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Recent Statuses

7 days ago
Current Ethical issues aside, AI prose is just really bad.
3 likes
15 days ago
She wanted to read, she wanted to write, but the main thing she wanted was something to fight
4 likes
1 yr ago
Make it clear that you don't need him to be reading Dante tomorrow. Also suggest it would be fun if you had a private language that you could use to mock English speakers in secret.
5 likes
2 yrs ago
Luckily history suggests an infinite ability for people to be shit heads ;)
1 like
3 yrs ago
Achmed the Snake
1 like

Bio

Early 30's. I know just enough about everything to be dangerous.

Most Recent Posts

Emmarelda woke to a violent jolt that hammered her against something hard and unyielding. Against her better instincts she opened her eyes only to find her instincts had once again been right. Judging by almost continual spine rattling jolts she was in a buttertub. Buttertubs were another wartime innovation that had been brought to the streets by the goats. They were armored wagons, framed with wood but with axels and crude armor fashioned from iron. In battle they were used as mobile fortifications and block houses, with narrow slits cut in the armor to allow crossbowmen and arquebusiers to ply their trade. In the city they provided mobile bases and block houses for the goats, as well as prisoner transport. Emmarelda tugged at the chains that had been wrapped around her wrists. Further chains encircled her ankles and her waist, all leading to an eyebolt in one of the walls. She couldn’t move her finger, a glance downward revealed that quilted gloves had been pulled over her hands, from the way it felt they had been stuffed with oakum to stop her from moving her fingers.

“Mrrmmmf,” she said eloquently, discovering that a gag had been forced between her teeth. That seemed like overkill. Two goats sat on the bench across from her, short truncheons drawn and eyes suspicious. Through the narrow aperture of the crossbow ports the medieval architecture of Fae Gate was rolling past. This was one of the few parts of the city that had escaped the ravages of the Great Fire, largely because it was rich and built of stone, its crenelated rooftops and gargoyle encrusted buttresses proof against mere fire. It helped that it was adjacent to Court street and the palace, rich folk who had the money to hire firefighters and buy the space that protected them from the flames. That meant they could only be going one place. A frisson of fear trembled through Emmarelda’s body as they turned onto Crow Hill.

The Black Fort stood atop Crow hill, its talons reaching deep into that modest rise. It was a hundred feet of gray basalt, all that remained of an ancient fortress that dated all the way back to the Basalian invasions over a thousand years before. It had been rebuilt many times and served many functions over the year but for as long as anyone could remember it had been a prison. Not just any prison either, it wasn’t for the common thief and pick pocket like Goldbrick or Kupford. The Black Fort was where the King had been held before his execution, where hundreds of Royalist nobles had been tortured and executed during the worst days of the civil war. The heads of those men and women had been nailed to the walls for all to see and despite the years, stains of blood could still be seen on the masonry.

It wasn’t the place's reputation that chilled her. It was the image itself. As they climbed the ancient stone streets of the Black Fort it made an almost perfect replication of The Tower from the Tarot. First the strange man, clearly the Page, then the Leviathan and sailor on the rope, a representation of the Hanged man. The appearance of so many arcana in the real world never augured anything good. Well she was chained up and being dragged to the most infamous prison in the country so maybe her prognostication wasn’t that impressive.

The heavy oak gates boomed shut as the buttertub pulled into the courtyard of the Black Fort, the four heavy dray horses snorting and puffing with the exertion of dragging such a weight up even a shallow incline. The guards stood and began removing her chains from their bolts with long clattering rattles. They then tugged her like a leashed horse out of the buttertub and into a courtyard. It was after midnight but the moon was huge and bright. A half dozen luciferite lanterns blazed on poles, bathing the courtyard in a bright yellow light. A squad of goats stood at attention, their gear neater and less rusty than the normal run of the mill. In front of them stood a neat little man in an orange silk doublet and a pair of green hose. He had a pencil mustache and his dark hair was oiled back. He held an embroidered handkerchief to his nose against the smell of horse ordure, sweat, and oiled steel.

“This is the one?” the stranger asked.

“Yes Vicount Cranborn,” one of the goats declared. The perfumed nobleman sneered and looked the gypsy girl up and down.

“Well I can’t say I see what all the fuss is about. Throw her in a cell till the Count arrives.”
@Theyra

I wasn't considering the email type things to be a real post but I can definitely expand when there is more action going on.
@UFRSivio Can I assume that Sadek is made aware of the intruder given the marines take her to the brig

I don't have an immediate plan for Hobby until we arrive at our first destination, if anyone wants to interact with engineering let me know!
From: Kashvi Sikander Sadek <kssadek@arcadian.mil>
To: Percival Adonis Charming <prcharming@arcadian.mil>
Subject: Vac Exercise


Top,

Given the fact that we now have a hard vac training space I want a training exercise at 0600. All personel suited and booted by 0530.

Semper Fi.

Energy seemed to thrum in the air. Many strange things had graced this stage over the years but nothing like this. A ripple of impending violence was already running through the Gypsy camp, mobilizing the many layabout brothers and cousins who would be here in short order with knives and short swords to slay the invader. Either he didn’t know that, or he was too desperate to care. Emmerelda reached for the crystal ball, her fingers extending almost of their own volition. It wasn’t a conscious decision to try to read the future, it was merely an instinctive grasp for something familiar. Electricity seemed to leap into her finger and prickle through her body. The crystal ball flared a white so blinding pure that it could be seen even through hastily closed eyes. There was a southern roar and the room was plunged into darkness that carried an icy cold that shivered the bone. Freezing drops of water fell from the ceiling and the iodine stink of the sea permeated the room. Emmarelda opened her eyes to find herself sitting at the table, hands locked on the inky black globe. The table hung in the air surrounded by blackness that was occasionally swept by stinging icy spray. Her companions were gone, though the strange man still stood, his pose seeming alien and awkward with no one to threaten. Emmarelda forced her eyes upwards but instead of the leviathan jawbone she saw that its candles had been transfigured into stars glimpsed only intermittently through roiling clouds and sheets of rain.

A sound like the booming of a great drum thundered below and Emmarelda forced her eyes downward. Fifty feet below them was the deck of a ship, its great spanker sail flogging itself to pieces in the gale. Emmarelda was no sailor but the vessel must have been handsome before the storm tore her rigging into its current array of torn and shredded sails and snapping ropes. It seemed that sailors ought to be swarming up the surviving ropes, fighting the storm for their very lives, but no living thing moved on the deck. A great flash of light illuminated the ship, rendering it in a sepulchral array of grays and whites. In the momentary brightness Emmarelda saw a few sailors, but her initial impression was correct. Several men, corpse white with grey blue lips, were scattered around laying as they had fallen against the iron clad motor house or by the gangways. A body skipped along behind, tangled in a frayed line that skipped him across the heaving waves like a piece of bait. As if intent on completing the ghoulish analogy, a leviathan surged up and ripped the corpse away from the parted rope. Another crack of lighting breached the darkness illuminating a coast line only a few miles of the bows. A single light from a distant light house guttered feebly from some distant headland in vain defiance of the gale.
The interloper was shouting something at her, his bellicose posture forgotten. He might have saved his breath as not a word carried across the tumult. Emmarelda felt a chill run up her spine that had nothing to do with the icy barrage of rain. Her eyes tracked downwards toward the ship to find a figure emerging from what must have been the passenger cabin. He was tall and dark with narrow angular features that somehow seemed Continental and aristocratic. He was staring up at her, eyes glowing like coals from the deepest pits of hell. His face was flushed… not flushed, slicked with blood. It was black in the lightnings strobing illumination, running down over his chin to stain his old fashioned ruffled doublet. He could see her, she realized with a frisson of horror! The figure reached up for her, his eyes blazing with insane desire. He called three words to her that chilled her soul.

Something struck her just above the breasts and staggered her back. Her fingers lost their grip and light flared back into existence. The crystal ball cracked, echoing a final peal of thunder, as Emmarelda toppled over backwards onto the rugs that had been piled over the floor. The interloper’s dagger thumped to the ground. He had thrown it at her! Had he known it would hit her butt first? Everyone was screaming. Emmarelda forced herself up, the table was awash with icy water that poured off it like a circular waterfall. Emmarelda and the Interloper were both soaked to their skins and shivering with cold. The others were dry, save where they had been splashed by the gallons of water that had materialized on the table.

“SHUT UP!” Emmarelda screamed, so loud that it momentarily stunned two screaming Gypsy women and a trio of their male relatives to silence. The moment was broken by a cracking sound and all eyes went upwards to see the leviathan jaw breaking free of its bonds and plunging downwards. It rushed down in a disturbing inverse of a great beast breaching the depths to devour its prey spewing wax from guttering candles. Emmarelda and the Interloper jumped up through it onto the table colliding in the middle a moment before it smashed into the ground in a shower of shattering bones. Flames sprung up in a half dozen places, licking into roaring pyres as they touched spilled oils and fatty unguents to begin climbing the fabric partitions. Somewhere, further out into the carnival a racket was rising up as men screamed and beat on sheets of tin and old bells, signaling an attack from without.
@Xandrya I shall await your email post!
@Xandrya Do you have an actual questionaire in mind?
<Snipped quote by Penny>

Well, it's become cannon that there's signs of the things being shot at.

If you take a look at Liu's post...


An interesting development but not one authored by me.

In the interest of forwarding the story we can say they blew out the vent safteys or some such with gun fire even though that isn't a particularly subtle way to do it.
@Cmmelody No, she had her people turn off the monitors, her excuse is that they were preparing to install their own sensors for their exercise.
Cue the deckhands frantically deflating Ranger tires to offset the loss (aviation tires are filled with dry nitrogen to keep a more uniform pressure across different temperatures and reduce explosion risk).


Cue chief Hobbs replacing the nitrogen in the Marine barracks with helium seeing one inert gas is as good as another and now all the jarheads squeak when they talk :p
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