[MnM] Project: Daedalus (Prologue)

Agamon

Hero
The following is the prologue to an upcoming PbP game called Project: Daedalus, which takes place in the Legacy Universe, which was created by Tokiwong for Generation Legacy. Toki's allowed me to use my game in his fledgling world (thanks, dude:)). This is an account of the first session, played some time ago, as a table top game.
 
Last edited:

log in or register to remove this ad

The lights shone down on the bright white room. A young teenage boy lay unconscious on a table, wires connected to him and monitors surrounding him. Two people in lab coats, a man and woman, worked along side him silently, but thoroughly, turning dials and checking the monitors.

“It doesn’t appear to be working, doctor,” the woman finally concluded.

“Dammit!” the doctor exclaimed. “But it was working yesterday when we applied it. Why isn’t it now? Are you sure you gave him the correct dosage?”

“150 cc’s, just like yesterday.” The woman looked down at the boy’s face. “Perhaps he’s already grown an immunity to it?”

“Impossible!” The doctor’s wrinkled brow furled. “We’ve detected no regenerative capabilities in this elite. The process should have worked when reapplied. Take him back. We’ll try again on a different subject tomorrow,” he added with a sigh. “Good night, Dr. Kalam.”

“Alright, good night, Dr. McDermott.” Dr. Kalam watched as Dr. McDermott left the room. Three men entered the room as the doctor left. Two of them were large and dressed like orderlies in a hospital. The third was dressed in military fatigues and armed. Dr. Kalam unhooked the boy from the machines and the two orderlies moved his body to a nearby hospital bed. They then wheeled the boy out of the room, followed closely by the military man and the doctor.

Following numerous darkly lit corridors, they came to a stop at a reinforced door guarded by two more armed men. One of the guards smiled at the doctor. “Hello, Jaya. Find that cure for cancer, or whatever it is you do, yet?” he said with a bit of a smirk.

Jaya smiled back at the guard. “Hi, Michael. No, we hit another dead end today, I think.”

“Hey, I’m off-duty in 10 minutes. Want to go have a coffee at our five-star cafeteria?” Michael said with a grin.

Jaya nodded. “Sure, I could use some caffeine right about now. See you in a bit.” She kissed Michael on the cheek before looking into the retinal scanner beside the door.

“Get a room, you two,” the other guard said, rolling his eyes as the door slid open. The four people entered the hallway on the on the other side of the doorway, leaving the guards to their post.
 


Continuing On

Damn I'm tired, I posted the post meant for my story board here >.< Ah well, anyway, subscribing, this looks rather interesting. It'll be nice to have something a tad modern to read.

Z, AKA: Renfield, AKA: Mr. Happy
 
Last edited:

S'okay, Renfield. Mistakes happen. :)

Darn, Toki, I was just about to email you and the players, I just wanted to get somehting substantial up. Glad you approve thus far. :)
 

The four journeyed down a short hallway with the wheeled bed before it opened into a large, brightly lit room. Along the concrete walls of the room were two openings into five-foot by 10-foot cells. The wall with the hallway entrance had only one cell. Beside each cell were a numeric pad and numerous small monitors. Each cell was covered with a transparent yellow field of energy. Six of the cells held occupants that stirred as the group entered the room. The doctor led the bed to the empty cell across the room, where the orderlies proceeded to move the boy to the cot lying inside.

“Yo, what’d you do him?” a black man in his twenties, wearing simple, loose, one-tone cotton clothing, standing in his cell, demanded. The group simply ignored him. He tried again. “Hey, girl, I’m talking to you! Why don’t y’all talk back, huh?”

“Yeah, where the hell is this, and what are we doing here?” a woman with dyed-blue hair, also in her twenties and in the same simple clothing as her cellmates wore, asked, but she too was ignored. “This is ridiculous, you have no right to keep us here!”

Once the unconscious boy was put in the cell, the doctor pushed some buttons on the control pad beside it and a yellow field covered the opening to it, too. As the orderlies rolled the bed back down the hallway, the armed man looked at Dr. Kalam questioningly. “You can leave. I’m just going to monitor his vitals for a few moments. I’ll be fine,” she said, waving her hand at him as she turned toward the control pad beside the boy’s cell. The soldier followed the orderlies down the hallway.

“Let us out of here, and we’ll see how fine you’ll be,” a young Hispanic man said from his cell.

“Yeah, what he said, man. I’m gonna mess you up!” the black man added. A large, olive-skinned man simply sat on his cot in his cell and glared at the woman through the energy field, his nostrils flaring as the others taunted the doctor.

“If it were up to me, I would let you out, but it’s not,” Jaya finally responded without looking away from the monitors, her voice low, but forceful.

A young Asian man, sitting cross-legged on his cot then spoke, his voice calm, “But that is not true. You enter this room often and have the codes to open our cells. You have done so many times in the past. You may believe you cannot free us because of what others tell you, but it is within your power to do so.”

“That’s right, you could!” added the Hispanic man. “Hey, we could, like, throw you in a cell and maybe even rough you up a bit, or something, to make it look like we caught you by surprise. Just give us a chance.”

“Not likely,” Jaya responded coldly, though her face showed signs uncertainty. She gave the monitors a last glance and turned to leave.

“Dammit, let us out of here!” the blue-haired woman yelled.

At that, the last prisoner awoke from her sleep, a red-haired woman in her twenties. She gracefully leapt from a curled-up position on her cot and started clawing at the energy field, to no avail. “Let me out! Let me out! Let me out!” she continual shrilled as Jaya made her way down the hallway. Jaya paused before reaching the door, her face stricken with grief. She stood and thought for a few moments before settling herself down and opening the door.

As the door closed behind her, she looked to Micheal, still standing guard at the door. “See you in a few minutes, baby,” he said with a grin.

Jaya, seemingly distracted, didn’t smile in return. “Okay. I need to talk to you about something…”
 
Last edited:

“Let me out! Let me out! Let me out!”

“All right, Sam, enough already,” the blue-haired woman said. “She’s gone. She doesn’t care. None of them do. They just want to run whatever tests it is they’re doing to us.” She backed up from the glowing field and sat on her cot, putting her head in her hands.

Sam stopped, gave the other woman a bit of a dirty look before her face softened into a state of resignation. “Sorry, Sarah, but this place is really starting to drive me buggy.”

“You mean catty, dontcha?” the black man said, leaning on the force field. “Oh, no, wait, you already a cat, or that’s what you say. Now that I’d like to see. Girl turning into a cat-girl. Wouldn’t that be cool…”

“You’d only see it for a few seconds before I clawed your gaping eyes out, Tyrone,” Sam replied jokingly.

“Hey, I’m glad you guys can sit there and joke, but this ain’t funny,” the Hispanic man said, anger in his voice.

“And I ain’t laughing, Miguel. But what the hell are we supposed to do?” Tyrone yelled back. “We tried every trick in the book, but them rent-a-cop guards musta seen all those old movies, too.”

The young Asian man, seemingly meditating upon his cot, spoke, not opening his eyes, “We will not be free of our prisons by simply wishing it so. We must be patient and await our opportunity. Our captors will make a mistake eventually, and we shall be ready to take advantage of it.”

“No offense to you, Kiro,” the large Greek man finally said in a thick Russian accent, rising from the bed, “but I am not a patient person. While this prison keeps the beast locked inside me, I was raised to believe one should be able to go where he wants, do as he wants, and be what he wants. I would go mad were I to remain here much longer.”

“Right on, big guy. What Max said. You make your own opportunities, that’s the only way you get ahead in life, man,” Tyrone added. He jerked his head around, trying to see into the boy’s cell. “Hey, how’s Aaron doing?”

Sarah, with a bit better viewpoint, responded, “He looks fine from here. I’m sure she wouldn’t have left him there if he weren’t. I pity him for the headache he’ll have tomorrow morning, though.” Suddenly the lighting dimmed, leaving only the warm, yellow glow of the cell’s force fields. She added more quietly, “I wonder which of us they’ll take tomorrow…”

No one answered.
 
Last edited:

Jaya walked down the hallway swiftly and barely acknowledged the few people she had passed. The calm and thoughtful demeanor she displayed belied the nervousness rumbling in the pit of her stomach. She checked her watch and hastened her step.

“This is insane, it’ll never work,” she thought as she rounded a corner. The calm she projected began to waver. Beads of sweat formed over her brow as she clutched a datapad tightly in her fingers. “They could get killed doing this, and it’d be my fault. Hell, I could get killed, too.” She briefly glanced at a slowly panning security camera as she walked past it. “No, I’ll let it be they’re choice if they come or not.”

She rounded another corner, her heart in her throat, but felt some relief at what she saw. At the end of the hallway, standing guard at the door of the elite prison room was a lone guard, Michael. He didn’t look very happy to see her.

“I think this is a really bad idea,” Michael said grimly.

“A worse idea would be to do nothing,” Jaya replied. “I’m sorry, Michael, I have to do this, I told you already…”

“Yeah, I know. Okay. I know better than to try and change that stubborn mind of yours.” Michael looked over at the empty post beside him. “Jefferson took my suggestion to take off early really well,” he said, smiling. “He hates the graveyard shift, every other word out of his mouth tonight was a complaint.” He sighed as he pulled a black rod from his belt. “Here you go,” he said, handing the rod to Jaya.

Jaya took the rod and looked at Michael worriedly. “I don’t want to do this.”

“You have to. I’m going to be in enough trouble as it is. You need to make it look like I didn’t help you. Now, it’s this button right here,” Michael replied. He pressed the button and two small prongs at the other end jolted with electricity. Jaya flinched. “It’s okay, it’ll hurt a bit, but not as bad as it does because you’re leaving…” he said, looking in her eyes.

Jaya looked away from him. “You don’t need to stay here forever. When you leave, we’ll meet up again. I told you, I can’t stay here anymore.”

“Oh, I’ll come looking for you, bet on it. Now you better hurry up, you have less than a half-hour until the next shift comes on. Good luck.” Michael smiled, and then closed his eyes and gritted his teeth.

“I’m sorry,” was all Jaya could say as she jabbed the stun baton at Michael. His body jolted for a second and he slumped back against the wall and to the floor. She kissed his forehead and dropped the baton. Quickly gathering her wits, she punched a code into the door panel. Once again, she gave a retinal scan and the door slid open. She hurried inside.
 

Wow man, looking good so far, is this essentially the first gaming session or setting the stage for that or what? Hehe, getting giddy, escape from some high tech medical facility, doctor betraying those she works for. Good stuff. One question, is the facility so secure it needs no cameras? Just curious is all.

Renfield
 

Renfield said:
One question, is the facility so secure it needs no cameras? Just curious is all.

They do have cameras.

Hell, I could get killed, too.” She briefly glanced at a slowly panning security camera as she walked past it. “No, I’ll let it be they’re choice if they come or not.”
 

Remove ads

Top