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Surf a Flood of random discussion.
10/14/2006 9:53:18 AM
432

The Flood 4: Parallel Worlds

[b]The Insertion.[/b] The moon looked down on it all. A hazy, thick blanket tucked in close to the ground, as though it were a duvet warming up a child in winter months. From simply looking at the moon, and the sparkling mass of stars clustered above and beyond it, you wouldn’t know a war was on. Looking lower, and if you knew they were actually knew they were there in the first place, a trio of black, almost invisible planes glided seemingly without effort above the low level cloud layer. A larger transport plane, accompanied by a pair of smaller, sleeker escorts. On command, the two escort fighters peeled off from the transport, that was startlingly quiet for its size, and flared their afterburners. Specks of light amongst the dark they sped off east, towards a monumental battle in the skies, where jets screamed around at ridiculous speed, engaging one another in elegant rolls and dives, blasting away at one another in a deadly aerial combat. Quietly, the transport carried on without an escort, confident that the greatest in radar spoofing technology and stealth equipment would keep it hidden. But what really mattered was within the plane itself. Secured firmly by strong magnetic locks that were connected to a pair of rails stood a bipedal machine, fully the size of two men with one man standing on the first’s shoulders. It was expected to be the last fully operational unit of its kind in this entire region, or so intelligence said. Red markings that had once adorned it’s armour had been replaced with the occasional blue stripe, but little broke the jet black coating besides the single large, bright red eye and a pair of smaller ones to the left of it on the metal rectangle that assumed the place of a head. A handful of mechanics and technicians dashed around, running last minute checks on armour and weaponry, especially the most potent of all armaments. The weapon in question was literally the latest of all developments. “The most secret and devastating device in development for this decade” many heralded it. Mounted onto the right shoulder, it was tubular with a circular cooling device attached to the back of the weapon. A technician had affectionately painted on a snarling set of teeth around the muzzle, and no one had wanted them removed. The interior hold was illuminated by a pair of baleful red lights on either side of the mechanical masterpiece, two of the technicians secured their equipment in specially prepared places and ran to seats and strapped themselves down whilst the third jogged to the rear of the craft, where the bay door stood closed. The man secured himself with a short tether and grasped the lever controlling the door. He looked up to the bipedal machine, shook his head and pulled the lever. Suddenly, the interior was filled with noise and the temperature dropped like a stone as the whooshing, freezing exterior found a way into the craft. Fighting the biting cold wind, the mechanic hit a red button, and with a deafening [i]clang[/i] the magnetic locks uncoupled and the machine raced along the rails and out of the hatch of the plane, falling away into the darkness. After a moment of free-fall the machine hit the cloud layer and carried on going, the thick layers of cloud parting like paper. It punched out the other side, and the pilot inside it immediately took stock of the locations below the vehicle. Breathing through a gas mask that fed him a constant supply of Combat Stimulants, the adrenaline inducing gases made his senses as sharp as that of any computer. The machine was heading towards the river bank opposite the ruins of Floodlin. From here, the man inside could see pinpricks of flame dotting the area, marking out where enemy artillery pieces had made their homes, but one stood out. A gargantuan column of flame made an impossible target to miss, and the machine rolled over to get a better angle of descent toward it. General Guscon was taking a tour of the front lines, accompanied by a handful of other Undergroundican leaders, and a force of bodyguards, he had come via a convoy of staff cars and Half-Track tanks to this, the greatest piece of military engineering he was likely to ever see, [i]The Marathon[/i]. He emerged, clapping wholeheartedly from a improvised bunker after he had witnessed the firing of his most potent artillery piece. “Excellent work! Where was that shell aimed at?” He shouted, ears ringing from the blast. “A concentration of Floodian forces in the east of the city, General. It is bizarre, the enemy gathers in large numbers, but does not strike our forces trapped in the city.” Replied a young adjutant. It angered Guscon, but he nonverbally admitted the young soldier was right. The entire reason that he had come to the frontlines in the first place was because of the disastrous turn of events in the enemy city. In the space of a few hours, Undergroundican troops in the city had been surrounded, cut off from the river and home, and were now being herded into an ever shrinking perimeter. It was hoped that by his arriving, the troops would rally and gain much needed morale. Guscon had a sinking feeling that Floodland no longer cared about the collection of forces stuck in the city-a full two thirds of the units in the entire sector-but cared more about striking out across the river. “What is [i]that[/i]?” Guscon asked, pointing out a slight patch of movement amongst the night. “It’s coming right for us. Quick! Get the convoy tanks! Hurry!” The adjutant shouted, panic in his voice. Shells and bombs were never that big, so something far worse must be en route, it would seem. The pilot had waited until the very last moment, with alarms bleeping and wailing all around. Relishing every moment of danger, he finally triggered the chemical boosters in the legs of the walking tank. With a slam far more powerful than any shell, the jets that folded out of the legs roared with the strain, nearly shearing off their positions with the energy of the halt. With his velocity slowed sufficiently, the pilot released the thrusters, and the now useless devices, along with the empty fuel tanks, sprang off the walker as explosive bolts attaching them detonated. The walker dropped to the muddy ground, sending clumps of semi-solid earth flying. The pilot had landed in one of [i]The Marathon’s[/i] firing pits, huge holes in the ground, dug with three tunnels leading in different directions. One heading West with a large railway to accommodate The Marathon and a similar one heading East. Another subterranean tunnel came from the North with a dirt road constructed for ammunition transport. But it wasn’t ammunition vehicles heading towards him, it was a quartet of Half-Track tanks with Heavy Machineguns bolted onto their hulls. They didn’t get a chance to fire. The Mech hefted it’s arms, and the two chain guns on each arm began to take them down. Rapid pelts of bullets rained down on the slowly advancing tanks, and their paper thin armour was torn apart in seconds, each one detonating as bullets ground through them, setting off ammunition, petrol or both. With the immediate threat out of the way, the walking tank turned to find the [i]real[/i] target. A truck filled with shells the size of houses next to the hulking Marathon, a pile of rail stock, there it was. The walker broke out into a run as it spotted around a dozen figures trying to sneak away, and they looked suspiciously like Undergroundican staff officers. One in particular looked like General Guscon. But a buzzing filled the area and suddenly, a Helicopter Gunship burst over a side of the firing pit, blasting immediately with everything it had. The Mech shrugged off the blaze of gunfire as though it were light rain, and brought the flying machine down in a return salvo. As the Helicopter fell, the Mech jumped up, landing before the fleeing party of Undergroundicans, and mowing them down, rendering the defenceless enemy into lumps of bloody meat and tatters of clothes. To finish the job, the pilot whipped the seemingly invulnerable walker around and charged up the wonder weapon. As if from nowhere, blue dots of light began to appear around the gun muzzle weapon. The Mech planted its feet firmly, and steadied itself as the blue dots were sucked into the gun itself. The temperature of the barrel soared, and the circular cooling device hissed superheated steam as it tried to keep up with the heat, if the weapon grew too hot, it would fuse and explode, not something that should be allowed to happen. With a blinding flash like a star exploding, the weapon discharged, and a crackling blue stream of energy scythed across the barrel of The Marathon, cutting it off entirely. The pilot changed the angle, and the beam vaporised a pack of terrified crewmen. The pilot turned the weapon slightly, and touched off a truckload of highly explosive shells. The entire area shook as though an Earthquake had arrived, and the shells exploded simultaneously, throwing lighter objects, humans and debris into the air. Feet planted firmly, the mech simply rode out the blast, and watched with satisfaction as [i]The Marathon[/i] was lifted off it’s tracks for a moment and crashed on its side with a screech of torn metal. Behind his gas mask, Corbec smiled at the destruction. “Mission Accomplished.” [Edited on 10/14/2006]
English
#Offtopic #Flood

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  • You already know about Americans and travel, I ranted about it enough before. Anyway, I break up on the 15th, but I'm not sure about the yanks. Could be yesterday, next week, whatever. You know the Spanish have their Christmas in January?

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  • Perhaps maybe they're doing something today. Do Americans take Christmas holidaya before us, cause they might be in another land...

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  • A second sun. Missed that last bit out. But where is everyone else?

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  • A second what? All very interesting...

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  • [b]The Second Sun.[/b] “Have you got the GPRS locked?” “Yup. Right there. On the A322. He’s at the Service Station for that road.” “Can we get a call through?” “Afraid not, the mobile phone is off. We’re getting a Satellite into position to relay footage of what’s going on now.” “Are the Stalkers in position?” “They are en route now. All six of them.” High above, silently floating in Orbit a spy satellite steered into position, using short puffs of compressed gas to manoeuvre around and allow the camera a good angle. Amongst the endless black of space, it blended in perfectly. It slowed to a complete stop, and a section opened up to face the planet beneath it. Slowly, a telescopic camera extended out and trained the high-powered lens at the surface. “The orbiting camera is ready. We’ll have footage soon.” A wall-size flat screen suddenly winked into life, displaying the Service Station in a crisp high-definition. The tents could be clearly seen, along with a single truck. “Those bodies. The station occupants?” “I should think so.” “And who are they?” “I dread to think. Floodians perhaps.” The screen showed a group of people in body armour lounging around or standing guard. Whoever they were, a scan of the area revealed they were not carrying the nanites distributed to the local population. “There can be no doubt. Mc Lees didn’t do his job properly and now the Floodians have established a foothold. What’s this?” On the screen, a man in a business suit was herded out of a tent by two people. One stepped forward and seemed to say something. Shortly after, the others all stood and gathered their equipment. “No. It can’t be. Get the face recognition software active. I want to know who those people are. Now. Especially that one.” In front of the camera feed another screen popped up, scrolling through thousands of faces per second. At first, one was highlighted and then moved to the side of the screen. Then moments after a second one was highlighted and shifted to the side, quickly followed by the third, then the fourth. The first was Mc Lees #137, the second Emperor Corbec, and the third Empress Sally Sabar. “It can’t be. Surely he’s dead? How could he have escaped! It isn’t him, is it?” “Pyroshark…” Lehto #137 spat, glaring at the picture of the man he had sentenced to death. “Order the stalkers to attack!” Lehto shouted. Little did Corbec know, but whilst he explained what the situation was to the assembled troops, the spy satellite was watching his every move. The soldiers seemed to tired to argue with him or refuse to go along to this “Hive.” Wearily, they trudged into the truck, sending the captive to a seat close to the cab so he could talk through a small opening to the driver and provide directions. “I’m driving, and Sally, you’re with me. I want to talk.” Corbec had found the keys earlier and climbed into the drivers seat. The engine roared into life as Sally clambered into the passenger seat. The truck was a medium size, six-wheeled old thing, painted a drab green all over for camouflage and fitted with powerful headlights. Corbec pulled out onto a road Mc Lees told him was called the A322. Apparently this Hive thing was directly ahead, but Corbec couldn’t see it. The darkness was too thick and his Night Vision Goggles weren’t strong enough to see too far away. “You wanted to talk?” Sally asked at length. “Yeah, I wanted to ask you to stop taking such risks. I mean, we’re royalty, we shouldn’t be here, heck, if it weren’t for Pyroshark being around to blab about our ascent to the throne, we wouldn’t even be here.” Corbec spoke quietly for fear of anyone hearing. “Corbec, if this is about the portal thing-” “No, Sally, look, we’ve both got to stop throwing ourselves into these situations. I’m surprised we’ve both lasted this long, given everything we’ve been through. Sooner or later, we’ll have to let other people do the killing for us.” “Do we? I mean, do we have to stop doing this? I enjoy these risks Corbec, it makes life interesting. I can’t imagine just moping around some castle just sitting around and making the occasional speech. I want shooting, explosions, car chases and wars!” Sally exclaimed. Corbec was silent for a moment. “I just don’t want either of us to be hurt.” Mc Lees had his head in his hands, wondering what the hell he was doing, and more importantly, how he would survive. “It’s not all bad.” Someone said. Mc Lees looked up. “Hi.” Pyroshark said. “You. You’re.” Mc Lees stammered. “Pyroshark? Yes. Dead? No.” “How? The base-” Mc Lees was clueless. “The Undergroundicans lent an unexpected hand.” Pyroshark smiled. “So, Mc Lees, right? I met a woman with your name while I was in the Seventh Column. You know her?” Mc Lees blushed and forced a smile. “Yeah. Yeah I do. After all, we spent 137 generations in that mountain, didn’t we? She and I… We married, but she died in an accident when we first came here.” “I see.” said Pyroshark. He fell silent, thinking about how anyone with the plans to enslave an entire planet could be capable of love. “We’re not all like Lehto #137, you know.” Mc Lees spoke up, as if reading Pyroshark’s mind. The truck followed the dual carriageway, the tall pine trees all around towering over it. The road was empty, but the forests weren’t. Six metallic figures dashed through the undergrowth at the same pace as the truck. Once they were al ready, they moved in for the attack. “Jesus Christ!” Corbec exclaimed. Something lithe and malevolent had just landed on the bonnet of the truck, buckling it. The thing had long, shining fingernails of metal, two circles of burning red in place of the eyes, and a metal grille for a mouth, or as far as Corbec could tell, given everything from the waist up was half obscured by shadow. Suddenly, it fell backwards and underneath the wheels of the truck as the windscreen exploded into hundreds of flying shards of glass. “Keep driving!” Sally shouted, holding a smoking pistol. Almost simultaneously, five more of the scarecrow-like metal figures gained purchase on the truck. The canvas cover on the truck was easily broken and one immediately landed in the rear compartment. “Stalker!” Mc Lees shouted, and pressed his back against the metal of the driver’s compartment. The ‘Stalker’ raised a metal claw and plunged it through Master Snakes’ left shoulder. The other set of razor-sharp nails combined to form a cone-shaped saw blade, rotating at a thousand times a second. Screaming in agony, master snake hefted his Spas12 with his one arm still operating correctly and fired. The blast jarred his arm to the point of uselessness, but obliterated the Stalker’s face. Suddenly, a conical saw blade eviscerated a vast section of canvas cover next to JS097’s shoulder, and by Alpha Whatever a series of ragged tears appeared in the cover. Above them, a Stalker ripped the entire cover off. Sally yelped as the mirror on her car door was wrenched away by a metallic hand, and the window smashed apart by a blurred cone of metal. She fired twice to fend off her attacker, but the effect was negligible. “Hold on!” Corbec shouted, steering the truck at full speed toward a hedge separating the two roads of the dual carriageway. The truck ploughed through, throwing foliage everywhere, but minus one Stalker. “See! Why should we give up this?!” Sally shouted to Corbec. Master Snake was wondering why the saw blade of his assailant was still rotating even after he had blown off it’s head when it burst back into life. The Stalker, minus a head, brought back it’s blade arm for a final strike when Pyroshark shoulder barged into it. The talons embedded in Master Snakes’ shoulder wrenched free and Pyroshark pushed the Stalker off the truck, but as he did, it bumped into General Chief, knocking him out of the truck. Chief barely managed to get a hold onto the rear of the truck in time and avoid a painful death. But it didn’t save him from a fourth stalker from scuttling along the flank of the truck and stabbing him in the ribs with its saw blade hand. Blood flew everywhere, and Pyroshark managed to pull him up into the truck before the pain made Chief let go. Corbec was keeping the truck steady, noticing a roundabout ahead and prepared to go around it when the sky lit up with a second sun. [Edited on 12/9/2006]

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  • Mmkay Today is taking too long dammit. [Edited on 12/9/2006]

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  • Next part to be out some time today.

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  • Mmkay. It is all slowly beginning to come together, no? EDIT: Post 225 [Edited on 12/8/2006]

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  • [b]The Answers.[/b] Corbec had everyone stand down to catch some rest. Everyone was too tired to ask where exactly they were or to kick up a fuss about not being back in Ireland to wait for reinforcements. “So, Pyroshark. This man, did you see him during your brief employment in The Seventh Column?” Corbec asked. The two had gone to one side out of earshot from the soldiers. “No, not up close anyway. I’m not sure, I was there for nearly no time at all, and I never got to know everyone.” Pyroshark explained. “What I’d like to know is how such a large and important base evaded detection for how long?” Corbec asked. “Apparently the people in there were the 137th generation of clones.” “Either way, it hardly puts much confidence in your story. What with all this about clones.” Corbec gazed up into the black sky, glittering away with a bright carpet of stars and a bone-white moon. “Something must’ve happened here. There’s no light pollution around. No power, no lights.” Pyroshark spoke up. “Job done.” Sally said, making both Corbec and Pyroshark jump. “Done already? That was barely five minutes.” Corbec asked. “He was most forthcoming. He’s agreed that if you grant him political asylum, then he’ll tell us everything we want.” “Seriously? Well, let’s begin the interrogation then.” Corbec suggested. “I’ll stay outside if you don’t mind.” Pyroshark piped up. “OK… Fine, just don’t do anything to attract attention, right?” Corbec said, going through an open flap into one of the tents. The interior of the tent was lit by a single, high power light stand. The man was sat down in a chair in front of a table once used to hold tools ready for use. Another chair sat across from him. The man looked unharmed, if a little demoralised, and Corbec wondered what Sally had done to break him so quickly. Corbec took the seat and put his elbows up onto the table. “So. You want political asylum, hmm?” He began. “Yes, yes I do. Ah… I told your person. Her.” The man pointed to Sally, who was looming in the corner of the tent, presiding over the interrogation. “Well, you’ve asked the right person, you know who I am?” “Corbec, recently crowned Emperor of Floodland and the Undergroundican Protectorate.” “My, news travels fast, even to other worlds it would seem. But anyway, I have questions, and I will only grant you asylum if you answer these questions.” The man paused, looking at the floor. “Fine.” He leaned over to Corbec and whispered: “But, the things she said she’d do to me, don’t let her. Please, please don’t let her.” Corbec noticed the man was being deadly serious, making constant nervous glances to Sally in the corner. Her face was deathly serious, almost as if it were set in stone. “Fine. Let’s begin. What’s your name, where are we, what was that device we came through, why is the whole population of Ireland a mass of slavering murderers, are you connected with the mass disappearances in our ‘world’ and if so, why?” Corbec took a deep breath as he finished. “And if you don’t tell me what I want to hear, I’ll set my lovely assistant here on you. Now, begin.” “Alright, my name is Mc Lees #137. I am a member of the Grizzled Ancients, a secret society that-” Corbec interrupted him. “I know all that crap, lived in the Seventh Column yadda yadda, underground base and all that, 137th generation clone and whatever, now get on to the real answers!” “Umm, OK. We’re in England. A country in this world that we infiltrated a short time ago. That device you came through was a portal from our world into this and vice versa, disassembling you at a molecular level then reassembling you here in an instantaneous jump through something called the Internet. It picked us up in Ireland and deposited us here. Both the people here and in Ireland have been converted to our consisting of nanites, millions of self-replicating machines that absorb themselves into the bloodstream and brain. They either find their way into a host or dissipate into the air. Once into a host, they have total control of it. Also, the nanites can repair minor damage caused to the body, increasing the survivability of the host. I’m sure you’ve already come across that on your way here.” Mc Lees paused to see if Corbec would reply, but he was silent. “Anyway… I have a theory that every time a person from this world is directly killed by a person from ours, a person from our world disappears. Perhaps as some sort of balance between the two. I don’t know really.” “There have been [i]thousands[/i] of disappearances globally.” Sally said from her corner. “We were forced to-remove a significant number of people ourselves before the gas could be distributed.” Mc Lees explained. “I’m sure you have some vitriolic speech about how this is morally wrong and that I should be shot right now. So could you get it over with quickly?” He went on to say. “No, actually, I was wondering why the hell I hadn’t come up with that plan already. Right, I would like to know where your accomplices are, do you know where to go?” “There are things called hives that we constructed entirely out of Nanites in conquered territory. I don’t know where to go, but you could gather directions there.”

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  • Congratulations, my mood has been restored to positive status by that. Good one.

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  • I'd prefer it if you just sent me the finest women of your village.

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  • Cool. *Worships the almighty of fantasy land*

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  • [quote][b]Posted by:[/b] js2097 If I'm annoyed at some evil little ASBO while I'm doing it, whatever. Just kidding, please don't kill me.[/quote] As GOD of my little world of fiction, I grant your character mercy.

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  • If I'm annoyed at some evil little ASBO while I'm doing it, whatever. Just kidding, please don't kill me.

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  • And in the next part of The Flood 4, JS suddenly dies of a heart attack. Nevertheless, no it doesn't. [Edited on 12/8/2006]

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  • How does the ungratefulness not make you want to hurt something? Oh wait, I forgot, you're doing well in Geography. You must be insane.

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  • How is that a fuel for rage?

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  • In the flood, hang on, I'll link it... [url=http://www.bungie.net/Forums/posts.aspx?postID=9361935]there[/url] Take 2 deep breaths before you enter. [Edited on 12/8/2006]

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  • Where is this post?

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  • Go there, read post, get so angry it cannot be described, shout. And I was in such a good mood too... [Edited on 12/8/2006]

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  • Whaa.... "Moron in "I hate Christams?"

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  • Wow, that's scary. By the way, moron in 'I hate christmas' thread to vent rage at.

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  • Never mind, it would be wise for me not to discuss my age group on the internet. A place home to hundreds of thousands of paedos, criminals and other such malcontents. [Edited on 12/8/2006]

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  • [quote][b]Posted by:[/b] Colonel Corbec [quote][b]Posted by:[/b] Pyroshark Woot! Nice to see I'm getting a more significant role rather than just providing the occasional sarky remark and getting hit by stuff. Yay! =) I'm liking the way the story's going; there's some good juxtaposition with the urban sprawl of Floodland and the prevalenty-rural setting of the Internet. Yes, I said juxtaposition. Now I [i]know[/i] I've been doing too much English... And yes, in answer to your earlier post, A-Levels do take up this much time. They sucketh heartily. -Pyroshark-[/quote] A Levels sure sound like good fun... [quote]My posting may be on hiatus at the moment. A combo of work overload and me becoming a bubbling crockpot of rage over the last couple of days has affected my ability to form coherant thought. Seeya when I've calmed down. [/quote] I know how that feels, you must be in Year 10 too. [/quote] Year 11, -blam!-. It only goes downhill from where you are. But as long as you didn't take geography (as I was forced to), there is a glimmer of hope on the horizon. Anyway, after getting an A* on my as of yet unfinished 3000 word piece of coursework (I'll get more marks when I'm done) I'm back in my happy place.

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  • [quote][b]Posted by:[/b] Pyroshark Woot! Nice to see I'm getting a more significant role rather than just providing the occasional sarky remark and getting hit by stuff. Yay! =) I'm liking the way the story's going; there's some good juxtaposition with the urban sprawl of Floodland and the prevalenty-rural setting of the Internet. Yes, I said juxtaposition. Now I [i]know[/i] I've been doing too much English... And yes, in answer to your earlier post, A-Levels do take up this much time. They sucketh heartily. -Pyroshark-[/quote] A Levels sure sound like good fun... [quote]My posting may be on hiatus at the moment. A combo of work overload and me becoming a bubbling crockpot of rage over the last couple of days has affected my ability to form coherant thought. Seeya when I've calmed down. [/quote] I know how that feels, you must be in Year 10 too. And Xbox Halo Guy, to answer your question, I have begun writing the next chapter thopugh not much is done. Expect a release today or tomorrow, depending on how much homework I get.

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  • Woot! Nice to see I'm getting a more significant role rather than just providing the occasional sarky remark and getting hit by stuff. Yay! =) I'm liking the way the story's going; there's some good juxtaposition with the urban sprawl of Floodland and the prevalenty-rural setting of the Internet. Yes, I said juxtaposition. Now I [i]know[/i] I've been doing too much English... And yes, in answer to your earlier post, A-Levels do take up this much time. They sucketh heartily. -Pyroshark-

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