exsilium MODS (
initiates) wrote in
exsiliumlogs2013-06-14 06:21 pm
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Entry tags:
- #missions,
- #plot post,
- asuka langley soryu (evangelion),
- claudia donovan (warehouse 13),
- gilbert nightray (pandora hearts),
- kate "candy" kane (dc comics),
- katniss everdeen (hunger games),
- nathan summers (marvel 616),
- oz vessalius (pandora hearts),
- physis (toward the terra),
- remy lebeau (marvel 616),
- shintaro kisaragi (kagerou days),
- sir codpiece (original),
- zelos wilder (tales of symphonia),
- ✝ aidan (original),
- ✝ asami sato (legend of korra),
- ✝ belthazar spellscry (original),
- ✝ nanami momozono (kamisama hajimemashit,
- ✝ nikolas kamarov (wildstorm),
- ✝ rei ayanami (evangelion)
Mission: Bad Science Saves the Day
Date & Time: Mid-Day, 3310 | Present Day June 14th-16th
Location: Andersfeld, in the (far former) state of Alaska. (Also known at one time as Anchorage, Alaska.) | Back in Exsilium, those manning the Transport Pads, or working on developing the antibiotics and administering them to the ill throughout the city. Yet others will need to hop-scotch through time gathering sufficient supplies to save lives.
Characters: Volunteers to alter medical research, people working on antiobiotic cures, people distributing appropriate cures, and those who are doing minor missions into the past to retrieve adequate supplies to treat the sick in the present.
Summary: Transports are asked to help save tens of thousands of lives, first by traveling two years into the past and altering scientific research. Second, by helping with the manufacture and development of antibiotics or other cures, once the mission is complete. Third, by distributing the cure to the affected parties. Fourth, by going on pointed supply missions solo, or with up to two other people, in order to get enough supplies to save people in the present.
Whatever your character decides to do, the weight of saving lives is on their shoulders, unasked, and perhaps unwelcome. What will they do when faced with this decision?
Warnings: Illness. Freezing cold. Possible death. Drunken scientists.
In Andersfeld, the snow falls in thick, fat flakes, winds blowing in gusts up to 60 kph. Everyone is bundled up against the weather. Spirits are generally low, if not outright alcoholic. Safety lines and lights guide those brave enough to venture outdoors from building to building.
For the Transports with a six hour window to alter a future that will kill over a hundred thousand people in three weeks, it's a dangerous and necessary bravery.
In Exsilium, the success of the mission to Andersfeld is felt as soon as scientists notice the virus responding to antibiotic treatments. It becomes a race to finding the most effective means of combating the now bacterial infection, and of mass producing any working cure for distribution.
Some help with the production.
Others hurry to cart the supply out to the places hit most heavily. Yet others work directly with administering the antibiotics, in most cases, via an IV line. Those less heavily affected will be granted ridiculously large antibiotic pills, needing to be coaxed down spasming throats.
Those who need action, or who are no good with the sick, are asked to make countless small trips through time to secure the supplies needed to produce enough of the cure to save the tens of thousands who are ill but not yet deceased.
And for those too ill to assist, now is the time to rest, heal, and get better. In a world like this, one never knows what surprise might next lie in wait. The Transports and the Initiative have thwarted total disaster for now.
Mostly.
Location: Andersfeld, in the (far former) state of Alaska. (Also known at one time as Anchorage, Alaska.) | Back in Exsilium, those manning the Transport Pads, or working on developing the antibiotics and administering them to the ill throughout the city. Yet others will need to hop-scotch through time gathering sufficient supplies to save lives.
Characters: Volunteers to alter medical research, people working on antiobiotic cures, people distributing appropriate cures, and those who are doing minor missions into the past to retrieve adequate supplies to treat the sick in the present.
Summary: Transports are asked to help save tens of thousands of lives, first by traveling two years into the past and altering scientific research. Second, by helping with the manufacture and development of antibiotics or other cures, once the mission is complete. Third, by distributing the cure to the affected parties. Fourth, by going on pointed supply missions solo, or with up to two other people, in order to get enough supplies to save people in the present.
Whatever your character decides to do, the weight of saving lives is on their shoulders, unasked, and perhaps unwelcome. What will they do when faced with this decision?
Warnings: Illness. Freezing cold. Possible death. Drunken scientists.
In Andersfeld, the snow falls in thick, fat flakes, winds blowing in gusts up to 60 kph. Everyone is bundled up against the weather. Spirits are generally low, if not outright alcoholic. Safety lines and lights guide those brave enough to venture outdoors from building to building.
For the Transports with a six hour window to alter a future that will kill over a hundred thousand people in three weeks, it's a dangerous and necessary bravery.
In Exsilium, the success of the mission to Andersfeld is felt as soon as scientists notice the virus responding to antibiotic treatments. It becomes a race to finding the most effective means of combating the now bacterial infection, and of mass producing any working cure for distribution.
Some help with the production.
Others hurry to cart the supply out to the places hit most heavily. Yet others work directly with administering the antibiotics, in most cases, via an IV line. Those less heavily affected will be granted ridiculously large antibiotic pills, needing to be coaxed down spasming throats.
Those who need action, or who are no good with the sick, are asked to make countless small trips through time to secure the supplies needed to produce enough of the cure to save the tens of thousands who are ill but not yet deceased.
And for those too ill to assist, now is the time to rest, heal, and get better. In a world like this, one never knows what surprise might next lie in wait. The Transports and the Initiative have thwarted total disaster for now.
Mostly.
no subject
“Name’s Remy,” he says, in response. “No kinda lord, really.”
It’s then that he takes a moment to concentrate on what the others are saying, and begins to scan the skyline for Cable’s signal. The light’s bright enough to blind, or it should be, but amidst the pure white of their surroundings and the crystalline sky, it’s almost hard to spot. But Remy knows what he’s looking for, and sets off in that direction once he sees it.
I’ll be there in twenty, he thinks, for the others’ benefit. He’s good at navigating ice and snow, but going any faster would be suicidal.
no subject
"Perhaps not in title, Lord Remy, but it is certain you are in spirit. I myself am Sir Codpiece, Defender of the Nuts. It is an immense honour to meet you." Polite words that Codpiece truly meant, as much as any squirrel could mean anything. (He could mean rather much.) He held himself fast to his new companion, trying to determine through what wizardry he was hoping to navigate this storm to locate his friends.
Nothing for it but to wait and hold on.
no subject
Likewise.
He could move faster, of course, but it would burn through energy reserves he might not have any way of recharging out here. The ice and snow may be like home, but they work against his abilities as well. Thankfully, he has plenty of all too human training to fall back on.
no subject
::I'll just hunker down here and wait, then.:: His mental voice was tinged with a bit of sarcastic amusement. It was definitely below zero, but he'd survived colder. Then again, he wasn't sure if the fever was affecting his perception of how cold it actually was.
No matter. He had a little time, so he shoved some snow up in a vague approximation of a windbreak, and settled down with his back to it to wait for the others.
no subject
He makes better time than he thought he would, climbing across a snowbank to find Nate. He pauses, nods to Codpiece before giving Nate a blandly-delivered wave.
“This would be the friend I was tellin’ you about.”
no subject
He's fascinated by the apparent magic used to communicate his arrival with Remy. When had the big man told anyone Codpiece was coming? Magic, indeed!
"I trust my presence will not be considered a burden past that which Lord Remy has taken upon his broad shoulders, my lord." Literally speaking.
no subject
"Here you are," he said, instead of commenting on the strangeness of the scene. "I do not suppose someone has a map?" They weren't going to do well accomplishing the mission objective floundering around in the cold, after all.
no subject
Was that... a squirrel? In a tiny hazmat suit. On Remy's shoulder. Talking. The only reason Nate was fairly sure he wasn't hallucinating the whole thing was that Remy was talking back to it, and that seemed a little more detailed. That, and he could sense a mind there, which he drew into their little mental network.
"'Lord'? When did you get the upgrade there, Gambit?"
He gave Nikolas a glance, his tone a little more serious than he'd been with Remy. "Pretty much all the other presences in the area are centered in, or heading towards, one spot. Wouldn't be too far normally, but in this weather it'll probably take us longer."
no subject
“It’s prob’ly best we get this over with as soon as we can, no?”
no subject
In no small part because he did not feel the need to freeze his tail off in such unsuitably (ha-ha) cold weather.
Having never encountered a telepathic network, only the odd telepathic creature or two, his inclusion warrants little other than the stray thought that such a landscape would be terribly difficult to behold in bright sunlight.
Also not terribly friendly to nuts or any decent deciduous tree.
no subject
And that definitely was a talking squirrel. Well then. He had seen stranger things, but not much stranger, he had to admit.
He nodded slightly to Nate. "Point us in the right direction, then." If there were any significant power source out there, it must have been well-shielded. He couldn't really feel it enough to get a sense of direction. Better to trust the telepath, in this case.
no subject
"Why does that not surprise me?" Nate replied, his tone a mixture of amusement and sarcasm. "We're maybe, mm, ten or fifteen minutes walking to where the people are, but that's not counting snow - and I can't exactly see if there are any obstacles in the way. But we can probably handle those when we come to them." Certainly with Nikolas and Remy both here they had enough firepower to get through anything short of a bunker. And he wouldn't put money on the bunker.
He could feel another bout of coughs threatening to make themselves known, so he switched to back to telepathy. ::I'll take point, I suppose - rest of you won't have to worry about plowing through the snow, anyway.:: He concentrated for a moment, confirming their trajectory, and then started slogging.
no subject
i'm officially the worst, i'm sorry everyone
It rather drove him to a desire to nap, were he being honest. Clinging to Remy's shoulder, he says nothing of his thoughts -- but his thoughts speak enough for themselves. For the most part, those thoughts avoided words, a collection of images and associations that ran constantly through his head.
Busy little fellow, indeed.