Project Atlas
Erica
Shiny Browncoat
A light blanket of snow covered New York. Heaping piles of the dirty, sandy stuff lined the street: they had for months and would for some time yet, but the fresh coat painted the city clean anew. It was an alluring illusion. Within the heart of the city, a thousand deals were being made, from brokers on Wall Street trading in the economy down to the felafel cart vendors selling their wares on the corner. Despite the vast knowledge available to them, most of the general public went about their daily lives blissfully ignorant.
All of it depended on a larger delusion of safety and security. The Saturn Accord had been signed five years ago, limiting the use of metahumans in military operations and banning any programs designed for human enhancement. While pundits debated its efficacy - especially with a few major nations like China refusing to sign the accord - few events had made it international headlines since the Accord. A spectacular fire here, a daring robbery there, but nothing came close to the war with a telepath leading the troops in 1992. Morena’s trial thrust the issue into the spotlight, but it also raised the bar on what would be considered a truly newsworthy metahuman event.
No peace comes without effort and sacrifice. Behind the scenes, the U.N. had established a secret program enlisting metahumans to help keep counter their own kind. After five years, Project Atlas still remained a secret to the public. With limited personnel they had been successful in thwarting countless potential threats and arresting dozens of dangerous metas. Yet the world continued to evolve: their model of pairing one or two metahumans with a larger team would not be sufficient forever. Debate raged for months until Marshall Roberto F. Turchi had issued the command: they would form meta-dominant teams.
Thus, on a Tuesday in February, selected contractors would be pulled the U.N. building in New York. These would form into teams forming a new model and a new approach. The Project had been founded on the principle that metahumans were not inherently untrustworthy; it was time to put that principle to the test.
All of it depended on a larger delusion of safety and security. The Saturn Accord had been signed five years ago, limiting the use of metahumans in military operations and banning any programs designed for human enhancement. While pundits debated its efficacy - especially with a few major nations like China refusing to sign the accord - few events had made it international headlines since the Accord. A spectacular fire here, a daring robbery there, but nothing came close to the war with a telepath leading the troops in 1992. Morena’s trial thrust the issue into the spotlight, but it also raised the bar on what would be considered a truly newsworthy metahuman event.
No peace comes without effort and sacrifice. Behind the scenes, the U.N. had established a secret program enlisting metahumans to help keep counter their own kind. After five years, Project Atlas still remained a secret to the public. With limited personnel they had been successful in thwarting countless potential threats and arresting dozens of dangerous metas. Yet the world continued to evolve: their model of pairing one or two metahumans with a larger team would not be sufficient forever. Debate raged for months until Marshall Roberto F. Turchi had issued the command: they would form meta-dominant teams.
Thus, on a Tuesday in February, selected contractors would be pulled the U.N. building in New York. These would form into teams forming a new model and a new approach. The Project had been founded on the principle that metahumans were not inherently untrustworthy; it was time to put that principle to the test.
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