opening her eyes, Glory placed an assuring hand on Saltโs shoulder before speaking with what little confidence she could put together. โAlright. Weโve got to move and try to get out of here. Keep your visor working as best as you can. Bounding Overwatch maneuvers. Iโll lead. Ready?โ
Regardless of his answer, Glory began to tug Salt towards the stairway down in order to begin making their way out of the building.
No stranger to the haze and trance states. It was likeโ a welcome awakening.
Another locked compartment of the B - A - R opened, but Stella hadnโt noticed. A savage Reclaim denizen with a broken arm swung a half-shattered glass bottle for his opponentโs neck. Stellaโs Clairvoyance Optics honed in, analyzed trajectories and patterns of blood splatter both from where the manโs hand gripped tight against the glass shards and where they connected against his opponentโs flesh. The uniforms of whatever warring factions may have come to dance had been rendered useless, dull and ashen in the smoke, so she had no idea as to what conflict existed between the two.
Perhaps that was what was missing amongst the terrans. The closed system of Alexandria extended to its nets of information. Everything coming in and out, analyzed and predictable. Earth blurred its factions amongst the meridian lines. They pervaded into one another, spilling and exchanging resources, bacteria, ideas.
โYouโre a Mixologist...โ
It was hard to focusโdissociating behind the optic feed, letting her vision go blurryโbut the voice brought her back. Stellaโs eyes locked onto the B - A - R cartโs displays. The feed showedโฆ another television, an old CRT, encased with platinum, embossed with designs. It spoke through the static, faceless.
โProgeny of chemists, biologists, ancient alchemists, bards, bartenders, and charlatans. So follow your path. Seek recombinance, reorganize, reshuffle your factors.โ
Stella blinked, and tried to focus her gaze clearly. But somethingโsome shadowโhemorrhaged in her head and all her clarity turned to dust.
โYou have everything you needโchance would have itโto avert unfamiliarity, return to Limbo. Or find a path.โ
One of the silhouettes from the crowd had reached herโbashed his knee into the cart and tumbled into it. Stella stepped back, her. focus ever-distracted by shimmering analysis of the cartโs velocity across the asphalt and where it would return to stillness. The man clutched at his eye. His palm pressed against the socket couldnโt hide the web of blood across his face. He was hardly aware she was there.
some shadowJust another silhouette, herself.dust
โBut by all means, โMaryโ... Donโt let any one passing goal distract you from your art.โ
Stella looked back at the CRT on the feed, and could have sworn it regarded her back. The simplest tilt backwards in recognition of her gazeโit was a cue she recognized in the rhythms of rhetoric in Limbo.
As though catching just a glimpse of a scanner gazing back. Clearly.
In the new compartment, chilled bottles of thick glass and steel alloy. Her optics bore into the new stimuli for microseconds, then action in the artisan arms.
Matching a shadow to the manufactory. Weaving from within. Creating a closed system. Intent not to mend permeable membrane.
For rending biotic connection was always the quickest way to purge a vessel of contaminants.
Seared by disinfectant or drowned in antiseptic.
Stella pried open the industrial capsules and jammed each against slots in the bar. Her formulas intermixed, repressurized, and ran through a tap back into the final capsule. Screwed on top was the same sort of spray nozzle sheโd handed off to the Man in Rags. This one was heavy duty. She adjusted her respirator, ensured its seal.
The Reclaimโs ๐พ๐ฃ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐ฃ โ๐ ๐ฃ๐ก๐ ๐ฃ๐๐ฅ๐ โค๐ ๐๐ โโ๐ ๐๐ธโ'๐ ๐๐ธโ๐ปโ was bisected at irregular intervals with corridors of perpendicularly intersecting highways where 10 storey skyscrapers once held capsule hotels for the factory workers. The capsule fad never quite took off in South City, so the blocks laid empty. The highways were perfect for the dispersion of an autonomous crowdโpaths for conflicts to break and seek equilibrium. Some were quick to use the route as the fires spit more smoke into the street before the APEX complex. Others lingered, still sought conflict. Others made it as far as they could.
The highways led out of the GCZ. Its borders were distinct because the surrounding industrial zone had been excavated at least two or three storeys from the street level of the rest of the Reclaim. Salt grabbed Gloryโs shoulder and pulled her to a halt when they neared one of the ramps that led back towards the city.
โThree signatures,โ Salt said. โTheyโre slowing down. On the ramp.โ He directed a hand towards three silhouettes, ascending the ramp, but congregated before their quarry. The ghostly figure met a fourth Reaver, shredded his jacket open with the same serrated ripper and tossed the man aside as his pursuers closed in. Watching the ghostโs movements felt like a paradox. So slow and methodical, but executed with razor instinct at the exact, decisive moment to drop the Reaver to his knees.
Salt hesitated, instead letting his visorโs display linger on a small ray heat signature hidden in the smoke rising along the ramp. โAnd weโre not the only ones watching the show.โ Salt flicked his infrared goggles up and zoomed in with telescopic lenses on the small heat signature. The ray emerged just below the brim of a trilby hat. Salt shook his head as his eyes momentarily fogged up. It was vertigo, but with no queue. โNevermind. Take point. Iโll back you up.โ
As Glory moved to intercept, Salt caught his balance and gazed back towards the obscuring smoke.
He leveled the black box with his eye in a shaking hand bereft of its own strength and strained to raise his eyes to meet it. โPretendโฆโ he said to himself between heaved and rasping breaths. โItโs your old standard issueโฆโ He gripped the thing awkwardly, like he was mimicking a revolver grip. With a click, the rectangular box erupted with an infrared beam, siphoning measurements across the ramp to his targetโa ghoul and the Reavers that pursued him. As the data reached him, he felt the searing sensation building up again.
The Reavers didnโt wait after their next man fell to the Ghoul. The source of the smog on the ramp rising into the Reclaim became clear when two of the Reavers withdrew clay devices and launched them towards the Ghoul. On impact, boiling tar rode a brief concussive shockwave and released noxious black smoke into the air. The Ghoulโs torso was half-covered, but the ever-present grimace on his face didnโt waver.
I pose a question. Whatโs more evasiveโ A Justice or the origin of Rage once we escape it?
Stella once again found her steady step, rhythmically pressing through the crowd the way a mixologist stabilizes their breath when treading with tray high past the weight of a dozen watching eyes. She held her formula high and sprayed it in a massive cloud as she walked. Those who inhaled the thick mist continued to cough through the smoke, but felt adrenaline fade and fatigue set in. Rage, as though artificially placed, began to evaporate. She caught as many as she could, and those who still sought martyrdom in APEXโs bowels began to break rank. Frenzy gave way to fleeing.
She turned back to capture a last glance of the B - A - R cart. Its surface was a sea of blue flames licking up the last bits of volatile ethanol before it dripped down towards the charges within the open drawers. Then, the inferno became a storm. The B - A - R cart vanished in flares, and the crowd could not remain.
Yes. We'll be prepared for more character introductions after the current scenes are finished. You're welcome to make a character now. I am @Opposition#4407 on Discord. You can add me and join the group for more information about character creation and lore.
There are plans to admit 2-3 more players for the final scene of this season, which will follow an election event in the Reclaim Zone. If anyone else is interested in developing a character for Futility, feel free to message me.
โIf you look deep enough into a mechanism, grinding its cogs to sparks, spiralling, shredding any foreign component that interrupts the inner workings of a great machine; it seems so vile, but then you start to understand why it exists. Because the decision is all yoursโlet the gears click on in lockstep or stick your hand in between their serrated edges and feel the metal edges. Feel them twist deeper towards bone. Youโll feel finality in agency.โ
โ๐๐ฃ๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐๐ โ๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฃ๐๐ฅ๐ ๐๐จ๐๐ โ๐๐ฅ๐ช ๐๐ก๐ฃ๐๐จ๐ >>> โฆ โI called the station. We canโt cut the feed. Both vest cams still recording.โ
โDoes Valentine know whatโs going on?โ
โYou think heโll be paying attention? Of course heโs not going to do anything...โ
The corridors of the factory levelโs interior were tight enough to provide the space a unique dynamic in close quarters confrontations. The Bomb Squad was already sweeping the space in between the walls of heavy machinery and snapping shots of their points of interest. Turkish, however, knew to leave his squad to their prep. He had other plansโwalked straight past as they deployed laser measurements, kicked the loose layer of rust up along the floor with thick boots that sounded like concrete against the steel walkway.
An engineer approached the lift shaft, where her foreman paced with stiff limbs. โThat Irish guy is back.โ
โYou mean Turkish?โ
โBut his accentโsโโ
โI tried calling โManagementโ but the liftโs in use. Looks like someoneโs coming down.โ
โYou think theyโll let us out of here?โ The engineer felt the defeat in her voice before she heard any answer. A calm set of hands smeared grease along her lab coat. His stomping had become almost as loud as the old world lift shaft creaking to life.
Turkish peered down the hallway. He had a console probing the space with green and red light as it scanned its surroundings. โThe security โround โere?โ
Meanwhile, Lott stared unblinking as the red LED number above the door of the elevator changed as she went down and down. There were no blackouts to speed up the process or a kind, armed man to keep her from feeling the passage of time. It didnโt help the woman that time had slowed to a crawl for her, an odd side effect likely brought on by mixing Dr. Howlandโs miraculous meds with two Manhattans that were so strong the fumes alone made the eyes water. Perhaps living life in bullet time would be nice if she were to face off against the violent mob, allowing her to fully articulate the illegality of their actions and how their right to assemble was negated the moment they stepped onto private property, but alas Gatch had handed her a different destiny.
He just hadnโt mentioned the destiny would involve her being trapped in an elevator for what felt like months. If he had, she wouldโve swiped the whole bottle instead of just bringing herself a third Manhattan that was dangerously close to being little more than a whiskey soaked cherry. She shouldโve spent her exile coming up with a plan of attack for how she would ingratiate Turkish so she could use him as a stepstool to boost herself up to new heights under Gatch.
Instead, she found herself entranced by her own appearance in the reflective surface of the elevator door. She was a mess, but she was standing tallerโif only to make sure she didnโt spill the overfilled drink she had made for Turkish. The doors slid open with a ding followed by the scraping noise of a rusted lattice gate used to seal off the lift from allowing undesirables access to the nicer parts of the corporate world. Lott stepped out of the elevator, her suit a rare sight amongst the lab coats and jumpsuits, as the gate screeched shut behind her. Her dead eyes swept her surrounding, settling momentarily on the foreman and the engineer. The auditor in her flared up as her eyes captured images of the employees who should have been working instead of socializing. Just because there was potential that they would all get hammered and sickled to death by a violent mob of rabble rousers did not mean that productivity should be threatened.
โShouldnโt you be working? And shouldnโt you be making her work?โ asked Lott, addressing the engineer and the foreman. There was no malice in her voice because it wasnโt needed, the thread count of her suit was proper intimidation enough. Any protest against her was clear career suicide. She didnโt necessarily enjoy telling them off. She was just playing her part in the great corporate machine, a small cog pushing around smaller cogs to keep things moving.
Lott turned and eyed the man she recognized as Turkish, even though she couldnโt recall a single time they had ever actually spoken. Had they met before? She tried running a quick scan of his face through her archives, but nothing was flagged. She realized that it looked like she might be ogling him, and then she realized that she had been. Lott cleared her throat, looked down at the nearly full tumbler of whiskey in her hand, and held it out for Turkish.
โItโs good to see you again, Turkish,โ said Lott, still unsure if they had ever met. โThe Mayor has sent me in his stead to catch you up on a current situation, should you need it, and to assist you with...โ
Nothing. Lottโs mind went blank. Why was she here? Had she been sent to only give the man a drink? Had Gatch just been trying to push her away instead of bring her into the fold? No, no, no, that wasnโt possible. Her heart rate quickened and her watched beep, a slight sedative administering herself into her system to keep her barely above comatose. Mimicking Gatchโs nonchalant movement from earlier, she shrugged her shoulders as if she wasnโt fencing with a panic attack and said, โYou know.โ
Both workers seemed averse to Lottโs gaze. The moment their eyes connected, the foremanโs attention suddenly slipped away. He turned back to a series of cabinets and a desk, a little space heโd created trying hard to pretend it was an office. Another burst of laser radiation emerged from the device in Turkishโs palm, marking the low edge of the corridorโs corner with a pulse of unseen heat. He turned to Lott at the mention of his nameโstared her down with perplexed brows that looked bent into a caricatureโs pose for a few seconds. Good to see you again, sheโd said. Turkish searched his memories, but his static gaze fell to her offering before anything came.
He took the drink in one hand, continued to direct the laser with his positioning beam in the other. His eyes didnโt stop scanning the corridor as he spoke. โIโm looking for the security room. Some console or office where thereโs gotta be a detailed map of the place or something. Thatโs what theyโll be after.โ Turkish pressed a button down on his beltโs communicator and its brief feedback came from further beyond. Another one of the exosuited squad members jogged down the hall, kneeling in front of the infrared marker and bolting a device to the wall.
โThe teamโs setting up the defensive perimeterโworkinโ their way in, but itโd be best if we could set up โround the payload.โ Turkish moved over to the foremanโs desk, as though cursorily interested in the sheafs of paper and which ones needed signatures or stamps. The foreman couldnโt even pretend to workโjust sat and watched, wondering.
โHe told me that the blueprints were the target,โ Turkish made a face alongside the vague pronoun. Perplexion? Respect? A knowing hesitation. โYou get the blueprints to a few sections aโ APEX prefabs and you know all sorts of secrets about the fuckinโ diameter aโ their screws or something.โ
Turkishโs inspection of the foremanโs administrative space grew more in depth, intense. Before long he had looked over a nearby table, opened up a cabinet by the fluorescent water cooler, and glanced inside some drawers. Inside was one of those new ๐พโ๐ผ๐ผโ High Density Brain Bars. They were all over the holograph NET ads these days. Turkish unwrapped and chomped it. That look in his eyes hadnโt changed since Lott had seen him. Massive pupils. Artificial Lawn Green. The color youโd see only fake yards meant to mimic some trad primitivist fad in The Bayโs upper tiers.
โWhatever theyโre after, they may already be slinkinโ โround the halls. Seen any?โ he asked the foreman before continuing. โWe figure theyโre got someone out there rilinโ up the crowd. Have โem charge the doors and eat up all the C4. while they dash their sneaky lads to the security room.โ The ๐พโ๐ผ๐ผโ bar was gone in an instant, and Turkish kept glancing back towards the desks in the foremanโs โofficeโ.
โWe should have that covered now, though. Should be easy to deal with the targets. Maybe the Reclaim folkโll get in by some fluke.โ He tapped a finger to his cranium, then gestured to the shaped charge now mounted on the wall. Itโs technician stepped back and the charge spit out laser sensor, which soon faded beyond the spectrum of visible light. โClean their mess up for us. Maybe we scrap a bit with whoever makes it past. Clean fun.โ
โI wouldnโt mind seeing that,โ said Lott, hungry for the violence, in what she had intended to be an internal thought. Sheโd been lingering next to Turkish as he ran his scans, shifted through papers, and ate someone elseโs depressing excuse for a lunch. The way he scoped out the room wasnโt too distant to how she used to run her audits inside of APEX Clinics, although those days the only thing potentially exploding were the nervous, red-faced employees frightened by her very being. Lott moved to take a drink upon realization that she had actually spoken out loud to buy time to think of some excuse for what she had said, hitting the empty glass hard against her teeth as the lights burned her eyes.
Lott blinked. She had a full glass before; where had it gone? She noticed the drink in Turkishโs hand, felt betrayal, knew that now there was no point in asking him to get drinks if he already had one, and then realized she had been the one to give it to him. Lott rolled her neck and felt her mind sink into her stomach as a cool sweat formed on the back of her neck. Had she missed a dosage? She checked her watch and the tiny pin needles pricked her skin just in case. She didnโt level out, but she felt like she had leveled up. Realized she didnโt need an excuse. It was the truth. She wanted to watch them grease a few lowlifes.
โIn case there is an incident tomorrow. We need to make certain that your team's methods are media approved. Donโt worry,โ said the meds, using Lott as their mouthpiece and lifting her hand to pause Turkish. โIโm not asking you to shift tactics, or to curb your curses, or to kibosh the cute accent. Itโs just to alert the board so they can sell their shares now and repurchase them back once the price dips.โ
โAnyway, you mentioned tomorrow,โ continued the diazepam, failing to recall that Lott had actually mentioned it. โI am concerned about our contract with Knight Enterprise. They failed to protect the personal property of the Mayorโs Right Hand the other day.โ She felt the phantom vibrations of her phone, a text reminder about the explosion that had also happened failing to come through. If they canโt even do that, how can they hope to protect the Mayorโs actual right hand?โ
Lott sniffed, looked through Turkish, and corrected herself, โMy right hand sideโs right hand.โ She felt something was wrong and leaned against a cabinet to steady herself. โWhat Iโm saying is we need a hand. Will you be there to oversee security? How much do you trust the Knights?โ
Turkish left the ๐พโ๐ผ๐ผโ bar wrapper on the โofficeโ floor. The condensed nutritional supplement had visibly energized him even more, in a strange sort of wired way that had him walking robotic and far too present in physical space. When the first tremor came, it barely shook him. It emanated through the resonant maze of corridors from a source that could only be determined via the amplified vibrations coming from the front of the complex.
The guard out front and his partner had both been civilians not too far back. Corporate guns, corporate greedโthey had a way of changing people. That machine sought their sort and showered them with gifts of what had been missing, their conditions manufactured by the machine itself through crushing competition. None of it really mattered anymore. Now, he was an APEX Bastion, but their feeble barrier was set to break, and after the โsupportโ that had arrived casually strolled inside, he knew it was meant to be that way. He knew he couldnโt go back.
When the last firebomb pressed him back against the brick, he couldnโt do anything to prevent the swelling crowd from pushing the doors. Some came forth with tools to battle the steel doors while others just seemed to be fleeing the terror from within the mass. A crowd that size is more a fluid hive than a rational group. Most of them hardly noticed him. They had their own worries as the fluid mass forced everyone forward, crushing against the brick. He jammed his arm forward, and released the deployable riot shield strapped to his arm which shot out to wedge itself in a corner of two meeting walls. He could feel it pressing down against his chest, but could no longer see the crowd beyond the shield. The job, the guns, the money, it all didnโt matter now. What mattered was nothing at all, or maybe just a hope that the crowd would be focused on the doors, that he would be overlooked as they crunched their way forward, that his shield could stand the weight of the pressing crowd and his ribs wouldnโt be crushed. His job was over, and so he sat waiting.
The doors had given way to pry bars and IED charges by the time Turkish and Lott got to the security room. There was no one inside. Any overseer had either abandoned their post or didnโt feel the need to show up most days anyways. Bad timing. A bank of camera screens flickered to portray the buildingโs corridors across all the lower levels. Swathes of people charged down halls with will and intent perhaps only known to them. They followed signs for the factory floor, but there were others.
โThatโs them.โ Turkish pointed out a series of heat signatures that crossed the path of a jammed camera. โClose.โ He turned, found the rather obvious lockbox in the floor of the security office and let a tube extend from his palm. He motioned for Lott to step back, a gentlemanโs courtesy before a spray of thermite flames hissed against the lockbox door. Those green pupils didnโt shrink in the slightest against the blinding light. He just smiled, took it all in.
There were voices from beyond. Hard to hear over the sizzling steel, but still carrying down the corridors. A resolute man came upon the adjacent hall, seen through a distorted camera lens picking up static from a jammer. He called to a few comrades beyond view, then stared down the hall with a set of infrared goggles. With a gulp of air, and a final double-take bearing a resemblance to what the non-devoted might call regret, doubt, or apprehension, he dashed towards Turkishโs charge. The following flash of light covered the spray of his blood, but when the puff of smoke dispersed, his leg was missing from the knee down. He called out:
โItโs clear. The run to the exit is clear from here,โ he said, in a choked voice. โBut Iโ I canโt walk. I canโtโโ He struggled for words, because he knew they couldnโt change his fate. His stifled weeping was as resonant against the metallic walls as the coming footsteps. The Man in Rags stopped before his fallen disciple, and dropped a stim syringe to clot the wound. The megaphone from before had been replaced by some spray bottle in his hand, tinged with slight bioluminescenceโlife beyond the machine. Integral to the ๐พ๐๐๐.
โThank you for your service,โ he said. โBut APEXโs Bomb Squadโs in the building. Make it out if you can.โ The Man in Rags turned, stared down the corridor at the security roomโs door, stared at a watching shill, nameless, and as meaningless to him as the rest of them. As pointless a role in the grander game in his mind as the fallen pawn. Then, he walked on, and an entourage followed.
Turkish walked out of the office with a black box that looked more like a magic wand than a blueprint, but when he held it up to the light and activated it, a three-dimensional schematic constructed itself, reflecting off of the sulfurous smoke the lingered from within the security office. The pawn made an attempt to crawl towards his salvation, but could hardly stand the pain, and could hardly meet the eyes of Lott and Turkish.
โSquadโs checkinโ in and says most of the folks are inside or runninโ away. Weโre ready to cave to the exits. Tomb โem up. Seems like most of โem took their pitchforks to yer manufactory and are having the time oโ their lives. Wonโt make it out if we can help it. Just keep โem until someone official comes to clean Gatchโs problems.โ He clicked the projection off and pocketed it. Then turned his gaze towards the fallen pawn.
โIโll take this back to Brandon. No orders for a capture mission, so these onesโre all yours.โ
โTells you something about Buddha-nature. Vodka, bloodstains, burning headache. My gun is gone, and it took the stim-high with itโฆ Lifeโas he once saidโis suffering, but we must fight on, or something like that.โ
Xiaolan blinked her eyes like she was trying to get rid of some filter pulled over them. It didnโt go away. Later, sheโd realize she may have just gotten too used to seeing life through the filtered AR of her pair of Hearts Up! sunglasses. She was staring at her reflection, who was also prostrated on the dark floor of the hotel room, full-lotus with red-stained hands immersed in two glasses splashing vodka over their rims. Itโd get the bloodstains out, she thought, but at what cost? Xiaolan could have sworn sheโd seen this image before, digitally alight on the wall of some great pagoda somewhere lost to time. Or maybe she simply foresaw her own fateโsome great, graceful, Bodhisattva of death or something like that.
Spilling half a glass of tainted vodka in the process, she pressed down the dictaphone's button once again with her elbow. โBodhisattva of deathโฆ Iโll use that somewhere. Itโs like zen, but with more aesthetic. Zen as fuck.โ
Who was to say, really, what happened? Could it have been an impulse surgery? They couldnโt be the stains of her own exsanguinations. Xiaolan knew this because she was too powerful, perhaps even immortal. The very thought conjured images of her squaring up hand-to-hand with Raijin. Maybe it was the thundering in her skull. She removed her hands from either pint glass, flicking them around until the sterile smell misted her accidentally. It was only then that she realized, through the mental haze and visual fog, it was going to be another day of suffering. No moisturizer.
Xiaolanโs war purse was lighter upon leaving that morning. A rather off putting interrogation of the morning staff in the fine establishment below her hotel offered few answers. โThe Big Shooterโ was gone, which would mean she would be stylistically limited until her reunion with her custom boomstick. As she left the bar, she plucked a dying bougainvillea from a growbox out front, knowing she'd need it later. There, walking through the damp streets of New Malacca, Xiaolan was hardly present in reality, searching instead through a dark void wherein she hoped to find memories of a night gone wrong but found only blackness. It did cross her mind that today was a day of more than just derelict wandering, awaiting the return of someone with a vessel to go raiding, or wasting away confined in bars she couldnโt afford following cons she could never quite keep up with herself.
It was late enough that Xiaolan already couldnโt keep track of the sun. Perhaps sheโd slept through the day on purpose, because of her imminent meeting. It was a sort of fate that always befell her. Rest never came easy, appearing as a haphazard burnout of the lights, only to leave the Artist of War to awaken in another instance of reality altogether. Always, it seemed, moments before she had to be up and going somewhere else with great urgency. Flowing like water over the steel plates patching streets that wouldnโt be paved for generations.
The Whipโs pink plated was more dented than it had been the night prior. When Xiaolan felt herself take its handlebars in her gripโfeel the slight skew off their axesโshe couldnโt help but manifest the half-mil asyuan. Coin, as she called it sometimes, was abject. It was a horrid necessityโone of the Tools of War. She pondered life as a footpad, a footsoldier, or just one shield in a phalanx. The infantrymen rarely pondered their coin. The general, however, played abstract games to determine the fate of nations. Warfare, as it had modernized, had become less its romantic predecessor and more a game of shifting coin, economy variables, petty intrigue that nonetheless changed fate like no honorable battle ever could. It was through the half-mil that she could once again place herself among the generals, and with the coin there was so much to be done. Enemies could be ended, alliances reestablished, capital collected, and evenโperhapsโdormant relations kindled.
The Whip fishtailed into a drifting stop at speeds cruel enough to leave slashes of blackened rubber burnt into the already dark pavement. Dancing figures, flashing through forms and kata ran through sequences of precision techniques across her mirrorshades. Xiaolan had the habit of leaving files packed with information splayed across her visionโlike she was unconsciously sapping their secrets into her brain in the day-to-day. She grinned when she saw the two men standing as Yin and Yang before the door to Suraiboshen. Catching glimpses of their own optics, the Hearts Up frames upon Xiaolanโs face flickered red, as if greeting them. She smirked.
The establishment, the Artist presumed, might have just the sort of chemically-addled compounds laced into their confections to erase the overwhelming sense of DOOM that coursed in her veins. Every day, in fact, she hoped sheโd find the right chef, or sensei, or guru, or enemy that might help her escape the forsaken state of constantly falling and falling towards something dark and unwelcoming. But then, where was the fun in running away from the battle?
โYour generalโs come.โ โYouโll find nothing of interest.โ โI am the weapon.โ
She paused, letting the perfect structure of her rhetoric linger. Xiaolan was a strange one to frisk, especially with the Big Shooter still absent without official leave, but it was her presence that manifested an edge. The colleagues within must have taken notice. Xiaolan was quick to make herself known.
โDo my screens deceive me or do I stand witness to a fine section of warriors?โ She stepped down the hall, swiveling her head just enough to allow her glasses to devour the schematics of the establishment as well as the profiles of the group sheโd been directed to join without making her gestureโs intent clear. Upon first observation, the rogue detected no immediate enemies or hazards.
But so began the game, And the Artist of War, prepared to follow the Way, Readied her reclamation of a throne on D8.
โWe all want to walk the wire.โ โPlay both sides...โ โLike every major issue is resolved simply byโฆโ โJust crossing the line.โ โChoose a camp, and only then will you often find that evil resides in enemy and ally alike.โ โWe try to walk the tightrope.โ โBut itโs up there that no one sees you.โ โAnd rarely are you ever seen againโฆโ
โ๐๐ฃ๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐๐ โ๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฃ๐๐ฅ๐ ๐๐จ๐๐ โ๐๐ฅ๐ช ๐๐ก๐ฃ๐๐จ๐ >>> โฆ โTensions continue to mount on the contested Northwestern border of Portland and Seattle. Many believe the Lords of War skirmishers to now be trapped inside the hijacked Cipher Tower taken control of only days ago. Hart media is live on the border as siege seems to be laid outside the tower by a force of โโโฆ?โ>>>--??>>>โ
She never knew what it meant for a weapon to backfire. Hadnโt used them enough. That would change.
โFan out. Encircle.โ Such was the way of the Lords of War.
โB-Team keep the Ciphers clear. C-Team withdraw. Relay a report to Knox as fast as possible. A-Team with meโฆ And let the hunt begin...โ
Herald couldnโt help but smile as the Scrap God shielded Petrukov from a final fate. It really was that easy sometimes. One could presume he wasnโt the quickest covered head-to-toe in his worn exosuit, but it certainly served its purpose. As the Jury-Rigg drifted through the wall and splattered its surroundings with small shards of concrete, Heraldโs helmet only emitted a hardy chuckle, haunting with its mechanical amplifiers echoing in the old warehouse. A length of bent rebar smashed into his leg chassis, but he hadnโt noticed.
Per๐๐ธโ๐ theyโd all forgotten her. Perhaps she di๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐จ๐๐ช ๐๐๐ฅ๐ ๐ค๐ ๐๐ ๐๐ ๐ฃ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐ฃ๐๐ฉ. At first it was the subtle burst of interferenceโreminiscent of televisions screens poorly tuned and all thatโthat jolted the Jury-Rigg. Kay first caught sight of ๐๐๐ฃ on a busted camera lens that must have been placed recently overlooking the warehouseโs exterior. Then, the hacker faded back to the base white Labyrinth, and there she was standing r๐๐๐๐ฅ ๐๐ ๐๐ฃ๐ ๐๐ฅ ๐ ๐ ๐๐๐ฃโฆ
Tucked behind a low pylon to ensure her safety and proximity to outlets, Kay was a shadow in the firefight. So no one saw her seize.
Just as quickly as the Drift Demonโs vehicle exploded into view, a solace for his fleeing comrades, they faded from the warehouse-turned-battlefield, leaving only the driver in the dust among the Lords. The moment Petrukov slipped through the garage gateway into the buildingโs connector room, its garage doors began to collapse in all directions, sealing the driver off and sealing the candidate and her lawyer within. It seemed โtheir choiceโ was clear.
As was the decision of the Lords. Their Herald braced his shinplate against a low pylon bursted to rubble and the hulk of metal held from a handle atop and a trigger below aimed at the driver that dared to create an escape route. There was a window of perhaps two seconds where the entire warehouse room could hear that strange pulsing charge as CO2 built up. Then, it all burst out with a puff of ignition fire. The first bang was the 40mm shell firing forth from the barrel of his grenade launcher. The second, almost imperceptibly present in the echo of the first, occurred when the slug slammed into the rear bumper of the Jury-Rigg, nearly taking it off as the car was jolted forward far enough to bend the recently closed garage door in a few inches.
โAim for the wheels and weโll drag โim out of the wreck,โ boomed from the amplifier.
They were like spidersโsilent as them at least, save for the sizzling of the laser burns the Ciphers left in their wake. One of the purple-clad men jumped from the catwalk, harnessed in a thick cable, but the sound of its winch was inaudible over engine revs. He fell in perfect position to grab one of the Lords by the helmet, rip off the visor, and jab the lit flare in his hand down into the face that lay beneath. The winch began to retract.
The corridorโs connector was blackened as the garage doors shut. Two green globes, offset just a bit as though whatever eyes or gogglesโit was indistinguishable which they wereโ were malformed. They illuminated a mouth of titanium incisors twisted in a smile. Inheritor had that habit. His mouth was always half smirking, more slack than would make those around him comfortable.
โEncirclement is dangerous, Petrukov. The Lords are trying to encircle youโฆ All the while sending back their weakest rank to alert Portland. Imagine what would happen if the High Warlord knew youโd double-dipped and dealt with the Ciphers...โ His โSโ trailed off, all snake-like.
โYouโll be under siege. So close to your election.โ Inheritor could see it, almost as if through his optics. A detachment of the Lords dashed back through the opposite end of the warehouse, with aims to reach the GCZโs back alleys and escape into the shadows, crawling their way back to Portland. Some Ciphers would give chase, but neither of the squads realized what watchers might lie in their way.
Serena stared down her adversary. Her animated sunglasses showed their best approximation of an emoticon glare in pixelated nodes of red light. โWhatโs the plan Inheritor?โ
That slack smile return, accompanied by a automatonic cackle. All of the barriers rose, and the doors were opened.
A steady beating bounced off the warehouse walls, metallic, lo-fi. Something within the stereo had busted upon his impact against the concrete pylon. The Bannerlord hugged tight the mighty boombox to his bulging chest, arm veins popped with adrenaline. The archaic machine sprayed flecks of his own blood back onto him with every pulsation. He looked down to his arm, torn open by shrapnel, but he could hardly feel it. The black flag strapped to his back was a dead giveaway for where he was ducking low. It was peppered with the high-caliber ballistics of the Lords of War, even had a long scorch mark that sheared off the top of the flag from a reflected ray of the Cipherโs guns.
He was pinned down, but so long as he remained, the boombox still played.
[h2][color=#008B00]<<<โ๐ผ๐๐๐ ๐๐โ๐๐ป...>>>[/color][/h2]
[color=#008B00]>>>๐ธ๐ฃ๐ฅ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ฅ: ๐โโ๐๐๐๐๐๐โ
>>>
>>> "๐ ๐๐ ๐ ๐๐ ๐๐ก๐ฆ๐ฅ๐๐ฃ"
>[/color]
I am a writer and poet aiming to create surrealistic and abstract imagery in my work. I also greatly enjoy worldbuilding, roleplaying, and collaborative writing in general. I also work as a writing advisor, so I enjoy working with, critiquing, and supporting writing in most of its forms. If you would like to work with me with any piece of prose or poetry, let me know. If you have roleplay concepts, questions, or ideas I'd be happy to listen. For those that enjoy the projects I GM, contact me as necessary. PM at your will.
Contact me on Discord at Opposition#4407.
[h2][color=#008B00]<<<โ๐ฆ๐ฃ๐ฃ๐๐๐ฅ โ๐ ๐๐๐ก๐๐๐ช๐ค...>>>[/color][/h2]
[url=https://www.roleplayerguild.com/topics/167756-the-last-embers-dark-steampunk-fantasy-closed/ic]The Last Embers[/url] --- Tatiana Leviatan : The Black Shepherd Summoner
[hr][hr]
[center][h1][color=#44F03E]๐ฝ[/color][color=#42E93C]๐ฆ[/color][color=#40E33A]๐ฅ[/color][color=#3EDD39]๐[/color][color=#3DD737]๐[/color][color=#3BD136]๐[/color][color=#39CB34]๐ฅ[/color][color=#38C532]๐ช[/color][color=#36BF31]:[/color] [color=#32B32E]๐[/color][color=#31AD2C]๐[/color][color=#2FA62A]๐[/color] [color=#2C9A27]๐พ[/color][color=#2A9426]๐ฃ[/color][color=#288E24]๐[/color][color=#268823]๐[/color][color=#258221]t[/color] [color=#21761E]๐พ[/color][color=#20701C]๐[/color][color=#1E6A1B]๐[/color][color=#1C6419]๐[/color][/h1][/center]
[center][color=008000][b][i]Dare you stand against Titans in a Great Game?[/i][/b][/color]
[color=008000][b]Enter the ๐พ๐๐๐. [url=https://www.roleplayerguild.com/topics/180490-cyberpunk-political-intrig/ic]Move your piece[/url][/b][/color][/center]
<div style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><div class="bb-h2"><font color="#008b00"><<<โ๐ผ๐๐๐ ๐๐โ๐๐ป...>>></font></div><br><font color="#008b00"><span class="bb-greentext">>>>๐ธ๐ฃ๐ฅ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ฅ:	๐โโ๐๐๐๐๐๐โ</span><br><span class="bb-greentext">>>></span><br><span class="bb-greentext">>>> "๐ ๐๐ ๐ ๐๐ ๐๐ก๐ฆ๐ฅ๐๐ฃ"</span><br><span class="bb-greentext">></font></span><br><br>I am a writer and poet aiming to create surrealistic and abstract imagery in my work. I also greatly enjoy worldbuilding, roleplaying, and collaborative writing in general. I also work as a writing advisor, so I enjoy working with, critiquing, and supporting writing in most of its forms. If you would like to work with me with any piece of prose or poetry, let me know. If you have roleplay concepts, questions, or ideas I'd be happy to listen. For those that enjoy the projects I GM, contact me as necessary. PM at your will. <br><br>Contact me on Discord at Opposition#4407.<br><br><div class="bb-h2"><font color="#008b00"><<<โ๐ฆ๐ฃ๐ฃ๐๐๐ฅ โ๐ ๐๐๐ก๐๐๐ช๐ค...>>></font></div><br><br><a href="https://www.roleplayerguild.com/topics/167756-the-last-embers-dark-steampunk-fantasy-closed/ic">The Last Embers</a> --- Tatiana Leviatan : The Black Shepherd Summoner<br><hr class="bb-hr"><hr class="bb-hr"><br><br><div class="bb-center"><div class="bb-h1"><font color="#44f03e">๐ฝ</font><font color="#42e93c">๐ฆ</font><font color="#40e33a">๐ฅ</font><font color="#3edd39">๐</font><font color="#3dd737">๐</font><font color="#3bd136">๐</font><font color="#39cb34">๐ฅ</font><font color="#38c532">๐ช</font><font color="#36bf31">:</font> <font color="#32b32e">๐</font><font color="#31ad2c">๐</font><font color="#2fa62a">๐</font> <font color="#2c9a27">๐พ</font><font color="#2a9426">๐ฃ</font><font color="#288e24">๐</font><font color="#268823">๐</font><font color="#258221">t</font> <font color="#21761e">๐พ</font><font color="#20701c">๐</font><font color="#1e6a1b">๐</font><font color="#1c6419">๐</font></div></div><br><br><div class="bb-center"><font color="#008000"><span class="bb-b"><span class="bb-i">Dare you stand against Titans in a Great Game?</span></span></font><br><font color="#008000"><span class="bb-b">Enter the ๐พ๐๐๐. <a href="https://www.roleplayerguild.com/topics/180490-cyberpunk-political-intrig/ic">Move your piece</a></span></font></div><br></div>