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    1. Raylah 7 yrs ago
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7 yrs ago
Currently super swamped by work and having cold on the top of it, so posts will be delayed

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Christina rode through the eerily silent town. The dead laid in the streets in piles, nobody had time or energy to bury them. Again. Shivers ran down her spine as she guided Betsie towards the Sheriff's office. Whether they want it or not, somebody will have to take care of the corpses, if only to pile them up and burn them, otherwise they will attract rats and diseases will start to spread. Not talking about the horrendous smell that was already clouding the town.

“But it would be a classy way to greet the Devil when he arrives,” Christina whispered into Betsie’s ear. “I’m sure he would prefer streets lined with rotting dead instead of rose petals or red carpets.” It felt strangely rude to talk out loud, even though there was nobody listening.

There was a small crowd gathered in front of Sheriff Reilly. Too small. Have the people chosen to flee town? Or just locked themselves at home, hoping the upcoming disasters will somehow miss them? Or was this all that was left of the thriving lively town? Christina chose to ignore that option.

Listening to the Sheriff's speech felt so surreal. Were they really standing here in broad daylight, seriously talking about the Devil coming to the town? She got off her horse and moved closer, nervously playing with the reins in her hand, finding herself near Jack and the mysterious stranger. Apparently, the big black horse was his, which seemed very fitting.

She giggled when she noticed Jack mumbling something into his horse’s ear. Somehow that put him in a different light, she couldn’t just see him as a cocky pretentious womanizer anymore, the image of him talking to his very normal black and white speckled steed would always come to mind.

“I don’t think the Sheriff is going to give us actual badges,” she said after Jack asked for a shiny one. “Kinda hard to imagine he is storing dozens of those things in his office.” She scratched her forehead. What did she know, perhaps he did. “Anyway,” she turned to Sheriff Reilly, “I don’t really care for badges or titles, but I was born in this town, I spent my whole life in this town, and I’m willing to fight for it.” Especially when it seemed like they had no other choice. Nonetheless, her speech brought out some approving shouting from the gathered crowd. “But I have to ask. Fighting whatever sorcery brought the dead back to life is one thing. But the Devil? How exactly do we fight the actual Devil? I don’t think shooting him in the gut will do the trick,” she giggled nervously. Religion wasn’t really her thing, but she did go to Sunday school and remembered that Devil is not somebody you want to pick a fight with. Unless you are God.

“Also,” she frowned, suddenly remembering something the mysterious voice said, “what did he mean by ‘You only have yourselves to blame for this.’?” They weren’t the most lawful town in the West, but certainly not some lair of sin and depravity. The Devil surely would have some better places to go than Longwater.
Collab Between @Raylah and @Tortoise


Kelsie sighed as she read the message from Abadi. It was not unexpected, but it still hurt coming from her. Of course, just like Kelsie, Abadi most likely had no say in the matter, simply relaying the statements of her government. Even so, it would feel much beter if those words came from that incompetent weirdo Tanaka. But no, he had to get himself shot, heroically saving the Xandalian envoy. Kelsie had to say that she would never expect the kid to do something so brave and selfless. Perhaps she was wrong about him.

The Undefeated were still officially considered allies of the ECU despite the latest diplomatic rift, so Kelsie could enter their embassy without any trouble. The holographic butler escorted her to Abadi’s office and Kelsie knocked hesitantly. “It’s me. Can I come in?” She wasn’t really sure what she was going to say, but wanted to make it right. If not on a diplomatic level, at least on the personal one. That is why she brought a bottle of the best Ellarian whiskey along. It was probably crap compared to whatever the ECU was making, the Undefeated weren’t exactly experts on distillation, but as a token of good will it should work.

The door slid open, revealing Abadi behind a pretty bland, wooden desk. Fortunately, it was the only thing in the room that lifeless: what had originally been a borrowed little office had become an almost permanent habitation for her, and it was finally starting to show. An electric guitar sat in the corner, posters in English, Spanish and Arabic script were hung on the walls, and a little bobblehead of a rockstar was nodding along, perpetually, to a rhythm only he heard. It looked like a bureaucrat's office was invaded by teenage rock fans.

It also perhaps revealed that, despite her position, Abadi was still very young.

“Guardian Kelsie Blackwood,” the holographic butler announced, unnecessarily. The Acting Liaison stood from behind her desk, almost smiled, and then (remembering the current diplomatic situation) caught herself and decided to gaze evenly instead. “How can I help you?” she asked.

Kelsie entered the room, waiting for the butler to disappear. Even though he was just a hologram, it felt weird having someone staring at her all the time, especially with the strange blank expression the holograms had. Even when they were programmed to smile or frown, still there was something missing in their eyes, making shivers run down Kelsie’s spine. And she certainly did not need to feel any more uncomfortable than she already was.

“Liaison Abadi,” she nodded respectfully. “I would congratulate you on the promotion, but given the circumstances…” Kelsie shrugged. “How is Liaison Tanaka? Unfortunately we do not have any medical personnel stationed here, but I could ask the high command to send someone, if you require our assistance. And as for me being here… Well, I got your message and thought it would be better to settle things in person.”

Abadi didn’t say anything, waiting.

Kelsie sighed. “I know that our withdrawal from the Zetan system was a bit sudden and we haven’t discussed it with the ECU. But let’s be honest. The Xandalians were deadly serious about their war threat and neither of us can afford to be at war with both the Zetans and them. Plus the invasion was getting nowhere, getting to the point it was just a huge waste of lives and resources. That was the reason my government decided to withdraw from the conflict and issue such a statement.”

She lowered her eyes, too ashamed to look directly at Abadi. No matter how she sugarcoated it, it still felt like the Undefeated betrayed the ECU and dumped all the blame on them. Kelsie was ashamed she had to justify something like that to her friend. “We are our nations’ representatives, we communicate the official statements of our governments.” She paused and sighed. “No matter our personal opinions,” she added quietly.

Abadi sat back down, not really knowing how to respond. Hollywood Oligarchs never went in for apologies; they threw money and gifts at each other, or quoted ancient literature. And it was just expected the other party understood.

The alcohol was a familiar sight, though.

“I understand,” Abadi said at last, and realizing that was probably too formal, tacked on: “I mean, I get it. You had your job to do. So did I.” She looked out of her window, where Earth was currently visible. She never liked looking at the real Earth, because it reminds you that all the holo-suite fantasies are fake, but it was easier than looking back at Kelsie right now. “I know my message was a little… harsh.” She cleared her throat.

There. That should be enough. Now she looks back at Kelsie, and determined to put it all behind them, bravely changes the subject: “Tanaka is- fine, I guess. To tell you the truth, he’s with the Zetans.” Yes, Abadi thought, you heard that right. “I know, I know how that sounds. But they’re the only ones with the tech to fix him. Option B was just to let him die.”

Kelsie smiled, knowing it was probably hard for Abadi to say such a thing. It seemed that keeping up appearances was the cornerstone of the ECU society, at least between the Oligarchs, and apologizing certainly made dents in a hard-build image. Not from Kelsie’s perspective though, she preferred a direct approach. As she said from the start, she was not the best diplomat.

“The Zetans?” she couldn’t hide her surprise, both from the fact that they offered to help and that the help was accepted. “I don’t blame him. People will do crazy things to survive.” She had seen that many times before in combat. “Are you sure he is in good hands though? Like… won’t they use him against the ECU? Or turn him into something…,” an image of heavily augmented Zetans that paraded around the Meeting Place came to her mind, “... change him too much?” She shrugged. It was really none of her business. “Sorry, I’m just surprised, that’s all. Of course it is up to Liason Tanaka. Please tell him we wish him all the best and hope for his complete recovery. Actually,” she pulled out the bottle she brought, “if you wouldn’t mind, we could make a toast to his health?”

Abadi looked at the bottle with an appraising expression. “Kind, culture and era?” she asked, before realizing the question probably didn’t make sense to anyone outside of the ECU. “I mean, of course.”

So they toasted to the health of Tanaka, currently under foreign care- and as they talked about these things, the conversation naturally turned towards the war.

A few minutes into the talk, Abadi took another sip of the Ellarian whiskey- strong stuff, shouldn’t drink too much- and says “I don’t know, it’s just that when I think about the war and all the fighting… we caused it, didn’t we? Not just our countries.” She was talking about the day her and Kelsie first met each other, and Sigma-Devi, as representatives of their nations. The three-way argument about the nature of humanity, that laid the groundwork for every interaction their peoples have had since. “You and me started this, in a way. Didn’t we?”

Kelsie took a sip and closed her eyes, enjoying the burning sensation and the sudden warmth sliding into her stomach. After her last experience with a hangover, she was really careful not to drink too much. Her eyes still firmly shut, she nodded. This was her recurring nightmare, a thought that hunted her ever since the war started. No matter how hard she pushed it away, it always came back. And it seemed like she wasn’t the only one in such a situation. “In a way. But… It's not like we declared war right back then, six months ago. We were just having a normal conversation, one you would expect to have with distant relatives you haven’t seen for 300 years. The things that happened after… We can hardly blame ourselves for it.” All those deaths and destruction. That was a bit too much weight to carry on their shoulders.

“Maybe it was inevitable. The clash of cultures, diametrically opposite beliefs. It seems humankind hasn’t evolved much since we left Earth, still settling all conflicts with war.” Kelsie smirked, thinking that the ECU should probably be proud of continuing the traditions of Old Earthers. But it was not a remark one would make in a casual conversation. “I try not to think about it too much.” A glass rose to her lips again. “Hopefully it forced both our nations to advance and change enough not to repeat that mistake again. I know the Undefeated changed more than I would ever expect.” Kelsie’s eyebrows went up as she remembered last General’s speech and all the changes that were currently going on back home. She still couldn’t wrap her head around it.

Abadi cocked an eyebrow at this. The Undefeated are changing? It sounds like something the Liaison of the ECU should ask about, but she decides to just leave it be. Right now, she doesn’t want to carry that title. She only has it at all because Tanaka went and got himself shot.

“Yeah,” she says instead, “things are definitely changing on New Hollywood. People are protesting, and talking about getting rid of the protectors. There’s this old religion coming back out of the woodwork,” she laughed, “one of them gave me a pamphlet.” She lifted it out of a drawer, a piece of folded paper filled with talk about searching for the Truth and some pretty poorly-veiled jabs at holo-suites.

Kelsie’s eyes skimmed the paper and she raised her eyebrow. “I’m not really an expert on religions, but fanatic believers can cause problems. And it doesn’t really matter what they believe in. Back when the colony on Ellara was established, some people were so adamantly pacifistic they refused to fight even when Screecher spears punched holes through their guts.” Kelsie chuckled at such absurd ideas. “Religions were never a thing with the Undefeated and I hope they will not make a return now. I am sorry about the protests, I can officially offer you our support, even though I think it would be best if our armed forces stayed out of it.”

After reading Harding’s report on protector training methods the ECU used, Kelsie wasn’t really surprised that people wanted to get rid of them. No one could survive such torture and remain a sane and composed person. Kelsie squinted at Abadi, who was playing with her drink, staring at its swirling surface, lost in thoughts. Did she know? Like really knew about everything that happened in their precious holosuites? Even though she just read a report of someone who had only observed the events, she was deeply disturbed by that. She couldn’t even imagine subjecting their own people to such horrors and have the audacity to call it training. Yes, the problematic people on Ellara were locked up, sent off to labor camps, even executed at times, but never tortured. At least as far as she knew.

“So,” she asked carefully, “do you think your government will hear the protestors’ requests, at least partially? The protector numbers have to be quite low after all the fighting. How are they planning to keep the peace?” She realized that her questions were probably a bit too intrusive. “Sorry, that’s just my military brain always thinking in numbers and strategies. I can’t really turn that off.”

Abadi laughed a little, knowing how militant the Ellaryians are. "It's alright. Yeah, it’s best your armed forces stay out of this issue. It’s a New Hollywood problem, and we’ve been dealing with the same kind of issues from year zero. There’s no way the government will listen to them. No way. It’ll blow over.” She herself hoped that wasn’t wishful thinking. She only knew vaguely about what happened to the protectors: in the Academy she attended, meant only for future Oligarchs, protector indoctrination was only touched on as a sort of necessary evil. For the preservation of society and Old Earth Culture, and all that usual stuff.

“The protectors really aren’t so bad,” Abadi said, remembering those classes. “They’re just- trained, I guess. Like attack dogs.” She smiled, a little sorrowfully. “Did you know, I never really thought about it before I came here? Never considered if it was good or bad. When the Gateways reopened, it’s like we all came out of our bubbles. Bubbles that we’d been in for 300 years. And somehow, we were all expecting to find others just like us. I wonder what Old Earth would think of us all.” She gazed out of the window again, where Earth was still just as dead as last time she looked, and added in a quieter voice: “I wonder if it matters.”

She shook her head, clearing her thoughts. “You said any fanatic belief could be dangerous. What about our respect for Earth?” She looked over at Kelsie, not sure how she’ll react to this question. “ ...What about your own people’s military culture? It seems like you’re all soldiers. Is all of it dangerous if it goes too far?”

“Hmm,” Kelsie scratched her forehead. “You are right. I also never really thought about how we have lived until now. I guess seeing other nations being so different puts things in perspective. For us, the military culture wasn’t a choice, at least not at the beginning. If we had continued the ‘old ways’ with democracy and everything back when the colony ship landed, there wouldn’t be any humans left on Ellara. How we live, it’s… just the way it has always been, it never occured to me to question it. But things are changing now,” she sighed and looked at the glass in her hands. “Who will we be if not soldiers?” she added quietly, realizing that while this was a topic she could debate with a close friend, it was not something to discuss with a representative of another nation.

Her datapad beeped. “Excuse me,” she mumbled and read the message that popped up. Her eyes widened as she read it again. “Oh, crap.” There were some much juicier curses on her tongue, but she needed to keep up at least some appearances. “Have you seen this?” It was broadcasted station-wide, Abadi must have gotten the same message. “Paintings?! Poetry readings?!” Kelsie groaned. She only had a vague idea who Shakespeare was, it certainly wasn’t a topic thoroughly discussed at the military academy. This thing sounded like a perfect hell for any of the Undefeated. And it was obvious she had to go there. When did her life turn into a constant strain of torture?

“Uhh, Abadi? You know all about these fancy things, right?” Kelsie closed her eyes for a second, gathering mental strength for what she was about to say. “You think you could… eh… lend me some dress or something?” There it was. Not in her wildest nightmares would Kelsie think about saying that sentence.

The Hollywoodite, on the other hand, was pretty excited.

“Hah, this reminds me of home!” Abadi declared, when she had skimmed over the message herself. “I studied Shakespeare for a year. ‘A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.’” But then she seemed to suddenly remember something, and her smile dropped into a frown. “I hope they stay away from his sonnets, though. Have you ever read the Fair Youth sequence? The way he talks about women-”

And then, at last, she fully registered what her friend asked.

“Oh! Oh, yeah, you can borrow something. I own more than I could ever really wear. That’s expected.” She thought for a moment. “For an event like this, with Shakespeare and poetry, I’d say we should go with something neoclassical British, maybe aiming between the 17th and 20th centuries…” Already thinking of Victorian dresses, Abadi then remembers the reactions most other nations have had to that ECU ‘flair,’ and decides to dial it back some. “Well, I’m sure I have something simple and dignified for you.”

A rose? Kelsie knew it was a flower, a totally useless one. Some were grown around the war memorials, but it would never occur to her to smell them. What would be the point of that? She remembered the saying ‘it’s like you were born on a different planet’. Well, Abadi was technically born on a different planet, so she ought to be a bit different. But now it seemed like she was even speaking a different language. Perhaps this was a bad idea.

Kelsie gasped for air when she saw Abadi’s wardrobe. Or the room that was used as a wardrobe to be precise. Why would someone need so many clothes? Useless ones, on top of that. There was a furry brown thing in the corner that looked like a bear costume. Why would anyone own that? As Abadi browsed through the racks, Kelsie had to fight the urge to run away. Those things weren’t dresses! They were huge fluffy balls that looked like wrapped candy. You could make tents for an entire squad from all the fabric used on one dress.

“Simple and dignified sounds better. I can’t really imagine wearing that.” Kelsie moved to a different part of the room, where the clothes at least didn’t have dozens of layers. Skipping all the brightly colored things, she pulled out a short black dress to have a closer look at it. Too late noticing that the fabric was almost completely transparent. “Uhh. Nope.” She didn’t have to be an experienced party-goer to know that you shouldn’t wear that to an official diplomatic event. You shouldn’t wear that anywhere with people present, unless you were a stripper jumping out of a cake or something like that.

Being way more careful with her selection, it took a while before she took out another one. The dress was black and long, very simple, yet elegant. At least Kelsie thought it was elegant, but she wasn’t really an expert on the matter. With long sleeves and a short collar it actually looked a bit like her uniform, even though the embroidery was different. The split on the side went a bit too high for her liking, but she could live with that. “What about this one?” She waved the dress to get Abadi’s attention.

“You don’t have to wave it,” she laughed, “I can see. Korean, I’m not sure about the Era. I think it’s called an ao… ow something?” One culture Abadi never delved into. “You know, I’m not even completely sure that’s mine. This is kind of a shared place between most of the Oligarchs in the Meeting Place; it’s cramped here, and there’s only like three of us, but no New Hollywoodite could go without a wardrobe twice the size of their office space.” She thought for half a second. “I’m sure nobody will care if you use it, though. Sometimes I wonder how much of this even gets worn.”

Kelsie wasn't really sure about wearing clothes of some other Oligarch she didn't even know, but (to her own surprise) she actually really liked the dress, so she decided to just go with it. It was true that there were more clothes than three people could wear in a lifetime, so hopefully nobody will miss this particular piece for a day. "We are the same way with weapons and armories," she chuckled. (Somehow, this did not surprise Abadi)

"Thank you so much," Kelsie said on her way out, hugging a big bag with the dress. "I should go get ready. I assume I will see you there?" At least one familiar face that won't be frowning at her.

“And probably in something twice as fluffy,” Abadi smiled. Whatever happened between arguing governments, she was glad it hadn’t broken their friendship.
@Aleranicus honestly having a perfect sheet isn't as important as then being active in the IC, so don't worry about it too much
Ellara, northern continent, deep inside the Red zone


It was dark and her head was pounding. Ugh. How much did she drink last night? Her mouth was dry and one of her arms was twisted under her at a very uncomfortable angle. She tried to roll over, but something heavy was all around her, holding her down.

Wait. She hasn’t been drinking. No, because after months of doing nothing, they were finally heading out, on some special mission to rescue aliens who crashed in the red zone. The mission. Yes, she remembered now, the ship exploding, searching the nests, the pterroes everywhere… The pterroes! They were flying and she was falling and falling and falling. Yuki tried to get up again, her heart was racing, panic threatening to take over. What happened to her?

Was she dead? It was weird because she didn’t really feel any sharp pain, certainly not like when she broke her arm or when a Screecher spear went through a dent on her suit right into her shoulder. The suit! Of course, she was still in the suit, but the controls weren’t responding. She carefully wiggled her fingers and toes. Some mild soreness, but other than that, it was good, no broken bones or dislocated joints.

Getting out of the exoskeleton without the servos working and any outside help was tricky even under normal circumstances. Now, when the suit was not just offline, but apparently damaged in several places, without even emergency power, it felt nearly impossible. Yuki didn’t really have any other choice though, so she wiggled and twisted her limbs to reach the emergency cotter pins designed specifically for these situations. Ten minutes later, she was finally able to open the suit enough to slide herself out, looking almost like a snake shedding skin.

It wasn’t dark. Her helmet was buried deep in dirt and mud, which was obscuring her vision before, but now she could see clearly it was around midday, the sun was high in the clear sky with just a couple of white clouds floating around. Perfect weather for a jog in a park. For being stranded in the middle of nowhere… Well, she could have been worse.

After quickly scanning her surroundings for any immediate threats, Yuki knelt beside her beloved suit. The metal cracked in several places, the hydraulic fluid was leaking from torn tubes. A long sigh escaped her lips and her fingers stroked the colorful markings on the shoulder. The thing was done for. She grabbed the knife that was still attached to the suit at waist level. The soldiers rarely ever used it during combat, but it was a useful thing to have around in emergencies. There was a tiny flint and steel in the handle for making fire and a small compass. Plus, it was a big sharp knife.

A strange noise made her turn around swiftly. What was it? She couldn’t see anything, but that hardly meant nothing was there. On Ellara, every inch of ground was home to some lethal danger. It was noon, the beams of sunlight coming through thick vegetation above her created a lot of creepy shadows. She was in so much trouble. The panic threatened to take over and Yuki let it. For ten seconds.

It was noon. The fight happened sometime around morning, which meant…

One…

… the transports were long gone. Nobody searched for her. Why would they? Her heart raced so fast she could hear it. Anyone in a five miles radius could hear it.

Two…

Has anyone ever survived being carried away by a pterro? How did she even survive?

Three...

She looked up. Looks like the beast dropped her on the biggest tree around and she fell right through its crown...

Four…

… breaking a ton of thick branches on her way. Had she not been wearing her suit, she would have been impaled…

Five…

...at least a dozen times. She was alone. Sniffling, she wiped the tears from her eyes, smearing mud over her face.

Six…

Alone in a swamp swarming with crocoes, giant mosquitoes and devil knows what else.

Seven…

The alien ship crash site was 212 miles from Omega station and they have traveled at least a dozen more to reach the pterro nests. That is like a ten days walk.

Eight…

Unless something kills her. All alone, surrounded by bloodthirsty fauna and flora, without any equipment, weapons, or supplies.

Nine…

And the best of all, deep within the Screecher territory.

Ten…

Deep breath in. Deep breath out.

“Alright, panic time over. What do we have?”

Not much, one would say. One totally busted exosuit, broken beyond any point of use. The datapad on the suit forearm was detachable but also shattered to pieces. So far nothing. A knife, compass, and means to make fire. That is going to be useful when the temperatures drop after sundown.

“If I’m still alive by then you mean?”

If she was still going to be alive by then. She looked down on her body to acknowledge another problem. The bruises that were just coming up were fine, she was used to having them. The issue was she was only wearing a thin T-shirt and shorts. There was no need to wear too much clothing while in the exosuit. For one, it could get very hot in it, but more importantly, the fabric messed with the motion sensors, making it harder to operate precisely. Some people even went so far as to go in completely naked. Yuki was not one of them and she was really glad for it now.

“Boy was it really annoying seeing Douglas’ dong every time we geared up.”

Her look traveled further down to reveal the biggest problem of all. Her bare feet. Her toes twirled in the cold mud when she imagined walking over 220 miles without shoes.

“Not a pretty image, huh?” She sighed. “Alright, what was the first step? Set your priorities?” She vaguely remembered that from the survival training. “Damn, I should have paid bigger attention. So, priorities.”

Nobody was coming for her, nobody knew she was alive, so there was no point in staying in position and trying to make some signals. She was deep inside a no-fly zone, there was no chance someone would accidentally see some makeshift HELP ME sign made out of stones. The Hyperion and other ships in orbit probably had eyes on the general area, but she could never create something big enough to get their attention. Which meant she had to get back to the Omega outpost on her own.

“Priority one: staying alive!”

That was a big broad thing to focus on, but as a general motivation, it worked.

“Priority two: not getting eaten or killed.”

That was better. The immediate area around her seemed safe for now, but that could change. Crocoes could travel great distances when sensing prey. She was safe from pterroes, but there were other dangers, like gigantic life-sucking mosquitoes and other things, a lot of them probably not even discovered yet. Sighing, she took the wet mud into both hands and started to rub it all over her skin. It stunk horribly, but it should protect her from the mosquitoes. Croco feces would be even better, but that was a bit dangerous to obtain.

Next, she found a suitable stick and sharpened it with her knife to make an improvised spear. It was always safer to put some distance between the person and the attacker. Chasing a mosquito away with a knife just did not seem like the right thing to do.

“Priority three: water.” Water was always important. Fortunately, it wasn’t too hot, and the sun up north did not have the scorching power it had around the equator. But still, the body needed water and she needed the body to carry her back home. The suit was equipped with an integrated hydration bag with a decent water supply, but it got punctured in several places and was empty now. Yuki carefully extracted it, desperately trying not to tear it even more. There were big holes in the middle and top, but the bottom section looked fine. It was not going to hold much, maybe a liter, two tops, but it was better than nothing.

Yuki made a hole in the swampy ground which soon started to fill with water. Dirty, stinking, grey water. Taking her shirt off (good thing she was still wearing a sports bra underneath it), she used it to gather as much muddy liquid as she could. Then she filled the remains of her hydration bag with it, carefully filtering it through two layers of fabric. It was certainly not perfect and she still needed to boil it to make it drinkable, but she could do that later. She used the damaged part to create a strap to hang the water container over her shoulder, carefully tying it so not a drop of precious liquid would be lost.

Goosebumps popped up on her naked arms. The wet shirt would do her no good now, so she decided to get moving to get warm. She needed to find a safe place to stay the night, which the swamp certainly wasn’t. Ideally, she would head to the wrecked ship - even though the remains were destroyed by the explosion, it was at least a good orientation point. Plus perhaps there were some supplies or gear to scavenge.

“Or there is a functional communication device. How nice would it be not having to walk all that way back home? Just say ‘Hey guys, you kinda left me behind, so come and pick me up.’, wait for a Limo, and then enjoy the huge rounds of drinks everybody owes me for FUCKING ABANDONING ME HERE!” She knew her anger was deeply unjustified. Shouting out loud really helped against the frustration building inside her, but overall it was a very bad idea. As was confirmed seconds later when she heard sounds of grunting and snorting and very loud sniffing from a bush just a few dozen meters from her.

“Shit, shit, shit,” she hissed quietly, looking around for some shelter. Whatever the thing was, it sounded large. And this was Ellara, so it most likely wouldn’t hesitate to eat her. Or at least kill her and bathe in her blood or something. Because the sounds were getting closer fast, she quickly climbed the nearest tree. It was not really a great idea, but she couldn’t come up with anything better.

The grunting creature made its way under her and stopped. It looked… Well, Yuki wasn’t really sure what it was, but it looked like a very hairy pig with huge tusks and three pairs of limbs. Two back pairs functioned as legs and the creature could walk upright, leaving the third pair free to function as clawed arms. All and all, it looked like a fucking centaur with a boar head. “A pigtaur,” Yuki chuckled quietly. The name really made no sense, but neither did the creature. The pigtaur must have heard her because it turned its ugly snout in her general direction and sniffed rabidly. Luckily, it wasn’t arboreal and it seemed like it lost interest quickly.

It leaned towards the ground, using all its limbs to dig through the mud violently, its head coming down every time he discovered something worth eating. From what Yuki could see, it wasn’t picky - it would eat worms, roots, various insects, weird reptiles, and other no doubt yummy things it found in the stinking mud. The creature looked very content and it didn’t seem like it was about to leave any time soon. Which was not a good thing, because Yuki just noticed a pair of big green eyes looking at her from above.

A bigass snake was wrapped around a branch above Yuki, its skin bright green with red stripes, its triangular head watching her, slightly rocking from side to side. Sharp split tongue kept coming out to taste the air around him, detecting particles of her sweat despite the mud she smeared all over herself. “Fucking hell,” Yuki gritted her teeth. “Shoo!” she hissed at the snake and it hissed back at her, aggravated. “Sorry, sweetie.” Her voice was just a quiet whisper. “I didn’t mean to anger you. Just it would be really really awesome if you didn’t try to eat me. Or at least waited till that thing down there was gone.” She glanced at the pigtaur happily digging through mud and, to her immeasurable surprise, the snake followed her look, hissing even more. “Oh, you don’t like him either? So how about you go and eat him, hm?” The snake was big, but not really big enough to swallow the beast whole, so Yuki was astonished to see that it actually moved towards the pigtaur.

The long, brightly colored body slowly descended to a branch on her level and then below, hanging just above the creature. Triangular head turned to Yuki once more and she could swear the thing winked at her. But perhaps she was just going insane from all the stress. The snake wiggled a bit to find the right position and then leaped right onto the pigtaur’s torso, wrapping itself tightly around its neck and chest. Before the creature could react, the snake’s head darted forward and back a couple of times, sharp teeth sinking deep into the flesh. In addition, the snake also used its tail. Yuki hadn’t noticed before that it was armed with several long spikes covered by slimy fluid coming from their tops.

The pigtaur had no chance to do anything. One of its hands grabbed the snake, but its grip was weak and soon it stumbled to the ground. Yuki originally didn’t have any intention to watch the creatures fight, but now she couldn’t look away, thanking every known deity in the entire universe that the snake didn’t bother trying to attack her. How the hell would she fight something like that? Now she was really curious about what would happen next. Even with its jaws unhinged, there was absolutely no way the snake could swallow the creature whole. Maybe it will just wait till the carcass decomposes? But the snake wasn’t of the patient kind. Still firmly wrapped around the pigtaur, its head lunged forward, jaws opened to reveal more teeth than one would expect a snake to have. All the teeth slid into the beast’s soft stomach and then the head yanked back, tearing a huge piece of meat off.

Yuki stared as the snake leisurely swallowed the bite and positioned itself to grab another one. She didn’t know much about snakes, but she knew they were not supposed to do that. “This place is a fucking nightmare.” She climbed down the tree and snuck around the creatures, trying to get as far away from them as quickly as she could.

So, there she was, swiftly marching through a swampy forest, her bare feet covered by the everpresent mud and dirt, wearing nothing but tiny shorts and a sports bra. What a sight to behold!

As she was leaving the forest, the ground became drier, which meant less mud, but also more stones, rocks, twigs, and various other things that were not very comfortable to step on. Yuki had to improvise, cutting several long and sturdy grass blades and trying to weave them into simple sandals. A portion of her still wet shirt had to be sacrificed to create strings to tie the things together and it still wasn’t perfect. “Better than nothing. Perhaps I should have asked the snake to give me a piece of the pigtaur. Its skin would work great.”

She walked for several hours, marching towards the black pillar of smoke on the horizon and trying to ignore rising hunger, thirst, and most importantly cold. The wet shirt wouldn’t dry in the damp air and putting it on would make her even colder, so she had to keep moving almost naked, hoping she would find something useful in the crashed ship, or at least would be able to safely make fire. She crossed the flat, rocky terrain only to end up in another swampy forest. Why did they even want to conquer this land? It was such a shithole.

The smell of burning plastic tickled her nostrils, but it meant she was getting closer to the wreck. “Besides, nothing says ‘civilization’ better than a cloud of toxic smoke.” She was extra careful, knowing that the first scouts and Phantom pilots reported several crocoes in the area, feasting on bodies from the crashed ship. Plus the dreaded mosquitoes. Yuki hoped that the ship explosion either killed the local fauna or at least scared it away and so far it seemed she was right.

The ship wasn’t in a good shape before the explosion, hell it wasn’t in a good shape even before the crash, but now it looked like a blackened pile of metal, ripped from the inside by an immense force. The blast seemed to have originated from the rear part of the vessel, maybe from a cargo hold? Yuki had no idea how the ship was designed.

She followed the huge furrow the vessel dug in the ground during the emergency landing, carefully examining everything she came across. At first, she didn’t discover anything useful, it was mostly just large pieces of plating, girders, and other unrecognizable metallic parts. But as she was nearing the wreck itself, there were more interesting things to find. First, she saw an arm - a regular human arm, the shoulder end was burnt and charred, the hand was briefly chewed on. Not very useful.

The blast clenched the giant’s body between two girders. The mosquitoes must have fed on him before he died, all the fluids had been sucked out of the body, making it look like an ancient mummy. “What the fuck are you people?” It was debatable whether they were even people. Yuki remembered that there were regular-sized humans in the pterro nest as well as these huge ones. Maybe they were some weird humanoid aliens? Clones gone wrong? Terrifying miscreations from hell? Who knew? Certainly not her.

Yuki was tiny even for a girl, with her 5’3 the body truly looked like a giant to her. But the giant was wearing a gigantic shirt and the sun was going to set soon. The temperature was already dropping and Yuki wasn’t far from starting to chatter her teeth. Getting the body out from its position was difficult, but she was determined and ended up using a long piece of metal as a wrecking bar. Had the guy been alive, it would have killed him. But since he was already dead, she didn’t have to be extra careful. The shirt was from some primitive scratchy material, but it was thick and sturdy and big enough to cover her whole body.

She avoided the section of the hull that was still burning and headed to the front which was fortunately upwind, otherwise the thick black smoke would make it impossible to access. The corridors were already mangled by the crash and the blast didn’t help it. As the wall of fire from the explosion ran through them, it burned or melted everything inside. She could hide there for the night, but her hopes of finding anything useful, let alone some working ship systems, slowly disappeared into thin air.

One small door remained closed even after the crash, protecting whatever was behind them from the fire. Yuki was curious and even though it took a lot of her strength to push it open, she was able to sneak inside. “YES, finally some good news!” The place probably used to be a locker room for the crew. All the closets, lockers, and various boxes laid broken in a big pile in one corner, but some of them still had their original contents. Yuki cheered when she found a proper water canteen filled with clean water, some horribly smelling dirty socks, and a pair of pants that were only torn in two places.

Several broken flashlights could be reassembled into one functional, which made the exploration way easier. And there, at the very bottom of the pile… “I can’t fucking believe it.” Yuki started crying when she found a box with a brand new pair of shoes that were just a tiny bit large for her. Two or three pairs of socks were going to fix that easily. It was a different design than the Undefeated used, but proper military boots are still proper military boots, no matter what planet you go to.

She made camp in a large container that had fallen not far from the ship. Half of the big doors remained in place, providing her with a safe place to sleep. A small fire was burning in front of it, wet shirt drying on an improvised clothesline, a skinny lizard on a stick slowly being grilled just above the flickering flames. Yuki had already boiled the water - it didn’t help with the muddy smell, but at least she shouldn’t get sick from it now. She still needed to get more of it, her new canteen combined with the torn hydration bag wouldn’t even hold an amount she should drink in a day, but for now, she was satisfied.

A notebook and a couple of pencils were other priceless treasures she found deep within the ship's wreck. Such items would probably be useless to most of the Undefeated, but Yuki had a half-secret hobby - drawing. Art was generally not considered very ‘cool’ in their society since it provided no real value. Basically, it was just a waste of time, fine when you were a child, but inappropriate for an adult. It was not forbidden or punished though, and her squadmates were more than happy when she created funny cartoon portraits to put on their suits. “How the hell is slaughtering dozens of aliens more appropriate fun than drawing a few lines with a pencil?” Lots of things were strange, but that’s just the way it worked and Yuki was not the one to step out against it. She drew in secrecy, in her spare time between the missions and endless training. Her posting on the Omega outpost after the northern front was halted was ideal - no fighting, just guard duties, training, occasional patrols. Yuki wasn’t against war and killing, but she did not seek it intentionally.

The first few pages of the notebook were filled with unknown letters and weird symbols - she left them in, carefully flipping the pages. If she ever gets back home, perhaps someone will be interested in what those people considered so important they wrote it down. If it was under different circumstances, it would be a lovely evening. Campfire crackling and sputtering, roasted lizard sizzling, the pencil tip quietly scratching on the paper. The darkness here however hid many dangers. The crocoes were not active during the night, but Yuki had no idea about the mosquitoes. Plus there could be other previously unknown monsters like the pigtaur. Yuki glanced on a page - a triangular head with large hypnotic eyes stared back at her, split tongue sticking out of the mouth. The snake looked a bit too realistic to her liking so she turned to a new page and started to draw the poor mummified giant whose shirt she stole.

The morning came almost too soon. Yuki thought she would be too worried to fall asleep, but the exhaustion won and she fell into a deep slumber. Not even a croco walking around would wake her up. Maybe if it started chewing on her leg. But no creatures appeared during the night or morning, probably due to the smelly smoke that was still coming from the ship. “How long could that keep burning?” Yuki knew that back on Earth people burned garbage like that and it was part of the reason it was a dead rock now. The Undefeated weren’t super hard on environmentalism, but they didn’t want to repeat the mistake of their forefathers. “Hmm, if it means turning this swamp into a dead ground, no loss for us,” she gritted her teeth as her brand new shoes acquired a muddy coating.

She collected her primitive weapons, stuffed her humble supplies into an improvised backpack, dressed up, and checked her direction. The Omega outpost, the closest civilization to her position, was southeast off here. 212 long miles. “What do they say, the first 150 miles is the hardest?” Fortunately, the swamp continued further north and southeast quickly turned into dry grassy land. Yuki picked a sharp peak in a mountain range on the horizon as an orientation point, sighed, and started walking.
@Kale19

<Snipped quote>

For the record, communication through the Gateways is possible- so, SGT Rogers and the other Dead Drift folks could send a message back through the Gateway to the Dead Drift. But maybe they just haven't realized that yet.


I thought the problem would mostly be with the time distortion from the black hole.
@Birdboy GM might have missed it @AdorableSaucer? I recommend joining the Discord server to poke him around with a pitchfork until he looks at it.
Uhh, I'm fairly certain that you can't post images like that on the forum. PMs are fine, but out publicly like this - better take it down before you get in trouble ;)
Lady raised her eyebrow when the crocodile introduced herself. She had seen a few queens - once there was some sort of fancy noble event in the capital, lots of foreign guests arrived and few of them were royalties. None of them animals though, let alone gigantic crocodiles. Maybe it’s different across the sea? Animals rule and humans serve them?

--That sounds like the right way to run society.--

Anyway, it was up to Victoria how she introduces herself. If she claimed she was a queen, she was a queen. Lady herself often claimed she was an ancient goddess suffering from a curse to fool dumb humans, so… who was she to object?

--When someone gives you free food, you indulge their weirdness.--

Yes, plus there was the abundance of free food. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” she said between the bites.

When Lady heard Victoria sniffing, she raised her head and tasted the air as well. It was strange. Whoever was coming smelled almost like a human. Almost, but not quite. She couldn’t place the scent and was fairly certain she had never come across it before. One thing was for sure, it was not another crocodile.

Just in case, she quickly eyed the escape routes. Humans could actually climb trees, which was unfortunate, so her previous hideout was not really safe. She could try to run into the woods, hide under a log, or maybe jump into a river?

--Yea. Forget that.--

No, that was probably not a good idea. After all, humans could swim too.

When Anthony arrived at the clearing, Lady bristled up a bit. A human boy. Not a child anymore, but not a man quite yet. Those were the worst. Small children often tried to ‘play’ with Lady, using their dirty hands to grab her tail and put it into their snotty drooling mouths. But you could easily outrun them. The older ones were much more malicious and dangerous. Lady had a friend back in Grada, a ginger cat named Scratchy. A group of bored kids kept chasing her around the streets with sticks and even tried to put her into a bag and throw it into the river! She would have to be careful around this one.

Then she got a good look at the ‘prince’ and noticed the tail. And horns. What kind of a weird animal-human hybrid was he? Those features didn’t look like any beast she knew of.

--It’s a baby Devil!--

Her old landlady often spoke of the Devil, describing him with such horns and tail. But he was also supposed to have hooves. And a sleazy beard. The Church of the Pure had a lot of crazy ideas.

--He doesn’t like evil incarnate.--

No, the boy didn’t look evil at all. He watched Lady looking just as confused as she was. She decided that having a tail and horns was not a crime. And, at the risk of repeating myself…

--FREE FOOD.--

… they offered her free food. You don’t say no to that, horns or not.

“Your mother was kind enough to offer me a part of your lunch, Your Royal Highness,” she bowed her head in front of him. “I hope that is alright. I will not bother you much longer, I will just finish the fish and head back to the town. Surprisingly, I’m in the mood for an adventure, plus I want to see what this town has to offer before deciding if it’s worth settling here for some time.” Lady lazily sniffed the almost entirely eaten fish, deciding which parts are still worth eating. “I have seen a noticeboard on the town square, so I will head there to see if anyone in the town needs help.”

--Not work.--

“Not with work, of course, but maybe with some simple… tasks that don’t require too much effort.” No, Lady was definitely not in the mood for working. More like a stroll before a long nap.

@WolfredWolf
Ellara

One by one, the ships emerged from the Gateway. The smaller Cruisers and Destroyers first, making space for the following Battleships. Sonne, Eclipse. Thorsten was the last to leave the Zetan system. If the Gateway passage made any sound, it didn’t travel through the vacuum of space. Everything was silent as the arriving fleet passed by their sister ships standing guard and headed towards the planet.

The surface was also quiet. The crowds watching the spaceships fly over the cities towards the docks were honoring the fallen brothers and sisters by holding three minutes of silence. Even though it was officially declared as a victory, nobody was in the mood for celebration.

Oscar was in the captain’s quarters, watching the news. His speech was being transmitted to every station on the ground, and the cameras watched the crowds reacting to it.

“... our friends, the Earth Cultural Union, whose innocent citizen was abducted by the Zetans to gain access…” His voice from the recording resonated with confidence, and he could see people nodding, still looking grim. “... because every single life matters! Because we DO NOT leave our people behind!” Most people in the crowd stood taller, raising their fists, angry and determined expressions appearing on their faces.

“Yet we left a ton of them behind on Zeta-5.” That was the current Oscar.

“... recovered his body, which bore the signs on unimaginable torture … “

“Yea, sure.” The real Bodi was probably enjoying his stay on Zeta-5, soaking his new mechanical body parts in an oil bath and fucking some androids while watching his own people get slaughtered, or whatever the Zetans did for fun.

Oscar turned the transmission off, he couldn’t bear to watch that hypocritical asshole in a fancy uniform any longer. The truth was, he felt responsible for every life lost on or above Zeta-5. Even though he was the one who dragged his country into war, nobody protested against it. No, they cheered excitedly. And even a sworn and loyal soldier like Oscar could see that was not a good thing. People shouldn’t be excited about war. Some things needed to change, but where to start? If only he knew a person who could give him some advice.

Claire entered the room warily, squinting at him. “Why hast thou summoned me, magnificent one?” she mockingly bowed to him. How did she come up with new insults every time they met?

“I have a job for you.”

“I thought I already had a job. I’m actually really busy creating more things you warmongers will use as tools of destruction.”

“Well, you are about to become even busier. I’m going to appoint you my advisor.”

“You don’t want to hear my advice.” The disdain was clearly visible on her face.

“I certainly don’t want to hear it, but…” A long sigh escaped his lips. “I think I need to. This can’t keep going on any longer, something needs to change.”

Claire squinted so hard her eyes turned into tiny narrow lines. “Are you asking me how to transform the Undefeated into a normal democratic society?”

“Well, I definitely wouldn’t go that far,” Oscar grinned.

“Oh my god, you are actually serious. Well then.” Claire took a second to gather her thoughts and take a deep breath. “You are a dictator. And don’t interrupt me,” she raised her hand to stop his complaints. “You are. Have you been elected by a democratic process? No. Are people free to speak up against you publicly? Hell no. Are people free to do whatever the fuck they want?” She just snorted. “That makes you a dictator. And don’t get me wrong, as far as dictators go, you are actually a pretty good one. The problem is, you do not rule all the people. You take almost a quarter of the population and declare them trash, toss them aside as less-than-humans. Do you realize those people don’t really have any more rights than the captured Screechers that slave away in the labor camps?” Claire spoke passionately and desperately, from her own experience.

She was right and the rational part of his mind knew it. Even though he could not understand it, apparently some people did not want to be soldiers. Oscar had no idea why, being a soldier was the best part of his life, the only part of his life. But the cases where people deliberately failed the tests to get kicked out and become Rejected were multiplying. Back in the times soon after the landing when this system was introduced by desperate colonists facing extinction, the Rejected were the ones who physically could not be a part of active military units, usually due to high age or some disability. They were assigned other duties necessary in the struggling colony and were not shunned in any way. In time, however, as the military culture became a key part of the society, the non-military citizen became more and more undesirable and scorned. Gradual changes over the decades have slowly pushed them into being considered inferior to ‘normal’ humans.

Still, some people were motivated enough to endure this on purpose. The Rejected these days weren’t just the physically disabled. A lot of people failed the tests on purpose, just to avoid being a part of the Undefeated army. Or maybe they were terrified of being sent to the front? Oscar didn’t know. He did know, however, that Claire was one of these people - her academy records clearly stated that she was an excellent recruit, just had serious problems with authorities. She questioned every order, often speaking against the war. When the officers pushed against her, she pushed back, resulting in failing the final exams. Only her brilliant brain saved her from slaving in some dry-cleaning for the rest of her life.

Oscar sighed. Whatever changes he was going to make were always going to anger someone. “So what are you suggesting? Do we just let everyone do what they want? Disband the army and become farmers?”

“You don’t have to disband the army. Even if you give people a choice, lots of them will still choose the military. That way you will have those who really want to fight to do your fighting, and those who don’t want to fight can do something more useful, like grow food or invent things.”

A short growl escaped Oscar’s lips. Why the fuck did it sound so reasonable? “What about the northern front? We can’t take that continent with diminished numbers.”

“Why the hell do you need to take that continent?”

“What?” That was such an absurd question Oscar had no idea how to answer it. “Because it’s swarming with the Screechers?”

“Of course it’s swarming with the Screechers. It’s their planet. But we don’t even use all the space on this continent. Why do we need to waste lives trying to capture a second one? Why don’t we take this opportunity to do something good, to… to advance society?”

Oscar snorted. “What does that even mean?”

“I don’t know!” Claire shouted at him. Why did all their conversations eventually result in yelling at each other? “I don’t know,” she continued in a calmer voice. “Nobody knows. Because nobody ever bothered to try and find out. You rip babies out of their mothers’ wombs and stuff rifles right into their hands. If you give people some space, they might come up with some good ideas.”

They debated for hours, long after the Thorsten landed in a dock, the crew disembarked and the engineers and mechanics started to repair the damage the ship had sustained. Claire had a ton of idealistic ideas that were absolutely inapplicable, but also a few good ones that had some merit.

~~~~~~~~


The memorial was beautiful. Two meters tall pedestal provided enough space for each name and rank to be engraved. Every life lost immortalized in stone, an endless list of brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, mothers and fathers. Comrades. Friends. A statue was placed atop the pedestal. An unarmed man, cowering in fear, protected by a soldier in an exoskeleton who was aiming a rifle at a terrifying robot. The warform depiction was a bit exaggerated to make it look more dramatic. As if one soldier standing versus that mechanical monstrosity wasn’t dramatic enough.

Oscar ran his fingers over the grooves on the stone that made letters and words. Private Andrew Higgins, 17. How did such a young kid get into the invasion fleet? Into a first wave of the ground invasion even? The Grand General shook his head.

The crowd was silently waiting for his words, a couple of floating cameras ready to transmit the message to every person on Ellara and in space around it. Oscar took a deep breath. He was not scared - of course, he was not scared, he was the Grand General, a veteran of countless battles, for sure he would not be afraid to say a few words in public. But you could say he was nervous. After all, what he was about to say would change the lives of everyone on the planet.

“We are here today to remember our brothers and sisters in arms, who died during the Zetan conflict. Brave men and women who did not hesitate to lay down their lives to help a friend in need, to fight an unthinkable threat. But why were they forced to do that?

With the Gateway reopening, we have entered a new era. Yet, we seem to be carrying the bad habits over from the old one. We have been at war for centuries, too long for anyone to even remember what peace feels like. And that is not a good thing.” Oscar paused for a few seconds, observing the crowd’s reactions. They mostly looked confused. No surprise, this was certainly not the speech they were expecting. “War,” he pressed a bit harder, “is not a good thing.” Now that caused some jaws to drop. “Sometimes it is a necessary thing, but starting a new one should not be celebrated.”

“For too long,” he raised his hands to shush quiet murmurs and whispers spreading through the crowd, “we have been at war. It has become our way of life, the centerpiece of our society. But that has to change. Even now, there are people who did not wish to be a part of this circle of death and destruction. We may have tried to forget they exist, but they walk among us. Invisible, shunned. Rejected. For too long we have taken from them, giving nothing in return.”

He could feel the people staring at him, the whole planet stunned by his words, trying to guess what would come next. “I am not saying that we will abandon our way of life. I am not saying we will all bury our guns and become farmers. All I am saying is that from now on, people will have what they didn’t have before. A CHOICE. 300 years ago, when our forefathers landed on Ellara, they didn’t have a choice, they had to fight to survive. Today, 300 years later, fighting is no longer a matter of life and death. Yes, we will continue to fight, to grow our borders, to eliminate threats to our people. But we will also build. Grow. Create.”

Alright, now to the main business. Oscar nodded at the security to be on high alert. A lot of people carried guns on them and he wanted to at least finish the speech first before someone starts shooting at him. “From now on, after attending the mandatory 5 years of the military academy, the graduates will be allowed to choose whether they want to continue being a part of the military or want to pursue a career in a different area. Similarly, all current military personnel will be allowed to retire from active service. They will not face any repercussions. Starting this day, NOBODY will be discriminated against for not being a part of the military. That includes EVERY SINGLE CITIZEN of this nation. We are all humans and we will all have equal rights.

Let’s take this chance and help to better our society, each at their own discretion.” He finished the long-prepared speech and looked straight into the camera. People gathered around the memorial were whispering, giving him side glances. The truth was, he had no idea how the people were going to react. As Claire pointed out, he was not democratically elected, so there was no way to democratically un-elect him, or whatever the right word was for that. On the other hand, a bullet through the brain worked just as well, probably even better. He would have to be way more careful during the days and weeks to follow.
@ArmorPlated Anyone can join!
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