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<Snipped quote by Archangel89>

I'm afraid I'm out. Shit got busy for a second, a bunch of people left and I really don't want to force myself back into that headspace.

Sorry guys.


Ah that’s a shame, I was really enjoying your Rhodey storyline it was amazing! It does seem this might be dying a slow death. For what it’s worth whenever these pop up they are always my favourite role playing experience. It’s a shame we never managed to get to collab!



Sue was happily finishing packing the Argo as Reed tinkered with the underside of the hovering transport, unafraid of any eventuality in which the car would fall on him. It's not like he had any bones to break, in that instance he'd just flatten entirely and slide out from beneath it's weight. The two hadn't used the Argo in quite a while, and Reed was keen to upgrade it as much as he could before they left on their journey. Sue was just happy she got to drive the thing again, they rarely got the opportunity to use it.

She stopped for a moment, the excitment of the situation subsiding towards more long-term fears. "Reed, are you sure about this? What about Moleman, what about the Thinker?"

Reed didn't stop his improvements, stretching out an impossibly long arm and grabbing a wrench from the other room. "I'm sure. My readings picked up energy we've not seen since The Reach. If there's any chance of them coming back we need to be ready, I won't let what happened last time happen now."

Sue slid the last case into the Argo's storage compartment and rested her arms on its edge, watching Reed's shape ripple unnaturally as his arm retracted back to him. She found it creepy when he first started doing this all those years ago, now she found it endearing. "So it's definitely not just one of Lord's patrols? Some Agency black-site project leaking into the atmosphere? What if it's an ambush?"

Reed finally rolled out from beneath the craft, his form snapping back into a semblance of normal. He wiped his hands on a rag, thinking for a moment before continuing. "No. This isn't their handiwork. It's far too complex for anything Lord could do. The signature is messy. Layered in ways our dimension doesn't normally tolerate. It's almost as though reality tried to patch itself around the intrusion." He paused again for a second. "To tell you the truth, Sue, I haven't seen energy like this since our space mission."

Sue's arms dropped from the compartment, her brow furrowing. Memories of that mission still haunted her; the blinding light, the silence of space swallowing them whole, the transformation that followed. "So whatever fell through, it's carrying the same fingerprint?"

Reed gave a small nod, folding the rag neatly before setting it aside. "Not identical. Way more distorted. As if it's been stretched across an impossible distance and only just snapped back into place." His expression was resolute, no flicker of concern glanced across his brow. "It shouldn't be here. And yet it is."

Sue glanced at the Argo as its systems purred awake. She forced herself to match his resolve. "Then let's not wait around to see if Lord gets there first. If something that powerful's out there, he'll want it, and he'll want to twist it to suit him."

Reed let out a small laugh. "If Lord could find this as fast as I did he'd have to have hired some pretty smart people over the past month."

Sue slipped into the pilot's seat, running her fingers across familiar controls and grinning back at Reed's cockiness. The Argo stirred eagerly beneath her touch, thrumming with life. Reed climbed in beside her, already pulling up a holographic projection of the energy spikes - a fractured, glowing trail stretching northward.

Sue took a steadying breath and gripped the controls. "Canada, then." she said. "Into the woods. Just what I always dreamed of."

A faint smile tugged at Reed's lips. "You've had worse camping trips."

"You better just remember I want our honeymoon somewhere hot and with a beach. Northern Canada is very low on that list."

The Argo glided forward, its engines humming low as it slipped from the Baxter Building's concealed garage onto the street. For a moment it looked like some eccentric prototype car rolling out into late-night Manhattan traffic. Then its hull shimmered and vanished from sight. With a deep thrumming pulse it rose straight up, clearing the rooftops, the city lights shrinking to a carpet of stars below as it accelerated into the night sky.




Hours later, the invisible craft hovered over the dense expanse of northern Canadian forest. Reed hunched over the console, the holographic display before him flickering with fractured bursts of light, the unstable energy signature dancing like static. He'd spent the whole journey analysing and updating his energy readings, and they only got more confusing and intriguing the more he delved into them.

Sue eased the Argo down toward a clearing, the treetops brushing the craft's underside before it settled soundlessly above the ground. "Readings are climbing again." she said, glancing toward Reed. "Whatever it is, it's moving southeast."

Reed tapped the scanner on his wrist, its pulse echoing the hologram. "The signature's still chaotic, but it's coalescing. The fact it's moving though is very strange."

Sue unbuckled her harness, standing as the Argo settled down onto the snow. "Reed have you considered that this reading might not be a 'what' but a 'who'?"

Reed followed her out of the transport. "I had not."

The cold Canadian air bit instantly at Sue’s cheeks as her boots crunched against the snow. She pulled her coat tighter, scanning the tree line. The forest seemed impossibly quiet, the kind of silence that created more anxiety than comfort. "Just makes it all the more important we get to it before Lord then."

Reed nodded. The scanner's glow lit his features in pale blue as he led the way, Sue close at his side. Together they pushed into the dark woods, following the fractured trail toward whatever awaited them in the Canadian wilderness.
A final note, woo made it to Earth, anyone who might notice a time space issue feel free to reference, although I am tagging @Half Pint as we already discussed this.


Sent you a PM!

Also I very stupidly forgot my glasses when I came into work today, so the chances of me getting my post done are a bit lower than usual. Hopefully I'll be able to get something up by the end of the week.
I should be able to work on something tomorrow if everything goes to plan
Sounds interesting! This is the first time I've seen a zombie roleplay set after the point the characters would be somewhat prepared to deal with the zombies!
<Snipped quote by Retired>

It's been one week, so I have to be honest. I'm no longer in a place where I can continue with this game, or with RPing in general for the foreseeable future.

Best of luck to everyone.


I’m sorry to hear that, friend. I hope you bounce back soon.
<Snipped quote by Terry Bogard>

Mister Negative and Vulture.


Sounds like my in laws
Got a little post up there, I'm moving towards the end of the Mad Thinker storyline and unintentionally made a small reference to this near the end!



Sue thumbed through the pages of an old, dog-eared copy of Foucalt's 'Discipline and Punish'. She must have read this copy at least 5 times in her life, stumbling across it in her father's library as a young girl which sparked a lifetime love of French philosophy - and a further pretentious phase in her adolescent years wherein she forced her brother to watch countless French New Wave movies in exchange for driving him around to meet his friends. Reminiscing back on her brother as she seemed to do more and more recently, she couldn't help but see the irony in his hatred for movies like 'Breathless' when she couldn't picture a movie character more similar to him than the protagonist of that flick.

She allowed herself a smile for a moment, deep in thought, before her fiance interrupted her thinking over the noise of his furious keystrokes against the keyboard of the computer terminal.

"I can't believe you still read that stuff, Sue. Give me a copy of Popper or Von Neumann any day over those French quacks" He let out a quick chuckle. Sue rolled her eyes, it was time for this conversation again it seemed.

"Science without philosophy is blind, darling. Plus-" She continued, wagging the book towards him as she spoke. "-There's a lot in this old French quack's perspective that you might find relevant to the world we're living in now. If you managed to open up that closed mind of yours."

Reed didn't look away from the terminal, but the corner of his mouth tightened - his version of a smile. "Perspective is all relative. Foucault makes broad claims about systems of power - at least that's what I've gathered from his wikipedia. I prefer mechanisms I can test." He relaxed slightly in his chair, happy in the knowledge that his playful jab would elicit a reaction.

Sue tapped a finger against the cover. "You'd be surprised how close his analysis is to what we're living now. Surveillance states, prisons masquerading as protection, people reduced to numbers in ledgers. He was writing about the panopticon in the eighteenth century, Reed, but he may as well have been describing Lord's checkpoints. You've seen the news about the Raft!"

That caught him; his typing slowed. "You're suggesting philosophy has predictive value."

"I'm suggesting that the Mad Thinker we met isn't just testing our code, he's testing us. Our choices, our ethics. And if you reduce everything to calculations, you're already playing by his rules." She glanced down at the book for a second before adding softly, "That's how systems like this win, Reed. They convince you morality is something that can be debated upon."

For a moment, the only sound in the Annex was the hum of cooling fans and the low hiss of recycled air. Reed's eyes flicked back to the screen, but Sue knew the words had landed. He could dismiss Foucault, but not the question she'd just put between them. Fortunately, or perhaps unfortunately for him he wouldn't need to answer, as if he were listening to them the Mad Thinker's text began to scroll along the screen in front of Reed.

[GOOD MORNING, LAB RATS.]


"Sue get over here." She put down her book and hurried over to him, resting her arm across the back of his chair as they read the text.

[READY FOR ANOTHER TEST?]


The screen was soon filled with different windows opening proxy servers displaying maps, blueprints, schematics, and finally a series of videos showing various human rights violations committed against Metahumans by members of the Lord regime. A data bomb that if unleashed could throw acid in the face of the president and his soldiers at precisely the right time to hamper the grand opening of his Raft.

They both felt an electric current of excitement and anxiety course through them. This was huge, information like this being made public could turn the tide of public opinion at least in some part, let alone what these schematics could do for other resistance fighters. Sue's mind ran with thoughts of impeachment, of civil change - Reed's ran with the thought of reverse engineering the power dampener collars. They both knew this had to come with a catch. If something feels too good to be true it very often is.

The maps and schematics began to flicker, collapsing into cascading lines of code that reorganized themselves into a single pulsing directive. The Annex's lights dimmed as if even the building itself was bracing for what came next.

[HERE IS YOUR CHOICE, LAB RATS.]


Two windows opened. On the left, a launch command tethered to the Agency's drone fleet. Below it a grainy black and white live feed, circling around a group of unknowing civilians in Gotham hundreds of feet below. On the right, a dump of Agency comm logs, prison manifests, and the Raft's intake schedules.

[PUSH THE BUTTON, AND THE WORLD CHANGES. A STRIKE, FROM LORD'S OWN EQUIPMENT. CHAOS WILL FOLLOW. CHAOS HE CAN'T CONTROL.]


Reed's stomach dropped. His mind was already running the probabilities, unwanted calculations filling in like a reflex. If the strike succeeded, Lord's narrative shattered. Detainees freed. Potentially thousands, maybe even more saved. His jaw tightened. Thousands saved, at the cost of dozens - maybe hundreds - of innocents.

Sue's face hardened as she read, her eyes narrowing. "He wants us to burn civilians to save the many." Her hand clenched against the desk, invisible energy sparking faintly across her knuckles. "This isn't a choice. What is his game, why not the data without the other? We can't Reed, we're not murderers."

Reed leaned forward, fingers hovering over the keys. "It's not that simple." He winced as the words left his mouth, knowing how they'd sound. "If the regime collapses, how many families walk free? How many children never see the inside of a detention block?"

Sue turned sharply to face him, her voice cutting. "And how many mothers bury their kids because you thought the numbers added up?"

"How many lose theirs because we let Lord abudct them?"

There was a silence in the room. Neither of them wanted to consider either option. Sue forced herself to steady her breathing. She knew Reed's brain was already sketching out contingencies - how to divert the exploit, how to reroute it, how to find an impossible third option. That was who he was. But she also knew how the Thinker worked. "Every second we waste arguing, he wins. This isn't about which button we push. It's about proving he doesn't control the board."

The green text pulsed again, as if in answer:

[OPTION A: SOIL YOUR HANDS, SAVE THE MANY.
OPTION B: KEEP THEM CLEAN, LET THE MANY SUFFER.]


The cursor blinked at the bottom of the screen, waiting. Reed's fingers hovered just above the keys. He hated the binary. Every fiber of his mind screamed there had to be another way - a hidden subroutine, an overlooked failsafe, a vulnerability the Thinker hadn't considered. If only he had more time.

"I can try to reroute it." he murmured, eyes flicking over the lines of code cascading across the screen. "If I strip out the targeting instructions, maybe we can salvage the data without triggering the strike. Or at least redirect it somewhere safer."

Sue's jaw tightened. "And if it backfires?"

"I'm not sure. We could end up sending the strike without getting the data."

They both paused for a moment. Sue put her hand on his shoulder and looked into his eyes. "Reed, we cannot risk the deaths of innocents. This is not who we are. It's time to choose the third option, not to play at all."

Reed thought for a moment, brushing a hand across his beard before nodding solemnly. "Better that than blood on our hands." Reed exhaled through his nose, then began to type, not the command the Thinker had offered, but their own act of rebellion against him.

[WE'RE NOT PLAYING YOUR GAME THINKER. WE CHOOSE THE THIRD OPTION.]


Then the entire system seized. The screen flashed white, then black. A hiss of static filled the Annex. One by one, the windows collapsed into nothing. Suddenly text filled the screen once more.

[CLEVER.]


The words lingered on the empty screen, pulsing like a heartbeat. The terminal went dead. Cooling fans spun down into silence. Reed slumped back in his chair, a sigh escaping his mouth. All that data - gone. Thousands of lives that might have been saved, the Raft's secrets, the Agency's schedules - all evaporated.

Sue placed a hand on his shoulder, firm and steady. "We didn't lose, Reed. We didn't play his game."

He looked up at her, guilt flickering across his features. "And the people still locked in cells? The kids still wearing dampeners?"

"They're not free yet." She admitted softly. "But they will be. The right way."

The dark monitor reflected their faces, side by side in the dim Annex light. Behind their tired eyes, the cursor blinked back to life for just an instant.

[TEST COMPLETE.]


And then even that vanished, leaving them in silence. For a moment neither of them said anything, Reed opened up a chat window and shot a message to Elder. Despite the ominous warning from Belo the last time they'd met he had to admit he was thankful he had the mole man to work on tracking the Mad Thinker while they struggled with their decision. They were hot on his trail now, this time they'd be taking the fight to him.
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