The Black Devils

Post » Sat May 28, 2011 2:54 am

Fallout:
The Black Devils







_______________________________

Chapter One:

Fort Sheridan, Illinois
JULY 4, 2255
Operational Efficiency: 48%
_______________________________





"Ladies and Gentlemen... welcome to Fort Sheridan, Illinois. I am Colonel John Tannanbaum, commanding officer of this base. I find it very fitting that you have arrived here on the day celebrating our great nation's independence. In these troubling times... with the reassuring words of President Richardson still out of contact... we need all the hope and resolve we can muster up. The United States of America needs stalwart champions. She needs defenders such as yourselves. In the face of horror and hopelessness, the United States Army says 'This We'll Defend!'. And we will defend our country, I assure you.
"You stand before me now, civilians. You have civilian senses of order. You have civilian senses of discipline. You have civilian senses of courage. For the next nine weeks... you will be stripped of those things. You will be beaten until you are too exhausted to bleed... and then some. You will be pushed harder than you have ever been pushed before. Some of you will even beg for leniency or compassion before we are done... but those things are not part of this process. When you have been steeled and prepared, only then will you don your power armor, take up your rifle, and bear the name of a United States Army soldier!
"Alright, then. The time has come for you to take your first steps toward becoming soldiers. Lieutenant-Colonel Alissa Yates will be directing you from here. Alissa, I leave them in your capable hands."


I'd managed to excuse myself, which was fortunate... both for the new recruits and for myself. Allisa's voice called her charges to attention, bringing a wave of nostalgia over me. For just a couple seconds I was standing back at Camp Pinnacle in North Dakota on my own first day of Basic. Things were a lot different back then. The loss of communication with the West Coast was still fresh. People were panicking. President Richardson had been the first and last hope we'd had of not living in fear of rampant mutation. Without his calm voice going out over the Public Broadcast Network... folks were in deeper despair than ever. Me, I knew my old man was dead. The service was all I had left. Things really did change. Now I was watching recruits we'd brought in right out of local settlements.

Eventually, however, reality did come back to me. I was the commander of Fort Sheridan... and I was standing there staring off into space like some kind of whack job. With a chuckle and a shake of my head, I wiped the drool from my chin and began the slow march back toward my office. Along the path I passed several new faces which I didn't immediately recognize. The good side of that was that it meant we were gaining popularity among the local populace. The bad of it was that I was beginning to feel old at an incredibly young age. So many of the faces I expected to see... wouldn't ever be coming back. Ironically, that thought struck me just as I bumped into a young Corporal with an eerily similar face to one of those I knew were gone. Corporal Adam Rickler was the son of Sergeant Michael Rickler, a friend of mine. Mike was one of the many good men we lost reclaiming Fort Sheridan from the raiders. His son was a good kid, and a credit to his father, but every time I saw him I couldn't help but feel a little down. As I moved to pass, he fell in beside me and began speaking a mile a minute.

"Colonel Tannanbaum, sir... I heard you were giving a welcoming speech to the newest batch of recruits, so I thought I would try to find you there. Guess I was a bit too slow. Anyway, I have some exciting news! As you know, we've been working on repairing the Main Communications Dish since we got here. The parts are hard to simulate... and the raiders did a real number, so its taken way more time than we thought... but... we officially began picking up signals with it as of last night. Now, get this... the first signal we get... is from someone claiming to be a 'Colonel Augustus Autumn of the United States Army'. Sir... he's calling all units... trying to get word from anyone. We need to send a message back."

I admit that I stopped dead when he said they'd gotten a signal already. The fact that the damned thing worked at all was more surprising to me than that there were other Enclave forces out there. Immediately I gestured towards the Comm bunker and headed off in that direction.

"Lead the way, Corporal... we need to find out everything we can. When we get to the bunker, have one of your tech boys dig out the State of Emergency Challenge Code Book. If this... Colonel Autumn guy really is who he says he is, he will know the codes. Have someone else go digging around through the old records from North Dakota. See if we have any military records for a Colonel Augustus Autumn serving in the United States Army. I want to know who he is, who his parents are, where he came from, and why the hell he's out here in the middle of nowhere looking for help."

Rickler pushed into the bunker ahead of me and immediately set the technicians there to work finding out who this 'Autumn' guy was. Meanwhile, Corporal Rickler and the third technician were busy setting up the broadcasting terminal. I stood there patiently waiting, watching to see what it was they were doing. Apparently the old broadcasting terminal had been a complete loss, and they had been working for some while now on assembling a replacement.

The raiders whom had occupied the base up until we arrived had trashed a lot of the old computers and equipment. It was actually a stroke of luck that they never managed to get through the concrete doors and into the base itself. This place would be almost completely useless if they had managed to get in and do any real sort of damage to the reactor core and the computer mainframe. As it was, we had access to entire archives of information regarding the military facilities here before the war, and power throughout the majority of the on-base structures. It was unlikely to think we would find another base as fortunate as Fort Sheridan had been, but still some of them might prove to have useful supplies and information.

If we could get into contact with this Colonel Autumn, though... perhaps he had enough forces that we could really begin to bring the base we had online.

Unfortunately, as it stood, it didn't look like we were going to get any communication off while I was standing there. I waited for a good twenty minutes while Rickler and a technician whose name I didn't know busily attempted to rig together a transmitter station. When eventually they fell into bickering, I coughed politely and spoke up before turning to go.

"Corporal Rickler... as soon as you and your team here are ready... transmit the Challenge Code: Beta-Zero-Two-Five-Mark. If he replies accurately, then begin transmission of the following message. "Fort Sheridan Acknowledges. Status Update, Colonel Autumn." I want to know exactly what sort of shape he's in and why he's calling all available forces. If he replies, come get me. I've got some work to do, myself. Doctor Hollister left a memo on my desk that said she needed to speak to me. If this is another complaint about me not forcing her random inoculations on all base personnel... I may have to shoot her."

That earned a few laughs from the techs and Rickler... though I wasn't entirely joking. Doctor Marie Hollister was the local representative of the United States Chemical Corps. She was a very capable biological engineer, don't get me wrong. But when she got something in her head, she just couldn't take no for an answer. The last big ordeal had been over some crisis with a disease which may or may not have been spreading through the camp. Convinced that we were all in 'mortal peril', Doctor Hollister insisted that I allow her to host random, unscheduled administration of antibiotics and vaccines. Apparently the random factor was to make it hard for the illness to spread... but... the existence of the illness itself was questionable. Ever since, she has continued to hound me about something on a semi-regular basis. Most days, such as I was attempting to do today, I just hid in my office with the blinds on my window and door closed... and told the secretary to tell her I was out.

Today, as I got to my officehowever, she pulled open the door from the inside just as I was making to grasp my fingers around the knob. Looking up, I came face to face with a grin which I truly despise. You know... the kind that just -screams- 'gotcha'. I didn't have a chance to make a statement or hurry her off, she saw me make a move to speak and cut me off again.

"Oh! There you are, Colonel! I've been looking for you. You never replied to my memo, so I was just delivering a second one to convey how urgent the situation is... but... since here you are, I guess I can tell you now!"

Heaving out a sigh, I stepped in the door and gestured for her to follow.

"Right, then. Fire away."

She seated herself across my desk and procured a small canister which she set upon the table. I didn't seem to recognize it at first, but there was something very oddly familiar about the emblem on it. Leaning forward, I picked it up and inspected it closer. A chill ran down my spine as I realized what was being held in my hands.

"Colonel... I see you realize what you're holding. That canister is one of hundreds my staff recovered from the Medical Storage Warehouse while we were investigating it. According to the shipping and receiving manifests, West-Tek sent five hundred samples of their mid-development phase F.E.V. strains here, to be flown out to the Mariposa Military Base. Before the base evacuation order came, only the first two shipments left. We've got three hundred canisters of a completely unfinished, untested strain of the virus which could potentially kill us all... and we have no place else to store it but in with the regular chemicals and medical supplies!

I very gently returned the canister to the desktop and slid it over toward Doctor Hollister. With a frown, I watched as she took it and returned it to the medical case which I hadn't seen before now. I heaved a sigh of relief when the thing was gone from sight.

"Can we safely dispose of them?"

Marie shook her head and laughed lightly.

"I wish we could sir... god knows I do... but the medical facility here isn't designed to handle biological research. We would have to ship it out to one of our other facilities where it could be done safely, and we've not had any contact with another Enclave base or research facility in years. For all I know, we could be the last bastion of the United States out here."

I eased back into my chair, then, and shook my head.

"Not... necessarily."




__________________________________________________________________________


At current, I am a bit ill... and so I've decided to post this as it is right now so that I can get some rest. I'll edit it and continue on later.


EDIT NOTE: ... so far... I've merely made it bigger, and indented paragraphs and such.. Hopefully the fact that I write in standard novel-sized paragraphs won't be too much of an issue.

EDITED AGAIN: Okay... so... I re-wrote it a bit. Expanded some areas and what have you. Kept it real big and nice-like... but I can't really space it out much more without making an enormous amount of small paragraphs or manually double-spacing the entire thing. Hopefully you can read it like this... but... if not... I guess I understand that too. Either way, this is where I'm at now.
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Nicole Mark
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 5:53 am

One-word summary..


EPICAMAZINGAWESOMEFTW
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lucile davignon
 
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Post » Fri May 27, 2011 6:30 pm

This is mah criticism.

I didn't even read it, I couldn't bring myself to. The text hurt my eyes, and it made me disappointed because it seems to be a good fan fiction. If you can make your text a normal font, and space it up a bunch, that'd be great :)
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Emily abigail Villarreal
 
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Post » Fri May 27, 2011 9:24 pm

This is mah criticism.

I didn't even read it, I couldn't bring myself to. The text hurt my eyes, and it made me disappointed because it seems to be a good fan fiction. If you can make your text a normal font, and space it up a bunch, that'd be great :)



Merely a moment of consciousness taken to apologize to you, in particular... in my current state I can barely see what I'm writing as it is. I'll try my hand at making it look a little better presently. Hopefully I'll be awake long enough today to see if you actually found what you read interesting. Heh.
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Emily abigail Villarreal
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 1:35 am

Thank you :D. I'll definitely read it when you fix it up.
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Chrissie Pillinger
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 2:21 am

Alright :D. It wasn't what I hoped for, but I read it.

It was actually quite good, a turtle for you. :turtle:

A little criticism is be a little more descriptive about the characters' current surroundings, although even without it I could picture easily the situation.
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jennie xhx
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 3:21 am

Fort Sheridan, Illinois
July 7, 2255
Operational Effectiveness: 57%





"I find it hard to believe that, in the course of three days, all hell has broken loose. Four years of relative peace since settling in here at Fort Sheridan have been completely up-heaved by the discovery of those F.E.V. containers in our Medical Storage Warehouse. Thanks to Doctor Hollister's findings, I've had officers and soldiers and panicking technicians pounding on my door all day. Personally, I think she's probably been feeding some of those gossip-hound blowhards out there false information to spread paranoia amongst my soldiers. I probably should have shot her, after all."

I took a moment's pause to breath and consider the rest of my report.

"Matters have only been made worse, however, by our continued inability to construct a functional transmission terminal with which to reply to this distant Colonel Autumn's broadcast. It seemed at first that Corporal Rickler had managed it... but when I attempted to use it to broadcast a return transmission, it overloaded something in the wall and nearly fried the entire dish. If we had only gotten to this place before the raiders had settled in, maybe we wouldn't have so much trouble on our hands. Undoing the amount of damage they've done has been the single largest setback of this mission."

I paused again, this time setting my log-recorder aside and taking a sip of my coffee. Sometimes, like today, I wondered what I was going to do when the coffee finally ran out in this place. There were crates and crates of the stuff, now... but what would I do when we had to find someone who could transport shipments all the way up from South America to get it? I was just going to have to do without. I sighed, but my dismay wouldn't last for long. Lieutenant-Colonel Yates stepped into my officer and saluted promptly.

"Morning, John... I hope I didn't come in at a bad time? If you'd like to take your personal log down now, I can come back later."

Waving her off, I returned the salute and gestured for her to take the seat across from me at my desk.

"Oh, come now... don't be like that. You know damn well I don't mind you interrupting me. You're one of the few people in this hell hole that doesn't just stop by for the sole purpose of annoying the crap out of me. If it weren't for you and Corporal Rickler, I might just have thrown myself under one of the trucks out there."

That last comment earned a soft smile, as well as a bit of a laugh.

"Well, all that would serve is to get your clothes dirty. Those rusted up piles of scrap wouldn't run to save your life."

It was true, and I couldn't deny it. Instead I took another sip of my coffee and gestured towards the pot against the far wall of my office. Alissa moved to get herself a glass, and I moved to slide my recorder back into the drawer of my desk from whence it came. When she returned and seated herself, I placed my mug upon the wooden desktop and leaned forward prepared to listen intently.

"Now... Lieutenant-Colonel Yates. What can I do for you on this very fine, if busy, day?"

There was a pause, for she too had taken a sip of her coffee and was in the process of settling her cup upon the table as well. When she had, though, she relaxed into her chair and smiled.

"I came by, mostly, to tell you that I might have a clue as to why those samples were sent here. Doctor Hollister came out my way looking for information regarding the delivery. We spent a few hours digging, and there wasn't much, but something did come up. Apparently there was a Department of Defense lab out here somewhere called Gen-Lite. The samples were sent on along to the lab... not directly to Mariposa. My guess is that West-Tek had a team at that lab who was supposed to be working with these samples in particular. It's speculation, sure... but I'd like permission to check it against the mainframe records."

So... there was a clue. I was hardly opposed to Alissa digging in a bit further, so I authorized her full access to the computer mainframe and as many technicians as she needed to sort through the data. She was so excited that she almost left without her coffee, though quickly turned back and grabbed it before making to depart. I sat in silent consideration once she had, though... for there were thoughts brewing in my head which I needed to sort out.

West-Tek had deliberately sent these samples out of their way. They arrived here... at a base without biological research capabilities... in order to be sent further along to another, Department of Defense controlled facility? Something didn't add up. Why did they arrive here at all? There were also two shipments which had been sent on ahead already, according to the manifests. It didn't settle right with me. For some reason, they were trying to move these samples.

Before I could put any serious work into wrapping my head around why there was a knock at my door. Jerking to attention, I adjusted my uniform and took up my cup of coffee again.

"Come on in, its open."

What I expected to see was some young punk soldier terrified his skin was going to melt off and his organs were going to rearrange themselves. What I found was a grizzled old officer with a smug grin on his face and single silver star upon his collar. I stared in disbelief for a long while at the man, whose uniform very prominently displayed 'Brigadier General Bertroit.' The man was supposed to be dead. He was one of President Richardson's advisors, and a close friend of my father's as well. As soon as I realized that I wasn't hallucinating, I saluted sharply and moved around to pull out the chair for him.

"P... pardon my impoliteness, General, sir. I must admit... you had me at a disadvantage. You see, I was given the direct impression that you had been killed while aboard the Poseidon Oil Rig, sir."

General Bertroit sat down, and immediately I moved to fetch him a cup of coffee as well. When I was seated and he was served, I cleared off my desk of everything but our glasses and eased my elbows against its edge for support.

"Sir... forgive me for asking... but... how did you survive, and why are you here?"

The older soldier settled his cup down and pulled out a cigarette... something which I would never begrudge a superior officer for doing in my office. As he lit it and inhaled, he began to explain the how it was that he was both alive, and seated before me.

"Colonel Tannanbaum... I would be very much as dead as you believed me to be, were it not for the honor and bravery of your father. He gave his life in the battle against that crazy bastard Frank Horrigan. His unit, as well as Sergeant Granite's unit, were directly responsible for clearing the way through to the old Poseidon Oil Tanker. A tribal called The Chosen One helped get me, as well as Granite and his surviving men, onto the tanker. There were some prisoners whom he got on board as well... but there weren't many officers who made it off before the whole thing went up. A few of the senators and congressmen fled... but the President was killed. Vice President Bird survived... though he resigned and retired while we were on our way back to San Francisco."

I listened closely as he recounted the events, taking a note of some of the names he mentioned. When he seemed to be done with his story of survival, I took another long pull from my coffee mug and set it aside.

"That is certainly a harrowing tale, sir. I am glad to see you survived, though. It's good to know I'm not the last man following the command structure. Since you made it from California all the way to Illinois... I am assuming you were not alone and had some direction?"

The general nodded again and laughed, though the sound was tired and world weary at best.

"After returning to Navarro... I sent out a message to as many of the bases further East as I could. Eventually I got in touch with a man who identified himself as Commander Autumn. He told me he was heading out East, towards some facility outside Washington. I originally set out with my rag-tag group of politicians and soldiers and civilians to follow him, but we lost contact. Then, about two days ago, we pick up short range radio burst on United States Army reserved frequency. We came to check it out. When you second in command told me that you were the commanding officer of this base, I thought it fitting to come see you myself."


_____________________________



Aggh... writing while sick is the svck. Anyways... it's not as BIG as the other one... but its done largely in the standard font so as to hopefully make it easier to read. Again, I tried my best to keep the paragraphs from being TOO ungodly long... but for the most part this is being taken right out of Word and edited here... so... sigh.

Alright :D. It wasn't what I hoped for, but I read it.

It was actually quite good, a turtle for you. :turtle:

A little criticism is be a little more descriptive about the characters' current surroundings, although even without it I could picture easily the situation.




Hey now... hey now... I'm just trying to do my best not to get carried away with font and walls of words again! >.>


But yeah. It's not my finest, right now. I'm just looking to get it out of my head, first. I'm very likely to come back and edit it mercilessly once I don't feel like my brains are going to melt out my ears.
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Charity Hughes
 
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Post » Fri May 27, 2011 11:52 pm

Oh wow, I just realized how bad
It wasn't what I hoped for, but I read it.
sounds..

If you took it how I think you took it, that's not how I meant it. I meant the edit wasn't what I hoped. The writing itself was very good :D
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Bambi
 
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Post » Fri May 27, 2011 7:35 pm

Alright... I think what I'm going to plan to do from here... is just restructure this thing into Chapters. I've gone through my original word file from when I began writing this... and I find that I really do prefer the chapter-based organizational structure. So... for now, this will act as (EDIT) Chapter Two. When I've got a minute, I plan to go back and alter the original two segments, too.



__________________________________________

Chapter Two:
__________________________________________






I awoke in a panic, my heart pounding mercilessly and my half-wakened limbs scrabbling to get me up and out of my bed. I staggered through the dark until I found a light switch, at which point I had a slightly easier time of making my way to the bathroom. Dim rays of morning light shone in through the tattered curtain as I twisted the faucet knob and set the tub to filling with steaming water. That, in itself, helped me swallow my panic down... though it would likely not last for long. Nothing ever did.

When the worn porcelain basin had filled, I quietly disrobed and eased my tired frame into the hot water. Immediately I began to feel better still, though no sooner had I settled in and begun to lather up my washcloth with soap when a sharp knock upon my door interrupted me. Groaning, I leaned forward and returned my bar of soap to its pedestal beside the sink before calling out toward the offender.

"Who is it, and what do you want at this ungodly hour? If it isn't an absolute emergency... I intend to shoot you."


The voice which replied was distinctive, one which hardly needed the identification she gave.

"John... it's me, Ally. Open up. I want to talk to you."

I sighed, glancing around to see if I had a towel handy. Finding that I did not, I instead eased my back against the tub and closed my eyes.

"The door is open, Alissa. Come on in. I'm in the bath, though... so this had better be important. Don't think that just because we're friends it means I won't make you pay for intruding upon my personal time."

I allowed myself to watch as the door opened, Alissa entering and closing it behind her swiftly. She glanced into the bathroom and waved pleasantly, then gestured towards my kitchen.

"I'll come in in just a moment. I'm going to put some coffee on."

And then she was gone. Just like that. I spent the next few minutes in silence, listening to the sound of opening cupboards and rustling glasses. When at last the smell of brewing coffee filled the air, footsteps told me she was headed back in my direction. I had expected that she would take a seat somewhere... or perhaps stand and speak. I was slightly unprepared for the fact when she re-entered the room, stripped out of her uniform, and eased herself into the tub with her back rested against my chest.

Silence fell over the room... until at last I burst out laughing.

"Ally... that's not quite what I meant when I said come on in. I had rather intended upon taking my bath alone."

She glanced over her shoulder at me and poked out her tongue teasingly... something one did not often see in a soldier. To be honest, it was really hard to think of her as a soldier at all, most days. Then again, some days I hardly felt like a real soldier myself. The tone of her voice, however, took on a mockingly chastising tone.

"Johnny, Johnny... always trying to be the perfect soldier. Most men your age, in your position, would be downright thrilled to have a naked woman in their bathtub. Only you would complain and laugh at her."


With a grumble, I moved an arm around her waist and adjusted to make the seating arrangement more comfortable.

"If you leech up all my warm water, I won't complain again. I'll just throw your butt out of my house naked. Believe me, I'm not most men. Besides... I've seen you naked before. Not much has changed."

There was a bit of laughter at that, though it was short lived as the sound of the coffee maker beeping filled the room. Alissa begrudgingly rose up out of the water, stepped out onto the rug just long enough to dry the soles of her feet, and headed off to pour herself a cup of coffee. It was hard not to watch her as she moved... dripping water all over my damned floor.

With a sigh, I forced myself upright too. Grabbing a towel out of the cabinet as I went, I disappeared into my bedroom to locate some clean clothes. I re-emerged to find a damp naked Lieutenant-Colonel standing outside my door, holding a cup of coffee and looking like she was enjoying it just entirely too much. I rolled my eyes and made to brush past her with a smirk.

"You are too much sometimes, you know that? Why don't you focus a little more on whatever reason it was you came here this morning, and a little less on trying to get me to follow you to bed, hmm?"


She huffed at me, but I could hear her padding along behind me as I went to procure myself a cup of Joe. "Well what if I only came over to seduce you, hmm? What then?"

I glanced over my shoulder, eyed her, and laughed. "Well... had you said that upon knocking... rather than that you wanted to talk, maybe I might let you get away with it. But you told me you had something you wanted to speak with me about. I will have none of this... fooling around... until you have at least told me what it is you wanted to talk about."

Alissa blinked at me when I turned around to face her, then smiled and shook her head. "Fine... but what I want to talk about is completely unattractive... and you'll hardly be in any mood to be seduced when I'm finished. I swear... if you hadn't had me crawling into bed with you since we were sixteen, you'd probably never have a woman in your life. You've gotten really bad at this, lately." She paused for a moment to collect her thoughts before beginning again. "You gave me authorization to follow up on the transportation of those canisters. Well, I'd like to send out some scout teams to explore the location where our records show the Gen-Lite facility to be. They're going to need to be in full bio-hazard gear though... and we'll need to establish a decontamination zone."

I took a moment to consider her request. Sending out teams meant exposing them to possibly harmful effects. There would definitely need to be bio-hazard gear involved. And a seriously potent De-Con chamber. It would take some time to set up... but in the long run... it was preferable to being left in the dark. I nodded, then leaned in close enough to plant a kiss upon her lips.

"I want to oversee the construction of the decontamination chamber myself... so... we'll hold off on the exploratory teams for a little while. Why don't you go tell Quartermaster Brakkert to start putting together all the radiation and bio-hazard equipment he can scavenge up from the warehouse? When you get back, maybe I'll let you try some of your smooth moves again. Maybe they'll work this time."

And work, they did.

With 'personal matters' taking up most of my morning schedule, it was already well after mid-day when I casually strolled into my office. The typical pile of papers and documents sat awaiting me, but I really didn't feel like doing it today. I checked through the entirety of it to ensure that nothing sensitive or particularly important had been tucked away in the stacks, then passed them off to a Sergeant whom had wandered by my office door. With that settled, I eased back into my chair and kicked my feet up onto the desk lazily. Just as I had, however, there was another face appearing in my doorway.

"Colonel Tannanbaum... we've just received a transmission from an aircraft identifying itself as Army Two. They claim to have Vice-President Daniel Bird aboard. They indicate they received these coordinates from Brigadier General Bertroit, and that they are low on fuel. Shall we authorize them to land?"

I looked up, blinked, and shrugged.

"Sure... what the hell. Next thing you know, the circus will come to town."
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JeSsy ArEllano
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 2:28 am

Another Enclave fan. An RP of mine is open, which is strictly restricted to Enclave only. Care to join?
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jodie
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 7:30 am

Another Enclave fan. An RP of mine is open, which is strictly restricted to Enclave only. Care to join?


I actually was just reading that! Think I might... though I've got to come up with a character who'd fit in over there.
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flora
 
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Post » Sat May 28, 2011 5:59 am

I actually was just reading that! Think I might... though I've got to come up with a character who'd fit in over there.

Alright, cool. I wouldn't be surprised if I saw a certain bird named 'Enclave Radio' signing up..
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Sheila Reyes
 
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