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#espionage story
jaratedeguadalupe · 1 year
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hey guys i forgot to post so have this
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skyepatridge · 2 months
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OUR SINS ARE SCARLET backers, check your inboxes!
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thecrowslullaby · 1 year
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and I hope he'll stay that way~
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leotanaka · 9 months
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"where are all the monsters?" "why aren't there more monsters in this show?" "this is supposed to be a monster story." "the monsters were only there for a minute."
me:
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elliwiny · 16 days
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Today on Opportunities! (7.05)
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Signing a book about aliens FOR one of those aliens has gotta be on Stone's bucket list, I'd think.
Read Opportunities as it updates with commentary: First || Latest
Or grab the whole Book from my shop! Patreon || Ko-Fi
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Steven Knight on what the movie will be about:
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fuckyeahfightlock · 9 months
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behindthesemasks · 7 days
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19
Chap1er 18
Things don't go smoothing when the team makes it back to the hotel
Back in the hotel, Erik paced the room as he waited for the unconscious Andreas to come around again when the door to the room was almost taken off his hinges as it slammed open.  His head snapped to look over and he barely had time to register there was male crossing the room before his face exploded with pain.  Next came the blow to his throat and then his gut, pain exploding throughout his body.  Falling to the ground, he coughed and wheezed, trying to draw in breath, before he was flipped onto his back and a fist slammed into his face a couple more times.  With the beating he was taking, he was pretty sure it was Oglesby’s men who’d found them, and was sure he was going to die.  Each blow raining down on him caused the pain to increase exponentially, then the world went black.
It took Case, Nic, and Gabe to be able to finally pull Klaus off of his brother who was trying to pound Eric into the carpet of the floor.  Ambrose was immediately in the large man’s face, rage written on every line and curve of his face and the steel grey of his eyes almost glowing with the fires of rage.  The threats and promises of pain that were expressed were enough to keep Klaus from going after Eric again, but everyone knew if they didn’t get Klaus out of the room that it was only a matter of time before his resolve would weaken and it would become chaos again.  
No one had heard from or seen Melania.  The group who had been at the hospital were now also missing, and knowing that Oglesby was at least the money behind the attacks, if not the brains as well, put everyone on edge.  If finding out that Andreas was involved in the threat to Alexander hadn’t been enough of mind fuck, now having Erik threaten Mel was definitely one for everyone.  Things were going sideways faster than anyone could adjust and compensate, and that was not a good thing.  For men whose entire lives were adjusting to ever changing circumstances, not being able to find solid footing was not something that put them in a good mood.
“GET.HIM.OUT!” Ambrose bellowed at the men restraining Klaus, his jaw ticking as his teeth were clenched.  He didn’t turn his attention back to Erik until they had succeeded in getting him out of the room.  If they hadn’t been able to, he was ready to shoot the German asshole himself to accomplish it.  His patience was completely gone and he was ready to start dealing out pain to accomplish his orders to those around him.  That  Klaus had surprised him as soon as the lock had clicked on the door had pissed him off to begin with, the condition that he’d left Eric in only made it worse.
“Restrain him like his cousin.  Make sure they’re both still alive and able to talk when I’m ready for them.  Come get me when they are.  I’m done with the bullshit, I think they believe the old man has gone soft.  I’m about to show them differently.”  Ambrose gave instructions to Cam and Donovan before following the others back out of the room.  He could hear cursing down the hall in the direction of the suite.  Time to go talk with his team and calm down enough not to kill anyone, yet.
“Now we know who hired the assholes at the mansion.  That’s one question answered.” Nic was saying as Ambrose walked in.  A quick head nod to his grandfather and he continued. “How the fuck could he NOT know who was financing this fucking dig?  Oglesby is far from stupid, that’s the only reason he’s still alive.  He’s never crossed us, never crossed the wrong person before.  For him to be this careless and foolish now seems a misstep that is unlike anything he’s done before.  I think there’s still something we don’t know about this.”
“We can figure this out later.  We have three missing team members, my granddaughter is missing, and the asshole that orchestrated this is out there as well.  Priorities, gentlemen.  We can assume that Cade, Alexander, and Dez are all still together for now.  Hopefully that will make them easier to find.  Case, Nic, and Gabe, get out there and find all of them.  No excuses for failure.  AM. I. CLEAR?”  Ambrose’s voice was calm but there was no missing the undercurrent of rage in it.  None doubted that he was barely controlling the desire to hurt, maim, and possibly kill someone in the near future.  All the men’s heads nodded as they rose to leave. “What am I supposed to do? Fucking sit on my ass while they’re out there?”  Klaus bit out at Ambrose in frustration.  Eyebrows raised on the other men as everyone froze.  No one wanted to be between the other two if they were going to go at one another.  Was this really the time to piss off Ambrose more? He was never known to suffer fools lightly. 
“That’s exactly what you’re going to do.  You’re a loose cannon, Klaus, I can’t have you out there possibly blowing up at an innocent person, and bringing the Serbian authorities attention swinging around to us. We’ve got two men tied up in here, and a couple dead bodies in a burned out car out in the woods near the excavation site.  You think we want attention on us?”  Ambrose’s head tipped to the side, his lips thinning as his cold blue eyes pinned Klaus with a hard stare. His voice was cold and almost emotionless, something that rather worried the others in the room, who exchanged quick glances.  He was like a volcano that had been smoking and suddenly stopped, an eruption was imminent.
“Someone needs to see if they can locate the GPS tracking devices on the cars, run their credit cards, see if there is ANYTHING that can tell us where the four have disappeared to.  And sweep this fucking room!  How the fuck did she get out of here and leave no trace?”  Now, now there was anger, lack of sleep or coffee was showing in Ambrose’s demeanor.  Just a crack, not a full explosion, but if Klaus pushed him again, there was no telling how big it could get. “Now, you all have your tasks.  Do them.  I’m going to handle our guests here, and find out what the fuck is going on.  I’m sick of playing catch-up.”  Ambrose turned and headed out of the room with no further comment.  He was about to shoot someone, and he’d prefer it to be one of the two assholes down the hall rather than one of the team that he still needed. As Gabe prepared to slip away, he looked over at Nic and Klaus.  Both men looked utterly defeated and worry was etched deeply into their strong features.  Now it wasn’t just Mel that was missing, but the other three who had been at the hospital, at least as far as anyone else there at the hotel knew.  He was the only one who knew that none of them were in danger and they were all together.  There was a little bit of guilt that gnawed at him over that, but not enough to stop him from what he planned on doing.  No, his loyalty did not lie with anyone in the hotel where he now stood.  He was going to those with whom he felt the most loyalty.
“Guys, try and look on the positive side.  Maybe the others have found her, and that’s why they’re not answering.  Case and Cam said that they had called the guys more than once before they had gone out looking too.”  Gabe tried to give some reassurance, if only to relieve his own guilt. “Yeah, I’m sure they’re all kicked back and drinking coffee in some posh shop while we have been looking for them and worrying.” Nic bit back, sorry afterward that he had been quite so harsh.  “Oglesby has got to be close, Mel is a bargaining chip and Alexander is a target.  It’s not safe to assume anything at this point.”  This time exhaustion and worry was clear in his tone and words. Gabe nodded curtly and headed out the door behind Case.  He felt a vibration in his pocket and swiped to open his phone while they waited for the elevator.  It was the 228 number again.  ::Omni #955.  Package is tired::  It was all he could do not to laugh, someone had clued her in on the lingo.  As soon as he could be, he’d join the four that were there, then they’d have to figure out how to deal with the boss.
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luckyluan · 4 months
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CHAPTER 5.3: THE JOYRIDE
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Antwan unbuckled his seatbelt and hopped out of the Bronco. He turned the collar of his khaki jumpsuit up around his cheeks before he announced his next move to Maxim. 
“I have to make a phone call first.” he said. 
“The kids are fine.” Maxim whined. 
“They are not fine until I hear they are fine. Give me a dollar.” Antwan demanded. 
“Do I look like I have a dollar?” Maxim challenged. 
He felt a pang in his chest the instant he saw the flash of hurt in Antwan’s eyes, but he was right. They looked disheveled to say the least. Maxim’s black button down bore two scorched holes on the left shoulder and the grimy fabric of his black jeans was missing patches. Antwan looked no better. His khaki jumper was covered in grass stains and loose leaves; and one of his boots had a hole at the heel. 
“Don’t be a dick about it. Find a shower.” 
Antwan murmured before he slammed the car door and sauntered off for the orange phone booth across the street. Maxim reclined in his seat. He watched his husband jog through the late traffic and slide into the phone booth. The glass door closed behind him and Maxim pulled a black flip phone from his waistband. He kept his eyes on the phone booth as he flipped it open and dialed a number. The line connected after one ring. 
“Yeah?” a dusky voice asked. 
“We’re in trouble.” Maxim breathed. 
“Old ghosts or new?” the voice asked. 
“Eternal.” Maxim emphasized. 
“...Awfully cold today, isn’t it?” the voice remarked. “Might be time for you to get warm.” 
The line disconnected and Maxim returned the phone to its holster as Antwan hopped back into the car. He shut the door with a soft thud. 
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songmingisthighs · 8 months
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i got spanx on tighter than my parents ever hugged me and my tits are pushed up so fucking high like they're being offered to God. am omw to an event held by the damn european economic community with guerrilla playing on loop
is this my rebel spy arc ???????
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spookyspaghettisundae · 4 months
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Breaking In Was the Easy Part
Shadows kept what shadows veiled.
The security guard’s shoes clapped against shiny, marbled floors. He stopped by one of the tall windows, overlooking the glittering skyline of Rome by night.
He stared outwards. Sniffed. Scratched his butt.
Hiding in the shadows nearby, where this oblivious guard ran risk of glimpsing her from the corner of his eyes, Chloe Grant held her breath. Frozen, still, like a statue, she waited in the dark.
The guard remained oblivious. He continued staring out into the night. He stood there for so long that Grant’s lungs began to ache from holding her breath, and a frustration, welling deep down, started budding into anger.
She had already broken into the building without him noticing. Now, he just needed to get the hell out of her way. Preferably before she needed to gasp for air, or the anger bloomed into fiery rage.
In the drop of a hat, she could have switched his lights off, just like that. The silenced pistol in her toolkit had a bullet with this guy’s name on it. She wasn’t one to snuff out some rent-a-cop if she could avoid it, but he was taking his sweet time.
The temptation to go for the gun rose while the burning in her lungs blossomed alongside her frustration.
Finally, the guard walked on. Disappeared around the next corner of the corridor, descending deeper into the bowels of IntelliTech.
Every shuddering breath hurt as Grant’s lungs flooded with desperately needed oxygen. All her frustration waned as fast as any pain subsided. After all, this guard knew nothing. Probably lived his days and nights, working security here, oblivious to the true nature of IntelliTech.
It was just one of many shell companies used by Celava worldwide. They fronted this IT provider, but all of Spencer’s intelligence pointed to IntelliTech serving as a data hub for the multinational energy corporation.
And this one, single, useless guard—well, he was just doing his job. Not well enough to have noticed the woman who infiltrated the building that night, but doing his job nevertheless.
He’d probably get fired if Grant’s invasion was eventually noticed, but that was very low on her list of concerns.
Once the guard had moved far enough out of earshot, she whispered into her headset.
“Hammy’s gone. What’s it look like out there?”
“Coast is clear,” responded Ruiz via their radio, with a soft crackle of static. “Pretty sure it’s just the one guy on-site.”
“Keep your eyes peeled. I prefer ‘definitely’ over ‘pretty sure’.”
Grant snuck out of the alcove, slipping past one of the ornate alabaster sculptures of Roman deities. She weaved her way past the other divinities, heading in the opposite direction from the security guard who had missed her intrusion.
Much to her relief, most of the building’s rooms and hallways featured clear labels. Big, black print emblazoned on brushed gunmetal plates. She followed their lead, drawing her spiraling path ever closer to the building’s server room.
Minutes ticked as she moved with the quietude of a cat. She kept her eyes peeled for security cameras, shimmying underneath any when their cold, glassy lenses looked the other way.
Ruiz asked via radio, “And you, uh, you don’t think anything’s… off? These guys got a lot of valuable data to keep private here, and security’s a little bit on the sad-sack side, don’tcha think?”
Grant paused, ducking behind a towering potted plant to wait.
To listen.
The guard was long gone, on the opposite side of the building, and unlikely to hear her.
Ruiz wasn’t wrong in his observation. She had thought the same thing.
“Yes and no. I’m guessing there’s some extra bells and whistles we haven’t noticed yet. Some less-than-obvious stuff. All the windows are bullet-proof, and some of these doors are magnetically locked with steel reinforcements. A lot of the premises are labeled, but then there’s some big mystery doors. My guess is, they have something else underneath this building—something that ain’t just plain little ol’ IT, if you catch my drift.”
A long pause.
It felt strange how this liminal space was swallowing all her whispers.
Silence filled the vacuous hallways of IntelliTech.
“You think they’re holding some specimens down there,” Ruiz said.
Grant snuck on. Set her jaw. Through clenched teeth, she replied.
“Almost a one hundred percent chance.”
Another long bout of silence followed from Ruiz. He broke it with a short and ominous remark.
“Switchin’ to point-fifty.”
She paused again, just outside a sealed door, labeled—
SERVER ROOM.
“Jesus. You gonna ready some AA missiles to go with that?”
Grant guided a stolen keycard through a reader next to the door. A red light on the device turned green and the gadget emitted a soft beep, with a loud click-CLANK to follow, as the magnetic seal on the door released, and the door slid open with a soft whoosh.
“Ain’t takin’ no chances tonight. If they got a specimen down there as a watchdog, you just line it up, and I’ll take it down.”
Grant slipped into the server room, where the hum of hundreds of fans filled the air. The whole room vibrated, and the array of server racks, all encased in metal and glass, looked like something straight out of a science fiction flick.
The door automatically slid shut behind her.
She needed access—soon—because all her movements in the building, such as opening these mag-locked doors, were likely being recorded in some sub-system. And registering it to the guy whose card she had stolen.
It had to be a matter of time.
Now locked inside a room where she was permitted to make more noise, she ripped open the zipper on her backpack. Locating the nearest server, she whipped out the device Singh had provided them with for the mission, hooked it up to the system, and booted up the sleek black laptop.
Instead of an operating system’s stock screen to greet her, a sinister-looking and slow-moving loading bar progressed on-display, while the device brute-forced its digital tendrils into IntelliTech’s—or rather, into Celava’s—data hub.
Minutes flew by to the steady whispering hum of computer fans in the room, while Singh’s hacking device worked its magic, and Grant awaited its completion with bated breath.
“How’s it goin’ in there?” crackled Ruiz’s voice via headset, now with heavier static interference. “Security guard’s out on a smoke break. Coast is still clear. If anybody knows what’s up, they ain’t showin’ jack for it.”
Grant shot a glance at the screen.
It had changed already, which she had missed because it looked almost the same: the progress bar now indicated how far the device had gotten in vacuuming up all the data it could access from this data hub.
She didn’t want to envision how expensive the unseeming sleek laptop and its hardware must have been. Then again, Malachi Spencer was footing the bill, and Future Proof’s pockets seemed to run as deep as the Mariana Trench.
“Almost done,” she replied.
79%.
She wished she could scour the data gathered here while she waited.
Grant wondered if Spencer’s suspicion would prove to have been right.
Whether or not Celava was truly funneling personnel and natural resources through the Anomalies, all with a singular and terrifying purpose: to build a colony in the distant past, in some era before the dinosaurs went extinct.
In the here and now, however, Grant only glimpsed a black screen with a white progress bar. Racking up all the data.
93% complete.
Just before her patience could wear thin, a monitor on the wall winked on, flashing brightly with electronic life.
The monitor flickered, yet refused to display any image, staying a darker shade of gray—revealing it had turned on, without casting much light. Speakers behind the device emitted a soft ringtone, like a call or message had just come in.
Then a booming voice spoke to her.
“I am the Operator, and you are very naughty,” spoke a mysterious man’s voice from the monitor’s speakers—with a playfulness to his tone, and a strong British accent. “Cease what you’re doing now, or I’ll be forced to release the hounds. And, fair warning, I do not mean electronic countermeasures.”
She played it smart. Offered no response. Nothing she could be recognized by. Like the ski mask concealing her face, a voice could lead to identification. For now, she preferred to maintain her image as the nondescript cat burglar.
96% complete.
“Not talkative today, hm? You know, the hounds usually make intruders far more chatty. Or, well, screamy. I suspect it will be the latter with you. Don’t say I didn’t warn you!”
He sounded young and mischievous. How much of the threat was empty?
A smirk crept across Grant’s face.
Was this guy for real?
“Hah. Have it your way then. Your screams of terror will probably make for a great feature on our next instructional video. I do love authenticity. Nice never having known ya, I suppose. Ta.”
The monitor deactivated again. The gray glow vanished as its electronic life disappeared.
And nothing else happened.
Asked Ruiz on the radio, “What the hell was that?”
In case anything was being recorded in the server room, Grant stayed quiet. She looked around for bugs, microphones, cameras, anything.
She found nothing.
99%.
A man’s scream reached her, muffled through the mag-locked door into the security room.
Her only way out.
The scream endured, shifting through varying stages of surprise, agony, and horror. It didn’t end as abruptly as it started, instead petering out with indecipherable pleading in Italian, and cutting off after a bout of gurgling noises.
The security guard?
100%.
Keeping her eyes locked on the door, Grant yanked Singh’s device away from the server rack, careless of the cable she blindly ripped out of its socket in the process. She stuffed the sleek laptop into her small backpack and neared the door again.
THUMP.
Something had hit the door, leaving Grant frozen, while her heartbeat raced at a pace of a thousand miles a minute, felt all the way up into her neck, and accompanied by the rushing of blood in her ears.
There was something out there.
Silence. The shuddering breath she dared to take could not have eclipsed any sounds out there, but she felt a presence. The vicinity of something dangerous.
Of something deadly.
There were no other ways out of the server room. The only other door led to a dead end, where Grant frantically looked through, only to find a bunch of clutter in form of cardboard boxes, spare cables, a sink fastened to the wall, and other useless junk.
“Talk to me, Goose,” said Ruiz. “Can’t see anything out here. Guard went back inside, and you’re in a blind spot for me.”
She waited at the mag-locked door. Couldn’t sense any presence there now.
The deadly silence remained.
She swiped the keycard down the mag-lock reader. The device only emitted an obnoxious beep and its red light blinked.
“Uh-uh-uh,” said the Operator from the TV speakers with a mocking, singing tone to it. “I locked down everything. Consider it me doing you a favor, magpie. A sweeper team is on its way to arrest you. They’ll return the hound to its cage before you’re ripped to shreds, and you’ll get to have a nice, lovely chat with a security detail, and then some corrupt police officials, I wager. One day, you might even get a chance to look back at all of this and have a good laugh—that is, from behind prison bars, of course.”
The Operator chuckled with sadistic glee.
Grant’s anger almost gave air to a single swearword, and instead exploded into a strike of her knuckles against the metal door.
The Operator was making perfect sense. Having worked in counter-intelligence herself, she would have run the same kind of ship. Issued the same kind of intimidation and taunts as he was.
She knew better than to succumb to fear, or spiral into inaction, and knew exactly what to try next.
The Operator had responded to her attempt at opening the door with the keycard—he clearly had no eyes on the server room, only on whatever any device was ever telling him. Beyond a shadow of a doubt, he could remotely open and close any mag-locks throughout the building.
She was boxed in now. And she wasn’t going to wait for some sweeper team to capture her.
Thus, Grant acted quickly. Whipped out the tiny toolkit she had brought along for analog intrusion.
She had already been detected, and something was out there—according to the Operator, ready to slash her to ribbons upon contact—so subtlety had just flown out the window. And the poor security guard guy, well, he had probably lost more than his job just now.
Her foldable crowbar snapped into full length after she retrieved it from her kit, and she used it to jimmy open the mag-lock reader.
“You need to get the hell outta there,” said Ruiz, nervous tremors swinging fiercer with every word. “There’s an Apex fuckin’ Predator in those halls. It’s trailing blood all over the place, and I think it’s lookin’ for you. That security guard is toast, and I got no eyes on the AP. It’s too fast, moved into some room. I think it loops around to where you are. Repositioning.”
Metal sheets bent and splintered until she stopped prying at the reader with the crowbar, and ripped off the metal casing. Dexterous, Kevlar-gloved fingers started eviscerating the card reader, splaying out its thin wiring, and trying to make sense of its design.
Closed system. Not anything she could simply override.
Fuck.
The swearword echoed in her brain.
She backtracked into the backroom and pursued plan B.
Her boot crashed down on the ceramic sink with a heavy kick. Upon first impact, a long crack appeared on the wall behind it.
The whole place’s design for doors and locks and computerization was modern—but being situated in the center of Rome, the building must have featured some parts that had never been modernized by its newest owners.
Another kick shattered the sink and water started trickling from a bent pipe.
She grunted and gritted her teeth as she kicked and punched at the wall until she could jam the crowbar right into the growing fissure she was creating, busting her way through the wall.
Her tiny flashlight clicked. She shone its light into the fissure.
Luckily, none of it was solid concrete. Just a bunch of old bricks behind thin plaster and white paint.
“Do you know how to play chess, magpie?” asked the Operator from the adjacent room. “If you’re smart enough—and I truly hope you are—then I’m sure you can play it in the theater of the mind. Or draw on the floor for all I care. I’m sure it’ll buff out, even if you use a permanent marker.”
He didn’t know what she was up to. No eyes on the backroom. No electronics to spy on.
Lucky.
She gritted her teeth again and pulled at the drain pipe in the wall with all her might. The metal squealed, then finally bent before snapping away where it broke. Grant grunted again and yanked a portion of drain pipe from the wall, then used it as a blunt instrument to break through the wall entirely.
She struck and struck away, widening the hole, and hammering the gap. When it found purchase and dug deeper into the fissure, she used it like a cruder crowbar to widen the hole.
The Operator rambled on in his musing, mocking tone. “I’ll even give you the luxury of making the opening move. White pawn on F-7 moves to F-5. You know… a little IT joke on the side?”
There was no way she was going engage.
“Come on, it’s funny!”
Grant continued hammering and striking away, tearing away chunks of red brick and artificial rubble till her black gloves had turned a chalky white, and until the hole had grown wide enough. A different light poured in through a hole on the other side of the fissure.
The ski mask and black attire was soaking up her sweat. She must have lost minutes already. If there was a sweeper team on its way—and she suspected the Operator had been telling the truth—she didn’t have a lot of time left.
Ruiz hadn’t spoken in those minutes. She hoped he had kept his cool, and stayed on position of the eagle’s perch a few buildings away.
She needed the sharpshooter to shoot sharp if it came down to it.
Breathing heavily, she only perceived a deceptive silence from the adjacent room.
Every further attempt at tearing open the wall came easier than the last, with all its integrity having been demolished by her incessant and systematic destruction. Whole bricks clunked down and the rest crumbled, and the drain pipe clanked and clattered when she chucked it aside to climb through the hole, clambering into an open office space.
The Operator was still talking, babbling about Chess moves and other inane tomfoolery, but her own panting, and the noises of fighting her way out of the backroom into the office drowned it all out.
Pressed up against the wall next to the office’s door, she waited again, hoping to hear something—anything—that might reveal the presence of the “hound” the Operator had warned her about.
But… nothing. Not a sound.
This was going to end badly.
She had seen those monstrosities in action before. Silent, agile, fast, and built to kill grown humans in the blink of an eye. Evolved beyond natural evolution, and as Burch had later theorized—maybe designed by genetic engineering.
The Apex Predator was lurking. Hiding. In position to ambush her.
Seconds passed, melting into what felt like an infinity. Time—a luxury—she didn’t have.
Time.
Grant considered retrieving her silenced pistol from her pack, but decided against it. Nine millimeter rounds weren’t going to do much against such a beast.
She opened the office door and crept outside.
Sprays of blood had painted the walls with gruesome splatters. The body of the security guard wasn’t even nearby. Crimson marked where the creature had dragged it along the marbled floors, around the next corner.
Grant scanned every nook and cranny, keeping in mind every single thing that Mischchenko had taught her about predatory wildlife.
Watch for the shadows. Watch for vectors along which an animal can leap. And if it can fly, or climb—such as these Apex Predators could—always look up.
And just as she looked up, following the cue of those teachings, she almost regretted it. Her heart skipped a beat. The gangly, mottled-gray body of the Apex Predator hid just beneath the high ceiling, perched atop one of those statues of a Roman deity.
“Oh no,” said the Operator, pressing out the second word with vicious sarcasm, and his voice now coming from unseen speakers in the hallway. “Quite the pickle you’re in, aren’t you? Wish you would have stayed and played some Chess now, eh?”
Bloodstained claws clicked against the sculpture’s shoulders. A guttural growl from its closed, toothy maw sent shivers down Grant’s spine. It hissed.
The Apex Predator stared at her through its spider-like array of eyes. The brain implant exposed on the top of its skull glowed with a singular red light.
A spiderweb of cracks appeared on the nearby window, and the Predator’s head whipped around, as it snarled at where the glass cracked.
“Run! Now!” shouted Ruiz via headset.
He had shot the window, and the glass withstood his .50 caliber.
Grant needed not be told twice. She dove into the next alcove behind a statue, and the Predator flew past her. Then she zigzagged the opposite way, towards where the Apex Predator had leapt from in its deadly lunge at her.
The creature screeched—turning into an alien and ear-piercing howl—as its claws scraped against marble, and it skidded along the smooth, blood-splattered floor.
Running for her life, she dove around the next corner, and the Apex Predator followed. She leapt over the dead security guard’s mangled corpse, just in time to hurtle through the next door on her way back out, and slam it shut behind her.
The Predator would have caught her, had it not slammed into that same door with the momentum of a speeding truck, and broken the door’s surrounding frame in the process—everything bent upon impact, metal deformed.
Another blood-curdling shriek pierced the night as the Predator pried its way through the door, tearing through the feeble obstruction in its pursuit of the fleshy human in the Kevlar catsuit.
Grant fled through the building, retracing her steps with little thought, and panic driving her running stride.
Glimpses over her shoulder only accelerated her footsteps and supercharged her terror, as the ferocious mutant quickly closed the distance once it had clawed its way through the door, only to crash into the next one she slammed shut in between them.
“Fuck,” Ruiz shouted. “Move!”
Her boots clanked up the metal stairwell as she fled upstairs to the rooftop from which she had gained entry into the building.
And finally, making her heart sink, Grant’s mad dash ended at the mag-locked door she had opened with the stolen keycard.
The red light on the card reader glowed a menacing red, mirroring the red glow on the Apex Predator’s brain implant.
She was trapped.
“Oh, Magpie,” spoke the Operator. “See, I could open that door for you, and set you free… but then I’d also set our little doggy free, free to roam the city of Rome, and feast upon—well, I’m not actually sure how many people it would rip apart in its rampage before we put it down—”
Metal squealed as the Predator pried the door to the stairwell open. The creature peered up to her and shrieked.
With feral fury.
“I’m sure you’re regretting your life choices now, aren’t you. Well, you can’t blame—”
“Get away from the door,” growled Ruiz on the headset radio.
“No!” shouted Grant. “We can’t let this thing out!”
The Predator stormed up the stairs with leaping bounds, skipping entire floors as it flew up the center of the spiraling stairwell.
“Oh, how very noble of you. I tip my hat, missy!”
“Down!” yelled Ruiz.
He was going to do it, one way or another—
She ducked.
The door exploded. Then it exploded again. Two of Ruiz’s rifle shots had blown football-sized holes through it. Funny how the glass withstood more punishment.
Before any dust could settle, the Predator flew over the stairwell railing and its claws cut deep. Grant’s own blood sprayed, shedding DNA that could be traced—the least of her worries now, as the blood drained from her head, and she lost all feeling in her left arm. An arm and hand that refused to obey when—
She ripped the broken door open, and fled onto the rooftop, into the sea of night, where glittering lights sparkled on Rome’s city skyline. The streets bustled with life—life that was threatened to be ended by the creature right behind her—
Grant fumbled and retrieved the pistol from her pack, just in time for the growling creature to follow onto the rooftop where she had emerged. Its brain implant glowed red like a malevolent, cyclopean eye.
It prowled towards her while the pistol slid perfectly into her grip, and she aimed at the Predator’s head with practiced precision.
It had smelled blood, and it was poised to leap again.
To kill.
The pain in her arm screamed as it hung lifelessly from her side, while she stayed silent and aimed with her right.
She aimed.
To kill.
To pull the trigger, as it leapt.
The bullets she released didn’t stop it. Couldn’t stop it. Probably even hit.
The next thing she knew, the smoking, silenced gun was on the rooftop next to her, and she was holding her side, where claws had left a deep wound, and all the warmth escaped her, pumping wet and slick and deathly.
The Predator crumpled to the ground, and echoes of Ruiz’s dampened shots were so loud that she could still hear them, several rooftops away.
Like the .50 had blown holes through the door, it had turned entire chunks of the Predator into a fine red mist. Killed the damned thing dead outright before it could kill her.
Well, almost.
Almost.
Grant slumped from her knees onto the ground, splayed out and with all strength escaping her like the blood.
Ruiz was talking to her all the while. The Operator, less audible from out there, also continued babbling.
Darkness enshrouded her field of vision until shadow swallowed all. And blinking never dispelled it fully. The starry night blended with the darkness of death.
Breaking in was the easy part. Always was, wasn’t it?
Getting out, unnoticed, unscathed—that was the hard part.
Everything hurt.
Guess this is what dying is like.
Losing consciousness, losing time, she didn’t know how long she took to fade away, in and out, until a silhouette rushed to her rescue, towering over her, and joining the darkness in blotting out the glittering night’s sky.
Not the silhouette of Ruiz, that is, but many figures. Men in black jumpsuits, armored, and armed to the teeth with firearms and batons. They sported ski masks like her own, with eyes covered by night-vision goggles.
A whole strike force of hired guns crowded around her.
They lifted her up. Not a damned thing she could have done about it.
They carried her away. Over the crumpled carcass of the Apex Predator.
All the pain went away, flared up, went away again.
Away.
They carried her away, into a blinding bright light.
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elliwiny · 3 months
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Opportunities Update!
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Now we're back in Kyan's security checkpoint. (Don't tell anybody it's a shipping container)
Read Opportunities: First || Latest
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softcuddledrone · 8 months
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living plushie gets dressed up in glowy EL wire and cheap plastic bootleg fake-tech to sneak into the cuddledrone hive to see what the fuss is all about
what happens when it emerges from the pile with its "disguise" ruined
Swift collection from Miss Manager as soon as any of the drones realized there was a stowaway that stuck around after closing time. Summary (attempted) drugging (sedation, relaxation, suggestibility) and trussing up to be used as an allegedly-non-living plushie (under threat of 'consequences') for her drones for a day. After a day (or few, depending on how much the cuddledrones like their new toy) the stowaway would be sobered up by the Manager in private and have a looooong conversation about motivations for sneaking in, potential ulterior motives... and possibly a job offer. She's not made a Node nanite cocktail for something like a living plushie before, but she's open to experimentation.
--If it wanted more of the hive's company as a toy and fellow cuddledrone, that is.
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ferallair · 1 year
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Goddammit, Klaasje! I have distrusted this woman since the first time I talk to her and almost 250 in game hours later I finally get it. She's a goddam spy for Wild Pines.
Everything below this is probably crazy:
So first, Klaasje is a liar. Nothing she says in true. I've never belived her story that she is on the run from being burned by her former employers. The fact that she confesses this is enough for me to think it's not true, at least not totally. Yes, I have trust issues. But she also knows way more about espionage then she lets on. For instance, her knowledge of telecommunications and radios:
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You did what with the what now? That's class A espionage stuff right there. She obviously knows how to do more then just flirt and steal documents like she claims.
She also arrives in November.
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What does that matter? Ok, bear with me:
At some point in there is a raid on the abandoned church in Martinaise. Something top secret, undercover, that multiple precincts where involved in, including 41, and Harry was most likely a part of. Drug dealers might have been involved, the place was shot up and people were probably killed. Ruby is running from La Puta Madre because she betrayed them in some way and she knows all about Harry the can opener, so I suspect she was a part of this raid in some way. And according to Titus the only drug dealers in Martinaise are Union approved one's like Ruby. What exactly happened is a mystery (one that niggles and crunches my brain at 3am sometimes), but I suspect it happened right before November. Why?
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Harry gets a new badge in November. Perhaps he lost his old one in a shootout in a church? Or perhaps he got a promotion for a shoot out in a church? (November's seem bad for Harry).
So November Harry got a new badge, Klaasje rolls into town, so what? Well, the strike starts in December. I think what ever happened in that church peaked someone's interest in Martinaise, in the Union, or both, so they sent in Klaasje. I don't think it's a coincidence she immediately makes friends with the Hardie Boys and Ruby. She targeted them to "party" with. Even her affair with Lely was probably at the behest of her real employer wanting to keep an eye on Krenel. I also think that whatever happened in that church lead to the strike. Perhaps too many people were getting too close to the Claire's drug running scheme so he locked up the harbor as a distraction. I suspect Klaasje isn't the only spy keeping an eye on things.
The Sunday Friend always seems so out of place. Why would a high ranking bureaucrat who is supposedly in town for a booty call with a sex worker WANT to talk to the police? He doesn't offer that much to the case and Mr Martin Martinaise could just as easily have given the police his friends testimony. But he wants to meet them in person. It sounds like he makes a special trip out. Probably because the smoker on the balconey is actually a Moralintern spy and the Sunday Friday is his handler. He wants the RCM to know they are being watched by their "boss". I don't think it's a coincidence that the Smoker plants himself in the middle of the Whirling in Rags after you interview his friend. He's keeping an obvious eye on the Hardie Boys, Harry, and probably Klaasje as well.
And technically, Harry is also a there as a kind of spy for the RCM. Harry isn't just there to solve a murder, he's also supposed to be investigating Krenel.
Plus there are a number of unseen spies, spies for the Union, Spies for Krenel, ect.
I wondered at first if Klaasje was a spy for some other, unnamed, company, but then I remembered this:
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She's got a great vantage point up on the roof, where she stays all day until 11pm, after which she mysteriously vanishes.
Anyway, I'm probably crazy so if you got this far... sorry? I don't know, I need a nap.
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kwebtv · 2 months
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Series Premiere
Behind Closed Doors - The Cape Canaveral Story - NBC - October 2, 1958
Drama / Espionage
Running Time: 30 minutes
Written by Paul Monash
Produced by Sam Gallu 
Directed by Paul Wendkos
Stars:
Joe Maross as Wayne Hollister
Jacques Aubuchon as Charles Meyers
Peter Whitney as Edwin Getty
Bill Henry as Herb Goodwin
Virginia Christine as Julie Hollister
Kathleen O'Malley as Sue-Ellen Goodwin
Marc Snow as Captain
Gabriel Curtiz as Russian Scientist
Rear Admiral Ellis M. Zacharias as Himself
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