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File: False Woman Quest.png (599 KB, 1000x1000)
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"Few paths lead more quickly to damnation than that of innovation. The longer you walk it, the more Old Night closes in around you."
-Magos Scintilla Vex

It had begun with a tapping. A scratching, that traced on the inside of your head. Not on the bone, not scraping, but deeper, tracing pathways on the inside of your head, but never quite approaching the bone. It followed the inner edge to your nose, your tongue. It made ripples in the water which drew you in, deeper and darker.

It completed it's revolution - inside your ear - and then it became the Voice.

The Voice was the water, and with the water, it would press into your mind and make thoughts, like leaving a handprint in clay, that washed out with the tide.

Tide. Clay. You knew what those things were, now. They hadn't been things you'd known before, but now you knew the texture of it, how it smelled or crumbled when it was dry.

You would ask questions, and the Voice would answer, pressing new thoughts into your mind and rushing old ones out. It seemed pleased by some questions, and if you had asked others, you could not recall. You did not know what to call the Voice, only that you must listen to it. You were not to speak to it as you would a master. It was not that, and it was more than that, but it did not teach you the difference, and so you returned to the water.

First, it taught you the world. Earth and sky. Floors. Walls. Switches. Cups. Fluids. Then it began to teach you what you are.

Who are you?

>K-455, a bodyguard model, easily replaced and yet durable, strong, made to fight and die. You were to be more resilient than most, vigilant in ways that others were not, and yet not entirely trusted. Unobtrusive, precisely tailored to the aesthetic specifications of the order, and nothing more.
>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.
>L-301, a simple laborer. Smaller than most, soft of step and keen of senses. Carefully grown, observant and sharp. Even a laborer, however, can have their gifts. Uncanny silence and springiness of movement, a surprising complexity of thought. Surprising gifts, nothing more.

---

This quest allows you to designate a second-choice vote on decisions with three or more options before Write-Ins. When votes are totaled, the option with the least votes for it will be removed, with votes for that option instead being changed to the second-choice of those voters. This helps increase the accuracy of votes, but is not mandatory. Please specifically mark your second-choice as such if you do so.

Vote stay open for a minimum of six hours, but will usually take longer.

A note: My writing style is rather direct, but trust me, this is going to get a little goofy.
>>
>>5806381
>L-301, a simple laborer.
>>
>>5806381
>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.

In the decaying Imperium, a stroke of the pen can cause the most damage. Though silently listening and relaying or the right person going missing could do much as well.
>>
>>5806381
>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.
>>
>>5806381
>>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.
>>
>>5806381
>K-455, a bodyguard model, easily replaced and yet durable, strong, made to fight and die. You were to be more resilient than most, vigilant in ways that others were not, and yet not entirely trusted. Unobtrusive, precisely tailored to the aesthetic specifications of the order, and nothing more.
>>
>>5806381

>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.

Not really sure where this is headed lol
>>
>>5806381
>L-301, a simple laborer. Smaller than most, soft of step and keen of senses. Carefully grown, observant and sharp. Even a laborer, however, can have their gifts. Uncanny silence and springiness of movement, a surprising complexity of thought. Surprising gifts, nothing more.
>>
>>5806381
>K-455, a bodyguard model, easily replaced and yet durable, strong, made to fight and die.
There's already a 40K bureaucrat quest somewhere
>>
>>5806381
>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.
>>
Voting isn't closing yet, but I would like to remind people to set second-choices if you'd like. There's a clear favorite, of course, but it never hurts when it's the big choices like this. Quoting from the OP:
>This quest allows you to designate a second-choice vote on decisions with three or more options before Write-Ins. When votes are totaled, the option with the least votes for it will be removed, with votes for that option instead being changed to the second-choice of those voters
>>
>>5806575
I read that, was just too lazy/didn't care.

My second choice would be
>L-301, a simple laborer. Smaller than most, soft of step and keen of senses. Carefully grown, observant and sharp. Even a laborer, however, can have their gifts. Uncanny silence and springiness of movement, a surprising complexity of thought. Surprising gifts, nothing more.
>>
>>5806381
enough with the trans quests already
>>
>>5806381

First choice
>>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.

Second choice
>>L-301, a simple laborer. Smaller than most, soft of step and keen of senses. Carefully grown, observant and sharp. Even a laborer, however, can have their gifts. Uncanny silence and springiness of movement, a surprising complexity of thought. Surprising gifts, nothing more.
>>
>>5806483
I'll add
>L-301, a simple laborer. Smaller than most, soft of step and keen of senses.
as my second choice. Completely forgot about your runoff system.
>>
>>5806381
>>K-455, a bodyguard model, easily replaced and yet durable, strong, made to fight and die. You were to be more resilient than most, vigilant in ways that others were not, and yet not entirely trusted. Unobtrusive, precisely tailored to the aesthetic specifications of the order, and nothing more.
>>
>>5806381
>K-455

Second choice:
>A-414
>>
>>5806381
>K-455, a bodyguard model, easily replaced and yet durable, strong, made to fight and die. You were to be more resilient than most, vigilant in ways that others were not, and yet not entirely trusted. Unobtrusive, precisely tailored to the aesthetic specifications of the order, and nothing more.
>>
>A-414, an actuarial model with prestigious memory. Sparsely, and precisely refined, with weak and pliable flesh. Easily made, and easily modified to suit whatever clerical or technical task was required, with a deft hand and a keen eye.
I think even if a last minute vote for K-455 power slides under the finish line as I write this, the tie-breaker would still put bureaucracy in the lead. Writing.

>>5806775
It's not used very often, but I keep it around so that people are more free to vote for options that they like but aren't in favor.
>>
Checking if this unicode character is valid on 4chan: •
>>
QM, the logo is

siiiick

did you make it?
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>>5807161
I dabble a bit. It's a picture from google with parts masked out in photoshop, then taken into illustrator and traced with a low color count. The words are just partially masked text with a modified gear shape from another project laid on top.
>>
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Gothic. High and Low, literacy and speech. How to show deference to Administratum bureaucrats. Sorting by decimal or in alphabetical order. The order cants used on message tickets and how to send them. Notation in short-hand, with movements that pulled at your mind in confusing ways. Strange things that curled and churned in the water, and strained your mind.

Hand. That was a word who's meaning still evaded you, try as you might to understand it. With short-hand also came how to use short-hand with an auto-scribe, something you might have when the client modified you for their needs. They would remove something and then replace it with another, but you did not understand what that was.

That disappointed the Voice, but you don't recall asking it why.

Proper deference to enginseers and techpriests. Their needs were different, their rituals obscure and given only by their will. Oils you should carry, both sacred and practical. Light tech-chants, as expected of an assistant. These things were harder to glean from the water, and it made it churn tightly around you before repeated tides eroded your worries, and allowed you to return to the depths.

The following Parameters have changed:

Conditioning •
Manipulation •••
Vigilance ••
Logic ••••
Intuit •••

Parameters are a simple metric of your basic abilities. They are rated on a scale of one to five. Two is average. Having sufficient dots in a Parameter means that you can fairly easily complete some choices, but if you lack sufficient dots for a choice, attempting them will accrue a point of Strain and risk failure. You can have maximum Strain equal to your points in Conditioning. Attempting to Strain while at your maximum will incur a Strain Check. Finding safe shelter will cleanse all your points of Strain.

The Parameters are:
Conditioning - A combined ranking of your body's strength and swiftness, and also the limits of your endurance.
Manipulation - Your ability to understand the behavior of objects in motion and how to manipulate them, either personally or with tools.
Vigilance - Not only your sensory acuteness, but also your ability to interpret your senses and other information.
Logic - The ability to handle large quantities of discrete information, retain it and organize it, as well as interact with complex systems.
Intuit - Capacity to engage in lateral thinking, understand others and make accurate assumptions.


The further you sank into the water, the more you were taught about yourself. The client was nobility - those who lived in the upper spires of Hive Odrev. A secretarial model, intended for one of the great many attendants who must accompany the lower ranking nobles on their duties. The sacred ports, guarded on high by adepts by divine decree.
>>
>>5807272
‘Divinity’ was another word you did not know, but you knew you would find the meaning deeper in the water. As you tried to dive lower, the tide would push you back, and as it did so, it would pass through you and teach you more. You could feel yourself swell each time, retaining more of the water and losing less to the tide. You were to be a living recorder, at the disposal of those on high. You needed to hold these things effortlessly.

You and your lot were headed to the domain of House Porta, the guardians of the way to the sky. You were to be one of a number of living manifests, monitori-

You are imperfect."

It was no longer inside, but outside. The Voice had become muffled, gurgled through the water as if it was drowning. There wasn't time to ask it's meaning, there was only the tearing of your senses. Pain. You had learned that word in the water, but now the water was rushing away from you as you fell up and away from the sea. You felt tight, and for the first time you felt the confines of the womb.

Something was pulling away from you- a thick dome, tipped with many fine points, melded with a pair of needle-lined goggles that floated away from you in the water. Your vision was blurry, filled with a sea of amniotic fluid entirely unlike the water had been. Something flicked inside of your skull, and something inside of you spasmed, jerking your body. Tears welled up at the stinging rush of water, and the burning that was consuming your chest.

Fluid was rushing past your body, the bottom of the womb opening, and the clear bag that held your body tightly in place split, jostling against it's neighbors. A strange, pale thing slid from it, dragging your head down with it. Leg, whispered a strained part of your mind. It's weight was dragging you down, soon joined by another. Your chest was spasming powerfully, making your head hurt and feel swollen, only making your thoughts churn painfully before you dropped free.

Things tore free from you, jerking your limbs back from your body for an instant before you were taken by the hateful tide and torn away. Your vision went dark, and the water churned around you. Your head went under again and again, while your body burned until some instinct screamed in your ear: Breathe.

Lungs seemingly unlocked, but instead of heaving air in, you expel a sudden stream of foamy fluid before your head goes under again. Your body catches on a hard rod of metal, and water gives way to air.

You fall, and hit something soft and slimy.
>>
>>5807274
DEPTH 1

THE CORPSE-GRINDER

A gentle trickle of amniotic fluid continued to flow from your mouth as you took gentle, shallow breaths. It spilled from your lips and gathered on a sleeve, soaking into the cloth. Your head slowly turned, following the pale limb laying to your side, flexing the thin digits it was topped with.

Right, hand.

You had been awoken by a groan - or perhaps, a sob - from beneath you, if that was possible. Fumbling, you struggle to lift your head and right yourself, trying to sort your limbs out from each other. Hands, feet- the knowledge comes thickly, and slowly. They were not things the voice in the water had taught you, and whatever instincts you had yielded the information jealously. A warning klaxon sounded, somewhere. It was muffled through walls, and swallowed up by the ambient din of spilling water, and background atmospherics.

Twisting, you raise your head up. You are part of a pit of corpses.

Hundreds of bodies interlock and fit together, spreading out around you to fill the vast circular pit you find yourself at the base of. Bodies in the center slowly sink, as if being drawn into a pool of quicksand, and are slowly pulled under while the surface layer is slowly covered up by fresh corpses. Most were naked, just like you, but some were dressed, others still clutched things or slowly bled from wounds cut across them.

It seemed like only you lived- but if that was the case, who had spoken before?

Turning, you slowly crawl your way out of the bed of bodies, pawing at skulls and slipping when your hand grabs arms that pull free with your grasp. Tufts of hair pull free when you pull too hard without thinking, and you gag when your fingers sink into uncomfortable dampness more than once.

You pull yourself to the edge of the pit, your knees scraping onto bare metal before you roll over the size and collapse, exhausted by the brief labor. You are not among the spires of the hive. You are not to be one of them. You are alone.

>You don't understand. The tide brought you here, is this another test?
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>...whatever this is, it doesn't matter. You aren't ready to die just yet.
>>
>>5807276
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.

IMPERFECT
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>>5807276
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>>
>>5807276
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>>
>>5807276
>>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>>
>>5807276
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>>
>>5807276
>>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
>>
>>5807276
>>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.

>A warning klaxon sounded, somewhere.

Alarm warning klaxon, imperial manufacture, type Rho 122-4 model T, used to signify alert to imperial guards.

Run! Run!

! Survive!
>>
Let us venture, venture it on!
>>
>This is rejection. Your purpose has been taken from you.
Writing.
>>
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Something wells up in your chest, and you instinctively bend over and hack, but instead of yet more amniotic fluid being expelled from your lungs, you simply heave dry air and shudder. You try to stop, but it comes again in a wave, leaving you powerlessly gasping for breath. You didn't know what to do. What could you do? You were to go to the spires and - no, that doesn't make sense, there were other things humans did than what you...

A frenzied scream shakes you out of your paralysis. Someone yelled, muffled by many layers of bodies, mixing into the background whine of engines as their voice seemingly approached you, then spun away from you, seemingly passing by the bodies just under your feet. You flinch as the sound echoes up through the chamber and across the hive walls. Things thump in the distance, and in the other room, you hear the din of another engine die down.

...it wasn't safe to be here, at least. Only corpses were supposed to fall down these chutes, you were sure.

Your hand finds it's way to the wall, and you slowly grope the punched metal for hand holds. Humans were not supposed to crawl on all their limbs, you think. The Voice hadn't taught you much about that, yet, but you recall standing upright. Fingers closing around a line of slots, you carefully lift yourself up: first onto your knees, then unsteadily onto one foot. It shakes as you try to figure out how to position it, but it holds, so you bring your other foot forward and manage to stand up.

You immediately stumble, but something in your bones makes your arms come out, and instead of falling, you merely fall forward and smack yourself on the wall.

The world goes blank for a moment, and a few seconds later when things swim back into focus, you realize that the thing that just shrieked was you. You feel dazed, and your ears ring slightly with a harsh pain that makes you wince. You were slumped against the wall, again, the side of your thigh and chest that were scraping against the metal felt hot and angry.

Memories from the water stirred, and you struggled to recall. You knew that you were never to harm certain soft parts of your body, as they... they- right, it was a feature of your series. Enhanced intellect, expanded brain matter. You were forbidden from replacing several specific body parts with bionics, as they would damage your capabilities. The throbbing pain told you something was wrong, though - a simple bump wasn't supposed to hurt this much.
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>>5807928
Quality gained: [Genetic Curse - Thinking Tissue] Your body is laced with additional grey matter in key locations. This grants increased intellect, memory and in some cases, reflexes. However, it renders you more vulnerable to physical injuries to certain areas of your body, which are much more painful than normal and heal slower.

You have just gained a Quality. A Quality is a trait different from average that can affect the outcome of certain actions, and they are retained until they are spent or lost in some way.

You find your feet again, and begin to follow along the wall, squinting slightly in the gloom. What light the room had was provided by low-power lights set into the ceiling, which cast the entire room in an off-white haze. You rub your sore leg with a grimace, the contact against bare skin making you remember - you were naked. Humans wore clothes, you think, and your body was starting to gently shiver as the fluid clinging to you cooled in the circulating breeze of the chamber. You were supposed to be given some clothes upon delivery, but obviously that wouldn't happen, now...

You look around. You could...

>[Vigilance] Rob the dead.
>[Conditioning] Some of the hive walls are exposed. You could try to rip insulation and cabling from the machinery.
>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
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>>5807930
>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
>>
>>5807930
>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
>>
>>5807930
>>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
>>
>>5807930
>Quality gained: [Genetic Curse - Thinking Tissue] Your body is laced with additional grey matter in key locations. This grants increased intellect, memory and in some cases, reflexes. However, it renders you more vulnerable to physical injuries to certain areas of your body, which are much more painful than normal and heal slower.

>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
>>
Well they say two brains are better than one.
>>
>[Logic] Hives were supposed to maintain emergency supplies. All you need to do is find the locker.
Writing.
>>
You take a moment to gather your thoughts, closing your eyes briefly are you search what you had been told in the water. What you had been told swam in and out of reach, the memories dimmer than what you had been given in the womb, but still there. Although, now they seemed almost suspect- if the promise of your purpose had been a lie, what else could you have been lied to about?

Hive Odrev was founded in M36, and it primarily used off-world parts from the local forge world Abraham in it's initial construction. The orbital tether, the initial foundries and the habitation blocks built on top of them were thus primarily constructed to Abraham's standards, with the rest of the hive and anything constructed after M38 utilizing Odrev and Malignax's local techniques.

Your eyelids flutter briefly as you struggle to recall more.

Abraham-pattern Flush Emergency Lockers cost precisely 149 thrones, were exactly two meters tall and one and four-tenths meters wide, but it could also be the Heavy Equipment Locker at three meters tall and five wide. The Odrev-pattern equivalent cost 50 thrones and would have a bare metal exterior due to the omitted primer. Was that useful information? You knew what it looked like, at least.

All that said, you had no way of knowing how deep you were and thus the era until you went looking.

Less than a second after you closed them, you open your eyes again. This was a corpse-grinder for the production of corpsestarch. Mechanicus safety protocols demanded the installation of appropriate emergency tools at specific points. Odrev had not followed these safety standards for six hundred Terran years - you had been taught how to bypass that on paperwork when required.

You look around the room. There was a red light flickering in the gloom, but when you get close, still leaning with one hand on the wall for support, you find that it doesn't seem to mark an exit like it's supposed to. Instead, the slight inlet where the exit was supposed to be had been sealed over with scraps of sheet metal, clumsily welded into place. You reach out and push on it gently with a hand, and the whole construction gently groans as it flexes.

Instead, you follow the wall to a point where the hive wall had been cut through and joined with replacement flooring to create a new exit. Instead of the smooth inlet of atmospheric doors, the edges of the exit were melted slag where exposed girders and walls had been fused together, leaving knobbly welds that you traced your fingers over as you rounded the corner.

The new exit bypassed the normal hive structure, leading to a new hallway that clearly didn't join with the intended exit. If it had, it would turn left when you walked through it, but instead, it turned right and continued on. Strange.
>>
>>5808416
As you walked and followed it, your steps became easier and easier, the half-formed skills given to you in the womb starting to make more sense to you as you got an opportunity to actually use them. You wonder - if you had been perfect, could you have stayed in the womb, and learned how to walk before being released, or would you have always had to relearn how to walk?

The texture of the metal beneath your hand changes, and you pause to look at the wall. There was a patch where the wall changed texture, becoming a metallic matte grey against the cast ferrocrete. This was the flush Abraham-pattern locker. It was an intentionally sparse design- no helpful labels or obvious markings to discourage idle civilians. Your hand quests along it until you find a seam, then you pull the recessed latch.

Doors swing open with a metallic click, and you swing the door wide to find... nothing. Where there was supposed to be medical supplies, extinguishing units, ration bars and the fire blanket you had desired was instea three spent extinguishing canisters thrown into the corner and several bundles of crusted cloth on the floor.

Strange. Had this been used recently? The hive authorities should have refilled this by now unless it was very recent, yet the canisters themselves were empty.

A distant clatter made you look to the side. Was someone coming?

>[Vigilance] ...you should hide.
>Workers, possibly? Come to address the damaged wall? Maybe they could help?
>You could possibly take what you need from them.
>>
>>5808417
>[Vigilance] ...you should hide.
>>
>>5808417
>[Vigilance] ...you should hide
Digging this so far
>>
>>5808417
>[Vigilance] ...you should hide.
>>
>>5808417
>>Workers, possibly? Come to address the damaged wall? Maybe they could help?
>>
>[Vigilance] ...you should hide.
Writing.
>>
Your first instinct was that they were Imperial officials, maintaining the hive structures. Then you remember the jury-rigged entrance, the corpses and the fact that you're naked and among the dead. Legitimate authority would just break down the sealed off entrance, and even then you wouldn't want to be found like that.

For an instant, you debate sprinting back to the grinder and hiding amongst the corpses in plain sight, but you decide against it. There was no telling what they were here for, and you didn't want to risk accidentally being pulled into the grinder.

Instead, you clumsily shove one leg into the locker, then the other. Turning, you grab the open doors and try to pull them shut, but they get stuck on your chest. You try to flatten your back against the wall, but the locker is shallower than it should be. Twisting to the side, you breathe sharply in and pull the doors shut with more force, feeling it press against your chest and leg before abruptly clattering shut, pinching your foot and making you pull it back with a wince. Thankfully, while your body is being partially squeezed by the interior, it wasn't so tight as to be painful.

Your mouth keeps twisting strangely when you do these things. The movement concerns you, but you don't have time to debate if it's a problem or not as voices approach.

“No, seriously, I swear I heard something.” A masculine voice came.

“It just sounded like a fan or something to me, man.”

“Ugh- maybe? It just didn't sound right...” The same voice replied, growing closer to the locker.

“Could be something in the grinder giving way.”

A third voice joined, that of a woman. “Let's hope it's just someone trying to muscle in, because we can shoot that.”

“...think it might have been the barricade?”

“I keep telling Tolley we need to reinforce that shitty thing.” There was a brief pause as footsteps approached and passed the locker. “No, I swear it was closer, though.”

You try to quiet your breathing, shifting your body to lean away from the locker door. A piece of metal in it's construction creaked slightly as your weight shifted around on it.

“Look, do you want to check it out or not?” The second voice kept moving further away.

The first voice, though, stayed right next to the locker. “I don't want to screw this up, is all I'm saying.”

A footstep came closer, but softer than it had been before. Hesitant, not sure.

Your breathing starts to pick up for some reason, and you realize your lungs are tickling and burning with the urge to cough. You cover your mouth with a hand and try to resist the urge. Amniotic fluid was pooling at your feet where it was running off your legs and torso, with only your shoulders partially dry.
>>
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>>5808784
Your eyes roam the inside of the locker, but in the gloom there isn't much to make out. Used, empty equipment, something mounted to the upper corner- an alarm, possibly? Or an atmospheric sensor. meant to detect the fires the extinguishers are meant to put out. You fumble to it with a free hand, but as you blindly probe it, all you find is a cheap, encased sensor with a slit for detection.

A shadow crossed the gap of light streaming in from outside, and you leaned yourself back from it, while your head throbbed, pressure building in it like the tide.

Don't come any closer... don't come any closer...

“You coming or not man?” The feminine voice called.

“Huh? But I-” The voice stopped, apparently reconsidering himself. “Yeah, be right there.” It lingered for a second, then began walking off with a sigh of exasperation.

After a few seconds, you let a stream of breath out. At least you know that you were a trespasser, now. The relevant Imperial statues flash to your mind aimlessly, but you doubt this was the work of the authorities anymore.

You grip the inside seam of the locker door and lift up the small counterweight that was attached to the other side of the latch. The locking arms twisted, and you were able to stumble out of the locker, before turning and carefully shutting it. Sparing a glance over your shoulder and not seeing anyone watching you, you turn and find your way to the end of the corridor as fast as you can.

At the end, you find another termination - the corridor turned, but then abruptly terminated in a thick slab of welded metal. Unlike the one that had blocked the exit to the corpse-grinder, this one had been reinforced with angled braces punched into the floor, holding up the welded paneling so it couldn't be knocked down. It also seemed to be much thicker and heavier. Next to it, another hole had been punched in the hive structure, opening up an entrance into another impromptu room.

Ratty mattresses had been thrown on top of cargo crates, creating impromptu benches that clustered around a broken ventilation grate on sticks. Beneath it, a low-cetane promethium canister sat, flame issuing from a hole that had been carefully punched in the top to make an improvised burner that heated a small pot filled with a off-white stew. Cloth bags were strewn around the room, some bursting with random pieces of scrap metal, others empty, and there were a mismatched pair of dressers against one wall.

A camp, of some kind. Belonging to those people back there, maybe?

>[Vigilance/Strain] Rob the place before you go.
>You really should keep moving before they come back.
>>
>>5808786
>[Logic] Use the presence of flame to dry off the last remains of amniotic fluid and get warm before moving on.

Dunno if write-ins are okay, so here's mine.
>>
>>5808800
Write-ins are fine, but I usually put in a
>[Write-In]
when I'm intending them. That said, so long as they're not bending reality too badly, I don't mind if they're given without being called for.
>>
>>5808786
>>[Vigilance/Strain] Rob the place before you go.
>>
>>5808786
>[Vigilance/Strain] Rob the place before you go.
We should see if we can get clothes and a knife or something out of it.
>>
>>5808786
>[Vigilance/Strain] Rob the place before you go.
I find pants to be quite underrated to starting a day, personally
>>
>>5808786
>>You really should keep moving before they come back.
>>
>>5808786
>You really should keep moving before they come back.
>>
>>5808800
Support also are we a big titty plump thighs lady filled with brain? Beacuse if it was a guy I would imagine a giant belly brain
>>
>5808786
>You really should keep moving before they come back.
>>
Wouldnt it be funny if we looked for clothes and we just found sunglasses.

Completely naked
Except for sunglasses.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d2)

Okay, I believe that's a... even split? I can work the write-in into either of them, so I suppose I'll roll off for them.

1 for robbing, 2 for moving on.
>>
You snatch the pot off their improvised cooktop and drop it on the floor, fluid on your hands steaming, but protecting it from the heat that had built up in the handle. Sticking your hands out over the flames, you feel the remaining amniotic fluid drying and steaming a little in the heat, leaving only a slight crust that was easily brushed off.

With your arms clean, you turn to the bags and pull them open. They seemed to be useful scrap components salvaged from the hive- machined pieces like corner pipes, springs and bearings. You remember that these were often difficult to make if you didn't have a forge with which to work out of. Were they not able to legitimately purchase these from the hive forges, or was the hive engaged in an intensive recycling program?

That was certainly odd, but you weren't going to worry about whatever hive law you were breaking right now. Keeping your back to the fire so it can dry off from the ambient heat, you pick your way halfway through the second bag, struggling to pull the parts around with your limited strength before determining that it was all just scrap. Skipping the remaining bags, you pull open the dresser drawers and find it stuffed with the camp's actual supplies.

Two drawers were filled almost to overflowing with ratty, grease-stained clothes, to the point that you couldn't even open one of them up all the way, the latch instead catching on something that had overflown on the inside. Rather than waste any time trying to free it, you simply rifle through the one good drawer until you pull out a stained set of coveralls. They were a faded grey color, and whatever insignia had been included by the original manufacturer on the sleeve and back had been stitched over with bands of colorful cloth, forming a procession of colors on the sleeve that cycled between red, yellow and orange.

At the very least, they seemed to be meant for a woman, so you opened the front and put your leg through one hole, then the other. When you try to pull them up, you nearly sent yourself catapulting into the fire as the coverall's ankles don't come over your own, forcing you to roll up the hems two, three, four times until they're the correct length.

A clank sounds in the distance, and you flinch. The corpse-grinder? Footsteps? You listen for a few seconds as your pulse slowly dies down, then you go back to zipping the coveralls up. They rub uncomfortably against your bare skin, and feel oddly damp, but they'll do for now.
>>
>>5809564
You pull open the remaining drawers, looking for anything else useful while you were here. One drawer opens with a clatter of metal, and you look in to see several Mars-pattern power packs, like those used in lasguns. Most of them were apparently scorched by flame, and there was about eight in total. Another drawer was stuffed with several oddly immaculate foil-wrapped bars - ration bars, according to the label. Strange why they were here, when the citizens were clearly cooking themselves, but no matter. More drawers contained ratty books, spent promethium cartridges and hair pins, nets- even a small pile of throne coins, shiny pebbles and strips of foil. Strewn around the bottom of the dresser was a small sea of boots, shoes and sandals- far more than three people could need.

You spare a glance at one of the less-full bags in the room. It's tempting, but you know very well that you wouldn't be able to carry much. And even if you wanted to, you didn't have many options on what to carry except for what you could fit into the sewn-in pockets of your coveralls unless you wanted to constantly hold them in your hands.

Choose up to two:
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>The power packs.
>The ration bars and the spare change.
>Try and find a promethium can that's full, and take any important looking parts.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>Try and find a promethium can that's full, and take any important looking parts.
Wait, we're a woman? Ew
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.

>The ration bars and the spare change.
Take nothing to noticeable that would get those we take from too interested that could be found on us if we get searched.

hopefully those aren't gang colors on the sleeve
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>Try and find a promethium can that's full, and take any important looking parts.
>>
>>5809565
>>The power packs.
>>The ration bars and the spare change.
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>The ration bars and the spare change.

>>5809594
It's literally the third word of the Quest title, not sure how you missed that
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>The ration bars and the spare change.
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>The power packs.
>>
>>5809565
>>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>>The power packs.

>>5809594
>The False WOMAN
>>
I believe that goes to
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>The ration bars and the spare change.
Writing.
>>
>>5809565
>Take the time to find a pair of shoes that fit.
>Try and find a promethium can that's full, and take any important looking parts.
>>
>>5810111
That's cruel- y'know what, anon, since that would have tied with ration bars, we'll throw in a promethium can, just for you.
>>
>>5810120
I matter!
>>
OKAY MAYBE EATING THREE POUNDS OF BEEF IN TWO DAYS BY MYSELF WAS A BAD IDEA, BUT NO AMOUNT OF INDIGESTION WILL STOP ME FROM UPDATING
>>
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The most important thing was that you don't walk barefoot. The boots on display were in various stages of ratty, stained or chewed by machinery - more than likely stripped off corpses that were jamming the machinery - and many of them were mismatched. You had been promised grand clothing by the waters- a gown and hood for the supervision of the spaceport, and more when serving at the behest of the nobility. The boots you held - one synthleather and the other slicked cloth - were not what you had imagined, nor were they strictly in spec for your model, but you knew you could tolerate a fairly wide range of footwear.

Setting them down, you shove your bare feet in, quickly yanking the laces shut and tucking them down the tongue instead of wasting time tying them. Without looking, you pull the bars from the drawers two at a time in your hands and begin shoving them into the pockets of your coveralls, first your breast pockets, then the ones on your stomach. The fistful of change - barely twelve thrones - goes into a small flap pocket that sat behind where a identification patch would go on your shoulder.

You turn to leave, then spare one look back at the empty promethium canisters. Some were the size of your torso, meant to be carried in the back of vehicles or with one hand, but the others were smaller - probably canisters that had been used as improvised stoves like the one that was currently running. One by one, you pick them up and shake them, hoping for one that was both reasonably full while also not being too large to carry. You go through several large canisters before trying several meant for portable ignition devices, until you find one that resembled a lubricant bottle. Smaller than a drink bottle, squarish and made of flexible plastic. It was only half full, but it was better than nothing.

The hairs stand up on the back of your neck, and you turn suddenly.

...nothing. Or, nothing for now?

With a sudden feeling like you've outstayed your welcome, you push the drawers shut quickly, shoving the promethium bottle into your pocket and hastily returning the cooking pot you had removed to the spit. With your hands dry, the handle was uncomfortably warm, but you bear it for the two seconds it takes to replace it, then turn and move through the exit as fast as you can.

You notice that this doorway hasn't been bypassed through the hive walls, but instead connects to a corridor clearly meant for maintenance. A grating on the floor exposes the supply pipes within the walls of the hive, and you new boots clatters on it loudly, no longer silent with your bare feet.

Wincing a little bit at the noise, you decide to not linger to hear if they notice their camp has been plundered. A part of you is beginning to wonder which department they're actually associated with - or are the hive authority's standards much lower than you think? Instead, you turn and walk off at as brisk a pace as you can without making a racket.
>>
>>5810918
There were multiple rooms off this corridor, each roughly the same size as the room containing the camp. Most were abandoned, or used as rough storage for something, but all of them featured many additional layers of metal welded to their far walls. Those walls would be connected to the same corridor they had bypassed and sealed off next to the camp. Strange.

You follow the corridor to it's end, where it terminates into a set of stairs and another passage forking off to the side. Without much of an indication as to where either of them lead, you elect to follow the staircase upwards. Hives were constructed to fairly detailed standards, and you knew that every five sublevels - where main elevators were dictated to have stops - was mandated to have navigational information. If you could find that, you could determine where you were in the hive.

Were you even in Odrev? Had that been another lie? The locker had matched, but it wasn't inconceivable that Abraham had supplied other hive worlds than Odrev in it's history.

You round the stairs, going up one flight, then another, tugging on the bent zipper of your coveralls as it kept snagging, then abruptly working down. The landings you pass seem equally empty, leading to simple, straight corridors that go straight and then fork further down. That would make sense- the grinder chamber was large, more than several stories, and the delivery infrastructure would take up additional space besides, it made sense that the hive would be sparse for several stories above it. Not to mention several below where the actual processing machinery was.

A noise was beginning to filter in from above you- human activity, perhaps even a crowd. This section of the hive was still inhabited, which was promising for your-

"Why don't we get to make stew?”

The sudden voice from the landing just in front of you makes you start back.

“Because we're not guarding the grinder.”

“It's not that bad down there.”

“What, you like hanging out with the dead of the next twenty sublevels?"

“Don't be a baby, it's fine down there. It's not like they make you watch.”

“Yeah, but then you have to unjam the Emperor-forsaken thing. It makes my skin crawl, and that's not even counting the shit that's in the Bilges.”

“Everyone knows that's just a myth. We've been to the Bilges, it's just people who couldn't hack it up here and crooks.”

You lean into the wall, perhaps on instinct, but lean back when you realize it's not actually covering you at all. One voice was coming from either side of the entrance, and you could fairly easily string together the implication. These men were guards? Why would that be necessary? And they were clearly associated with the people in the camp...
>>
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>>5810921
The sound of voices echoed more loudly through the landing- clearly there was civilization on the other side of this. You could keep ascending, but that would be loud, now that you were this close. Turning back was equally tricky, and you weren't sure there was a way to navigate around to this level once you were down there.

You spare a look around. One of the maintenance hatches, maybe? There were plenty strewn around the stairwell in order to access the infrastructure behind the walls, but you weren't sure of the utility once you found your way in. It's not like they were meant to be traveled through, and you weren't sure you were strong enough to climb it vertically, much less silently.

A Strain Check is the only dice roll you will make in this quest. When you attempt to Strain while your accumulated Strain is equal to your Conditioning score, you may attempt the action, but 1d10 must be rolled per dot in the corresponding Parameter. Results that are 6 or above count as one success. Dice that roll a 10 count as two successes. Three successes must be rolled to avert a critical failure. Fail or pass, after a Strain Check, you cannot Strain again until you restore your Strain by seeking shelter.

>Turn back, find another way.
>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
>[Vigilance/Strain] Go up to the next floor.
>[Vigilance] Get into the maintenance access.
>[Logic] Pretend to be an authority.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5810930

>[Vigilance] Get into the maintenance access.

Whew, just caught up with this quest, interesting work QM
>>
>>5810930
>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
if we get pressed we may as well answer honestly, practically anything could happen and we can probably bullshit well enough if we're careful.

we don't know if the Hatches opening wouldn't be loud enough to attract attention considering we can overhear their conversation.
>>
>>5810930
>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.

Our intuit’s pretty good, and I’m pretty sure that pretending to be an authority would be way harder considering our clothes.

Neat quest OP
>>
>>5810930
>>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
>>
>>5810930
>>[Vigilance/Strain] Go up to the next floor.
>>
>>5810930
>>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
>>
>>5810930
>>[Vigilance] Get into the maintenance access.
>>
>>5810930
>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
>>
>[Intuit] You don't need to worry about them. Just pretend that you're supposed to be there.
Writing.
>>
...strictly speaking, you didn't need to pretend to be or actually be a hive authority or any kind of authority. Searching your memory, you've actually seen this enough times in the waters, even without being strictly taught it. The need to wear an identification flasher or have the proper electoo implanted, uniform protocols, even grooming standards. All of these were for decorum, of course, but they were also for fitting in.

Don't look around, don't look nervous, and seem like you know what you're doing and they won't bother you.

You take a breath, then start up the stairs again, not bothering to keep your steps light this time. The landing comes up properly into your vision, the conversation becoming clearer and clearer as you hop up onto the landing.

“I'm just saying, what's the point in being superstitious?”

“What's the point in assuming?”

“I should be asking that- look, I'm not saying there isn't anything down there, just that it's not nearly what everyone makes it... out to... uh..."

The conversation trails off as you walk past them, not looking back and trying your best to recall the movements that had been implicit in the images you had seen in the water. Your clothes and especially your shoes were hardly what you had expected, but you could make the motion work if you thought about it. You raise your head and look around, taking note of how the chamber opened up higher, now - two floors tall instead of merely one. The walls also partially gave way to mesh and grate, framing meant for habitation levels with sight-lines and room to breathe. A residential or commercial area, or at least an area close to one.

“Er... hey, there?” One of the voices raises a little.

You pretend to just notice them, despite the clenching in your gut, turning around like you were surprised at being stopped.

The two men were dressed in a bizarre manner, wearing what appeared to be leather aprons cut with deep lines along the hems and sides, creating a slitted image that you vaguely recognized. Beneath it, they each wore many layers of fabric- thin shirts and then jackets on top of the other, creating a striped set of yellows, oranges and reds at the lapel.

Seeing that they had your attention, the one on the right - with shaved sides and a close-cropped beard - waited for you to reply, but then leaned forward. “Er... what's up? Everything okay down there?"

Truth be told, you hadn't replied as part of your deception, you hadn't replied because you've just realized you barely know how. You've yet to actually speak, only sob and in one case, scream. Not good, but at least while you scrambled to think of something, you could pretend to be surprised.

>"Everything is fine. Why?"
>"We're condition normal."
>"Go and ask them yourself if you need."
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5812247
>"Everything is fine. Why?"
>>
>>5812247

>”Mind your own business, please.”

A sort of catty remark will get the job done I think
>>
>>5812247
>”Mind your own business, please.”
>>
>>5812283
+1
>>
>>5812247
>"We're condition normal."
it stinks, it's dark and cold. the usual.
>>
really interesting premise qm excited to see where this go's

>"Everything is fine. Why?"
>>
>>5812247
>>"We're condition normal."
>>
All these replies are terrible.

We gon die.

>>[Write-In]
>They said they found salvage.
>>
>>5812247
>"Everything is fine. Why?"

Fuck it. Dice gods bless us.
>>
Rolled 2 (1d2)

Roll-off time, it seems. 1 for Fine and 2 for minding your business.
>>
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Your lips move soundlessly for a moment as you recall the movements. Each one was almost like a gear in sequence- when you began it, the others would move, and the motion would return to you. You look at the one who had replied to you. “Mind your own business, please.” You tried to avoid sounding surprised at the high-pitched, harsh sound of your own voice, which strained with being used for the first time. It wasn't how you had expected it to sound- although, you had never been prepared for what you might sound like...

“But-” He looks instantly taken aback. “Isn't the-”

“If you care so much, check yourself.” You reply flatly, which wasn't difficult with how much effort it took you to speak. “I have obligations.”

He shares a look with his neighbor, who shrugs at him in bemusement, thoughtlessly elbowing the handle of a pistol that was leaning out of his apron back into place. A skull, you realized belatedly. The apron is cut to resemble the jaws of a skull when it hangs off the body. At the very least, neither of them were reaching for theirs, both of them seemingly distracted by something.

Without another word, you turn and walk off with a not entirely fake sound of irritation at a slight pinch in your boots. You turn and follow the perimeter of the walkway, fighting the urge to look behind you while you fuss with the zipper of your coveralls again. The guardrail comes up to you, and you look over the side while you walk, acutely aware that the two of them could still be watching and judging you.

You were standing above a grand commercial thoroughfare- at least three stories high, to create an open-air space filled with bays for the construction of shops, supply depots and offices. The walls featured pillars that bore suspicious, Aquila-shaped holes where gold ornamentation must have once been displayed, but had long been ripped over, leaving only their inlets behind.

The style was familiar to you, it's more modern counterparts had been imprinted into your mind along with the common layouts of the upper floors. This must have once been part of the old hive administration centers, where the hive admin had once governed it before relocating higher and higher with the rising spires. Multiple generations of bureaucrats must have used this place, but they seem to have abandoned it. Or was it taken?

An oversized thoroughfare ran the length of the room, with wide streets that would have left ample space for ornamentation and gardens if the residents hadn't filled it with their own constructions. An entire central block had been constructed out of many stacked modules- some with sturdy plascrete and others out of reused girders and metal siding, with drapes of colorful cloth were used to cover up some of the shoddier construction. While it was obviously unauthorized and ramshackle, you took careful note of the coordination and labor it would require to erect tall plascrete structures and build on top of them.
>>
>>5813009
Many of the central buildings had bright white light spilling out from them, with walls not enclosed with plascrete, but with plastic tarps. They were carefully placed so that they were next to as few buildings with windows as possible. Crop production, maybe? You dismiss that after half a second of running the numbers. Far too small.

Residents moved around with a guarded air about them, never quite relaxing even as they spoke with half-smiles and carried on casual conversations. Most of them flowed in and out of a few long buildings that you didn't quite grasp the purpose of. They were restaurants, clearly, but they seemed to primarily serve drinks instead of food. You searched your mind for the businesses you could remember... wineries? You had received quite specific instructions in how to check bottled wine for imperfections, but the refined impression you had of them didn't quite match with the raucous noise coming out of the largest one.

Your eyes roam to the proper, intended walls of the thoroughfare, and you search for a few moments more before realizing something: business here was quite limited. There were grocers, the wineries, even what appeared to be a tailor- but the people transporting bags of scrap and other valuables, what they were doing escaped you. There were no Mechanicum adepts you could see to oversee the delivery of these materials to the forge - and even if there were, you didn't know what forge in proximity would be accepting... segments of pipe? Pieces of enamel, slabs of meat?

The transport took up a seemingly large swathe of the far wall, with what appeared to be offices of some kind open on the level above them, where people flittered in and out, occasionally shouting something at the workers down below. A part of you perks up at the idea of Imperial authority having a presence here. Maybe they could help you locate yourself?

You had been impressed upon multiple times by the Voice that your nature was somewhat illicit, but you knew that meant little of it's legality, especially when you were being sold directly to Odrev's upper class. Further, it wasn't apparent to anyone who happened to look, so it wasn't an immediate concern to hide it- even though you had been quite pointedly rejected and disposed of, you doubt your creator would care.

An expression you can't quite process comes onto your face at that thought. A deep-seated part of you wanted to believe that your survival was some kind of horrible miscalculation, but the Voice had been very clear about your intended purpose: disposable, replaceable. High quality, to be sure, but not a masterpiece.

While logical, that assurance couldn't stop the worry that made your head throb with a faint pressure.
>>
>>5813010
The guardrail opens up, and you find a pair of stairs leading down. Still slightly wary of your half-formed walking abilities, you grip the guardrail tightly and you walk down the flight as carefully as you can. As you hit the first landing and pedestrians from the crowd begin pass by, you make a mental note that many of them seem to be significantly taller than you- by a head or more, in most cases. That made your relative frailty all the more concerning.

Your feet hit the bottom of the stairs, and you stop briefly. A hand goes to the shoulder pocket that contains your change. It wasn't much, and if your count was right, it wasn't enough for even the most basic of equipment, just a few meals. A traitorous thread in the back of your mind asks what you would even do with equipment, anyway?

Where do you do?

>Visit the ‘winery’.
>Visit the offices on the far side.
>[Intuit] Look around, try sizing up what little commerce there is here.
>[Logic] Try to find a place to rest.
>You don't want to stay here, just pass through and leave as soon as you can.
>[Intuit] Find a shrine.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5813011
>Visit the offices on the far side.
One way to get to the upper levels would be alongside someone we help, we seem to know a lot of little details so could be quite useful if we find the right line of work.
>>
>>5813011
>[Logic] Try to find a place to rest.
>>
>>5813011

>[Intuit] Find a shrine.

Maybe we can hide amongst the scribes of the religious authority?
>>
>>5813011
>>Visit the ‘winery’.
>>
>>5813011
>[Intuit] Look around, try sizing up what little commerce there is here.
>>
>>5813011
>Visit the ‘winery’.
40k barwench quest lets go!
>>
>>5813011
>[Intuit] Find a shrine.
I wonder what kind of priest serves these people.
>>
>>5813010
>You were standing above a grand commercial thoroughfare- at least three stories high, to create an open-air space filled with bays for the construction of shops, supply depots and offices. The walls featured pillars that bore suspicious, Aquila-shaped holes where gold ornamentation must have once been displayed, but had long been ripped over, leaving only their inlets behind.

For a moment i wondered if this planet is the hands of chaos. Thats even more frightening.

>[Intuit] Find a shrine.
Lets see what kind of shrine they have.

Also, anyone selling arms?
>>
>>5813011
>>Visit the ‘winery’.
>>
>>5813011
>Visit the ‘winery’.
>>
>Visit the ‘winery’.
Writing.
>>
You recall that these sorts of establishments are also social venues, in the same manner as a lounge or a parlor where customers would arrive to participate in conversation and a fine food, like the ice cream parlors and coffee shops in the upper hives. One of them was located within your immediate sight upon reaching the bottom of the stairs - likely no coincidence, if the majority of foot traffic entered and exited through these areas.

There was no door, instead the entrance was covered by a set of cloth drapes. This time, you take proper note of the colors- once again orange and it's neighbors, an arrangement that was prominent in the area, down to the patch sewn onto your sleeve. Some kind of affiliation, maybe? You don't recall any Imperial organization that used similar colors. Abraham's personal colors included red and yellow, but that wasn't particularly notable for a forge world, much less one that had concluded it's construction duties centuries ago.

The drapes fall behind you, and instantly warm air rolls over your shoulders and face. Many people were packed around tiny tables, using mismatched chairs, stools and in one case a bucket for seating, shoveling dark-brown rolls of bread and bowls of a whitish substance into their mouths while others talked in low murmurs or clinked bottles that in the confined space added up to a deafening background roar. Your assumption of a parlor proved both accurate and woefully incomplete of this place, as while the customers were ordered and spirited, the dried flecks of food, drink stains and exaggerated gesturing spoke to an atmosphere entirely like upper hive decorum.

For a second, you're tempted to turn back before concluding that these people were likely no threat to you. If you had seen their guards back there, then you likely had nothing to worry about.

You made your way around the inside of the room, stumbling out of the way of a burly man who unexpectedly stands up, raising himself easily two heads above you before turning and walking past as if you weren't even there. While backing up, your rear collides with someone's shoulder, who takes the contact without a word of complaint before gently nudging you off as soon as they're able. For a second, instinct kicks in to apologize as profusely as you've been taught to, but when you turn and see the woman barely paying any attention, you judge it would make too much of a scene and turn away.

A woman who was clearly a cashier or server of some description stood behind the bar, pulling two bottles out from behind the counter for the burly man with a smile. He takes them in one hand and nods before turning back around and lumbering past you, giving you enough time to squeeze to the side once again.
>>
>>5814054
She sees you moving around him, and leans over the counter, raising her voice to ask. “Can I getcha something, hun?”

You glance to the side, waiting for them to answer. After a few seconds, you realize that she was referring to you. “My name is not Hun."

Her eyebrows go up. “Of course it isn't. I meant: do you want something to drink?”

>Order something.
>Ask her for directions.
>Ask her who's in charge around here.
>Ask her where you can find the hive administrators.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5814055
>>Ask her for directions.
>>
>>5814055

>”Are you hiring?”

Working as a barmaid would be an excellent way for us to get oriented and learn about our environs.
>>
>>5814055
>Ask her where you can find the hive administrators.
>>
>>5814055
>>Ask her for directions.

Chaos food, Chaos drink.

Im callin' it now, boys.
>>
>>5814055
>>”Are you hiring?”
>>
>>5814094
I'll allow this, but I'll caution that while mixing drinks is probably Manipulation or Logic, the actual manual labor that a lot of your time will be spent on would be Conditioning and thus cause strain.
>>
>>5814364

Well, we could always dodge out after a single shift. We seem pretty smart so this might be enough for us to get oriented.
>>
>>5814055
>”Are you hiring?”
This will be good.
>>
>>5814055
>”Are you hiring?”
>>
>”Are you hiring?”
It's time, boys.
>>
You glance around, trying to take stock of your surroundings before you answer her. The server wore an incredibly simple dress- in fact, you'd hazard it's closer to a smock, possibly one modified out of an apron. Specifically, you note the prominent blue sash made of what seemed to be handkerchiefs sewn together end-to-end. Not the same as the yellow everywhere else, then. The significance was lost on you, but you couldn't appear ignorant by asking about it.

Instead, you abruptly ask. “Are you hiring?”

The woman seems taken aback. “Hiring?”

“Yes. For employment.”

“Er... it's a small place...” She said, more to herself than anything, scratching the buzzed side of her hair. “Kitchen's full, but if you want to help out, I can throw you a few coins. You ever work in a bar before?”

Bar. So that's what this place was called. The name seemed familiar, actually- something in the periphery of what the Voice had taught you. “No.” You admit.

“Know how to mix a drink?”

You glanced at short racks of drinks, all cheap bottles of bitters and chilled, reused bottles of some kind of alcohol. Sommelier had not been your intended designation, and you didn't imagine they mixed wines, either. Surely it was similar in process to mixing medications. “Yes.” You reply.

The server stared at you for a second, then shrugged. “Alright, then.” Immediately, she reached behind the counter and started stacking bottles on the table, fishing up a scratched silver tray from somewhere. “Then wait for three rolls and a slab of grox steak to come out, then you can haul this over to Georj and his boys.” She catches your blank look. “That man.” She points over your shoulder briefly, pulling her hand back before you can turn to look. You spy where she was pointing anyway- a group of five men sitting in a row along the back wall, looking tired and carefully cupping glass bottles beneath their hands.

Five bottles in turn go on the tray, and you dubiously try lifting it. Immediately, your arms feel slightly sore, before three wire baskets filled with rolls clatter down on top of it, which you barely keep steady. A heavy plate follows, topped with a slab of meat only about the size of your hand, but also comically thick, to the point that you would likely struggle to eat even a small cut of it. Your arms now feel like they're burning, but you lift it with effort, balancing it on the back of your hand while you turn and try to weave across the room, stepping between chairs and bodies to make room for your own body. The tray tips in your hand as you yourself lean, before slowing and tipping back on your relaxed hand.

Stepping over what appears to be an unconscious man on the floor, you stop at the table and lower the tray with a grunt and burning muscles. “Georj?”

“That's me, kid." One of the men replied, stroking a full beard and looking slightly bemused.
>>
>>5815484
You nearly correct him on your age, but decide against it. “Is this your order?” You relax the tray on the corner of the table, before quickly sliding a bottle across the table to each of the men, handing out baskets with your off-hand.

“The grox's for me.” A scrawny man at the end raised his hand and you leaned across the table to place it in front of him.

A few of the men leaned back as you did, and you straightened up, flipping the now mercifully light tray vertical.

“Thanks, kid.” A man sitting next to Georj said, his expression now somewhat thoughtful. He dug in his pocket and produced a few coins, holding them out for you.

You take it with some bafflement. Was this a bribe? A part of you recoiled at the idea, but... under the circumstances, you could simply take it and just continue to give him the same service quality. That was something you could handle.

Mustering up a quick nod, you turn and make your way back to the counter, where the server seemed fairly impressed. “Okay, that wasn't too bad. Keep that up.”

Professionally, you wanted to, but your muscles already protested a bit at the exertion. You were designed to tolerate standing up all day, even in unfavorable equipment and conditions, but you weren't intended for manual labor, merely clerical work or assistant labor. Any task that required your memory, but also high strength was a better fit for a servitor, not a clerk. That said, the thrones clenched in your palm were likely a precious commodity in this place. It wasn't a good idea to pass them up.

>[Conditioning/Strain] Try to do your job.
>[Vigilance/Strain] Fake working to try and observe as much of your surroundings as possible.
>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.
>>
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Shoulda realized I was forgetting something.
>>
>>5815485

>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.

Tell her you have a bad back and you’re better off serving beverages
>>
>>5815485
>>[Vigilance/Strain] Fake working to try and observe as much of your surroundings as possible.
>>
>>5815485
>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.
>>
>>5815485
>>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.
>>
>>5815485
>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.

The first day on the job is a bad time to slack off, and straining is ultimately unsustainable.
>>
>>5815485
>[Conditioning/Strain] Try to do your job.
I want to see what happens if we have more strain here.
>>
>[Manipulation] Focus on mixing drinks to avoid overly tiring yourself.
Writing.
>>
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You look up at her. “May I see what drinks you mix here?”

“I suppose?” The server replied, gesturing for you to come behind the bar. “Ever make a screwdriver?”

You hesitate briefly, unsure of what she's referring to. “Not yet.” You say.

“It's pretty simple.” The woman sighed, pulling out a strange pair of cups on a stick from behind the counter. The insides were denoted with different measurements, you could easily see, but it's actual function remained a mystery to you. “A screwdriver is a drink made with one of our pure spirits-” She pulled a large bottle out from behind the counter, grimy on the outside but filled with a perfectly clear liquid. “-and a good amount of pipeclod.” She followed it with a large jug of some greenish liquid.

Slang. Of course it was slang. That could potentially be a problem, since you hadn't been taught any beyond the basic concept. You knew that imperial loading workers had slang for certain terms - mats for oversized cargo palettes, lofts for stacked materials and so on - but nothing beyond the scope of your work. Down here, though, there was clearly a lot of slang you still had to learn.

You watch as she pours the ‘pipeclod’ to a seemingly arbitrary level in a glass. “Two fingers.” She explains, as if you should already know what that meant. “Move the nozzle to whatever bottle you're using, but we only have one, so if you lose it, I'll kill you.” Flipping out the cup, she measures out an entire full cup and drops it into the glass. “Sometimes they ask for it on the rocks, but either way, we stir it." She swirls a spoon around the perimeter as she explains. “Hard to get a strainer back here, so we make do with it the improper way. You get all that?"

You glance around at her workstation, but see not stones. Another piece of slang, then. Looking down at the wet tool she was now rinsing under a small tap of water, you review the steps you had seen, then quietly condense the instructions down to something useful.

Four-sevenths pipeclod to three-sevenths spirit, stir slowly. Maximum volume approximately three and a half fluid ounces.

Not outside of your skill level. That was a promising start. You nod to her. “Yes.”

“We also serve mixed spirits and-”

“Fries and two rolls.” A new voice calls from the room behind you, sliding a set of food through the slot.

You internally wince at the heavy-looking tableware and glance back over your shoulder.

“Alright, you're bringing that to-” The server turns around with the tray in hand, stopping when she sees you talking to the customer who just sat down.
>>
>>5816523
“What do you wish to order?” You ask him, unsure of whether to fold your arms behind your back, as if addressing low nobility or with your hands clasped in front, as if addressing a senior clerk. After a moment, you settle on clasping your hands in front.

“Ah...” The man, thin and emaciated, strokes a beard hanging from his chin for a moment. “I'll take a straight up whiskey and cream, if you've got it.”

“We don't.” The server called as she passed with the tray on her shoulder. “No strainer.”

“Oh, yeah?” He thought for a moment more. “Bah, on the rocks, then.”

You nod, still acutely aware that you have no idea what that means. At the very least, you recognized what whiskey was, and locating it behind the counter was simple enough. Cream- that was a dairy product, and by opening the small cooler located under the bar, you're able to locate a carton labeled ‘preserved cream' with tape and a marker. For a moment, the question of how these people had cream floated to you, but you put it aside for the moment. If there were crops, there was at least in theory lifestock, or it was synthetic. Cream did not, by definition, have to come from offworld as it did for the nobility.

“Nice to see a Sun behind that counter for once." The man nods to you as you straighten up.

This had to be more slang. It was unlikely at best for you to be a ‘son’ for a number of reasons. “Yes?” You answer politely, turning with the carton and retrieving a fresh glass from the inlet under the counter top.

“Yeah.” He repeats, then shrugs. “Just nice to see someone with the colors.”

Colors. As in regimental colors? You turn, and see the colorful cloth on your arm, then remember the colors hanging from the buildings outside and the clothes of the people inside. Ah, you see. You decide to risk something. “My employer seems agreeable.”

“Who, Tea?” The man glances over his shoulder to where she's setting drinks down across the room. “She's alright. Got no problem with Oilers, anyway."

Oiler. She wasn't a Sun, and that must be why her sash was blue, although why it was blue specifically wasn't evident. At least you could see the meaning for Suns, if your assumption that they meant a star by that was accurate. That was evidence that the colors were some kind of group signifier, like wearing hive or imperial colors. What division of the hive administration were they, though? You think back to the aprons the guards had worn. Maybe they were associated with the Adeptus Mechanicus?
>>
>>5816524
Without knowing the proper ratio, you settle on simply using the same ratio of alcohol that had been used for the screwdriver. You swirl the whiskey in the bottle, watching the fluid slide back down into the bottom of the bottle carefully. Then you tilt it and pour it directly into the glass without using the measuring cup, mentally working back from the end volume. It sloshed out quickly - much faster than the pure spirits had issued through the tube inserted into it's opening. At an ounce and a half, you pull your arm back and set the bottle aside, then pour two ounces of cream directly into the glass. You heft it in your hand for a moment, gauging the volume of fluid inside before nodding. Your ability to evaluate sizes from sight was still intact, then.

Then you remember it was meant to be ‘on the rocks’. You had already confirmed a lack of rocks to put in their drinks, so it had to be a euphemism. Rock, stones... rock candy? Although it was technically crystalline candy- crystals? Additive- ice... ice crystals? Served with ice crystals?

You kneel down and open the cooler again. There was a small tray of large ice crystals in the bottom. Not cubes as you were expecting, but uncannily sized to fit into a glass. You don't find any tongs, so instead you pull the glass down and quickly drop one into the glass before stirring it again.

That was probably as close as you were going to get without seeming unusually slow, so you straighten up and place the glass in front of the man. He leans back to give you room as you place it down, then picks it up, glances down and takes a gulp of the fluid. His lips purse, and you briefly worry that you've ruined the beverage before he nods and sets it back down. “Thanks.”

You offer a brief nod before turning to look at other bar stools. Most of them were full, but everyone at them already had drinks. That didn't bode well for you. Just the thought of lifting another one of those trays made you feel tired, and the server - Tea - was already looking expectantly towards the kitchen as she came back.

A quick mental estimation of the room tells you that even if everyone in the room had one drink an hour, you'd only need to make a drink approximately every three minutes. That two and a half minutes of downtime would wind up being spent bringing food to tables as you had done already. There just wasn't enough demand for drinks in a bar this small to save you from manual labor.

...not unless you tried to increase the amount of drinks being served, somehow.

>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.
>[Logic] Find a technical task to attend to, instead. Something minor, but time consuming.
>[Conditioning/Strain] In theory, serving all the drinks you can might reduce your workload?
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5816525

>[Logic] Find a technical task to attend to, instead. Something minor, but time consuming.

Obviously we should scrounge for materials and build a straining device out of mesh or something we can collect from odds and ends.
>>
>>5816525
>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.
Come on Hun, use your charm.
>>
>>5816525
>>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.
>>
>>5816525
>[Conditioning/Strain] In theory, serving all the drinks you can might reduce your workload?
>>
>>5816525
>>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.

Gotta work these muscles! Wait tables and get coin and drum up drinks orders, thus halving the workload.

Hopefully we get strong this way. We have a few days worth of ration bars. Might even get dinner!
>>
>>5816525
>>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.
>>
Okay, the
>[Intuit/Strain] Try to drum up business by assembling a new drink.
seems to have it. Since it's our first one, a brief refresher on what a Strain check is.

This is only happening because you're out of Strain, normally this would just add a point of Strain. In this instance, you're still allowed to Strain, but you need to pass a check or suffer a critical failure and screw up in an unusual way. I'm going to need people to reply rolling 1d10s, and we'll just go straight down the replies until it's the number we need- in this case, you have three Intuit, so we need a total of three rolls.

The target number is 6 or higher, but 10s count for double, and your target number of successes is three.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d10)

>>5817008
>>
Rolled 1 (1d10)

>>5817008

Here you go boss
>>
Rolled 9 (1d10)

>>5817008
>>
Rolled 1 (1d10)

>>5817008
>>
>>5817008
>5817061
>5817068
>5817151

The 9 means we succeed right?
>>
>>5817061
>>5817068
>>5817151
Okay, so that's two failures and a success, which is not a pass, so we've just critically failed- but not to the same degree as three straight failures. As you progress, you'll pick up Qualities that change how the rolls go, double successes on a 9 or 10, more rolls, etc.

Since we're just learning about the system, this first failure is going to be a little soft- also because you can't really lethally screw up mixing alcohols.
>>
>>5817365
Is this the new dice system you're planning for COADE?

>you can't really lethally screw up mixing alcohols.
It is, in fact, possible to lethally mix alcohols
>>
>>5817416
Somewhat. I'm exploring different ways to have random chance in my quest without making everything random chance, hence this hybrid system of building up Strain until you make a roll. Of course, the character I thought was least likely to be picked was, and she's got a low Strain threshold, so this is gonna be interesting.

I was under the impression that the only risk in mixing alcohols was introducing an unexpected allergen, but given that allergens would have been present in the base drinks that's not really making a 'new' one like it would be if you mixed ammonia and bleach.
>>
Pardon the delay, due to a schedule shuffle I just realized that my post 'yesterday' was more like two days ago.
>>
Strain Check: FAILED - 1/3 Successes

You look at the array of bottles before you. Glancing up at the patrons seated at the bar, you make a fairly simple calculation: while food and drink were being ordered, tables needed to be served- but if more drink was being ordered than could be handled comfortably by one person...

It wouldn't hurt to try and ingratiate your skills to your temporary employer either, which made it appealing to try and drum up some business. Drink mixing seemed to follow a fairly basic template, with one primary drink and a smaller additive of something else. Given that you already had the flavors, you just had to mix something together that tasted good. That wasn't exactly your area of expertise, and while you were intended to eat mostly nutrient paste, you were also perfectly incapable of imbibing a large number of foods and enjoying flavor like the people you were intended to occasionally be in the presence of.

With that in mind, when the next customer sits down at the bar, you look expectantly to him for his order. He makes a vague gesture, cupping his hand and moving it towards the bar counter. After a few seconds, you realize that he wants a drink, and pull a bottle of pipeclod from behind the counter. You unscrew the bottle, and take a gentle whiff of the contents. The scent was slightly acidic, energizing, with an acute sweetness that stirred your periphery memory.

A part of you was tempted to simply mix it with cream and be done with it, but instead you hunt for more bottles behind the counter. Several were bitters, which did not seem appropriate for your purposes. Your fingers brush a bottle that seems much heavier than normal, and you withdraw it to find a large, rounded bottle with a dusty label proclaiming it to be apple juice. That seemed roughly appropriate, and so you unscrewed it, pausing to smell it briefly. It didn't smell soiled, and so the smaller portion of your new drink became apple juice.

The urge to add a third ingredient came upon you, but you swallow it and instead swirl it briefly before placing it in front of the customer.

He takes it with some evident surprise at the color, shrugging it off in favor of taking a sip. After a moment, he takes a deeper draft before looking at the glass in puzzlement. “This is... punch...?” He asked, more to himself than to you. He glances up. “I'm sorry, I was hoping for something a bit... stronger?” He stresses the question oddly, as if unsure he's supposed to be asking it.

“Of course.” You reply, suddenly unsure of yourself. Was it possible to concentrate the flavor simply by mixing things? It had seemed to agree with him, and yet it hadn't met his expectations. What had you done wrong?
>>
>>5818639
You bring another glass up from behind the counter, frowning to yourself and looking over the bottles you had. Both of the drinks you had made had used low portions of alcohol. The alcoholic drinks possibly had greater flavor, then. If that was the case, then into your new glass you pour half whiskey and had the unlabeled spirit you had used before.

The man seems pleasantly surprised when you set the mostly clear glass down in front of him. He takes it and swirls it around the glass once before gulping some of it down. From the way his eyes water and his cheeks flush, you instantly fear you've committed some crime against flavor, but he seems pleased, and instead of immediately going for a second drink, he seems to savor the flavor while letting his eyes go a little unfocused.

You feel rather pleased with yourself for a second, then a hand comes down onto your shoulder.

“What did you just serve that man?” Tea asked.

“A drink.” You reply, unsure of the tone in her voice.

“A drink... that contained enough alcohol for three separate glasses.” She sighs. “That's called ‘losing money'. It's also not good for much other than getting drunk as fast as possible.” She waves her hand. “I'll handle this. You were good at balancing that tray, before. You can go on serving duty."

“My back isn't in the greatest shape.” You lie. “I'm not sure I could carry that much weight.”

“I'd believe it.” She rolled the word oddly as she said it. “Grab a mop, then. You can clean the floors.”

Yet more work you weren't suited to- but on the other hand, at least it wasn't hefting heavy loads around. For a blessing as well, you had been trained in the basics of cleaning, albeit a servitor would still be better suited for the task. When you open the washing cupboard, you're at least heartened to recognize a broom and mop, and retrieve them so you can get it under the table's legs and the customer's feet. The problem, of course, would be getting around them.

Nevertheless, you put the mop on the floor and begin to push the head around with careful steps, mostly standing on the perimeter of the main guest tables as you do so. One of the tables clears off as you get close, and you take the moment to mop under it, instead.

“You're not from around here, are you?” A voice, female sounds from behind you.

You turn. A woman in Suns colors sits with a group of people too busy with their own conversations to notice her speaking to you. She had a shaved head, with only a small puff on top to account for her hair.

“Excuse me?” You reply.

“I said you're not from around here, aren't you?”

>"I'm not, no."
>"How could you tell?"
>"I'm from nearby, actually."
>"I don't think that's any of your business."
>"No, I'm from around here."
>"I'm sorry, did you want something to order?"
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5818641

>"How could you tell?"
>>
>>5818641
>>"I don't think that's any of your business."
>>
>>5818641
>[Write-In]
>"I dunno. I hit my head a couple times and woke up in an alley."
>>
>>5818641
Great quest op!

>>"How could you tell?"
>>
>>5818641
>>"I'm sorry, did you want something to order?"
>>
>>5818641
>>"How could you tell?"
>>
>"How could you tell?"
Writing
>>
“How could you tell?” You reply, partially softening your voice. Hopefully you could avoid looking like you were hiding something. The last thing you wanted to do was draw attention to yourself.

“You just don't look it. Too well-fed.” She holds up a hand, just above your eye-height. “Plus, I've never seen anyone as short as you who wasn't a child.” She didn't care to elaborate on what she meant, instead continuing on. “So, what? Did you get thrown down here? Hopped over from Uptown?”

You hesitate on exactly what to tell her. Being thrown down wasn't entirely inaccurate, but you weren't sure you wanted to reveal that. It didn't seem like they would throw you back into the corpse-grinder if you told them the truth, yet you had stolen from them and lied to them already. Did you want to risk compounding those lies?

“I came from...” You pause for a second to actually think about your answer. You had fallen, then come up the stairs, but without knowing what level of the hive you were on... “What level are we on?"

“What, you mean the floor?”

“The plate level.”

She snorted. “Plate level- you're beneath it, kid. Sector Primus, hive ground floor, the only thing beneath us is the bilges.”

Finally, a clear answer. It doesn't take long for you to approximate your location: if this level bore the signs of being hive administration, once upon a time, then this must have been one of the top floors of the original hive construction. Several floors above it, the initial founding structure of the hive began, part of the vast frame holding up the entirety of Odrev. Over the years, the hive population would have added to it, creating progressive layers and sectors capped by reinforcing slabs of ceramite and plasteel, forming layers and columns that formed the hive. Of course, Odrev was yet incomplete- it only had an orbital tether, and not a grand port, as older hives did.

It was also... bad news. That put you several thousand stories beneath the spaceport. Did that actually matter, though? Dim memories - warnings imprinted into you by the Voice began to surface, explicit instructions pressed into you again and again by the Voice:

Never go to the underhive.

“...you okay?” The woman asked.

You make a wordless noise and settle your thoughts. “Ah- yes, I'm from approximately a sector up.”

“I gathered that.” The woman replied, patiently. “What I'm asking is- why are you here?”

“I'm just passing through.”

“Passing through?” The woman sounded surprised, then furrowed her brow, as if you had said something exceptionally strange. You wondered briefly if it had been something you said before you notice how many empty glasses are on her table.

>"If there's nothing else, do you wish to order something? I am working."
>"Where can I find a hive official?"
>"Where's the nearest floor exit?"
>Silently walk away.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5820504
>"Where can I find a hive official?"
The only way to go is up.
>>
>>5820504
>>"Where can I find a hive official?"
>>
>>5820504
>"If there's nothing else, do you wish to order something? I am working."
>>
>>5820504
>"Where can I find a hive official?"
This could either fuck us because we are in gangland or we will just be called naive.
Either way, autism go!
>>
>>5820504

>Where can I find a hive official?

This lady seems informed and maybe she’ll throw us a bone
>>
>>5820504
>>"Where can I find a hive official?"
>>
For gods-sake.

We were thrown back by the hive official if we go back there we'll end up in grinder again!

>>5820504
>>"If there's nothing else, do you wish to order something? I am working."
>>
>>5820504
>>"If there's nothing else, do you wish to order something? I am working."
>>
>"Where can I find a hive official?"
Writing.
>>
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“Where can I find a hive official?” You ask, interrupting whatever the woman was about to say.

“A what?” She laughed. “You mean one of the Arbites? They don't come down here! Nobody does! You might as well ask me where you could find the sodding Emperor!"

“Someone must." You continue, pausing momentarily as you recall. “Otherwise you would know nothing of them.”

“Yeah, I guess that's Uptown...” She wipes a tear from her eye, still stifling some stray giggles. “Like they'd pay any heed to a little exile like you. Not unless you've got a few tons of corpsestarch stuffed down your suit.”

“Then I'll go there.” You reply shortly, then turn away.

“Eh? Wha...” You hear her voice trailing off as you turn and push your mop across the room.

The tempo of the room changes as the first hour becomes hours. Customers endlessly chattering start to grow exhausted, while the ones who arrived late and stayed quiet seem to recover more of their energy. You avoid some labor by attempting to clean more than just the floors - a task that finds you on your knees and scrubbing caked on dirt from the foot rails of the bar more than once - but you're unable to avoid carrying trays to table in it's entirety. Tea seems to recognize your plight after the fourth time you nearly collapse, and begins splitting them into halves. Not that it helps all that much.

At some point, a hand catches your shoulder. “That's enough.” Tea's voice comes. “It's late, anyway. You going to be safe to go home?”

You look at her blankly for a moment, startled out of a strange haze. The bar was suddenly much emptier, only a few people remaining while finishing off drinks or fiddling with dataslates.

“...yeah, nevermind.” Tea says dryly. “You're not making it more than a block. Go ahead and find a bench. You can sleep it off there.” She waves you off towards one of the benches that were bumped up against the wall, and you stagger off, before you're suddenly stopped again. “Oh, nearly forgot.” Several strips of something are pressed into your hand. “Here's a cut of the tips. If a man named Hop asks, we never spoke.”

You nod, unsure of her meaning, opening your hand slightly to see a small fistful of paper bills and coins. For a moment, you're confused as to what you actually did before you recall that most professions were compensated in currency. While you did know that, the idea of actually being paid was slightly baffling to you. Money was something you managed on the behalf of others, not for yourself.

It goes into your shoulder pocket regardless, your eyelids trying to close of their own accord. You had been prepared for fatigue and the need for sleep extensively, especially when extended hours would be required of you, but experiencing it for the first time, you were somewhat overwhelmed by the effect it was having on you.

You don't even recall reaching the bench before you lose consciousness.
>>
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>>5822098
Your accumulated Strain has been cleared.

You thumb through the bills again. Roughly sixty thrones, when combined with what you had in your pockets already. While it obviously wasn't tabulated according to Odrev's Standard Compensation And Labor guidelines, it was money valid almost anywhere, and that made it useful to you. Although it wasn't a lot, even by the standards of a hive world, it was something. Perhaps it'd go further down here, as well. Mindlessly, you roll your shoulders again, working at the slight strain you'd gotten from sleeping on a somewhat hard bench. When you'd woken, you'd found yourself slightly rolled over, your zipper having worked itself down so low it was practically falling off you, and the pocket holding your promethium bottle pinned against a nearby chair.

That had woken you up quickly, but in the end, the bottle was fine. The bar was coincidentally starting to fill with customers again, primarily ordering some kind of hot food from the kitchen instead of drinks. You'd left before you overstayed your respite.

Mindlessly, you bit into one of your ration bars, chewing the flavorless paste without much thought. Corpsestarch was a fact of life for your spec, since there was never any intention of feeding you fine meals on a regular basis. The flavor had been imprinted in your mind long before you had ever tasted a bar, and while the chewy, slightly savory meal had been novel at first, you had quickly gotten distracted planning for your day.

If it even was day. The synchronization lights were either malfunctioning or broken, giving the city a perpetually dark sky, with bright grow lights and a smattering of glass bulbs lighting up the habitation blocks.

>Look for a route to this ‘Uptown’.
>[Intuit] Look for a shrine.
>[Vigilance] You hadn't seen any before, but there had to be businesses down here.
>Those offices you had seen before. What was happening there, if not hive business?
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5822100
>Look for a route to this ‘Uptown’.
See, it even has up in the name. We're clearly going places.
>>
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I think captcha is onto me.
>>
>>5822100
>Those offices you had seen before. What was happening there, if not hive business?
Nice we are the only person who can eat the starch willingly
>>
>>5822100

>Look for a route to this ‘Uptown’.

Our talents are wasted in the Underhive, we should work our way up into the Hive proper
>>
>>5822100
>>Look for a route to this ‘Uptown’.
>>
>>5822100
>>Those offices you had seen before. What was happening there, if not hive business?
>>
>Look for a route to this ‘Uptown’.
Writing.
>>
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Both ends of the city were blockaded- checkpointed, rather. The citizenry seemed free to come and go as they please, especially as the side passages seemed entirely unguarded, but the large, main thoroughfares out of the city itself were capped by a pair of stands on either side of the main road. Groups of what seemed curiously to be freight traffic came through the checkpoints at regular intervals, and given the lack of guards at the checkpoints, they seemed to free traders and not unfortunate travelers.

Trade, this far outside of Imperial jurisdiction? You suppose it wasn't the most unbelievable thing.

Their cargo was pieces of salvage ripped from the hive walls, small scraps of functioning technology, bundles of spices and bags of mushrooms and crops in the back of flat-bedded trucks. Some even carried cartons of stubs, racks of alcohol and stacks of what appeared to be small hides on the backs of herd animals- six-legged insects with blunt faces and lidded eyes that you identify as tabba, an animal native to Malignax.

You had made your way up through the main thoroughfare of the city, moving pointedly in one direction until you came up against a place where the city ended. A part of you had kept expecting the city to end several times already, but it just kept going, and you decide against mentally downgrading it to a town just yet. You had eventually reached the end, though, after passing more than ten improvised city blocks.

The checkpoints were positioned close to the office space you had seen before, but now that you were viewing them up close, you thought that trading post was perhaps a more accurate assessment. The arriving traders would receive lot numbers, and while they were unloading their goods, a representative would enter the offices. You could see conversations happening through the windows and the doorway- people not wearing the local colors in quiet discussions with people wearing the colors of the Suns, while seemingly lone civilians waited in lines or talked to representatives at the counter.

“To Uptown?” The man you were speaking to shook his head. “Nah, I'm due south into Jade Eyes territory, don't really go up north."

“Any idea what would be charged for that destination?” You ask. “Any passenger services?”

“Passenger services...” He thinks about it for a second, clearly debating how honest of an answer to give you. “I dunno, twenty portions? Eighty thrones? That's as much as I'd charge to ride along, not sure anyone has ever bothered taking just passengers around.” Someone apparently calls something to him, and he steps away almost immediately, leaving you disappointed.
>>
>>5823907
While waiting for one of the trucks to pass, you notice that it's replacement cargo seemed to be uniform crates, roughly shoulder width. They were wooden, but also clearly reused many times, with the wood splitting where it's top had been opened and then re-secured with nails many times over, or replaced with a scrap metal lid entirely. They seemed to be selling the same things over and over again.

What was in the trading post didn't interest you. It seemed to be purely a place of business, and unless that business was transport, it didn't matter to you right now.

“Uptown?” The next trader you ask laughs in your face. “Maybe ask a bootlicker. I'm going that way, but you'd have to walk a few dozen kilometers east to reach it.”

His answer leaves you somewhat puzzled, but you shrug it off.

“Not many people go up that way." A woman in Suns colors tells you apologetically. “We do, maybe twice a month, but it's a rough drive. The hive foundations fall out about halfway through, and the bypass will only take you into Teeth territory, so you have to go along the underside and come back up at the Tribute.” She dragged on the cigar between her fingers again, blowing foul-smelling smoke into your face. “Dunno the fare, but I doubt it's cheap, hundred thrones, easy.”

“How long is the journey?” You ask.

“Bout... ah, six days, each way?” She hazards. “Like I said, it's a long drive.”

That was longer than the ration bars you had would last, even taking into account your somewhat reduced caloric consumption. “Is there no faster way?”

She opens her mouth and lets a cloud of smoke escape. “Supposedly you used to be able to take some sort of express route straight to Uptown just north of here. Journey would take no more than a few hours or something, salvagers and runners would use it back when the Imps used to run this place."

“And why isn't it used now?” You ask.

“Because it's in the Bilges.” She replied simply, as if that explained everything. “Just not worth the damn effort.”

“...I see.” You reply. “I take it nobody goes to the Bilges?”

“Oh, some do, I'm sure.” She waves the cigar in her hand. “They basically start right on the other side of some of those walls, but it's just not worth it. No better scrap than you'd get anywhere else in the hive. Everything else was picked over a long time ago, that's why nobody lives there if they can avoid it.”

“Know anybody who goes in there?”

“Eh, I'm sure some of our people do..." She looked thoughtful. “I'd ask the boss, he'd know if they're getting paid for it, at least. Or... er...” She scratched her head. “Not sure where you'd go to get work otherwise. The west gate, maybe?”

>"Who leads the regular convoy?"
>"Which way is the west gate?"
>>
>>5823911
>>"Which way is the west gate?"
>>
>>5823911

>"Who leads the regular convoy?"

We should become a trader’s accountant
>>
>>5823911
>"Who leads the regular convoy?"
>>
>>5823911
>>"Who leads the regular convoy?"
>>
>>5823911
>>"Who leads the regular convoy?"
>>
>"Who leads the regular convoy?"
Normally I wouldn't close so early, but I've got some extra time today and we might be able to squeeze in a double update.
>>
You walk through the cloud of cigar smoke with a slight wave of your hand where it mixes with the gout of acidic-smelling exhaust from another truck. The woman had gestured vaguely in the direction of a loading area, where a fleet of three trucks bearing hoods painted in the colors of the Suns were parked. Whatever they were intended to transport, the beds were currently empty. Behind the line of trucks, two men spoke, one leaning up against the wall of a plascrete building constructed as part of the checkpoint.

“Excuse me, sir. Are you ‘Cad’?” You ask, using the name the woman had given you.

“Make sure to bring the extra cans- yeah, we need to refuel twice more than usual, considering the load." One of the pair- a shorter, but stocky man gestured to his companion, although he kept glancing around vaguely. “Yeah, I know it's basically one truck down, but it's just what we gotta do- and- ah-” He finally seemed to realize he'd just been spoken to, and also that he should look down. ”Ah... sorry, wuh...?"

“Are you Cad?” You repeat.

“Ah...” He seems briefly confused by something, before recovering quickly. “Yeah, actually. What's up?”

“Are you traveling to Uptown?”

“Sure am, although I don't handle freight. You'll wanna ask Lev up in the office.”

“I need to get to Uptown.” You correct. “How much would it cost to take me there?”

“Twenty five portions, I'd say.” He answers easily. “And you'd have to bring your own food and water.”

“That's fine.” You pause. “How much is a ‘portion’?”

"Fourth a ration." He studies you closer.

“Ah.” That would explain some things. And if the other woman equated twenty portions to eighty thrones... converting in your head, that would make your combined wealth about ninety thrones, or roughly twenty two portions. Short by a few bars - more than a few, considering the journey would be six days. That was pushing it, even for your altered metabolism. “Is there any way you could lower the price?"

“I don't imagine it.” He folded his arms. “We're a tight ship. Everyone's gotta pull their weight, and lugging along someone who's just going to sit around will cost.”

Your eyes flick around, slightly. You settle briefly on the banged up trucks, something that seemed to be universal down here, but also spoke to a people incapable of fully repairing dents and crumples, much less the engines that drove them in the first place. Even the obvious punctures were patched with square of metal welded or riveted into place, rather than welded seals. Then the places where stub guns and pistols had been slotted into the bed at unobtrusive angles, ready to be drawn easily.

>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.
>[Manipulation] Offer your services as a hired gun.
>[Manipulation] Offer to drive part of the way.
>[Intuit] Try to haggle his price.
>Thank him for his time and look for another option.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5825106
Caught that one of the options actually got cut off, whoops.

>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.
>[Manipulation] Offer your services as a hired gun.
>[Manipulation] Offer to drive part of the way.
>[Intuit] Try to haggle his price.
>Agree to the price and try to figure out a way to make up the difference.
>Thank him for his time and look for another option.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5825152
>>[Manipulation] Offer to drive part of the way.
>>
>>5825152

>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.

“I’m good with a wrench - let me take a look at your vehicles and I’ll earn my keep.”

Our girl has 4 points in Logic, no doubt she’ll be able to spot and rectify some issues here
>>
>>5825106
>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.
>>
>>5825152
>>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.
>>
I had a dream where a catastrophic typo convinced everyone this was a 40k/Pokemon quest, and when I came to close the vote I found 40 posts asking about evolution mechanics and reactor fuel rods. Woke up in a cold sweat.

..anyway.
>[Logic] Engines aren't your forte, but you did know something about machines.
Writing.
>>
“Do your vehicles receive regular service?” You ask, pointing at the truck parked next to you.

“Yeah? We got a guy here who looks them over.” Cad replied.

“What happens if something goes wrong in the field?” You press.

“Usually we can limp them back home or tow 'em if we really need to." Cad shrugged. “That or we can commit a little tech-heresy to keep them sputtering.”

“I'm moderately skilled at the maintenance of engines.” You lie, lightly. While it was true that your model was intended to possibly be marketed to tech-adepts as a form of assistant, and you had been given knowledge of a number of machines and devices as a matter of course, you had only been specifically indoctrinated with machinery pertinent to your job. Given that your intended role was on a dock, the things you were most familiar with were cranes and forklifts. “If anything goes wrong, I can repair in the field.”

“You some kind of tech-adept?"

“...no.” You admit. “I am not trained by Mars. But I am still capable."

“Can you, now?” Cad replies. “You willing to prove it?”

“Yes.” You say, unable to back down now.

“Then I suppose we should...” Cad trailed off, then looked uncertain. “Do we actually have anything for her to...?”

“Liv's truck is having that power problem.” His companion offered.

“Didn't Ken take a look at it?”

“Nah, said it wasn't important so long as it ran.”

Cad looks at you again, shrugs and then gestures to one of the trucks further down the line. “Well. You take a look and tell me.”

You nod, carefully, and walk over carefully, glancing at Cad each time you feel like you're getting close, only for him to shake his head and gesture for you to keep going. Three trucks down, then five- it was only on seven that he gestured for you to stop. Paradoxically, this one seemed to be in better condition than the others, with few bumps and a covering of paint that was only worn at the joints in the body. When you lift the hood, though, you find an engine that would make a Enginseer wince.

It was a mess of unbound piping, loose electrical cabling and badly socketed parts.

You stare at it. Then you glance at Cad, who gave you a thumbs up.
>>
>>5826335
The manufacturer's mark on the inside of the frame is that this was a Malignax-pattern Ground Truck, which meant it was surprisingly new for the underhive. You suppose that the Abraham-pattern would have likely ceased to function after centuries of continued use regardless of how lovingly they were maintained. Regardless, you resolve to do what you can, and begin pulling apart the engine's internal piping and wiring. Without any augmetics and only the most simple tools you're able to coax out from the rattling box under the seat, you're limited to merely disassembling what you can reach.

...not that you would know how to do much more than that.

When you press the ignition switch and invoke the machine spirit, the engine turns with a clumsy coughing sound. Pressing the accelerator pedal only makes it screech harder.

Still. You know the basic rites of maintenance- and you also have the advantage of actually understanding the size of parts. With it, you're able to refill the appropriate reservoirs of oil and lubricants from bottles, pull electrical wiring from being pulled into gaps in the internals of the engine, and in more than one place swapping sets of pipes so that their diameters actually match the valves they're attached to.

You couldn't identify the issue, in the end - in fact, you're ignorant to what the issue even was... but you're fairly certain that when you turn the ignition, the engine gives off a much louder and healthier roar than it had before.

Cad looks up in surprise from a half-eaten sandwich as you halt the engine, and comes ambling over as you slide yourself out of the seat. “Well, I'll be damned...” He muses. “Guess you know what you're doing, after all. What did you even do?”

“I performed the holy rites of maintenance.” You answer, not untruthfully, but also to avoid admitting you weren't sure, either.

“Proved me wrong, I guess.” He thinks to himself, rubbing his chin thoughtfully. “Well, if you're willing to take a look at our engines every night, I suppose for the extra insurance and the fact that you got this working, I could cut your fare to... I dunno, forty thrones sound good to you?”

That left you with at least twenty in change. “It does.” You agree.

Cad grins from behind a grime-soaked hand. “What's your name, anyway?"

“I...” You hesitate. Your designation was quite simple, but you were also warned by the Voice to avoid revealing your true nature to those outside your employer's confidence. The reasoning had never been revealed to you, but if it was intended to protect you in the upper hive, it likely applied below it, as well... or, you could pass it off as a name of someone belonging to the tech cults. Or you could lie...

>Your designation: A-414.
>Humanize it somehow- A-414... 41... At... yt... Ayta? Ayat?
>Take a name you heard earlier.
>Make something up based on your surroundings.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5826339
>[Write-In] Lebesnati. High Gothic for 'Cauldron Born'. It is apt enough as a pseudonym.
>>
>>5826370

Support. Bez for short?
>>
>>5826375
Maybe, but I'm kinda partial to the idea of the locals calling us 'Nattie'.
>>
>>5826339
>Your designation: A-414.
Why would we lie?
>>
>>5826416
Dunno, why did we lie about our mechanical credentials?
>>
>>5826339
>>Humanize it somehow- A-414... 41... At... yt... Ayta? Ayat?
Ayla
>>
>>5826339
>Make something up based on your surroundings
>>
>>5826339
>Humanize it somehow- A-414... 41... At... yt... Ayta? Ayat?
>>
>>5826609
+1
>>
Hum. It's a narrow margin, so how about we zoom in a little on the current lead(s), get a better feel?
>Ayta
>Ayat
>Ayla
>Alay
>Lebesnati
>>
>>5827160
>>Ayla
>>
>>5827160

>Lebesnati

Bez for short!
>>
>>5827160
>Lebesnati
>>
>>5827160
Lebesnati A-414 (pronounce it all in high gothic and let these hivers figure out how to say it phonetically)
>>
>>5827160
>>Lebesnati
>>
Alright, Lebesnati it is. Writing.
>>
>>5826339
This is a fine quest ya got here.

>panics because this place isnt under imperial control
>>
“I- er-” You waver slightly as you try to find the words, your grasp of Low Gothic briefly failing you. Was it appropriate to just give your designation? You knew those names were normal among the Adeptus Mechanicus, and you had been told to give your name as if you were one of the Mechanicus, but among these people who seemed to have little, if any ties to the Mechanicus, you best- “Ego sum lebesnati!” You blurt out in High Gothic before you have any time to think.

Cad stares at you blankly for a second, as you look at him stock-still, holding your breath as the idiocy of what you just said hits you.

Way to hide what you are, A-414.

“...Leabess...natti?” Cad says, slowly. “That's your name?”

“Ah...” It wasn't incorrect, although you suspect your creator might have preferred ‘vatgrown’ or another technical term. “It is.”

“Lebes... er...” Cad shrugs it off. “I'm sure I'll learn it. We leave right at shift change tomorrow morning, think you can make it?"

“When's that?” You ask, fishing around in your pocket and pulling out your bundle of thrones. You've ordered them precisely, and so you're able to count out exactly forty in bills and change without looking.

“You'll know because they fire up the crop beds around that time.” He says, holding out a hand for the bundle of cash you hand over. “Even if you're inside, the light's gonna half-blind you.”

He must mean the greenhouses they set up. In that case, since they were on now, you likely had an entire day before you needed to show up for the convoy.

You retreat from the loading area, going back to the center of town to count your current supplies. No more than twenty thrones, and your ration bars. You had roughly eight on you now, and you could get by on two a day, if you needed to. Strictly, though, you'd prefer to eat at least three. That was four days of food, if you stretched it, which meant you needed to make up the remaining two days somehow, either now or on the road. At four thrones a bar, you could afford to buy four bars with your remaining money, but would that be worth it?

It was always possible for you to somehow forage or hunt for food - although you doubt there's any good hunting other then vermin down here. Also barring the fact that you scarcely had any idea how to aim a firearm beyond the basics of how to unload one and anoint it with sacred oils. Stealing is was another option - given you were leaving tomorrow, even if your theft was noticed, any search for you would come up short. Stealing it from the convoy was another option, as well. You could also just go without it, or beg for it.

You feel a pang from your stomach at that thought, but it was an option. It would free up money to get something else- tools, maybe. Or scant electronics, something.
>>
>>5828523
Picking up another odd job was viable, but you'd then have to show up tired the next day. You're not sure that's a good idea, either.

>Buy the food.
>Buy a weapon to hunt with.
>Buy some basic tools.
>[Vigilance] Steal the food from a greenhouse or store.
>Beg for the money and food.
>[Strain] Find another odd job.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5828524
>>[Vigilance] Steal the food from a greenhouse or store.
>>
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>>5828523
>[Strain] Find another odd job.
wörk wörk wörk wörk
>>
>>5828524

>[Vigilance] Steal the food from a greenhouse or store

No reason not to, really
>>
>>5829045
Support are strippers a thing? We are atleast big thigh
>>
>>5829056
we are short by the standards of this hive level. Maybe we can pull off the cute angle?
>>
Rolled 2 (1d2)

Okay, that's... two and two, from the looks of it? We'll roll off, although I might be able to squeeze some of one into the other. 1 for working, 2 for robbin'.

Wrrriting.
>>
>pic related
>its you

We're gonna have a hell of a time once our hair starts to grow out.
>>
>>5830220
You've actually got some hair, since accelerated growth logically means some accelerated hair growth.

Also test, can I post again?
>>
Nice. Pardon the delay, folks. Seems there was some kind of posting error for the entire board when I would normally update.
>>
You couldn't afford to buy everything you needed through legitimate means, and you didn't have the time to work- that meant you had only one recourse. Ordinarily, you'd feel guilty about the idea, but against these people, it was hardly treason. They were clearly some manner of leech, taking facilities from their rightful Imperial owners and co-opting them for their own usage. You were starting to get the feeling they might even be criminals. You think. Probably.

That raises a question for you, though. Where would you actually rob? A few obvious targets present themselves, and it proves extremely easy to scope out the target. After all, you can just simply walk in as a customer to most of them.

Business here takes a few forms: most are stalls, set up over small storage units with rolling shutters. When opened for the day, the secure latch is lifted and the storefront pushed out from within before being set up. As the day drags on, more and more stalls are stowed and folded away, but there's always someone present- guards, merchants, even the rare truck trundling through the street. On sale are a few stalls shoveling out mass-baked bread and stews - some made by breaking down corpsestarch and mixing it with ration wafers and boiling the combined mixture down, others made by leafy greens from the growhouses.

You walk through, turning to let others pass you as they filter through the streets, coming to and from the hab blocks raised up above the street-level businesses. Relative to the streets, where merchants ducked through simple doors and flaps to access their wares, the prospect of stealing directly from the habs with their individual locks was a much worse idea, since you'd have to get through the front, pick or break through a door or window and hope one of the residents wouldn't spot you.

Putting those out of your mind, you begin casing the full-on stores that dotted the streets. Not mere stalls, but taking up the bottom level of entire buildings. They seemed to exist downstream from the stalls- the bars and cafes served food that seemed to be made with products from the stalls - sauces, breads and meats made into sandwiches, fried breads and fine stews. They were also the only businesses that sold more heavy hardware: a blacksmith was based out of one of them, hammering chunks of metal into rough tools- knives, thin rods for handles and fans of thin metal for rakes and brooms. Even a few improvised hammers.

Something about that puzzles you. On any hive world, new tools straight from the Manufactorum should be in ready supply. Why would they be making their own? After all, Mechanicum-produced weapons seemed to be in no short supply.
>>
>>5830826
Stealing tools probably wouldn't help you, though. There's more than a few armories along the street, even a few aimed at drivers offering mechanical services, tools, replacement parts that are wildly out of spec for ground trucks and more- but none of them sell food. And that's what you need right now. Food is in ready supply at the crop beds, though...

You couldn't not notice them, they were all over the city - especially in the erected center column - and their lights made it obvious where all the entrances are. Workers regularly moved in and out of them, pushing past the plastic drapes to work at beds of linked crops suspended in hydroponic basins inside. Most seemed to be growing some kind of large brown fungus, with room made for small trees, leafy greens and rooted vegetables in the spaces between and underneath the benches.

You needed food, and there was plenty of it for the taking- but the walls were clear and that could be a problem when you didn't want to be seen... the streets didn't clear out at night, after all.

With the ease you got a job at the bar, you had an idea of how to get into these places, but the question remained of who to hit...

>Another bar, for the food and drink.
>The stall market.
>One of the armories.
>One of the greenhouses.
>>
>>5830828

>The stall market.

Maybe we can pretend to pick up on order on someone else’s behalf?
>>
>>5830828
>>The stall market
>>
>>5830828
>>The stall market.
>>
>>5830828
>Another bar, for the food and drink.
come on dine and dash
>>
>>5830828
>>Another bar, for the food and drink.
>>
>>5830828
>The stall market.
>>
>The stall market.
Writing. Might try for a shorter voting period today so we can rerail on a more normal time for me to write these things.
>>
It's curious that there are guards here.

Not so much that a commercial district - tiny as this one is - would have law enforcement, but that there's law enforcement in this part of the hive at all. Even more that they wear the colors of the Suns. It ran contrary to your understanding of what it was like outside of Imperial control. The underhive was a place full of special interest factions at best and lawless gangs at worst, it was curious that any group large enough to develop it's own internal police force would form. Were the rest of the Sector Primus groups like this? Or were the Suns unique?

For now, it didn't matter.

What mattered most was finding a stall that you could confidently get away with hitting. With all of the activity you were facing down here, you didn't have the luxury of being choosy with your target, which made it difficult to steal from a stall that specifically sold what you were looking for. There just wasn't any knowing when that specific stall was going to be hit, so you'd have to watch for your opportunity and take it.

You could deduce a simple pattern as soon as you started observing. Merchants arrive with new wares for the day, before opening stalls and putting out the new wares, along with old wares from inside their storage units. The ones that were already open must have come earlier, while the merchants that arrive empty-handed must restock at different points in the day.

All you needed to confirm where the money went after closing was watching one of the stalls. Most of the merchants pocketed their earnings and left, while others placed them into secure metal boxes or scurried them away into places you couldn't see. The earnings were either on them or hidden among their wares, somehow. Despite the sophistication of the operation, you didn't see anything resembling a central depository, so most wealth would be stored in people's homes or a secret location, like stashing records the nobility wanted ‘lost’ behind a book shelf.

The people down here were wary, and you were sure many would be watching for the sorts of underhanded tactics you wanted to use on them. Despite the almost instinctual disdain you felt for these people, you couldn't blame them, and regardless, you'd have to be careful with your approach. Approaching them directly like any other customer was by far the safest way to interact without raising the suspicion of the guards, but it also had the lowest payout unless you tried to risk it. On the other hand, the biggest payout would be directly robbing a unit by far - even if it didn't have anything beyond currency, you could purchase whatever you needed the next morning.

Of course, the actual safest approach would be to somehow steal from a merchant's private stores - in their home or an entirely separate place, probably deeper in the hive - but with only one day to find anything, how did you know you wouldn't just turn up empty-handed?
>>
>>5832221
The guards still bothered you, and you couldn't place why until something clicked. Who would pay them? Did they have a pay structure? And if so, where did the money for that come from? Taxes? The idea seemed almost absurd, which made you suspect the merchants paid them rent or contracted their labor. It would explain why the Suns bothered to keep such an elaborate presence here, after all.

>[Intuit] Use social engineering to convince someone to hand over their wares.
>[Vigilance/Strain] Covertly gain access to a closed unit.
>[Manipulation] Fleece a few easily-missed items off merchants.
>[Manipulation/Strain] Fleece some major items off merchants.
>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.
>[Intuit/Strain] Pretend to be one of the enforcers and ‘confiscate’ wares.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5832222

>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.

This kind of detective work is our strong suit.
>>
>>5832222
>>[Intuit/Strain] Pretend to be one of the enforcers and ‘confiscate’ wares.
>>
>>5832222
>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.
>>
>>5832222
>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.
>>
>>5832222
>>[Manipulation] Fleece a few easily-missed items off merchants.
>>
>>5832222
>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.
>>
>>5832222
>[Intuit] Use social engineering to convince someone to hand over their wares.
>>
>[Logic] Deduce the location of a single merchant's stash.
Writing.
>>
You decide to make an investment.

One of the stalls was a young woman with hair bound by a blue handkerchief - another Oiler, you surmise - selling tough bread stuffed with what seemed to be some kind of congealed soup. You hand her five thrones - a precious amount of your remaining reserves - and take the offered bun.

It was only one throne more than half-a-day's ration, but it still felt like you were letting value slip away as you bite into it. The crust was incredibly tough, and the inside was vaguely mealy, but warm and savory from the condensed soup. You think it must have some kind of meat inside it, but you're not entirely sure what meat tastes like...

Real meat, that is. You are already well-acquainted with the soothing taste of corpsestarch.

Without benches in the square, you find nearby steps to sit on, huddling to the side as workers move past you in a steady stream. You eat, and allow yourself to soak in the movements of the crowd around you. Merchants and customers came and went at equal speeds, even some who appeared to be traveling would find other merchants to offload their wares to, or negotiate with to borrow their stalls for a day. When they closed their stalls for the day, most merchants hurried home, or went to other businesses, which made sense, but...

No, wait.

Some merchants took breaks to eat or to restock, returning with new stacks of wares, fresh breads, doughs, but you realize that some of them exit the area in a strange direction. They would follow the crowd initially, but then break off, turning into areas that left the city and didn't appear to connect to any of the other merchants or producers in the area. An hour later, they would mysteriously reappear - returning with the crowd as if they really did just go to do some shopping or visit their homes.

They all seemed to tend towards the gates that shared the same wall as the grinders. Scurrying their wares away in the disused parts of the hab, perhaps?

You think back to the locker you found before. It was unobtrusive enough, and if everyone thought they'd be empty, it might be a decent hiding place?

You stand up, casually tug up the stubborn zipper on your coveralls yet again and join the crowd. Some of the merchants were moving out, and this was your best chance to follow. They start to disperse with the crowd, but you follow the ones who wind up dispersing away from the crowds. Stealth wasn't your strong suit, but you were engineered to be unobtrusive, and that made you easily able to hide yourself among the taller people around you.
>>
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>>5832947
That changed as you found your way out of the crowds, and you found yourself suddenly out of your depth. Where was there to hide in long, straight corridors? There wasn't any, and instead you opt to use your previous strategy and pretend like you were supposed to be there. When they glanced back to look, you would intentionally keep going straight, or take a different turn than them as if you had your own business.

If you spied them at a distant intersection, you would intentionally avoid them and loop around, forming a search area for you to narrow down. This strategy takes you far, and you begin to find blocked off and sealed sections of walls, yet again breached and closed to create the perimeter that seemingly enclosed the grinders. From this side, the barricades were flat expanses of welded metal, clearly intended to be difficult to find purchase on, but it only reminded you that you were on the side of whatever they were designed to keep out. They had clearly been battered by years of use, with scratches and the occasional pockmark from firearms present... although some were so old that you wonder if they had simply been part of whatever metal was repurposed for them.

As you travel deeper, the hab lights become more irregular. More of the walls become stripped, and the floor is occasionally damp with collected puddles of condensation that your boots leave ripples in as you walk. Finally, though, you catch sight of what you've been hoping for: the unmistakable shadow of one of the merchants traveling in the opposite direction than you. They were heading back, and that meant you could close your search area.

You close your loop, moving deeper into the underhive - the bilges, if you recall - to create your zone of searching. All you needed to do now was systematically close down these blocks, one by one, until you found one of the stashes. And if you were lucky, the person you saw had only just turned back around, with the stash being nearby.

Down each hallway you come across, you open each and every locker you find, followed by searching every sub-hall and maintenance closet, along with the rare storage rooms. They were all abandoned, likely the Suns work trying to keep their guard perimeter clear. Your eyes adjust to the darkness of the intermittent lighting as you rummage, and you're soon moving at speed, aware of how as you get closer to the city, the likelihood of actually finding one of these stashes goes down.

It soon becomes clear that whoever it was had intentionally taken a convoluted path - likely to foil people like you - and they had deposited their goods somewhere away from where you had seen them, which forced you to be thorough with your searches. You pull rags and discarded hypodermic needles, bandages, broken equipment and who knows what else aside, gripping it through the cloth of your coveralls to avoid touching them directly. You feel the metal siding, rattling on it in case it was loose or-
>>
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>>5832953
What was that noise?

You turn suddenly, staring into one of the darkened hallways. Your eyes narrow slightly.

...no, doesn't look like it was anything.

Turning your attention back to the next storeroom becomes a fatal mistake, as with your back turned, you only hear the rush of air, the rapid footsteps and the heavy breathing before you feel the impact lift you up off your feet. You hit the wall with a gasp, the wind suddenly crushed out of you by someone else's weight, and get just as quickly pinned. A garbled string of Low Gothic issues from a mouth just behind your ear, and you feel spittle spray against your ear and neck. Your thoughts were distorting and tumbling, mixed in with the pain of being constricted like this and the pressure on the soft tissues of your body disrupting the neuron cultures that had been placed there. You felt sick, your head feeling as if it was about to burst from the pressure, your veins pounding and your skin burning.

You writhe in it's grip, panic building at the feeling of a thin, elongated hand wrapped around your bicep and digging into the flesh. With a burst of manic strength, you flip around and find yourself face-to-face with something out of a nightmare. In the gloom, you can only see the vaguest suggestion of a face, but it's enough to see the elongated jaw, beady eyes and matted hairs clinging to it's head. It was a mockery of the human form, clutching at you and screaming as it tries to push you away with it's thin, reedy limbs.

>[Omnissian] Your nose fills with the taste of ozone. Your nerves burn, and the area around you suddenly fills with the blue light of crawling sparks. A hand reaches out, and you grip it's skull in desperation.
>[Aetheric] The tide returns to your head, and you squeeze your eyes as it throbs and threatens to burst, your vision filling with an odd silver light as in a sudden explosion of force, it's outside of your head.
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
>>
>>5832956
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.

Biomancy is cool.
>>
>>5832965
It's actually Aetheric, if you want anything psyker-related. They're all very different sources.
>>
>>5832956

>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.

The typical 40k player
>>
>>5832956
>>[Omnissian] Your nose fills with the taste of ozone. Your nerves burn, and the area around you suddenly fills with the blue light of crawling sparks. A hand reaches out, and you grip it's skull in desperation.
>>
>>5832956
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
>>
>>5832956
>[Aetheric] The tide returns to your head, and you squeeze your eyes as it throbs and threatens to burst, your vision filling with an odd silver light as in a sudden explosion of force, it's outside of your head.
>>
>>5832956
>[Omnissian] Your nose fills with the taste of ozone. Your nerves burn, and the area around you suddenly fills with the blue light of crawling sparks. A hand reaches out, and you grip it's skull in desperation.
>>
>>5832956
>>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
>>
>>5832956
>[Aetheric] The tide returns to your head, and you squeeze your eyes as it throbs and threatens to burst, your vision filling with an odd silver light as in a sudden explosion of force, it's outside of your head.
>>
>>5832956
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
Battle Sister
>>
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
Fun fact: this was supposed to be vote 3, but then the decisions all ended up navigating around the events that were supposed to prompt it for two weeks.
>>
>>5832956
>[Genolysis] You feel blood running down your arm, and you scream in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.
>>
Something warm and hot runs down your arm, and your arms piston in a panic, clawing at your attacker with sudden strength that surprises even you. A guttural screaming is ringing off the walls, too deep and feminine to be the creature's- until you realize it's you. Something is clenching deep within you, flooding your body with burning heat, heart suddenly hammering and lungs beating hard before you lunge forward.

The creature almost whimpers in surprise as you ram it, throwing it off it's feet and flinging it against the wall. It hits with a dull crack, and through the adrenaline-filled haze, you realize that it's thin limbs must be fragile. You're almost beyond rational thinking as you continue forward on your hands and feet, fingers scrabbling into the thin grooves in the floor that separated the paneling as you go on the offensive.

To your surprise, the creature skitters back, slurring Low Gothic words together as it puts as much space between you and it as possible, retreating quickly back into the shadows of the intersection. Never turning it's back on you until it was around the corner and gone, it's strained voice still bouncing off the wall.

“Merrcay... cheep... jours...”

Part of you wants to go after it, to crawl across the floor and hunt it down, but your legs start to shake, and you can only squat on the floor. You breathe heavily, clutching a side and grimacing as fresh pain radiates from the deep scrapes where it's claws had dug into your skin, bruises surrounding the puncture marks.

With an effort, you stumble to your feet and open the locker again. An adrenaline-fueled kick breaks the loose backing off, and you push it into the thin recess behind the wall paneling of the hive. A small bundle was wedged into the gap between it and the piping that ran behind the hive walls. You pull it out, feeling a small bundle of coins and bills in your grip. You pull it open, and are gratified to see bundles of paper bills, coins and - surprisingly - a few foil-wrapped ration bars and a seemingly random collection of ammunition for some kind of stub weapon.

The ration bars made sense on second thought. They were currency down here, of course they'd be kept with other valuables. The ammunition didn't. You pick it up and frown at the manufacturer's markings. They were mismatched and disjointed, clearly they were either tampered with or were castoffs at the original manufactorum. Regardless, that didn't help you now.
>>
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>>5834396
Your thoughts are getting clearer, and you realize that's because the pain in your arm is subsiding. You lift it up with a frown and see the trickle of blood running down it has almost entirely stopped, leaving your arm smeared with it and throbbing with a droning ache that made you wince. There were thick scabs already formed where the puncture wounds had been made, even if the arm itself was nowhere close to recovery. Even lifting it took a concerted effort, with the muscle protesting as if you had spent all day doing basic labor.

An odd nausea churned in your gut. Some part of you wanted to whimper, but you push it down and purse your lips unhappily.

Quality gained: [Genolysis] There's an occasional murmur in your bones. A ripple of muscle, and the pulsing of glands you have but shouldn't. Strain gained from choices that are based on Conditioning do not cause Strain on a d10 roll of 7 or higher. Strain Checks based on Conditioning add a success on a 4 or higher, and double successes on a 9 or 10. Additionally, on a result of 10, one more die may be rolled for the test.

This wasn't in your spec.

None of this was in your spec.

Words the Voice had used for human emotions churn in your head, as you try to remember which one this feeling was supposed to be, but it's all drowned out by a question rolling across your mind:

Do you actually know how you are ‘imperfect’?

The thought sprouts in your mind, and for a second you think you're going to cough up more amniotic fluid, but you cover your mouth and take slow, deep breaths until it subsides. Focus. You need to get out of here, now.

You glance at the stash. Was it worth taking the whole thing? At a glance, you could calculate it contained roughly... four hundred thrones. That was more than some hab workers made in an entire month. Gross. Before taxes and miscellaneous tithes. It was also a noticeable amount of money to suddenly come into. Did you dare take it, and risk someone coming after you for it?

>Take only what you need, plus the ration bars.
>Take most of, but not all of it.
>Take all of it.

>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>>5834398
>Take all of it.
>[Optional] Take the ammunition.

The adage goes 'if you can't carry cash, carry a weapon'. I say we go and get ourselves a weapon so we can carry both. And maybe some clothes that don't have identifying markings...
>>
>>5834398
>>Take most of, but not all of it.
>>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>>5834510

supporting, having too much money is a good problem to have.

My first thought is we should immediately buy a small slugthrower for self defense
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>>5834398
>Take most of, but not all of it.
>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
We should take all the bills and the ration bars and the ammo
>>
>>5834398
>>Take most of, but not all of it.
>>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>>5834398
>Take all of it.
>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>>5834398
>>Take all of it.
>>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>>5834398
>Take only what you need, plus the ration bars.
>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
>>
>Take all of it.
>[Optional] Take the ammunition.
Writing.
>>
The bundle remains clutched to your chest as you limp your way back into the city, occasionally repressing a little whimper as your body begins to regularly ache from pain. Gradually, though, as whatever strange function of your body gets to work, the limp slowly lessens until you're able to walk more or less normally.

When you enter the city, you become acutely aware of the eyes of a few guards being drawn to your tattered clothes, and the bloody scabs that stuck to your skin. If they had something to say about that, they kept it to themselves, but you couldn't ditch the feeling that they were staring at you. If it was because of the blood, or your stolen prize, you couldn't say, but what you did know is that you couldn't bear to stay here for long.

The first thing you do, obviously, is buy ten ration bars from an armored stall with a hand-punched sign proclaiming that it dealt in ‘conversions’. That's three a day, and it takes exactly forty of your thrones- roughly a tenth of your new savings. You breathe a sigh of relief. At least you could afford to eat the rest of the journey. With the amount you had now, you could also easily afford a large bottle of water to keep your own personal supply. You still didn't think they'd actually leave you dying of thirst if you ran out on the road, but it never hurt to be prepared.

Transporting such a heavy bottle requires a rucksack, though - one seemingly made from locally sourced leathers and crudely stitched together... or torn from the upholstery of fine furniture. Regardless, it worked and felt sturdy enough.

That left the question of what else to spend your money on - you had plenty spare, but your small stature and inability to actually carry much functionally limited how much money you could actually spend. Converted all into ration bars, the amount of money you had would mean you'd be trying to carry nearly a hundred of the damn things. Light as they are, at that quantity, you'd topple over.

No, it was better to make one or two wise investments. The tattered state of your clothes immediately came to mind, and for a second you found yourself fantasizing about the robes of an Imperial bureaucrat. They were not supposed to be stylish garments, of course, but you had been educated enough on the etiquette required of those working in close proximity with the Imperial authority to know that there were several fashions regardless; from the tailored uniform suits of past years to the contemporary clinging gowns and even the elaborate tailored jumpsuits of the original settlers.

Then you remember where you are, and try not to feel disappointed.
>>
>>5835932
There would be no such thing this deep in the hive... but still, it might not be a terrible idea to replace your garments with something more practical and less stolen. Less stolen than the money. That would be spent. Thus hiding the fact that-

You break your looping train of thought. On the other hand, if the journey had any delays, it wouldn't hurt to acquire some extra supplies to last you more days than you had planned. And while the idea of handling a weapon before had seemed absurd, your experience in the tunnel had taught you otherwise. Whatever had happened, it... well, you couldn't plan on it happening again.

For the following vote, you had roughly 10 Wealth.

>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>A weapon for self-defense. (3 Wealth)
>Tools- not that you're entirely sure what kind would help. (2 Wealth)
>Was it possible to acquire a vehicle of your own? (8 Wealth)

>[Optional] New garments. (1-4 Wealth)
>>
>>5835933
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>Was it possible to acquire a vehicle of your own? (8 Wealth)
>[Optional] New garments. (1-4 Wealth)
>>
>>5835933
>A weapon for self-defense. (3 Wealth)
>Tools- not that you're entirely sure what kind would help. (2 Wealth)
>[Optional] New garments. (1-4 Wealth)

Lets us have a good bit of stuff and, depending on the final cost of clothes, keep a small buffer of cash for when we arrive.
>>
>>5835933
>>[Optional] New garments. (1-4 Wealth)
Who needs weapons? Spend it all on looking fabulous
>>
>>5836152

Supporting, we need a range of supplies.
>>
>>5835933
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>A weapon for self-defense. (3 Wealth)
>[Optional] New garments. (1-4 Wealth)
>>
>>5836442
+1
>>
>come in to check the vote
>wait why the fuck is everyone voting for multiple options
>tfw forgot Choose One, it's literally cut off on my clipboard
Aaaaaaaaahwell that's fine, actually. We'll handle clothes first and... seems like a lot in favor for a weapon. I wish there was an easier way to clear an entire shopping list in one vote, but alas.
>>
>>5836926
To be clear, we'll swing back to the main shopping menu again, it's just that this is the cleanest way to handle these options when some of them have different sub-choices.
>>
You could see the eyes of passerby sliding over to you, and instead of moving on like they normally would, they glance down and linger on the tears in your sleeves, across your chest and on your leg. It was rather more attention than you'd ever want, and you find yourself hurrying into the crowd to find anonymity among the throng of bodies.

Was there even a tailor in this city, beyond the stalls that sold shapeless hand-sewn aprons and clothes? A brief flash through your memory- wait, yes, there was. You had seen it when you walked into the city.

Abruptly, you turn around in the flow of the crowd and begin pushing you way back towards the city center, away from the stall merchants and to the cast buildings, where true businesses were ran. Your eyes search for the display you thought you had seen on your way in. Suspended shirts and a rigged hololith proclaiming- there it was. A plascrete building with a wooden sign bolted into the rough surface simply proclaiming ‘TAILOR’ in stenciled Low Gothic, while a holo played a stuttering, repeating animation of scissors clicking over and over in front of it. They seemed to be the wrong kind for clothing, but perhaps it was originally used for a barber. A soft shirt was lain on display in the window - basic, but clearly made from fine cloth for this deep in the hive.

By this point, you had slid the precious pouch with your spoils inside your coveralls, moving some of the currency within to other pockets. That would let you pay for things without fumbling with large wads of cash in view of everyone. And if someone stole the pouch back, you wouldn't lose all it contained.

The door opens with a gentle tinkle of a bell, and you flinch gently at the sudden sound.

A man stands behind the counter, slowly looking up at the woman scared by his door chime. He raises an eyebrow.

“...hello.” You say, closing the door behind you gently and stepping forward slowly.

“...afternoon.” He regarded you with some suspicion, as if he couldn't quite fathom what brought you here, his eyes constantly flicking over you, lingering on your tattered clothes and the blasted zipper of your coveralls. His shoulders draping with blue cloth and white embroidery - another Oiler, then? “Can I help you with something?”

You close your eyes and take a deep breath, then open them again. “Yes.” You allow yourself to relax into the manners you had been taught in the waters. “I wish to purchase a set of garments.”

It was his turn to look slightly startled, possibly not expecting such formal speech from a person who looked like she had been recently mugged. He recovered with amicable speed. “I see.” He began, slowly. “Are you with the Suns?”

“No.” You say, truthfully. “Although I do business with them.” Which was also accurate, if you counted paying fare.
>>
>>5837143
“Is that so?” He's looking at you with a more critical eye, now. Something in his expression softens slightly, and he leans back as he shifts into a less defensive posture. “Are these... ‘garments’ for work, play or something else?”

You hesitate. It wasn't too late to back out now and get something cheap. Just to get yourself to the next level. You didn't need to commit to something more expensive now, but...

>Go back to the stalls and purchase something basic. (1 Wealth)
>"I need something practical and durable to wear in my day-to-day that actually fits me." (2 Wealth)
>"My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity. Is there something that's not too restrictive...?" (3 Wealth)
>"I am an Imperial servant. I need to present myself as fit for the station of a scribe." (3 Wealth)
>"I'm traveling, and I require something that's capable of protecting me." (4 Wealth)
>>
>>5837144
>"My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity. Is there something that's not too restrictive...?" (3 Wealth)
>>
Together with the weapon and tools, a 3 Wealth option here will leave us with 2 Wealth to spare, which should be enough to keep us situated in food for a few days while we get the lay of the land in Uptown and figure out our opportunities there.
>>
>>5837144

>"I am an Imperial servant. I need to present myself as fit for the station of a scribe." (3 Wealth)

This is probably the superior long term investment.
>>
>>5837200
Considering all the torn down empty spaces where there clearly used to be Aquilas, and the way it was previously mentioned that there had been an uprising, openly calling ourselves an Imperial seems like an ill-advised move.
>>
>>5837213

Valid counterpoint but for all we know, that’s just the underhive. I’m hoping for greater Imperial presence as we ascend into the Hive proper
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>>5837144
>>"My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity. Is there something that's not too restrictive...?" (3 Wealth)
>>
>>5837144
>"My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity. Is there something that's not too restrictive...?" (3 Wealth)
Buy a ball dress that is also good enough to fight in
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>>5837144
>>"I'm traveling, and I require something that's capable of protecting me." (4 Wealth)
>>
>>5837485

>ballgown that we can fight in

Lol, touch grass, anon
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>>5838130
>>
>"My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity. Is there something that's not too restrictive...?" (3 Wealth)
Writing.
>>
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“My work requires me to be presentable in a social capacity." You explain. "Is there something that's not too restrictive...?”

“That can depend.” The man replied, pulling a pair of spectacles seemingly twisted from an antenna wire from his pocket. “Is this work in service, pleasure, business...?”

“I am an assistant." You slip into your specification briefly. “I organize, run numbers, memorize important information, manage inventory...”

“Ah.” He nods. “You work with the main office, I take it?”

“No.” You shake your head. “I am currently not in service.”

“Is that so?” He seemed contemplative, moving along behind the counter and gesturing for you to follow. “That opens up some options without their dress code.”

At a gap in the wooden countertop, he moves out onto the main floor, where only a few sparse racks were arranged, displaying what seemed to be more examples than garments ready to buy. You saw mostly leathers, with roughspun cloth underneath, or synthfabrics on display next to natural fabrics. Some had minor embellishments on the buttons and lapels- some kind of hard organic material you couldn't place. It wasn't bone, at any rate.

In the corner, a gap had been left in the wall of shelves, creating a small booth space hidden from the door and the crowds outside. It had a mirror leaned up against one side, and a small stool for the person being measured to stand on. For a brief moment, you wonder who the dirty woman standing next to the man was, before you realize that it was you.

Of course, you knew your own face. It was virtually identical to that of the rest of your model line, and you had seen it in the waters before, but it had just been an image, there. When the face twitched in recognition, and focused on itself, you instantly feel slightly disconcerted at how the image is actually blinking and moving. Like the rest of your model, you had been created to be unobtrusive, but easy on the eyes, not an eyecatcher like the K-model. A firm jaw, and a rounded face that was pretty enough to not embarrass your owner in polite company, and yet generic in such a way that you would never upstage them. Brown hair came in an unsightly bird's nest down your neck, barely touching your shoulders.

Instantly, you frown, and pick at one of your would-be bangs. It was as long as the rest of your hair, of course, and had wound up plastered to the side by what you suspect was dried amniotic fluid.

“Is there a problem?” The tailor asks.

“No.” You let it drop. “I was just thinking that I need to have my hair bobbed. It's unseemly.”

“Ah.” He nods. “I'm told pulling the hair back is also popular with the actuary contingent these days, especially on the upper levels.” He offers.

“I don't know if that's where I'll wind up.” You reply, slightly warily.
>>
>>5838232
Evidently choosing not to take you up on the subject, he turns to the mirror. “You have a short stature, and a small frame, but thankfully you are of normal proportion, unlike an abhuman or mutant. That means you can wear a variety of fashions without looking too out of place, however anything that is necessarily bulky will look strange on your frame." He reaches over and tabs through a rack with well-practiced care before withdrawing a leather jacket - synthleather, from the shininess of the material. “When zipped, keeps your silhouette compressed, professional. Easy to unzip for a more ‘cool’ look, what's beneath can be dressed up or down depending on the occasion. Good for casual wear, but high-quality leather, can be matched for more formal occasions.”

A part of you can't help but be slightly rankled by the implication that you're anything like an abhuman, but you keep his reflected gaze without a twitch at the insinuation. He couldn't have known, after all.

He moves over to your other side, pulling a long, shapeless cloth from where it was folded on a display and letting it unroll, moving it in front of your chin. “Gown, or robe if we add shape. Classic, you can't go wrong, the clingy material is usually very flattering. For warmth and comfort, we can add longer gloves.” He gestures to the shoulders of it. “Mantle for the shoulders. Administratum has used this for thousands of years and will keep doing so. Never goes out of style, but is a bit basic, yes? We can hem the skirt shorter to keep it practical, but it's heavy cloth. Black keeps the daily grime hidden, but we can also do a red or white for a markup.”

You couldn't help a slight longing look at the shape. It... wasn't of the quality you had been promised, but it was clean. After a moment, though, you thought about the prospect of getting it covered in grime and have second thoughts. If you were just going to ruin getting where you needed to go, maybe you should just save your money until you get there...

“Lastly...” He carefully lays the gown on a display and moves over to a display bust, putting his hands on it's shoulders. “A worksuit. Blazer is professional, old-fashioned, but that makes it distinguished." Curiously, instead of the necktie you expected on display with it, the shirt pockets had been moved up high enough to be easily accessible with the blazer still on, and the included pants seemed to not be slacks, but tailored work pants, thick with padding and sewn with extra pockets. “More rugged, less formal, but more practical, and you can dress it up by swapping out the trousers for...” His hand moved to a nearby rack, displaying a tightly-fitted pencil skirt. “A skirt for more formal instances. This style is very popular with Suns and upper gang members, since it comes in layers.”

You nod, carefully. “And it looks like it has the most pockets of any of them.”
>>
>>5838234
“Oh, I would not be so sure.” He gestures to the gown. “You see this, but beneath, for warmth and modesty, more is worn. You can disguise many pockets within a robe, if you are careful. I know a few ladies like to wear a direct bodyglove beneath, and forgo the gown when working. The bodyglove is also very popular with a jacket, since there's less texture from a normal shirt.”

“I see..." You roll the thought around in your head. “How quickly could I get something resized?” You couldn't help but notice all of it seemed comically big on you.

“For a rush job, it would have to be...” He thought for a second, then rattled off a number of thrones. That was surprisingly affordable, for you, although it would take a chunk out of your stolen savings. Perhaps he was lowballing you, after seeing your ratty condition?

“Is there any way I could try on a few?"

“Of course, we will need to do so in order to determine your sizing, anyway. Please.” He gestures to the booth.

In the end, you find yourself being gently prodded into different poses as the tailor wraps a loose tape around different parts of your body, summoning a teenaged girl from somewhere with a few hushed words. She helps him measure, staring up at you with wide, somewhat disbelieving eyes as she slowly revolves around you.

You had to admit, he had drawn you in, and you had somewhat committed now. All of the styles seemed appealing, to an extent. But in the end, you settle on...

>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>The ‘worksuit’ seemed utilitarian, although the style was a bit odd. You could combine it with whatever could be salvaged from your current clothes, as well. So you'd have at least two outfits.
>>
>>5838236
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>>
>>5838236
>>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>>
>>5838236
>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.
I first wanted the gown, but I think this has tomboy energy.
>>
>>5838236

>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.

Trying to fight in a dress is impractical and a silly selection for a bio-android with four dots in Logic.
>>
>>5838236
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>>
>>5838236
>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.
Dresses are silly, get trended
>>
>>5838236
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>>
>>5838236

>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.

Obvious samefagging from the ballgown anon
>>
>>5838519
You sure, anon? Three votes that have voted for different things thus far and one 1pbtid doesn't obviously say samefag.
>>
>>5838236
>The more casual jacket- although you're not sure what ‘cool’ means. It's basic, but practical and light. The leather also seemed decently tough, which was encouraging.

Jacket and Bodyglove combo sounds kino.
>>
>>5838236
>>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
I just think it's cool okay
>>
>>5838236
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
>>
I think that's
>A formal gown. Like he said, you could just forgo it for the bodyglove you'd have underneath if it got in the way. You could move decently quickly in a robe, as well.
Just barely edging it out. Although, if what the other half are interested in is the jacket and bodyglove combo... I might be able to do something for you in a while. Writing.
>>
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Your Wealth has been reduced to 7.

Fabric gently kicks and swishes along your legs as you move through the thoroughfare. You felt warmer than you had in a long time, the ever-present chill of the darker corners of the hive held back by the loose fabric draped around your body, and the insulating leather beneath that.

For once, your feet weren't pinched. That was an encouraging sign that your investment was paying dividends already. The integrated soles of the bodyglove were similar to boots, slipped on over the end of the leg and slid into an internal sleeve to make a tight seal. If you understood it correctly, it was something like a gaiter, preventing excess moisture from entering the boot. That was the benefit of the thing being made from decent-quality synthleather.

At the same time, it was a product of the underhive, and you could tell. While a mountain of material had come off the hem of the gown and the undergarments to account for your height, where it had needed to be stretched or expanded there were obvious patches of differently colored synthleather on the bodyglove. The alterations to the gown were less obvious - mostly bringing in the waist and some subtle loosening to help the fabric sit right on your body - and it was a testament to the skill of the tailor that only the mismatched material gave it away . Still, he had also made the squares of lighter leather that surrounded your bust and hips symmetrical and repeated on both sides, making it look almost like it had been done on purpose.

You had waited for a few hours as the tailor had made the alterations, busying yourself with trying to comb your hair down and wash some of the grime off your face. The tailor's apprentice had shyly offered you a wet cloth, which you took gratefully and managed to stain brown with the grime coming off your face and arms by the time the tailor came out with a test fit. You hadn't quite gotten all of the blood off, but a part of you didn't quite want to scrub it entirely off the layer hiding that you could still feel your flesh mending, skin knitting and fusing back together beneath scabs in ways you didn't want to think about.

Oilers - there was something more to them than you initially thought. They seemed to have a hand in advanced business around here, although it seemed like they weren't directly allied with the Suns. Perhaps they were trade partners?

A shabby wooden building comes into view. Whatever the original builders had intended, you doubted the comical amount of stickers and signs depicting firearms that covered every available inch of the surface was a part of the design plans. The windows were slatted over with an iron grate attached not to the wall, but to heavy plascrete boots that kept it in place over the glass, which themselves were chained to the hive floor.
>>
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>>5839261
On instinct, you pinch the hem of your robe and lift it up gently as you step up and off the street and into another building. You didn't have to do it - given that it was for working in, the tailor had given you several centimeters of ground clearance, so it didn't actually [i[touch[/i] the floor or need to be held up, but the habit had been trained into you thoroughly, and you found it surprisingly difficult to shake despite never actually doing it before.

You had noticed an immediate change in the way people looked at you when you stepped out of the tailor, feeling somewhat more human than when you had went in. They regarded you slightly more warmly, but more importantly, they paid you less mind. Looks directed your way were quickly ended, as they decided you either weren't a threat or weren't worth getting involved with. The burly man behind the counter was clearly the former in mind.

He leaned over the counter and grinned in what he probably thought was a friendly manner, showing multiple crooked teeth. “Hello there, lassie. You in the right place?"

Your eyebrows went up, slightly. “Is this not an armory?”

He laughed, a bellowing sound that reminded you oddly of baffles. “It's a gun store! Not exactly your normal haunt, is it?”

“No.” You admit. “Yet I have need of it.”

The very first thing that stuck out to you about this place was the sheer amount of weapons on display, here. The walls were already lined with stuber pistols fighting for space with stubrifles, but beyond that, knives seemed to come out of every available surface. Some were slid into cups along with identical siblings, others featuring simple engravings and tassel-decorated hilts were laid out in simple wooden boxes, and a few carefully kept behind glass bore the obvious teething of a chain weapon.

“So you do.” His grin got even wider, and you found yourself wondering if the miracle surge of adrenaline you had felt before would come once again. It wasn't that you felt a threat from the man, but the exact opposite: he was simple far too excited at the idea for his own good. Or your good. “Does the little lady have an idea of what she might want?”

“I might.” A hand disappears up one of your sleeves, and you fish around briefly in one of the multiple pockets that lined your body glove and the insides of your robe. The benefit hadn't occurred to you before, but you found yourself immensely grateful for the lack of an obnoxious bounce from some of your heavier pockets as you walked down the street on your way here. You pull your arm out, and hand him one of the bullets that had been in the stash. “Do you know what this is?”

He barely looked at it, pinching the casing gently between a pair of meaty fingers and briefly flipping the bottom of the case up to look. “Yeah. Armor-piercing stub round. Arbites-killers if you're feeling like a fancy prick. Nasty surprise if you're rich enough for body armor.”
>>
>>5839264
You catch the bullet when he tosses it back to you. “Is it unimpressive?”

“Eh.” He snorts. “Like I said: nasty if you're rich. A flak vest costs more than you or I make in a week, and it's not like I get one that isn't cracked in all that often. It's mostly useful if you want to make some nosy prick think twice before getting in on your turf. And you can do that by pumping him with five rounds for the same price.”

“Not something you recommend, then?”

“Not for someone like you.” He peered. “You don't seem like you could handle much recoil. I got a few lighter pistols that are suitable for dainty types. Generally I recommend the Vraks-pattern, but I ain't got any of those right now- so instead the Gorgon might be more your speed. More common parts, too.”

“Is that a pistol?”

“Both of ‘em. Your type tends to want the concealable pieces. Am I wrong? I got a few lovely shotguns for home defense back ’ere.”

“Not entirely.” You consider for a moment. “I need something for self-defense while traveling. So it being concealable isn't as important as it not being able to weigh me down.”

“That changes things slightly.” He taps the glass counter he's leaning on. “If we're talking travel, long-term? I'd be inclined to recommend a lasgun. The power packs are just unmatched on the go. Especially if you're camping out off the normal routes.”

“Then why didn't you recommend one?” You look up.

He shrugs. “Cost. The weapon itself isn't too much worse than your average stubber, but the power packs will run you as much as a hundred box of stubber rounds. Doesn't matter if the rounds recharge if you run out of packs after just one volley, huh?” He demurred visibly. “For you, though- no recoil. That can be a pretty big advantage for someone who just wants to scare off an assailant.”

“And you'd recommend a laspistol, again?”

“Of course.” He grunts. “Why ovearm? A lasrifle is bigger than your chest, lady, it'd be a huge pain to cart around all the time. Not like you need the extra firepower unless you want to fight a mutie.”

He had a good point, you suppose. The temptation was there to select an outsized weapon for the job, but...

>Choose a stubpistol and a large box of ammunition. You can deal with a little recoil.
>Choose a laspistol and a power pack. The recoil savings are well worth the reduced ammunition reserve.
>Go for a more powerful longarm instead.
>Perhaps a knife would be a wiser investment?
>Reconsider buying a weapon.

>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.
>>
>>5839265
>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.

is a sawed-off shotgun an available option?
>>
>>5839265
>Choose a laspistol and a power pack. The recoil savings are well worth the reduced ammunition reserve.
>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.
>>
>>5839265
>Choose a laspistol and a power pack. The recoil savings are well worth the reduced ammunition reserve.
>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.
>>
>>5839265
>Perhaps a knife would be a wiser investment?
>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.
>>
>>5839321

Supporting, this is a reasonable compromise between cost, power and practicality
>>
>>5839265
>>Choose a laspistol and a power pack. The recoil savings are well worth the reduced ammunition reserve.
>>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found
>>
>>5839293
Yeah, that'd be a longarm.
>>
>Choose a laspistol and a power pack. The recoil savings are well worth the reduced ammunition reserve.
>[Optional] Sell the specialized ammo you found.
Writing.
>>
A hand goes back into your robes, and you slide the ammunition from the slightly bulging pocket in your bodyglove. Eventually, you produce a small handful of it, and hold it out to him. “Would you be willing to buy this off me, then?” You had roughly thirty in all, with not all of them the same rise. If his offhand remark was accurate, then that was worth more than a hundred standard rounds, which he had said was similar to a power pack...

“Let me see.” He leaned forward, playing up his uncertainty briefly, but you could see in his eyes that he'd already decided. “Yeah, I could buy this off ya.”

“Perhaps you could just give me a discount on a laspistol instead?” You ask, assuming a slightly deferential pose.

He grinned, showing off his missing teeth again. “You're sharper than you look, girlie. Yeah, I suppose I could do that.” From behind the counter, he produces a box - surprisingly not the laspistol on display behind the glass case, and withdraws a beaten old laspistol from inside. “Lens just been replaced, should be good for a few thousand shots. That's plenty for the likes o' you.”

You hold your hands out, taking it gently and turning it over in your hands. “I don't recognize the pattern.” You frown, slightly. It wasn't an Abraham-pattern pistol, that was for sure. Odrev didn't produce it's own las weapons, instead usually getting them in on import from Abraham or nearby armory worlds, but where the Abraham-pattern had a snub nosed, stubby look that you had been drilled in spotting over and over, this had a longer barrel, with an enormous well for the power pack beneath the barrel.

“You shouldn't: it doesn't have one.” He grinned. “And you'll be thankful for that, trust me.”

You look up, slightly wary.

“That there has been modified to accept your standard issue lasgun pack.” He explains, patiently. “Same one as the rifle. Same one as a hundred other gizmos that ever got anywhere near the guard. It's good for lumens, heaters, car igniters...”

You furrow your brow. “Aren't some of those tech-heresy?”

“Probably.” He shrugs. “But so what? I'm not a priest.”

You turn that reasoning over in your head... and decide that he's not incorrect. It also didn't matter to you- you weren't planning on perverting the machine, after all. Instead, you retrieve your bills and hand them over, to which he relinquishes a single bulky power cell that slots in front of the grip and gives the gun some unexpected weight. That, and he actually bothers to tell you which of the buttons above the grip is the safety and which one is the cell release.

Weapons were not your forte, and you hoped that you would not have to make them one in the future. At the very least, being a laser, you didn't need to worry about picking up ballistics anytime soon.

Your Wealth has been reduced by 2 instead of 3 thanks to your sale. Your new Wealth is now 5.
>>
>>5840171
The weight on your hip was slightly unfamiliar as you left the store. The holster provided was a simple loop of leather, designed more to keep the pistol in by preventing it from falling through and onto the floor, and you felt it would probably have fallen off your thigh already if you hadn't been able to slide the straps through bands on your bodyglove. No matter how tight you dug them into your thigh, there just wasn't anything to stop something that heavy from falling.

At the very least, you didn't have to worry about it showing through your gown, as while it certainly clung to your waist and hips, your legs were well-hidden by the folds of your skirt, leaving no sign of your weapon.

The day was starting to drag on a little. At least, from your internal count, the workday should be ending soon... and ‘night’ should be starting to approach. Was there anything else you wanted to buy before it was too late?

Choose one:
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>Tools- not that you're entirely sure what kind would help. (2-4 Wealth)
>No, save your remaining money.
>>
>>5840172
>>No, save your remaining money.
>>
>>5840172
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>>
>>5840172
>Tools- not that you're entirely sure what kind would help. (2-4 Wealth)
just get some cheap ones
>>
>>5840172
>>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>>
>>5840172
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
>>
>>5840172
>Tools- not that you're entirely sure what kind would help. (2-4 Wealth)
>>
>A buffer of extra food and water. (1 Wealth)
Fitting considering the day.
>>
You lean forward into the metal grille. “Sixteen portions, sir."

“Seventy thrones, flat.” The man replied without even looking at you, already thumbing four ration bars out from a rack built into the armored side of the booth.

Money already in hand, you push the bills through the machined divot in the counter of the booth for him to grab from the other side. After a quick glance at the bills to make sure they were legitimate, he passed four ration bars through the slot. One of them was creased along the side - the result of continuous creasing in someone's pocket - while the other three were pristine. Brand new. It didn't take much for you to connect what they wanted with the grinders.

Either way, you bow to the clerk out of habit and step out of the line, ration bars vanishing beneath your robes. Four extra bars was two days of buffer for anything to go wrong, realistically more if you started stretching your ration bars before you exhausted your main supply. The extra metallic bottle in your rucksack clanked gently, the weight of the heavy water within pulling on you. A second one had cost you, but the extra supply was well-worth it. With your adjusted intake accounted for, it amounted to several days of water, and was by far the heaviest part of your pack. In fact, it was so heavy you almost regretted buying it, anything else and you'd be at the limit of what you could carry.

For some consolation, the weight would decrease rapidly as you traveled, and the truck would be the one actually carrying it.

All that was left for you now was to spend the night somewhere. Briefly, you contemplate sleeping on a bench, but decide against it. If you wanted to remain awake and alert for the journey, you'd need a place to stay.

Which was actually an easy question, for once. The area around the customs zone was littered with wayhouses for the visiting merchants. They didn't advertise themselves as hotels openly like they would on the upper levels, but it was clear their services were not exclusive to merchants. It'd be trivial to simply ask them for a room for the night.

As you walk back, you find your eye being drawn to some of the remaining stalls. A small family was haggling with a merchant for what appeared to be the butchered corpse of a infant tabba, with a pair of scrawny children clustered tightly around the stall, looking up at the curled up worm in wonderment. Beyond them, a local medicine man hawked herbal cures that assuredly couldn't be adequate replacements for the attention of a true medicae- soaked wrappings to prevent infection, thread sterilized with hard alcohol, and tinctures that were claimed to reduce fever and relieve fatigue.
>>
>>5841331
A smith had carefully laid out tools from his exposed corner shop, showing cast wrenches, files, adjustable wrenches that were too fine and chrome-plated to be anything but salvaged or stolen from a proper manufactorum. Others were labeled ‘access tools’, which seemed to be given more careful attention by people who often had thick aprons lined with pockets and protective woolen mitts. For a second, you assumed they were thieves, looking at picks, but then you realize that they must be the salvagers who bring in materials from the hive walls. A tool for unlawful access was also a tool for repair access, after all.

One woman was even selling what appeared to be small leather tents and foam rolls that could be used for bedding, along with cutlery and tableware that you were positive was lifted directly from some Imperial Guard inventory. She also appeared to be selling bones carved with crude sigils on the side. You didn't care to get close enough to see, but you swear one of them featured a crude attempt at an Astartes. Or was that an Aquila with poorly drawn wings?

You shrug it off, although for one last moment you can't help but consider...

Your Wealth has been reduced to 4.

>Buying some of that local medicine, ineffective as it probably was. (2 Wealth)
>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)
>Buying some of these ‘access tools’, although you wouldn't be able to carry a complete set. (2 Wealth)
>Buying a few of the more utilitarian pieces of camping gear- mess kits, utensils, a kinfe... (3 Wealth)
>No, this was all too crude. Save your money.
>No, you didn't need any of this.
>>
>>5841335
>No, this was all too crude. Save your money.
>>
>>5841335

>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)

Pro tip: once we have the Mechanic tools, we can use them to fabricate the access tools and save money this way
>>
>>5841335
>>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)
>>
>>5841335
>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)

I really hope we are not overencumbered with those, but it would help us a lot.
>>
>>5841335
>>No, this was all too crude. Save your money.
>>
>>5841335
>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)
>>
>>5841335
>>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)
>>
>Buying your own set of mechanic's tools, since the caravan would only loan you some. (2 Wealth)
Writing.
>>
You were running out of pockets.

A good problem to have, you suppose.

In the end, you couldn't carry the entirety of what you needed on you. The case of tools you had seen before was big enough to be a suitcase, and you were already getting dangerously full on water and food. A part of you regretted not having your own truck, but you remind yourself that it was probably the right call to go without one. If it got damaged, or you had to leave it behind, you would have just obliterated a large chunk of your money for nothing.

All it meant was that you'd have to compromise on what you could carry now. Where large sets of tools were sturdier, you substituted with cheaper adjustable tools - a variable wrench and pliers, a screwdriver that could also be used as a lever in a pinch, a hammer. You had to force yourself not to buy any power tools, like you'd be able to recharge them once they ran out of energy. At the very least, a flashlight without power could be used as a stick, but a drill without power wasn't exactly useful to you.

You did make one exception to that, however. A chemical blowtorch, which ran off a small bottle of high-grade promethium. No power cell, so it'd work so long as there was fuel in the tank. A tank that you were pleased to note was the same type as the bottle you had picked up earlier, effectively doubling your fuel capacity.

Your Wealth has been reduced to 2.

That find put you in somewhat higher spirits as you settled in for the night, carefully laying out your equipment as you laid back in a small bunk built into a building which clearly was not following Imperial building codes. You make a mental note to send a report to the proper department when you reach the upper hive, but it starts to slip from your mind as your eyes droop...
>>
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>>
The morning air in a hive seemed to be oddly cold. You stand outside the shipping center, surrounded by barely any incoming traffic, but plenty of people milling around you as they prepare to leave or move onto their next stop. A line of trucks was forming itself next to the gate, and you spy a familiar short man moving around the front of one as you approach.

“You're on time.” Cad says, as if that wasn't a guaranteed thing.

“I am.” You reply. “Should I not have been?”

“Might make you more popular with some of the slackers we got on this crew.” He grinned, then looked you over. “New duds. That everything you're bringing?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Go ahead and stash it under the seat, if it'll fit." He gestures towards one of the ground trucks with an airy wave. “You're up in Errat's ride so none of us have to triple up. He's a little rough around the edges, but he'll keep the ride smooth.”

“Are we going to be going offroad?” You ask.

“Yeah, since we gotta go down the foundations, but that won't be until day two of the ride, so take it easy today.” Before you can ask anything else, he turns and yells at someone down the line of trucks. “Oi! Errat! Over 'ere, this is Lebiss- Lebatt- natalie- Lub- ah, screw it, just get over here!”

Errat turns out to be a nervous-looking man with a short crop of stringy blonde hair. Wiry and thin, constantly twitching and looking around as if he expects someone to suddenly accost him. He extends a hand to meet yours as his height forces him to lean over to grab your hand comfortably. “Mornin'...” His voice shakes and is reedy, but he doesn't stammer. He regards you a bit suspiciously, standing between you and his truck almost defensively. “She's riding with me?”

“Someone would eventually.” Cad placates. “Just think of it as practice.”

Errat seems irritated by that response, but keeps his mouth shut as you debate on whether to say anything.

>[Intuit] Try to make a good impression with your best manners.
>[Logic] He seems fond of his truck. Perhaps you should show some polite interest?
>[Vigilance] Put his mind at ease by making yourself less obtrusive.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5842794
>[Logic] He seems fond of his truck. Perhaps you should show some polite interest?

We've marketed ourselves as a professional gearhead, keep up the act.
>>
>>5842794
>[Logic] He seems fond of his truck. Perhaps you should show some polite interest?
>>
>>5842794
>[Intuit] Try to make a good impression with your best manners.
He is probably just nervous because we are lookin good in our new outfit.
>>
>>5842794
>>[Intuit] Try to make a good impression with your best manners.
>>
>>5842794
>[Intuit] Try to make a good impression with your best manners.
>>
>[Intuit] Try to make a good impression with your best manners.
Writing.
>>
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Errat seems defensive, but not entirely unreasonable. You can't quite pin down if he's simply defensive of his vehicle or distrustful of strangers- perhaps both, honestly. Or there was something else that was bothering him, but in any chance, it didn't hurt to be extra polite.

You pinch the sides of your robes and pull them out gently as you drop into a low curtsy, not quite prostrating yourself like you would for the upper nobility, but low enough to have to slide your foot out to the side to balance yourself. “Thank you for accommodating me.” You say, politely not mentioning the fact that you're paying them.

Cad grunts. “She's got manners.”

Errat simply seems at a loss for words, before silently gesturing back to his truck. “Let's hitch up, then. The sooner we get this over with, the better.”

“It's a six day drive, Errat, remember? We're not just bouncing over to Cogway like normal, we're under and up to the Tribute.”

“Yeah, yeah. I know.” Errat sounded dismissive. “I've run it before.” He turned to you. “Come on.”

Glancing briefly at Cad, you follow Errat back to one of the trucks lined up on the edge of the platform. Like all the others, it was a boxy thing, with squared edges as six oversized wheels with deep-cut treads suitable for offroading. That seemed curious to you, but you were going outside the road network of the hive, if you understood what they meant about going under the ‘foundations'. Yesterday, the beds had been empty, but now it along with the others was piled with heavy crates and bags secured down with tarps and straps, carefully arranged so that the softer cargo would not be crushed by jostling crates as they ran.

You absently nod at the arrangement, noting only minor flaws in the packing procedure before Errat opens the door and gestures for you to step inside.

“M'lady.” He says dryly.

You ignore the implied jab and pull yourself up into the cab, sliding yourself into the worn cloth passenger seat and slipping your bag off your shoulders. The door shuts behind you, and you put the bag on your feet as Errat comes around the front of the cab to speak to Cad one last time, although he can't seem to help stealing occasional glances at you as if he expects to catch you doing something. You adjust some of the tools beneath your robe so they don't pinch you as hard, tucking the loose fabric of your skirt beneath your thighs and settling in for what you can only guess will be a long drive.

Errat pulls the door open and drops himself down into his own seat. He glances up at the mirror and carefully adjusts it slightly, jostling the bronze eagle talisman hanging from it's pole as he does. “Ground rules, by the way.” He says as he fishes a key out from inside his jacket pocket. “Don't get anything on the seat or you'll be buying a new one. If I say to do something, don't question me and just do it. Clear?"
>>
>>5843951
“Completely.” You say, evenly, questing for a seatbelt and not finding one.

He grunts. “Last, no complaints about my driving.” He mutters something you can't quite discern after that. Something about someone. 'Lo', maybe? It wasn't anyone you had been told about yet, so you doubted it mattered.

The engine turns over with a powerful racking of metal and hissing promethium before it abruptly coughs to life. Gauges light up with green backing lumens as the needles tick in their housings, and the entire truck begins to vibrate with the power of the idling pistons in the hood. Lumens illuminate the back of the vehicle in front of you, which was still off, even as the truck behind you starts up and throws a faint pool of light around the side windows.

Errat says nothing while the truck in front starts to turn over. You search for something to break up the silence, lest you spend the entire journey in an awkward silence. “So how long does the journey across the foundations take?”

“It's slow going.” He replies as red lumens illuminate on the rear of the lead truck. “Five days. If we have a bypass to Uptown, it'd barely take quarter one. You look on a map, and it's about the same distance from here to the heart of the Teeth's territory, but that's on the roads. Foundation doesn't have any proper roads, and never will, so we have to take it slow and offroad."

“Never?” You more feel than hear the clunk of metal as a gear shifts deep within the engine. The convoy begins to roll out, first the vehicle ahead of you, then you and Errat. You glance over your shoulder, and see the rear truck beginning to follow through the rear window.

“Never.” He replies. “You just can't get any heavy machinery down there like you can up here. It's not the bilges, for sure, but nobody wants to make the mistake of waking up the sleepers.”

That gets you attention, and you head swivels over as the gates of the city loom and pass over your head, the rough and cut walls of the hive giving way to the smooth plascrete paneling of a hive vehicle roadway. “Sleepers?”

“Well, yeah.” Errat changes gears, and you feel an odd lurch in your stomach as he begins to accelerate to keep pace with the lead car. “You know what they say." He chuckles, as if he obviously wasn't entirely serious.

“Odrev is built on the bones of an engine war.”
>>
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>>5843952

DEPTH 2
THE IRON CARCASS

You decided you liked this form of travel.

The hive swept by past you, an endless trail of lumens in the ceiling stretching into the distance, the only markers of how far you had gone the occasional maintenance inlets that swept past the window. The road was intended for one-way use, you could tell by the division of the lanes when it met other roads- only merges or exits, no intersections. However, it seems the current inhabitants had gone to pains to establish their own traffic down here, as other vehicles would fly past you on occasion, hugging the left side of the tunnel to avoid you. The signs at intersections had been defaced and painted over with new information wherever the inhabitants had deemed relevant. Multiple tunnels were sprayed with yellow stripes on the floor and ‘COLLAPSE’ in badly run stencil on the floor, others warned of dead-ends further ahead, while yet more advised slowing down due to rough terrain or an upcoming ‘toll booth’.

Unauthorized, most assuredly.

You remained upright in your seat, reclined slightly back and watching the lights go by. They had a sort of hypnotic quality to them, and you found the low-energy activity to be somewhat soothing after the last few hurried days.

Of course, you knew what Errat had been talking about.

Odrev had been founded after a large-scale titan conflict, fought on Malignax over six thousand years ago. The climatic battle, where the Archenemy and their corrupted god-machines had been routed by the forces of the Legio Vindictus had been literally fought on the very ground the hive stood on. To this day, some of Odrev's industrial output was paid in tribute to the forges of Vindictus and the Knight houses who had aided them as thanks by Odrev, although it would still be many more centuries until the forges were built up enough for it to be anything but a token to their forces. The debt seemed to weigh heavily on some of Odrev's citizens, if the expression was in common use. At least, that's what the Voice had told you.

"How we doing back there?" Cad's voice came from a dangling vox unit strapped to the ceiling of the truck.

Errat reached up and pulled it down. "Fine. Girl's not causing any trouble." He spared a glance at you, and you shrugged lightly, unsure of what to say. The gesture felt awkward when you did it, but you knew well enough what it was supposed to mean.

"I'll swap." A feminine voice groaned. "Erich's about to drive me insane."

"So you're fine, then." Cad replied. "Good. We're coming up on the plaza drop. We got a long road once when we hit the drop, so we'll stop to eat and check over the trucks beforehand."

“I guess that's where I come in.” You say, absentmindedly.

“Eeeh... we'll see.” Errat obviously didn't sound enthused at the idea, but muttered something into the vox and hung it up.
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>>5843953
As you had driven, you had noticed the occasional structural support erected by the inhabitants, shoring up a weak wall here or sealing off a bad water conduit there. But they were starting to become increasingly common as you progressed. They gave way to a new kind of support as you went deeper in the tunnels, bracing not just the ceiling, but the walls, suspending chunks of the road between them, helping to hold up the road itself. The supports occasionally broke up the lumens that lit the road, such that you couldn't tell entirely what was ahead.

Then you realize that the supports weren't blocking anything- the road was simply ending.

The convoy slowed down as you approached, tires beginning to bounce on a more uneven metal decking as a platform came into view. It oddly jut out against the darkness around it, lit by low-power red lumens wrapped around it railings, providing a small shoulder for vehicles to pull into. Errat pulls the wheel around skillfully, tightly sliding the truck against the hive wall so the last trailing vehicle could coast to a stop behind you. He casually opens the door and steps out, so you do the same.

You have to slide out into the narrow gap he left between the wall and the door, forcing you to keep yourself pressed up against it as you shut the door and carefully slide your way out. Your robes bunch up against the rock, but the fabric is tough, and aside from the sound of your chest scraping against it, it's not too bad.

The pair in the third vehicle - a dark-haired woman accompanied by a man somehow even thinner and reedier than Errat - are getting out of their truck as you finally manage to pop yourself out from the gap between it and the wall. The woman sees you stumble out from the side of the truck, glances at Errat and promptly lightly smacks him behind the ear, while Cad only smiles in bemusement.

As you stumble over, he waves a hand airily over his shoulder and looks at you. “First time out, right? Welcome to the Plaza."

“It's not very big...” You trail off as a soft wind flutters your robe. It was far too powerful for something that simply came out of the atmospheric scrubbers, and you shudder despite the warm insulating layer of your robe. Stepping forward to the edge of the shoulder, you grip the railing and get a sudden sense of height.
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>>5843955
The lumens wrapped around the railing did not cast even a glimmer of light on the wall that you had assumed was mere meters from the railing, hidden in darkness, but present. Your gaze slowly turns left, and you see the road continue, arching to the left and slowly turning away... and then coming back right again, then left... something which... should have blocked it from your vision as it vanished behind the highway walls. It was then, as your eyes adjusted, that you began to comprehend the support columns that were now ubiquitous, studding each and every segment of the road, supports driven deep into hive walls, straddling exposed griders and sitting atop curled bars that had been peeled back as the wall itself had been stripped away.

“Oh.” You say, no longer quite so intent on resting your chest on the railing. Slowly, you look up, and see thin pinpricks of light in the distance - gaps that shot beams of light from upper levels into the darkness, cutting through it without even giving a glimpse of what was in the darkness below you.

Yep.” Cad agrees, pointing off the shoulder. “It's something, innit. I wasn't even alive when it collapsed, but apparently it used to be a big junction, so they got the bypass put together real fast.” He gestured to the mess of torn metal that had been fused back into a road on your left. “But we're not going that way, we're taking this down.” He turned away from you.

“Taking what down?” You turn to follow his gesture, and realize that there was something else to the shoulder, hidden from your view behind Cad's vehicle where you thought the railing simply continued. No, instead there was a paired curve of metal... and then a drop. You lean over the railing slightly, and register the skids that lead to a... suspended metal cage. An elevator, you think, from the coil of wire it was connected to. One that, presumably, would go down to the very floor of the hive.

You look at the coil and how it was several times wider than you were tall.

That was a long wire.

“Not too late for second thoughts.” The woman replied airily.

“Of course not.” You reply, absentmindedly, still looking at the elevator with a feeling of concern bubbling up in the pit of your stomach.

“Good, because I want you to take a look at all of the vehicles before we get on the ride.” Cad says, stepping closer. “Don't go too deep and take them apart or anything, just... give them the once over.”

You focus yourself, again. “Yes, sir.” You notice Errat looking suddenly defensive again, and decide to try putting him at ease. “How about yours first? It's the one closest to the... er... elevator.”

Errat looked visibly relieved, and scurried back to his truck as you follow Cad forward to his truck. “Have I done something to offend him?” You ask Cad, lifting up the hood of his truck.
>>
>>5843964
“I think Errat's just being Errat. He's a weird rootstalk of a man, but he's as even handed as I know them to come.” Cad handed you the heavy toolkit he had retrieved from beneath his seat. “Think you can make this one purr like you did the other?”

“Probably not without taking it apart and putting it back together again." You caution. “If you want it done quick...”

“Bah.” Cad waved you off, dropping the heavy case at your feet and turning to speak to the woman - the man with her presumably being the Erich she had mentioned over the vox.

You turn your attention to the engine. Like the others, it was a victim of being kludged and jury-rigged, and you doubted there was anything you could do for it's health now without a laundry list of spare parts. Still, you run yourself through the basics - lubricants, oil reserves, clean metal for clean parts and grease where grease should be- the basic rites of maintenance. Realistically, you doubt you'd be able to fix one of these things if it really broke...

With that in mind, you decide that a coat of sacred unguents couldn't hurt under the circumstances. With a soaked cloth, you begin to anoint every exposed part of the engine. It's slow work, and as you go, your eyes trail over, and you notice a faded image stenciled on the nearby wall. It had been ignored by whoever had constructed this platform and it's railings, but it seemed to be a map of the old hive transit lines. You pause for a second to straighten yourself and commit the entire thing to memory before returning to your slow application.

The ‘plaza’... that meant you were probably in Primus Plaza, and if your impression of the city had been correct, it was in an old administration block... likely the Administratum Quarter. If that was the case, the bypass probably ran in the direction of... Emperor's way, which means you were crossing either to Foundation Square or Cogway & Victory. For once, you actually knew where you were.

Errat seemed to be busying himself around his own engine, fussing with bottles as he topped up reservoirs and checked dipsticks. Occasionally, he would reach into the engine and check something, or twist some hidden mechanism you couldn't see until he was satisfied. He looked over his shoulder and caught you looking, before gently coming over and speaking to you in a low voice.

“Hey, uh...” He coughs. “I just checked my own engine over, and everything looks fine. You don't have to check it. Uh, if you don't want to, that is...”

“I will... keep that in mind, yes.” Is all you can think to say before he hurries off. Cad was certainly correct that Errat was a strange one, but he seemed to know a thing or two about maintaining his own vehicle himself, which was probably more than you knew how to do. That might save you some time, giving you more of a chance to check the other two trucks, or find some time to do something else.
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>>5843967
>[Logic] Go ahead and check his anyway.
>[Logic/Strain] ...try to make some improvements to each engine you check. Be ambitious.
>[Intuit] Use the time he saved you to get to know the other people in the convoy.
>[Manipulation] Plant a problem in one of the engines that you can ‘fix’ later.
>[Write-In]
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I knew I'd forget an image somewhere in here.
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>>5843970
>>[Intuit] Use the time he saved you to get to know the other people in the convoy.
>>
>>5843971
It says something that for all my writing fuck ups, the one that still bothers me hours later is failing to put the pretty picture with it's intended post.
>>
>>5843970
>[Intuit] Use the time he saved you to get to know the other people in the convoy.
>>
>[Intuit] Use the time he saved you to get to know the other people in the convoy.
Writing.
>>
>>5843970

>[Logic] Go ahead and check his anyway.

Don’t trust this guy, seems a bit squirrely
>>
You shut the hood. It was good enough for now.

Errat glanced at you with a twitchy wariness as you pass. Was that really protectiveness of his vehicle, or did he just not like you? Could be either, come to think of it.

You have to use both hands to lift the tool case, where Cad only had to use one, but you pull it to the third truck and lift the hood up. A fairly clean and grime-free engine greets you, and you wonder why it's different for a second before you realize what it must be.

“You did a pretty good job on this one before.” The driver says as she steps over to you, making a show of rubbing her chin as she leans over the engine with a smile. “Think you can work any more tech miracles on it?”

“It was only the basic rites of maintenance.” The abridged ones that you could easily get away with knowing and using, that is. So long as a tech-priest wasn't looking too closely, that is. You look up at her. Her hair was dark and pulled into a bun with the judicious application of almost a dozen hairpins, which still seemed to leave stray hairs spilling out from behind a yellow bandanna. “You must be Liv.”

“Yeah?” Her eyebrows went up. Her eyes were a muddied green and slightly sunken into her face, leaving a pair of heavy lines around her eye sockets. “How'd you know?”

“Cad said that's who the truck belonged to before.”

She laughed, an easy cackle that colored her cheeks and surprised you with it's intensity. “That makes sense. Thing probably needs some love and attention, but damned if I can't afford an overhaul at the manufactorum."

You furrow your brow, unsure of what you said that was actually humorous while you prepare the unguents rag. “Is that a service they offer?”

“Oh, yeah.” She said, waving her hand. “If you have a few thousand thrones handy, that is. They'll replace anything that needs to, make it like new. Of course, it only costs a few hundred a year to keep them running as-is, so...”

“I can see the financial incentive.” You agree, beginning to wipe down the engine.

“Plus, it handles offroading better than the rest of it's make for some reason, and I'm loathe to change anything out lest I ruin whatever it is...” She fished around in her coat and withdrew a small packet of cigarettes, pressing one into her lips. “Want one?”

“No thank you.” You reply, although she's already putting it away.

“Not a smoker?” She lights the end with a small lighter she produces from her inner pocket.

“I... haven't had the time to try it, yet.” You say, truthfully.
>>
>>5845143
She makes a noise of agreement and nods her head, breathing in through the tube. “Give it time, kid, you'll find a few vices that agree with you.” She breathed out smoke which wafted in your voice. The smell was acrid and unpleasant, but you passively ignore it. Smoke was something to be expected in the docks, or in any other setting that involved judicious use of incense, and you had been tailored with a fairly potent resistance to it.

You finish the anointing, and pull the cloth back. The fluid reservoirs were all at their maximum levels, so you leave them be, and the engine had been greased by you yesterday, so...

Looking around, nobody else seemed to be in any hurry to leave. Errat seemed like he had finally calmed down a bit, and was sitting in the driver's seat with his door open, eating something out of a bag. Liv had turned her attention away from you, looking out across the abyss that was just behind you while she smoked. Erich was carrying on a conversation with Cad, the words loud but indistinct from the other side of the truck.

Replacing the tools you had used, you pull out one of your ration bars, deciding now was as good a time as ever for it. Liv looked over at the sound of crinkling foil, and her eyebrows shot up as you bit into the bar without thinking. “You can eat that stuff?”

“It is efficient.” You take another bite.

Liv snorts. “Guess you really are a bit of a cogboy." You hesitate too long to ask what that means before she waves her hand. “Me, I can't get over the taste. Too much like pure fat, to me, I always got to eat it with a little something for texture.” She lapses off into silence again as she takes another drag on her cigarette, letting whatever the rest of her thought was die with the conversation.

You open your mouth to ask, but reconsider. You had a moment to steer the conversation briefly, it seemed like a waste to ignore it for now... Cad and Erich were wrapping up their conversation, starting to pull away from each other like they were heading back to their trucks.

>"So what's down there? In the foundations, that is."
>"What are we carrying, anyway?"
>"How am I a cogboy?"
>"Errat seems to dislike me. Do you know why?"
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5845145
>>"How am I a cogboy?"
>>"Errat seems to dislike me. Do you know why?"
>>
>>5845145
>"Errat seems to dislike me. Do you know why?"
>>
>>5845145
>"What are we carrying, anyway?"
>>
>>5845145
>"How am I a cogboy?"

I really like how this feels a bit like metro 2033 right now. Well done!
>>
>"How am I a cogboy?"
>"Errat seems to dislike me. Do you know why?"
Writing.

>>5846143
Metro 2033 is both one of my favorite games and the first book is one of the best post-apocalyptic novels ever written, in my opinion. So, uh, yeah I guess it's an influence. Honestly I don't think I'm physically capable of writing a setting where people don't live in partially underground arcologies to escape a hostile surface anymore.
>>
You chew for a few moments longer, then look up, your brow furrowed. “How am I a ‘cogboy’?” You knew, vaguely, that it was slang for a member of the Adeptus Mechanicus, but you were neither a member of the ruling priesthood or trained in their ways. Sure, you knew rites, but they were the kind of rites that the Mechanicus tolerated knowledge of, so long as they weren't spoken of too openly or used too flagrantly.

“I dunno.” Liv waves her cigarette vaguely. “Y'know. You like to do things efficiently. Y'know something about machines. Hell, you definitely look like you were in the upper hive and had an exceptionally bad day.” She took another drag on it. “Not that I'm saying you look like a mark. Way too unkempt for it.”

That was encouraging, in a way. At the very least, you would fit in more once you got to the upper levels. “Thanks.”

She laughed again. “See? That's exactly what I mean. You sure you don't have any bionics under that robe?”

“Yes.” You lie. It wasn't in your spec, but could you trust it completely at this point? Accelerated healing certainly wasn't in it. “Do I really act similarly?”

“Well, you're not at all like a member of the Teeth. Too nice and not nearly self-flagellating enough. But slap some red on and you'd fit the bill."

“The Teeth?”

“Cog's Teeth. They're the gang that operates north of here.” She lifted her cigarette away from her lips and frowned at it, before taking one final puff and flicking the butt into the abyss. The speck of an ember trailed into the darkness, staying lit for longer than you'd think possible normally, while Liv's hand continued to wave at the makeshift road. “Their territory is at the other end of the bypass."

“And they're related to the Mechanicus?”

“Their territory is right beneath the manufactorum above us. They're all ex-cogboys or cogboy wannabes who were rejected by the Mechanicus or couldn't make it.” Liv was rinsing her mouth with a bottle of something in her coat pocket, which she spit over the edge. “Honestly, some of them give me the fucking creeps, and they're always weirdly forward about everything. Guess that's Mars and their ilk for you.”

“Do you dislike them?”

“I'm giving you the time of day, aren't I?” Liv slumped over the edge, her arms freely dangling into the abyss. “It's just something about them. Whatever it is they get taught, it gets inside their head. I've met a techpriest or two and they're nothing like the Teeth. Girls who happily lop off both their tits if it means stuffing in a new power cell, it's just so... eager. I don't know.”

You're not sure how to respond, and judging from Liv's increasingly green coloration, you suspect she might not want to continue this line of questioning, so you decide to change topics. “Errat seems to dislike me. Do you know why?”
>>
>>5846556
“Errat's a weirdo.” She immediately says, sharply, then reconsiders. “Er- he's not all bad. He just... doesn't really know how to act around the opposite sex, you get me?”

“Yes?” You lie.

“He's not a bad sort, just...” She searches for words. “He likes one thing, and that's his truck. He doesn't like strangers, people touching his truck and he has no idea how to act around girls. Especially pretty girls. Put all of those things together, and you get the weird insect brain shit.”

“Is there anything I can do about that?”

“In six days? Nah, probably not. He'll keep it together, though. He's nervous, not crazy or a psycho. In fact..." She thinks for a second. “If you wanted, you could bump up to my vehicle for the next bit? Erich is drivng me crazy, I could do with an excuse to kick him out.”

You take the last bite of your corpsestarch bar while you think of an answer. Errat wasn't asking any probing questions, and he seemed welcoming enough, while Liv seemed much more forthcoming and yet paid far more attention than he did. Was it worth the extra scrutiny?

>Ride with Liv.
>Stay with Errat.
>>
>>5846562
>>Stay with Errat.
>>
>>5846562

>Stay with Errat.

Eh, let's stick with the incel for now.
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>>5846562
>Stay with Errat.

Liv is a nice woman, but I want autism.
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>>5846562
>Stay with Errat.
What's better than one autist being awkward? Two autists being awkward^2!
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>>5846562
>Stay with Errat.
>>
>>5846562
>>Ride with Liv.
>>
>>5846562
>Stay with Errat.
>>
>Stay with Errat.
Writing.
>>
You chew for a few seconds more before swallowing. “No thank you. Cad specifically put me with Errat, I don't want to disrupt his plans.”

“Eh. Suit yourself.” She muttered something about a hammer, and you took that as your cue to leave.

Getting back into the truck took some effort with it parked up against the wall. You flatten your back to the hive wall and sidle your way back in, pressing and squishing yourself up against the truck where the riveted bodywork allowed for no extra clearance. Passing the door, you grab the handle and crack the door open carefully, making sure to not let it touch the hive wall before sliding yourself in.

Errat is staring at you as you slide in, apparently speechless.

“I made sure it didn't scrape.” You say, suddenly feeling defensive.

“...sure you did.” Errat coughs. “It's fine, though. I doubt you scratched the paint.” He turns the key and starts up the truck. “We're down first, by the way.”

“Is that good?” You ask.

“Nah. It's normal for the most expendable wagon to go down first.” Her jerked a thumb at his chin. “And in this case, that's yours truly. And you, I guess."

“Good.” You lie without conviction. There was a word for that you were missing. Had you never been told? You search your memory as Errat slowly begins to turn the truck towards the end of the platform, but come up with nothing. You had been given plenty of knowledge on how people interacted socially, but you had been given precious little practical-

The lurch in your stomach cuts that line of thinking short. The wheels shuddered slightly as they slid into the grooves on the short ramp into the elevator. The view from the cabin pitches up slightly as you roll over the crest... then drops down with a thump as the rear follows and you become acutely aware of how all that's between you and a hundred story drop is a pair of steel girders.

Errat feathers some kind of brake lever with a free hand, guiding you smoothly down the ramp, but he can't prevent the uncanny jostle that comes when the wheels clear the ramp and slam up into the elevator. Metal sheets rustle against each other, sounding far too light and wobbly for structural panels. You brace for something to snap, but it never does as he guides you to the end of the cage.

“Alright.” He says. “You gonna hitch us up, or am I?”

>"I'm sorry?"
>"I can do it."
>"I wouldn't know how."
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5848184

>"I can do it."

How hard can it be?
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>>5848184
>"I wouldn't know how."
>>
>>5848184
>"I can do it."
>>
>"I wouldn't know how."
>>
>>5848184
>"I can try"
>>
>>5848184
>>"I can try"
>>
That is... two for every option. I think I can make this work.
>"I wouldn't know how, but I can try."
>"I can do it."
Writing.
>>
A few days ago was that monster update that was six posts long. Can I ask for a moment how many people actually managed to read it? I make it a point to avoid votes that aren't either important choices or on the protagonist's personality, but I also don't want to post a wall of text that nobody actually reads.
>>
>>5849365
Why would I skip reading an update?
>>
>>5849365

I read the whole thing, Bentus
>>
>>5849378
There were only three votes. My main concern was that it was so long nobody got a chance to finish reading it before voting.
>>
>>5849382
There are slow days on /qst/. It happens and there's nothing you can do but wait for the votes to come.
>>
>>5849384
Yeah, I figured it was something like that. But I was slightly concerned that it lined up with a longer update day. Y'know, don't want to take people's time for granted if this is the kind of thing where they vote on their lunchbreak and don't have the time to read War and Peace for the weird 40k vatgrown clone liege quest.
>>
>>5849396
I read longer and weirder posts in COADE, I'll read this one too.
>>
“I wouldn't know how.” You say. “I can try.”

Errat started to fight down a grin that pulled at the corner of his mouth. “It's real simple. You gotta close the loading gate, so if the parking brake gives we don't go tumbling into the abyss. There are some chains that will prevent us from rocking too much, too.”

“I can do it.” You say, opening the door and slipping out onto the platform.

“Wh-”

Metal grates clatter under your feet, and you realize that they're not actually properly connected or held in place to the deck of the elevator. Most were held down with rivets driven through gaps in some of the links. Some were loose entirely, and skid under your feet as you walked. The lumpy metal pressed against the relatively thin soles of your boots, and you make a mental note to get some studier boots if you ever need to do something like this again. Instead of trusting your weight to the grating, you walk along the metal frame that holds up the floor of the cage.

As Errat said, there was a heavy steel hook welded to the far railing, and you wedge it behind the structural rod of the front bumper. Turning, you keep a light hand on the railing as you walk your way back to the rear of the truck. The railing simply ended there, with the gate of the elevator a simple rolling shutter like were supposed to be in cargo elevators. A strap with a heavy hook dangled from the middle of it, and you carefully reach out for it, with a hand on the cargo straps for support. The gate closes with a gentle creaking of metal, and you fumble with the hook for a moment before putting it on the underside of the rear hitch.

“Now what?” You return to the open door, glancing at a crank mounted in the ceiling. “We twist that?”

“Yeah.” Errat replies with a sheepish mutter. “It'll empty the counterweight.”

“Empty it?” You reach up for the crank, but find yourself a foot short. Instead, you step onto the running board before the open door and grab the piece of scrap metal. It turns loosely in your hand, almost without weight as you spin it around, but whatever the rope it's tied to is engaging as you spin it, the mechanism works very slowly.

“The counterweight at the bottom is full of water.” Errat says. “When you pull the line, it opens an emptying gate, which lets water out until-"

The floor lurches disconcertingly beneath you, and you stop cranking.

“Little bit more.” He says. “Or we'll start to stall as it gets closer to the source.”

You frown, and twist the crank further, pushing up onto the balls of your feet to gain the necessary height and leverage to twist the crank around as it gets heavier. The road was starting to rise away from you, the elevator swinging gently as the mechanisms began to advance. It was slow, but you could feel the drop in height in your stomach, and the slow breeze being forced up under the hem of your robe by the dropping cage.
>>
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>>5849408
A slow rushing sound starts to become audible as you descend, rising up towards the elevator as you work your way down. You turn, and see a spray of something rise up into view. A fine mist gathering around a thick cable which had appeared in the distance, all too quickly followed by a great metal cylinder that loomed out of the darkness suddenly. Water spilled freely from a precisely drilled port in the bottom, a shutter drawn open by some kind of tension mechanism made from several twisted wires and a metal plate. It was nearly twice as big as the truck, and vanished into the gloom above you almost as quickly as it came, leaving a spilling trail of water behind that quickly dissolved into dribbles and then mist that gradually dispersed entirely.

“Is that halfway?” You ask.

Errat nods. “It'll slow down as we hit the bottom." He leaned over and opened his own door, looking down through the grates. “Doesn't look like we're close yet, though. There's barely any light down there, but you can see the ground.”

“Like moonlight?”

“What's moonlight?” Errat furrowed his brow.

“...weak ambient light. Barely enough to see by."

“Then yeah, moonlight.” A gentle groaning sounded through the ceiling of the elevator, and you see the crank start to slowly run backwards, unwinding itself as you reach the bottom. Your expression must have seemed concerned, because Errat speaks up again. “The elevator always resets to the top. If you're down here and want to get it down, you pop the counterweight from this end and wait.”

“Understood.” You turn, and notice Errat retrieving something from behind his seat. A shortened shotgun, from it's appearance, with a single tube running it's length. “Should I be concerned?”

“This time? Yeah.” Errat glanced around. “The best time for them to attack is when we're almost down, since there's only one- no, not yet.” He stops you as you make to get back inside the truck. “Unhitch us.”

You nod, and quickly move to yank off the chains from the front and back. The task felt easy enough, but you disconcertingly realize that the inky black floor beneath you is changing colors, getting oddly bluer and developing odd lumps of half-texture as you approach the foundation floor. It wasn't enough to reliably see by, but it was also rapidly getting closer, and you hurry to release the rear hook and throw up the gate as the truck's engine turns over. “Who's 'them'?”

“Mutants.” He says, carefully. “Bilge rats. All stripes. Most of them are near feral, but you also have the people who were banished down here for one crime or another. They're the most dangerous, since they're desperate. Down here, you barely have any vermin without refuse from the upper levels, barely any picking, any foraging... the only available meat is human flesh.”

“That sounds like a legend.”
>>
>>5849410
“I thought that, too.” He slides his shotgun over, keeping it pointed towards the passenger window, and you find yourself checking your laspistol as you slide into your seat and shut the door behind you. “But they're all too real.”

“Human flesh? What do they eat when there aren't travelers?”

“I don't know.” He admits. “Life finds a way, or maybe they do have something to eat and just enjoy the hunt." He glances over, and notices you checking the charge rating on your laspistol. “You're armed? Good. You know how to use that thing?”

“No.” You reply truthfully. The indicator on the back read an even fifty shots. Slightly under rated capacity, if you remember correctly.

“Better than nothing. Besides, you rarely need to aim to hit one of them." He cocks his head, as if readying for something. “Okay, get ready-”

He's interrupted by a loud metallic thwack that reverberates through the cage. Your stomach lurches again as the elevator comes to an abrupt halt, the pool of light spreading out around you illuminating thick, matted down and flattened soil, along with rows of barrels, lashed together to make some sort of barricade. The rusted remains of some kind of hab unit was around you, broken pipes and fixtures sprouting up from the ground at irregular intervals surrounding the barrels. You hear a whirring noise close to your door, and you look up to see that the crank is suddenly running backwards, disrupted somehow by the landing and letting all the tension out of the system.

Errat pulls the wheel around and reverses the truck off the elevator with a powerful whine from the engine, pulling as hard around as the wheels and the shape of the elevator will allow before pointing it straight and sliding forward. Almost as soon as the front wheels drop off the elevator, it starts to rise, and you can't help but hold your laspistol a little bit tighter as your sole escape route rises up into the ceiling. He pulls the truck around and runs you alongside the barrel fence until it ends, providing the two a semi-unobstructed view of the... darkness surrounding you.

All that you could see in the pool of light from the lumens is what appeared to be odd, rolling mountains in the distance. Twisted piles of metal, not quite intentional mounds, but a... dusting that lay all over the hive foundations. There were broken girders, shattered plating, false walls, plaster... relics from the missing floors above, like nobody ever came to clean them up. There was even ice on the ground, permafrost that appeared to have hardened the exposed dirt and made it into rocky patches.
>>
>>5849412
Almost involuntarily, you flex the odd reserve of strength within you- lumps and glands beneath your ribs and near your stomach that still unnerved you. Your jaw twitched oddly, and you found your senses straining, but coming up with nothing. You felt calm, and you couldn't tell if that was because there wasn't a threat or stress that you were missing one if it was present.

Soon, the counterweight dropped into sight nearby, following a wire to a constructed platform near the elevator. The disc valve at the bottom has closed, although it still leaked minute amounts of water from several places. It settled down, the main cable attaching it going briefly slack... until the disc shuddered and opened again, the counterweight rising into the sky in a sudden, powerful spray of water.

You watch it rise away, and settle back in your seat, still gripping the pistol, but feeling calmer now that another of the convoy vehicles was descending. Minutes rolled by, seeming far slower here than they were when you were riding down yourself. You keep waiting for something to happen, but then... you notice a pair of lights falling down towards you.

The elevator touches down behind you, and the truck rolls off the platform with expert timing, just barely clearing it before the counterweight resets and pulls it into the air.

"I miss the fun?" A voice comes over the vox.

Errat pulls it off the roof. “No. All quiet, not even a rumble.”

"Good, good." Errat says cheerfully as he pulls up beside you. "How's our girl holding up?"

“She's not afraid of heights, at least.” Errat glances at you, and you shrug, still holding the pistol.

With one more person present, you finally relax a little as the elevator rises into the darkness again. Liv and Erich arrive last, reversing out with much more clumsy technique as Cad pulls forward, the stablights affixed to his vehicle suddenly flicking brighter. In the gloom, several dim points lit up abruptly, shining in the dim light. Errat clicked something on the dashboard, and his own stablights came on, making the dim lights abruptly shine bright with retroreflected light.

"Okay, looks like the buoys are still intact." Cad's voice comes over the vox. "Let's get rolling."

His truck started to move forward before Liv and Erich could even fully free themselves with the elevator, having waited until it hit the floor before raising the gate. Their tires dropped off the edge hard as it lifted up before they were completely unloaded, and you watch them bring the vehicle around in the rear view mirror as Errat sets off behind Cad. The three of you form a line again, rolling forward and hugging close to the reflected light- ‘buoys’ as Cad had called them. Errat puts his shotgun to the side as you start forward, and you holster your laspistol with a bit of relief.
>>
>>5849413
They move far slower than they had in the proper roads and tunnels of the hive. The wheels catch and roll over obstacles, crunching over metal and sliding as piles of scrap come loose. You jostle in your seat, jerking back and forth as the floor of the truck seems to lurch behind you. Errat glances at you at one point while adjusting the mirror attached to his door, and you see the butt of his shotgun reflected along with the lower half of his chest, still within easy reach.

Whoever had traveled these roads before you seem to have left a trail where the scrap and dirt was notably compacted or pushed out of the way, but it didn't follow the buoys completely. Instead, at multiple points Cad would swing his truck around, fording one of the mounds rather than continue on the clearer paths that wound through them.

Errat follows him, and you blink when you realize you've been zoning out staring at the blackness. Now that the sense of threat has gone, you feel oddly tired, and you fight back a yawn. It had been... it felt like only minutes, but you suddenly feel as if you've been awake for hours. The only thing that gave you any sense of time progressing was the occasional vox message from Cad or Liv talking to each other or asking for updates.

"I see a decent patch up ahead." Cad says. "We'll pull over here." His vehicle pulls off the trail, and you find yourself gripping the door for stability as Errat follows him away from the buoys and the trail.

You glance over your shoulder, and note disconcertingly that the trail stops being visible as soon as it's not illuminated by stablights.

Their headlights sweep over open dirt, and Cad rolls to a stop while Errat swings around and pulls in front of Cad's truck, forming a chevron with the chassis of his. Liv arrives a moment later, creating a small triangle between the three of them before doors open.

“Alright.” Cad says, rubbing his hands together with a gentle huff. “Let's get a fire going. Erich, see if there's any spare wood around here, and Debbie-"

“Lebesnati.”

“Lebbie. How about you take a look at my poor girl? I think I might have jostled something loose on that last climb.”

That wasn't an encouraging statement, but you force yourself to squeeze through the gap between the two trucks and lift the hood of Cad's. He wasn't kidding- several of the hoses were loose where the brackets that held them down had broken, and the poor fit on most of the parts wasn't doing the engine any favors. Something else could be wrong, deeper in the truck: the axle could be loose, or the wheels damaged, or any number of things that you had no idea how to fix, but you settle on what you can solve with the basic rites for now.
>>
>>5849416
A dash of promethium is poured on a pile of dried, colorless lumber and lit with a flame from a lighter. The pile goes up with a low, yellow flame that burns slowly and without much heat as the flames eat through whatever treatment was used on them, eventually cracking them open and growing hotter and orange as the flame is able to work it's way inside. Erich and Liv unwrap some corpsestarch bars and small packets of some dry power, pouring it into a thin-walled pot along with water and broken up chunks of the ration bars. Soon, it appeared they had an improvised stew of some kind going, which they thickened with chunks of bread as it simmered over the fire.

You shut the hood and retreat back to the relative warmth of the inner fire, sitting down on ground that was now slightly damp with melting permafrost. “I did what I could. Hopefully the axle is fine.”

“It felt good.” Cad said, chewing on something thin and grainy. “Should be fine. Probably.”

You shrug, and pull out one of your ration bars.

“Oh, come on.” Liv says. “Put that away, you can have some of this.”

You hesitate. Cad had said that you had to bring your own food and water, but he says nothing to correct Liv, so you slide the bar back under your robes and scoot slightly closer to the fire.

“So, what's your story?" Erich asks, hunched over the fire like he was trying to make himself fit into the same space as Cad or Liv. His eyes seem beady in the gloom, but he's looking at you with an open curiosity.

“My story?” You ask.

“You a trader?” He asks. “I've never seen anyone want to go up here if they weren't. But you didn't bring anything with you.”

“I'm not a trader.” You shake your head.

“So why Uptown? You got business there?”

“You can get to the rest of the hive from there.”

“The rest of the hive? What do you want with the upper floors?”

“I...” You hesitate. What did you want? What were you really hoping to achieve by this?

>"I need to get to the top of the hive. The very top. The spaceport."
>"I want to... meet someone. I need to ask them something."
>[Sub-Option] “Someone who betrayed me.”
>"There's something I need that I can only get from the hive authorities."
>"I just want to get out of here. I don't belong."
>"...I don't know."
[Write-In]
>>
>>5849417
>>"I need to get to the top of the hive. The very top. The spaceport."
>>
>>5849417
>(Write-in): "I suppose I want to see just how far up I can get. Who knows, maybe I'll manage to reach the top of the tallest spire."
>>
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>>5849417
>"I just want to get out of here. I don't belong."
>[Sub-Option] “Someone betrayed me.”

>>5849365
I actually like longer updates. I sometimes miss votes, but that has nothing to do with the lenght of the updates and more with time zones and work.
>>
>>5849417
>>"I want to... meet someone. I need to ask them something."
>>
>>5849417
>>"There's something I need that I can only get from the hive authorities."
>>
>One vote for everything but 'I don't know' and some write-ins besides
...I can make this work.
>>
“I... I need to get to the top of the hive." You begin slowly. "The very top. The spaceport.”

“That's pretty high up, kid." Cad's eyebrows go up. “Why do you want to go up there?”

You were quiet a moment. What were you doing? Keep going up and... and what? Were you so delusional that you thought if you reached the spaceport, you could present yourself before the nobility and they would make you a scribe? It just seemed like the thing to do, but you weren't sure if it was what you even wanted. But then what else? “I want to meet someone.” You say, finally. “I need to ask them something.”

“In the upper hive?” Liv asked, leaning forward. “They'd have to be a noble, right?”

“I...” You pause. You didn't actually know what the location of your creation was. When you had been flushed, you had fallen...

...you had fallen only a short time. There was no way you had traveled the entire distance from the upper spire to the literal foundations of the hive in that time, you simply would have drowned or died from organ damage as you were thrown against the walls of the chutes over and over. Your creator couldn't possibly be in the upper spires, which means you were created at some point below them...

“I don't know where they are.” You confess. “They're not a noble, though. They're... someone... someone who..." You search for the word. “Someone who betrayed me.”

“Revenge.” Errat's face pinched slightly, looking into the dim light of the fire. “I can understand that.”

“What are you gonna do to them?" Erich leaned forward. He had a nasal voice that fitted his appearance, making a soft wheeze every time he spoke. "Off 'em?”

“I'm not sure.” You mumble. “That's something I can only figure out once I meet the hive authorities.”

“The Arbites?” Liv sounds baffled as she turns the pot on the fire, carefully poking at the forming coals with a stick. “How can they help you?”

“It all depends." You say. “Maybe they can help me, maybe they can't.." You trail off, looking into the fire burning before you. "All I know is that I want to get out of here. I don't belong."

“Too good for us, huh?” Errat says dryly, looking over for the first time. “Want to get back to ‘real’ civilization?”

“Nah, she's right.” Cad speaks up, reaching forward and dipping a small spoon into the pot before sampling it. He nods to Erich, who produces bowls from a stack. “You don't really fit in around here. And I doubt you ever will."

“That's a little harsh, Cad...” Liv frowns, taking a bowl from Erich without looking.

He shrugs. “It's the truth? Look at her, Liv. She's not scum or scavenger, she's too... clean and upright for all that. There's no future for her down here- no offense.”

“None taken.” You feel a strange twitch at the corners of your lips.
>>
>>5850547
“You can't just waltz up to the upper hive, though.” Liv protests. “No matter how high you want to climb, some things just aren't achievable through pure will.”

You feel your stomach twist in anxiety. She wasn't wrong, and you knew it. You had no idea how you were going to keep going, or how you'd continue to feed and clothe yourself, or if you would ever make it to the middle hives, much less the upper hives. Though something deep in your bones - maybe the strange fault with your flesh, the programming you received in the waters, or something else entirely - said it was what you needed to do.

A bowl makes it's way to you, and you look down. The off-white color of the corpsestarch had colored the water, turning it thicker and whiter, while the soup added had added dark swirls that surfaced when the liquid was disturbed. “I know. I suppose I want to see just how far up I can make it. After the spire is the tether, you know. Past that is the Emperor's domain."

“Sky's the limit if you believe, I guess.” Errat says, clearly not believing his own words and raising the bowl to his lips.

“It's a plan.” Cad shrugs with a slight grin as he scoops up a chunk of corpsestarch from the bowl.

“It's a dream.” Liv concedes, blowing the steam from hers.

“It's frakking stupid, but when has that ever mattered?” Erich finished, lifting back a bottle of something and drinking deeply.

You lean back with your own bowl, feeling the warmth of the liquid between your hands and tipped it back. The liquid was hot, and your tongue prickles as it washes over it, but the heat warms your core against the nigh-constant breeze in the hive as it comes up from under and over the truck. It was thicker than you expected, and the combined broth tasted like watered down meat, a slightly savory flavor that you weren't used to in corpsestarch.

The conversation begins to slowly turn again, and you feel the sudden interest begin to slowly leave you. The intensity of their curiosity had taken you by surprise, and you weren't sure how you felt about being the focus of so much scrutiny. Hopefully it wasn't something you would have to get used to.

As the embers start to die, and the last of the camp stew is drained so the pot can be put to the side, nobody moves to set up tents or any kind of shelter. Instead, they slide themselves into the cabins of their trucks, leaving red lumens on to partially illuminate the cabins and shutting the doors to keep out the cold. You shiver slightly at first, but as you and Errat sit in the almost-darkness, your robes slowly heat from your body heat, followed by the rest of the cabin.

It's not very comfortable, but it's a lot better than freezing.
>>
>>5850548
You find yourself thankful for your heavy robes and body glove. The insulation from the leather is welcome, and the robe adds another layer of heat that can be trapped, even if it only really warms your waist and legs due to the fit. You lean back against the cloth covering of the seat, gathering up parts of the cloth and draping them twice over yourself for some extra warmth, then close your eyes.

Once, you're woken by Erich, come to wake Errat up for his turn keeping watch. You had leaned over in your sleep, ear pressing against the passenger door, leaving you to hear the gentle rush of wind outside, and the occasional groan of the hive structure settling and moving above you. It felt like it could fall down at any second, but of course it never did. You watched the ‘stars’ in the sky through lidded eyes, occasional bolts of golden light dancing between them and across the blackness.

When your eyes next open, you realize that you're moving. Featureless dirt rolls by the window, broken up by occasional debris or the pole of one of the buoys. The sky in the hive ceiling has changed color ever so slightly - instead of blue, the lights are more oranges and reds as light leaks in from segments of the ceiling exposed to the sky, or sky-matching hab lights.

“Hey, there.” Errat says as you suddenly sit up. “Didn't mean to wake you.”

You jerk in your seat as he crests a small pile of scrap. “It was the rattling.”

“That can happen.” He says, adjusting his passenger mirror slightly. “We figured we shouldn't wake you up.”

You wonder if they ate breakfast, but elect not to comment as you withdraw a ration bar from inside your robe. “How long have we been moving?”

“Eh, bout an hour or so.” He changed gears as the ground pitched up suddenly. “Cad says we're making good time.”

“Four more days to go, right?” You say, your eyes being pulled skyward. Those golden lights were in it again, flitting back and forth like tiny arcs of lightning or... you're not actually sure. They seemed to leap from point to point, as if loose electrical cabling or industrial runoff deep in the ceiling was having some kind of interaction. Errat doesn't seem to think much of them, but you're unsure what they actually are.

>Ask him about them.
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.
>>
>>5850549
>>Ask him about them.
>>
>>5850549

>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.

Let’s hold our questions until a good time
>>
>>5850549
>Ask him about them.
>>
>>5850549
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate
>>
>>5850549
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.
>>
>>5850549
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.
>>
>>5850549
>Ask him about them.
>>
>>5850549
>Ask him about them.
>>
>>5850549
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.
>>
>It's obviously fine, let him concentrate.
Writing.
>>
You shrug it off, settling back in your seat and watching the lights arc and dance in the sky.

They dance back and forth, always arcing in a straight line from one point to another. Sometimes, they're thrown off course by something, other times they seem to streak just above your head, barely missing some of the jagged terrain. They never seem to pass directly by you, although sometimes you can see them spilling from the ground in the distance and arcing into the sky.

Perhaps they were industrial gases becoming ignited? That itself was an alarming thought, if pipes were venting flammable gas into the foundations unchecked, a decent fireball could be created if one pocket was allowed to build up undisturbed. A fireball out of nowhere would be a wonderful way to end your journey unexpectedly early.

It was hard to really do anything else productive while navigating the terrain. Your body was jostled back too much to even really eat in some of the more difficult sections where piles of scrap and torn land had accumulated, much less fuss with your other equipment. There was the constant rocking, plus the load roar of the engine and the shuffling and creaking of metal being crushed. A loud bang rings out from behind you, and the wheels roll over a rattling sheet of metal, tipping over the top of one of the scrap mounds and down the other side to, uh...

“Wait.” You twist in your seat. “They've fallen behind.”

Errat looks up at his rear mirror, noticing as you had that they were suddenly coasting to a stop. Sparks trailed from the metal they were running over, and the entire thing jerked suddenly to a halt, seemingly snagging on thin air.

"Frakking Emperor-" Liv's voice strangled off a curse over the vox. "Sorry, Cad. I think we just had a problem..."

---

You lean forward, putting your hands on your knees and peering. Cad and Liv were too tall to see comfortably, and had to squat down and crane their necks.

“Shaft snap.” Cad says. “Of all the luck...”

“Think we can tow it?” Liv says.

“Yeah, but it'll cut down on our time.” Cad rubs his short hair with a hand. From your position behind them, you get a chance to evaluate Cad and Liv that you hadn't gotten before. The two of them were both taller than you, and clearly used to manual labor. Liv moreso than Cad- she had a surprising strength to her, lifting heavy things with ease, moreso than you would expect.

You hadn't gotten a chance to stand this close to Cad before, and you finally notice the intricate stitching that had been laid across his jacket. While the others wore jackets of varying qualities - Erich in particular had a quality synthleather jacket - they all wore the colors of the Suns as elaborate patches and strips of fabric running along the sleeves or across the back. Cad's was made from real, soft leather that didn't have the unnatural shininess of synthetic leather- either vatgrown or made from something else.
>>
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>>5852103
A pattern depicting a glowing sun was embroidered on the back in yellow and orange thread, with rays stretching down each sleeve. Smaller, finer etchings in faded gold thread depicted feathers alongside the sun, while newer bold red stitching showed what appeared to be tires and gears. It was exquisite- and you were surprised he could afford such a luxury down here. Was this common for higher members of the Suns? A part of you suspected it was, given that Cad seemed to be in charge of this team.

“Will it be possible to tow it over this terrain?” You ask, unsure of it yourself. If the dragging part had already snagged once...

“Yeah, it's possible.” Cad replies. “But we'll lose half our time. Someone will have to steer it, and we'll need to stop and get it up over ever obstacle.”

“And we're on a time limit.” Liv says, suddenly sounding nervous. “I don't think...”

Cad nods grimly. “We can't be late, so we'll just have to ditch it. Liv, start to unload it, and we'll see if we can't get most of it onto the other two. The weight'll bog us down, but we'll just have to drive harder."

“Got it, boss.”

You peer closer at the dropped shaft. It had broken in the middle of the run between the engine and the rear wheels, splitting clean down the middle after so much wear. The inside of the rod was oddly shiny, as if it was brand new out of the manufactorum. All it had to do was spin... maybe you could repair it? That was why you were supposed to be here, after all. It would only need to be held together such that it could spin for a few days...

>[Vigilance] There were spare parts all around you in the scrap piles, right? Try and locate something you can use as a temporary replacement.
>[Logic] Try to fashion a brace that'll hold it in place from materials you have.
>[Conditioning/Strain] Perhaps you could physically mold the two halves back together? Punch a hole through and use a pin to hold it?
>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together.

An option in blue indicates that one of your Qualities is affecting it. Beware that these options may consume the Quality or alter it in some way.
>>
>>5852108
>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together.

Keeping these guys from losing a whole-ass truck will probably net us something good.
>>
>>5852108
>>[Logic] Try to fashion a brace that'll hold it in place from materials you have.
>>
Oh, and before I forget, if you want to take an option that would require a dice roll - like the roll to avoid Strain on Conditioning here - go ahead and roll it with your vote from now on. If we come up short for the required number of rolls, we'll do those after the vote is called.

Oh, and [Write-In] is an option, forgot to write it.
>>
>>5852108
>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together.
>>
>>5852108
>>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together
>>
Rolled 10 (1d10)

>>5852108
>[Conditioning/Strain] Perhaps you could physically mold the two halves back together? Punch a hole through and use a pin to hold it?
>>
>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together.
Secondary: >[Logic] Try to fashion a brace that'll hold it in place from materials you have.

I personally enjoy large updates alot-I like reading. Can't reply most of the time due to an IP range ban though. I suspect few responses was recieved because it was the weekend and people were busy doing other things.
>>
>Use your blowtorch to fuse the drive shaft back together
Writing.
>>
“Wait."

Liv pauses, one foot half-raised.

You kneel closer, peering at the fallen drive shaft. “It just rotates, right?”

“Uh, yeah?” Liv says. “If you stick your hand near one while it's running, you're liable to lose it.”

You carefully slide some scrap to the side, wary of any sharp edges, and slide yourself slightly under the truck. Your chest wedges against the underside of the runner board, but you can still turn your head enough to read over and gently grab the broken rod. Reaching into your robes, you produce the promethium torch. “Let me try something.” You don't have time to see their reaction before you turn under the chassis.

The shaft is surprisingly light - lighter than you would have thought for a solid rod of metal - and easy for you to lift from the joint it terminates into. The other half is fixed in place by it's housing, so you're only able to lift the fallen section into place. You press it into the joint and notice that due to the partial crumple, the two halves no longer exactly fit together. The part that had dug into the ground had deformed, making it shallow on one end and overhanging on the other. Ideally, the two would be fully joined, but when it comes to welding... you wouldn't be able to affix the entire rod, only the outer edge.

It's a shame that cars aren't held together with glue, like books are.

Grabbing the shaft, you wedge it back into place, trying to make sure the line of the shaft is as straight as possible. The deformity is actually an asset here, as it catches on the axle and holds it straight.

The torch lets out an electric whine as the automatic starter is charged by your fingers pumping the actuation lever. Gaseous promethium issues through the nozzle before it catches and flares to life with a white hot flame. You wince and point the torch away from yourself, feeling your eyes reflexively narrow into tiny points. Looking at it left tiny white spots in your vision, but it was also your only source of light in the dark, so you try to avoid looking at it for too long as you withdraw one of the thin rods of solder that had come with the kit. It was meant primarily as a cutting torch, but you could in theory weld with this...

You start by clumsily applying it to the edge of the gash, heating up the metal until it's glowing white before your eyes. To reach, you need to stretch your arms out beneath the truck, such that it wavers slightly in front of you. With your other hand, you very carefully feed the solder into the crack. It melts almost instantly upon contact with the flame, trickling down into the joint and you hope filling in the cracks between the two halves. You slowly move around the edge of the break, forming a rough line of solder that looks vaguely like a weld. You just hope that it roughly holds together...
>>
>>5853917
One third around the break, you have to switch to a new stick of solder, which is quickly eaten up as you reach the divot in the rod. The entire stick wounds up being swallowed into that thing, and you realize that you might not even finish the path all the way around. You look around, and pull some metal plating up from the ground around you, laying it on top of the axle and blasting it with the blowtorch until it too glows hot. Using another piece of rubble, you very skillfully tamp it down by bludgeoning it with part of a brick and wait for it to cool.

When it doesn't come loose when you experimentally scrape at it, you guess that it probably worked alright. Your last stick goes into fusing the rest of the perimeter shut, and instead of adding another piece of scrap, you heat the torn edge of the drive shaftl up before bashing it into place with the rock. The result looks vaguely like a crimp, and at the very least appears fused.

It should hold... you hope...

“How we doing?” Cad's voice comes.

You begin wiggling yourself out. “I'm not sure. Try starting it up.”

Liv sits in the cab with the door open as she fires it up, Cad watching with an impassive expression.

You put Cad between yourself and the truck, just in case anything goes horrifically wrong with your repair job. Doubtless the machine spirit of the truck would be angered by what you just did.

The engine turns over and comes on, and Liv experimentally presses the accelerator...

To your surprise, the truck suddenly lurches forward and rolls out of the pile of rubble it had been stuck on, running around the perimeter of the clearing while the sound of Liv's distinct cackle echoed. It made a distinct grinding noise as it moved, and the power seemed to be less, but...

“I'll be damned.” Cad muttered. “It's actually moving.”

“Barely.”

“Barely.” He agrees. “That's better than before.” He rubs his chin. “...think it'll hold three more days?”

“I have no idea.” You admit.

Cad claps your shoulder with a hand. “Kid, you'll have to get used to that feeling.”

You remount in slightly higher spirits, although both you and Errat can't help but glance behind you every few minutes, trying to make sure that Liv and Erich are still following you. The entire convoy had reduced it's speed slightly, avoiding some of the bumpier sections and debris piles if they could possibly avoid it. On occasion, Cad even led the convoy on wide sweeps, sending you away and away from the buoy line until they vanished entirely, only to gradually sweep back around until the reflectors flared again.

“Does he know what he's doing?" You frown as Cad veers off to the right again.

“Oh, yeah.” Errat says, eyes flicking over the landscape regardless. “Cad's our guide. He's been running the foundations for twelve years, and he knows the dead zones better than anyone else.”

“Dead zones?”
>>
>>5853918
“Path between the sleeper's nests.” Errat says, lowering his voice to the point that it became difficult to hear over the engine. “The buoys mark the best route, but if you ever had to navigate them on foot... there's a reason we use guides.”

“How do you tell what's a dead zone and what isn't?"

Errat shrugs. “I don't know. Cad just seems to have a way with it. If you're brave and on foot, you can get close, but...” He gestures. “It's pitch black down here so...”

Cad seems to be in a good mood that night, adding extra chunks of ration bar to the stew and thickening it with a dash of something that smells of alcohol from a hip flask. It tastes headier than usual, making your throat burn and your stomach feel oddly warm, although the feeling quickly passes. You sit one one of the runner boars, watching Liv's normal cackle turn to giggles as she lightly punches Cad and slurs her story about a bouquet of flowers that you can't quite parse.

You take the time while the others are dousing the fire to examine your impromptu weld job. As you expected, it has visible cracks in it, and a slight but pronounced twist to the metal. You blast the metal again with the torch to seal the crack, but you know that if this twist gets any worse, there won't be a convenient break in the metal for you to seal back up again. The flame sputters as you let off the pump, and you shake the fuel can experimentally. Barely anything. You put the near-empty can into your things, and replace it with a new can. You can use the last dredge of promethium to light tomorrow's fire so it doesn't go to waste.

Cad's good mood has lasted long enough for him to take first watch, and you settle back into the seat, your eyes closing quickly.

It felt like only a few seconds later when you open them again.

Lights dance outside your window, and you lift your head to see little sparks of gold and red light streaking above you, closer than they ever had been before. They dance on the wind like embers, stopping just above the clearing the convoy had made camp in before abruptly flicking off. Partially light and fire, they're drawn to the earth, pooling downwards before flickering on. And yet, they were... indistinct. They moved with little purpose, if any. A part of you suspected your earlier guess was right, and that they were simple motes of fire, ignited in distant fires or by atmospheric gases.

"Tankborn..."

Your eyes roll up to the vox unit, which is silent above you.

It had been a voice couched in a hiss of vox static, half-whispered in the wind and half spoken in the ambient static of it's speaker. A voice not entirely outside, but also ‘inside’, like the Voice in the water had been.

You rub your eyes. Had you been dreaming about the waters? You had dreamed a few times since being cast out from the tank, but they were disturbed and indistinct. Not like this...
>>
>>5853919
Something like a sigh carried on the wind, rolling over one shoulder and across your cheek. You tasted burnt oil, and a sound like the death rattle of a dying man. It reminded you of the corpsegrinder, and for a brief instant, your skin felt wet with amniotic fluid, and your limbs weak. Why were you remembering this now?

Turning, you look over your shoulder and into the darkness. There was nothing out there, just more scrap and rubble. Were you imagining things?

>Check it out.
>Leave it be.
>>
>>5853920
>>Check it out
>>
>>5853920
>Check it out.
What could possibly go wrong?
>>
>>5853920

>Check it out.

My body is ready for whatever horrible thing this is
>>
>>5853920
>Check it out.
>>
Oh, and while I think I we got one more update before thread dead, if it looks like it's about to fall off and I haven't archived it yet, please do.
>>
>>5853920
>>Check it out.
>>
>>5853920
>Check it out.
>>
>>5853920
>Leave it be.
I'll be the voice in the back of your head
>>
>Check it out.
Looks like we actually probably have three or four more updates in us actually. Writing.
>>
File: contact.png (7 KB, 494x408)
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The door clicks open, and you slide out into the darkness of night- insofar as that existed down here. Frozen shards of dirt gently crunch beneath your boots, and you begin making for the corner of the camp, beyond the small circle of light cast by the embers of the fire, and the interior lights of each truck.

“Going for a piss, Leb?” A voice softly calls, and you turn to look up at Erich, peering up from his position inside the triangle of vehicles.

“Yes.” You say, nodding. “I'll be back shortly.”

“Kay, be careful.”

You turn away again, checking your side for your laspistol as you make you way into the ring of darkness around the camp. The ground grows dimmer and dimmer as you walk, and you find yourself wishing that you owned a stablight. Navigating solely by your merely human night vision was a pain, although the light down here wasn't pitch black. If you squinted, you could see the faint outlines of trash and rubble around you well enough to walk without tripping. The ‘stars’ were dimmer tonight, and you wonder briefly if the sky beyond the hive was overcast or the new moon was approaching.

Stopping at the edge of the circle of light, you listen for a moment. The foundations were exceptionally quiet beyond the regular winds that rushed past, but if you just barely listened...

It was a sound like settling metal, a hiss of static and a sigh of regret. It came on the wind, and yet you felt it through the ground, in the soles of your shoes and your feet. Whatever it was, it spoke without words, like an old man in his final days struggling to move his lips. There was regret, mourning and shame, and it hung in the air like thick steam that you could feel yourself pushing through as you walked.

"Tankborn..." The voice came again, rushing like static. It issued from open pipes and from under overturned piles of scrap metal, echoing without truly rattling the metal. New words came with a renewed effort. "Stand... speak..."

You keep walking, acutely aware of the light of the camp shrinking away behind you. This was further than you had ever come before- almost as far as Cad had ever drawn you off the trail of buoys.

Yet you were getting close. To what, you weren't sure, and a part of you whispers fear. Yet, you couldn't help but be drawn forward, knowing that you should stand before what was calling to you. That it was mighty.

Good, perhaps not. But mighty.

Your feet stop, and you stare into complete blackness. There was nothing before you- at least, nothing that you could see.

"Tankborn..." The voice called again, repeating as if it's own words were echoing. Inhuman, but quiet, old. It did not bounce or issue from the ground this time, but it came from the air in front of you, gently buffeting you with the merest whisper. Whatever it was, you were standing before it.

>"I am here."
>"Who is this?"
>...perhaps you shouldn't be here.
>Use the blowtorch as a light.
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5855103

>Use the blowtorch as a light.

On low, and keep our hand on the nozzle in case we need to blast.

… we took our laspistol with us, right?
>>
>>5855103
>"Who is this?"
>>
>>5855103
>...perhaps you shouldn't be here.
Nope! This has to be some sort of trap that lures people into the dead zones. This is some anomaly nonsense!
>>
>>5855103
>...perhaps you shouldn't be here.
All of the bad vibes, get me out of here
>>
>>5855011
That depends

>>5855103
>Use the blowtorch as a light.
>>
>>5855103
>...perhaps you shouldn't be here.
>>
>>5855103
>Use the blowtorch as a light.
We are so very close. Don't chicken out anons.
>>
>"Who is this?”
Secondary: >Use the blowtorch as a light.
>>
>>5855103
>>"Who is this?"
>>
That looks like a three way split, but we got our secondary vote tie-breaking us to:
>Use the blowtorch as a light.

>>5855279
On the world instantly making me a fool? Perhaps.
>>
File: contact with you.gif (33 KB, 494x408)
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Your hand goes under your robe, tracing the things hidden under the folds of cloth. Your hand touches the grip of your laspistol, and you hesitate briefly before moving your hand to the blowtorch and pulling it out again. Twisting the throttle dial down, you lift the torch up and above your head, just out of your sight before squeezing the ignition mechanism.

The igniter grates, and small sparks rain down around you before the promethium catches, and the darkness around you is suddenly illuminated by red and white light. The red casts the ground around you in a bloody half-light where the other colors were washed out unless you got close and squinted, leaving the dirt looking off and murky, while rust on exposed pipes was oddly bright against the dark metal. Raising your torch and lifting your head, you shine the light as best you can on what's before you.

Thin lines of metal reflect the light faintly, tracing a spiderweb of exposed circuitry and sunken photoreceptors that spreads out further than the dim circle of light you're casting can reach, disappearing into the gloom above you. A groaning sound comes, a sigh of exertion as something long disabled fantasizes that it can move again. Dirt and many layers of soot stained once-pristine cerulean plates, the original color barely visible under the red and white light.

Your mind stirs with recognition, and you take a step back as photoreceptors ignite with a glimmer of internal light, staring out into the darkness without focus, but upon you all the same.

"Tankborn." The Titan speaks, the sound issuing from cracks in it's armor and the grill beneath it's photocluster. "Have you not... come to walk...?"

“I...” Words fail you.

"Walk." It's eyes remained unfocused, distant. "We promised... that we would walk..."

Your mouth moves for a few seconds. “How do you know that I am tankborn?"

"We can... see it on you... the mark of the maker... stolen promises... cloak of old night..." It trails off, it's voice growing fond, as if lost in memories. "You can set us free... let us walk..."

“The war is over.” You shake your head. “You defeated the enemy, it was centuries ago!”

"...no..."

“...no?”

"War... never... ends..." The sound suddenly became more focused, surprised. "Can't you... see? That war... still lives... we... must walk..."

The power in it's voice makes you flinch. It was a wreck, broken beyond repair, and yet the sheer force of it's presence made your knees tremble and your head feel faint.

"Empty, formless... locked full of potential... tampered... stolen..." The hair on the back of your neck stands up as it speaks. "Easy to get inside. Your mind... barely formed, yet shaped with intent."

You shudder as you feel it's touch against your head again.

"You are a child... of the machine... you can do this... for us..."

“Do what?” You ask. “What do you want me to do?”
>>
>>5856429
"We must walk." It's voice sharpens, brightening as it exerts. "Tell us: do you think we can walk?"

Your gaze turns, and you see the broken and crushed reams of cabling and machinery pooling out around it, stretching far beyond your small circle of light.

"Then you must walk for us." It rasps. "Do this... and we will speak of you... you, and the unbroken stem inside you. Will you walk?"

>"I will."
>"No."
>[Write-In]
>>
>>5856431

>"I will."

Probably best to nod along for the massive killing machine’s benefit
>>
>>5856431
>"I will."
>>
>>5856431
>>"I will."
>>
>>5856431
>"No."
>>
>>5856431
>"I will."
>>
Archived: https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2023/5806381/
God I never know what to do for tags.

We'll just count until this thread falls off as the remainder of the voting period. Expect the new thread to be up... 4AM PST? Ish? That's about when I normally update.

I'll also post here when a new thread goes up and shill it in /qtg/ I suppose:
https://twitter.com/QMBentus
>>
>>5856431
>>"I will."
Would be awesome to have the support of a titian and slowly repair it.
>>
>>5856431
>"I will."
>>
>>5856431
>>"I will."
>>
>"I will.”
Thanks for running the quest, Bentus! I enjoy reading your writing.
>>
Bah, back too late to link the new thread in here. Regardless, I'm writing now and there'll be a new thread up soon.
>>
Okay, posting new thread... nooow.



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