Steel Accord
One Thousand Club
Togo was hanging out on a cliff outcropping of a mountain just outside of Anchorage. It may not be a particularly big city but to Togo it was a marvel to behold. People working together without even realizing it, with devices someone created and gave to others for a profit. Even the idea of profit, that someone could create or do something that earns them an exchangeable currency.
Concepts so simple to most people. Togo wasn’t most people though, by some measures of many including his own, he wasn’t “people” at all. Standing a little over six feet at the tip of his pointy ears, he was easy to spot. Not even mentioning his black and white fur pattern, canine face, and just generally everything a dog has aside from standing on two legs.
He wasn’t naked, although he wasn’t exactly wearing normal clothing either. A rope tied around his dome right beneath his ears like a headband. Some shorts around his waist. Some ropy bands tied around his knuckles and forearms in a complex pattern. Traditional Muay Thai attire.
It gave Togo his own identity but it wasn’t just decorative. He was highly trained in the art, he needed to be. His martial arts skill was regularly put to the test when he fought criminals across Alaska and other states in the Northwest like Washington. Occasionally he had to deal with something a bit more substantial like the misanthrope lycanthrope Dyrewolf he fought in Northern California.
That fight was brutal and as much as Togo hated to admit it, he had a feeling it wouldn’t be the last time they met.
He shivered as the wind picked up. One benefit of his not-personage was that his fur protected him from the deathly cold that only wearing shorts and no shirt would be to others. Still didn’t mean the cold didn’t bother him, it just wouldn’t kill him.
His ear perked and he looked to the sound. The oil rig off shore was beginning to work. The machinery was loud enough he could hear it from hear. He smiled at the industry. Still, he squinted. He pulled out a pair of binoculars and scanned the rig. He thought he saw something that shouldn’t be there. He couldn’t tell if it was on the shore, in the ocean, or on the rig itself. Anyway it didn’t look good.
He jumped down from the cliff where he stood and landed in his own custom hovercraft. He put goggles over his head as the fan behind him powered to life and he took off gliding over the snow.
Concepts so simple to most people. Togo wasn’t most people though, by some measures of many including his own, he wasn’t “people” at all. Standing a little over six feet at the tip of his pointy ears, he was easy to spot. Not even mentioning his black and white fur pattern, canine face, and just generally everything a dog has aside from standing on two legs.
He wasn’t naked, although he wasn’t exactly wearing normal clothing either. A rope tied around his dome right beneath his ears like a headband. Some shorts around his waist. Some ropy bands tied around his knuckles and forearms in a complex pattern. Traditional Muay Thai attire.
It gave Togo his own identity but it wasn’t just decorative. He was highly trained in the art, he needed to be. His martial arts skill was regularly put to the test when he fought criminals across Alaska and other states in the Northwest like Washington. Occasionally he had to deal with something a bit more substantial like the misanthrope lycanthrope Dyrewolf he fought in Northern California.
That fight was brutal and as much as Togo hated to admit it, he had a feeling it wouldn’t be the last time they met.
He shivered as the wind picked up. One benefit of his not-personage was that his fur protected him from the deathly cold that only wearing shorts and no shirt would be to others. Still didn’t mean the cold didn’t bother him, it just wouldn’t kill him.
His ear perked and he looked to the sound. The oil rig off shore was beginning to work. The machinery was loud enough he could hear it from hear. He smiled at the industry. Still, he squinted. He pulled out a pair of binoculars and scanned the rig. He thought he saw something that shouldn’t be there. He couldn’t tell if it was on the shore, in the ocean, or on the rig itself. Anyway it didn’t look good.
He jumped down from the cliff where he stood and landed in his own custom hovercraft. He put goggles over his head as the fan behind him powered to life and he took off gliding over the snow.