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    1. Derren Krenshaw 10 yrs ago

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Hi! Hi hi!

Still here, though I will be gone for a few days at the start of january, but aside from that... yeah. Still here!
Alexi couldn't quite share Katherine's grim mirth at her current state, though at the same time he couldn't help but be impressed by it. She was managing, despite the obvious pain. Was it a part of being a mercenary? Was she used to injury? He certainly wasn't, and had little way of telling just how bad off she was right now. Talking, moving, not bleeding... all good things, at least.

"This way, yes, careful," She seemed determined to make her own way to the stream, and he didn't dare challenge that choice. Her decision to submerge herself completely? That was... worrying. But he had helped her up before, and could do it again, at least enough to keep her from drowning. So if she thought this was the best way to wash the ichor from her armor, he'd give her some time in the river, standing right nearby.

And a good thing, too, as her calm -if labored- efforts before turned into frantic scrambling to escape the water's grasp. He was there, able to help her, able to get her back to camp. That was something, at least.

"Ask what you need," He said the words without thinking, and found no reason to regret them. Helping Katherine settle down beside the fire, he took leave briefly, setting his previous shirt down on the ground and retrieving one fresh from his tent. Katherine was going to need something different, something dry to wear herself, or at least something to help keep her warm. Though... again... not something he was sure how to approach. He decided to stick with her directions, upon returning.

"Alright, ah, I might need some direction..." A quick glance over her armor gave him a decent idea of how it was applied, the buckles and straps seeming apparent enough. But he hadn't done much with armor, at all. This outfit, these pieces, they were hers. He didn't want to somehow damage them -if that was possible- through clumsiness. He didn't want to cause her further discomfort, either. "This strap pulls... ah! Yes, okay, I... think I see?"

Carefully, Alexi worked to help Katherine out of her armor. He would have liked to claim it was a quick affair, not dragged out at all by his inexperience, but that would be lying. Too many second-guesses, to many unsure movements, how quickly could Katherine have done this herself, had she been healthy? He tried not to think on that.

"Okay, okay, finally..." He moved the pieces of her armor carefully away, hanging them up on the opposite side of the fire as best he could manage. The flames would help dry them, surely, so long as the skies decided to remain clear tonight. "None of that... stuff... got through your armor, did it?" He glanced quickly about her body, taking care not to let his eyes linger. Katherine needed to know none of the ichor was left around, not to be looked up by him, though no glowing liquid could be seen. The stream had done its job in washing it all away, it seemed, if any had gotten past her armor in the first place.

"Do you feel... any better at all?" He sat beside her before the fire, glad for both light and warmth. She had to be doubly glad, at least, her clothes clinging to her as they dripped water. He kept his eyes to her face, as if he might read into her health somehow. "Your cheek, do you feel any pain there? Or... any more pain, than the stitches might have been causing?"
"It isn't, it isn't... Lord I'm sorry."

How could Alexi not be? Even injured, barely able to see or stand, Katherine was the only reason either of them made it back to their camp. Somehow, she knew the way in the deepening gloam. Poisoned, too, was that thing's blood poison? He felt like tearing away his sleeve where he had brushed her cheek, but held himself in check. She was managing, somehow, he could deal with a little on the outside of his tunic. He could try and keep something of a level head in return, make sure to help the one who was helping them both.

The fact that what little ichor he had started to mop up before her warning wasn't burning his arm -at least not yet- helped as well. He, he was fine. In perfect health, nothing more than some little scrapes and pains from stumbling through the woods. Not strong, no fighter or sprinter or athlete of any kind, but healthy, at least in body. Katherine needed that, right now. Actually, Katherine needed him healthy in body and mind, right now.

It was the least he could do, do manage that much.

"The stream, yes, yes of course." His eyes wandered to stick on the camp as they moved through it, but he forced his gaze away. The stream, she truly did need to wash all the... ichor, off. If it was dangerous, poisonous, then it was past time it was removed. "I can get there, at least."

Alexi could, at least. The soft burbling song of running water reaching his ears well before the stream itself came into view. It's sound carried far in the quiet stillness, but as he listened for it while they walked, other sounds greeted his ears. Soft chirps, calls, rustles and more, animals at night. Somewhere around them, above them, below them, birds and beasts and insects alike made their presence subtly known. It was... comforting, actually. He was reminded somewhat of the city at night, quieter, but with sound nonetheless. That was a good thing, it helped him calm and focus.

"Okay," Panting, body beginning to grow sore, he carefully lowered Katherine at the water's side at last. He could focus, could think, and that was good. Now then...

"Katherine... Katherine how well can you move?" Eyes straining in the dark, Alexi looked over his escort, trying to judge just how bad things truly were. Her cheek needed attention, the ichor was close to her stitches, and he didn't know what would happen if any managed to get into her blood. That was easy, he could use his own tunic as a rag if needed, carefully wash her skin clean.

But he couldn't ignore the still-glowing spots across her form. Mostly on armor, would it seep through? Should he suggest- did he know enough to suggest? Concern warred with holy teachings in his mind... but he couldn't afford to sit and worry, could he?

"Let's get that off your cheek first, after that..." Alexi was already working his way out of his tunic, keeping care that Katherine did not begin to topple over. "... Your armor, we need to do something about it, right? I can help you wash it off but, well... is it safe to leave on for now?"
Antoine let out a low whistle, leaning back against a wall of cabinets as he pondered Abby's words.

"So it was that bad... Alright then." Serious face. As easygoing a person as Abby seemed, she was military with a job to do. Easygoing could vanish in a heartbeat if given a reason, he had no doubt of that. Indeed, he'd probably volunteer to shout down himself if he came across as making light of the issue -intentional or not- and then step back in line for her turn. She needed explanation, answers, knowledge, and he could help with that. He could, so he would. That's how it was, he didn't even have to think it over.

"The cryo-bed systems aren't perfect, only as close to perfect as possible." Gesturing lightly with one hand in time with his words, the other began to drum a soft, steady beat upon his chest. That helped, both helped, his mind focusing easily on the information he thought she'd need. "Much of the work is done by computer, it's simply to delicate to accomplish otherwise. You still need people on hand, however, who can do the small tasks computers are unsuited for, keep the whole system running, and be on hand should something go wrong: Cryo-techs."

Not to mention let people know that they were watched by more than just unfeeling machinery. People trusted people, not computers. That was one of the main reasons that got Antoine fast-tracked through experimental surgery, that got scientists and doctors alike so excited when he said he wanted to work with the cryo-beds. You needed people there when others went to sleep, and when they woke up. It made things easier, made things more comfortable, made it all possible.

And, if anything went wrong, there was at least a chance of saving those in Cryo. Projected mortality rate in a catastrophic-failure scenario, where the techs had to wake everyone themselves, stood somewhere between fifty and seventy percent... but it was less than one hundred.

Of course, despite all of that...

"Of course... people can't always be trusted." That was the heart of the matter, wasn't it. Antoine offered Abby a deliberate nod, letting her know he was at the heart of her questions here. "So while the Techs watch over the system, the system watches over us. We have to log in to any terminal we wish to use, be it a bed terminal, a general terminal set in the wing, etc. We have to choose a reason for logging in, which determines what permissions we have for that session, and must remain active or be automatically logged out after fiv- three minutes."

Right, they had changed that from when he was in the Mountain. No one had said as much when the third shift's Techs were woken up, but it was clear that change had been very, very recent. Add that to what was logged, the response of their superiors to questions or even minor transgressions? He and the other Techs had nervously laughed it off at first, but when poor Laura had been brought to tears after she tried to thaw someone slated for the shift, only to find out she had gone to the bed of someone with an almost identical name? It was clear what the higher-ups were scared of. Very, very clear.

"Everything we do while logged in is recorded, time stamped, and kept on file to be reviewed. Any action taken outside of set guidelines, from trying to use files you don't have permissions for to an automatic log-out, is reported to the heads of Medical. Waking someone up requires that they be cleared by someone with Admin permissions for that shift, the only exception being if an 'emergency thaw' is activated, which sets off an alarm throughout the cryo-wings. In theory ,someone 'might' have been able to do what Adams did, once. The sad truth is that it's possible, but anyone, anyone looking into the death should have been able to see that something was amiss from the logs, and be pointed to Adams as the Tech who was there when it happened... Which brings us to how he could have done it so many times."

Antoine took a deep breath, shaking his head as the finger-drumming picked up it's pace. They were here, now, at the same question his peers had been whispering amongst each other for over a week. On the bright side, they had come up with a couple ideas that might be able to help Abby. On the other hand... They had a couple ideas that, if verified, could put many, many sleepers at risk.

"In order for Adams to have gotten away with what he did again and again, the most likely reason is an exploit in the system. Some programming bug that was never caught, overlooked, or only occurs in a scenario no one considered, that would allow Adams to bypass the log-in requirement and/or the filing system and alarms. The Cryo-techs... we've put some thought into this, in all honesty. And there are two theories that I believe might be what happened."

"One: Adams managed to gain access to an Administrator or Master account. The Heads of Medical, Ship captain... and I believe the General all have Admin access, and then there's the original account that's existed since the system itself. There could be a bug with the log-in system that allows one to 'trick' the computer into logging you on with an Admin account, and from there... you are pretty much free. Administrator accounts are still recorded, but it's focused on their personal terminals, since they don't need to log in anywhere else. It's very possible an Admin account logged into a bed terminal wouldn't be recorded... which would have given Adams the freedom he needed.

Second, he found a way to trick the terminal into 'test-mode'. Before it was ever connected to the beds themselves, the system went through multiple virtual scenarios. The system thought it was connected to a bed inhabited by a person, and acted accordingly, allowing the developers to judge how accurate the system was and uncover what bugs they could before moving on. It's too useful a tool to have been removed, and if Adams managed to somehow 'trick' a terminal into believing it was in test-mode, he could then initiate a 'mock' emergency-thaw with no alarm, followed by a 'mock' re-freeze. It probably wouldn't be recorded, as no one should be able to access that on any terminal connected to an inhabited bed..."

Antoine was shivering, now. Thinking about it to this extent, talking about just how someone could manage to kill person after person without being caught. He forced his hands down, clasping each other before his waist, lest his gesturing grow wild and panicked. He was a cryo-tech, a medical-technician, and a combat medic before that. Protect life, preserve life, that was what he did.

To consider... to talk about this...

"One of... those two. They're probably... your best options to look at." He shook his head, trying to focus, trying to get away from the pit his thoughts were sinking into. Locking onto Abby's gaze once more, he offered her a pale grin. "Sorry, I think I ended up giving you a lecture. I hope it was useful to you, at least?"
Alexi prayed. For Katherine's safety, for her skill to outshine that of her infernal opponent, for grace and mercy and everything else he dared hold the audacity to ask for. He begged favor from the Lord of all, groveled against the tree that was his only support and pleaded for what could have been moments or hours. Time faded away, lost amidst the flashes, crashes and cries of Katherine's fight, amidst the darkness and terror and hope it all might sometime end. He didn't care that it faded away, or perhaps he welcomed it. What did time matter, how long had passed or how much was left to pass? As long as they got out okay, time didn't matter.

Alexi's prayer never stopped. Not until the demon finally collapsed, and Katherine rose, laughing victory in the air.

Finally, at last, that the ever-merciful Lord abo-

"Katherine!"

Fear moved his legs then, though he might never find the strength to admit it. That what hope he had might vanish so soon after finally kindling to life was too much for the scribe to bear, sending him scrabbling to his escort's side. Where there more dents in her armor? It was dark, but little spots glowed... wrong, all over her form. Had the demon managed to injure her? He couldn't see any blood or- Her cheek! Where she had been cut before, had it been injured more? It seemed to glow as well, with some... liquid?

"Are you al- No, no why am I asking?" He wanted to smack himself, but instead bunched up the sleeve of his tunic in one hand. He used it to try and brush whatever he thought he saw from her cheek. Her eyes where closed, why were they closed? Breathing, she was breathing, though, that was good. He still couldn't tell what was wrong. Exhaustion? More? It was too dark! The glowing spots seemed wrong, but how could he tell what he was doing- wait, what was he doing? What practice did he have, treating injury? None. None!

You've had practice carrying people home, though.

The simple thought cut through Alexi's crowded mind like the winter wind. Right. He could do some things, at least. There was fire at the camp, more light, more safety. He could do more there, not much, but more. They had to get there first, where was there? Could Katherine lead them? Could he support her? It probably wouldn't be any worse than Charles. At least she wouldn't be fighting him every step, right?

"Like dragging Charles home... right, right." Muttering helped, or seemed to help, or he was going mad. Alexi took Katherine's arm across his shoulders, and worked to help her stand, somehow succeeding. Right. That was done. Now for the next part. "Okay, okay, home... er... camp. Back the way we came... so... this way?"

He took tentative steps, moving simply away from where the demon lay. It was as close to 'the way back' as he knew, so it would have to do for now.

"Which way, do you know the way?" He tried craning his neck to see Katherine's face. Were her eyes open? Was she better? Worse? Dear lord, this was his fault wasn't it? "Sorry- I'm sorry Katherine. We'll get right back to camp, oh Lord I'm sorry."
It seemed Galina and Souma were thinking the same thing.

He had managed to carefully fish out his collection of 'eggs' as they careened through the compound. At first, he thought they might be useful as they made their way to the tunnel, in case anyone came to stop them in the compound itself. But Galina took charge of that potential problem, and while her skill with that sword wasn't unfamiliar in the least, her grace and poise on horseback most certainly was.

Good thing he fought her on foot, last time.

Offering only a nod in response to her cry -one he wasn't sure she even saw- Souma loosened his grip on the reins and focused solely on aim. At this speed, steering didn't matter, they only could move forwards, and certainly couldn't stop in time should the gates close. One less thing to worry about, then, his arm curling back with the first of six eggs held tight.

The first two he launched went high, arcing way overhead to barely miss the rough ceiling above as they entered the gateway tunnel. The next were aimed directly for the scrambling guardsmen. Thrown straight with brutal strength, they shattered immediately on contact with flesh, wood and stone, setting their payloads free. Finely ground pepper and sand rose in clouds throughout the short tunnel, drawing cries where they found their way into eyes, noses and mouths. Stinging, burning, blinding, too much so to ignore, he forced guard after guard to crumple in tears mid-sprint.

Not every shot could be perfect, however. Some eggs struck only structure, causing men nearby to pause but otherwise only confirming their suspicions. One of the guards who had barely missed getting struck sprinted hard for the gate winch, features set in grim determination. He crossed the distance in great, swift strides, shouting out for his comrades as his gaze focused solely on the lever that would release the gates and swing them closed...

They were wide open when Souma's lobbed eggs landed down before him.

"Clear!" The gates flew past with a new chorus of cries, Souma's grin growing only wider as they broke fully free of the compound. He scrambled for the reins once more, slowing their horses as they moved towards the streets of Tokyo proper. They would be just another cart moving towards the docks, there. The same as a hundred others one might find, loaded down with supplies, it's drivers plodding along dutifully to the end. He called out to catch Galina's attention as they approached the 'official' boundary of the city itself, signaling for her to return to the cart by his side.

"Back to brothers, now." It was all-but impossible to keep the excitement from his voice, flush with their escape. He resorted to speaking low, a cautious whisper that nevertheless glowed with feral glee. "Daisuke at docks. Will help load, then we board, then we sail."

He couldn't help it, the chuckle that wormed its way up from the bottom of his stomach as dark as it was excited.

"Then, we hunt."
Right, should probably chime in for my character's status'/future plans.

Mowzer's still napping, and probably will be for the rest of Antoine's current conversation with Abby. Future plans are still rather open, but both will probably head out to look for Stella before too long. Antoine did promise to bring Mowzer by later, after all...

Aside from that, I should mention that I'll be away from Sunday until tuesday, and will not have computer access. I'll make sure to leave up-to-date on things, but after saturday night I probably won't be able to read anything new happening here until late tuesday night, much less respond.
"Pleasure," Antoine reached out to shake Dr. Brock's hand... then found himself watching the back of the man's head as he hastily excused himself. His arm remained partially outstretched, hand open, grasping only empty air.

Okay... then...?

The First Sergeant -Abby- took over quickly enough, Antoine's gaze snapping back to her as she spoke. His hand still wanted to reach out, to hold, to move, but he clenched his fist tight, shoving it behind his back and forcing a smile to his lips as he relaxed. What had that been all about? Greeting and leaving? Emergency? Even so, did that excuse just... well...

Muscle tensed all the way up his arm, pleading, demanding to be moved. His arm shivered behind his back, it was almost painful to hold it back. It needed, no, he needed to do something, quickly, now.

A sharp shake of Antoine's head helped, some, a chuckle in response to Abby's jest helping just a little bit more. His arm relaxed some, the tension draining, and he could focus on her request. Cryobeds? Right, Dr. Brock had mentioned them before running off to do whatever. Information on them, of course, after the announcement she made earlier, she'd want to know more, wouldn't she? About the system itself, in case anyone asked, and about- countermanding, exactly.

"Certainly, Abby." Smiling was easier now, thankfully. He stepped back to pull the door wider, standing aside so she could enter. Well, for all the reasons that he could have been interrupted from his nap, this wasn't so bad an option. Another sharp shake of his head helped him focus, adding a shrug as he waited for her to enter. "I'd offer a chair if I had one, though if Mowzer will share, feel free to sit on the bed?"

He leaned up against the counter himself, Mowzer glancing up only briefly from his curled-up spot on the bed, basking in the leftover warmth from where Antoine had been sleeping. He offered the two a biting comment of his own, before tucking his head back between body and tail. Antoine chuckled at the remark, shaking his head a bit more casually as he closed the door behind Abby.

"Cryobed mechanisms and countermanding, then..." He tapped his chin with a finger, where best to start? "How much do you know about the system, already? I don't want to take up your time with redundant details. And if your asking how easily someone could repeat what happened last shift... then..."

That was a bad place to go. Talking about what might have happened was a quiet test the cryo-techs had been giving each other, but always well away from anyone else. Such a thing was supposed to be impossible -at least on the scale that happened during the second shift. All the techs wanted to know how it might have happened, how they could prevent someone from doing it again... but no one wanted the suspicion that would come along with it. Camaraderie by mutual threat, if he hadn't just finished speaking with Ms. Weber, he'd have been right there with his fellow techs.

But after that surprising -and welcome- meeting, it was now just a little bit easier.

"I can stick to describing the safeguards, checks, and possible ways they might have been avoided, if that's what you're looking for?"
She did not have to tell him twice.

What growing relief Alexi had felt as Katherine lifted him back up to stand by her was swiftly dashed as she stared at something very much behind him. As she gasped and stumbled back, he shouted and stumbled forwards, her shout perfectly mimicking his own feelings. He hit the ground yet again and rolled, scrambling to gain distance, to get away, to stay safe.

Katherine was behind her, fighting, fending off the... thing, the demon. It was here, of course it was here, whatever hellish being had lured them both over wanted its meal. Both escort and threat were right behind him, the darkening woods closing in all around. Every direction looked the same to his fevered glancing, every shrub and root suddenly seeming that much more dangerous with the sounds of struggle echoing behind. How far had he followed those lights, blindly, absently, looking at nothing else? How many steps, how many turns, climbs and slides had he taken? Where was he, where were they?

How could they get back?

The thoughts gripped his heart with an icy chill, sending Alexi shivering to a nearby tree, clutching at it's rough bark for some sort of reassurance. There was nowhere for him to go, not now. He'd only wander again, with fewer supplies and more danger than before. Hands clutched harder at the tree, eyes finally looking back, to where Katherine had the demon crippled.

Katherine, of course. She could find a way back, she had to know a way back. She just had to rid them of the beast before her, and they would be safe for another few hours.

Alexi clung to the tree, staring out at Katherine and the demon, concern, fear and hope blocking out any chance that last shivering flame had of ensnaring him again. He wasn't a fighter, had no weapon on hand nor courage to use one if he did. So the scribe stayed back, out of the way of his escort, and prayed for her safety.

It was the only thing he could do.
Souma didn't reply, not in words. The tense poise of his form and the intent, piercing glare of his eyes conveyed enough. He was prepared for whatever he had to do, ready for any trick or trouble that was thrown in their way. With a resume like his, 'ready' became a way of life, the whimsy of fate well-known and well-experienced. Galina was the same, he had no doubt, and so when warned him before and after scrambling across the cart on a mission of her own? He knew there was no choice but to impress her.

And if the feral, almost manic grin spreading across his face conveyed anything, it said Souma was more than willing to do just that.

"IMA!" All subtlety thrown out the window, the spymaster snapped the horses of his cart almost immediately into gallop. Workers jumped at his cry, the supervisor behind shouting as he saw the cart building speed. No use for subtlety now, if Galina had done what he expected she had. What was it now, five seconds? A small clock ticked down in the corner of his mind, as they flew free of the warehouse and out into the compound proper.

The alarm started from the back, if they had been caught off-guard, the guards likely wouldn't spread word for a few seconds more. The supervisor needed time to shout orders, others time to register and follow them, precious seconds they could afford to lose, as word would still make it to the walls before the runaway cart.

Sound was faster than horses, another shout from just outside the warehouse reminding him of that. His mental clock ticked down once more in time with the cry, and Souma hauled back on the reins, forcing the horses to slow for the turn they would have to make.

Also, to keep them in control, as one ticked to zero...

And the entire warehouse began to explode.

It started as a single, terrifying crack of fiery thunder, joined by more and more every instant until it grew into a deafening orchestra that consumed the structure entirely. Munitions, explosives, wood and cloth and more added to the devastation. Waves of heat and sound washed over their cart and the courtyard around, the horses bucking and neighing in blinding panic as Souma struggled to keep them in line. People tumbled to the ground outside, or bolted to windows and doors to see what had made such a terrible, continuing noise. Surprised, horrified, enraged, injured... but alive.

The same couldn't be said, of those who had been inside.

"Ready, Galina!" Souma cried out through the fiery roar, sweat beading on his face as he forced their horses to move toward the outer wall. "Gate might close first. If does, will have force open!"

Sound traveled faster than horses, and everyone in the area now knew something was wrong, somewhere. Panic and confusion were their allies, now, ones that might be kind enough to hold open those gates a few moments longer, or at least give them the time to do the job themselves.
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