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  Building a New Home
Posted by: Manix - 07-20-2013, 11:50 PM - Forum: Greater Moscow and the Golden Ring - No Replies

The ship and supplies sent back by his father was astounding. No fishing trolley returned, but his fathers custom built schooner. Many of the the family's craftsman and his fathers own "Chief of House" had come to Manix.

Chief, your presence surprises me, a delightful one I must say, but a surprised none the less.
. Chief looks him up and down and smiles: You have read the note, you father wished me to be here with you to get you settled, and to train your House Chief. I fear time grows short.


Chief, these notes explains what I want done and what has already been done, above and below. No man may leave the compound alone. No man is to give any information to anyone, I dont care who they are. If it is a Local authority then bring them to me, but answer no questions. When the work is done, take em all home, save Jackson, Cargo Chief, take him under your wing, he is who I want as my House Chief. Moscow is dangerous, but the danger is in the game. This game I will play why puzzle out the secrets of the scrimshaw.


Satisfied that his orders will be followed, he decides to go for a walk.

Continued in http://w11.zetaboards.com/TheFirstAge/topic/11679407/
Edited by Manix, Sep 4 2016, 03:55 PM.

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  On the Job
Posted by: Drayson - 07-20-2013, 07:11 PM - Forum: The Guardian - No Replies

Chief Inspector Drayson McCullough availed himself of Dr Adrik Ivanov's desk, his Wallet resting next to where his feet were propped up on the expensive oak's surface. He had case files and police reports displayed, as well as the medical files of a surgery that was recently performed. It wasn't the first time he had read the reports of course, nor was it likely to be the last, but it gave him something to do while waiting for the good doctor to return.

The police reports were all standard stuff. Precinct psychiatrists had already written it off as a bad case of work-related stress. The doctor had worked over 30 hours straight before the incident, and a sudden outburst of anger wasn't unheard of in a over-taxed man. Coupled with other eye-witness reports that the patient had been irate, offensive, and 'down right creepy' according to one male nurse, it was all pretty easy to explain.

The man was a dick, and the good doctor snapped. Open and closed case, really. Unless you payed attention to the fact that the patient went out the window to escape the violent doctor. After having heart surgery. Not to mention the...inconsistencies...in the medical report. Those were all confiscated by the CDPS, and replaced with a far more mundane report. He had a copy of that one as well, naturally.

The incident had been flagged noteworthy enough for him to open a case file, and to shut down the 'regular' police's own investigation. A CDPS mandated order to keep an eye out for the missing patient, marked as a 'person of interest' was to be the limit of their involvement. And all the better, really; they had no idea what they were dealing with.

Soon enough Drayson heard the jingle of keys in the lock, and when the door opened, he had his badge and ID held up for Dr Ivanov to see. The good doctor was young; an expert in his field and well respected by his coworkers. He had the man's own files too, naturally. Psych evaluations, school records, even a police report from when a five year old Adrik was caught shoplifting a Snickers bar.

"Who are..."
Dr Ivanov's anger at finding a stranger sitting at his desk was quickly swallowed when he saw Drayson's badge. He froze for a long moment, then turned to close the door. The man hesitated only a second, toying with the idea of making a break for it, before he just sighed quietly and shut the door. "What can I do for you, Inspector?"


Drayson flipped the classic leather-bound wallet shut and tucked it into a pocket, kicking his feet off the desk to stand up. A few deft flicks of his fingers closed the various displays of his Wallet, and that was returned to his pocket as well. Of course, the way he stood left his jacket open just enough that his pistol was boldly displayed in it's shoulder holster. A little reminder for the good doctor to cooperate.

"Three days ago, you cut a man's chest open. And twelve hours later tried to kill him."
Drayson could read between the lines of even the most mundane-seeming of police reports and witness statements. He'd written more then a few himself, after all, and knew what to look for when folks were trying to hide something.

Dr Ivanov sputtered and held his hands out defensively, "What? No! I never...no! No, I was tired, and he was a horrible, horrible man...no, I didn't want to kill him!"


Drayson snorted in ammusement and walked out from behind the desk to glance out the office's one window. The view left a bit to be desired; the roof of this part of the hospital, and a patient wing filled the view, but at least it let in real light. "Belt up, Doctor. You're a respected doctor. We've pulled plenty of long shifts before. Which, I might add, I've already waved off the board from looking into. Insurance reasons, you know. Not fond of doctors working too many hours straight. Asides from one Snickers bar, you haven't stepped out of line your entire life."


The doctor paled a bit; of course he knew that the CDPS would have checked his file if one of their investigators had come to talk to me, but that had been over thirty years ago...it was a sobering realization that they could learn so much about him. He indicated questioningly towards a chair, and after Drayson gave a nod, Adrik sat down tiredly.

"I don't know what to say really, Investigator. He...he was brought into the emergency ward. I don't know who brought him in, I just did the surgery, you understand?"
Adrik sat forwards in his chair, and rubbed at his bruised knuckles. He had never punched someone before. "He was...he was a terrible person. Vile, mean. He tried to bite one of the nurses, did you know that? We were going to gas him, as well as local anesthetics of course."


This was all in the report, but Drayson let the man talk. He leaned against the wall near the window, staring out at the narrow sliver of sky he could see. The patient ward across the way included one window, some three stories above the that portion of roof, that had a piece of ply-wood instead of glass. The man had dropped three stories before running off. After heart surgery.

"We did the surgery. Had to tie him down, least till the anesthetics took effect. And it was...he...I mean, everything was there, right? Heart, lungs, all the organs were there. But they weren't...weren't right."
Adrik looked up at Drayson, obviously frightened by what he was thinking of. "Not...not human? Couldn't be. Or maybe he was, and something happened? Maybe some kind of...I don't know...it wasn't human though. I checked on him a few hours later. I was excited, you see...going to write an essay on him. Make a name for myself. Get a disease named after me or something. The staples had fallen out, and the incision was already scarring over."


That was in the reports that the CDPS had locked up also. The patient had been brought in because someone had stabbed the man in the chest, and damaged his heart. Hence the emergency room and the surgery. Could this thing heal that fast? And if so, why had the surgery been necessary to begin with? And who the hell had brought the thing in?

"The man woke up while I was checking on him. I thought...thought maybe this was going to be a major breakthrough, you know? New age for medicine...but he started talking. He sounded...hungry? Not desperately so...like a man looking forwards to a run at a buffet? Like, he knew, was certain, he was going to eat right away, and just...gloating about it. He was going to start with Antonnia...one of the nurses, the one that he tried to bite before the surgery."
This was in the report also; he had watched the video on the surgery; these things were always recorded, to help regarding malpractice suits. No one had been wearing name tags, and Antonnia's name had only been spoken aloud after the mystery man had been put under, leading to the suspicion he had been conscious for the entire surgery.

"So the man threatened you, and your staff. And you tried to kill him."


Adrik stood up suddenly, "What? No! ...yes...yes, but you don't understand. That man...I...he scared me. Like a wild animal, a wolf or something...his tone? the certainty of it? I couldn't..."
He dropped back into his seat, face in his hands.

Drayson nodded slightly and stepped away from the wall, "Calm down, Doctor. A few CDPS specialists will visit you later today. Medical specialists. They'll want to get your professional expertise on your missing patient."


Dr Ivanov nodded slowly and glanced up at Drayson as the Inspector moved towards the door. "Oh, and Doctor? Your house is under surveillance. Your missing patient knows your name. But don't worry. The CDPS is on the job."
The Doctor's name had been mentioned during the surgery as well, and anyone with a passing knowledge of the internet could find his address, with a little effort. Drayson offered the now pale doctor an almost sarcastic smile, then took his leave.

Continued in: Doing the leg work


Edited by Drayson, Aug 11 2013, 07:01 PM.

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  Acronyms
Posted by: Ascendancy - 07-20-2013, 01:09 PM - Forum: About - Replies (3)

CCD - Central Custody of Dominion

Founded 2025.

ASU - Ascendant Soviet Union

Founded 2023, restructured into the CCD in 2025.

CDPS - Custody Domestic Protection Service

Custody Intelligence;
headquarters: Kremlin

Ascendancy
- Authoratative ruler of the CCD
Nikolai Brandon, Former President of the Russian Federation and Ascendant Soviet Union

Dominances

- political divisions of the CCD.
Current Dominances & their capitals are:
Dominance I - Former Russia aka the "Central Dominance", Moscow.
Dominance II - Former nations of the old USSR, Kiev.
Dominance III - the Indies & southeast Asia, Mumbai.
Dominance IV - the Far East excluding China, Tokyo.
Dominance V - the Middle East, Dubai.
Dominance VI - Eastern Europe, Prague.
Dominance VII - Western Europe, London.

Patron
- Ruler of a Dominance;
directly reports to the Ascendancy;
the CCD equivalent to a regional governor

The Sphere
- the executive and cultural counsel to the Ascendancy

Privilege
- the seven individual members of the Sphere

Custody
- CCD equivalent to a department or agency; eg, Custody of Defense

Atharim
- hunters of gods and creatures from the godwars

Regus
- head of the Atharim

Wilder
- a First Age wielder of the Power

The Sickness
- the symptoms which follow an uncontrolled use of the Power

Ouroboros
- the tattoo of a serpent or dragon eatings its own tail which marks a member of the Atharim

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  FAQ
Posted by: Ascendancy - 07-20-2013, 01:06 PM - Forum: About - Replies (1)

How do I know what god I can be?

You can be any god from mythology, so long as its not already claimed by another character. See claimed gods list. GODS of myth must be channelers; however, stories that feature heroes or mortals do not have to be channelers. Also, if you played a RP character from the 3rd Age (time of the books), you can play your old character-reborn.

Will my character ever remember their “past life”?

At this point in our story, we have not developed any means by which characters remember past lives. This is not to say it is impossible, it just hasn’t happened. If this is a storyline you are interested in pursuing, contact us.

Will I feel kinships or familiarity with other gods?

If a mythology says two gods were related in one way or another and both are reborn, certainly! You may or may not feel a kinship, relationship, or a familiarity with that other person. The chatroom would be a great place for the two writers to talk about it!

What is the process by which channelers advance in strength and experience?

You are in control of advancing your own strength and experience level as a writer which feels their character has developed it throughout your various posts. Therefore, you can further your progress / strength / skill at your own pace. There are no designated rules by which must be followed to 'level up' so long as you don't go beyond your 'potential strength' level, as that is the max you applied for (and were approved) when submitting the application to begin with.

As general guideline, it will likely take 3-6 months of consistent RP to advance from Adept to Expert.

Before leveling up to 'Master' experience level, check with admin first.

On the other hand, if we ever come into a situation where it is deemed someone is taking advantage of such freedoms, we'll handle it on a case by case basis.


Can we invent monsters?

Yes! You have the freedom to add to the monsters and mythos of the world. I only ask that you have an appropriately developed back story to tie in with your creation of sufficient depth to approximate that on the Mythos Blog. At that point, your creation will be added!

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  Drayson Mccullough
Posted by: Drayson - 07-20-2013, 07:35 AM - Forum: Biographies & Backstory - Replies (1)

Drayson Mccullough
Age: 36

Origin: Castletown, Isle of Man, British Isles.
Current Resident: Arbatskaya district.

Occupation:
Custody Domestic Protection Service.

Psychological Description: Drayson had always been a man of few hobbies, and fewer friends. Growing up in a small town on the Isle of Man, he had always stood out as being far too mature for his age, and the only times he was seen as being aggressive was in a good rugby scrimmage. Drayson considers himself an easily angered person, but it is rarely seen by others. Instead, he is described as having almost supernatural levels of patience.

Physical Description: Drayson is a large man. 6'2" and heavily built, he has a penchant for somewhat dated wool suits, well tailored of course. A bit of a pain in the height of summer, but the rest of the year is usually pleasantly cool. A strong exercise routine is evident in his build, although rarely made obvious thanks to his chosen style of suit and jacket.

Powers and Supernatural Powers: None.

Bio:
Although just a boy when the King of England and the elected government made the fateful decision to bow to the CCD, Drayson still identifies himself as a Brit. The Royal Family are still a remembered and respected tradition, and now defunct United Kingdom still exist as a fond memory in his mind. But Drayson's a realist, not lost in the glory days of the past. Britain would rise as a powerful contributor to the CCD, and it was the men and women of those once isolated Isles that would bring it there.

As a boy, Drayson was the eldest son of five boys, raised by a single mother who did all she could to make ends meet. With the dying economy, she failed. Drayson, aged 9, watched his youngest brother die of pneumonia before his first birthday; funding for public healthcare was steadily cut as the government's coffers dug deeper and deeper into the red. After that, the young boy's entire view of the world changed. Gone was the carefree child, and Drayson quickly took up the mantle of being the man of the house.

He cared for his younger brothers, helped with the chores, and did odd jobs to earn money, food, or odds and ends that the family needed. Kerosene for a heater, blankets, some loose change, a bag of sugar. He was up early and to bed late every day, a diligent student and a common face around Castletown doing whatever he could to help his family. Drayson finished his public schooling and won a scholarship, which he used to pursue a degree in criminology and criminal psychology. Three years of schooling achieved him his Bachelor's degree, and he was quickly accepted as a police officer.

His loyalty to the CCD is more a carry-over of his loyalty to his homeland. So long as the CCD flourishes, so too will Britain. He served with distinction in the DVII Capital Region police department, with a sizable portion of his uncomfortably small income going to his mother and younger brothers, to help cover their ongoing education. It was during his time in London that Drayson drew the attention of the Custody Domestic Protection Service, and after five years as a police officer, he received his transfer notice to the DVII CDPS, based in Scotland Yard.

Another eight years of distinguished service there saw him transferred to the Moscow branch as a Chief Investigator.

-----

The investigation had gone in circles for far too long. They had their third copy-cat killer in the stockade, and their third one that claimed that 'something made them do it.' It was a load of bull; the department's psychologist was guessing they suffered from a mix of split-personality syndrome and schizophrenia. An easy enough story to buy; drugged out, desperate, and crazy, was the best way to describe the homeless population in the slums of London. Even under CCD rule, things had been slow to recover, and the social security net needed to help so many of the forgotten and lost simply wasn't in place yet.

Something wasn't adding but some of them had it figured out. Some new drug must have been making the rounds. It wasn't unheard of for the smaller 'chemists' to test their new product in the shanties. All three killers had been known to live around Gallions Hill, and that was where the three detectives were headed to get to the bottom of things. The three men parked their car in a gravel lot near the base of the hill and climbed out. All three wore wool suits of middling quality. Off the rack sort of stuff, with at least a passing nod from a seamstress to get them fitted. They weren't wealthy men, but they would stand out where they were going.

They mingled around the car for a moment, one of the police detectives discreetly tucking a short-barreled shotgun under his coat, the other two checking their revolvers. Then they made their move. The shotgun was loaded with bean-bag rounds; they didn't want to kill anyone, but they were ready, just in case. Nearly two dozen bodies in two weeks was simply too much to ignore.

Over the next two hours, the three men moved through one of the city's largest shanty towns. At last census, near 3 thousand people lived in the area, squatting in abandoned or condemned buildings, in decommissioned metro stations or lines, or in tents and lean-toos in what was once a rather nice park. The area was once home to the upper-middle-class before the economic collapse. People that were well off, but not independently wealthy. As factories ceased, mines closed, and companies went other, these were the managers, the bankers, and stock-brokers. Now it was the homeless (and probably more then a few of those once well-off folks who hadn't fared well in the change of times).

With the coming of the CCD, there could be no denial that things were better, and improving every day. But it was slow, and some places saw the affects sooner the others. They asked questions, even roughed up a few people from time to time. Punks and runners, mostly. You would think that a place like that, word that the police were skulking about would spread fast, but these people had clammed up. Everyone was a possible murderer now, and most folks stayed huddled alone or in small groups, around fires or radios, and kept a wary eye out for who-ever was going to pop up as the next killer.

At one point in their journey, they came across a young man, a priest. An Irish priest. The man was doing God's work among the lost and forgotten, but Drayson was almost certain that the young man gave the three detectives far too bold an eye.

The three cops spent hours scouring the camp, and the answers they found weren't quite what they were looking for. Sure there were new designer drugs floating around; there always were. But everyone they spoke to said the same thing. The killers didn't do it due to some drug. There was a ghost. It possessed people, and made them go around killing folks. Skinning them alive, breaking their bones. Torture.

Then the big break. A woman came running towards them the three detectives. Weeping, sobbing, hysterical. But desperate enough to actually come to them for help, which was saying a lot. Her daughter had been taken from near the tent they shared. A man with a knife, crazy, babbling in some language she didn't know. That was a common trend among the killers so far; they had been babbling, probably gibberish according to the specialists. Just another side-effect of whatever drug was making the rounds.

She led them to her tent, and from there the hunt was on. Other squatters pointed them in the right direction, and the three cheap-suited men were soon pounding the steps into one of the abandoned subways in the area. Torches were pulled from pockets and guns jumped into their hands; the city had shut down the electricity in these parts of the public transit system to save money, and it was pitch black.

It took days for him to fully understand what happened next. The three fanned out in the metro station, before the detective sporting the shotgun spotted the culprit, already at work on the now dead girl. No more then fifteen, the girl hadn't stood a chance. The coroner was sure she was already dead before the bastard had started cutting, so that was one small favor. The detective fired, but the beanbag didn't seem to phase the man much. He took it square to the face, then came running. Two more blasts of the shotgun, one of which went wide, and the knife-wielding maniac fell on the detective.

The two were already on the ground struggling when Drayson and the other detective found them. The attacker's knife was already biting into their comrade's throat when they opened fire. Rounds peppered the crazy man, but it was already too late for their friend. The knife gouged through his throat in their death-throws. What came next was the hard part to explain. Just before they opened fire, something seemed to rise out of the knife-wielding maniac's body. A spirit, or ghost perhaps. Neither man really understood what they were seeing.

Most of what came next didn't go in the report. The thing, the ghost, surged towards Drayson's partner. Both men fired at it, but there was nothing to hit. It seemed to wrap itself around Drayson's partner, who let out a terrified scream as it seemed to sink into his mouth, his eyes. The man seemed to struggle, staggering back against the wall and sobbing in pain and terror, babbling for it to 'get out of his head.' It ended quickly, the babbling stopped, as did the shaking and weeping.

Both men were silent for a long moment, Drayson's gun aimed at his partner, the only sound in the room the dying gurgles of the other detective laying on the dirty floor. His partner looked at him, then his gun came up far too quickly. One shot, a second, and Drayson was staggered back against one of the concrete pillars by the impact of one of the two shots that found their mark.

The possessed detective advanced, and began rambling some sort of gibberish. Actually, it almost sounded like a language. There was an accent to it, and a structure, like he was actually saying something, just not in English. Or anything else Drayson could readily identify. The man fired again, another round striking Drayson in the chest, getting a pained grunt from the large man.

Then that Irish priest came out of no-where, a long slender spike in hand. He came up behind the possessed detective, who was distracted with the gun, as if trying to figure out why it had stopped firing. The priest grabbed the detective's collar and drove the spike deep into the base of his skull, up into the brain and gave it a good wiggle as it sunk in. The detective shuddered once and dropped hard.

Had the Atharim priest played his cards right, it could well have been a start to a good relationship between Drayson and their secretive organization. Instead, the priest tried to lure Drayson into a false sense of security. As he tried to come to grips with what had happened, he shrugged out of his overcoat and unbuttoned his jacket and shirt to eye the bullet proof vest underneath. Two revolver rounds were buried into the new cracked impact plate. The priest tried to explain a little of what had been happening. A creature, a thing called a Wefuke. A remnant of something called the Godswars...

The Priest took a stab at Drayson mid-conversation, an attempt to kill the only witness. Drayson was quicker. The two struggled, but Drayson was the stronger of them. Bone snapped; the priest's arm broken at the elbow. Again, the priest's knee. The man dropped like a sack of bricks. Trained to hunt monsters, but the man was no good against another human it seemed.

In his report, Drayson put forward that the priest might have known something about the drug in question. Perhaps was the source of it. There was no mention of horrible ghosts. No mention of what the man had told him, before trying to kill him. It was all mundane and logical. The priest managed to kill himself in the hospital before the Custody Domestic Protection Service could get their hands on him, their interest having been peaked when reports of the Celtic tattoo on the man's wrist made it's way into the medical report.

With a dead Atharim on their hands, they looked more closely into Detective Drayson's report. One thing lead to another, and he was quickly transferred from the police to the CDPS, where he has served ever since, being transferred to Moscow just two years ago.


Edited by Drayson, Mar 30 2014, 07:16 PM.

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  The Baccarat Gala
Posted by: Hood - 07-17-2013, 08:02 PM - Forum: Place of Enlightenment - Replies (9)

Continued from: Window Shopping

After the incident at that blasted book store, Mr Arrabat had been far more cooperative about sticking to the itinerary. Even after the delay with the Custodians, they still arrived well ahead of their driver, whom Hood spotted stuck in traffic barely two blocks from where they had gotten out of the car.

The Baccarat Mansion was a lavish structure, made more so for the expensive banners that were rolled down the building's face, bearing the Baccarat seal and of some of the most important guests to the night's fundraiser gala.

A steady stream of expensive cars and limos lined the street towards the mansion's entrance, and CCD police played an important role in the horrible traffic congestion, as they closed off intersections and gave gala invitees priority. Only a handful of guests would deign to dismount and walk, not wanting to be seen doing something so indignant.

Mr Arrabat didn't seem the type to care what others might think if he were to simply walk up to the building. The two were met at the first landing of the steps leading to the mansion's open doors, where a handful of men that were obviously well-dressed guards kept an eye things, and a dozen valets waited to park the cars of anyone who had actually decided to drive themselves.

A concierge accepted Mr Arrabat's invitation and Hood's papers, and the two were allowed in after their names were checked off the list. The two walked in together, and Hood absently adjusted his tie before glancing down at the old man. "Well sir. Safe and sound. I'll be out back if you need me."


Mr Arrabat chuckled and nodded, "Yes well, at least there was some excitement tonight, yes? I will send for you once I am ready to leave."
And with that, the old Italian man moved into the main room, where guests mingled among the glass-encased displays of the Baccarat's finest works of art. Staff circled to deliver drinks or bore platters of expensive snacks, beautiful women hung on the arms of men three times their age were common place, and every second person was just a total waste of skin. In Hood's mind, at least.

He skirted wide of that room, moving to one of the side halls used by the serving staff. One of the servants actually tried to stop him at first, but after getting one good look at him the young man suddenly found himself busy inspecting the tray of empty drink glasses he was carrying.

Soon enough he found himself to the...what was the term? Veranda? Porch? A sign of the wealth and power of the Baccarat's was that their mansion, in the heart of Moscow, sported what passed locally as a rather expansive yard and garden. Guests mingled there too, talking and enjoying pipes or cigarettes. Most of the bodyguards guests had brought were secreted away in a small outbuilding in the yard, a bit out of the way of the main house.

They were allowed to come and go of course, especially if summoned by their client, but most made a point of staying out from under foot of their betters. There was little danger to their clients at the gala, after all. Hood's reason for being present was double-edged, however. Both as Mr Arrabat's escort, and an added bit of security for the Atharim, so he stayed closer to the house.

He loosened his tie and produced a cigar and cutter, with the cap tucked into a pocket rather then simply being discarded as some of the guests had done. Then a deft flick of his wrist and the cigar was lit, a few practiced puffs to get it smoldering nicely. That done, Hood just stood with near perfect stillness, calmly studying the garden and yard, especially the gaggle of bodyguards, the lay of the wall, the cameras, even the guests. He was being payed very well for this job, so he would make a good show of it, at least.

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  The underworld
Posted by: Ascendancy - 07-16-2013, 04:52 PM - Forum: Rest of the world - No Replies

There was something to going through the motions for appearances' sake. Somewhere in the back of Nikolai’s mind, he was tempted to abandon the gear--the science--of exploration and forge ahead on sheer instinct, but he would not give in to temptation. Forty-five years of discipline kept his hand from sweeping the dangerous flames of temptation too freely or too often. No. Now was the time for logic and reason; the time for science. Instinct was waiting for tomorrow.

By way of plane, then helicopter, he arrived several hours earlier to this field office, an in situ center of operations for the Custody of Energy’s exploration team. It had been two years since his last visit, and while briefings, calls, and teleconferences went a long way toward facilitating the process, eventually the Ascendancy needed to come in person. He had to be here, after all. Instinct did not work unless a man was immersed in context.

Two years of field work led by a team of geoscientists, surveyors, and explorationists currently surrounded his field of view. He was in a control room of sorts, the heart of their operation, but without the gear, the room was meaningless. The focal point on which Nikolai was currently concentrating was an enormous curved wall which acted as a pressure-sensitive screen. The glasses he currently wore filled the screen with images, an operations panel, and a recording device which projected his line of sight to the scientists in an adjacent room.

He tapped a command on the tablet in his hands and 3D floor to ceiling graphs of sonar frequencies were suddenly overtaken by a topographical map. Much of the region in this part of Siberia was made up of the sharp, forested slopes of the Altai mountains, part of a range which ran east-westerly along the CCD border with China and Mongolia. The snow-capped peaks of those very mountains rimmed the horizon on screen. Set before them was an enormous plateau, a flat-table high above sea-level. Prior to CCD consolidation, this region was “protected” from development. But the endogenous peoples which once roamed this region, thousands of years long dead, were nothing today. The media would whine about it, until the Ascendancy point-blank asked those anchors if they would give up hot showers, warm food, and working hospitals to protect burial mounds and cave drawings. The absurdity of the media’s logic astounded him.

Indeed, the rugged terrain of the Altai mountains enclosed the plataeu, as defined by this virtual environment, and as Nikolai pivoted, looking for the pattern described by one of the geophysicists, the image likewise shifted as though he were there in person. This semi-desert valley was more like Mongolia than Siberia, he said to himself, pitted with rocks and tufts of hardy grass as it was. It stretched out before him now, but his thoughts were far from environmentalists, humanists, seismic activity, and computer models.

He approached and swept his fingertips across the screen to enhance the size of the region of interest, a particular rift in the topography which to the untrained eye seemed no different than any other. Then he spoke to the observation panel. “This is the reservoir with the questionable water saturation content?”


“Yes, Ascendancy.”
A man’s voice responded over the comm.

There was a very real petroleum reservoir beneath the virtual landscape. The fact was confirmed by known source rock samples, seismic activity, and the trained eye of their geoscientists, but the rock had to contain enough hydrocarbons to make drilling worth their time and money. A wet reservoir yielded more water than it did petroleum afterall, but there was only one way to know the ratios, which usually meant drilling a sample well. Usually.

“Then that is the one we visit first.”



***


In his father’s time, explorationists with a twenty percent success rate of identifying productive reservoirs were considered the gold-standard. Based on years of data accumulation, drilling sample wells around known reservoirs yielded the best results, hitting viable deposits with every one in five attempts. Drilling in unchartered territory was far more a gamble; and one hit in forty was considered the standard. Of course, science had made some progress since the 1980’s. A fifty percent success rate became the gold standard of the early twenty-first century. Not even a professional baseball player could boast a comparable batting average.

But Nikolai Brandon?

Every time since the first time he felt instinct’s pull, he was right, astonishingly right. It churned his blood when he felt it: that perfect combination of sludge, rock, pressure and density. It crushed his lungs. And it felt like he held the earth in the palm of his hand. God, he loved it.

He had to be on location, of course. The closer to the site, the keener the sense. If he were directly above, walking the surface over which those subterranean chambers flowed, it was like a shard of glass etched the inside of his skull, carving the words he would proclaim into the very bone:

”Here,”
, he ordered to the team watching his every move.

As soon as the announcement issued, they broke into action. The scientists signaled the engineers back at central command the go-ahead to begin work, communicating orders down the ladder of responsibility. A production facility could now be designed. Plans would be laid to build roads and support structures in and out of the region. Branches off current pipelines would need run. A year from now the horizon of this deserted landscape would be unrecognizable.

On the trek back to the helicopter, Nikolai swept a curious study across the team’s activities. It was a comfortable, windless day, and soundless as well except for the various conversations among the team. They were all men he trusted, competent at their jobs, and loyal to the cause. After all, every additional success on the team’s part made these men a little bit richer, grew their power a little bit wider. They were long enough in Custody employ to take the Ascendancy’s word on this matter without hesitation. All but one.

Mark was the youngest member of the field op’s team, though they were never formally introduced. He simply stared across the dry, rolling hills, and studied the mountains beyond. He was the new man assisting Dr. Elliott, a seismologist who served as liaison between the scientists and drilling contractors. A brief glance revealed Dr. Elliott tapping away at a tablet, absorbed in thought and likely already in the beginning steps of his negotiations. For Mark, however, this was his introduction to witnessing the secret to the Custody’s success first hand, and Nikolai had to give the man credit, he was withholding his reaction well.

Nikolai waved for the man to join him for the walk back while two agents fell in behind them. In the distance, crew members were readying for travel preparations; there were still other sites to visit today. While one aircraft could seat the entire group, the Ascendancy and his security team--which today was thinned to the two men in his shadow--always travelled alone.

”Mark is it?”
Nikolai asked when Mark approached.

“Yes, Ascendancy, Mark Dazernaki. I work for--”



”Dr. Elliott, yes,”
Nikolai finished for him, not one to waste time being told what he already knew. Mark took it in stride, but his sidelong glance straightened forward once more, outwardly undisturbed about the interruption, though his jaw tensed slightly as though holding back what he truly wanted to say.

As specialized a team as this was, Nikolai knew few personal details regarding those around him. These were the people upon whom his power weighed, but he had to trust to the machine of his system to ensure everyone’s character. If Mark was here, it meant he passed clearance checks with flying colors, but it didn’t mean he was worthless.

”It’s reasonable to doubt what you are witnessing, Mark.”
Nikolai continued with full sincerity. Nikolai was the one in the center of all this, but acknowledged it must seem strange to behold. A team of experts landing on some remote location, deviating from every accepted protocol since the Industrial Revolution, and going ahead with a full-scale drilling operation on the word of one man, who himself is neither a scientist nor an engineer, but simply and quietly leaves the group, isolates himself, and returns some minutes later to issue the order after having done nothing but stand in solitude, expression darkened with concentration.

“It is remarkable, Ascendancy.”
Mark replied, pursing his lips together thoughtfully.

Indeed it is, Nikolai thought. However it was clear Mark did not truly believe the words he spoke. Mark was a reasonable, logical man; and humanity could reason away the unthinkable and logically dismiss the inexplicable--even when the extraordinary manifested right before their eyes. It was upon this canon the Atharim contained chaos from erupting, the reasoning of mankind, and the bloodshed of their members. However, little did Nikolai seek the approval of one assistant. Soon enough he would come to believe in his Ascendancy’s power as had the rest. But it would make the man’s life easier to cease questioning the obvious and accept what lay before him.

They parted for their separate aircraft. The two men from the Ascendancy’s regiment within Custody Protective Services fell in step. Dr. Elliott and the others came last.

A movement caught the corner of his eye: Mark reached under his jacket, and Nikolai’s world solidified with ironclad focus. The wall was already formed by the time he turned to face Mark’s aim; already motioning that the two agents at his side stand down; but it was not upon the pistol which he focused, but onto the face of a traitor.

Mark was clearly not trained for this. Otherwise he would have fired by now, and as the innumerable seconds stretched on, the confusing lack of reaction on their part danced across his eyes.

”Well?”
Nikolai asked with all the weight of a tomb.

It was not the reaction Mark expected, but he finally found his mettle and fired. Nikolai cringed at the explosive sound so near, but kept himself from flinching, having gone through this exact same scenario three times before, and countless times on practice ranges with CPS. Such was how the two agents at his side were confident their assignment was safe.

The bullet struck a barrier no less than arm’s reach away, but the heat of it radiated, slamming Nikolai with memories which reached back to his childhood. It sickened him.

Mark’s eyes widened with horror, and fired until he was out of rounds and Nikolai’s ears pounded with the noise of being in such close range.

Immediately, the two agents descended on Mark, and Nikolai felt himself approach the man. He wondered what that Dreyken must have thought when it approached its two innocuous captives.

Like that Dreyken, Nikolai was not surprised to find the Atharim’s symbol on this man’s arm. Mark bore a celtic interpretation of the ouroboros: the serpent eating its tail was looped into two figure eights and surrounded by knotwork. Nikolai shook his head as Mark’s jaw dropped to the ground. He squat low, speaking quietly, wearily to the would-be assassin. ”They should really stop sending men with the tattoo.”
The members of the team were already moving on, boarding their helicopter as the pilots prepared to leave. There was a schedule to keep after all.

He looked upon young Mark a few more moments before rising to leave. ”Take care of it.”
The agents nodded and Nikolai left them behind to carry out the order on their own. He wanted no part of it.

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  Tehya Alisdelisgi
Posted by: Tehya - 07-14-2013, 03:16 PM - Forum: Biographies & Backstory - No Replies

Tehya Alisdelisgi
(teh-hya ah-leese-deh-leese-gee)


"In ages past, our old ones were the storytellers. This was the way things were passed along to the generations that followed. For this reason, the aged people made it a point to remember every detail so they could relate it at a later time. They were the word and picture carriers making history and spiritual values alive and important. In recent times we have made our old ones think they are not so important. We spoof their stories and make them feel foolish. The truth is that we are ignorant of what is precious and how to 'a da li he li tse di -- appreciate age. Rigidity can creep in and set even the young mind if there are no soft memories, no laughter, no times too deep for tears. Age is grace -- a time too valuable to waste."

A Cherokee Feast of Days - Daily Meditations, Joyce Sequichie Hifler

Though they lived in the city, and had done for generations, Tey grew up on the ancient stories of her grandfather; tales of tricksters and spirits and the Little People who hid among men. She knew these things were not true, because the world was not so benign; and she knew the world was not so benign, because it needed guardians to separate the innocent from the supernatural. Grandfather knew it too; a curled snake marked the puckered, crepey skin inside his arm, just as it marked her father and mother and brother. Just as it would one day mark her. They called themselves Alisdelisgi – protector, in the old language – but also bore an older name. Atharim.

Tehya grew up in the dregs of a dying economy, in a society on the fringes of civil war and poverty. The haze of instability, of misery, inevitably drew the sorts of dark creatures that made her education a frank and practical one. No academic textbooks, no abstract lectures, and no gentle introduction to the world beyond their own: it simply was, from the very beginning, her reality. Beyond her Atharim education, she, along with her brother before her (he was six years her elder), were taught by their mother. As such Tey had few friends outside her inner circle growing up; she was just the weird, Native American home-schooled kid of the neighbourhood, and since she was quite capable of looking after herself, was pretty much just left alone. Not that she ever considered her life lacking from the social exclusion; she had no idea what the life of a normal girl her age was like, nor really cared to know. Despite the fractures cracking deeper breaks into the heart of her country, despite the humble living that was nonetheless considered above the poverty grade, she was happy.

Tehya adored her grandfather – grandfather frog, she called him sometimes in jest, for he sat in his chair like a wise old frog sits on a lilypad. Her beloved Dustu (spring frog, which was also a joke; grandfather was not in the spring of his youth). So many wizened lines cased his face their weight had pulled his skin south … or maybe he had shrunk and left his skin too big - regardless, every crease was a wisdom, every strand of white hair sprouting from his scalp a truth. His words were more important than knowledge, for knowledge was of the past and wisdom was of the future. When Tehya was not schooling, or learning the ways of the Atharim, she was most often found at her grandfather’s knee. Listening. She soaked up his stories with a solemnness belied by her years, though as a child of the Atharim she was hardly ordinary. Sometimes he told the history of their people – the Cherokee, not the Atharim – and of the traditions her family embraced, and of others that had been lost to time. Other times he spoke of his own youth, of its build and apex, of how his left arm had become a stump at the elbow. When he spoke of the Atharim, it was different, somehow, to how her parents taught it; deeper, like it etched a tattoo on grandfather’s very soul. It transcended the simple duty that had been drilled into Tey since she was old enough to understand words. For him it was not simply a calling but formed the ethos of his world.

She was fourteen when she first started to notice the signs something was wrong. A touch of fever, an unusual amount of clumsiness. The odd headache. Tey knew of the Sickness, of course, but it was her old Dustu who pieced it together while the symptoms still wobbled about in those infant stages, before the diagnosis was even clear to those who knew what to look for. She had never seen her father argue with Dustu before that day, if what transpired could be called an argument. There were no raised voices, but their words were nonetheless like the rumbles of mountains. The foundations between them shook.

“If they discover her, it will not stop there,” her grandfather said. And he was right; it wouldn’t. Such secrets did not openly filter so far down the ranks, but the Regus obviously believed the Sickness to be hereditary. The Atharim assigned to the task always ensured such an heirloom was never passed down, and they did it in blood. If Tehya was exposed, she would not be the only one to pay the price. Their family, their history, their lineage; it would become dust. Unless her father acted first. Heavy silence reigned, as her father’s eyes turned to where she was wrapped in a blanket on the couch. Despite the broad strength of him; the severe cast of his features, his oft unsmiling mouth and all the memories of blood on his hands, she had never been afraid of her father. But his expression now was grim, and what Dustu said next punctuated a grimace with each word.

“You will kill your flesh and blood, son?”

Her father hesitated from an answer, and Tehya felt the first little fissures rent through her heart. Her eyes grew wide, and fear settled cold, because she realised then what they were talking about. And what it meant. Her old Dustu shook his head, and the lines in his face deepened like shadowy crags. He looked gravely wounded. “In my day, Gawonii, the Atharim did not slaughter children and call it for the greater good.” Tehya knew, then, that the conversation was serious; that it was an argument – when Dustu used not a moniker or an endearment, but her father’s name. Grandfather had lived in a time before the Sickness. He had lived in a time before the ASU that became the dictatorship CCD. He had lived before the returned god, the Ascendancy, and in a time when the enemy did not lie hidden in the flesh of men, but in the flesh of monsters. His aged wisdom dwarfed them all, but even addled by fever Tey could see those doubts in her father’s face; the damning consideration that Dustu was old and no longer understood the world in which they lived. So when Dustu straightened and said, “Let me heal her pain,” he could not quite disguise the sharpness in his eyes, nor in his tone.

“Even if you cure her, old grandfather, she will be changed.”

Tey was still a child; a strangely solemn one, granted, but too young to really understand the ramifications of what was happening. She was scared, but she also trusted her family. Her father did not stop old Dustu when he gathered the materials for a smudging ritual. Sage to burn out the bad spirits, cedar for grounding and protection, and braided sweetgrass to attract positive energies. He didn’t stop Dustu, either, when he burned the ingredients and murmured the prayers and palmed the smoke. Nor did Atharim storm the house to take her away and nullify her family line. Through blind eyes and averted faces, the foundations of secrecy took root. Months went by, and they performed the ritual often; sometimes by her grandfather’s hand, sometimes by her own. Always Tehya waited with dread for the first pangs of a headache or the first waves of nausea – because each time the Sickness came, so too did the threat of watching Atharim eyes. Of discovery. Or worse, the moment her father realised the mistake he had made in letting her live.

Sometimes Tey sent prayers while she breathed the smoke; other times her mind was silent and open, willing positive energies to rid her of the Sickness and what it would leave behind if she did not die. One day, the positive spirits answered, and that was the first time she felt it. Pure calm, luxurious and lulling, like soft hands and a mother’s comfort. The world grew a little brighter, a little clearer, and then in one quick flash it was all gone – gone but for the burn of its memory. She confided in her grandfather, kept nothing secret in the same way he had never hidden anything from her, and he listened with a thoughtful stare. Spirits, not Sickness; how could something so unsullied be so corrupt? She posed it to her Dustu, hopeful, but he only looked at her, silent and pensive.

At first it was only when she burned the sweetgrass that she could touch that intense, floating joy. Later she discovered that opening herself to the spirits was enough, though she always felt safer doing it during the smoke ritual. Sometimes her grandfather would watch her when she did this, but if he sensed anything unusual he never said. His silent presence always gave her confidence, and it was under his watchful gaze that she began to realise there were shapes in the light. Distinctive shapes that had form and tangibility and allowed themselves to be moulded.

She did not get sick again.

When her father noticed, he could no longer ignore it. In hindsight, Tehya understands why he allowed old Dustu to try and heal her. Nearly all girls lost their battle with the Sickness. It was a heinous breach of his Atharim oaths to have allowed that chance to run its course, but it was the lesser of two evils at the time. Perhaps he hoped the choice would be taken away from him; that he wouldn’t have to murder his own daughter. But she didn’t die, and the decision weighed as heavy a burden as ever. When faced between your obligations to the world and your love for your family, how do you choose? Her chest tightens at the memory, even now; looking back, she does not know how she ever missed the softness in her father’s hard lines, the aching conflict of duty and love. Back then she only ever saw the furrows in his brow.

He wanted to know, of course, what she had become. The change had been far subtler than either distant legend or recent history told it to be; he wanted to know if she was truly different. Maybe she had simply been ill. At the time Tey felt as though snared in a terrible net. If she lied he would believe her; she knew that. Perhaps he willed for her lie, to absolve them all of the horrific consequence that loomed ahead if she didn’t. If she lied, she wouldn’t have to die; she could hide this gift, control it, and no-one would ever know. The fate of her family would rest in her hands – discovery of her betrayal would burn them all – but they were hands she trusted, hands that had been born to shelter the world. She would protect her family. But the poison couldn’t pass her lips, and when she told the truth she witnessed the pain crush her father’s brows low over his eyes.

Even then, still so young, she understood. The Spirit-gift was sweet and beautiful, but Atharim law was clear. She never pleaded her case, as she had with Dustu. “I’m a monster.” The words were level – far too calm for the amount of years she had seen – but girlish tears welled up in her eyes regardless; big, fat uncontrollable tears that welled on her lashes and plopped down her cheeks no matter how grown-up she tried to be. Her father’s face was stoic; the square lines of his jaw hard, his eyes like little chips of onyx. She could feel the hysteria bubbling, and was ashamed; she was Atharim, or would be one day. Would have been. She would do her duty, even if that duty was to die. But was it so wrong that she was scared? Dark brows drew further over her father’s eyes, until they closed completely, as though he could not bear to look at her. In the same moment, though, he pulled her close, tucking her head under his chin. “When will it be?” The sobs broke free. She cried hard. “Will you do it, father? If it needs to be done, I want it to be you who—” kills me. Only she could say it; couldn’t say anything after that. Her father held her close, his big swarthy arms blocking out the world and its cruel rules, like a bear hiding its cub. But he didn’t answer.

For days she expected it, waited for it; feared it. She was sitting cross-legged on her bed, a compendium of creatures she was memorising open flat on her lap, when her father knocked and entered. Ice froze her blood, though she set the book aside bravely as he sat next to her. Silence spread in great, frigid waves, and a warm buzz in the back of mind begged her to embrace the warmth of her gift. And curse. She refused.

He gave her the option to leave. His willingness to loose her on the world was startling, and for a moment she was horrified at how easily he cast aside his Atharim vows. Then came guilt, for having forced the toll of such awful choices on him. To kill his flesh and blood, or to break his promises to a society that was his blood’s legacy. If she left she would relieve him of the heavier burden, but Tehya couldn’t turn her back on duty, no matter what she was. Her eyes closed, her head bowed. She shook her head. The mattress lightened as her father sighed and stood, its springs creaking heavily. Tehya’s heart was like a jackhammer as the warmth of his hand pressed against the back of her head. At the time she had thought it meant goodbye; only later did she realise it was his unspoken acceptance.

If words give substance to secrets, then this one never existed. No-one ever spoke of it, and only her Dustu ever alluded to it. There had always been morality to his stories, and this was never truer than in the years that passed after: he shaped many of Tehya’s principles and morals as she grew older. She only ever touched her gift with Dustu or when she was alone; learned it little by little, one tiny cautious step at a time. Control was paramount, no matter how desperately easy it would be to lose herself to the sweetness of it. The responsibility she carried was engrained in her, that and the necessity to protect her family from the thing she had become. To protect the world. As her discipline and understanding grew, her Atharim studies deepened. Her father’s frown intensified when he learned her intention, but he never stopped her – his only words on the matter a stoic warning. No children, Tehya. The line must end with you.

Her old Dustu; he was proud.

At eighteen, Tehya took the pledge and received the ink. She resolved to reward her father’s faith and honour her old Dustu’s memory - after he passed when she was nineteen - by being the best she could be. Even to this day the Atharim is her life. As such, she rose the ranks with single-minded ferocity, as if to prove herself worthy of the simple serpent inked on her wrist would blot out the secret mark on her soul. She started amongst the Hunters, but quickly began to specialise in the development of weaponry and methods for detecting and capturing/incapacitating creatures, in order to learn their weaknesses. She excelled at it.

There were a few close calls in those early days; sometimes it was achingly tempting to call on the spirits to help the Atharim, despite knowing how it would damn her – and, worse than that, the consequences it would cause her family. By now, her brother had children of his own. The difficulty was that when attacked it was almost a reflex - one reason she was glad to step down from the front-lines. She doesn’t use the gift in her work, but continues to study it in private. To learn its shape and form and uses. To uncover its weakness.

Over the years her reputation swelled. And then the phonecall came.

Her father begged her not to answer the summons to Moscow, to stay away from the heart of the Atharim, where it will be all the more difficult to conceal her nature and the sheer depth of her betrayal. Their betrayal. But they offer the facilities to further her research; the funding and the equipment and the expertise. She will be heading a whole team of others. It’s an opportunity she simply can’t refuse, despite the dangers. A golden opportunity.

Even within the Atharim, there are factions. Tey belongs to a quiet undercurrent – quiet because it is a subversive view, and opposes the directive of the Regus – who, nonetheless, do not believe that eliminating the gods will ultimately prevent another godswar. All it will take is some small few to slip the net, to begin to understand the devastating power bequeathed to them, and how many the Atharim culled in their infancy will make little difference: the Apocalypse will happen anyway. Tehya’s answer is simple. Her people have always believed in the circular nature of life and death; logically, then, a cycle simply can not end with death. Killing the gods only perpetuates a circle – life, death, life, death. What lives, dies. What dies, lives again. The only way to prevent the end of days is to nullify the destructive powers that enable it. To incapacitate the gods.

And the only one who can do it, is one of them.

Description: Tehya is tall for a woman, 5’10’’, and statuesque. She has bold, handsome features; a strong jaw, defined cheekbones and night-dark eyes. There’s languidness to her gaze, and a lazy elegance to her movements; easy, calm confidence. Predatory. A thin pale scar knicks her forehead, just below her hairline, and another, thicker one dissects the top of her thigh – each old remnants of her Hunting days. Her skin is warm gold, her hair black.

Tehya takes her work seriously; she is a hard task-master and brooks no excuses, though is equally firm with praise. Most would see her as quiet, perhaps intimidating. Of necessity, she holds herself to a high measure of control; particularly when at work. There are some amongst her peers who do not approve of what she does – who say she is too interested in understanding more about the Atharim’s enemies than simply how to eliminate them. But there is no denying she is good at it, or that she has been a valuable asset to the Atharim. Her high rank alone attests to it.

Beneath the layers of stoic professionalism lies a sly sense of humour and a wicked grin. She appreciates honesty and has high moralistic values – at least when it comes to the important things. Mostly she prizes a sense of balance. Those who show kindness to, and awareness of, others usually earn her respect - if not necessarily her friendship. She has inherited a deep-rooted sense of duty from her father, and an endless well of compassion from her old Dustu. And from them both - from a rich familial legacy - the ferocious desire to protect. It’s in her blood.



RP History

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  Journey
Posted by: Nadia - 07-11-2013, 03:51 PM - Forum: Rest of the world - No Replies

"Are we there yet?" The age old question. And if most parents thought it was bad, try it from a 6 year old who could say it in 3 languages. "No, Zoe, we are not there yet. Now, what number are you on?" Nadia heard a sigh from her daughter out of the backseat and soon heard the steady thud thud tap of little fingers dancing across a plex-screen. "Nine." "Good, only ninety-one to go then." The next sigh wasn't quiet, but after that the car was for a while.

Transferring cities mid-term was chaotic to say the least for little Zoe, but when the job called, you answered, especially with the promise of promotion. Not to mention that a move to the Central Dominance could only increase their possibilities. Nadia wasn't sure if Moscow was really a city for children, but their new apartment was a ways outside of town in what everyone assured her was a good area, Papa included.

Yes, even now Nickolas Solokov had his grubby fingers dug into his daugther's and grandaughter's lives. While usually it was for the better, there was still fresh stinging bitterness, like a spray of salt water to the eye when she thought of what her father had put her through. But at least he still stayed in touch. Mother hadn't spoken to her since the move to Prague.

No use crying over spilled milk, though. She had started her own life, and she was proud of the life that she had built mostly with her own two hands. She was employed and her daughter was receiving a good education, staying ahead of her class, and they still had time on the weekends to be a family.

All roads lead to Moscow. The truth of the old adage could be confirmed by any GPS, but it seemed to be true for Nadia as well. The last time she had lived in Moscow, she was just toddling around. She only had a very few memories of the city, mostly memories of their old home and the playground. She remembered falling and scraping her knee and a boy who smiled nicely at her and told her it would be okay before mom had swooped in and pushed him aside.

Nadia checked the clock. 14:22. She had hoped to make it to Minsk tonight, but it didn't look like that was going to happen. Still they could stay in Baranavichy for the night before pressing on tomorrow.

******************************************
"Are we there yet?" Oh here we go again. "No, not yet, Zoe. Look, see that sign? What does it say?" There was a pause then "Moss-cow Eighy" Nadia suppressed a chuckle. "They call it Moscow, not Moss Cow, sweetie. But that means it won't be much longer."

Nadia saw Zoe's dark head bob a couple of time in the Crossroad's mirror then her brow furrowed for a moment. "I dunno, Mom, 80 seems pretty big to me!" Nadia shook her head. Yes, eighty was pretty big, but considering that they had already gone almost 2,000km on this trip, 80 more felt like nothing.

Soon enough, they were turning down a side road. As promised, the area didn't seem too industrialized, but was built up enough as to not feel secluded. The studio apartment that she had the key to was small, but nice, and she found herself thinking that maybe this move would be even better than she had first thought. "Home Sweet Home"


Edited by Nadia, Jul 11 2013, 03:52 PM.

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  Scoping for ink
Posted by: Rune - 07-11-2013, 12:34 PM - Forum: Greater Moscow and the Golden Ring - Replies (26)

Rune had been in Moscow long enough to know her way around pretty good. If she ever got lost she had a gps map tech in the bag slung over her shoulder. So far she hadn't had to need it except when she first arrived and studied the street layouts like crazy. But Moscow was a huge city, much bigger than anything she was used to back in the US. Most of her life Uncle Seth and her bounced from town to town, a mobile Atharim which lived on the road more often than the cabin she was actually born in.

One thing Rune did know was that if someone wanted to look for artsy stuff, they went to Arbat street. Which is exactly what she wanted to do! Therefore, she slipped on her sneakers, slung her bag over her shoulder, spiked her hair and got to walking. Which brought up a really good point, she was going to need to set up a more permanent place to live soon. The Atharim had a job for her, which meant staying in the city for a while. She was pretty excited about it, actually. But not as excited as finally getting the snake on her arm. Uncle Seth's was rad. Arbat street was not the place to get a tattoo (for mercy's sake, you'd think these people had never seen a girl with a hairstyle before! ... there were lots of staring...) but it was the place to meet an artist.

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