Sept. 7, 2060
4:00 PM
After leaving Dr. Kaminsky’s, the three runners made the obligatory early morning Stuffer Shack run before heading back to their warehouse and crashing the day away. Before their planned infiltration of the Arcology to shut down Deus once and for all, they had to do some things - collect on some payments, and maybe get themselves some new ones. They all loaded in the beat-up Ford van they’d appropriated from some drug-runners who weren’t needing it anymore (well, not after Rasta was through, they didn’t) and drove over to Dante’s Inferno.
Plunkett walked over to the public vidphone and punched up the number the Japanese businessmen from Renraku had given them. The white static on the vidscreen gradually cleared and the face of one of the Renraku execs appeared.
"It’s done," the ork said flatly.
"Excellent," said the company man. A pause. "We will be at your location shortly with the payment."
After hanging up, the ork turned to the troll and elf. "’Kay. The Renraku guys are comin’ by here in a few with the payment. I’m gonna go out and wait. Ghost, you come with me. Rasta, you go to Gunderson and collect. Get us another job, too." Both the other runners nodded as they parted ways.
The troll wandered over to Gunderson’s usual booth. The repulsive little man was wearing a threadbare brown tweed jacket and alternated his time between picking at a scab on his nose and punching buttons on his computer. He looked up at Rasta.
"We be done wit’ the job, Gunderson."
"Good," he said in his undefinable European accent. "Good." He punched in a code on his computer and downloaded some cash onto the team’s credstick. "Here is your payment, Sir troll. You will be wanting another job, yes?"
"Right."
"Ah, well Gunderson has another job for you. Mr. Johnson, he wishes that you get some telesma for him, yes?" So the Johnson’s a mage, Rasta thought. Telesma was herbs, minerals and such used in enchanting. "Here is the address where you are to deliver the goods upon receipt," Gunderson said, pushing a napkin towards the troll’s hand. "The telesma is being held by the Cascade Ork tribe, out in the woods. You like the woods, eh? Mr. Johnson, he pay you 3,000 if you do this."
Rasta nodded, accepting the deal. Gunderson keyed it in. The troll left.
Outside, he rejoined Ghost and Plunkett, now 7,000 nuyen richer thanks to the Renraku guys. "Gunderson wants us to do a simple delivery run," Rasta said. "Gotta pick up some telesma from the Cascade Orks. Deliver it to this address." He handed Plunkett the napkin.
The ork looked at the troll, and then the elf. "Let’s go."
All three of them loaded back into the van, and hightailed it through the rain-slicked streets of Seattle towards the Salish-Shidhe border crossing.
Sept. 7, 2060
8:00 PM
The van sped down the old I-90 - now called the "Eye of Sauron" by some Seattle residents, obvious Tolkien fanatics, who read way too much into the whole ork thing - towards Cle Elum, where they were to pick up the telesma.
They were fast approaching Easton when a Native American dressed in old U.S. Army fatigues - salvaged from God-knows-where, since the U.S. hadn’t even existed for 30 years - and with a red swath of warpaint across his eyes - flagged them down. Plunkett slowed and rolled down the window.
"Turn yourself around, Anglo," the paramilitary guy said. "We don’t want any of your big-city ways out here."
The ork looked nonplussed. "I thought you guys in Salish-Shidhe liked us?"
The Indian spat on the ground. "Salish-Shidhe. Bah! They would willingly coexist with polluters, with defilers. Seattle on one side, the damned orks on the other. This land is not Salish-Shidhe, Anglo. You trespass on lands claimed by the Salish Reclamatory Front, and we make our own laws. And we tell you to go back to your filthy city."
Rasta said not a word, but reached towards his weapon - not actually a move to grab it, just to show this Army-wannabe that they meant business. When the Indian saw this, he ordered the three out of the van.
The three runners complied, with Plunkett and Rasta immediately opening fire, which was returned by the man who had spoken, as well as nearly a dozen others. Ghost hung back near the van, as a bolt of fire arced towards the ork, and then another - they had mages with them, at least two. Bullets whizzed overhead.
"Ghost, a little help over here!" Plunkett shouted as he grappled with an SRF soldier.
"Coming right up," the elf shouted back as he rose from behind the van, tossing a bolt of green light towards the soldiers. Two of them immediately started wailing, their flesh beginning to bubble and slough away.
"I’ll cover you," Ghost said, launching another green bolt at the enemy as Rasta rummaged through his bag in the front seat and pulled out a small gray grenade. He popped the pin and launched it into the largest gang of soldiers. Plunkett dove over the hood of the van as the grenade detonated, and down went three more soldiers.
The men struck by Ghost’s green bolts were now almost totally liquefied, recognizable only as flesh-colored puddles of goo. The ork leapt back into the fray, cleanly popping one of the SRF guys in the head and following through with a resounding blow to the jaw of another with the butt of his Thunderblast.
After a few more seconds of the fray, the dozen soldiers all lay dead or dying on the ground. The runners went over to another van - evidently the SRF’s - and began rummaging through it. They found a map of Seattle, with Mercer Island - well, Council Island now - circled and a date in red, 11/15, beside it.
Sept. 8, 2060
10:00 AM
Once the telesma had been picked up and delivered, the runners went partied for a few hours at the Inferno before once again going back to their pad and crashing. The next morning, they decided to take the annotated map to someone who could do something about it, so they took it to Adam Carnucci, a low-level employee of City Hall who got them in touch with none less than Governor Lindstrom.
Lindstrom was a typical suit - small, thin, decked out in the obligatory neatly pressed Armani, perfect teeth, and just a hint of ruthlessness. Small talk was exchanged, and finally Ghost - who they all decided was best for this meeting - asked Lindstrom the obvious. "Is anything important about November 15?"
Lindstrom cleared his throat. "That’s the date of a special session of the Sovereign Tribal Council, to discuss a possible ouster of Chief John Moses, the Salish-Shidhe’s representative in Seattle." Here he looked somber. "The Sovereign Tribal Council. As in representatives from Ute, Pueblo, Sioux… if this SRF is planning to do something that day, it could be bad… very bad."