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/qst/ - Quests


The cube barely maintains its shape in your hands. Your fingertips are cold; it feels as though they’re on the verge of frostbite. The tip of your nose itches, prompting you to give it a little wiggle before returning to the task at hand. The wiggle does nothing. The sensation of current courses through your veins, akin to raw electricity, making the hairs on your limbs stand on end. Pain … pain comes next: a familiar experience of hot lava filling up your lungs. Your inner ears feel as though they are filled with lead, the imaginary weight unconsciously making you sway side-to-side.

These … are all distractions.

Grunting and groaning, you try to keep your concentration, the darkness that is your current perspective slowly giving away to the vista of an afternoon sun and flocking seagulls.

SYNCHRONIZATION COMPLETED

‘Release!’

You do so … and in the process, blow chunks all over the floor.

You’re almost in tears from the experience, swearing up a bevy of curse words, your bodice finding itself on all fours with the return of your senses, the once-glowing wisdom cube now dormant on the wet floor of the training area … and covered with vomit stains, courtesy of your upset stomach. Breathing hard and fast, you let out a light whimper as you feel the onset of the rest of the effects. The vomiting and nausea were relatively easy to recover from with experience … the sudden return of proper temperature adjustments to your receptors never stopped being painful, even after dozens of trials. You can feel the brief contraction of your arteries as they realize they take their sweet time in realizing that they aren’t at the base of a freezing mountain, but on the wet floor of a man-made training outpost in the tropics owned by an international defense task force.

They expand nicely … and painfully.

You feel cramps all over.

‘What was the mark on that point?’

‘Couldn’t even get to the starting line. The cadet’s still stable, though … as always.’

‘Definitely unstable, but his recovery’s still remarkable for someone who can’t consistently get himself to bridge the streams.’

‘Doesn’t make him a reject. How’s the primary and vanguard ratio looking like?’

‘They’re keeping the three-point link alive just fine. Maybe it’s just him.’

You turn a wary gaze to the assortment of engineers and scientists, each of them manning a laptop or standing behind an assortment of boxes. You rub your sore wrists through the rubbery texture of the link gloves as you sit on your knees … before reaching out and picking up the dormant, puke-covered cube, a mixture of disappointment and embarrassment coming over you as you lean back … and feel a supportive and sympathetic hand on your shoulder.

It’s Instructor Long Island.

‘Do you want to stop for today?’ she asks.
>>
>>4700116
>'Yeah, sure, I don't think I can push it anymore than I already have.' (Fatigued)
>'No, I can still go, really!' (Enthusiastic)
>Write-In
>>
>>4700118
>>'No, I can still go, really!' (Enthusiastic)
Gotta get over that barrier
And time for botes once more
>>
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>>4700122
Remember to thank You-Know-Who
>>
>>4700118
>'No, I can still go, really!' (Enthusiastic)
>>
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You stagger as you get to your feet, trying your best to keep that optimistic grin on your face.

‘No,’ you reply, placing your hands on your knees as you attempt at keeping balance. ‘I can keep going, really.’

Long Island’s expression communicates that your attempts at reassurance are doomed to failure. Still … you do make a good show of it, even with that puddle of vomit and that fizzling blue half-charged Wisdom Cube at your feet. Blinking extremely slowly and painfully, you try to widen your grin just that bit more, hoping for the Carrier-type Shipgirl to actually cut you a break and—

‘Nothing doing,’ the shorter woman huffs, crossing those thin, covered arms across her chest as she tilts her head, very much refusing to cater to your unnatural enthusiasm … but nonetheless still does show her appreciation for your eagerness to continue with a bright smile of her own. ‘That’s it for today, cadet.’

‘Aw, come on, teach,’ you practically—well, literally—whine, waving your hands about like some tropical monkey. ‘I’ll get it next time, hones—’

Your informal address of a superior officer garners you a light whack with the elongated sleeves of the subject in question, glaring up at you to remember your position as cadet … which you promptly do, nervously clicking your heels and throwing up a quick—if clumsy—salute before raising your gaze so as to not break the protocols that came with the hierarchy of rank. She may not have been human … but as far as the base’s doctrine was concerned, you would only be flirting with trouble if you continued with this insubordinate behavior.

‘Y-Yes, Instructor Long Island!’

‘Proper rest and knowing your limits is also a key component to being a Shipgirl Commander. I trust that you’ve read the lecture not on how we …’

She adopts a truly nightmarish look, looming above you like some sort of horrifying ghoul, twisting her head about as though she was possessed, the purple aura of her spirit seemingly stretching for the clouds.

Devour your souls if you’re not careful …

You let out a frightened squeak, almost slipping on the wet floor as you take a step back.

Long Island giggles mischievously, humming a playful tune as she balances herself on her heels, thoroughly amused with her own attempt at feeding her hunger for amusement.

‘Well, we told him not to bite off more than he could chew.’

You huff let out a huff at the familiar voice, turning around to face your two fellow cadets: Abigail and Connor. Connor, your roommate of the last eighteen months, regards you with a tired look … while Abigail grins mischievously at what you assume to be you.

She was definitely keeping her laughter in check.
>>
>>4700165
>'Don't the two of you have somewhere else to be?' (Irritated)
>'Of course you'd say that, Mr Consistent-Psyco-Rating.' (Sarcastic)
>'You guys actually came to check up on me? I'm flattered.' (Surprised)
>Write-In
>>
>>4700168
>>'You guys actually came to check up on me? I'm flattered.' (Surprised)
>>
>>4700168
>'Of course you'd say that, Mr Consistent-Psyco-Rating.' (Sarcastic)
Once sassy, always sassy.
>>
>>4700174
>>4700181
Flipping a coin. Coin flipped.
>>
>>4700168
>>'You guys actually came to check up on me? I'm flattered.' (Surprised)
>>
>>4700184
Don't worry, I can account for you, too.
>>
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You guys actually came to check up on me? I’m flattered,’ you let out, sincerely as you can manage … while nursing your head to be rid of the lingering remnants of that splitting headache during your attempt at syncing up with the Cube. You promptly bend over to pick up the semi-dormant device, wincing as disgusting slosh of vomit squelches in your ears as you lift it off the wet floor, holding it at arms length as all those present look at you with the same look of disgust.

You make an attempt to steer the conversation into more comfortable waters.

Pun totally intended.

‘Don’t you two have your parade to get ready for?’ you inquire, glancing up and down their dress uniforms. ‘Nice digs, by the way.’

Conner places one hand on his hip, regarding you with that ever-present, disciplined expression. ‘We have some time before Captain Tague gives the formal shove-off. Thought we’d check up on how you were doing.’

Abigail wears a wry half-grin as she turns her head towards the open waters of the practice cove.

‘You know, normal people wouldn’t be so insistent with having those as their psyco baseline.’

‘Hey, it’s at my discretion, remember?’

Conner rolls his eyes, shaking his head. ‘Let him be, Abigail. You’ve seen those posters he keeps in his room.’

‘Hey, you have them, too,’ you point out, feeling very offended by Conner’s jibe.

‘Not the way you put them up.’

>‘Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)
>‘You can’t deny that the vibrancy of the Sakura Empire isn’t a merit all on its own; the elegance, the mystery …’ (Sakura Empire)
>‘I happen to hold a very honest appreciation for the Iron Blood’s brand of engineering and innovation, unlike most people.’ (Iron Blood)
>>
>>4700213
>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)
Gotta make sure the sun never sets!
>>
>>4700213
>>‘I happen to hold a very honest appreciation for the Iron Blood’s brand of engineering and innovation, unlike most people.’ (Iron Blood)
BISKO BISKO BISKO BISKO BISKO BEST BOTE
>>
>>4700213
>Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
What a torturous choice. Only first if many, I expect.
>>
If no tiebreaker is forthcoming, I'm willing to lend my vote to Ironblood, or alternatively whichever faction has more of OP's favourite botes.
>>
>>4700292
What we clearly need is one more vote for Sakura, so we can get Mech banging his head against the wall within the first three prompts.
>>
>>4700213
>>‘Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
AMERICA FUCK YEAH
>>
>>4700213
>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)
Pip pip
>>
>>4700213
>>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)
>>
>>4700213
>‘Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
>>
>>4700213
>‘Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
>>
Not gonna lie. Tempted to just do away with votes and go with >>4700219 because I know he'll be here for keeps. Haha.
>>
>>4700359
Don't be like that buddy, the Brits have spoken but I will get my Bisko
>>
>>4700359
Least this way, I can mess with Queen Loli and Bestspite
>>
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>>4700359
tbf, Bisko is quite an adorable dork.
>>
>>4700365

Imo they fucked up by making Warspite and Queen Elizabeth lolis. I prefer the KCol designs

PoW however they got right
>>
>>4700377
>>4700213

>>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)
>>
>>4700213
>>‘You can’t deny that the vibrancy of the Sakura Empire isn’t a merit all on its own; the elegance, the mystery …’ (Sakura Empire)
Yandere represent though
>>
>>4700213
>‘Come on, you’re telling me that there’s an Eagle Union poster not worth putting up? (Eagle Union)
>>
>>4700213
>>‘I happen to hold a very honest appreciation for the Iron Blood’s brand of engineering and innovation, unlike most people.’ (Iron Blood)
Was ist des deutschen vaterland?
>>
>>4700575
BROTHER I WELCOME THEE
>>
>>4700377
i mean QE is definitely a loli but Warspite i would say is just smol
>>
>>4700213
>‘I happen to hold a very honest appreciation for the Iron Blood’s brand of engineering and innovation, unlike most people.’ (Iron Blood)

Didn't know you were running an Aura lane quest Mechanic.
>>
>>4700709
I am down with the royal meidos if my yans dont win
>>
>>4700774
ANOTHER BROTHER
>>
>>4700845
Iron Blood Number 1
>>
>>4700213

Vichiya Dominion! Gimme my Jean Bart!
>>
>>4700228
>>4700292
I'm not sure if this is a vote for Eagle Union or a change of vote to Iron Blood. If you're still around, would you please clarify? Or I'm just going to take this as half a vote for each, cheers.
>>
>>4700917
Can i also change my vote to iron blood/royal navy? As the only vote for sakura empire, i doubt others will vote for it too
>>
>>4700926
Go ahead, I don't mind. I know my audience enough.
>>
>>4700927
Guess ill cement the lead for royal meido corps then
>>
>>4700927
hey mech can we get a eta on the wingbride /qst/
>>
>>4700956
The latest chapter has actually finished. The next one will be chapter 4. I progress that quest on a chapter-by-chapter thread-wise basis rather than a prompt-to-prompt. New thread should be up around the last week of March.
>>
>>4700972
cool thanks man
>>
Did you really dump your kancolle quest for another boatshit fanfic? I'm speechless.
>>
>>4701076
This quest was made by personal request of a very nice person that asked me very politely and allowed me to proceed as I saw fit instead of strangling me to do things their way. See what being polite and respectful instead of taking the persona of antagonistic wad gets you?
>>
>>4701083
Personally i dont care, as long as i get my boat waifu fix, it dosent matter where!
>>
>>4700917
Well it was intended as regular EU vote with option to serve as tiebreaker. So feel free to count it as vote for EU.
>>
Still at work, but I should be off in about 3-4 hours. Hang tight until then.
>>
>>4701083
wait youre doing a kancolle quest mind if i get a link to it
>>
>>4701185

http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/16387/

It’s discontinued though, although it’s nice it’s probably not worth binging it.
>>
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>‘Hey, the Royal Navy is the epitome of subtlety in strength. I’m just another face in a long line of appreciators.’ (Royal Navy)

Abigail snorts in amusement as you give the back of your neck a rub. You follow Conner’s look of distaste as he fixes his gaze upon the volunteer subject for your Ancillary Pillar.

‘Kinda heavy on the front there, don’t you think?’

His criticism of your Vanguard Unit elicits a frown from your own person.

>‘The vanguard’s job is to soften up enemy forces enough for the primary unit to tear apart. Front-heavy is the way to go and firepower’s no object.’
>‘I’d like to think that I picked up a few points in deciding the make-up of my ideal command … namely that a balance of attributes allows me to adapt to changes better.’
>‘What are you talking about? She’s a destroyer-type. How is that heavy at all?’
>>
>>4701411
>>‘I’d like to think that I picked up a few points in deciding the make-up of my ideal command … namely that a balance of attributes allows me to adapt to changes better.’
>>
>>4701411
>‘The vanguard’s job is to soften up enemy forces enough for the primary unit to tear apart. Front-heavy is the way to go and firepower’s no object.’
Big guns, best guns
>>
>>4701417
>>4701425
Let's see where fate leads us. And ... Light Cruiser wins.
>>
>>4701411
>>‘The vanguard’s job is to soften up enemy forces enough for the primary unit to tear apart. Front-heavy is the way to go and firepower’s no object.’
>>
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>‘I’d like to think that I picked up a few points in deciding the make-up of my ideal command … namely that a balance of attributes allows me to adapt to changes better.’

‘You really think that you’re up to that grade?’

>‘That’s definitely a swing at me, but I’m too tired to argue.’
>‘I know my limits, Abigail.’
>‘She's the best of the best of the best. I'm just thanking my stars that the bureaucracy allowed it at all.'
>>
>>4701442
>>‘That’s definitely a swing at me, but I’m too tired to argue.’
>>
>>4701442
>>‘She's the best of the best of the best. I'm just thanking my stars that the bureaucracy allowed it at all.'
>>
>>4701442
>>‘She's the best of the best of the best. I'm just thanking my stars that the bureaucracy allowed it at all.'
time to go big, hopefully it leads to big tiddy
>>
>‘I chose her because she was the best of the best of the best … even if I’m not.’

Conner raises an eyebrow at your declaration.

‘Well … I need all the help I can get, don’t I?’

Abigail wrinkles her lips watching the Light Cruiser—your Vanguard unit and the bearer of your Command’s Ancillary Pillar—come to shore, her dress whooshing up with her coming to a sudden stop as she is received by the engineers, her arms under her breasts as she is walked through a very rapid conversation regarding the ergonomics of the trial.

‘You do realize that you’re only aggravating your risk factor by about a thousand percent running a cube trial with an SSR-grade, right?’ Conner points out, shaking his head as he regards the volunteer unit as she is handed a dummy cube, shifting through a prism of colors with every word the engineers put out for her to digest. You bite your lip, looking away from the sight as guilt begins to overtake you.

‘I just thought that if I’d fail at all, I’d at least be able to do it on my terms,’ you let out, frustration peeking through the glass window of its subterranean chamber. ‘It’s not as if I’m doing this out of utter over-confidence or entitlement.’

‘I never said that.’

You let out a sigh. ‘I know, I know …’

‘How did you pull that off, anyway?’

Your Vanguard turns towards you, briefly, turning her lips up in support before shifting her attention to the chatty engineers … and in the process, prompts you to hang your head in guilt.

Some star turn you were.

>‘Well … I just kind of floated the idea around Hermione and … uh … you know how she is …’
>‘Would you believe me if I told you that Swiftsure actually suggested it herself?’
>‘You know how Dido is: she’ll believe in the best of you even if you don’t.’
>‘I filled out the paperwork and Hermione agreed to it. Nothing special there outside of me having to requisition auxiliary armaments from the meowficcers and the manjuu.’
>‘I have no idea how I was able to jump to the head of the queue, but when it comes to Belfast, I’m not complaining. Considering her reputation, though … I think she could have done better than me on the parade day.’
>>
>>4701475
>>‘I have no idea how I was able to jump to the head of the queue, but when it comes to Belfast, I’m not complaining. Considering her reputation, though … I think she could have done better than me on the parade day.’
>>
>>4701475
>>‘I have no idea how I was able to jump to the head of the queue, but when it comes to Belfast, I’m not complaining. Considering her reputation, though … I think she could have done better than me on the parade day.’
>>
>>4701475
Sorry guys, the FIRST OPTION
>‘Well … I just kind of floated the idea around Hermione and … uh … you know how she is …’
Should be:
>‘Well … I just kind of floated the idea around Sirius and … uh … you know how she is …’
>>
>>4701475
>>‘Well … I just kind of floated the idea around Hermione and … uh … you know how she is
I'll change to Sirius
>>
>>4701475
>‘You know how Dido is: she’ll believe in the best of you even if you don’t.’
>>
>>4701480
>>4701484
>>4701485
That's one for Sirius, one for Belfast and one for Dido. And none for Gretchen Wieners
>>
>>4701475
>>‘I have no idea how I was able to jump to the head of the queue, but when it comes to Belfast, I’m not complaining. Considering her reputation, though … I think she could have done better than me on the parade day.’
>>
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>‘I have no idea how I was able to jump to the head of the queue, but when it comes to Belfast, I’m not complaining. Considering her reputation, though … I think she could have done better than me on the day of the parade.’

Smirking and nodding, you feel your eyebrows twitching at Conner’s smug aura.

‘Yeah, she probably could—ow!

Long Island grunts in irritation as she places her hands on her hips, looking up towards the active—yet technically lower-ranked—soldier, having just finished giving the man a great swipe with one of her elongated sleeves, prompting the now-sheepish Conner to rub his head to the melody of Abigail’s giggles, the instructor’s tolerance for the back and forth having apparently reached its zenith with the former’s canceled attempt. Your own show of amusement—a half-cut snicker—is very much restrained in its nature by comparison … for even you know then to breach the dossier of communication with a superior within arms length, even if she wasn’t part of the conversation at hand. Abigail, seeing your abnormally disciplined example, follows suit within seconds.

‘Disparaging remarks are not allowed on my floor,’ Long Island remarks, scowling. ‘Whether they succeed or fais, the choice a cadet makes is at their own discretion, following sound judgment and execution on their part. I believe even ace like you would be aware of that much.’

‘Yes, ma’am,’ Conner replies, smiling apologetically.

Long Island snickers triumphantly, turning her attention back to you. ‘That was pretty close,’ she chirps, with some degree of encouragement, before continuing, ‘but perhaps you could scale back your requirements regarding the primary if you wish to persist with the current three-pronged method we’re running. Since there aren’t that many issues with your potential so much as you’re having problems turning the ignition and getting it to run at all.’

You hang your head.

The way Instructor Long Island communicated her points … makes you feel more like a kindergartner that had failed to color within the lines than a military man that had screwed up his lines. You bite your bottom lip, turning your glance towards the sole member of your main fleet-slash-primary … and the holder of the Regulatory Pillar of the formation. She raises a good-natured hand, idly joining up with Belfast at the side of the cove, compounding your disappointment with yourself with a single encouraging glance.

You’d wasted her time, too.

‘I’m not very specialized in logic behind what pushed you towards that grade for your Vanguard, but don’t you think you could at least manage taking it down a little when it comes to the primary?’

>‘Instructor, not you too … she’s not even …’
>‘Maybe I’m pushing things a little too much with an E-grade.’
>‘Go big or go home, right? Haha …’
>>
Terms to remember:
>Ancillary Pillar
>Regulatory Pillar
>>
>>4701526
>>‘Maybe I’m pushing things a little too much with an E-grade.’
Gotta try balance this now, to try not die with whatever Mech has planned
>>
>>4701534
I guarantee you this quest is nothing like Shipgirl Commander in terms of atmosphere.
>>
>>4701526
>>‘Go big or go home, right? Haha …’
cv or bb/bc are good for royal navy
>>
>>4701526
>>‘Go big or go home, right? Haha …’
>>
>>4701543
Less chance of being blown up, getting eaten, or just straight up going brain dead on a failed roll then? lol
>>
>>4701556
We'll see lol
>>
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>‘Go big or go home, right? Haha …’

Long Island smacks an open palm to her face, mumbling under her breath. Abigail and Conner regard you with the same, narrow, incredulous glares, their mouths hinging open slightly as they appear to find themselves at a loss for words at your declaration.

‘And I suppose the reason you had the type picked out is also due to the same line of logic?’

The Instructor’s flat tone almost prompts your ears into simultaneously combusting out of embarrassment.

>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>‘Actually, Instructor, you left such an impact on me that I … couldn’t help myself.’
>‘Well … just a little …’
>‘Raw, destructive power has never decided a battle in its entirety, ma’am, but it's never been a bad back-up plan to have the potential to flatten a mountain just in case.’
>>
>>4701573
>>‘Actually, Instructor, you left such an impact on me that I … couldn’t help myself.’
>>
>>4701573
>>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
At this point, you guys probably know what option pertains to which class.
>>
>>4701573
>>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
>>4701580
Yup, first is CV, 2nd is CVL, 3rd is BC I'm guessing and 4th is BB
>>
>>4701573
>‘Actually, Instructor, you left such an impact on me that I … couldn’t help myself.’
>>
>>4701594
Actually disregard that, I'll go with

>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
>>4701573
>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
>>4701573
>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
>>4701573
>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’
>>
>‘I’ve always been of the firm belief that Carrier-types are more versatile in their deployment roles, ma’am.’

Long Island regards you with a flat look, your citation of operational doctrine having apparently little effect on her consideration for your preference of formation. You keep your gaze straight up, however, unwilling to meet her eyes lest she see you as a potential drum-head to beat her elongated sleeves upon. You’d received enough flak from the requisition units and your peers of your audacious request to potentially tie-up your assignments with two units of such vital capacities; you’d implode on the spot if the Instructor turned her flames upon you, too.

‘So was Captain Gerrard the one that vouched for you or …’

>‘No, ma’am. Officer Illustrious passed her slip through herself upon hearing my request, ma’am.’
>‘Instructor Formidable saw my request and decided that it’d be safer for her to oversee my trial herself, ma’am.’
>‘He helped convince Officer Victorious a little, yes …’
>>
>>4702353
>>‘Instructor Formidable saw my request and decided that it’d be safer for her to oversee my trial herself, ma’am.’
it is time for THE WARUDO
>>
>>4702353
ahh such good choices its hard to choose
>>
>>4702353
>‘He helped convince Officer Victorious a little, yes …’
>>
>>4702353
>>‘No, ma’am. Officer Illustrious passed her slip through herself upon hearing my request, ma’am.’
gotta stick with Lusty, good ole armored gal
>>
>>4702360
>>4702365
>>4702369
Three way tie so far.
>>
>>4702353
>‘Instructor Formidable saw my request and decided that it’d be safer for her to oversee my trial herself, ma’am.’
>>
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>‘Instructor Formidable saw my request and decided that it’d be safer for her to oversee my trial herself, ma’am.’

‘Of course,’ Long Island grumbles, rubbing her temples. ‘Should have known that that one would be doing things all on her own.’

‘If you’re accusing me of skipping protocols, Instructor, you can take it up with the Captain.’

You gulp and turn about face, locking eyes with your two trial volunteers as they cut right into the conversation, their gear put away and their assortment of frills making them stand out in the mass of uniforms and secondary colors. Long Island scowls as she locks eyes with her fellow instructor, her expression telling you that there what little room that she had for tolerance had vanished with Formidable’s foot now wedged through the door. You practically wince as the both of them size each other up for the second time in the last few hours, the illusion of your well-being no longer an effective barrier to their disapproval of each other’s methods.

Belfast, meanwhile, stands to the side of both carrier-types, wearing that same mysterious smile.

‘I wasn’t implying anything of the sort, Instructor,’ Long Island responds, wearing a sweet, sarcastic and thoroughly venomous smile, mimicking Formidable’s flighty, bold staccato (much to the latter’s disapproval). ‘It’s merely an idle thought regarding my peer’s extreme methodologies is all. Especially when she should know better than to risk it by encouraging a cadet with a delicate record to such extents of daring-do under her watchful eye, no?’

Formidable, while irritated, stands unmoved, returning Long Island’s ire with an irritable half-smirk of her own. ‘Oh, you flatter me. I merely take the course of treating them as they’re adults undertaking a course of action of their own sound judgment and discretion.’

You wince at that.

Way to throw Long Island’s philosophy back in her face.

‘Not to this extent,’ Long Island growls, swinging her arms in such a wide radius that it prompts Abigail and Conner to take a few steps back, lest they get swiped into the water themselves. ‘You’re aware of the risks that come with your Psyco Grade; you should be more aware of the dangers of such an endeavor with a cadet that’s unable to hold a consistent bridge between the streams … especially when the other one is also an SSR.’

Belfast’s smile twitches, but she remains wordless and passive, nonetheless.

The accusation, however, is more than apparent.

‘While under supervision,’ Formidable counters.

‘Do you not see that pool of vomit?

Formidable remains unmoved.

‘We’ve mopped floors of puke and blood in the filtering phase.’

‘We’re supposed to be responsible.’
>>
>>4702474
>‘Instructor Long Island, it was made at my discretion. To blame Instructor Formidable for my over-estimation of my capabilities would be in gross error and putting the blame where it doesn’t belong. I apologize for wasting your time.’
>‘I’m not saying that it’s not totally my fault, Instructor Formidable, but maybe you’re doing a little too much here. I appreciate your help, but maybe I’m just not … up to your standard like you said. Could’ve started a little slow, really.’
>Stay silent
>Write-In
>>
>>4702476
i think we may need to go for the 2nd option and do admit we did go too far too fast
>>
>>4702476
>>‘Instructor Long Island, it was made at my discretion. To blame Instructor Formidable for my over-estimation of my capabilities would be in gross error and putting the blame where it doesn’t belong. I apologize for wasting your time.’
>>
>>4702476
>‘I’m not saying that it’s not totally my fault, Instructor Formidable, but maybe you’re doing a little too much here. I appreciate your help, but maybe I’m just not … up to your standard like you said. Could’ve started a little slow, really.’
>>
>>4702479
i somewhat agree but i think its better to know where our limits are and then figure out how to increase them.
>>
>>4702480
seems legit, going for this then
>>
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>‘Instructor Long Island, it was made at my discretion. To blame Instructor Formidable for my over-estimation of my capabilities would be in gross error and putting the blame where it doesn’t belong. I apologize for wasting your time.’

You drop into a bow, emphasizing your point as your guilt comes to a head … literally and figuratively. At the sound of an uncomfortable grunt, however, you dare yourself into an upward glance from your forty-five degree position, chancing upon the resigned look of your supervisor and instructor … who promptly raises her own nose in a huff, wagging her hand in an emphasis of her own position.

Fine,’ Long Island remarks, turning her back to you. ‘I expect a full debriefing regarding this failure of yours, then.’

Yes, ma’am!

She says nothing else, save what you catch to be a series of mutters that could pass for self-reminders or dirty curse words, opting to resume her duties as the trial’s supervisor, leaving you in the company of your fellow prospects … and your two volunteer units. Formidable cradles her arms under her breasts, her large dress motioning heavily with her steps forwards, throwing Long Island’s retreating back a tired, flat gaze as Belfast comes up to your side, shaking her head.

‘After all this time, she still has trouble loosening those apron strings.’

To your surprise, it’s Belfast who makes the comment. Formidable snorts in agreement, shaking her head as Long Island engages in conversation with a heavily-mustached engineer, popping up one of her planes into existence and holding it as though it was a courtroom exhibit.

‘She means well, but she can be stubborn when she wants to be … which, by my calculations would account for around seventy-five percent of her engagements.’

>‘Instructor Formidable, I don’t think you should be making such remarks … glass houses and all that …’ (Point out Formidable’s own headstrong nature when it comes to her methods)
>‘She’s a great teacher.’ (Defend Long Island’s prowess at tutoring)
>‘You shouldn’t be making such remarks about your own peers, Instructor.’ (Chastise)
>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>Keep silence
>>
>>4702597
>>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
>>4702597
>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
>>4702597
>>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
>>4702597
>>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
>>4702597
>I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
>>4702597
>‘I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)
>>
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>I’m sorry for wasting your time, Instructor Formidable; Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Apologize for your latest failure)

You mean it, too.

Hanging your head and wearing a tight-lipped grimace, you wonder if your arrogance hadn’t enabled you to make such a profound push. Had you really thought to bet on yourself to such a degree when the precedent of your failure had given more credence to the inevitability of yet another fruitless attempt? The dawn had doled out its promise and the morn yielded its truth. After so many attempts with so many others, perhaps you had merely dared to dream an instant of possibility where all your trips had been mere setbacks to an ultimate success … that this would be your triumphant moment, proving those that had doubted you as speckles in the infinite oblivion in the wake of the final, true step upward.

You feel like a right berk for having their efforts and faith amount to little more than a pool of vomit.

Belfast and Formidable seem to consider your apology. Formidable adopts a pensive expression as she regards you, while Belfast’s expression remains mysteriously … cheerful, almost eerie. After what seems like a stretched hour, you end up being given a pair of curt nods … followed by a set of retreating backs, as they excuse themselves and move to join the expectant engineers and observers, all of whom are eager to take in whatever data they could from this sad excuse of a trial, leaving you with a pair of wet boots and a great sense of shame.

The buzzer sounds almost immediately after, signaling for the preparations for the next candidate to begin … and for you to leave the designated area, post-haste. Letting out a sigh and watching your two dream candidates disappear past rows of equipment and bodies, you decide to take your leave before the MPs came to assist you in your endeavors. You’re not sure what’s worse: that you’d failed or that you’d failed Belfast and Formidable after riding on all that bravado. Perhaps you could have requested Ranger or even Mutsuki. It wouldn’t have been as embarrassing to trip over those whose opinions you had no care for in the first place.

‘Well, at least you’re not due for the lunatic’s asylum. That’s something.’

You fix Conner with a weary gaze, prompting an apologetic return and an arm draped across your neck and shoulder. Abigail comes up to Conner’s side, wearing the most forced attempt at alleviation that you had seen in your life.

It is, however, still very much sincere.

‘Come on,’ Conner starts, sounding a little too friendly, ‘let’s go get some grub, huh? Pretty sure that there are still some breakfast burritos left over …’

>Decline the offer
>Accept the offer
>Write-In
>>
>>4703275
>>Accept the offer
>>
>>4703275
>>Accept the offer
>>
>>4703275
>Accept the offer
>>
>>4703275
>Accept the offer
>>
>>4703275
>>Accept the offer
>>
>>4703275
>>Accept the offer
>>
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Internet having problems, as is common in the boonies of Langkawi
Testing to see if my mobile at least works
Apologies, everyone
>>
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>Accept the offer

‘You’re quite the specimen for them to pick up in the first place,’ Conner mutters thickly, his boy band locks fluttering with the breeze as the very messy paradox of a young man of such good looks and such appalling eating habits makes itself known to you. ‘Remind me why you joined up again?’

‘I didn’t join up,’ you protest, scowling. ‘They were recruiting. Same as you.’

With two wraps of breakfast burritos each (courtesy of the back door of the mess hall and staff eager to be rid of any and all excess), the three of you had decided to spend the remainder of what you understand to be the last vestiges of a free morning for Abigail and Conner shooting the breeze and devouring leftovers from a crisp Saturday morning rush. Both your friends—for what value that held over the course of two years—were due on the main island in the afternoon, to participate in a showcase of the latest batch of META-designated Shipgirl Commanders to the world … which, at least at this very moment, wasn’t exactly about to have you as a feature. You’d been enjoying the casual conversation, which had, up until Conner’s recent shift in topic, catered to the highlight comedy of grievances featuring Captains Stubbs and Aubert.

How you were the one they accused of lacking in social graces and delicacy, you’d never know.

‘Come on,’ Abigail grins.

You scowl.

>‘You know why I joined up.’ (Vague, reluctant)
>‘I’m hardly the only one seduced by the siren call of a well-edited poster!’ (Sucker for a pretty face)
>‘Just because I’m from the boondocks doesn’t give you the right to tease me about it.’ (Seeking honor and validation for your hometown)
>‘When you have a grandfather like mine you’ll find that you don’t really have a choice in the matter.’ (Strong-armed into service by traditionalist patriarch)
>‘When they put that much money on the table you don’t say no.’ (Greed)
>‘Because I didn’t have anything better to do?’ (Sarcastic)
>Write-In
>>
>>4704037
>>‘Just because I’m from the boondocks doesn’t give you the right to tease me about it.’ (Seeking honor and validation for your hometown)
REDNECK ROYAL NAVY SKK
>>
>>4704037
>‘Just because I’m from the boondocks doesn’t give you the right to tease me about it.’ (Seeking honor and validation for your hometown)
>>
>>4704037
>>‘I’m hardly the only one seduced by the siren call of a well-edited poster!’ (Sucker for a pretty face)
gonna have to be honest
>>
>>4704043
>>4704050
>>4704059
Just a reminder that you can come up with your own backgrounds if you want. I left that write-in there for anyone with a creative pick to strike.
>>
>>4704061
dont worry Mech, I will play up the Proper Redneck SKK with this background, dont you worry lol
>>
>>4704037
>>Write-In
because i needed a change after collage and waiting to find a job that would suck the soul out of me? hell no this is a better fate than being a sad loser
>>
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>‘Just because I’m from the boondocks doesn’t give you the right to tease me about it.’ (Seeking honor and validation for your hometown)

‘Wanting to play the part of the hometown hero isn’t exactly what people would write up as a choice motivator.’

‘The requirements of my service does not extend to my intentions for the term,’ you counter, biting into your own roll. ‘Besides, what’s so abnormal wanting to do your hometown a good one.’

‘Nothing whatsoever,’ Conner replies, smirking. ‘It’s just funny remembering your loud ass saying it in front of Captain Gerrard during our first roll-call.’

You narrow your eyes …

>‘Could we please not?’ (Evasive)
>‘As if your motivations are any less corny than mine.’ (Escalate)
>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)
>‘So what are your Fleet Commands looking like?’
>‘So why aren’t you two at the port just yet? Shouldn’t you guys be … you know?’
>Write-In
>>
>>4704131
>>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)
>>
>>4704131
>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)
>‘So what are your Fleet Commands looking like?’
>>
>>4704131
>>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)
>>
>>4704131
>>Write-In
well at least it wasnt as bad as the others like the one who said to have power and get the ladies
>>
>>4704230
Haha. Good one.
>>
>>4704131
>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)
>>
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>‘You know what? You’re right … and I don’t regret it one bit.’ (Do a complete about-face)

Before letting out a boom of laughter, so loud and without so much control as that day, a source of so much embarrassment and continual torment for you in your tenure, replays in your mind. You remember stepping out of line, throwing up a salute, declaring the name of the boonies that you called home shouted out like a declaration of war from a frail twerp that couldn’t even find it in himself to hold up a jockstrap … and, of course, the follow-up to your very verbal and very loud response, resulting in an encounter with an irritable Shipgirl that, oddly enough, went on to become one of the more intimate confidants that you’d had in years.

If you hadn’t been such a country boy about it, you would have never have come to know Instructor Formidable and Officer Belfast as you had.

‘Eight weeks of scrubbing men’s toilets,’ Abigail notes with disgust. ‘I’d take waterboarding any day.’

‘Yeah,’ Conner concurs, wrinkling his nose. ‘Especially with Officer Belfast and her white glove.’

You let out a snort of amusement.

Exposure to Belfast’s spic-and-span habits as your orientation had left you pretty much the only one unscathed by her turns at inspection. You may not have a stable turning of the ignition, but you could damn well boast a tidy side of the room … much to the consternation of a certain class ace seated right next to you.

‘You’d think that she’d use that enhanced sight of hers to care for things a lot more important than a few dust particles.’

You click your tongue, shaking your head. ‘An unkempt bed in the morn is the gateway to all calamities.

Conner and Abigail give you flat stares, thoroughly irritated at your quotation of Belfast’s most infamous reprimand … while being the one soul in the barracks that had been spared her wrath. Eight weeks of latrine and shower duty was a bargain of a trade in allowing you iron out the kinks of your own tendencies; back home, you’d pretty much half-assed your task of keeping your bed tidy and your tables clear. Belfast and Formidable’s personal emphasis in overseeing your dedication, competence and thoroughness in the matter had pretty much stacked the architecture of your … relationship with them, for whatever value it ultimately formed.

It made your failure all the more shameful, as hard as you try to keep being optimistic about it.

That it wasn’t the end of the world.

That it did not (at least not necessarily) mean your aspirations would be cut short.

None, however, would change the fact that you’d, ultimately, let them down.

Your smile falters slightly: it really is hard to keep it up, knowing that for a fact.

‘You have all her catch-phrases on tape or something?’ Conner insinuates, sarcastic and mischievous in tone.
>>
>‘Would’ve probably help the both of you keep those slips down if I did.’ (Throw it right back)
>‘Again, you’re acting like I’m the only fanboy on base.’ (Dry)
>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)
>‘So when are the both of you heading out?’ (Shift the topic away)
>Write-In
>>
>>4704601
>>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)
>>
>>4704599
>‘So when are the both of you heading out?’ (Shift the topic away)
>>
>>4704601
>>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)
Ahh shittalking with friends
>>
>>4704601
>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)
>>
>>4704601
>>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)
>>
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>‘Oh, as if you and Abigail don’t have compilation albums wedged underneath your mattresses.’ (Throw it hard)

‘Tastefulness makes all the difference,’ Abigail counters. ‘That and a lack of bedroom eyes.’

Conner, however, furrows his brows, holding his chin. ‘I don’t know, he might have a point, actually … considering how Albacore parades herself.’

‘Oh, sure,’ Abigail replies, smiling tightly. ‘Nothing wrong at all with Nagato’s spread.’

‘That is traditional clothing, thank you very much,’ Conner retorts. ‘If you’d bother to be a little more culturally aware, you’d be able to tell the difference between a micro-bikini and a passable article of clothing.

‘Yeah,’ you snort. ‘Inspiring a lot of confidence there.’

A log of silence strikes itself between the three of you, the wheels and gears beginning to turn and shift as your curious trio adopts a … ponderous mood.

‘You know what?’ Abigail starts again, her expression a mixture of confusion and concern. ‘You have to actually wonder what all of that aims to cater to.’

>Write-In
>>
>>4705399
>>Write-In
most likely on what the will and thoughts of humanity alongside of the wishes of the sailors
>>
>>4705399
>I feel like this is one of those questions that will forever be argued about no matter how you answer it
>>
>>4705399
>If they were not real I'd say unit designs for a waifu gacha game designed to drain peoples wallets.
Knocking on the 4th wall.
>>
>>4705408
Supporting
>>
>>4705399
>We have a better chance charging a Command Siren with a dinghy than figuring that out.
>>
>>4705408
also supporting, the will of humanity for big tiddy is strong
>>
>>4705399

>>4705408
sounds good
>>
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>most likely on what the will and thoughts of humanity alongside of the wishes of the sailors

Abigail’s brow twitches at your supposition of truth.

‘Just what are you taking me for?’

You try your best to remain innocent.

It lasts all of five seconds, culminating with a soft thwack of an open palm to the back of your head.

‘It is a little … tone-deaf as a marketing gimmick,’ Conner suggests, frowning. ‘Imagine getting roped in on the promise of adventures on the high seas … and ending up being responsible for the operation and performance of a magical bio-roid possessed by the willed incarnation of an ancient war machine with the capacity to level cities if they ever went rogue.’

‘A cause for concern, definitely,’ you answers, unable to keep a straight face as you lean back, turning your gaze up to the sky. ‘Not that it isn’t tried and true.’

‘The implication that military men are horndogs without an outlet gains credence with every passing day,’ Conner chuckles, his shoulders visibly shaking as he hunches over slightly, taking another bite out of his meal. ‘There should be an official dissertation on that: the link between machismo and the structure of Thanatos.’

‘I’m gonna pretend that I get what you’re getting at there.’

‘You mean like you do every time Captain Wilkes puts a lecture on?’

You give your smirking friend a light shove, almost causing him to drop what remained of his burrito into the waiting sea below. He wrinkles his nose as he turns to face your person, not at all amused with your inadvertent physicality culminating in the relinquishment of his meal before he could even get to the proper meat of it. You shrug slightly, raising your hands in silent apology before leaning back … and deciding that with your laundry due anyway, that the state of the back of your shirt mattered little (and that the docks were clean to take a nap on, anyway), willingly plopping yourself, hands behind your head, on your back, knees dangling over the edge and an eye up into the clouds above.

The only things that you hear are the rustling of the waves, the ticklish motion of the ocean breeze and the chirp of a small flock of hungry seagulls, waiting to peck at what few leftovers remained from your score of mess hall leftovers. It was hard to believe that the clock hadn’t so much as struck ten yet.

Time did slow down here … just as it did back home.

‘Hey,’ Abigail starts, prompting you to lower your chin slightly, the bottom of your perspective catching a mite of worry upon her gaze. ‘Do you guys think that the Sirensthat they’re really gone?’

Neither you nor Conner rush your answer.

>‘We won; that matters more than if they’re still around.’
>‘I doubt it.’
>‘I don’t know. The last sighting was what? Seven years ago?’
>‘Hopefully.’
>Write-In
>>
>>4706353
>>‘I doubt it, they strike me as beings that wouldn't doubt to play the long game with us or I'm just being paranoid.'
>>
>>4706353
>‘We won; that matters more than if they’re still around.’
>>
>>4706357
supporting this
>>
>>4706353
>‘I doubt it, they strike me as beings that wouldn't doubt to play the long game with us or I'm just being paranoid.'
>>
>>4706353
>>Write-In
No mostly likely not maybe they are trying to get our guard down and strike with you pants are down
>>
Running in a bit, lads. Hang tight.
>>
>>4706353
>>‘I don’t know. The last sighting was what? Seven years ago?’
>>
I'm rebooting this Quest. This prompt fucking broke me. Thank you very much. It only took you 150 posts.
>>
>>4707684
Broke you? What do you mean?
>>
>>4707763
he could not figure out a way to write the next prompt without basically ruining the first part of the quest or doing it in a way that breaks the quests flow. which i understand cause i made the write in way too meta-like
>>
>>4707684
If you want to, you could just declare the write-in invalid and go with the next most voted choice. As the QM, you're in charge, and it's within your rights to ignore overly meta or out-of-character bullshit.
>>
>>4707868
Yeah, a write in that the GM disagrees with is hardly a cause to reboot a quest. I'm fine with whatever the next picked option is, or asking again on picking an option.
>>
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>‘I doubt it, they strike me as beings that wouldn't doubt to play the long game with us or I'm just being paranoid.'

Abigail’s concerns, oddly enough, are genuine ones. After all, Azur Lane’s continued operations pretty much leaned in on a better safe than sorry basis (one that adhered to your own paranoid sensibilities), and even with seven years between humanity and the last sighting of the black ships, you doubt that anyone had seen enough to reassure them that there was no confidence lost in a wager on their return … a prospect that, while taken into account, was one that you hoped never even saw the light of suggestion or consideration. You’d lived through those trying times relatively unscathed, much to your own surprise, perhaps owing to the fact that your three stoplight town was more of a way-station than it could ever be a population center … a perfect spot as the hub for logistical and relief operations of the eastern seaboard. As a kid, you’d almost enjoyed waking up during those wee hours, watching helicopters and military trucks roll in, the soldiers barking orders and reading out protocols to follow until your parents would whisk you away from the loud rotation of helicopter blades and order you back to bed, never quite understanding what their presence truly meant.

It was hard to keep innocent for long, however. As much as the military and the government tried to keep things quiet and manageable, the flooding—and sinking—of entire cities along the western seaboard wasn’t something that any of them could have feasibly kept under wraps even if they wanted to. The scarcity of news regarding humanity’s progress in regards to the war had inadvertently kept those that weren’t in the line of sight of the belligerent forces—with your township a prime example—able to enjoy their previous routes, almost unnaturally so.

Perhaps you were more blessed than you’d previously thought.

But the lost cities, the deaths of millions and the corruption of the northern Pacific had been more than enough to justify the prospect of a resurrection and return most frightening, if it would ever come to pass. An if that you took as a certainty, given just what it had previously meant for humanity as a whole.

Mass graves and shattered coastlines had a tendency to do that.

Probably somewhere out there, biding their time, licking what wounds they can,’ you mutter, feeling uncharacteristically grim. ‘If you believe even a quarter of what the reports have written up, we’d do well to keep ourselves from being caught with our pants down by the time they show. That’s why Azur Lane exists, after all.’

Abigail makes a sound of reluctant agreement.

‘Or they might really be gone,’ you offer, ‘but I’m not leaving my porch door open for that; nope, nope.’
>>
Conner lets out a snort, running his hands through his hair with a humorless smirk. ‘I keep forgetting you’re from a podunk town in the middle of nowhere.’

‘And I keep forgetting that you can’t go ten feet without getting your nose cold,’ you shoot back, ‘but in all seriousness, the fact that Azur Lane still exists at all lends at least some credence to that paranoia, right?’

‘Personally, I think that’d be more the politics surrounding the Shipgirls than paranoia towards the Sirens,’ Abigail returns, mimicking Conner’s expression. ‘Since, you know, none of the nations really agreed to the terms of a tentative disbandment when the Sirens finally decided to cut their losses after Operation Sunset.’

>‘Operation Sunset. That’s the one where …’ (Focus on Operation Sunset)
>‘Yeah, the United Nations really dropped the ball there.’ (Agree)
>‘I’d like to think that we’re actually sensible enough to not enable an arms race within the same decade we just finished a war.’ (Cautiously optimistic)
>‘Well, considering just how much every nation’s invested into the Shipgirl program …’ (Meet the politicians halfway)
>‘So instead of a typical arms race, it’s one involving magical bio-roids that came along to make sure we kept breathing in the first place. You know what? I take it back. Let the Sirens finish the job.’ (Incredulous)
>Write-In
>>
>>4708295
>‘Yeah, the United Nations really dropped the ball there.’ (Agree)
>>
>>4708295
>>‘Operation Sunset. That’s the one where …’ (Focus on Operation Sunset)
>>
>>4708295
>>‘Operation Sunset. That’s the one where …’ (Focus on Operation Sunset)
>>
>>4708295
>‘Operation Sunset. That’s the one where …’ (Focus on Operation Sunset)
>>
>>4708295
>>‘Operation Sunset. That’s the one where …’ (Focus on Operation Sunset)
>>
>>4708295
>‘Yeah, the United Nations really dropped the ball there.’ (Agree)
>>
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Operation Sunset, that’s the one where …’

>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
>‘We finally managed to beat back those bastards. Cost us half an ocean and two years of famine, but we did it.’ (Professional)
>‘Yeah, damn, you really have to bring up The Wound like that, Abigail?’ (Reluctant)
>‘I really wonder if it was worth it at all; we recovered, but … man. It’s like clogging the meat grinder with bone to get it to stop.’ (Regretful)
>Write-In
>>
>>4708632
>>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
>>
>>4708632
>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
>>
>>4708632
>>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
R.I.P. Taco
>>
>>4708632
>>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
>>
>>4708632
>>‘We finally managed to beat back those bastards. Cost us half an ocean and two years of famine, but we did it.’ (Professional)
>>
>>4708719
Ignore the name was doing a risk /qst/
>>
>>4708632
>>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)
>>
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>‘We lost Enterprise, Hiryuu, Ark Royal … so many.’ (Melancholic)

One name stands out to you among the masses that threw their bodies into that crucible.

‘Enterprise,’ you let out, casting your gaze downward, oddly melancholic, despite the lack of a personal tether to the event. You’d been young, sheltered; the only thing that made you aware of a war for humanity’s right to existence had been on-going in your youth had been the roll of military trucks and the strict curfews imposed, sandwiched between frequent updates regarding the progress of the combatants on the front lines. It had been the only time you’d remembered such a showcase of unity and cooperation among nations … and the irony of ironies would carve itself in the form of a vanguard of a war-torn time lost to naught but the memory of ancients … and all the more appropriate that they would hold those roles into the war’s twilight.

There would never have been one without them in the first place.

‘Enterprise,’ you start again, as more names come to mind. ‘Hiryuu, Ark Royal …

>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>Do nothing, continue your ponderous thoughts and the discussion
>Write-In
>>
>>4710874
>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
>>4710874
>>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
>>4710874
>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
>>4710874
>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
>>4710874
>>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
>>4710874
>>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen
>>
VERY IMPORTANT NOTE TO MY PLAYERS
1. Just came up with a bunch of lore for this Quest in the last 36 hours, so apologies for not running since the last post.
2. I'll try to have two sessions run at every day, each lasting 3 hours, just like Shipgirl Commander used to. Hopefully this one will stick, but one thing I can definitely say is that I won't be running on Fridays (Unless it's the first post of the new thread).
3. MOST IMPORTANT ONE: I don't want combat rolls as they disrupt the questing flow, but if there's demand for it, I'll implement it. The downside is that you'll have to give me at least a week off to come up with the mechanics. I'd rather not, but I'm willing to drop this here.
>>
>>4713414
Sounds good, when will this be starting?
>>
>>4713420
I'd like to key in a time comfortable with all, and the consensus seems to be 8 PM Malaysian time for one session and whenever I'm around for the other.

Remember to thank a certain someone. Cheers.
>>
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>Hold your burrito remains up in a toast to the fallen

‘To the ones we lost,’ you declare, the corners of your lips lifting up into a small, proud, smile. ‘May their memories shine bright and eternal … faces known and shrouded.’

Your friend give you a quizzical look apiece … before slowly joining in, nodding and huffing as they raised their half-eaten meals into the air. To the outsider, you must look like a right bunch of fools … and while you had no care to discount their accusations should they ever be thrown, you also feel that your actions, while crude, are not in ill in intention or content and thus, not one to be an iota ashamed about. Setting down your arm and taking another bite (also in salutation), you find your thoughts straying and encompassing the matter of Operation Sunset … or rather, the pieces that had enabled its ultimate success.

Takaoshe lead the vanguard, didn’t she?’ you inquire, finally picking up on the one name you’d missed.

‘Yeah,’ Conner answers, biting his bottom lip. ‘Chief Petty Officer Atago’s sister.

You find yourself still caught off-balance by the genetic relation of beings that were the amalgamation of technology and magic, even after having been exposed to the fact for years. Not that you found it odd; you just felt that such designations and classifications were rather … redundant, considering the origins of the Shipgirls themselves, being biological constructs on one hand and the manifestation of ancient weaponry given sentience with no actual parental unit intersecting any presumed family tree. The concept of Shipgirls regarding each other as cousins, sisters … it hadn’t even crossed your mind until you’d gotten your boots wet.

Then again, maybe you were just the odd one out paying attention to such a thing. No one else really cared.

Didn’t you put in a request to run a trial with her?’ you inquire, prompting an irritable look from your roommate.

‘I did,’ he grumbles, looking away, wearing a great big scowl. ‘She didn’t get back to me.’

‘Oh? Who’d you run up as the Vanguard, then?’

You’d only seen his Primary.

Lieutenant Noshiro,’ Conner declares.

‘The both of you are suicidal on a sub-conscious level,’ Abigail chimes in, scowling. ‘Two SSR Classes? Really?

Conner jabs a thumb in your direction, scowling. ‘As this idiot says: go big or go home.’

You didn’t say that … often, anyway.

‘You know, you can say what you want about my boldness, my friend, but you’re the only idiot on this base that had the sheer arrogance to request Taihou for his trial.’

‘Why? She’s a perfectly viable candidate.’

You're not sure if your friend had lost his sanity bridging the link or lacked it in the first place.
>>
>>4713955
>'Name one other Shipgirl that has an actual misdemeanor to their record involving a superior.' (Factual)
>'Are we talking on the same plane of reality or have you transcended beyond comprehension?' (Insult)
>'And what was her last evaluation score?' (Accusatory)
>'She's volatile.' (Worried)
>'She is, yeah.' (Brush off your own accusation)
>Write-In
>>
>>4713964
>'Name one other Shipgirl that has an actual misdemeanor to their record involving a superior.' (Factual)
>>
>>4713964
>>'She's volatile.' (Worried)
>>
>>4713964
>>'She's volatile.' (Worried)
>>
>>4713964
>>Write-In
isnt she a bit obsessed with her commander
>>
>>4713998
I have to support this
>>
>>4713964
>'She's volatile.' (Worried)
>>
I'm in the middle of watching the Fate/Grand Carnival stream. Should be running after I'm done, Inshallah.
>>
>>4713955
...I suppose her ability outweighs her quirks, especially considering we’re talking shipgirls here and there is no such thing as a bad one.
>>
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>'She's volatile.' (Worried)

Your opinion is made as clearly and concisely as you can manage. While you weren’t one to jab a thumb back on one’s flaws, the fact that Conner had willingly wrapped a loop around a Carrier with a record as—

My, my, just who are you calling volatile, Cadet?

A squeak escapes you as a chill goes up your spine. You turn to your head to the only female companion whose presence you’re aware of at that moment, praying that she’d decided to barge in with a sickly sweet imitation of the subject matter at hand.

Abigail’s eyes avert from your gaze, staring blankly towards the distant horizon with a hot-glued smile upon her features.

The giggle approaches your left ear.

>Signal for Conner to intervene
>‘It’s just … your record speaks for itself, Miss Taihou.’ (Serious, Nervous)
>‘Volatile? Did I say volatile? I wouldn’t dare say such slanderous things of such an exemplary soldier.’ (Play the yellow-bellied coward that you are deep down inside)
>‘Well … I’m just, um … concerned, uh … for the both of you, ma’am. As a … friend of the, uh … other half of the involved party.’ (Try to justify your worry)
>‘Good day, Miss Taihou. Your restraining order expired yet?’ (Snipe)
>Write-In

I was going to delay this until a certain someone came back, but ... well, time's a-wasting.
>>
>>4716502
>‘It’s just … your record speaks for itself, Miss Taihou.’ (Serious, Nervous)
>>
>>4716502
>>‘Volatile? Did I say volatile? I wouldn’t dare say such slanderous things of such an exemplary soldier.’ (Play the yellow-bellied coward that you are deep down inside)
One Fear
>>
>>4716502
>>‘Good day, Miss Taihou. Your restraining order expired yet?’ (Snipe)
>>
>‘It’s just … your record speaks for itself, Miss Taihou.’ (Serious, Nervous)

As her face comes into view, the last thing that you catch of Conner’s expression vanishing behind the frighteningly chipper visage of a certain Shipgirl that you’d heard nightmares worth of warnings of, her red eyes glowing brightly under the shimmer of the morning sun, her voice humming a tune that is much too cheerful for the frightening aura that she brings with her. You hear Abigail scoot over slightly, the heavy thread of her uniform letting out the traitorous call of abandonment as you’re left face-to-face with a woman whose reputation didn’t exactly warrant a reasonable output of … adequacy. In fact, Taihou had been the first case that you’d actually heard of a Shipgirl going off the deep end instead of it being the other way around … and certainly the first one to involve a court martial, international law and a proper designation of safety for all the parties involved.

Whoever Taihou’s Commander had been … he must have been quite a man to inspire that in the incarnated spirit of a living weapon.

That, however, did not deter your rather reckless rhetoric from being recited … with emphasis.

You’re uncertain whether your guts or your utter stupidity had the majority hold on the words rolling off the tip of your tongue, but by the time you’d formulated a reply, it didn’t matter.

Your approval had been stamped.

‘You are a pretty unique case as far as these sort of things go, Miss Taihou,’ you let out, wearing a tight smile as your bladder begins to burst at the seams with every syllable that swan-dives from thought into existence. ‘I mean, uh … not a lot of … Shipgirls that … um … get called to court on a … restraining … order …’

Her hands cup your cheeks. You don’t dare look away.

‘My, my, aren’t you adorable?

Her smile is wide.

It definitely does not reach her eyes, however.

Knees quaking, you find your jaw slacking as you try to piece together the next reply, but her hot breath and fiery eyes disarm you in ways that render your neurons unable to fire anything eligible beyond quacks and grunts. The concrete shifts under the seat of your pants as you feel your buttocks unwittingly scooting in an attempt to escape this Medusa’s grasp, tears on the verge of bursting from the corners of your eyes, your gaze craned forcefully—and gently—upwards into the burning hot embers that were her irises. You wiggle your toes, your—

‘Oh my.’

SPLASH!

Your senses returning to you with the breach of a surface three feet below, you sputter for breath, staring up at a pair of so-called friends restraining themselves from mockery … and a very pleased-looking Carrier staring mischievously at you from her position between the former two, effectively usurping your seat.

You stare up at the trio, clumsily treading water.

>Write-In
>>
>>4716559
>Write-In
I guess I deserved that ma'am but you can't fault a man about worrying about his friend. Especially with the rumors that float around base about you...
>>
>>4716575
supporting this but adding 'regardless though, i do hope my friend does take full and complete responsibility for you'
>>
>>4716575
>Supporting
>>
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>I guess I deserved that ma'am but you can't fault a man about worrying about his friend. Especially with the rumors that float around base about you…

You brush what seawater you can manage out of your hair with your fingers, your feet now back on solid concrete thanks to the very merciful and forgiving whims of the object of your wild and groundless accusations. To Taihou’s right, you spy Conner rolling his eyes at your lack of spatial awareness, having just finished muttering his incredulity at how you’d allowed yourself to scoot over to the point you were totally over the edge. Abigail is more of a Taihou’s mind, offering a sympathetic smile but ultimately unable to keep her amusement over your drenched self restrained to intent. You don’t blame her, however, even as you pull your top up and give it a right tight squeeze, giving an apologetic smile of your own instead. It had been your fault after all,, being so clumsy in the first place …

‘Yes, of course,’ Taihou finally responds, taking a step forward as her flighty, high-pitched voice sounds once more, touching her delicate fingers to her lips as she regards you in a manner as a spider would its helpless dinner. ‘Such concerns are fitting, especially where the well-being of one’s friends are concerned.’

She doesn’t seem too irked by your previous statements, despite your flight-or-fight response blaring warnings with every squeeze of your wrinkled top. You make a mental note to make a beeline for the washing machines the first chance you get, lest one of your superiors catch you wearing a wet, wrinkled uniform and smelling like the sea.

Maybe you could get away with saying it was a training mishap. The practice areas were notoriously slippery, after all.

‘Well, then shall we get going?’ Taihou chirps up again, turning her back to you and clapping her hands together. Even from this position, however, you could tell her focus was on Conner, with Abigail—rather reasonably—placing herself at least two arms’ lengths between the pair. ‘If we catch the next boat, there should be some time to browse what the city has to offer before the parade.’

It’s amazing how what was effectively a weapon of mass destruction worth billions could resemble a pleading college girl so … convincingly. You yourself have to keep the goofy smile from coming out in response to Taihou’s display.

Conner, however, maintains his stoic persona, merely nodding at his … partner’s act.

Maybe that was why he’d been made the class’ so-called ace.

‘Not really much that I’d like to browse around,’ Conner reasons, his voice trailing off as he considers Taihou’s proposal.

>Write-In
>Tell them to go and shove off; you needed to get yourself dry and your clothes washed ASAP anyway
>>
>>4716638
>>Tell them to go and shove off; you needed to get yourself dry and your clothes washed ASAP anyway
>>
>>4716638
>>Tell them to go and shove off; you needed to get yourself dry and your clothes washed ASAP anyway
>Good luck guys
>>
>>4716646
supporting this
>>
>>4716638
>>Tell them to go and shove off; you needed to get yourself dry and your clothes washed ASAP anyway
>>
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>Tell them to go and shove off; you needed to get yourself dry and your clothes washed ASAP anyway

Perhaps the most thankful for your casual dismissal was Taihou herself, as she throws a mysterious look over your shoulder before going on her way. Abigail excuses herself just as well, deigning it a more worthwhile endeavor to cross-check whatever items she’d forgotten to go over prior to her departure for the parade. You hadn’t even managed to ask just who she’d managed to attach herself to for the parade by the time she’d scampered off … not that it mattered, anyway: you’d find out by the time you were in the crowds and she had her demonstration up. You had at least three hours before the procession final went underway … more than enough time for you to change up and make your way to town yourself; after all, the ferry between the base and the island was operational up until the wee hours on weekends (owing to the fact that a vast majority of the cadets and staff preferred to not be cooped up on said weekends) and you—

‘I see you at least finally managed to learn to swim.’

You close your eyes and count to ten.

If there was a mood of yours to be ruined … you could definitely trust him to make good on it.

‘What a waste your time here would have been otherwise.’

>Ignore the voice
>‘Shouldn’t you be buttoning up for the parade, Wolfgang?’ (Curt)
>‘Go away, Wolfgang.’ (Brush him off)
>‘Congratulations on your placement, Wolfgang. Couldn’t have happened to a better guy.’ (Patient)
>'Don't sound too happy. Your care package get lost in the mail?' (Antagonize)
>Write-In
>>
>>4716749
>>‘Shouldn’t you be buttoning up for the parade, Wolfgang?’ (Curt)
>>
>>4716749
>>‘Shouldn’t you be buttoning up for the parade, Wolfgang?’ (Curt)
>>
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>‘Shouldn’t you be buttoning up for the parade, Wolfgang?’ (Curt)

You pull your wet uniform top off your shoulder, smarting it slightly from the sheer force you undertake the task by … so irritable the presence of the man before you means to you. Blonde, broad-shouldered and wearing the most punchable smirk known to man, you wonder what genetic malfunction could have deemed this arrogant piece of existence worthy of a chance at life at all. Walking towards you in the full black, white and blue dress of Azur Lane, his cap twirling at his side, you find yourself surprisingly reluctant to turn your back to the prideful blonde, instead deigning it a more appropriate show of your character to squeeze the remaining droplets of saltwater out of your soggy top, your nose wrinkling and your teeth grinding as you whiten your knuckles with every step that he takes towards your person.

Suffice to say, his company wasn’t one that you were particularly … enthused about.

‘Shouldn’t you be in the stands with the other rejects?’

It’s hard not to rise to the bait.

You manage to do so, even without your friends holding you back from indulging in a breach of disciplinary protocol. You truly had grown up.

‘I’m surprised that they’d keep a hick like you around,’ Wolfgang lets out, shrugging as he raised his palms parallel to his shoulders. ‘Well, not really. Keeping invalids around to meet PR quotas probably more than make-up for the vacuum of your existence.’

>‘Grow up, Wolfgang.’ (Sneer)
>‘Yeah, you’d know, wouldn’t you?’ (Throw his accusations back at him)
>‘Don’t you have better things to do? Maybe feed off some pond scum with the rest of your species?’ (Dry)
>‘Conner’s already gone into the city if you’re looking for him.’ (Dismissive, nonchalant)
>Keep silent but don’t take your foot off the pedal
>Write-In
>>
>>4716833
>‘Grow up, Wolfgang.’ (Sneer)
What a lovely fellow this man is.
>>
>>4716833
>‘Grow up, Wolfgang.’ (Sneer)
>>
>>4716833
>>‘Don’t you have better things to do? Maybe feed off some pond scum with the rest of your species?’ (Dry)
>>
>>4716833
>Write-In
> "Is this really the best thing you could think of to do with your time? Kinda pathetic, don't you think?"
>>
>>4716833
>"Is this really the best thing you could think of to do with your time? Kinda pathetic, don't you think?"
>>
>>4716833
>>Write-In
Oh yeah wolfgang at least my mother isnt a drunk and a whore and my father was there
>>
I should be ready to go within an hour. Currently finishing up my breakfast.
>>
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>"Is this really the best thing you could think of to do with your time? Kinda pathetic, don't you think?"

‘Don’t flatter yourself,’ he retorts, the proud smirk vanishing in an instant, making room for a look of disdain to wholly dominate his slightly tanned features. ‘Making you aware of the ballast you are is something I consider a duty to the emblem. Everyday you scurry around on this base is another day you put this operation’s resources to waste. You’d at least have my respect if you had the awareness and the honor to realize it on your own; as it is … I think I’m the only one around here that’s honest enough to put the effort in.’

>Write-In
>>
>>4717827
>Sometimes I think you have another reason to keep seeking me out Wolfgang. I suppose its a good thing you're graduating, now I won't have to be worried about my cornhole getting poked in the showers
>Shoot him a mocking grin
ahh the old time, "u gey bruh' insults, can't go wrong with them
>>
>>4717827
>Considering you only every attempted to synchronize with Fletchers, I'd hardly consider your "efforts" honest. You didn't even attempt to sync with Mullany, Nicholas or Stephen Potter.
>>
>>4717838
Supporting
>>
>>4717827
you? honest effort, please I do real work while you just bully others and lie to cover your mistakes to the instructors just because your mother is a drunk and whore and abused you while your father was never ever in your life because he left when he found out that he knocked up your mom and bailed to avoid responsibility am wrong or am i right
>>
>>4717838
>>4717841
Again, stop going ahead with assumptions, please. Unless you want the quest to stall like it did prior. I put up with it last time. I don't want to put up with this shit now.
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>>4717855
I will switch to supporting >>4717831
>>
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>Sometimes I think you have another reason to keep seeking me out Wolfgang. I suppose its a good thing you're graduating, now I won't have to be worried about my cornhole getting poked in the showers
>Shoot him a mocking grin

His eyes narrow at the accusation, coy as it is. ‘I seek you out,’ he starts, his voice barely containing his irritation as he stops twirling his cap, ‘because no one else seems to see the sense in your waste of a presence. Of all the mongrels on the road, you are, by far, the one most lack in self-awareness.’

Flicking his cap onto his head, he keeps a tight glare on you, his nose wrinkling in a very apparent show of distaste.

The feeling is mutual.

‘So, tell me,’ he begins again, taking a slow, deliberate drawl as he rubs his pristine shoes into the cement of the harbor area. ‘Just which unfortunate souls did you deem worthy to take away from more deserving hands this time? An E-Class Battleship? An SSR-Class Destroyer? How many man-hours did you have the bureaucracy waste just so you could live out those stupid fantasies of yours for all of five seconds?’

>‘Wouldn’t you like to know?’
>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’
>‘Not my place to bother with the details.’
>Stay silent
>Write-In
>>
>>4717910
>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’
>>
>>4717910
>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’
>>
>>4717910
>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’
>>
>>4717910
>>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’
>>
>‘Requests can either be met with approval or denial; I didn’t force anyone into anything so unsavory as what you imply.’

Wolfgang’s expression doesn’t change.

‘So you’re delegating blame now? How fitting for someone of your quality,’ he scoffs, placing his hands in his pockets. ‘Or does it reflect more on the quality of those you subscribe to, I wonder?

It’s his nonchalance that claws at you more than the words themselves.

>Write-In
>>
>>4717935
>Write-In
I blame no-one else but myself for my own shortcomings, but I will be damned if I let your petty words stop me from working on fixing them.
>>
>>4717935
This >>4717935 but I'll tack on a bit more and play up the Royals shtick
>Her highness's shipgirls only accept the best in quality. In both strength and character, if I had been found lacking I would not have been given time of day. I blame no-one else but myself for my own shortcomings in bridging, but I will be damned if I let your petty words stop me from working on improving them.
>>
>>4717997
This
>>
>>4717997
And by this I meant >>4717972, bleh. Juggling three gachas events at once is suffering.
>>
>>4717935
>>Write-In
I could say the same about you
>>
>>4717997
I like this revised version, and will support it over my original.
>>
>>4717997
this
>>
>Her highness's shipgirls only accept the best in quality. In both strength and character, if I had been found lacking I would not have been given time of day. I blame no-one else but myself for my own shortcomings in bridging, but I will be damned if I let your petty words stop me from working on improving them.

Wolfgang sneers at your words, his eyes narrowing underneath the visor of his cap. You match his glare, your expression … relaxed. Wolfgang’s irritable attitude had worn out its intimidation factor within the first few weeks of exposure; more than a year in, the only thing that crossed your mind meeting those royal vermilion orbs of his was their presence. The man had never missed a chance to put you down … for whatever reason he could find. You hadn’t even the foggiest of just why his hatred of you extended to such an unreasonable extent … and he hadn’t bothered with explaining himself even with your insistent prompting (outside of a forceful shove and cryptic retorts). As things went, you’d gone and settled into a merely discomforting dislike of one another with an eye on the conduct board; not quite ideal but more than adequate for two grown men such as yourselves.

After all, regardless of how you felt, he was still one of Azur Lane’s best and brightest … even if your respect for him ran shallower than a jock and his prom date. Given your own state of flux, you weren’t about to jeopardize your own career stepping over boundaries prematurely. One only gained such a right after one had proven oneself … and you, as things were, have absolutely nothing to show for it.

‘I take it back,’ he starts again, looking down the bridge of his nose as he leaned his head back. ‘It’s quite unfortunate that you’ve learned to swim. The sea would have done the world a great favor dragging your worthless behind out with it.’

You wrinkle your nose, barely restraining yourself from letting loose a tirade of—

You’re immediately knocked off-balance by a burst of … something. A brief glare of light prompts you into raising your arms … causing you to resume your fall with the clumsy shift of your right knee to the right. A grunt of discomfort escapes you as you look up … only to find a gust of wind to call on your reflexes, both arms going up in an attempt to shield yourself from the risk of injury.

A click of disgust hits your ears as you finally lower them down … and are greeted by a sight that is both awe-inspiring and intimidating.

‘That’s a good look on you, trash.’

Two Shipgirls stand by his side, staring down at you with unreadable expressions.

Battlecruiser Scharnhorst

Destroyer Z23

He steps over, hands in his—

Now, now, boys …

That voice.

‘Good grief.

At your side, they stand: Belfast; Formidable.
>>
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‘My, my,’ Belfast declares, her tone mock-outrage as she raises her hand to her mouth, ‘is this really the sort of thing that cadets should be getting up to on such a beautiful day?’

You realize that the question was for the both of you.

And there weren’t many correct answers to pick from.

>‘No, ma’am, just a … civil disagreement. My apologies, Wolfgang, for any offense on my part.’ (Professional)
>‘Only when the other side fires first.’ (Snipe)
>‘I should be so lucky.’ (Aggressive)
>‘No, he was just doing his duty, Lieutenant, ma’am, in pointing out my state of dress.’ (Negotiate)
>Keep silent
>Write-In
>>
>>4718350
>>‘No, he was just doing his duty, Lieutenant, ma’am, in pointing out my state of dress.’ (Negotiate)
>>
>>4718350
>>‘No, he was just doing his duty, Lieutenant, ma’am, in pointing out my state of dress.’ (Negotiate)
>>
>>4718350
>‘No, he was just doing his duty, Lieutenant, ma’am, in pointing out my state of dress.’ (Negotiate)
>>
>‘No, he was just doing his duty, Lieutenant, ma’am, in pointing out my state of dress.’ (Negotiate)

Belfast doesn’t comment on your explanation, that serene yet dangerous smile still upon her lips by the time you’re back on your feet. Sparing a glance to the opposing party, you notice Wolfgang taking a more formal stance compared to the slightly-hunched casual lean he’d adopted earlier in your encounter, his verbal volley of your person put on hold with the presence of a proper Instructor in the form of Formidable, who wears a neutral—if slightly peeved—expression as she stares across at NimiZ23’s more practical mode of address—and Scharnhorst, who regard her with looks of indifferent acknowledgment themselves.

Then the unexpected happens.

Nimi picks Wolfgang up … in the most literal sense of the word. Letting out a huff of exertion, the tiny destroyer—barely up to your diaphragm in height—topples the cold mood with that soft huff, effortlessly holding the six feet of meat, bone and refuse above her … prompting an indignant look from the hatted blonde that is every kind of satisfying.

Wolfgang, we’re late!

‘Wolf—don’t call me that! It’s Auxiliary Commander! Address me by the proper designated—’

‘My, my, they get along well, don’t they?’ Belfast snickers, watching the spectacle of the fully-grown man and his pint-sized handler … hoisting him like a petulant child.

‘Hey, don’t … where are you taking me? Hey!

‘We must be going,’ Scharnhorst announces, throwing up a casual salute as she tilts her head slightly. ‘Belfast; Formidable.’

‘Have a good one,’ Belfast cheerfully returns, raising a hand.

Wait-wait-wait, I’m not—’

‘And here we go!

The crack of the sonic boom and Wolfgang’s cries don’t quite manage to knock you off your feet, but your hands do raise up in an attempt to shield yourself from the sudden burst of air, leaving an empty spot where their trio had recently stood … and the echoes of sweet distress coming from the direction of the main island as Wolfgang’s cries for assistance hit your ears. Dusting yourself off and picking your top—which had fluttered to the concrete floor of the harbor sometime after the arrival of the two Ironblood Shipgirls—and giving it a good dusting itself before slinging it over your shoulder, you turn your attentions to Formidable and Belfast.

‘Thanks,’ you manage, offering a small smile … before remembering just who the both of them are and immediately move to adjust your lack of professionalism. ‘Thank you … Instructor; Lieutenant … ma’ammadams.’

Your clumsy attempt elicits a look of amusement from the both of them.
>>
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'Dare I ask how you ended up in such a state?'

>Just shrug in a dismissive manner
>'I'd rather not say, Lieutenant.' (Curt)
>'Free dive fishing. Hobby of mine.' (Dry)
>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>'None of your business.' (Reject)
>Write-In
>>
>>4718475
>>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
>>4718475
>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
>>4718475
>>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
>>4718475
>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
>>4718475
>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
>>4718475
>>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)
>>
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>'Miss Taihou, she ...' (Truthful)

‘I ran into Miss Taihou,’ you reveal, letting out a loud, embarrassed sigh as you move to detail the awkward circumstances of your disheveled state. ‘She, uh … well, it wasn’t her fault, really, but I kind of, um … ah … fell off the dock trying to keep her away.’

‘That flirt,’ Formidable grumbles, crossing her arms and placing her weight on one leg. ‘Honestly, you’d think that she’d have learned her lesson by now.’

Belfast, in contrast, adopts an oddly … concerned tone. ‘She didn’t do anything to you, did she?’ the Lieutenant inquires, wrinkling her brows upward as she surveyed your unkempt state of being.

‘No, no,’ you hurriedly clarify, lest you be implicated in the nonsense that an explanation lacking one would be bring. ‘Just … well, she had a helping hand in getting me ending up like this, but I’d put most of the blame on the fact that I’m much too much of a wimp to properly stand up to a pretty girl’s mischief.’

Such was the nature of all full-blooded men.

Formidable adopts a half-smirk, eyeing you with eyes lidded ever so slightly as she mimicked Belfast’s posture. ‘A pretty girl’s mischief, you say?’ she remarks, shrugging her shoulders lightly as those same rosey irises sparkle in amusement … and expectation.

>‘Well … she is. I mean … not exactly hard to point out the obvious.’ (Nonchalant)
>‘That’s not to say that she isn’t intimidating on her own merits, ma’am.’ (Backtrack)
>‘You’ll pardon me for saying it outright, ma’am, but … you have to admit that the Shipgirls get away with way more than the protocol would typically allow.’ (Forthright)
>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>Shrug indifferently; you’d merely said it as it’d played in your mind
>Write-In
>>
>>4719474
>‘You’ll pardon me for saying it outright, ma’am, but … you have to admit that the Shipgirls get away with way more than the protocol would typically allow.’ (Forthright)
>>
>>4719474
>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>>
>>4719474
>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>>
>>4719474
>>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>>
>>4719474
>>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>>
>>4719474
>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unrealized promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)
>>
>‘My grandmother had a saying: there are three things that God made to weaken a man’s resolve: the smell of his mother making dinner, a patch of shade on a noon day and the unsaid promises of a pretty girl’s smile.’ (Country bumpkin)

You’re quite proud, remembering those little nuggets of wisdom your grandmother had dropped about for you to pick up. Crude and generalizing they may have been, but wrong they definitely weren’t. You had yet to catch a fellow lad that could say no to the wafting scent of their mother’s peas, greens and sweet potato pies, a boy that refused the shade of an oak tree after a hard morning’s work raking the leaves and mowing the lawn … or a man that didn’t get leg-tied and tongue-tied at the behest of a pair of beautiful fluttering eyelashes, drawing him away from whatever iron and soot demanded of his hands with lies coiling around truths and a dainty siren’s call to go with it.

And are you not but just another man?

The unsaid promises of a pretty girl’s smile?’ Belfast repeats, closing her eyes and hunching over at a small angle, letting out another one of her melodious giggles before standing upright once more, her expression warm and amused. ‘I had no idea that you subscribed to such … beliefs. If I didn’t know any better, I’d have put you down for being such a sap.’

Despite the accusation, you find yourself quite indifferent. Probably because of all the unsaid promises that floated with her voice.

When grandma was right, she was right.

‘Well, ma’am, it’s gotten me this far,’ you reason, shrugging as you throw up an apologetic smile, unwilling to push against her point but … unwilling to back down on yours, either. ‘And I think that as far as what you think about it, well … that’s up to you, Lieutenant … ma’am.’

‘No, no, you’re misunderstanding me, Cadet,’ Belfast returns, pausing to let out another outburst of snickering behind a gloved hand, before setting it down and regarding you with those same smiling eyes. ‘I’m merely surprised. I did not mean to cause any offense, should you feel it.’

‘Oh, not at all, Lieutenant,’ you reiterate, shaking your head as you take a step back.

‘Sounds a little flimsy, though, as far as excuses go,’ Formidable speaks up, regarding you with an inquisitive look. ‘You’d do well to build up a resistance to those pretty smiles. I believe you’re more than aware of how … opportunistic the ladies here can be.’

You nod, throwing up a salute.

‘Yes, ma’am.’

‘But before any of that,’ Belfast chimes in, her expression turning into one of … displeasure. ‘I believe you should turn that uniform in before it starts going rancid. I can smell the beginnings of a build-up from here.’

‘Yes, ma’am,’ you answer, throwing up another salute. ‘Of course, ma’am.’

‘All right, then; come with us.’

‘Eh?’
>>
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>'With all due respect, Lieutenant, I believe I'm able to wash my own clothes. Besides, I have some forms to fill out before I hit the island.' (Protest)
>'Come with you? Why? Did I do something wrong?' (Confused)
>Wordlessly follow them
>Write-In
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>>4719633
>>Wordlessly follow them
>>
>>4719633
>>Wordlessly follow them
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>>4719633
>'Come with you? Why? Did I do something wrong?' (Confused)
>>
>>4719633
>'Come with you? Why? Did I do something wrong?' (Confused)
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>>4719633
>Wordlessly follow them
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>>4719633
>Wordlessly follow them
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>>4719633
>>'Come with you? Why? Did I do something wrong?' (Confused)
>>
>Wordlessly follow them

Despite your initial reluctance and confusion, Formidable and Belfast’s words are ones you follow without any retort or protest. As you make your way across the base, passing the myriad of titanic platforms that made the compound … and the men and women that made it work. Cranes, forklifts and klaxons are major contributors to the spread of activity through your surroundings, with warehouse doors opening and closing to the call of the engineers and the maintenance crew, those aware enough of Formidable and Belfast throwing up salutes before getting back to work or verifying whatever relevant task that demanded their input. You yourself don’t meddle in the affairs of the administration, with every other word coming out of Belfast and Formidable’s mouths on these occasional stops lining up a level above your pay grade. Dragging your heels some two feet behind your superiors and being relegated to the role of spectator, you find yourself oddly … engrossed in the architecture of Azur Lane Headquarters, making particular note of the compound’s incredible size, with extra focus on the hexagonal and the expanded wings to the north and south of the primary facility. You’d been in this particular section of the base before, of course … but that had been during orientation, and back then, you’d been more engrossed in the prospect of finally meeting a Shipgirl face-to-face than an appreciation for the facility itself … at least until now.

With the now very specifically being the residential sector of the Shipgirls themselves.

You’d only been here twice: both times to deliver Instructor Long Island’s paperwork on request from administration, and both times you’d, unfortunately, encountered her in the artificial garden just outside the main residential buildings and were thus, unable to actually enter one of the abodes.

Looking around, you could at least conclude that they lived better than the Cadets.

As expected, of course.

‘Tarry not, cadet,’ Belfast calls out over her shoulder, prompting you to jump into a small sprint as you moved to catch up with her and Formidable.

Unlike the rest of the facilities … the shipgirls’ residential area was the only one built on an arm going out to sea instead of the island itself, with one straight path going in and out, wide enough for a truck to roll across without much issue. The cadets’ barracks and training area was slotted across and right onto the island itself, being one of two facilities that weren’t situated upon the lengthy platforms that formed the artificial cove.

The main building stands out, of course, even from out here.

It looks more like a castle than it really should, in your opinion.

Not that it wasn’t nice to look at.
>>
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‘Come on, then,’ Formidable calls out to you, a hint of irritation in her voice as she leans her head from behind a corner.

You jog around the corner, catching up with Formidable and Belfast … and finding yourself on a narrower stretch of walkway than you’d expected, with the waves loudly crashing into the support structures below. Above, you notice what seems to be a RADAR dish installed on the flat top of a particularly high tower … one that you wouldn’t have noticed with the myriad of corridors and walkways available upon your first step onto the platform. You are now on the backside of the residential sector, making your way along the railing with the horizon sitting on your right shoulder and the backs of your superiors dead ahead.

There didn’t seem to be anyone else around, either.

‘We’re here,’ Belfast announces, causing you to come to a stop.

She swipes her card on a control panel at the top of a short flight of stairs, prompting the door to swish open, allowing her inside.

You were actually about to enter a Shipgirl’s abode.

You could hardly believe it.

Formidable gestures for you to follow her in. You take the four steps up into the threshold, shoes on ...

>Write-In
>>
>>4720294
>Well at least I'll be able to put one of the questions i've wondered during my time here to rest. Thank you for inviting me inside Instructor Formidable ma'am.
>>
>>4720309
Supporting
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>>4720309
>Well at least I'll be able to put one of the questions i've wondered during my time here to rest. Thank you for inviting me inside Instructor Formidable ma'am but uhhh why are we here and not at the Cadet barracks?
yea forgot to add that last part
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>>4720294
>Well at least I'll be able to put one of the questions I've wondered during my time here to rest. Thank you for inviting me inside Instructor Formidable ma'am.
>>
>>4720294
>>Write-In
permission to speak instructor?
>>
I'm going to be posting in about half an hour. Show of hands, please?
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>>4721032
Here
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>>472103
yo
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>>4721032
Prolly gonna disappear in a couple of hours to sleep, but here.
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>>4720294
Sounds good
>>4720316
>>
>>4721032
Am here
>>
>Well at least I'll be able to put one of the questions i've wondered during my time here to rest. Thank you for inviting me inside Instructor Formidable ma'am but uhhh why are we here and not at the Cadet barracks?

‘Well, this answers a lot of questions,’ you mutter, raising your head to meet the white-painted ceiling.

Forget “lived better”. The layout of the Shipgirls’ residences was something right out of a city center loft. You spy a curved couch sofa—and two three-seaters on the far side of the room set against what looks like a mini-library—with a set of stylized metal stairs set against a brick wall, perpendicular to what you can only describe as an absolutely luxurious view of the ocean behind a pane of slightly-tinted glass, complete with a veranda (or what was more like an extended gallery), set with its own array of flowers and a … a trellis for the more adventurous breeds to climb and spread upon. You let out a whistle of appreciation as you spin around to take in the utter palace of a dormitory, spying a kitchenette and a bar in one corner of the room, emphasizing the vastness of the utterly indulgent nature of the place. The only thing that felt off about the place was the faux wood floors … a cardinal sin for someone who’d spent his life in the company of craftsmen.

That and the overtly fluffy surfaces that served as sad excuses of carpets.

You may have been a country boy through and through, but that didn’t mean you didn’t come with certain standards of taste.

‘Please forgive the mess,’ Belfast lets out, the apology in her tone very much sincere. ‘The clean-up schedules been a-shambles in the last week. What with everyone trying to make time to get into town.’

Formidable walks over to the dining table, adjusting a fruit bowl that you hadn’t realized was slightly out of place before turning to you with a small—if toothy—smile. ‘Make yourself at home.’

You would if you could.

If it wasn’t just intimidating

‘There’s a community shower downstairs and the washing machines should still be running … you can just put your uniform in one of the empty laundry bushels outside before you start the shower up. We don’t have any hot water’—you’re a little relieved to know that there was some semblance of reality in here—‘so you’ll have to manage. I’ll look through the supply closet … see if I can find you a towel or a bathrobe to use.’

You absently nod, before realizing …

‘I was on my way to the barracks to clean up anyway … ma’am,’ you let out, with some degree of hesitance. ‘We’ve got working showers and a laundry—’

‘I’ve seen those contraptions,’ Belfast declares, sounding a lot like a stern governess (which she is, in a way), her back still to you. ‘Disrobe and get yourself cleaned up … unless you wish to become a long-term seagull attractant.’

Formidable giggles.
>>
>>4721179
>'I'll sort myself out, thanks. And thank you for inviting me into your, uh, home.' (Decline)
>'Yes, ma'am.' (You could use a shower, definitely)
>'Is it really just you two here? Seems like a lot of space for just two women.' (Inquire)
>'It's quite the place. Looks more like a billionaire's vacation home than it does a military residence.' (Comment)
>Write-In
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>>4721180
>>Write-In
>'It's quite the place. Looks more like a billionaire's vacation home than it does a military residence.' (Comment)

and we accept the offer of the shower because if head meido says so we do so
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>>4721179
>'Yes, ma'am.' (You could use a shower, definitely)
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>>4721180
>'Yes, ma'am.' (You could use a shower, definitely)
>'It's quite the place. Looks more like a billionaire's vacation home than it does a military residence.' (Comment)
>>
>>4721179
>>'Yes, ma'am.' (You could use a shower, definitely)
>Nice place you have here, it's good thing the navy takes care of its people.
(a comment made of delight, not envy, if that wasn't clear. Shipgirls clearly deserve it.)
>>
>>4721180
>'Is it really just you two here? Seems like a lot of space for just two women.' (Inquire)
>>
>'Yes, ma'am.' (You could use a shower, definitely)

You stunk, anyway.

The corridors were longer than the ones in your barracks, if a little darker (unsurprising, given that it was pretty much shielded from any external light source). Formidable is kind enough to show you the way to the so-called community shower—which, you discover, are just a pair of twin showers with frosted shower doors and a toilet stall complete with bidet—on a lower level that actually did look the part of a military operation … if a little more well-maintained. Formidable stops and excuses herself upon passing the first door to give you your privacy.

The laundry bushels are easy enough to find (right by the sink) and the frosted shower doors a great deal cleaner than what you’d been treated to the last eighteen months of training, but you’re comfortable enough to slip right in and turn the knobs, squeezing soap onto your hands from one of the pre-installed bottles fastened to the side of the glass right as the cold water hits your back. You click your tongue in disappointment as you reach for the top of the enclosure out of habit … and immediately remember that your back scrubber and loofah were all the way back in your own quarters, prompting you to dejectedly go back to your rough palms like the barbarians of yore.

If there was one luxury man could not go without, a good loofah was it.

‘I couldn’t find a bathrobe,’ you hear Belfast call out, the bathroom door opening in a swift, unexpected swing. ‘I hope these towels will suffice.’

‘Um, thanks,’ you call out, washing out your—

‘Remember to scrub your scalp extra hard,’ Belfast emphasizes, the stick figure of her silhouette motioning to place the towels on the handle as she moves to pick up your laundry. ‘I should have your clothes done within the hour.’

‘Within the hour?’ you repeat, perhaps a little too loudly. Gauging one’s own volume in the echoing chamber of a shower enclosure wasn’t easy … and you didn’t want to sound rude.

‘A thorough power-wash should do the job,’ Belfast informs you, right as her silhouette hoists the hamper off the floor. ‘Don’t want to let the sulphide settle into the seams and draw the seagulls now, do we?’

‘No, I guess … not?’

You’re not sure of what else to say.

‘I’ll be in the laundry room if you’re keen on joining me watch your clothes tumble and dry,’ she announces. You’re unable to tell whether she’s merely informing you of a fact or lacing it with clean sarcasm.

In all fairness to the Lieutenant, it could very well be both.

‘And feel free to bother Formidable or me should you need anything in the meantime.’

The door slams shut upon her exit. You don’t get the chance to throw out your thanks.

You yourself are out of the shower within ten minutes … smelling suspiciously like strawberries and wrapped in a very pink towel.
>>
>>4721248
>Just sit around and wait in the bathroom
>Exit the bathroom
>Write-In
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>>4721249
>>Exit the bathroom
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>>4721249
>Exit the bathroom
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>>4721249
Well waiting on bathroom like this would be awkward and lame.
>exit the bathroom
Maybe we can talk about what went wrong at the trials, gather pointers from the girls or meditate and do breath exercises.
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>>4721249
>>Exit the bathroom
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>>4721249
>Exit the bathroom
Well, we have nothing we can do on the bathroom.
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>>4721249
>>Exit the bathroom
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>Exit the bathroom

There was no reason for you to sit around here … even if you were practically naked, save for the big fluffy pink towel.

The corridor is narrow, but not so much that you had to turn yourself to move, with a width around the length of your leg, perhaps even less. The lights above are dim, three doors on the opposing wall, each of them labeled with clear indicators to their purpose: a custodial closet, the power closet and the laundry room … whose door was ajar, with Lieutenant Belfast tending to your clothes, no doubt. A glance towards the end of the short corridor indicates a wooden dresser-desk, ornamented by potpourri and a mirror … with the stairs heading back up to the general area from whence you came on the other end, where you’re quite certain Instructor Formidable remained.

The laundry room is … particularly noisy, with the hum of heavy machinery of a sort.

>Check the power closet
>Open the custodial closet
>Head into the laundry room
>Inspect the wooden dresser-desk at the end of the corridor
>Go back up into the living space/general area
>Write-In
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>>4721463
>>Head into the laundry room
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>>4721463
>>Head into the laundry room
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>>4721463
>Inspect the wooden dresser-desk at the end of the corridor
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>>4721463
Machine noise will make conversation difficult but I guess we can give it a shot
>laundry room
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>>4721463
>Head into the laundry room
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>>4721463
>Head into the laundry room
>>
>Head into the laundry room

Pipes, cables and the loud whirring of machinery greet you in the chamber … and a chamber it is. Forget a small laundry room for mere convenience: this was a proper basement, almost as large as your old school principal’s personal parking garage. Even for one of such design, however, you realize that everything was—as Belfast’s inclinations spoke—quite spotless, with nary an indication of dust or the odd cob-web present. The only thing that indicated anything resembling negligence—if it was that at all—was the slight peeling of paint of the green and white walls, and even that was relegated to the second layer, restricted mostly to the edges of words, arrows and lines. Your first step forward into the room, closing the door behind you, has you introduced to the metal platform, railing and stairs heading towards the lower floor, making for a more industrial atmosphere to the elegant and regal surroundings up top. You turn around the slip warning sign fastened to the bar above the first landing of the stairs, immediately holding onto the railing as you realize with your third and fourth steps that the warning was not a mere courtesy.

‘Lieutenant Belfast?’ you call out, descending the steps, gripping the railing with one hand and holding onto your towel with the other. The place was oddly well-lit, especially compared to the corridor you’d entered from, with industrial lights hanging from above and installed upon the walls making navigation a much easier task.

The whirring, churning … and the occasional thump grow louder with every foot you descend, until you’re finally upon the floor of what you’re quite sure is more of a boiler room and basement than it had any right to be called a laundry room. Raising your gaze, you spy that you’d descended at least a good fifteen feet, if not twenty, from the corridor above, spying a myriad of slated ventilation shafts high above … and a series of boiler tanks with warnings stuck upon them (recently, too).

You look around, searching for your superior and—

‘Oh, Cadet. Finished your shower?

—there she was, a mop in hand and a wheeled bucket at her feet, standing in front of a washing machine the size of a car.

‘Y-Yes, ma’am,’ you squeak, turning away

‘I’m afraid that you’ll have to wait for a bit,’ she follows up, tapping the bucket with her toe as she moves around a lengthy bench, cheerfully placing the bucket back into a nook behind the boiler pipes before promptly depositing the mop with a loud click and thud. ‘It doesn’t exactly have a quick wash option … not that it’d be preferable in this case, of course.’

‘Um …’

You’re uncertain of how to respond to that.

‘Cadet?’

Especially when the Lieutenant was very, very naked.
>>
'Is there something the matter?'

>'Is there a reason you're, uh, naked?' (Squeak)
>'No, no, nothing the matter.' (Remain evasive, keep averting your gaze)
>'I'm sorry, I'll ... I'll be upstairs.' (Exit, stage right)
>Keep your silence
>Write-In
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>>4721940
>>'Is there a reason you're, uh, naked?' (Squeak)
>>
>>4721940
>>'No, no, nothing the matter.' (Remain evasive, keep averting your gaze)
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>>4721940
>'No, no, nothing the matter.' (Remain evasive, keep averting your gaze)
>Look for a hidden camera.
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>>4721940
>>Keep your silence
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>>4721940
>Write-In
"I thought that you are the type that would wash your clothes by hands."
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>>4721940
>'No, no, nothing the matter.' (Remain evasive, keep averting your gaze)
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>>4721940
>'Is there a reason you're, uh, naked?' (Squeak)
>>
>'No, no, nothing the matter.' (Remain evasive, keep averting your gaze)

Your lie only gets you so far.

Belfast laughs, oddly melodious despite the thumping and whirring of the large washing device, clutching her arm as her eyelashes flutter and her mouth wiggles into a light, observant smirk. Realizing just where your gaze trailed from that clutched arm, however, you move to quickly recover what thoughts of protocol and professional behavior remained, averting your gaze with an upturn of your chin and an about-face to make sure your eyeful of the Lieutenant’s supple bosom … stayed at a mere eyeful.

‘Am I really that averse a sight, Cadet?’

>‘No, ma’am.’ (Curt, simple, direct)
>‘Uh, um … a little? I mean, uh … in your current state? Yes? Ma’am?’ (Loss for words)
>‘You’re um … a very pretty lady, ma’am. I’m just … trying to preserve what respect that I have for you … from … spilling over …’ (Uncertain, try to explain yourself)
>‘Ma’am, your code of dress is in direct violation of public indecency laws! This is a misdemeanor!’ (Brain Freeze)
>Turn back to face her (Reluctant, but reserved and mindful)
>Write-In
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>>4722595
>‘You’re um … a very pretty lady, ma’am. I’m just … trying to preserve what respect that I have for you … from … spilling over …’ (Uncertain, try to explain yourself)
>>
>>4722595
>>Write-In
'as much as i would want to keep on looking at such a sight, the gentleman in me must decline for now, unless the lady in question wants this gentleman to continue in being captivated by the view this lady is giving'
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>>4722595
>‘You’re um … a very pretty lady, ma’am. I’m just … trying to preserve what respect that I have for you … from … spilling over …’ (Uncertain, try to explain yourself)
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>‘You’re um … a very pretty lady, ma’am. I’m just … trying to preserve what respect that I have for you … from … spilling over …’ (Uncertain, try to explain yourself)

It’s not that you don’t find her attractive.

You’re quite certain there were no men on base that didn’t find her so. Belfast’s beauty alone made her one to turn heads … and the supplementary income from Azur Lane’s marketing schemes would likely not have as much commendation from the masses if it weren’t for her showcasing that beauty in those unreasonably priced compilation albums and recruitment drives. However, if there was one thing that you’d picked up in the term of your continued exposure to the Shipgirls, it was the standing fact that regardless of what your lust egged you on to do, the Shipgirls remained soldiers of proper rank and station … and you’d seen enough of those heads that didn’t heed that fact roll.

All that, however, remained unable to be plucked out for practical use at the very moment, with your hand gripping the hem of your towel so tightly your knuckles had grown pale … and soft fabric of the sorry excuse of a garment doing no favors for your ever-rising inclinations as you try to focus on something that wasn’t the delicious form of your—

‘You’re a very pretty lady, ma’am,’ you practically blurt out, trying to make an outlet more manageable for yourself to prevent the proverbial volcano from becoming a literal one. ‘I’m uh … just trying to preserve what respect that I have for you … from … spilling over …’

The giggle is both embarrassing and a welcome distraction.

You wipe your face with your hands, letting out an awkward groan as you keep your back and gaze to her, reasoning that whatever punishment she would have for your blatant disregard for her rank and authority to be null and void in the face of her very nude state. The light tip-tap of her feet breaks the brief feeling of respite that had come over you, however, and the giggle soon turns from a welcome distraction into the warning klaxon of an encroaching feeling of dread with her approach.

‘You never struck me as the easily flustered sort.’

You want to retort that not many men found themselves in a situation that was both so casual and incredibly outrageous in the same breath. Then again, not many men would deny taking full advantage of such a situation … that is, if the other side didn’t have the capabilities to level a city should their ire hit a certain point.

But your respect is what ultimately wins out here, with—

Cadet,’ Belfast starts again, an odd shifting sound reaching your ears as you sense her stopping less than an arms’ length away from you. ‘Are you a virgin?
>>
>>4722658
>'No, ma'am. I have had sexual relations before, ma'am.'
>'Once, way before I came to Azur Lane. Not exactly something I like to pin on the badge.'
>'I'm just not very comfortable right now.'
>'Uh, yes, ma'am.'
>Write-In
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>>4722658
>>Write-In
A gentleman never tells his secrets to a lady
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>>4722661
>>'No, ma'am. I have had sexual relations before, ma'am.'
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>>4722661
>'Once, way before I came to Azur Lane. Not exactly something I like to pin on the badge.'
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>>4722661
>'Once, way before I came to Azur Lane. Not exactly something I like to pin on the badge.'
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>>4722658
>excuse...me? What does that have to do with anything?
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>>4722661
>'Once, way before I came to Azur Lane. Not exactly something I like to pin on the badge.'
>>
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>'Once, way before I came to Azur Lane. Not exactly something I like to pin on the badge.'

She lets out a light laugh, audible even above the whirs of machinery. It hurts you … somewhat.

‘I’m sorry,’ she apologizes, the last vestiges of laughter leaving her being with her start. ‘I didn’t mean to laugh.’

‘It’s all right,’ you reassure her, unwilling to recall the incident—

‘Was she a heart-breaker?’

And of course she’d ask.

>‘I’d rather not say. It’s in the past, anyway.’ (Dismissive)
>‘Hardly; we were just two kids were looking to fool around. Didn’t even last a full season.’ (Nonchalant)
>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)
>‘If you count two horny teens who couldn’t even remember each others’ first names by the time the booze wore off as such.’ (Regretful)
>Write-In
>>
>>4722807
>>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)
>>
>>4722807
>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)
A single violin plays sadly in the background
>>
>>4722807
>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)
>>
>>4722807
>‘If you count two horny teens who couldn’t even remember each others’ first names by the time the booze wore off as such.’ (Regretful)
>>
>>4722807
>>‘If you count two horny teens who couldn’t even remember each others’ first names by the time the booze wore off as such.’ (Regretful)
>>
>>4722807
>>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)
[spoilers] ALL THE SOAP DRAMA [spoilers]
>>
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>‘Oh, it’s definitely a story to tell. Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere.’ (Epic)

It wasn’t a story that you’re particularly fond of recalling … let alone retelling. Your first and only time with a girl had resulted in one of the most overall embarrassing chapters of your life … and the loss of your virginity had done nothing to sweeten the sour fallout that followed after. Which, considering just what it had entailed, had absolutely no bearing on you for begrudging the reliever of your inexperienced state (and you put very special emphasis on the word “grudge”, because no length of tempering made it feel any less than an absolute curse) for her actions in the first place. If there was anyone that could feel wholly justified in their emotions in this case, you’re quite sure you made the grade … and then some.

You could have handled rejection.

You also, however, absolutely despised having your chain lead on the way it had been.

Perhaps that had been why the vast majority of females that had attempted to show you the time of day had been met with a shield up or the occasional roundabout remark … but you weren’t about to go into a spiel of self-analysis that would make a psychiatric ward cry out, and as far as you cared, it wasn’t something that you wanted to subject Belfast to. For reasons both selfish and in consideration of her poor ears.

A small voice at the back of your head, however, eggs you on, rationalizing that she’d been the one who asked.

You decide to meet both requests halfway.

‘Definitely a story to tell,’ you finally let out, a bout of forced laughter escaping you as begin evasive maneuvers, rubbing the back of your neck and making sure your gaze kept itself from straying into so much as a bear shoulder, your back still to her. ‘Heartbreak, betrayal … right out of a Thursday night channel premiere … and I mean that in the most basic of descriptions. No amount of, uh … woman was worth all of that, Lieutenant. For real.’

‘That does sound like quite the tale,’ you hear Belfast comment, her tone oddly neutral … or maybe you were being the one that was a mite too sensitive at the moment.

‘I thought about pitching it to a local cable station but they had about five shows with that running sub-plot,’ you joke, letting out a proper, genuine laugh. ‘Man, I … was naive.’

‘I wouldn’t know,’ Belfast replies, her tone still neutral. ‘I wasn’t there for this so-called epic of yours.’

‘I wouldn’t call it an epic,’ you reason, smiling wryly. ‘Maybe a small ratings boost at best.’

‘I’ll pretend that I understand that,’ she comments, ‘but I’d be lying if I said that this so-called ratings boost hasn’t caught my curiosity.’
>>
>>4722965
>'Maybe some other time' (Decline)
>'Aren't you a little too comfortable right now, Lieutenant?' (Question)
>'The fact that you're standing there naked is more curious, if you ask me.' (Comment)
>Write-In
>>
>>4722969
>'Aren't you a little too comfortable right now, Lieutenant?' (Question)
>>
>>4722969
>>'The fact that you're standing there naked is more curious, if you ask me.' (Comment)
>>
>>4722969
>'The fact that you're standing there naked is more curious, if you ask me.' (Comment)
>>
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>'The fact that you're standing there naked is more curious, if you ask me.' (Comment)

Belfast goes into another bout of laughter, very much amused by your … observation.

‘And isn't that just driving you absolutely mad, cadet?’

You find yourself uncertain as to how to reply.
>>
>>4723005
>I can imagine worse ways to go.

>If I may ask, do you have any advice for me, Lieutenant?

Let’s try and change the topic. She’ll twist it right back of course but perhaps there will be something to glean...
>>
>>4723011
>'Not particularly. It just feels a little awkward.' (Dismissive)
>'Are you expecting me to be anything else, ma'am?' (Hesitant)
>'An honest answer would be wholly appropriate. I therefore exercise my right to silence.' (Try to maintain your discipline)
>'Very much so.' (Honest)
>'Lieutenant, I think even a monk would be in the same state.' (Dry)
>Don't reply
>Write-In
>>
>>4723011
>it is a bit now ma'am but if that's how you get comfortable in your own place then I don't really have the right to comment on it.
>>
>>4723021
>'Lieutenant, I think even a monk would be in the same state.' (Dry)
>>
>>4723021
>Don't reply
Yeah we need to change the direction of this conversation... Responding to teasing just brings more teasing.
>>
>>4723021
>'Lieutenant, I think even a monk would be in the same state.' (Dry)
>>
>>4723021
>'Lieutenant, I think even a monk would be in the same state.' (Dry)
>>
>>4723021
>>'Very much so.' (Honest)
>>
[red]Testing[/red]
>>
>'Lieutenant, I think even a monk would be in the same state.' (Dry)

‘I’ll take that as a compliment,’ she remarks, letting out another bout of laughter. ‘Are you going to be like that the whole time you’re down here?’

>‘I think I’ll excuse myself. Pardon me!’ (Leave)
>‘It would be inappropriate, ma’am!’ (Insist)
>Turn around (Reluctant)
>Write-In
>>
>>4724357
>>Write-In
if she is ok with staying nude then we just indulge her i guess, better get used to seeing this often

"i think ill just stay here and wait till it finishes, at least the view is a sight to behold"
>>
>>4724357
>‘I think I’ll excuse myself. Pardon me!’ (Leave)
>>
>>4724357

>Which would you prefer, madam?
>>
>>4724361
supporting this
>>
>>4724357
>‘I think I’ll excuse myself. Pardon me!’ (Leave)

As much as I would like to keep seeing it, we're still just a cadet, don't wanna get fucked in this situation.
>>
Supporting >>4724361
>"i think ill just stay here and wait till it finishes, at least the view is a sight to behold"

>>4724500
Considering that we are currently only in a pink towel, leaving is likely to get us in more trouble if we run into someone else.
>>
>>4724561
Yes, because Formidable is currently in the middle of lecturing a another ship about being one too many boys over, so you miss that in favor of this.
>>
>>4724605
>>4724561
Yeah, that a good point, I'll switch from >>4724500
To >>4724361
>>
>>4724357
>"I think I'll just stay here and wait till it finishes, at least the view is a sight to behold."
>>
Mech's experiencing slow ass net right now lads.
How slow?
him loading up YT is auto set to 240p and still takes 20 years to buffer.
so wait warmly i guess and bask in the warm glow of 2k YT videos kek
>>
[red]Testing
[blue]Testing
[green]God, please work.
>>
Since my internet is now at least stable enough to post consistently, I should be able to fit in the usual 8 PM slot, so ... see you lads in 1 hour and 27 minutes.
>>
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>"i think ill just stay here and wait till it finishes, at least the view is a sight to behold"

Your stammer and nervousness is enough to throw your response off acceptable levels of grammar … but you don’t find much in the way of derision from your superior; taking it with a muttering and a prayer, you begin turning around so slowly that you wonder if your bones hadn’t morphed into a metronome mechanism from the nervousness of your current situation. No one would believe this … and even if they would, you weren’t about to implicate yourself in a scandal involving a shipgirl by blabbing about it in the first place. Your wet bare feet come to a dull, damp thump with the finish of your turn … and you find yourself, now, fully and utterly aware of Belfast’s fully nude form.

You aren’t a poet. You’re wholly unable to wax and wane about the intricacies and the provocativeness of the nubile, supple form that she represents … but a certain part of you definitely tries to reconcile that difference.

Belfast giggles.

You’re embarrassed.

‘Well, our clothes will take a while,’ Belfast declares, finally explaining away the reason of her nudity. ‘I tried to get Formidable to throw her basket, but that girl’s very specific about the detergent grade put top use. I trust you don’t mind any specific brands?’

You shrug, uncertain how to reply. As far as you were concerned, so long as it didn’t elicit a response from the Instructors, you were in the clear. Belfast, seemingly satisfied by this, steps toward the long bench in the middle of room, daintily parking her very naked self in front of the loudly churning machine before lifting and crossing one long slender leg over the other, tossing her hair over her shoulders as she moved herself into a light stretch, letting out a relieved moan as she does so.

The towel around your waist tightens uncomfortably at the sight.

‘Come now,’ she starts, bringing you back to reality with a melodious snicker and a mischievous smirk. ‘I won’t bite; come and sit down.’

She pats the space directly next to her, giving you permission to enter her immediate proximity without repercussion. Your mind, so messy on its best days, realigns itself with an almost-mechanical arrangement with the acceptance of her offer, practically operating on an operational doctrine that it itself merely half-understands. Regardless, you are next to her without a fuss, sitting down and gripping your knees, pretending that you were a mere patron of a sauna built around unusual configurations.

‘Excuse me,’ you let out, wiggling your buttocks as you try to find a more comfortable alignment. The bench was rather rigid, even for a bench, really. It groans slightly with your motions.

‘So is this all you dreamed it up to be or did you have other scenarios playing when it came to having the two of us alone and naked in a room?’
>>
>>4727606
>'To be frank, ma'am, I've never really pictured you, uh, naked.'
>'Permission to speak freely, ma'am.'
>'You could really stand to be less casual about this.'
>'It certainly doesn't involve pipes and a loud washing machine.'
>Don't reply
>Write-In
>>
>>4727607
>>'You could really stand to be less casual about this.'
>>
>>4727607
>>'It certainly doesn't involve pipes and a loud washing machine.'
>>
>>4727609
this
>>
>>4727607
>Yes, ma’am. Most of them included holding hands.
Two can play this game, you tease.
>>
>>4727607
>'To be frank, ma'am, I've never really pictured you, uh, naked.'
>'You could really stand to be less casual about this.'

These two in this order.
>>
>>4727637
Voting this
>>
>>4727607
I mean, option 1 she will either not believe or it might hurt her a bit, possibly both.
Option 3 is chastising an officer that may not go across too well, even if she's testing or teasing us.
>>
>>4727607
>'It certainly doesn't involve pipes and a loud washing machine.'
>>
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>'To be frank, ma'am, I've never really pictured you, uh, naked.'
>'You could really stand to be less casual about this.'

‘To be frank, ma’am, I’ve never really pictured you, uh, naked.’

Belfast’s mouth opens slightly, as if to say something … before retracting her jaw and adopting a look that you’re quite certain had more in common with a wrinkled pear than anything vaguely humanoid. Your shoulders stiffen as the atmosphere changes from an oppressive, warm and claustrophobic one … into the inside of an ice locker. You open your mouth to follow-up on your statement, deeming the previous mood preferable to the one that you’d unwittingly triggered … before reconsidering it and shutting your mouth: you’d merely told her the truth: why did you have to be apologetic about … not fantasizing what your Lieutenant looked like with her clothes of.

Of course, you’re quite certain that you’re in the minority in that case (mostly due to the marketing and recruitment campaigns, but funding had to come from somewhere), but that didn’t make it any less truthful. You respected—revered—her too much to reduce her to such … simple labels. Belfast was—is—an attractive woman; you could hardly deny that, but you’d never really thought of her in such a capacity.

Most of the time.

Seventy percent … eighty percent.

Your eye hadn’t completely shut down in that aspect.

The point, however, remained … for whatever worth it had in the present.

‘A statement both commendable and disappointing,’ Belfast finally responds, snorting as she leans forward, craning her neck up towards you as her voluptuous, dripping bosom hangs and swings enticingly with the motion, almost catching you off-guard. ‘I’ve known you for more than a year you still don’t fail to both exceed and dissatisfy expectation.’

You don’t disagree with her.

‘You could really stand to be less casual, though, Lieutenant,’ you finally state, trying your best to keep eye contact; it’s especially difficult when her breast was less than an inch away from your forearm. ‘I mean … it isn’t exactly normal to expect people to have a sit-down while in your birthday suit.’

‘I believe that my abode allows me to dictate my own terms, Cadet,’ Belfast returns, fluttering her eyelashes mischievously. ‘Especially considering the fact that you were the one who walked in on me.’

The klaxon in your head sounds off.

The nude form of the Lieutenant reclines slightly with the lingering echo of her statement, her arms raising up to get you a full view of her practically porcelain complexion. You click your tongue, gulping lightly as you consider your next words, the thumping sound of the titanic washing machine beating against your skull like a drum.

‘It’s a good thing that I’m a “sight to behold”, isn’t it?’

That … is a dangerous smile.

>Write-In
>>
>>4727782
>>Write-In
Try to change the topic of conversation
"For someone who seems less than inclined to wear clothes, you seem to have an awfully large washing machine, a little impractical isn't it?"
>>
>>4727782

>"...yes, you absolutely are. Sorry, I was out of line."
>>
>>4727788
Supporting
>>
>>4727797
>>4727782
Support
>>
>>4727797
>Supporting
>>
>>4727782
>"...yes, you absolutely are. Sorry, I was out of line."
>>
>"...yes, you absolutely are. Sorry, I was out of line."

The shift in expression nudges you towards the feeling that perhaps you’re forgiven. Regardless, however, you plan your vector of approach aptly, for fear of digging yourself into another pit … one that you’re quite certain wouldn’t be so easy to dig out of. You may have known her for more than a year, but you could hardly claim that you had the rapport to lecture her on her own turf. Belfast, nude and whimsical as she is, was still your superior and a veteran of a war. Treading lightly was, perhaps, a reminder that you required a little more constantly than you’d previously thought.

Overestimating your relationship with her was something you weren’t quite so keen to … repeat.

Especially not after high school.

‘So are we going to spend the next hour just staring at our laundry or do you want to talk?’

You hesitate, biting your bottom lip as you put your weight upon your arms, leaning back and allowing your brain to do its work. It was no wonder your peer group had such an active indifference towards you, what with your tendency to override such thoughts just to get the first word in.

Belfast, however, seemed rather … impatient with the lack of prompt.

‘Or you can just stare at me,’ she suggests coyly, showing off a toothy grin. ‘Feel free to boost my confidence at your leisure.’

As if to emphasize her point, Belfast leans slightly backward, lifting a leg into the air at a thirty degree angle, wiggling her toes.

>‘I am actually unable think of a better way to pass the time.’ (Play ball)
>‘Is there no Wi-Fi around here? Oh wait … I left my phone back in the barracks, too …’ (Casual)
>‘You’re just screwing around with me now, Lieutenant.’ (Unamused)
>‘Well, we can talk about today, if nothing else.’ (Vanilla)
>‘I’ve actually been meaning to get back to something I asked you … back when you had me clean all those toilets.’ (Reminisce)
>‘Where’s everyone else?’ (Asking a pretty girl you’re alone with about other women)
>Write-In
>>
>>4728015
>>‘I’ve actually been meaning to get back to something I asked you … back when you had me clean all those toilets.’ (Reminisce)
>>
>>4728015
>‘I’ve actually been meaning to get back to something I asked you … back when you had me clean all those toilets.’ (Reminisce)
>>
>>4728015
>>‘I’ve actually been meaning to get back to something I asked you … back when you had me clean all those toilets.’ (Reminisce)
>>
>‘I’ve actually been meaning to get back to something I asked you … back when you had me clean all those toilets.’ (Reminisce)

Belfast wrinkles her nose, looking thoughtful.

‘You’ve been meaning to ask me how I managed to get the urinal cakes to actually smell nice?’

>Facepalm
>‘Remind me of the crashed economies that had to happen for you to exist, Lieutenant …’ (Sarcasm)
>‘What? No. Why would you even remember that?’ (Offended)
>‘You did always get them to smell right. Your shifts had people even using the stalls for naps.’ (Affirm)
>‘I mean … you know, about your time during the war.’ (Talk about the war)
>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)
>‘About how and what Azur Lane really stands for …’ (Talk about current events)
>Write-In
>>
>>4728066
>>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)
>>
>>4728066
>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)
>>
>>4728066
>>‘About how and what Azur Lane really stands for …’ (Talk about current events)
>>
>>4728066
>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)
>>
>>4728066
>>‘Remind me of the crashed economies that had to happen for you to exist, Lieutenant …’ (Sarcasm)
snark on snark
>>
>>4728066
>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)
>>
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>‘I mean … about you. You promised that you’d actually … talk about yourself one day, if I had the time to listen.’ (Talk about her, personally)

‘Yes … I believe I did,’ she affirms slowly, a light snort escaping her as she lowers her raised foot, casually placing her weight on her arms as she leans back, regarding you with a gaze more expectant than you’d anticipated. ‘What sordid tales would you like to fish out of me in this opportune moment?’

>‘Why are you such a neat freak? I mean … even within the confines of the regs and the timetables, you’re pretty, uh … obsessed.’ (Casual)
>‘Do you ever think about anything … beyond your responsibilities?’ (Ask about her dreams)
>‘I told you about my first and only time. I think it’s sort of fair that you lay it all out just as I did.’ (Press her to divulge)
>‘Your nudity’s distracting me too much for me to think up anything with actual substance to it.’ (Lament, Muse)
>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>‘At the extreme risk of our … acquaintanceship being shattered by these next few words, I have to ask: why have you let me me stick around this long?’ (Direct)
>Write-In
>>
>>4728934
>>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>>
>>4728934
>>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>>
>>4728934
>‘Do you ever think about anything … beyond your responsibilities?’ (Ask about her dreams)
>>
>>4728934
>>‘Do you ever think about anything … beyond your responsibilities?’ (Ask about her dreams)
>>
>>4728934
>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>>
>>4728934
>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>>
>>4728934
>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)
>>
Sorry, had an emergency. Back now.
>>
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>‘Tell me about your last Commander … before he resigned from his post. I don’t know much about him, but you quote him enough for me to actually get curious. Were you two close?’ (Investigative)

Briefly, her expression morphs into one of genuine surprise. It appears that she hadn’t expected for you to inquire about her previous Commander.

Not that you were particularly curious, of course, but you had to start somewhere … and seeing as all you’d actually gathered about Belfast in the time you’d known her had been laced with anecdotes relating to the man, you decide that there could be no better point to jump off peeling the layers of her character. For two otherwise unconnected people in the context of a prospect and potential assignment under the banner of Azur Lane … the two of you had built up an oddly considerable amount of rapport. Outside of Instructor Formidable, you’d spent a lot of time in her company, mostly owing to the fact that she seemed to be on call with a mop and a bucket for your use than you would assume a Shipgirl would, for whatever reason.

You’d listened to her advice.

You’d chatted the hours away, even if the topics were of no consequence.

And you’d picked up nary a thing about her.

Assignments weren’t particularly famous or public, even during the war … and her exploits had been mostly grouped together with that of the force she’d been attached to rather than the individual who’d served as her Commander. What digging you could manage had merely brought up her considerable efforts in the build-up towards Operation Sunset and not one thing else of note. She’d been merely another face in that wall of bodies that worked in the shadows of history.

You aren’t a particularly cerebral specimen of the human race. You’re more than aware of that.

But you also know that if you wanted to get to know someone, the best avenue to take would be one that was at least vaguely familiar to both parties so you didn’t come off like at an absolute clown doing it.

You wish you’d known that in your younger days, really.

‘Sizing up the competition, are we?’ Belfast teases, leaning forward once again.

You shake your head.

‘No, just … taking you up on your offer, Lieutenant.’

Belfast lets out a light snort, smiling wryly as she wrinkled her brows, looking very thoughtful. ‘Well, it would depend on your choice of definition in regards to the word, Cadet,’ she continues, tentatively but not unkindly, ‘especially in regards to just how it applies to us as Shipgirls.’

>‘I guess … yeah, you could say that it’s from a professional stand-point, what with the cubes and bridge theory and everything …’ (Focus on what the bridge built upon, as it is what they are)
>‘No, I mean … did you really like him? Personally? Beyond the bridge and the walls and the theories and everything …’ (Focus on what is beyond the bridge, the connection between individuals)
>Write-In
>>
>>4729329
>>‘No, I mean … did you really like him? Personally? Beyond the bridge and the walls and the theories and everything …’ (Focus on what is beyond the bridge, the connection between individuals)
>>
>>4729329
>‘No, I mean … did you really like him? Personally? Beyond the bridge and the walls and the theories and everything …’ (Focus on what is beyond the bridge, the connection between individuals)
>>
>>4729329
>‘No, I mean … did you really like him? Personally? Beyond the bridge and the walls and the theories and everything …’ (Focus on what is beyond the bridge, the connection between individuals)
>>
>>4729329
>‘I guess … yeah, you could say that it’s from a professional stand-point, what with the cubes and bridge theory and everything …’ (Focus on what the bridge built upon, as it is what they are)
>>
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>‘No, I mean … did you really like him? Personally? Beyond the bridge and the walls and the theories and everything …’ (Focus on what is beyond the bridge, the connection between individuals)

‘Well … he was a dish.’

You fix her with a flat stare.

Belfast’s smirk has you wondering if she was genuine or just playing around with you.

>‘Fine, forget I asked.’ (Raise your hands in exasperation)
>‘You know what I mean.’ (Genuine, heartfelt)
>‘Right, I … all right.’ (Resigned)
>Write-In
>>
>>4729376
>Ok, so he was handsome. What was he like?
>>
>>4729376
>>‘You know what I mean.’ (Genuine, heartfelt
>>
>>4729376
>>‘You know what I mean.’ (Genuine, heartfelt)
>>
>>4729376
>‘You know what I mean.’ (Genuine, heartfelt)
>>
>>4729379
voting this
>>
>>4729379
Supporting
>>
>>4729379
>>4729376
Support
>>
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>‘You know what I mean.’ (Genuine, heartfelt)

‘Well, he was,’ Belfast giggles, lifting a hand to her lips. ‘Turned heads, that one did.’

You let out a sigh, wondering why you had even bothered if this was all she was willing to share … and contemplating that perhaps your so-called “rapport” had merely amounted to the upper atmosphere of light teasing and not quite the surface-level excavation that you’d been expecting. Opening your mouth to press her on, you decide to then close it, unwilling to push against what, to you, realize to have appeared to have less than adequate bearing and permit to push against. Instead, you offer her a small smile and a shrug, filing the results of your endeavors away, your hands once again on your knees … and your eyes once again upon the titanic excuse of a washing machine, settling for what you’d acquired.

Maybe one day she’d—

‘You know about Drift Theory, don’t you?’

Of course you do.

You’re a candidate, after all.

‘Uh, yeah, of course I do,’ you answer, your voice the sputter of a dying engine rather than the confident response you’d expected it to be; to emphasize just how much you did know, you press on with the definition, lining out the hundreds of paragraphs in your mind … and arranging them for oral comprehension.

You wonder why she’d be quizzing you on such a matter, but you’re more than happy to chime in on a topic that you’re actually … proficient in, for lack of better word. You’d scored high enough on the theoretical components to actually have them keep you on in the first place, after all.

‘It’s what the Shipgirl and Commander connection is based on, right? Using the … spiritual, mental and emotional core to further empower and unlock shipgirl potential to its fullest … using the Wisdom Cube as a catalyst and the human will and spirit as the scales to keep the balance relating to the three-point link’s stability, allowing you to use abilities that would otherwise violate the normal conventions of science and logic, phasing in and out of the material realities, enabling the maximization of shipgirl attributes. Basically using mental fortitude and willpower as limit breakers to push shipgirls above existing parameters. Shipgirls can operate without Commanders and artificial Cube enhancements to simulate a similar phenomenon, but without the Commander the Shipgirl is more prone to crashing and—’

‘Did you actually memorize the whole book?’

She actually sounds impressed.

You shrug.

You had to do something to make up for your failures in putting them into practice.

‘Well, yeah,’ you let out tentatively. ‘It’s pretty … basic, actually, when you think about it. Shipgirl needs Commander to break her set limits and … that’s about it.’

‘What else do you know about it?’

Was there anything else to know about it?
>>
>>4729516
>‘I know that I can get committed to the loony bin if anything goes wrong. Bad feedback, imbalance …’
>‘That there are three known levels of drift depth and that the deeper you go the stronger the Shipgirls become … but the riskier it gets for me.’
>‘That the author of spiritual sciences is living off the royalties and has a mansion on a hill somewhere after thirty years of being called a crack-pot.’
>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>Write-In
>>
>>4729527
>>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>>
>>4729527
>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>>
>>4729527
>>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>>
>>4729527
>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>>
>>4729527
>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’
>>
>>4729527
>‘That there are three known levels of drift depth and that the deeper you go the stronger the Shipgirls become … but the riskier it gets for me.’
>>
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>‘Everything from the human’s stand-point … and none from the Shipgirls’.’

‘Every measure that could be taken was pretty much built from the foundation of speculation into direct trial and error out of necessity,’ you go on, a small niggling feeling poking at you from the back of your mind … before you’re finally able to put it into words. ‘Phasing, transference, the intertwining of consciousness … every piece of ink and stone turned was made to maximize efficiency, compatibility and sustainability … but if you’re asking me to point out more of the obvious, a lot of it pertains to a very human perspective … and it’s very lacking in consideration for yours.’

‘Nothing gets past you …’

Despite searching for the sarcasm in her voice, you’re unable to find it. Belfast wipes off her bare breasts, not quite drenched in sweat but very much covered in a sheen of moisture, tiny droplets hanging from the tips of her nipples. Her throat hums contemplatively as she raises her head, before finally turning it up to meet your gaze again, an unreadable expression coming over her. Belfast’s eyes, however, betray her investment of emotion, as their intensity is more than apparent despite her own lack of expression. Apparently realizing this, she breaks your held gaze, letting out a tired sigh.

Your companion hunches forward, bringing together the tips of her fingers, licking her bottom lip as she appears to fix her stare onto one of the many protruding pipes upon the machine. Your mouth opens and closes, uncertain of what else to say.

‘There are three types of Commanders,’ she starts. ‘Ones who allow the power to wash over them, ones who shutter out any and all attachment … and ones that reach back out and hold on. The most common type is the second; you can’t help what you are, deep down inside … and most that come through the ranks make use of the discipline and counteract the negative effects of the three-point link by entering an almost ironclad state of mind. It’s the easiest to achieve, of course … with it being the most common. The first type is the most emotionally volatile of the lot, but at the same time, heightens their potential; they usually burn out early, with the only measure of control down to the volatility of their spiritual and mental fortitude. My Commander was one of these … the turmoil, the passion, it washes over, dominates …

‘He was a good man, of course, but in the bridge, everything heightens … the worst of you, the best of you. We’re trained, you know, how to deal with what’s left over. The shattered remains that float around, ingraining itself into the nexus of the stream. There’s a void, a black hole within the domain between what we are and who we are … and on some days, it is a bloody pain of the neck to put up with.’

You blink, surprised.

Belfast laughs.
>>
‘Not sure what you’re getting at,’ you say, rubbing the back of your neck, very much confused.

‘When the link is established, the consciousnesses that amalgamate to form the essence … isn’t so simple to just attach … and depending on the Commander, there is an … echo, a residue … emotion,’ Belfast continues, ‘there’s … something that builds in there, something that isn’t ours and it molds our inclinations, our … tendencies. Humans are built on their own individuality as a preset. Shipgirls are … complicated, what with us being the manifest of a collective consciousness to begin with.’

Formation Theory. You’d have to get around to that someday.

‘It’s a lot harder for us to reconcile what part of us is genuine in action … and what are just remnants of what was once there,’ she continues, ‘and in his case, I … slipped.’

‘Slipped?’

‘We’re trained not to be attached, not to … linger, for lack of better word,’ Belfast snorts, a strange aggressiveness to her tone. ‘We came to being with a mission in mind and nothing else that we hoped to achieve beyond, be it future or past. Shipgirls … simulate emotion, for the most part, adapting, learning, unconsciously adopting mannerisms, feelings and … sometimes it’s really hard to know what we feel is real or if it’s just what’s left over.

‘I respected him … I enjoyed his company, listened to him and I thought that … even if I had nothing, I had my loyalty to him and my duty, as everyone else did to theirs, but arrogant as I was, I thought that what comprised of our relationship was … unique.’

She pauses.

‘And then one day the bridge broke and I … felt nothing. I’d been living in an illusion of my own making. I had lost something that I had never had … and had no care for it. Everything that had been built up to that point, ultimately, came to nothing. I looked upon his face … and all I saw was the Commander I’d been assigned to and nothing more.’

Belfast sits up, tucking her hair strands over her ear.

‘I’m not sure if that’s just how I was built, designed … or if it’s ultimately what and who I am,’ she declares, firmly yet not without hesitation. ‘I talked with the others about this, of course; the psychological unit, the other girls … sometimes even other Commanders, and that regardless of the adoption of morals, ethics and practices that we have bestowed upon ourselves, I … I have to confess that what I have with you, cadet, frightens me more than it reasonably should.’

She forces a smile.

It doesn’t reach her eyes.

>‘We have a thing?’
>‘I’m not sure I understand.’
>Write-In*

Write-In encouraged
>>
>>4729987
oh lawd
>>
>>4729987
>Let me see if I got this straight. While bridged to your former Commander you experienced a emotional connection you interpreted as "Love." After the bridge disappeared you no longer had that emotional connection, but now you somehow are developing the same or a similar emotional connection to me [i]without a bridge[/i]?
>>
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>>4729987
why is it so hard for me to make good write ins now? Used to be able to sling good ones out easily years ago
>>
>>4730005
you know what supporting
>>
>>4730010
I'm just waiting for El to post "kiss her" and make the next prompt a living hell for me.
>>
>>4729987
>>Write-In*
kiss her
>>
>>4730027
jk
>>
>>4730027
>>Write-In*
here is my actual thing: can you explain in more detail
>>
>>4729960
>Write-In:
"Lieute- Belfast, may I ask, what do you like about me?"
>>
>>4700116
Oh shit! Be away for about a month and look who starts up a new quest? Does this mean Rhysode will be picking back up? Or you gonna stick with this new one for a while?
>>
>>4730005
Support
>>
>>4730082
I'm trying to get Rhysode "balanced" because people surprisingly LOVE the story and the over-detailed shit but aren't really enthusiastic about the combat.
>>
>>4730027
Going for this but also ask her what this “feeling” that frightens her is about
>>
>>4730097
Entirely understandable.
>>
>>4729987
This >>4730005
>>
>>4730005
Yeah gotta be this
>>
>>4730005
Supporting
>>
>>4730005
>>4729987
Support
>>
I've had extremely terrible internet the last few days. Thank God that it's over now. Running in 15.
>>
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>Let me see if I got this straight. While bridged to your former Commander you experienced a emotional connection you interpreted as "Love." After the bridge disappeared you no longer had that emotional connection, but now you somehow are developing the same or a similar emotional connection to me [i]without a bridge[/i]?

‘I wouldn’t cheapen the concept by boiling it down to one mere word,’ she sighs, hanging her head as she lifts her naked feet, wiggling her toes as her thoughtful expression deepens. ‘But the way that we … are, it began to raise my curiosities regarding just how much is merely an extension of the connection that we are to share and just what is wholly of our own choices.’

She turns to face you.

‘Too existentialist?’ Belfast offers, smiling apologetically.

>‘Sounds like something for the psychiatrists, if I’m being honest.’ (Dismissive)
>‘So the bridge disappeared and you just felt … nothing?’
>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>‘From a design stand-point … and this is just conjecture, it sounds like an automatic defense mechanism. Like in the movies.’ (Please don’t choose this option, thanks)
>‘Well, I wouldn’t go that far. It’s more ponderous, enigmatic …’ (Take it literally)
>Shrug indifferently
>Write-In
>>
>>4736362
>>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>>4736362
>>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>>4736362
>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>>4736362
>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>>4736362
>>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>>4736362
>>‘So the bridge disappeared and you just felt … nothing?’
>>
>>4736362
>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’
>>
>‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’

You bite your bottom lip, uncertain of how to proceed. You aren’t exactly … “privy” in the matters of Shipgirl psychology; the sub-topic had practically taken a life of its own in the years since they’d first emerged emerged upon the seas, and outside of basic interaction, you would be a right liar to claim even the most frivolous sectors of expertise regarding it. You’re not certain why the Lieutenant would bother to open up to you, of all the people she had at her disposal … but you move to do your best.

The most prudent of maneuvers would be, of course, to get a feel for your surroundings. So you do.

‘Did you ask any of the others what they thought about it?’ you inquire, before moving to clarify just what you had meant by “others”. ‘The other Shipgirls, I mean.’

‘I did,’ she answers, sighing as she tucks a stray lock of hair away from her face. ‘Quite a few of them, actually.’

‘And what did they say?’

‘They said that I was giving it more thought than I should be bothering with, at all,’ she trills, wearing a wry smile as the previously contemplative look that she wears disappears, replaced with a dryer, bemused expression. ‘Apparently, I’m one of the few to actually think of it as having anything worthy of notice”.’

‘And what did the “few to actually think that it is worthy notice” have to say?’

‘That even they didn’t think that it was worth lingering on,’ Belfast snorts, leaning forward slightly. ‘Even Bremerton said that I was getting … getting too worked up on something that probably didn’t matter much as far as we were concerned. Our output being built around the synchronicity of a multitude of factors and every technical thing regarding the drift and bridge comes to mind … but I suppose that all I want to know is why I feel this sort of … emptiness, to borrow an over-dramatic expression.’

You wave it off, smiling. ‘No problem,’ you reply, shrugging. ‘It’s what you feel, right? The extremes of emotion and all that.’

She laughs, heartily yet … sardonically, in the same instance.

‘It’s quite the oddity, however,’ Belfast continues, wearing a small smirk and a mysterious arrangement of her features, ‘as Shipgirls, we’re not exactly bound by the same standards that are common, to say … human women. No offense meant, of course.’

You open your mouth to reply.

>'Don't apologize. I actually find Shipgirls a lot easier to get along with than, um, the opposite gender of my same species. Less politics, you know?'
>'None taken. You could probably get away with saying that more than I could ever dream of.'
>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.'
>'Abigail's okay.'
>'Different sides, different needs ...'
>Write-In
>>
>>4739370
>>'Don't apologize. I actually find Shipgirls a lot easier to get along with than, um, the opposite gender of my same species. Less politics, you know?'
>>
>>4739370
>>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.'
>>
>>4739378
anon pls
>>
>>4739370
>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.
>>
>>4739370
>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.'

"Besides, not everyone wishes to bond by standards."
>>
>>4739370
>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.'
>>
>'Well, I can't think of many women who'd get in the nude and proceed to talk so casually, ma'am.'

‘No,’ she responds, laughing. ‘I suppose that I would fill a very narrow niche in that aspect.’

You could think of quite a few men who would appreciate such a niche … if not all of them. Regardless, you try to stay on topic, the matter of Lieutenant’s Belfast lack of clothing being oddly whisked away with the ease of comfort that the conversation is able to offer you in the midst of this—and you try your best to not turn your head downward to fulfill the requirements of such an audience yourself—trying time. Belfast seems more at ease with your highlighting of systemic differences within the category of situations, as obvious as they are. Her curtain of silver hair flaps downward, sticking to her forehead as she stares up from her slightly hunched position, those violet irises shimmering even in the dull light of this basement-cum-laundry room.

‘Although I won’t discount myself from other sides of appeal, either,’ Belfast comments, smirking coyly.

You feel the beads of sweat running down your chest as the whirring of the machine shifts into a loud putter.

You let out a small snort of laughter, refusing to fire even a single neuron of thought to argue the point. ‘No, no,’ you agree, wagging your finger. ‘Don’t think there’s anyone on this planet who’d even suggest it, Lieutenant.’

The both of you share a small smile, but only briefly, as you turn away to keep the situation from being anymore awkward than it already was. Your grandmother had imparted you with as much as she could in regards to the wiles of the opposite sex, but you’re quite sure that she would definitely not have foreseen you wearing nothing but a towel whilst sharing an extremely humid chamber with the reincarnation of an ancient weapon molded into the shape of an attractive woman.

‘Anyway, uh … yeah,’ you start again, coughing into your fist in an attempt to stave off any and all inappropriate emotions threatening to flood right in and slip you off this thoroughly-lubricated slope. ‘I’m sorry, but … I’m not really sure if I’m the best person to ask about this. If the others already told you that it’s a bit of an oddity, I, uh … don’t know what else to say.’

You bite your bottom lip again, psyching yourself up to venture further.

‘I’m sorry if that’s not what you wanted to hear, ma’am, but … I’m stumped.’

‘I know,’ she sighs.

‘Sorry for, uh … prying too much,’ you apologize, making as sincere a tone as you can manage. ‘I can’t imagine what that’s like, really … suddenly not feeling anything.’

‘That’s not the part that I’m … concerned about, Cadet.’

‘Huh?'
>>
'I'm just not sure if everything that I actually feel is of my own volition ... or if it's just all in illusion.'

>'So what if it's an illusion?' (Direct)
>'Is that why you tried to get along with me so well this last year?' (Personal)
>'It's not my place to say. Whatever it is, it's something that ...' (Hesitant, Deflective)
>Don't say a word
>Write-In
>>
>>4739556
>>'Is that why you tried to get along with me so well this last year?' (Personal)
>>
>>4739556
>I think humans have been asking that exact question for a very long time and the only answer we can really come up with is "I do not know but I hope it is the former rather than the latter."
>>
>>4739556
>I think humans have been asking that exact question for a very long time and the only answer we can really come up with is "I do not know but I hope it is the former rather than the latter."
>>
>>4739556
Sounds good >>4739572
>>
>>4739572
supporting
>>
>>4739556
>'Is that why you tried to get along with me so well this last year?' (Personal)
>>
>>4739572
>>4739556
Support
>>
>I think humans have been asking that exact question for a very long time and the only answer we can really come up with is "I do not know but I hope it is the former rather than the latter."

‘How oddly profound, especially coming from you.’

‘Ouch,’ you let out, clutching your heart as though she’d pierced it with a barbed spear, ‘going right where it hurts, huh, Lieutenant?’

She snorts, before looking away. You move to supplement what you believe was a decent enough foundation.

‘But, you know, Lieutenant,’ you start again, turning your head up to the ceiling as you try to dig through your thoughts again, ‘if you’re getting depressed over what you think is yours and what’s just another illusion or something, you’ll probably find that you’re not alone thinking of something like that. Not that I’d … well, what I’m trying to say is, ma’am, is that what’s real and what’s not is important, yeah, but if you’re worrying about what it takes away from you instead of what you actually do feel yourself, you’re just putting more weight on yourself than you really should. You’re overthinking what it means to you over actually just accepting that it is and moving on.’

Belfast’s eyes widen as she turns her attention to you, surprised.

‘Well, you are,’ you reinforce, shrugging as you try to keep your statements as grounded as you can manage. ‘You’re not the first person on earth that’s had doubts about what they really want or what they think they wanted or had … and personally, if I was in your shoes, I’d probably give myself a cut-off point of a week or something. Can’t let it dominate my doubts, you know? Not that I’m, uh … cutting down your worries, ma’am, of course. You probably have more reason than most to …’

You trail off. So much for working neurons.

Turning your head to Belfast, you offer her an apologetic smile … only to be met with your superior’s uproarious laughter. You try to follow her amusement, forcing out a chuckle of her own, only to see her clutching her stomach, dropping onto the damp floor and rolling all over it, her eyes tightly shut and her vocal chords extremely powerful; your heat up in embarrassment as you grip the fabric of your pink towel, turning your gaze up to one of the many pipes and cables overhead, very much regretting your attempt at cheering her up. How could you have thought that you’d have anything akin to a—

‘That is the worst conjecture I’ve ever heard,’ Belfast manages, giggling from her position on the floor.

You grimace. As expected as it was, it still remained a rather depressing point to behold.

‘Cadet,’ she calls out, your head still angled away from her, ‘surely you aren’t upset?’

You consider your answer, your gaze remaining fixed on the ceiling.

>Write-In
>>
>>4741697
>No ma'am, just embarrassed at how cheesy i can be
>>
>>4741697
Supporting >>4741704
>>
>>4741704
Supporting
>>
>>4741704
Supporting
>>
>>4741697
>No ma'am, just embarrassed at how cheesy i can be
>>
>>4741697

>>4741704
sounds good
>>
>>4741697
>>4741704
Support
>>
BAD NEWS: Mechanic is a tax evader
GOOD NEWS: Mechanic should be running today in about an hour or two.
>>
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>No ma'am, just embarrassed at how cheesy i can be

‘Cheesy?’ she repeats, raising an eyebrow, still lying on the floor.

‘You know … lame? Unsubtle? Cheap?’ you offer, smiling guiltily as you chance a look down at the Lieutenant, her eyes shining brilliantly upward, lips half-curved into a reassuring, yet amused smile. It’s a task and a half to not allow your gaze to trail down … as from your elevated position, the full view of the Shipgirl known as Belfast, is something that you are not, fortunately or unfortunately, able to avert from without offense: her bosom, those glistening wet nipples, rise and fall with every breath that she takes, thighs facing inward and her feet out on opposing sides of her naked form, her toes pointing away from her being. Her weight is focused upon her arms, palms on the damp floor and shoulders pushed slightly back, head tilted and hair sticking to the line of her jaw and sides of her neck and across her shoulders, a messy presentation that you had never dared to dream beyond the odd muse.

‘I don’t think it’s that at all,’ Belfast offers, kindly and with the kind of sincere laughter that would have men—

Oh, she had a … tattoo. An intricate curve arrow made in the shape of antlers and curved, sharp thorns, forming a chalice outlining her …

‘Oh?’

Your ears turn red as she catches you looking. Your throat dry and your capacity for response hamstrung by your embarrassment, you turn away, laughing nervously.

Footsteps.

You hear them: wet, deliberate, slow … footsteps.

‘Curious, are we?’ she whispers into your ear.

>Exit, stage left
>Exit, stage right
>Channel the Buddha
>Don’t respond
>Write-In*

*Write-In Very Encouraged
>>
>>4746279
>My curiosity is screaming at me but the gentleman inside of me is trying to strangle it before I say something stupid ma'am. But I really want to know the why and the when at least if you please.
>>
>>4746287
>>4746279
Support
>>
>>4746287
Support
>>
>>4746279
>>Write-In*
Say yes
>>
>>4746279
This >>4746287
>>
>>4746287
>supporting
>>
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>My curiosity is screaming at me but the gentleman inside of me is trying to strangle it before I say something stupid ma'am. But I really want to know the why and the when at least if you please.

‘It’d be a lot easier to tell the story if my audience was willing to offer some eye contact,’ Belfast giggles, melodious despite the continued thumping of the huge washing machine, ‘or did I mishear you mentioning that you were a man of experience?’

‘I didn’t say that,’ you retort, scowling at being misquoted. ‘I just said I wasn’t a virgin. It’s not like I’ve gone around the—’

‘Oh, just turn around, why don’t you?’

You hesitate … for what feels like an eternity. Mumbling every line of protocol that comes to mind to keep your thoughts from going too far astray does not work in the slightest, as you feel the blood rush down regardless of your attempt at maintaining discipline, coming face-to-face—bad choice of words—once again, with the nude form of your superior, her belly glistening with sweat and steam. You find your eye level with underside of her breasts, strands of long, fair hair sticking to her skin. Despite your best efforts, you find your control over your motor functions slipping as your gaze travels down from her navel all the curve of her mound, where you receive a blatant eyeful of her closed labia … and the pattern that crowns her pelvic region a bare inch and a half above, a shimmering pink mark shaped into what strikes you as something between a chalice and the wild, thorny antlers stylized into the dangerous thorns of a rose. You lean in slightly to take a better look, finding that the ink-work of her tattoo practically shone from certain perspectives, under light and shadow … unwittingly tilting your head much too forward, bumping the tip of your nose against her damp, porcelain skin.

You almost jump back, stuttering an apology that would not arrive.

‘Were you this jittery when your so-called scarlet woman decided to drag you up, Cadet?’

Belfast’s coy tone has an odd unintended side-effect in calming you down. Your cheeks still flush, you glance up between the valley of her breasts, finding a mischievous smirk and downward glance directed right at your person. You intertwine your fingers, resting your elbows on your lap, letting out a great big sigh.

‘She wasn’t this casual,’ you mumble, shaking your head, ‘that’s for sure.’

‘Different sensibilities, my faithful listener,’ Belfast responds, leaning over slightly.

‘Would you like to touch it?’

The words are uttered by your ear again, and the taunt is all the more maddening for it. You open your mouth to reply, wondering just what boundaries there were left for you to cross … because there just had to be.

>‘Yes.’
>‘No.’
>Write-In
>>
>>4746477
>‘Yes.’
>>
>>4746542
Yes, she is offering
>>
>>4746477
I’d be lying if I denied, but I wouldn’t dare. What... is its significance?
>>
>>4746477
>>‘Yes.’
>>
>>4746747
Oh you sweet innocent child
>>
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>‘Yes.’

You’re not sure how long your hand lingers upon her skin, but Belfast doesn’t make any attempt to push you away. Rough and uncertain, your digits caress the pink tattoo, which, indeed, does reflect light at the right angle. As if by instinct, your left hand presses against her right thigh, as if trying to steady her; your fingers are far from dainty and clumsy in their coordination. Your right hand runs its middle and ring finger along the outline of the tattoo, feeling the rough impression that it makes upon her alabaster skin, the glistening layer of sweat making it almost glow under the right amount of light. Belfast takes your curiosity in stride, humming an odd tune of contentment with every second your hand abuses in lingering upon her being. Your palm presses lightly as your journey turns inadvertently downward, barely above what you now realize is an extremely clean and unobstructed pubic mound, a tiny crease curiously leading towards what you realize to be her barely-obstructed clitoris.

‘I’m quite sure that that isn’t my tattoo, Cadet,’ Belfast informs you, playfully.

‘Sorry,’ you apologize, relinquishing your hold upon her, the thorny pattern of her tattoo now the focus of your thoughts. ‘Didn’t mean to.’

Belfast giggles as you fully pull away, allowing her to swing one leg over the bench and prop herself upon it like some sort of horse’s saddle. You feel the blood rushing to your head catching a glance of her womanhood, but otherwise keep your composure and turn back away, trying to keep your focus on the matter at hand.

Which was her … tattoo. Yes, her tattoo, lingering just above her tantalizing—

‘Pretty cool,’ you comment, nodding in a manner that you realize, much too late, was posturing much more than you had intended for it to do; you stammer as you try to keep your own disposition, unwilling to fall into any trap that could possibly be laid out, either by you … or by her. ‘Very cool, really, I … won’t say that it’s made me a connoisseur, but I’m quite impressed. Does it … does it, uh, mean anything?’

‘According to the tattoo artist,’ Belfast begins, smirking. ‘Extreme fertility.’

You feel your cheeks heat up as words die in your lungs.

‘Extreme … fertility …’

Belfast smiles, tilting her head.

‘Any … reason … you’d … uh …’

‘Funnily enough, it wasn’t … my idea,’ she elaborates, raising a finger and running it over her tattoo. ‘My boyfriend actually thought that I should be … inked, or so the word goes.’

‘Oh,’ you let out, blinking. ‘So, your boyfriend talked you into it?’

Belfast smiles wryly. ‘Ex-boyfriend,’ she elaborates. ‘My second, actually. He was heavy into the whole bad boy image and I thought that indulging in it wouldn’t hurt … and … what I got out of it was the ability to carry my regrets underneath an apron and a dress.’
>>
>>4746811
>Touch her stomach tenderly in a show of support
>'So you're pretty much the female version of that dude who tattooed his fiancee's name across his chest and split with her before the wedding, huh?' (Casual)
>'Why would you even do that to yourself?' (Disapprove)
>'A fertility tattoo referring to a memory of an ex ... and internal strife over your last Commander. You ... are not at all what the Shipgirl fanatics imagine you to be, are you?' (Incredulous)
>'Well, we all make mistakes. Maybe not with permanent ink and a reference to fertility, but ...' (Rationalize)
>Write-In
>>
>>4746811
>I'm sorry it didn't work out for you. (sympathetic)
>>
>>4746817
>>4746834
actually
>>I'm sorry it didn't work out for you. But there's always a new day. (sympathetic, hopeful)
>>
>>4746838
supporting
>>
>>4746817
>'A fertility tattoo referring to a memory of an ex ... and internal strife over your last Commander. Maybe you should consider being less casual about all this if it always leaves you unhappy?'
>>
>>4746838
Supporting
>>
>>4746838
going for this
>>
>>4746817
>>4746854
Support
>>
>>4746838
Supporting
>>
>>4746817
>I'm sorry it didn't work out for you. But there's always a new day. (sympathetic, hopeful)
>>
>>4746838
supporting
>>
>I'm sorry it didn't work out for you. But there's always a new day. (sympathetic, hopeful)

‘Would that new day be today, then?’

Your neck stiffens.

‘Huh?’

She grins, her eyes shutting into happy curves. You can’t tell if she’s joking or if she’s absolutely serious.

>‘That’s not the sort of thing you should joke about in this sort of situation, Lieutenant …’
>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>‘Depends on the sort of man your past loves were, lucky bastards they are, though, if you don’t mind me saying.’
>'You know, I'm really starting to see why you have exes, Lieutenant ...'
>Stare at her, unblinking
>Write-In
>>
>>4748987
>>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be
>>
>>4748987
>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>>
>>4748987
>>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>>
>>4748987
>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>>
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Mech is having internet problems again.
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>>4748987
>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>>
>>4748987
>>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’
>>
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>‘Well, as granny puts it: you can choose to let your screw-ups make up who you are, who you were … or who you will be.’

‘Is that how you’re choosing to put it?’

‘My grandmother hasn’t been wrong yet,’ you counter, puffing your chest. ‘I mean, sure, you’re pretty much playing into your own desperations an’ all that, ma’am, but it’s up ta you how you wanna go an’ live past it … or if you wanna do it at all. Not like ya’d be the firs’ one to go up ‘n getcha butt tumblin’ over heartbreak, even if you are a Shipgirl. I mean, uh … I can relate, I guess, but me aside, what granny’s trying to put through is that you can let it define you or you can just chalk it all up to experience, yeah? Whoever you gave your heart to, I don’t know, ma’am, and I’m not about to cuss out someone I ain’t even met, but I can tell you that you can choose to cry yourself to sleep starin’ at that there tattoo if it means that much to you, or you can actually just look at it as a pretty lil’ cut a’ bodywork and do whatever you want from then on. Least that’s the way I was thought. Dunno if it’s gonna work out for you, but, well, you asked me. I’m just telling you what I’ve been taught.’

You pause to consider your answer, long and winded as it is.

‘All I can do, really,’ you finish, rubbing the back of your neck. ‘I ain’t fancy … ain’t “exceptional” like how you Royal Navy types put it, but … I hope that helps.’

Belfast chuckles, running her hand over her tattoo as she wears a light, thoughtful smile.

‘Your grandmother, huh?’

‘Yes, ma’am,’ you reply, nodding. ‘Like I said: she ain’t been wrong yet … for better or worse.’

‘She sounds like quite the lady,’ Belfast says, prompting you to nod again.

‘Mom thumped her chest and blew out hot air and my dad’s only useful when he’s talkin’ down to ya,’ you let out, shrugging. ‘Someone had to be sane way out there in the boonies. We threw frogs at each other, for God’s sake.’

Belfast laughs, raising her hand as she calls for a cease to your anecdotal recollections. ‘I … I apologize, Cadet. I just have a hard time actually imagining you doing that.’

‘The tricky part’s to not panic when they’re thrown at you,’ you inform her, smirking at the memory. ‘Ain’t much to do when more than two people are doin’ the thrown, mind.’

She snorts, shaking her head … before biting a bottom lip, wearing a strange expression. The machine churns before you as an odd silence seems to draw curtains upon the your conversation. Thinking that there was nothing much else to say outside of waiting for your laundry to be done with, you turn your attention to the rumbling machine, idly counting the bolts upon the massive engine.

‘I suppose that now would be a good time to apologize,’ Belfast suddenly speaks up.

You turn to her, confused.
>>
>>4750334
>'Uh ... don't worry, ma'am. I think I've been compensated more than enough to be topped off with an apology.' (Wave it off)
>'Apology accepted?" (Confused)
>'For not being a virgin? I ain't one neither; not like I'm one of those crazies ...' (Tangential)
>'Naw, it was, and I quote, "quotational".' (Moron)
>Write-In

*I bring to you the full force of the Southern drawl, Mech-Style. Forgive me.
>>
>>4750341
>>'Apology accepted?" (Confused)
>>
>>4750334
>what for? I admit to have been thrown off balance, but I’d have you know, I appreciate you baring your soul, ma’am, even more so than your body. I will do what I can to not let you down again.

Poor Belfast. There’s no way she’d go along with a dumb tattoo if at some level she didn’t secretly hope for it to work.
>>
>>4750341
>>'Apology accepted?" (Confused)
>>
>>4750334
Supporting.>>4750372
>>
>>4750372
this
>>
>>4750341
>>4750372
Support
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>>4750341
This >>4750372
>>
>>4750372
supporting
>>
>>4750372
also for this
>>
>what for? I admit to have been thrown off balance, but I’d have you know, I appreciate you baring your soul, ma’am, even more so than your body. I will do what I can to not let you down again.

Belfast chuckles, shaking her head as her lips curve, but don’t quite reach her eyes.

‘That … I’m sorry, but this is a point I must insist.’

You nod slowly, uncertain of what she was getting at.

‘I … may actually have been the prevailing reason as to … why you have been unable to bridge the streams,’ Belfast confesses, much to your consternation: how could she be the one at fault. ‘As much as it may be your … inclination towards an overestimation of your own abilities, I believe that my own … disposition and neuroses were probably … significant contributors to the—to your—to our—failure to establish a … passable degree of sustained activation. I … I’d be lying if I said that I didn’t know this before you asked, but I just thought that maybe I’d … be able to reach out just as well as I had previously presumed. However, as you are now aware of the mountains of issues that I am unfortunately composed of, I can’t allow you to … hold the blame all on your own.’

You stare at her, incredulous.

The Lieutenant raises a guilty gaze, her brow wrinkling as she waits for your response.

‘Perhaps it would be better if …’

>[Pat her head]
>‘Should have known …’ (Frustrated)
>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>‘No use talking about it now, what’s done is done.’ (Dismissive)
>Write-In
>>
>>4751065
>>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>>Write-In
say this >‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo) and add the fact that we just then need to work harder together and we can make it work
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>>4751065
>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>>[Pat her head]
and >>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>>[Pat her head]
and adding on
>>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751065
>Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)
>>
>>4751191
>>4751065
Supporting this, all shipgirls deserve headpats.
>>
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>‘Then we’re both at fault, then. It’s a team effort, right?’ (Dattebayo)

Your response is simple.

‘Then we’re both at fault, then, ain’t we?’ you return, grinning widely as you throw up a raised thumb. ‘This is a team effort, right? So we both screwed up … and we’ll both make it up next time.’

Belfast stares at you, very much befuddled … before chuckling and nodding, agreeing with your sentiment. Whatever Belfast said meant little to you in the way of fault, really … it didn’t matter where she screwed up when you had done little to make up for your own shortcomings in the context of the bridging the streams. If you couldn’t do it, then it didn’t matter if she couldn’t, after all. That was the purpose of Shipgirl Commanders … and since you both had come up short, then it was up to the both of you to make it right. Giving a small, encouraging nod of your own, you find your mood lifted as you turn your attention back to the swirling—

‘Belfast!’

The exclamation catches you by surprise. You turn your head up towards the metal stairwell to see a walking mound of gray sheets, supported by a pair of long, stocking-covered legs and pristine black heels.

Formidable turns to her side, wrinkling her nose as she locks eyes with you, then to Belfast, then back to you, incredulous. It is then that you realize just what the implications your very undressed (as well as that of the Lieutenant’s) entailed. You motion to explain yourself, lest the Instructor turn you into atoms for your lack of proper dress.

You are too late to make the attempt, however, as Belfast, in all her naked glory, steps forward, as if to take the killing blow in your stead.

‘Formidable,’ she returns, crossing her arms under her breasts as she approaches the former, her expression as stoic as you remember her to be.

Getting up from your seat, you move to intervene, to tell Formidable that nothing of the—

‘You’ll never believe who I found upstairs! The nerve of that girl!’

You tilt your head, confused. ‘What?’

As the chatter descends into a topic that you are not at all privy too, clad in but a towel and in the basement of a residence belonging to reincarnated weaponry of an epoch long forgotten … you do what you do best and blank out, watching the exchange unfold with interested ears and a lackadaisical expression, realizing that, as had been said before, that Shipgirls, indeed, had very different sensibilities to your typical array of women.

An abnormality that you are, in all ironies, very much thankful for.

You don’t even care that by the time the exchange is over that you’re the most dressed one in the room.

You just don’t.

>END INTERLUDE
>>
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Your top feels a lot more comfortable to put on than it had ever been after one of your wash cycles, tidied up with an expertise that would have cost you a significant chunk of your allowance. Even specialist cleaners couldn’t have gotten your clothes this … wearable! You perform a small spin, feeling the fabric against your skin. Power wash nothing: your clothes had probably been through their own personal spa!

‘Doesn’t that feel much better?’ Belfast declares, huffing as she nods, her pride very much on display.

‘It does,’ you agree, feeling the flaps of your sleeves practically flutter with the movement from your shoulders. ‘Maybe you should open your own personal dry cleaners as a side business; this feels great!’

Belfast smiles, tilting her head. She doesn’t say a word, but her appreciation for your words of praise in regards to her laundry-tending prowess are more than apparent.

‘Try not to get used to it,’ Formidable declares, placing her hands on her hips. ‘The last thing I want is for the other lads to come around with their dirty laundry.’

Belfast opens her mouth to speak …

‘Now don’t you start,’ Formidable cuts her right off, rolling her eyes as she extends a finger, prompting Belfast to shift her attempt at speech into a defeated, yet amused, nod and smile. ‘God knows the effort that we have to throw around to keep the rest in line.’

>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>‘Regardless, I’m thankful. Instructor Formidable, Lieutenant Belfast.’ (Leave)
>‘I don’t think anyone would believe me, regardless. Especially the part about the both of you being practical nudists …’ (Nonchalant)
>‘You do a good job, regardless.’ (Praise)
>‘I can see it now … Formidable and Belfast Cleaners …’ (Imagination)
>Write-In
>>
>>4753608
>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>>
>>4753608
>>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>>
>>4753608
>>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>>
>>4753608
>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>>
>>4753608
>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)
>>
>>4753608
>>‘You do a good job, regardless.’ (Praise)
>>
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>‘Yeah, I couldn’t help but overhear …’ (Refer to what Belfast and Formidable spoke of downstairs)

You’re actually quite surprised that you’d managed to follow the conversation at all, especially when you were very literally wedged between two women flinging their words in the nude. Rubbing the back of your neck, you try to recall the words to the best of your memory, apologizing in advance before deciding that your curiosity was, indeed, worth indulging in.

‘Our apologies for not considering your presence, Cadet,’ Belfast sighs, pressing her palm to her cheek. ‘It’s not something we should have exposed you to, really.’

‘It’s not like there’s much that that gormless twit’s got left unexposed, mind,’ grumbles Formidable, crossing her arms across her chest once again. ‘Maybe I could risk the court martial next time. Get some live rounds shove up her twat.’

‘Formidable,’ Belfast warns, throwing her a wary gaze. Formidable, however, remains undeterred.

‘Tell me, then, how many times have we gone and warned her, then? I stopped counting at twenty.’

‘She’s well within her rights,’ Belfast counters, her tone remaining neutral despite Formidable’s exasperated snarl. ‘I should know.’

‘You don’t leave other people to clean up after your messes,’ your Instructor counters, clicking her tongue. ‘And I’m quite certain that your messes don’t involve gargling down pints of semen on a rotation.’

‘Formidable,’ Belfast warns once again, frowning as she nudges her head in your direction.

‘Please,’ Formidable scoffs, gesturing towards you with an extended palm. ‘She’s had enough time to recover and come back down to earth. If the administration gets wind of this, they’d—’

‘They’ll do nothing,’ Belfast interrupts, ‘and I’m quite sure that the cadet wasn’t prompting you to go into full detail about Bremerton’s situation.’

Formidable opens her mouth … before immediately assessing the situation, following it up with a grumble and an embarrassed hand over her eyes, letting out a small, half-whine, half-grumble, finally deciding to put a cap on her segue. They had discussed this before, of course, in the laundry room-cum-basement, naked and more candid than you’d expected either of them to be (even with their bare nudity taken into consideration). Formidable had walked down the steps then in a huff, having allegedly been through what you understood to be “yet another” heated exchange with one of Azur Lane’s Shipgirls … and the company they had brought over. A Shipgirl that you weren’t quite intimate with, but certainly had built a reputation.

Bremerton of the Eagle Union had, apparently, brought over some men and used one of the vacant quarters to … consummate the tryst. You’d apparently missed quite a spectacle in going down to the laundry room, although you’re also quite sure the sight of a nude Lieutenant Belfast had its own—
>>
No, no, you weren’t about to go there.

>'I don't actually get why you're so worked up, Instructor. I thought you were allowed to date and ... you know?'
>'I'm actually on your side, Instructor. Regardless of what your habits are, there needs to be an example that one has to set, Shipgirl OR Human.'
>'Why don't you take it from the top? Sounds like there's a lot more to this than a girl that just wants to go the good old Miss Independent route.'
>'Well, whatever it is, I don't think I should pry.' (End)
>Write-In
>>
>>4753858
>'Why don't you take it from the top? Sounds like there's a lot more to this than a girl that just wants to go the good old Miss Independent route.'
>>
>>4753858
>>'Why don't you take it from the top? Sounds like there's a lot more to this than a girl that just wants to go the good old Miss Independent route.'
>>
>>4753858
>Respectfully, instructor, if (rank) Bremerton is impervious to chastising maybe a different approach would work?

Aside from underlying issues that seem to be the case it might be that getting chewed out repeatedly only makes Brem dig her heels in.
Maybe another nugget of grandmother’s upbringing.
>>
>>4753858
>'Why don't you take it from the top? Sounds like there's a lot more to this than a girl that just wants to go the good old Miss Independent route.'
>>
>>4753858
>'Why don't you take it from the top? Sounds like there's a lot more to this than a girl that just wants to go the good old Miss Independent route.'



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