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IDRG Pyramid

Director Dyer peered over the city, wondering where the frogs were hiding. It had been too long since the subjects had escaped, and their patrols had yet to find even a sight of them. Not to say they haven’t seen signs, of course. IDRG more or less owned this city. It was an unsaid truth that what they said went in San Maria. They “liased” with the local law enforcement to ensure the citizenry were protected by cameras lining the streets, giving them a view of the entire city.

At least they had a view of the entire city. In the weeks since the escape, cameras had been going down across Santa Maria. These cameras also happened to be going out at the site of crimes being stopped by an unknown force, with the criminals claiming they were apprehended by some sort of alien creatures. Dyer knew better, of course. He knew it was the Frogs, and they were taunting him. They were showing that they were here, and they were fighting.

“You haven’t answered my question, Director,” Jeremy Jackson, the police commissioner of San Maria sat at the other end of Dyer’s desk. His hat was on his one knee, revealing the grey hair spreading from his temples, otherwise his follicles matched his jet black skin. Cracks from weary nights had begun to spread across the commissioner’s face, betraying the man’s recent struggles in holding the crime epidemic that consumed Pinebluff from doing the same to San Maria. “Did you have a containment breach of...something recently? We’ve been getting...reports.”

The fact that the authorities were starting to ask questions rubbed Dyer the wrong way. He had enough problems to deal with without the bureaucrats getting involved as well.

“Commissioner,” Dyer smiled at the man, “have I ever hidden something from you before?”

Jackson shook his head, “No. No you haven’t. But if what we’re hearing is correct, the Bay Cities have their first set of metahumans. We may need to work closely on this.”

“If that is true, expanded cooperation will be necessary to ensure our city remains peaceful, I agree,” Dyer extended his hand to the officer, who shook it. “San Maria is too stable to risk letting this kind of chaos engulf us as well.”

With a nod, the commissioner left, and Dyer went back to peering out the window.

**********


“Guys,” Angel said through the special ear pieces Clara had designed for the team, “sounds like something’s going down in the Angel Grove section of the city. Local chatter, no police presence at this time.”

From her apartment, Angel had become their eyes and ears in the city. With a small police scanner and a...covert plug into the city’s goings on, she could feed them any disturbance that happened to come up. She was also invaluable during the day, as Art had decreed they needed to stay hidden. When she wasn’t at school or doing homework, Angel was watching the IDRG pyramid.

“Guys,” Mozart said to his siblings, “they’re playin’ our song.”

“Thanks, Angel,” Clara thanked their friend. “That’s where the Bandits have been trying to expand into the city.”

The Bayside Bandits basically ruled the neighboring city of Pinebluff. They were a gang with a penchant for creating chaos and corruption wherever they went. Their leader, known only as El Bandito, more or less ruled Pinebluff as a king, and the authorities there were fighting a fruitless campaign against his men. But he wasn’t the kind of guy who was content with having one city under his sway, and now San Maria was on his wish list.

The Frogs had clashed with his men a few times in the time since they escaped from the scientists, and each time it ended with the Bandits behind bars. The last few weeks had seen increased movement from the gang, however, leading Art to believe something big was on its way.

“More Bandits?” Ludwig sighed. “They just don’t learn, do they?”

“I mean, we have constantly been giving them concussions,” Bach added in. “They can’t help being forgetful.”

“CTE is nothing to joke about, B,” Clara reprimanded her youngest brother.

“Whatever, they’re dirtbags,” the young frog shrugged. “Let’s go crack some skulls.”

“I like where your head’s at, bro,” Ludwig cracked his knuckles. “We doin’ this or not?”

“Yea, we’re doing this,” Mozart nodded. “Let’s move out.”

In unison the frogs took off towards their destination. In the time since their escape the city had become their domain. They learned its nooks and crannies, allowing them to traverse the city in surprising speed, even on their own. It was now their habitat, and everyone else was just living in them. It had boosted all their spirits near immediately knowing they finally had a home.

Mozart, Clara, and Bach could move easier over the rooftops. Ludwig, being by far the biggest of the four, was a bit more plodding, and made a bit more noise, but still did pretty well. He lagged behind, but sometimes that worked out to their advantage. The three smaller frogs would soften up the enemy forces before their tank of a brother showed up to clear out the rest.

Before long the frogs were outside the warehouse where the Bandits were setting up. Two tractor trailers were sitting outside, and the gang members were loading cargo from inside into them. Crate upon crate was loaded onto the truck, and each had a strange emblem of an eye painted in red on the top of them.

“Well, this is new,” Clara said from over Mozart’s shoulder. “They’re moving someone else’s product. Usually they’re using their own dealers.”

“Who cares who they’re using?” Ludwig asked as he joined the others. “Let’s get in there.”

“Fine, but make sure someone gets some of the product,” Mozart commanded. “We need to find out what the hell they’re moving.”

The four nodded to one another, and Art took the lead, leaping off the roof and landing silently on the roof of one of the trucks. Bach landed next to him, and Clara on the other truck. He motioned for Ludwig to do his thing.

The large, hulking bullfrog kicked himself downward, and landed with a crash in the middle of the assembled gang members. Some of them yelled, some dropped the crates they were carrying and reached for their weapons, but none of them made it very far. Those within Ludwig’s grasp were quickly flying through the air, while the others were surprised by the other three frogs dropping down on top of them.

“You know,” Bach said as he elbowed a gang member in the gut, “you’d think they’d realize this is our MO at this point.”

“You’d think,” Mozart shrugged as he sprung off his hands and drove his feet into the chest of one of the Bandits who emerged from the warehouse. The two of them tumbled back into the building, where Mozart had his breath stolen from him. The same boxes that the gangsters had been unloading outside were piled almost to the ceiling inside. “Holy shit.”

Art crouched and began making his way silently through the makeshift city of crates. The creaking of wood echoed through the cavernous space as the frog weaved in and out of the towering monoliths. As he made his way closer and closer to the center of the building, the sound of his siblings fighting outside was gradually replaced by the rhythmic chants of a lone voice at the maze’s end.

Mozart turned the final corner of boxes and found himself staring at a scene he didn’t totally understand. Red, jagged runes were painted in a swirling design, terminating in another one of the red eye symbols at its center. On top of the eye, an olive-skinned, dark haired woman stood with her hands raised, the chanting emanating from her mouth. As Art entered the circle, she spun, and glared at him with dead, black eyes. The chanting stopped and she stared into the frog’s eyes. For a brief moment, her visage appeared to change. Like a flash, the smooth, tan skin of her face shrunk in and greyed, her face becoming more of a skull than that of a human. The white robes that hung on her form transformed into soiled, ragged bandages, and her limbs atrophied to skeletal remains. But, as if it was a dream, it was gone.

“What are you?” the woman snarled at Mozart.

“Lady, I could be asking you the same thing,” Art shrugged,pulled the bowstaff off his back, and gave it a twirl. “All I know is you’ve got this stuff the Bandits were running, so that means you’ve gotta go down.”

“Creature,” the woman smiled deceptively at Mozart, “you have no idea what kind of powers I possess.”

Art didn’t really care, if he was being honest. He sprung off his powerful legs and raised the staff over his head. As he came down from the high jump, something odd happened. The air around the woman began to bend, almost if Art had been suddenly plunged underwater. When he landed, the woman was gone.

“As I told you,” her voice came from behind him, “you have no idea.”

He spun around and saw the witch floating fifteen feet above the ground, her hair and robes billowing from an unseen wind, “I don’t know what you are, but you cannot stop us. Our time has finally come, and those that dwell in the darkness between the universes will consume all.”

With that, the chanting started again, but this time it was unnatural. The woman’s voice morphed into a mess of gargles, screams, growls, and hisses. Words, unlike anything Mozart had ever heard, came forth, and the crates filling the warehouse began to shake violently.

Art jumped again, landing on the rafters above just as the crates exploded. From them flowed a torrent of foul-smelling black liquid. It took all of Mozart’s focus not to pass out from the rancid, decayed stench. The oil-like substance sloshed along the floor of the building. It bubbled and gurgled as it circled below the woman, and Art swore he saw viscera swirl through it. It began to reach up, surrounding the chanting witch in a grotesque bubble. It then broke apart, splashing to the ground and draining through the warehouse’s drainage system.

When it did, the witch was gone.

Mozart lept down, and was promptly joined by his siblings. He searched high and low for any sign of the rancid liquid or the woman, but found none.

“Art, we gotta get out of here,” Ludwig implored.

“Did you guys see that?” he responded, still obsessed with finding some sign of what he had witnessed. “That...ooze?”

“We did,” Clara nodded. “But we can talk about it later. Come on. The cops are coming.”

The frogs made their way back to their lair, all the while Mozart tried to make sense of his night.

NAME
Mozart, aka "Art"
Clara
Ludwig, aka "Lud"
Bach

ALIGNMENT
Lawful Good

IDENTITY
Existence is Secret

PERSONALITY
Mozart, as the oldest of his siblings, is the most patient and thoughtful of the group. He has a strong sense of honor, believing that without one’s honor they are nothing. He is a strong leader, though at times loses his sense of confidence, worrying that he is not fit to be the leader of the team. He loves human pop-culture. He loves his family more than anything in the world, and his devotion to them is paramount. His thoughtful and meditative approach allows him to tap into his chi, giving him an extra ability in battle.

APPEARANCE




ORIGIN











HERO TYPE
Acrobat/Martial Arts

POWER LEVEL
Street Level

POWERS
The frogs are a mutated, anthropomorphic frogs. The mutation that gave them their human-like forms and intelligence also enhanced their animal abilities. Art and his siblings can climb nearly any surface, jump incredible distances, have increased proportional strength, speed, agility, dexterity, and a slight healing factor. Their frog tongues can be used to both traverse the city and as a weapon unto itself. Mozart, being a Blue Poison Dart Frog, can also coat his strikes in a paralyzing poison, though using this too much will tire him out, making it a last resort.

During their youth and time at IDRG, the siblings were hard-wired and taught multiple forms of combat with the intent of making them living weapons. Mozart is a practitioner of the bo staff, his non-lethal weapon of choice after their bid for freedom.

ATTRIBUTES




Resources: Average
Weaknesses: The frogs, outside of Ludwig, have no real armor. Knives, bullets, and beatings hurt them as much as they hurt us.

SUPPORTING CHARACTERS/PLACES OF INTEREST












<Snipped quote by HenryJonesJr>

Of course. You don't have to re-apply as you were accepted last season. Just add Art's CS and you're good to go


Awesome. Should have a post up tonight or tomorrow
Hey all. Was hoping I could start my story up that I started at the end of last season. Catching up reading the IC now, and I see that y'all are keeping the crazy awesome writing going.
@HenryJonesJr: We're just wrapping things up. As soon as the two current arcs end, then we will move to season 2.


Okay. Gonna do my best to get a post up tonight. Not going out at all this weekend, so god willing hopefully I can get two in by Monday
Hey all, where are we re: Season 2? I'm writing a post, and trying to catch up.
Hey guys, sorry I've been MIA. Post coming tonight or Tomorrow.

@HenryJonesJr I have one very important, very serious question for you.

Is this classic Fury, HasselhofFury, or Samuel L. Fury?


Samuel L, mother fucker. haha
Short post up setting up Cap's first mission.

Finally getting to tell a story I've had in mind forever.


Screens flicker to life in the room as the blond woman is roused from sleep. She stretches out and drops to the floor for a set of pushups to shake the sleep off of her. The screens meanwhile displayed the news from the past night. The continued cleanup of the Kryptonian invasion continued to dominate headlines. From government agencies across the world harvesting Kryptonian technology to the continued horror stories of the mass loss of life, there was nothing else anyone wanted to speak of. It was possibly the defining moment of human history up to that point, if Stephanie Carter was being honest with herself.

The Kryptonians had changed everything, but they were defeated. There were other threats that were now moving in the media shadow the invasion had cast over the media landscape. Steph knew The Commander and HYDRA would be moving pieces to to take advantage of being out of the spotlight.

Unfortunately for them, Captain America and the All-Star Squadron were on their tail. At least it was her and the All-Star Squadron for now.

“We want you on the Avengers, Cap,” Maria Hill’s words rattled around in her brain. “After this, Superman will be under scrutiny. We need someone similar to inspire hope. You can do that. Take some time and think about it. It’s an open invitation.”

They wanted her to be a figurehead. Hell, they always wanted her to be a figurehead. That’s the reason they had created her to begin with. She was to be the perfect little soldier on the frontline of the new superpowered wars. She was going to be the new version of her father fighting the Nazis.

Except, as she had come to find out through her conversations with Nick Fury, Steve Rogers was one of the most insubordinate soldiers he’s ever seen. Steve would strike out on his own with the Howling Commandos whenever he saw fit, and no one really ever questioned him because he got results. That’s why she went rogue to expose the HYDRA infiltration of SHIELD. She wasn’t sure if the entirety of the double agents had been caught, but at least she now felt confident SHIELD wasn’t a hive of corruption.

Now Stephanie was her own woman with her own mission. That’s why she hadn’t accepted a membership with The Avengers yet.

She turned the screens off in her quarters and headed to the training room. As the door to the main facility opened, a voice said from beside it, “You’re up earlier than normal.”

“And yet you still someone woke up before me,” Steph responded to Nick Fury, who was sitting outside her quarters. “Do you even sleep?”

“Can’t sleep,” he shook his head. “Too much work to do.”

“You got something for me?” Fury had been searching for clues as to where Pat Dugan, SHIELD scientist and weapons expert, had been taken following his abduction and the killing of Starman. Dugan was a brilliant inventor, and had been working on a battle suit of armor for SHIELD peacekeeping forces. HYDRA no doubt wanted it for themselves.

“Maybe,” he sighed and handed her a folder. As she began to flip through it, he explained, “That new HYDRA asset you ran into when Dugan was taken? He doesn’t seem to be new at all. Seems to have been behind a rash of assassinations during the Soviet era, always against targets that threatened to turn the world back to democracy. He was known as ‘The Winter Soldier’.”

“Can’t be the same guy, can it? He’d have to be over eighty at this point,” Cap commented on the years of the Winter Soldier’s suspected kills.

“Hey, I should be close to that, too,” Fury winked with his remaining eye. “You and I both know fact is stranger than fiction.”

“Still, physically he seemed to be in his thirties at the most,” she shook her head. “Of course I didn’t see his face.”

She remembered that day like it was yesterday. The Soldier was fast, even faster than she was. He moved with the precision only granted through years of intense training. He gunned down Starman, a veteran hero, like he was a boy playing with toys. When he came after Steph, she had felt something she hadn’t in her entire career up to that point: Fear. She was afraid of The Winter Soldier, and he would have killed her if Courtney Whitmore, Dugan’s step daughter, hadn’t taken up Starman’s staff. The girl managed to turn the tide, and Cap managed to survive by the skin of her teeth.

“Well, whatever the case, it’s a lead,” Fury shrugged. “We’ve been able to come up with nothing regarding HYDRA’s base of operations. If we can find anything in Russia that could lead to them-”

“It’d be worth the time to look,” she nodded. “I’ll assemble the team.”

“Are you gonna take Whitmore?” Fury asked with a raised eyebrow.

Stephanie pondered the question. Courtney was a willing and eager girl looking to learn how to be a hero. But she was inexperience. That could equate to problems.

“I don’t think it’d be a good idea,” she shook her head. “The last thing I need is a teenage superpowered kid setting something off in Russia. Putin’s already a nutjob. I don’t need World War III starting over an unscheduled visit by the All-Star Squadron. But I want her training while we’re gone. Mind taking care of that?”
“And here I thought I was done training blond teenagers how to be a super spy,” he sighed.

“Hey, you signed up for this,” she smiled at him. “I’ll see you when we get back.”

**********


The Quinjet flew quietly towards its destination with the All-Star Squadron in tow. The four members of the away team, Captain America, Black Widow, the Falcon, and Snake Eyes, sit around the briefing table in the middle of the sophisticated jet, which flew itself through SHIELD’s amazing computer technology.

Steph stood and looked around at her team, “You’ve all been briefed, but I wanted to talk to y’all before we got there. This is a deep cover mission. No use of powers or force in public. Try to stay inconspicuous. Nat is our lead. She knows the country better than the rest of us. Question and Snake Eyes will stay with the jet until we find something solid. Understood?”

The team nodded in unison, “Good. This is our chance. HYDRA let somethings slip and we need to hammer them for it. It’s time they’re on the run. Let’s find ourselves some snakes, Squad.”

<Snipped quote by HenryJonesJr>
Ayyy! I took the liberty of adding her to Tony's supporting cast. Gonna be a blast if/when she decides to join the Avengers. (She totally will, though, right?)


Oh, I'm sure she'll be suiting up with them at some point
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