Division NPCs (
survivors_of_new_york) wrote2016-06-04 08:15 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Question
In the old days, the James Farley Post Office was the beating heart of New York City's postal services. Now it's the beating heart of a very different system. Day in and day out, the fight to reclaim the city goes on from within it. Patrols go out. Civilians stagger in. Supplies flow in and out like the mail trucks used to do.
It isn't built for holding prisoners like the NYPD's facilities are. But there are enough rooms deep in the bowels of the building that can be adapted for that. A few armed JTF officers stand guard in a constant rotation. No one's risking the prisoners inside getting loose and wreaking havoc. One guard is drumming his fingers nervously on the stock of his rifle.
In one cell: Martinez sits at a table with his head in his hands. He doesn't get up except to pace. He's stayed quiet this entire time, barely even acknowledging the personnel outside. (He asks once, just once, for 'Eric'.) The model prisoner.
In the next cell over: Keller is the opposite. He rages. Slams his fists against the walls until his knuckles bleed and leave streaks. He presses his face against the glass in the door and hurls insults at the guard outside. He knows what's waiting for him on the streets. LaRae doesn't give second chances.
In the last cell: Torch yells over Keller's racket to 'shut it man, we ain't telling them shit'. He doesn't snarl like a caged animal. He doesn't posture at the guard outside. He merely keeps winding Keller up more and more. No sense in starting a fight. He didn't get a chance.
And up at the top of the stairs, Lindianne Parker rolls her eyes. "Jesus. What a racket."
It isn't built for holding prisoners like the NYPD's facilities are. But there are enough rooms deep in the bowels of the building that can be adapted for that. A few armed JTF officers stand guard in a constant rotation. No one's risking the prisoners inside getting loose and wreaking havoc. One guard is drumming his fingers nervously on the stock of his rifle.
In one cell: Martinez sits at a table with his head in his hands. He doesn't get up except to pace. He's stayed quiet this entire time, barely even acknowledging the personnel outside. (He asks once, just once, for 'Eric'.) The model prisoner.
In the next cell over: Keller is the opposite. He rages. Slams his fists against the walls until his knuckles bleed and leave streaks. He presses his face against the glass in the door and hurls insults at the guard outside. He knows what's waiting for him on the streets. LaRae doesn't give second chances.
In the last cell: Torch yells over Keller's racket to 'shut it man, we ain't telling them shit'. He doesn't snarl like a caged animal. He doesn't posture at the guard outside. He merely keeps winding Keller up more and more. No sense in starting a fight. He didn't get a chance.
And up at the top of the stairs, Lindianne Parker rolls her eyes. "Jesus. What a racket."
no subject
Then, a sigh as he runs a hand over his face. "JTF still holds the Hudson yards, so we might be able to count on a platoon or so to break through to take whoever surrenders into custody. Keeping them on-site is not an option - neither is taking them onto Judge. If they surrender - and that's one hell of an 'if' - we'll basically be playing it by ear."
He looks to Lindianne, his eyes speaking to far too much work on far too little sleep. "I'll be honest with you, Parker. We'll give them a shot, but I wouldn't put money on these Cleaners surrendering. We had Martinez cornered, and the rest of them at gunpoint and outnumbered."
He raps on the blueprints with the back of his knuckles. "Just do your job, and everything else will fall into place."
A quick check of his watch. "Let's go."
And with that, he walks out of the Situation Room, Preacher and Rabbit following. Voodoo lingers, if only to smirk at Lindianne. "He's a cheery one, ain't he?"
no subject
Too long.
As he leaves the Situation Room, Lindianne makes a mental note to ask Faye to lessen the load on Mother just the tiniest bit. There's no sense in working the guy to exhaustion for her sake. (He'd probably scowl at the act, but it's out of a place of empathy instead of pity.) She pauses by the blueprints, face blank.
Then she flashes a smirk back at Voodoo. "I don't know which is scarier: when he's angry, or when he's like this." Probably when he's angry. It's a sight to behold. And she's going to try and not wind up on his bad side any more.
no subject
He glances towards the other SEALs, then jerks his head. "C'mon. Time's wastin'."
He'd never admit it, you see - but in a part of that blackened Southie heart of his that's much shallower than he'd like to admit, he really does care.
It's a short flight to the apartment complex - one of many in Hell's Kitchen that have kick-started the gentrification wave in recent decades. You wouldn't think to look at it now, of course - but before the bug hit, it was quite nice. Indoor pool, gym - no doorman or anything like that, but it's still kind of ironic for anybody living in the lap of this much luxury to be among the first to call for tearing it all down.
As Judge banks, they get a good look at the complex - it's about halfway between "intact" and "nameless pile of rubble". Some sections of the roof have collapsed - without maintenance to see to it and record snowfalls this year, the weight looks like it has been just too much to bear. Around the perimeter, large columns of black smoke rise into the sky. Mother grimaces, tapping Lindianne on the shoulder as he takes the control for the P.A. system from Judge.
"Parker, Judge'll bank around to the far side. Try and get eyes-on the smoke. Let me know what you see."
As Judge banks, Mother presses a button on the receiver, and his voice booms across Hell's Kitchen.
"I am Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator David Baskas, United States Navy."
If there's any motion close to the entrances, it's hard to tell with all that smoke being thrown up into the air - it's simply too thick to get a good read on much of anything right now.
"You are engaging in treason against the United States government. Lay down your weapons and put your hands on top of your head. Resistance will be met with lethal force."
no subject
Hearing Mother say his name- his actual name- is a strange experience. From her location on the opposite side of the chopper, Lindianne looks at him with a deer-in-the-headlights expression on her face. Is she supposed to know this information? It doesn't feel like it.
But they know her name, after all. Why not the other way?
Fat snowflakes are falling from the sky. Smoke billows and curls around the helicopter like waves on the shoreline. Visibility is horrendous. The wash from the rotors only makes the haze outside move in strange ways. She pauses, then throws open the door she's standing by. Instantly there's the tang of gasoline on the wind.
"I'm on it," she calls out over the roar of the engine. She squints into the smoke, watching for movement. Or for gunfire. There's nothing for a long few moments. Then, far below, there's movement. Someone crosses to peer up through a hole in the roof.
Up at them.
no subject
Curious.
"Parker, keep an eye on that hole."
Then it's back to the P.A. system. "Armed combatants will be shot on sight. Drop your weapons and put your hands on top of your head. This is your final warning."
He returns the receiver to Judge before saying a few words into his ear. Judge nods, and the helicopter banks once more towards the hole in the roof, coming to a steady hover just near it.
The crew chief tosses the rope out the door, and Mother's first on the rope and into the downdraft. Then it's Preacher, then Voodoo, the three of them spreading out onto the snowy roof. Voodoo takes point, approaching the hole with carbine up.
Rabbit stretches out his neck before taking position by the door, his carbine up as he provides overwatch for the other SEALs. "Don't like this," he says, shaking his head. "Too much can go wrong."
no subject
"We have their backs," she shouts over the sound of the engine. "We have this under control." And if there's the slightest waver in her voice? It's nothing.
(It's good to know she's not the only one who's been worrying about this going sideways.)
There's no noise from down below. The figure doesn't move from staring up at Rabbit and Lindianne. Then, ever-so-slowly, it raises its hands and puts them to the back of its head. Whoever it is, they're not taking any chances when it comes to Mother and the SEALs.
But are they just a civilian? Or are they bait?
no subject
"They're clean."
"Which apartment are we looking for, Mother?
"361. That's what the records say, anyway."
"361, huh? We gotta lotta fuckin' walking. From the numbers, this is deck five."
"Looks like. Judge, circle around so you can cover us through the windows."
Judge comes on the air as the helicopter banks into the courtyard, almost level with the roof. "Roger, Mother. Coming in."
"Check. Parker, see anything?"
no subject
There are windows blackened by soot or smashed out from the inside or boarded up by some enterprising soul trying to keep their home safe. In a few of the windows, there are onlookers. A pack of teenagers, wiping grease off of the glass to peer out at her. She lifts her eye from her scope to salute them with two fingers. They retreat back out of view.
"We've got live civilians, at the least." Then: movement. She puts her eye back to the scope. Halfway up, there's a figure pounding on a locked window. It's a woman in a deteriorating sweatshirt waving frantically for help. Then a telltale lick of flame from behind her ignites and the window instantly goes black. "Shit. Some of them didn't get the memo."
There are a few Cleaners in the courtyard in scavenged FDNY gear and flamethrowers. Can't be more than six of them in the group. They look up at the chopper. Look at one of their number. (They guy's huge, big enough to probably give even Voodoo a run for his money in hand-to-hand.) And once their squad leader disarms, the rest follow. Every pair of hands in the courtyard goes up.
"Some did," she adds, though there's no joy in the statement.
A window shatters two floors below Voodoo, Mother and Preacher. There's a man in a singed business suit choking on smoke. "Oh god," he screams up at them. "Oh god, make them stop! Do something!" It's obvious from the severe burn on his face that he's barely escaped with his life. "Oh god, please!"
no subject
"Christ," Voodoo mutters. "We need to get the JTF in here, Mother, we can't secure the whole fuckin' block on our own."
"They'll get here. For now, we make do with what we have. -stairs. Double-time it, gentlemen."
It's not long after that before Mother re-appears at the shattered window, pulling the businessman back inside. Then - gunfire, and he ducks into cover.
"Contact, down the hall!" Voodoo shouts.
"Goddammit but I can't see shit." Mother coughs. "Parker, we're taking fire but this smoke's too goddamn thick to see through. What're we up against?"
no subject
It's eerie how calm she sounds saying that. (Better forced calm than active panic. No one benefits if she loses her head.) There's the sound of a barely-suppressed curse before Lindianne speaks over the radio again. "Stand by, I'm checking. Just- stand by."
As thick as the smoke outside might be, inside is worse. It stings the throat with every breath. In the gloom, there's only the telltale flicker of the Cleaners' weapons to guide Mother and the rest. The smoke clears for a moment. Long enough to give Lindianne a clear view from the chopper. "Four! Four hostiles!"
Three have flamethrowers. The last, a guy in a turnout jacket and a balaclava, is crouching behind a pile of garbage. He isn't toting anything to 'cleanse' the locals from their makeshift refuge. He's got another toy with him. The only warning Mother, Preacher, and Voodoo get is the quiet 'click' of collapsible legs snapping into position.
Then a steady stream of bullets roar towards them from down the hall.
Turns out, camera tripods are just as effective for holding up mini-turrets as holding up a Nikon.
no subject
Their reaction is instantaneous - as the turret opens up on the SEALs, they dive for cover in the hall among the debris. Desk and armchairs are not perfect cover, but they do the job well enough for now. Over the radio link, there's a dull THUNK and a grunt from Voodoo.
"Voodoo!"
"I'm good! Goddammit, I'm good! Round fuckin' ricocheted off-"
It's tough, breathing all this crap in without coughing up a storm. It's easy to see what the Cleaners are trying to do - the turret pins them, the burners move in and roast them. That can't be allowed to happen - not when they're so close to what could be a linchpin in this whole thing.
Mother comes back on. "We cannot stay here! Let's move, cover to cover! Aim for the flames, no heroics! Parker, cover us as best you can!"
And so the three of them emerge from cover, their fire precise and directed downrange towards the Cleaners as they stalk down the hallway. It might seem loud from out there in the courtyard - but with the reverb, it's even louder on the inside.
no subject
Then, through the shattered window behind them, Lindianne's rifle barks. Her rate of fire is mechanical. Shot after shot zings through the space just above Mother's head. She doesn't have the best angle from her current location. But there's just enough to make any of the Cleaners hesitate in charging the SEALs.
The engineer catches a rifle round through his arm. He retreats behind his buddies, blood oozing through his fingers. The smoke is thick in the hallway. The only interruptions to it come with every bullet Lindianne sends zinging down the hall.
One by one, the Cleaners fall. The only one left after the charge is the man who set up the turret. He's pressed himself against the other side of an open door to try and escape the withering gunfire. But even so, he's bleeding badly from his arm. From the way his breath hisses, he's obviously got his teeth clenched.
"Fuck off," he snarls at Mother.
no subject
Well fine, be like that.The only response Mother gives is the crack of his carbine's buttstock against the engineer's forehead - just enough to stun him to let Mother get the flexicuffs on. "And here I thought we were friends. Voodoo, Preacher?"
"Clear so far," Voodoo says.
"We're at 311," Preacher says. "361's down the hall."
"If it ain't been torched yet."
Mother glances up and out onto the courtyard as he pats down the engineer for weapons. "Judge is a sitting duck. Parker, fastrope with Rabbit into the courtyard, secure anybody who's surrendered, and work your way up from the ground to third deck. I'll call this one in."
He rolls the engineer onto his stomach, cuffing his ankles together with another flexicuff. "Faye, Mother. We've got more civilians and prisoners than we can keep on eye on here. What kind of reinforcements can you send our way?"
no subject
Lindianne, halfway through clipping in for leaving the helicopter, makes a noise not unlike a cat whose tail just got stepped on. "Yeah. Sure. Hold the line. We're good at that." There's no bite behind the grumbling, though. It's less insubordination than venting. "Right. On our way up, Mother. Try not to die, please."
(It should be noted that the very first person she secures is the big guy in the courtyard. It takes any idea of fighting back right out of the others.)
There's the scrape of gravel underfoot. A sniff. Then a round of coughing. "We're gonna need air freshener after this mission. God, what a stink."
no subject
From the apartment blocks, there's a scream, then shouting. "Rabbit, Mother." (Some of the shouting is coming through the radio link, something like you've got to get us out.) "We've encountered some civilians en route. We're going to be delayed."
"Copy, Mother."
Once he's satisfied the Cleaner he's flexicuffed is secure, Rabbit turns to the squad leader, hands on his knees as he addresses him. His eyes don't stay on him - instead, they flicker to the ones who've yet to be secured.
"Okay, sir, gonna need some info from you. How many of your buddies came here, and where are they now?"
no subject
She's moving down the line and restraining one Cleaner after another. The man gives her the stink-eye before looking back to Rabbit. "Look, pal, y' don't get it. We go quietly and Joe'll flip his shit. We only surrendered 'cause'a that loonie on the megaphone. Dave or what-the-fuck-ever his name is." He means Mother.
He jerks his chin at the building to emphasize the point.
"We ain't traitors. You geddit?" A pause. Then, firmly: "Y' mind? Can't see shit in this thing."
no subject
"Let us worry about Mr. Ferro, sir. He'll be in cuffs soon enough."
A brief sigh, then Rabbit squats down on his haunches to look the Cleaner in the eye. "Look. For what it's worth, I'm glad we didn't have to try and kill each other. You made the right choice here."
An easygoing smile, and a gentle pat on the shoulder. "My name's Eric. You'll see more of me back at the post office."
Then he stands up. "How're the rest of them, Parker?"
no subject
"-Stay still." The cuffs finally are secured. She sits back on her haunches, drags the back of her hand across her forehead, then throws Rabbit a thumbs-up. "Set for transport, Rabbit. Other than Chuckles here-" She throws the last Cleaner a disapproving frown; the guy sneers back in response. "-No problems."
It's been (mostly) smooth sailing thus far. The entire situation is a damn sight better than the last time their crew went toe-to-toe with Ferro's men. Less civilian deaths, less Cleaner deaths, less broken noses, less guys getting their skulls caved in. (And less radiant heat burns.) All in all, it's been cake thus far.
Which is not a good sign.
"We staying here, or we going in after the guys, Rabbit?"
no subject
"We're going in." He sets about disabling the Cleaners' weapons as quickly as he can - fuel hoses on flamethrowers are slashed, rifles field-stripped and broken, grenades disassembled and their contents dumped out onto the ground. "Check your ammo." One of the Cleaners starts to sputter out a protest as their rifles are broken apart, but a glare from Rabbit stops him in mid-sentence.
"Faye, Rabbit. Five Cleaners secured in the main courtyard. I'm moving with Parker to secure ground deck and rendezvous with the others on deck three. Mother, five tangos moving on deck two, side unknown."
"Copy. We're moving to Amherst's apartment. We'll get whatever intel we can scavenge on Judge and stay and clear the compound afterwards."
"Check."
Once they're out of earshot of the Cleaners, Rabbit nods to Parker. "Stay soft and check your corners," he whispers over the radio. "A complex this big, there's gotta be more than just five left."
Snow crunches underneath his boots as he crosses the courtyard, rifle up and sweeping the windows.
"This's been too easy. I don't like it."
no subject
(She doesn't say a word when Rabbit glares at the Cleaner, but she clenches her jaw just the slightest amount. It's a reminder that despite his general friendliness, Rabbit is still fully capable of destroying pretty much anyone in the state of New York.)
"I told Voodoo to stop catching bullets with his vest," she offers as a bad joke. She's right behind Rabbit. There's no movement in the windows or from higher up towards the roof. Smoke drifts skyward lazily. Her breath is a cloud in the cold New York winter air. Snow crunches underfoot.
"...Yeah. It's been going too smoothly." The last time things went this well, she wound up on the floor of a ransacked warehouse. Peace is more of a theory at this point. Quiet is not always a good thing.
She pauses. "Hold up. Second floor, right side, by the hole." She aims her rifle up towards a smouldering gap in the complex's side. "...Four- no, five guys. Tanks on their backs."
Looks like the guy in the courtyard wasn't lying. Lindianne keys her radio.
"Mother, Parker. Got a visual on five Cleaners, second floor, right side."
no subject
"On it." Rabbit jogs to a slim tree, dropping to a knee just behind it and sighting in. They seem to be confused, conferring with one another - perhaps the P.A. announcement didn't make it to them, or perhaps they're adjusting the plan now that they're hearing gunfire. It doesn't matter. When Mother said "last warning", he meant it.
"Rabbit - no tank shots. We want to minimize collateral damage."
"Roger."
"We're almost to Amherst's apartment. Raise you when it's secure."
Rabbit steadies the barrel against the side of the tree trunk. "I got right and rear, you got left and closest."
A brief check with his thumb to make sure his rifle's on semiautomatic, then:
"Goin' loud on you."
no subject
They're probably trying to figure out what to do. As she sights in, the closest target throws his own gun to the floor and turns away from his buddies to undo his tank. It looks like he's trying to leave without them. Smart man.
But not smart enough.
The one next to him, the leftmost Cleaner, raises his own flamethrower to roast the would-be deserter. "Going loud," Lindianne calls just before pulling the trigger. Guy on the Left gets the first round in the chest. Center mass. His intended victim gets one through the head.
(Behind them, back at the knot of detainees, the squad leader bows his head in mourning.)
no subject
"Shit," Rabbit mutters under his breath, standing and repositioning to a tree just a few meters to his left before shaking his head. "I don't see him." He keys his radio. "Mother, Rabbit. Four E.K.I.A. Lost sight of the last one. Don't know where he's headed."
"Copy. We're about to breach Amherst's apartment. Keep an eye out for him."
"Check." Rabbit jogs over to the entrance, waving Lindianne forward. "On me, Parker. Let's smoke this son of a bitch out."
"Rabbit, take it slow. That flamethrower he's got beats anything you two have up close."
Voodoo comes on. "Yeah, seriously. Do me a favor and don't get charcoaled, you two."
no subject
She's right on Rabbit's heels as they head to the entrance. Somewhere up on the floor above them, one enemy still stands. One enemy who's no doubt going to be more than a little miffed about getting shot at. But they've got this.
The building groans. They don't have a lot of time left. "Think he's going to surrender?" The words are barely out of her mouth before there's a distant sound of gas igniting. She 'tsk's quietly in disapproval. "-Guess that answer that."
There's no visible way upstairs from their position; the door to the stairwell is piled high with debris and there is smoke visibly trickling out from the jamb. If they open it, it won't end well.
But just around the bend is a glimpse of shattered windows and an inner courtyard. Lindianne jerks her head towards it. After you.
no subject
"Faye, Mother. We're inside Amherst's apartment. Tell Rhodes and his boys we're bringing home lots of hard drives. Rabbit, status?"
Rabbit's only response is the keying of his receiver - but that's enough.
"Roger. Raise us when you're in the clear."
First things first - check the courtyard and the space beneath the windows. Never know what could be hiding there.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)