foggymorals
divine move
The current head of Hydra had some extremely Russian name that Nephele got wrong every time. Not to mention he was some frail thing that looked like he could be blown away by the wind. He looked ghoulish in a way. Short, pasty skin, beady eyes, yellow teeth, and a manner similar to a weasel. Even so, he was judge, jury, and executioner at the Hydra compound. He told you to jump and you asked how high. He also held every single program ever created under his little tiny thumb. Each and every soldier was a product of his sick and corrupted brain. He was the boogeyman.
Nephele currently lived at the compound, as she had been granted a year of sabbatical after completing her 22 mission successfully. The room gifted to her was nothing more than a supply closet they so “graciously” cleaned out for her. There were grease stains on the floor, and walls, and questionable-looking liquids on every orifice of the room. A thin, yellow-tinted mattress was simply laid on the ground. No bed frame or anything. Not even those metal mental asylum ones. Really showed how they valued her service. It would’ve been more comfortable to sleep on the cold floor.
For the first few weeks of her time off, she followed the same routine every day. It was get up, breakfast, train, and then anything else that was needed. Which was usually checking on operatives in the field and mission updates. Every program experiment had a tracker embedded in their neck, transmitting a signal back to Hydra. No soldier could escape. Not that the thought could ever really occur to them, what with having to go through so many brainwashes. Along with that, each operative had an earpiece that could contact Hydra, but only in the direst of emergencies. Only a few had used that.
That morning followed the same structure as every other morning. Nephele woke up, ate, and trained. It was a little after lunch that she reported to the comms room to see if any assistance was needed. This time, instead of a few people milling around and checking on screens, a dozen or so were gathered around Hydra’s head. From afar she couldn’t hear anything, but he appeared to be quite animated in what he was telling them. Not wanting to interrupt, she stayed by the door. After a bit, the group broke up and each went to their own computer.
A deafening screech emitted from the earpiece in her ear. She instinctively cupped her ears, but it did no good. After a few seconds, the terrible noise subsided and words could be distinguished.
“...Award. Different. Chain. Forward. Palace,” A man’s voice read off. He continued with a series of numbers, “...72°24'04.8"N 69°38'33.4"E.”
To someone who might’ve accidentally picked up on the signal, it would sound like a bunch of jargon. But for a few people around the world, something in their brains were activated.
Nephele currently lived at the compound, as she had been granted a year of sabbatical after completing her 22 mission successfully. The room gifted to her was nothing more than a supply closet they so “graciously” cleaned out for her. There were grease stains on the floor, and walls, and questionable-looking liquids on every orifice of the room. A thin, yellow-tinted mattress was simply laid on the ground. No bed frame or anything. Not even those metal mental asylum ones. Really showed how they valued her service. It would’ve been more comfortable to sleep on the cold floor.
For the first few weeks of her time off, she followed the same routine every day. It was get up, breakfast, train, and then anything else that was needed. Which was usually checking on operatives in the field and mission updates. Every program experiment had a tracker embedded in their neck, transmitting a signal back to Hydra. No soldier could escape. Not that the thought could ever really occur to them, what with having to go through so many brainwashes. Along with that, each operative had an earpiece that could contact Hydra, but only in the direst of emergencies. Only a few had used that.
That morning followed the same structure as every other morning. Nephele woke up, ate, and trained. It was a little after lunch that she reported to the comms room to see if any assistance was needed. This time, instead of a few people milling around and checking on screens, a dozen or so were gathered around Hydra’s head. From afar she couldn’t hear anything, but he appeared to be quite animated in what he was telling them. Not wanting to interrupt, she stayed by the door. After a bit, the group broke up and each went to their own computer.
A deafening screech emitted from the earpiece in her ear. She instinctively cupped her ears, but it did no good. After a few seconds, the terrible noise subsided and words could be distinguished.
“...Award. Different. Chain. Forward. Palace,” A man’s voice read off. He continued with a series of numbers, “...72°24'04.8"N 69°38'33.4"E.”
To someone who might’ve accidentally picked up on the signal, it would sound like a bunch of jargon. But for a few people around the world, something in their brains were activated.