Obuzeti
Professional Wordsdoer
New Detroit, 2219
277th Block, West Jurisdiction, Floor 8 - Nimitz
September 7th, 11:38 PM
Soundtrack: Lorn - Oxbox B
Westside is worse than a slum. Westside is a vertical junkyard.
When the Great Lakes had become, by necessity, the major port of the East Coast after most of it had been irradiated back in the Guiltwar that had left China, Russia, and both coastlines of the US in smoking ruins, they'd needed ground to stack the scrap metal reclaimed from the ruined Navy the new nation no longer needed. Old destroyers and frigates and battleships were hauled through rough canals and left in rusted moorings to await new purpose. Some did go to the shipbreakers, but when the Federated States finally collapsed and the New Federation rose from its ashes - along with Lastlight West, the corporation that had come to own 86% of the old nation's infrastructure - had no use for such an outdated navy. Particularly, the oldest carrier in service: the Nimitz super carrier, and its brethren.
So they had rotted in dock, and the scavs moved in.
These days, the shipbreaker docks are lined with dozens of hulls, some towering, some petty, some with their moorings broken, rolled over and collapsed onto each other, rotting and rusted and thriving with life, as scavs tap the aged wires for electricity, run the reactors for power, spill blood by the gallon to secure each petty room, and resist armed intrusion furiously. Those towering, shadowed hulks are hives of ambush and crime, the worst place to live in the city, by far. Even the Underslums see MaxTac on occasion, but the Tic-Tacs won't go past the caution signs of the breaker bays, so old all the yellow's worn off them.
No man's land: the Breaks. As the saying went, them's the Breaks.
His target is a decker - Vulture, by her tagline. She lives in the shadow of the Carl Vinson, two ships down from Nimitz. The groaning superstructure leans at a 45 degree angle, lashed in place by enormous steel cabling as thick across as a man; in the wind, you can hear the carrier groan and sway. The apartments beneath the Vinson are so cheap that they're basically free - with the understanding that, someday soon, the ship hung over this entire street will come crashing down and kill everyone there, probably in their sleep. But compared to all the other things that can kill you in New Detroit, this one's just a little more obvious.
Standing just over six and a half feet tall, Jonah traces the wire bundle descending from the carrier overhead - the cable Vulture's been identified on. He shimmies down it in the black of night, down to a rooftop loft apartment not nine feet beneath the shifting bulk of the Vinson, straight up nestled against the back of one of the towering support struts that bear part of the ship's weight. Black-haired and blue eyed, all smooth, pale skin and broad muscle, there's an arresting purity to his visage, he knows. No augs, no cyber, no steel.
His body wouldn't take it, anyways, and there's more that's artificial about him than an entire assembly line. Meat is a family product, after all.
Vulture has information his fixer needs. So he starts off light; he clamps a joinsnap around the net-cable rising from her apartment into the ship, cutting off her network access. She might has some short-range wireless, but without live feed to a licensed terminal, her license will shut off anyways. It also jolts the power off briefly as the powerload shifts, almost kicking a breaker.
With her defenses potentially defanged, Jonah plants a thumper - a disc-shaped device with an adhering inner surface - against the wall, and retreats. It's only seconds until it begins to thump its message against the apartment wall in binary, tapping out a simple message.
P - A - R - L - E - Y
277th Block, West Jurisdiction, Floor 8 - Nimitz
September 7th, 11:38 PM
Soundtrack: Lorn - Oxbox B
Westside is worse than a slum. Westside is a vertical junkyard.
When the Great Lakes had become, by necessity, the major port of the East Coast after most of it had been irradiated back in the Guiltwar that had left China, Russia, and both coastlines of the US in smoking ruins, they'd needed ground to stack the scrap metal reclaimed from the ruined Navy the new nation no longer needed. Old destroyers and frigates and battleships were hauled through rough canals and left in rusted moorings to await new purpose. Some did go to the shipbreakers, but when the Federated States finally collapsed and the New Federation rose from its ashes - along with Lastlight West, the corporation that had come to own 86% of the old nation's infrastructure - had no use for such an outdated navy. Particularly, the oldest carrier in service: the Nimitz super carrier, and its brethren.
So they had rotted in dock, and the scavs moved in.
These days, the shipbreaker docks are lined with dozens of hulls, some towering, some petty, some with their moorings broken, rolled over and collapsed onto each other, rotting and rusted and thriving with life, as scavs tap the aged wires for electricity, run the reactors for power, spill blood by the gallon to secure each petty room, and resist armed intrusion furiously. Those towering, shadowed hulks are hives of ambush and crime, the worst place to live in the city, by far. Even the Underslums see MaxTac on occasion, but the Tic-Tacs won't go past the caution signs of the breaker bays, so old all the yellow's worn off them.
No man's land: the Breaks. As the saying went, them's the Breaks.
His target is a decker - Vulture, by her tagline. She lives in the shadow of the Carl Vinson, two ships down from Nimitz. The groaning superstructure leans at a 45 degree angle, lashed in place by enormous steel cabling as thick across as a man; in the wind, you can hear the carrier groan and sway. The apartments beneath the Vinson are so cheap that they're basically free - with the understanding that, someday soon, the ship hung over this entire street will come crashing down and kill everyone there, probably in their sleep. But compared to all the other things that can kill you in New Detroit, this one's just a little more obvious.
Standing just over six and a half feet tall, Jonah traces the wire bundle descending from the carrier overhead - the cable Vulture's been identified on. He shimmies down it in the black of night, down to a rooftop loft apartment not nine feet beneath the shifting bulk of the Vinson, straight up nestled against the back of one of the towering support struts that bear part of the ship's weight. Black-haired and blue eyed, all smooth, pale skin and broad muscle, there's an arresting purity to his visage, he knows. No augs, no cyber, no steel.
His body wouldn't take it, anyways, and there's more that's artificial about him than an entire assembly line. Meat is a family product, after all.
Vulture has information his fixer needs. So he starts off light; he clamps a joinsnap around the net-cable rising from her apartment into the ship, cutting off her network access. She might has some short-range wireless, but without live feed to a licensed terminal, her license will shut off anyways. It also jolts the power off briefly as the powerload shifts, almost kicking a breaker.
With her defenses potentially defanged, Jonah plants a thumper - a disc-shaped device with an adhering inner surface - against the wall, and retreats. It's only seconds until it begins to thump its message against the apartment wall in binary, tapping out a simple message.
P - A - R - L - E - Y