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3 yrs ago
Current Finally, we have returned...
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6 yrs ago
I haven't logged into this for so long so I guess this merits some words of inspiration.... Benis.
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8 yrs ago
Why are we still here... just to suffer.
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8 yrs ago
Skidaddle Skiddodle, your d!ck is now a noodle!
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Bio

Come from NS, still doing RP's there. So far enjoying myself in this site.

Most Recent Posts

Somewhere in the Port District


Itzi’s pace carried her away from the docks, past rows of soldiers, and away from the docked airship. Anger still clung to her, she didn’t know where she was going, she just wanted to go away.

As the noise of the port began to thin the setting of crates and cables turned into brick and iron covers above the sky. Rails cut through the ground ahead and before long she found herself stepping into what looked to be a depot, tucked just beyond the main stretch of the docks.

A train sat there, the steam blew slowly from its sides, and metal wheels creaked as it settled from its journey. It hadn’t been there long.

For a moment Itzi just stood there, staring at it. A thought then came to her.

Get on. Leave.

Let them keep their gold, their war, and their stupid arguments. Take what she had and go somewhere else, somewhere far from all of this. She only took a few steps closer before the doors of the train carts opened.

At first nothing came out but then movement came. Scores of men began to step off the train in uneven lines, the smoldering steam covered them but their silhouettes were noticeable as they got off the train, something felt wrong.

One of them stumbled as he descended, catching himself on the railing with a shaking hand. Another followed, his arm slung around the shoulders of a third who could barely walk. A pair came down together, one guiding the other whose eyes were wrapped in bloodied cloth.

More followed, then more.

Their uniforms marked them from Mittenland, but there was little else uniform about them now. Most of it was torn fabric with bloody stains, their faces pale with pain or exhaustion. Some coughed as they stepped down, others didn’t speak at all.

One man was carried between two others, his head lolling slightly with each step. Another sat at the edge of the carriage for a second too long before a Mittenlander soldier reached up, helping him down with a firm grip.

Itzi didn’t move, she couldn’t even breathe. The anger that had been so heated a moment ago faltered at the horrid sight before her.

More men came. Some in crutches, others covered in bandages and so many more with rags tied over eyes that no longer saw, walking out in a line guided by a single soldier whose eyesight seemed to still work.

The smell reached her a second later. A foul mustard like odor that invaded her senses and immediately made her grimace with disgust.

A soldier stood a few paces away, leaning against a crate. He watched it all with a tired expression, like this wasn’t the first time he’d seen this.

He pulled a cigarette from a small pack at his chest, struck a match and lit it without much thought.

“They’ve been coming in like this for days,” he said, almost casually to Itzi as she was still reeling from the stench.

“From the front,” He took a slow drag, then exhaled.

“Every train’s the same.”

He reached out slightly, offering the cigarette to Itzi as she covered her nose with her shirt. She hesitated for only a second before taking it.

Her fingers trembled as she uncovered her mouth. She brought the cigarette to her lips and inhaled without thinking. The smoke burned on the way down, harsher than she expected, but the sensation was better than the smell of rotting flesh.

Her gaze didn’t leave the platform however, another crowd stumbled.

Some of the arriving wounded had to be carried. Others sat down on the ground and didn’t get back up.

The cigarette lowered slightly in her hand.

Her jaw clenched then loosened. The anger had completely disappeared from thought.

“Madness…” she muttered under her breath. Her grip tightened around the cigarette, just enough for the ash to fall loose.

As the last of the soldiers filtered off the train, more figures began to emerge from the carriages. These were not in uniform, they were civilians. Clothes worn thin and dirt-stained, some carrying small bundles, others clutching what little they had left in satchels or broken luggage. A few had nothing at all.

Itzi’s brow furrowed as she watched them.

“Who are they?” she asked quietly.

The soldier beside her didn’t look surprised.

“Refugees,” he said, taking another drag from another cigarette before glancing back at Itzi, “From Inbur. Slipping through where they can.”

He exhaled slowly, “But the Calarian lines don’t show much mercy, otherwise it’d be thousands of them here already.”

Itzi’s stomach turned. An older woman appeared at the top of the carriage steps, a small child strapped to her back with worn cloth. She tried to descend, one hand gripping the railing, the other steadying the child, then her footing slipped.

Itzi moved, crossing the distance quickly and reaching up just as the woman faltered, catching her by the arm alongside the soldier who stepped in from the other side.

“Careful,” Itzi muttered, steadying her as they helped her down.

The woman’s weight sagged for a moment before she found her footing again.

“Thank you… thank you,” the woman said weakly.

Up close, Itzi could see it clearer. The hollow in her cheeks, dryness on her lips, her hands trembled.

“I… I don’t have much strength left,” the woman admitted, her words breaking slightly, “We were walking… for days… before the train found us. Just luck…”

She adjusted slightly, glancing at the child behind her.

“He hasn’t had water,” she added, her voice cracking, “Not for days…”

Itzi’s eyes widened, she didn’t respond, she couldn’t. She just stared at the child, then back at the woman.

The soldier beside her moved, unslinging his canteen without hesitation, pressing it into the woman’s hands.

“Here,” he said simply.

The woman clutched it like it might vanish, murmuring thanks as she fumbled to open it.

The soldier watched her for a second, then shook his head faintly.

“At this rate,” he muttered, almost to himself, “I wouldn’t be surprised if this war spills clean across the Evig.”

Itzi stepped back slowly. Her eyes were still on the woman, on the child, and the way the woman tried to help him drink with shaking hands. Something about it struck Itzi harder than anything else she had seen. The exhaustion, the way she held on, the quiet desperation in her voice, it reminded her of home. Of her mother and the kind of life she had come from.

Itzi stepped further back, the weight of it settled in. This wasn’t just soldiers or gold or some distant war. It was people being driven from their homes, families breaking apart, children going without water. And if it kept spreading, it wouldn’t stay here, it would reach places like Hunyunak. Her home.

She exhaled slowly, steadying herself as the thought locked in place. There was no walking away from this, not anymore.




Ambassador Crane’s Residence


The residency had settled into a nice calm contrary to the chaos that had ensued earlier in the day. Kentz remained near the sitting room, posture straight, hands loosely behind his back as he kept his position. His eyes moved occasionally to Carter who sat where he had been left, looking marginally more alive than before but still far from steady and to Miss Alina who moved about finishing her housekeeping and nurse duties without unnecessary words.

Kentz didn’t interfere, he was there to watch and nothing more, at least for now.

Then the muffled ring of the telephone was audible from the other side of the home.

Everyone in the room paused, glancing towards the sound.

“I’ll get it,” Alina said, already moving.

Kentz stepped forward before she could take another step.

“I will,” he said simply.

She hesitated, then gave a small nod and returned her attention to Carter, she moved to provide him with the last of the dosage she had been administering. Kentz meanwhile turned and crossed the hallway, the ringing became sharper as he got closer to the telephone station.

He reached the instrument and lifted the receiver.

“Ambassador Crane’s residency,” he answered.

The gravelly voice of Crane immediately came through, “Corporal.”.

Kentz straightened slightly.

“Sir.”

“I will not waste time,” Crane continued, “You are to take Mr. Carter into custody and bring him to the embassy at once.”

Kentz’s grip on the receiver tightened just slightly as the order.

“The route has been cleared,” Crane added, “You will encounter no obstruction, use the vehicle. Understood?”

Kentz frowned faintly, taking in the words.

“…Understood, sir,” he said slowly, there seemed to be a small trace of hesitation in his voice.

“Corporal,” Crane repeated, “do you understand your orders?”

Kentz straightened fully.

“Yes, sir,” he replied more firmly this time.

“Good.”

The line clicked.

Kentz lowered the receiver slowly, placing it back into its cradle softly. The corporal remained by the telephone for a moment longer.

His gaze lingered to the nothingness, unfocused as the order settled in his mind. He did not know Carter well, not beyond what Miss Ku had said of him. Still her words came back to his mind, what Carter had tried to do and why. He had tried to take what he believed was the fair pay for his crew, the dead and the ones who had carried that gold out of hell and back to the Inburians.

Kentz exhaled quietly through his nose. As a soldier, he understood duty, it was not something to be questioned. It was the foundation of everything.

But even so, there was something about it that did not sit cleanly. Both Mr. Carter and Miss Ku had risked themselves for a land that was not their own and that was more than most would ever do. The Inburians would clearly not pay what Mr. Carter or the others felt was just and as such desperate actions had been taken and now the Ardellian was a public enemy of both the Mittenlanders and the Inburians.

And now that said Ardellian had been rescued by his compatriots; his own land was turning on him. The thought lingered only a moment longer before it was set aside.

In his case, Kentz was not a freelancer or had the privilege of daring antics, he had orders to carry out, as terrible as they be he would have to contend with them at a later time. The corporal turned and made his way back toward the sitting room.

He stepped inside just as Alina finished administering the last of the medication. Carter swallowed, a faint grimace crossing his face from the bitterness.

Kentz stopped a few paces in and then without ceremony, he drew his sidearm.

Alina’s expression shifted immediately, her usual composure breaking just enough for surprise to show. Carter looked back from his seat as well, the fatigue in his eyes remained despite the sight before him.

Kentz held his weapon but notably didn’t raise it.

“Mr. Carter,” he said firmly as a soldier did, “as of this moment, you are in my custody. We are to depart for the embassy immediately.”

His gaze remained fixed on him.

“I would advise that you do not resist.”

Carter kept his tired look on the corporal for a quiet moment. Then, slowly, he nodded.

“…Yeah,” he muttered, the fight not in him, “Figured as much.”

Kentz gave a single nod in return.

“On your feet, please…” he said.




Commonwealth of Ardell Embassy

Elvesland, Kingdom of Mitteland


Crane sat with his feet up on the desk of his office, a cigar between his fingers and a glass of whiskey resting in his other hand. Smoke curled lazily upward, blending with the dim light of the room. Things had settled now at the embassy, while the police cordon remained in place, the “broken down” truck at the back of the embassy was gone.

Miraculously repaired, no doubt.

Crane scoffed faintly at the thought, taking a slow sip from his glass. The Minister had come through quicker than expected, though he suspected it had less to do with courtesy and more with avoiding further pestering from Crane. Kostidis, on the other hand… that man was something else entirely.

“…Stuck up prick,” Crane muttered under his breath. He leaned back slightly on his chair, it creaked beneath him.

All of this, over some gold.

A lump sum that may or may not have even been properly promised, dragged into something far larger than it had any right to be. Diplomatic incidents, police cordons, accusations thrown around. It was absurd, completely absurd.

He rolled the cigar between his fingers, watching the light of it glow faintly. Whatever Carter thought he was owed, whatever justification there was for it, none of it was worth this kind of mess. Not the attention, not the risk or the implications.

Crane exhaled slowly through his nose. The simplest solution presented itself plainly in his mind now.

Hand him over.

Once Carter was inside embassy grounds and things were contained, it could be done cleanly and quietly. A gesture of cooperation and a way to smooth things over before they spiraled further.

His gaze drifted slightly. There was a problem with that.

Carter couldn't have just appeared out of nowhere. He had taken refuge in Crane’s own residency, under his roof and seemingly under his protection from what would’ve been an easy apprehension for the Mittelanders.

Crane clicked his tongue faintly. He realized how that detail alone complicated things more than he liked.

Still…

Better to resolve it now than let it grow and before the mainland caught wind of it. But that telegram.

“Damn you, Anders…” Crane muttered.

Of course he had sent it. Crane let out a quiet breath through his nose.

“…I’ll deal with that,” he muttered once more.

Then a knock came at the door.

Immediately, Crane lowered his feet from the desk and took one last long drink, finishing the whiskey in a single motion. The remaining layer in the glass he pushed the cigar into and extinguished it with a smooth hiss.

“Come in,” he called.

The door opened and his assistant stepped inside.

“Sir, Captain Anders is requesting your presence in the security room,” he said. “There’s… a situation.”

Crane already knew what that situation was. He stood up, pulling at his jacket and smoothing it into place.

“Patch me through with the Minister of Foreign Affairs,” he said calmly.
Sergeant John Dusk


The longer this went on, the less Dusk liked the look of it. Not the desert or the heat or the fact they had been dumped out here like broken equipment.

It was the people, or at least some of them.

Between the casual talk of theft, the half-joking grifting, and the overall ease with which some of the castaways slipped into the idea of preying on the first town unlucky enough to be nearby, Dusk could already feel a headache settling in behind his eyes. Some of them were just trying to survive, he understood that much. But the others sounded a little too comfortable with the idea of making their problems someone else’s.

He kept his mouth shut through most of it, his eyes moving from one speaker to the next. Then the vote was called.

Neri

"So, lets vote on it now. I'll ask for hands up for those wanting to stroll in honestly. Then in a moment I'll ask for a show of hands for those favouring theft or grifting," she paused for a moment, "Alright, those in favour of honesty, raise your hands" ...


Dusk did not hesitate, he raised his hand for honesty.

“We go in straight,” he said, voice clear and firm, “These people didn’t put us here. They’re not the enemy, and I’m not about to start robbing locals because we drew the short end of the stick.”

His eyes shifted across the group, he stood straight and he was not about to back down.

“We’ve got hands, we can work. Trade labor, ask for help, be honest about being stranded without telling them more than they need to know. That’s a hell of a lot better than starting off by proving every bad assumption they could make about us right.”

Dusk lowered his hand, his expression stern.

“That’s my vote.”

Sergeant John Dusk


Saeyeon Kim
"Saeyeon Kim of the UN convoy missions, formerly of Republic of Korea Army Special Warfare Command," she said. "I'll join you guys as well in visiting the town."


Dusk’s eyes shifted when he heard it.

“Republic of Korea Army…”

He gave a small nod in her direction, “Good to know I’m not the only one out here.”

Then came the noise of someone or rather something else. Dusk turned, brow tightening slightly as the… thing started moving.

He watched it push itself up, limbs adjusting, no head—just that hollow space venting cold air like it was nothing.

Then it started talking.

“Whoo-whee, it’s hotter than hell out here,” she declared in a rather loopy, off-kilter, synthetic Southern accent. Proudly she rapped her knuckles against her alloy chest. “Good thing I got my own air-conditionin’! Don’t any of y’all go reachin’ down into my donation box to cool off, though, not if ya want your hand back!” A puff of cold air from deep within her gullet approximated a sigh as she looked around at the desolate territory, her hands perched on her hips. “Course, if my power runs low I’ll be sweatin’ like a whore in church right quick, hehheh! Don’t s’pose any o’ y’all got a battery pack to spare? Or a head, for that matter? I sure need me one o’ them!”

For the first time, it occurred to the android to pay some attention to her fellow castaways. A few of them, some already acquainted, had already grouped together in the hopes of reaching a nearby town. Some dhasath…or were they humans? A mix of the two, maybe? To a robot, they all looked alike. She was much more interested in that space suit, which struck her as oddly but unidentifiably familiar, especially once she happened to catch a lucky peek of the skull and swirling gasses within the suit’s helmet.

“Molybdenum?” She repeated, a smile in her voice. “Wow, what a wacky word! Like, the element? Molybdenum. Pretty dang fun to say, but it ain’t exactly practical. What if I see a li’l scorpion or somethin’ fixin’ to jab yer heel? By the time I belt out the whole word, the varmint’s already done poisoned you! How about Moly? Or maybe just Denum? Though I guess those ain’t jeans you’re wearin,’ hehheh!”

For a moment paused, as though spacing out now that she’d gotten off topic. “Uh…what was that about sharp stuff? You afraid of gettin’ yerself punctured, balloon man? Big gassy guy? Well, don’t you worry none, I’d never pop a Moly no matter how funny it’d be! Heheh…” Though if there was any cash rattling around in that suit with those bones, that might be a different story.

When the robot actually managed to focus, she realized that the prisoners were introducing themselves. She didn’t actually internalize any of their boring human names, but it sounded fun, so she stepped forward to do so next. She seemed to carry herself without any self-awareness whatever about how badly she stuck out among all the rugged, fleshy, storied refugees of the starry frontier. “Howdy, y’all! I been called lots o’ stuff, like Thief, Stealer, Slag, Rustbucket, Sumbitch, and so on. But I like Bandit best. I was made for minin’, but these days the ‘mining’ I do is makin’ other folks’ stuff ‘mine’, hehhehheh!”

After quickly checking inside her storage compartment, though, Bandit’s face fell, metaphorically speaking at least. “Daww, consarn it all! Those rat bastards musta taken all my cash! I ain’t got so much as a doggone penny to my name…” Bandit groaned, her arms hanging so low they almost brushed the ground, but after another moment she straightened up. “Well, guess that settles it. I’m stickin’ with y’all for now. Wherever we’re headin’, they gotta have batteries there. And money. And heads!” Clearing her throat, she lowered her voice somewhat. “Still, uh, takin’ donations, by the way. Just sayin’.”


That accent, that… attitude. Dusk blinked rapidly as he looked at the thing.

“…You’ve gotta be kidding me.”

For a brief second, he just stood there, staring at it like his brain was trying to catch up.

A headless robot with a southern drawl talking about batteries and… heads.

“…Yeah,” he muttered under his breath, shaking his head slightly.

“Either I took a harder hit back there than I thought…”

His eyes stayed on the machine a moment longer, "or this is just how things are out here.”

He exhaled through his nose, letting it go.

Sergeant John Dusk


“Move.”

The shove came without warning, Dusk didn’t argue.

His boots hit the dusty ground as he stepped off the ramp, the dry heat immediately settling in, it reminded him of previous deployments. It wasn’t suffocating like some places back on Earth, but it had that empty feel to it. It was the kind of place where if something went wrong, no one was coming to help that much was universal.

He took a few steps forward, then turned slightly as more prisoners were forced out behind him. The guards didn’t even bother keeping formation or a perimeter. They were just dumping them there.

Fucking figures. Dusk thought as the ship began to rise behind them.

“…Yeah. Real professional.”

He muttered to himself, eyes tracking the ship as it lifted. Just like that, gone.

No supplies, no weapons and no explanation. They were left to rot.

“Shit…”

His hand ran across his face, brushing over half-healed cuts from the ambush. They were still tender that they stung lightly upon touch. The dust had already settled into the prison fabric he was wearing, his service boots were the only thing he had left, he looked just as out of place as pretty much everyone else around him who had been left behind.

He exhaled slowly, forcing the frustration down, panicking wasn’t going to fix anything.

Voices began to pull his attention then. A small group had already started forming. A dhasath woman, a kiellar, and—

A human.

He was tall and seemed confident. Talking like he owned the situation.

“…Castleton," Dusk muttered to himself once more. The name rang somewhere in the back of his mind for a moment, but it was not important right now.

Dusk watched the exchange silently, reading the room (or scene rather) the way he always did. Different species and backgrounds but they all had one thing in common, they were prisoners abandoned in an unknown planet.

Some of them were already talking about stealing.

Not great but they were moving toward a plan.

He glanced back once more at the empty sky where the ship had been.

Then back to the group. Apparently there was a town over the ridge.

She turned around, cupping her hands to her face to help her voice carry better, "Hey! Anyone wanting to change out of your prison clothes, follow me!"


That was the best play. Didn’t matter how bad it looked to be around a gang of questionable ethics, standing alone out here was worse.

The marine stepped forward, speaking just loud enough to be heard.

“Name’s John Dusk. United States Marine Corps. Attached to a UN convoy mission before all this.”

He gestured vaguely back toward where the ship had been.

“No idea who grabbed me or why, but that doesn’t change the situation.”

A brief pause as his eyes moved across them, sizing each one up.

“We’ve got no gear, no water, and no ride off this rock. That town’s our best shot.”

He nodded toward the ridge.

“I’m sticking with the group. If anyone’s got a better plan, now’s the time.”

Mark A. Lopez


Mark had claimed a corner of engineering and made it his. Nobody had assigned it but the workbench had a dent in the metal lip now where he kept resting his elbow, a scatter of tools laid out in a way that only made sense to him, and one of his half gutted drones sat in the center like a patient mid-surgery.

The ship had settled now, it wasn't the most comfortable situation, but things had settled enough. Systems were holding and people starting to fall into routines instead of panic.

Which meant he finally had time to think, but historically that was when things got complicated.

The drone chassis in front of him was one of the better survivors. It's frame was relatively intact, only moderate damage to its sensor array and actuator joints. He’d already stripped out what didn’t matter and left the skeleton of something workable.

Mark leaned over the console beside him, flicking between schematics he had sketched out and the drone itself.

“Alright…” he muttered, “Let’s not make this stupid.”

The idea was simple on paper, take the existing drone platform and push it further. It would not just be remote-operated but rather something that could act without him babysitting every second.

It wasn't a a full AI, no even close. He wasn’t that reckless.

What he was building was closer to a structured helper unit with ayered protocols, conditional responses and predefined task trees. Enough autonomy to handle routine work: inspections, minor repairs, maybe even basic hazard response.

It would seem smart but under the hood, it would just be a very complicated set of instructions.

Mark tapped the screen, zooming in on a logic chain.

“If sensor detects breach... isolate, compute to patch or flag.”

Another.

“If obstruction detected... clear if within force tolerance.”

He frowned.

“Yeah… until it decides a person is an obstruction.”

He scrubbed that line and rewrote it.

The whole reason drones like this weren’t already standard issue was because of limits from before he was born. Every time someone pushed too far toward autonomy, someone else started using words sentience and rogue.

Big red lines with big consequences. Mark leaned back in his chair, he rubb2d his face.

“Not an AI,” he said quietly, like he needed to hear it out loud, "Just… better tools.”

Still, he glanced at the half-built unit again.

It wouldn’t need him to directly pilot it. It could follow routines, adapt within bounds, switch tasks based on conditions. Coordinate with other units, maybe, if he got the sequencing right.

That was… close enough to make people nervous. His eyes drifted to the ceiling for a second.

“Who’s even enforcing that anymore?” he muttered.

There was no central authority, oversight boards or inspectors knocking on bulkheads asking for compliance logs.

Just a half-crew on a colony ship running on borrowed time and improvised solutions. He exhaled sharply and pushed himself up from the bench.

“Yeah, that’s a problem for later.”

He powered down the schematic display, giving the drone one last look before stepping away.

It would work eventually, it might make things easier around, but not tonight. Mark stretched his shoulders and grabbed a rag to wipe his hands.

Engineering smelled like metal, oil, and recycled air that had been recycled one too many times. He was getting tired of it.

“Fresh air,” he muttered, already heading for the hatch, “Or whatever passes for it.”

On a ship like this, air that had just been someone else’s problem five minutes ago could he the one he was breathing now. He stepped out into the corridor, letting the door hiss shut behind him.

A Diplomat's Discussion

A collaboration between @InfamousGuy101, @Dyelli Beybi, and @Badarby


Crane’s office door opened with a firm push as he stepped inside without breaking stride. The telephone sat at his desk waiting at its corner like it had been anticipating him.

The staffer stood just inside, already positioned near the instrument.

“They’re on the line, sir,” he said, “Both the Minister and the Inburian delegation.”

Crane gave a short nod as he moved behind the desk, resting his hands briefly against its edge. For a moment he said nothing, he inhaled slowly through his nose, then exhaled quickly and straightened himself.

“Leave and shut the door behind you,” he said.

The staffer hesitated only a fraction.

“Yes, sir.”

Quickly he stepped out, the door closing with a muted click.

Crane sat silently for a moment longer and reached for the receiver. He lifted it, bringing it to his ear as his other hand steadied itself against the phone itself.

“This is Ambassador Crane,” he introduce himself formally before then shifting to a more casual tone.

“Now,” he continued, “would someone care to explain to me why I have a hundred Mittelander officers surrounding my building?”

"We can do whatever we like in our territory. You have no authority outside of your walls," the Minister replied dismissively, "However, were we, perhaps, have evidence of a foreign agent who had attempted to steal from the Inburian gold reserve, and were it to have been revealed that this person had sought refuge in the Ardellian Embassy, we might be weighing up whether Ardell is conducting sabotage efforts in aid of a foreign power. Of course, one would never imagine that to be the case as that would be a gross violation of diplomatic privilege. Is there something else?"

Crane’s grip on the receiver tightened ever so slightly.

“Minister,” he began, “such presumptions would be… rather absurd. The Commonwealth values its relations with Mittenland far too highly to jeopardize them over something so… speculative.”

His tone remained even, “That said,” he continued, “if this matter concerns an Ardellian citizen, then the embassy retains its full right to maintain vigil and provide assistance where it is required, as is customary diplomatic practice.”

Another pause.

“So I will ask plainly, Minister,” Crane said, “what exactly has occurred and what, precisely, is it that you believe this individual has done?”

"When an individual is in Mitteland, they remain under Mittelandische law. I trust you would agree that the world would be anarchy if people decided they were not subject to the laws of the land they are in."

Crane nodded to himself as he listened, “Of course,” he said, with a touch of emphasis, “Naturally. One would expect nothing less. The law is the law, Minister, and I would be the last to suggest otherwise.”

He took a brief pause, “But,” he continued, “just as individuals, Ardellian or otherwise, are subject to that law of the land they are equally afforded the right to defense… and the right to request assistance from their home country, especially if they believe they're wrongly accused. At present, I do not have the details of what this individual is alleged to have done. Particularly from our Inburian colleagues, as it is apparently their gold at the center of this matter and the Commonwealth is well aware of the… sensitivities surrounding current situations.”

He took another pause, “So,” Crane finished, “what exactly are we dealing with here?”

The Inburian Ambassador to Mitteland, Demetrios Kostidis, was certainly less calm than the Mittelander Minister.

"I think you know what we're dealing with, Ambassador," Kostidis replied. "An Ardellian national was caught trying to steal from the Imperial gold reserves at our airship and is currently at large in this city.

"As of now, this Ardellian national is armed and dangerous," he added. "We believe that he might try and seek assistance from your embassy under some guise of innocence. We expect your cooperation in bringing this man to justice."

Crane nodded to himself once more as he listened.

“I understand,” he said, taking out a cigar from a drawer and lighting it promptly before continuing, “and let me be clear, the Commonwealth values its relations with Inbur just as highly.”

A brief pause followed as he took a smoke.

“We will, of course, do what we can to see this matter brought to a proper resolution.”

He shifted slightly at the desk, “However given the current scale of police presence, it is highly unlikely that any fugitive would willingly approach the diplomatic district.”

“As such, I would strongly suggest that the cordon be softened. At the very least, eased. We would not want an already delicate situation to escalate into something regrettable.”

“Furthermore,” he added, “the embassy is willing to provide direct assistance through its own guard. Coordinated efforts, rather than overlapping jurisdictions, would be far more productive in securing this individual quickly and without unnecessary complication. It serves all parties,” Crane finished, “to resolve this efficiently… and without fanfare.”

The Minister sounded a little less evasive this time, "Your guards don't have jurisdiction outside of your compound and residences," he pointed out, "This should be a matter for the police, who I understand have the situation under control. If the individual in question enters the embassy or residence, your guards may hand them over to the police. The cordon at this point is preventing you from having that problem."

Crane closed his eyes for a brief moment, two fingers rising to rub at the bridge of his nose as he let out a quiet breath through it.

“…Yes,” he muttered, more to himself than to the line.

He straightened again almost immediately, "Very well, Minister,” he said, tone somewhat annoyed, “Then at the very least, allow me a smaller request. The vehicle positioned at the rear of the embassy,” he continued, “the one reportedly in need of repair… I would ask that it be promptly removed.”

He shifted his cigar between his fingers as a thin trail of smoke curled upward.

“My escort is due to return from a private errand,” Crane added, “You see I was on a... social engagement, one which I had the misfortune of interrupting to attend to this matter.”

He took a puff of his cigar.

“I would prefer not to compound that discourtesy.”

His tone remained polite, “Surely that is something we can arrange?”

"There's a broken down vehicle?" the Minister sounded genuinely surprised, "I'm sure the police can arrange to have it towed away. I will see if I can get in touch with whomever is running this operation."

"Right, thank you Minister." Crane nodded, "we will do all we can from our end and keep all parties promptly updated."

With no more to day, Crane hung up the phone. His gazed turned to an empty corner, as if looking way beyond it as the curls of smoke surrounded him. Taking one more puff he took hold of the phone and spoke.

"This is Crane, connect me with my residency at once..."
Someplace.


The sky had no sun, it hung overhead in a dull, lifeless gray, as if something vast had swallowed the light and left only its shadow behind. The air felt dry and unnatural and there was no wind despite it all being so high up above the skies. There wasn’t even a sound beyond the dull drone of engines.

Carter stood on the deck of the Screaming Eagle, he was younger and in his old service uniform, he looked around dazed and unsure of where he was for a moment before realizing that scores of bombs were dropping from their holders all around the ship, whistling down and landing onto the ground into a cascade of explosions that rang into his ears. Then he glanced at the movement below.

At first it looked like nothing more than shapes, but then the shapes became people. Then they became bodies. Dozens, then hundreds, too many to count as the landscape became a sea of bodies.

And the bombs kept falling.

One after another, slipping from the belly of the airship in an endless wave with no pause. Carter leaned over the railing, eyes wide as the bodies kept piling up.

“They’re off target,” he muttered, “They’re not-”

Another wave dropped.

The ground below churned. Buildings collapsed into themselves. The sea of bodies climbed up.

“Stop it,” he said, louder now.

No one answered around him. He turned, moving quickly along the deck.

“Stop the drop!” he shouted, “We’re missing the rail yard!”

No one reacted, there was no one around. Not a single soul aboard the rails, the bombs kept falling.

Another wave fell.

“No, no, no...”

He broke into a run, speeding through the rails and into the gondolas. The corridors stretched longer than they were, narrowing and darkening as the hum of the engines grew louder. The bombs didn’t stop, the explosions below rang louder.

Carter reached the cockpit and slammed the door open.

“Stop!”

The word died in his throat, his eyes widened as he looked at the helm, there was someone sitting at the helm, perfectly still.

Carter’s eyes dried out, the air escape his lungs. The pilot turned his head slowly.

His eyes were empty. Empty dark voids that sucked any light around them. Then he smiled, a wrong wide smile that extended all the way to his ears.

Carter took a step back.

“Wha-” he couldn’t find the words, “We’re hitting civilians, we’re…”

The pilot’s skin began to sag, it slid from his face in slow, unnatural sheets as if melting until revealing the bone beneath. The teeth still stretched into a permanent grin across the face and the voice that came from him was no longer human.

“Are you a hero yet?”

More explosions rang into the cockpit, Carter tried to move but couldn’t.

The cockpit filled with light and then fire swallowed everything.

The controls, the sheet metal walls, the skeleton’s grin and Carter himself was engulfed into a fiery cloud.




Ambassador Crane’s Residency


He woke with a violent gasp, air rushing into his lungs as if he had been drowning.

For a moment he didn’t know where he was. A fireplace in front of him crackled softly, warmth pressed against his face and a blanket laid draped over him.

His arm throbbed, he uncovered it from the blanked, his wound was properly bandaged and clean.

He was dressed in a white one-piece undergarment, his regular clothes nowhere in sight and the room was quiet.

There were no engines or falling bombs nor screaming.

Just the fireplace.

Carter swallowed, his breath was still uneven and a thin sheen of sweat clinged to his face.

His eyes lingered on the flames a moment longer then he leaned back slightly in the armchair, not quite trusting that he was fully awake.

A door ahead opened with a quiet click.

Carter’s head turned toward the sound, his body tensing. For a brief second the dream still clung to him and something in him expected fire or that hollow-eyed pilot to be standing there.

Instead, a young woman stepped in.

She wore a simple maid’s uniform, dark fabric with a clean white apron, the kind that looked typical for staff of noble homes. Her blond hair was tied neatly behind her head, though a few loose strands hung at her ears, faint freckles dotted her cheeks. She carried a plated tray with both hands.

She paused when she saw him awake. There was a flicker of surprise in her expression, she strained up before she composed herself and stepped fully into the room.

“My apologies,” she said, voice calm, Mitten accent soft in her pronunciation, “I didn’t mean to disturb you.”

Carter watched her for a moment, completely motionless, he was still shaking off the last remnants of the nightmare.

“Where am I?” he asked.

She moved toward a small table beside his chair, setting the tray down with care.

“You’re at Ambassador Crane’s residence,” she replied, lifting a metal lid from the plate.

Steam rose immediately, curling into the air, a bowl of soup sat beneath, thick with chunks of meat and vegetables, the warm scent invaded the surroundings.

Carter looked at it, then back at her.

“How’d I get here?”

She adjusted the tray slightly, making sure it was within easy reach of him.

“Your friend brought you in,” she said, “You looked half dead when you arrived.” A brief pause, her eyes flicking over him, “Still do, a little.”

He let out a faint breath that might have been a laugh.

“Yeah… sorry about that.”

He shifted in the chair, pushing himself upright. The movement pulled at his body as a dull ache spread through his limbs and settled deep into his bones but he managed to sit properly.

The maid didn’t rush him. She simply waited until he settled before sliding the tray closer.

“I cleaned your wound,” she continued, “Applied balm and changed the bandaging, if you could call it that. You’ll want to avoid tearing it open again.”

Carter gave a small nod, glancing down at his arm.

“Thank you,” he said. Then, with a faint hint of dry humor, “Hope I wasn’t a trouble patient.”

Her expression didn’t quite soften but there was something less rigid in it.

“I’ve had worse,” she said, "From my time in the service.”

Before Carter could say anything else, she reached into her pocket and pulled out a small bottle. From it, she produced a pipette, drawing a measured amount of liquid.

“Open your mouth.”

Carter blinked.

“What is—”

“Open.”

Her tone carried enough weight that he didn’t argue again, he opened his mouth and she stepped closer, tilting the pipette just enough to let a few drops fall onto his tongue.

The bitter taste hit immediately and lingered as he swallowed.

He grimaced slightly.

“Morning as well,” she said, already setting the bottle away, “You’ll take another dose then.”

“What is it?”

She met his eyes briefly, “Something to keep you from rotting from the inside out,” she said plainly, “Best not to skip it.”

Carter let out a quiet exhale, accepting that answer for what it was.

She gestured lightly toward the tray.

“Eat. It’s chicken.”

He picked up the spoon, still eyeing the soup for a second before dipping it in.

“My clothes?” he asked.

“Being washed,” she replied. “You’ll have them back soon.”

He nodded, then hesitated.

“Where did my friend go?”

“She left a few hours ago,” she replied. “With the ambassador.”

He raised his eyebrows for a moment but didn’t say anything else.

“In any case,” she added, “you should eat.”

She moved toward the door again, Carter watched her go but then spoke before she could leave.

“Hey…”

She glanced back.

“What’s your name?”

There was a moment of pause, then she spoke.

“Alina,” she stepped out, the door closing softly behind her.

The room fell quiet again.

Just the fire.

Carter sat there for a moment longer, spoon in hand, staring at the rising steam before finally taking a bite.




Ardellian Embassy - Outer Streets


The car slowed well before it ever reached the embassy proper but even from the corner, it was obvious.

Police, loads of them. The entire street had been swallowed a line of bicycles and wooden barricades, officers stood in pairs at every approach and more clustered closer to the embassy itself. The alleyway to the rear was blocked, a truck sitting idle like a deliberate inconvenience rather than an accident.

Ambassador Crane sat in the rear seat and straightened his posture, one hand resting lightly against his knee. His face remained visibly nervous and his eyes moved constantly, measuring.

This was too much heat, far too much.

“…Well,” he murmured under his breath.

Corporal Kentz said nothing from the driver’s seat. His hands remained steady on the wheel. Itzi leaned slightly forward, her gaze sharp. She took it in quickly and was able to put it all together.

“Not subtle,” she muttered.

Crane exhaled quietly, then leaned forward just enough.

“Corporal,” he said, tone even, “you will return to the residency.”

Kentz’s eyes flicked to the mirror.

“Sir?”

“Ensure Mr. Carter’s safety has not been compromised.”

There was a faint pause, “Yes, sir.”

Itzi shifted beside the door.

“I’ll head back to the docks,” she said, already reaching for the handle, “I need to check what’s happening at the ship.” She opened the door and exited, as she stood at the street she looked back at the cordon, “And I’d rather not linger around this many uniforms.”

Crane gave a small nod.

“Very well.”

He opened his door as well and stepped out, Itzi didn’t linger and walked off immediately as the Crane stepped out of the car, her pace was quick and her figure disappeared down the adjoining street toward the docks without so much as a backward glance.

Crane watched her go for a moment longer than necessary.

“…Damn,” he muttered under his breath more to himself than anyone else as he then bit his knuckles. He straightened once more, composure sliding back into him as he leaned slightly toward the front passenger’s window, lowering his voice.

“Once at the residence, remain near the telephone,” he instructed Kentz. “If anything requires… handling, you are to be available.”

Kentz met his gaze for a brief second.

There was something in his expression but he gave a faint nod.

“…Understood.”

Crane gave a nod back and stepped back. A second later the car pulled away from the corner, and disappeared down the street ahead.

Crane remained still then he adjusted his cuffs, smoothed his coat, and began walking.

By the time he reached the police cordon, he looked like his usual diplomatic self, “I am Ambassador Crane of the Commonwealth of Ardell,” he announced.

There was a brief exchange of glances among the officers, then a path opened without resistance.

He passed through. Crane walked forward and soon into the building, once inside it all felt different. There was a clear tension.

He had barely crossed the entrance threshold before the figure of Captain Anders stopped before him.

“Captain,” Crane said.

Anders inclined his head slightly.

“Ambassador,” he replied. “A situation has developed.”

“That much is apparent…” Crane said casually as he let out a breath, allowing Anders to continue.

“A violent criminal is believed to be en route to this location,” Anders explained, “Local authorities have established a perimeter. We have already transmitted a telegram to the Mainland.”

Crane’s jaw tightened, just slightly.

“I see.” He pursed his lips and then nodded.

“You’ve handled it well, Captain. Order has been maintained.”

He turned slightly, gesturing to one of the nearby staff.

“Get me a line to the Mittenland Foreign Office,” he said, “I want the Minister of Foreign Affairs.” He paused for a moment, clicking his fingers before another thought came to him, “And connect me to the Inburian ambassador as well.”

The staffer nodded quickly and moved off, Anders spoke again.

“Corporal Kentz is not present,” he noted, “Was he not with you?”

Crane’s gaze shifted back to him, for a second he said nothing.

Then, almost dismissively, he explained “I’ve sent him on an errand.”

Anders’ expression did not change though he eyes kept squarely at the Ambassador.

“The nature of which,” Crane added, tone sharpening just enough, “does not concern this command.”

There was a tense pause between the pair as footsteps approached. The staffer returned, slightly out of breath.

“Sir,” he said, “the Minister is on the line. The Inburian ambassador as well.”

Crane nodded once.

“Good.”

He adjusted his coat one final time, turning away from Anders.

“Let’s see what they have to say.”





I'll be checking this out fully in a few hours. This looks awesome!


Sorry for the late answer. There's not been a lot of traction of excitement but I appreciate being you interested. This may still come out sometime in the future.
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