agogemod: (Default)
⌞THE AGOGE⌝ MODS ([personal profile] agogemod) wrote in [community profile] agogelogs2018-01-27 07:39 pm

AND THE ANZAC LEGENDS DIDN'T MENTION...


AND THEN SOMEONE YELLED OUT "CONTACT!";
and the bloke behind me swore





THE SILENT WAR

The news of the day of the retreat spreads like wildfire through the Trenches. Leading up to the final date, all soldiers on the ground are instructed to limit their gunfire, to make it look like the usual traditions for warfare, which have determined much of human history up until this point: no one really goes to war in winter. Everyone is to maintain a verbal and physical presence, but the time to confuse the Turks has really become paramount. At times, whole sections are ordered to be perfectly quiet until the last possible second and then spring out before the Turks can get too close.

Which is just how it is supposed to be. In fact, for COST recruits, there's a real sense that this might just go according to plan.

Around this time, the Rear Guard signup starts. COST recruits are met with some surprise by Captain Lewis; he will blink in surprise at a group so new wanting to volunteer so readily, but he's glad and gives everyone who joins a big warm handshake.

Each day gets closer and the mood of the soldiers becomes more jubilant and tenser; the erratic sense of relief that they might be leaving what has become the graveyard of so many friends and, often times, family, combines with the frustration of not being able to do anything but wait. This leads to more than a few fights breaking out, often over nothing important. Just the edge of temporary relief.

Then, before dawn on Jan 7th, the evacuation begins in earnest. It's possible to see it from the top of some sections: a bustling populace until it trickles down to the ghost of the Trenches, where there is nothing left but the rear guard. It's a smooth, efficient evacuation.

The Rear Guard

This is a skeleton army, just enough to make it seem no one has left. Everyone is encouraged to come up with ways to make it seem like there are more men than there actually are.

The local soldiers have come up with a particularly sneaky one - a rope is wrapped around the trigger of a rifle, just loose enough not to pull it, and from the end of it hangs a bucket. Another container slowly drips water into the bucket until it fills and drops, pulling the rope around the trigger and firing the gun. Soldiers are tasked with emptying the water, refilling the cannister, or checking the gun if it looks like it has jammed.

Outside of that, if someone has a sneaky idea to keep up the ruse - even if it's lighting small fires or singing loudly in a chorus to give the notion of people still around - it's all encouraged.

THE THUNDER OF GUNS

Everything is going well. It's not even that worrying when a thick mist comes up, heavy and difficult to see through. But, for those with powers, it prickles oddly on bare skin, followed by a pressure that builds in the back of the mind. It seems to dull any extra powers or senses; magic and its ilk are still usable, but require more concentration to reach now.

In the stillness of the night, however, there is no breeze to move the fog on and it settles like oil through the trench.

It's 1am when the first shell drops. It falls to the east of the recruits' position at Lone Pine. It's a shell that comes down and splits apart the night air in an explosion of shrapnel, dirt and heat. Then a second, then a third, now starting from both sides.

All the soldiers' clamour out of the way and Captain Lewis can be heard shouting over the din: "Into the Tunnels!"

But not everyone can make it. The shells are coming steadily now and one step in the wrong direction is the difference between life and death in such a small space. It's chaos - some soldiers are killed outright. Others get buried under the debris and dirt. Others catch shrapnel that, if not fatal, is enough to throw them and make it hard to get up. But COST's mission is the same as it always is: save as many of these men's lives as possible.

There are four direct entries into the tunnels, all about four or five meters apart, and they're all interconnected within the tunnels themselves.

One by one, however, shells fall and destroy the entrances to the tunnels.





WARTIME ARCHEOLOGY

It takes another three hours for the bombardment to stop and, once the tunnel entrances collapse, it becomes very dark in there. Might be time to fish out a match and strike up a torch.

While Officers previously told soldiers to keep out of the tunnels and otherwise left them ignored, these tunnels are huge. Not like the ones in other sections of the coast; here, they seem to go far into No Man's Land. They're crudely constructed and only some sections are reenforced with heavy beams of wood. But once journeying into them, there are all sorts of things to be found. There are old gas lamps that can be used to light your way or hung on a secure nook or cranny. The stone has been worn smooth in some sections, and other parts have been carved with graffiti of the soldiers who cut them out.

Some locations go down a few steps, while others go up and small holes seem to have been dug through the roof of the tunnels.

It's definitely best to get away from the front of the tunnels, where the bombing is still going on. There are wounded to be seen to and secured from bleeding out, people to find to make sure everyone is still alive. Maybe you want to go farther into the interweaving tunnels to see what else can be recovered. Or maybe you're being stubbornly sensible and looking for a way to dig your way out again, once the bombs stop firing.

Either way, it's a long, exhausting wait in the dark as the ground shakes, showering dust and rocks over everyone.

INTO THE DAWN

The sun has risen when the firing stops - and it's time to search for a way out of here.

Stepping into the light reveals utter destruction. The concentrated bombing has done its work; everything is strewn or buried in dirt and rubble. Machine guns are overturned and parts of the Trench have collapsed; going over the top would be disastrous, given that the Turks have no idea what is happening and will pick off anyone who sticks their head up.

There also isn't...anyone else around. All that's left is this one segment of the rear guard, just 500 men and the COST soldiers. It isn't possible to discern if the other groups have been evacuated or killed at this point.

It's time to consolidate, count their losses, see who is alive and who isn't, and salvage what supplies are left after some digging clean up is done. Work out who needs to stand watch. For now, Captain Lewis' orders are to use the tunnels as a new base of operations.

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES

They appear first as a shimmer of off-light, no more than a haze against the resettling mist. A faint shape against the grey - the long lines of a dog's face, almost Jackal-like, in a clean black uniform that gives more to the appearance of shadows - moves closer, but not too close. They could almost be a trick of the light, out of the corner of your eye. Almost intangible.

They're not moving closer, however, choosing to hang back in the rubble of the Trenches. The ANZAC soldiers don't seem to notice them at all.

Ten minutes after they're first spotted, Commander Grothia issues a priority message:

Contact. Regency soldiers. Do not engage.

If a shot does get fired that way, whether it's from Turkish or ANZAC soldiers unknowingly or from COST operatives: it's quick but, as the bullet seems to come into contact with them, the air around them shimmers blue, like it's hitting a field of light. This effect seems to be stronger when they're standing close together and, as of now, they remain unhurt.

Moving closer to them increases that feeling of mind fog on powered characters; for the unmagical, a sense of unease prickles up. It's a feeling not unlike the beginnings of the time-step, the hum of sensation that marks a transfer through time. Veteran recruits will easily recognize the buzz that dances through their bones before it stills as they move away; rookies might recall it from their initial arrival from BASE.

READ THE OOC INFOPAGE.

prizeneck: (5)

b. the tunnels

[personal profile] prizeneck 2018-01-29 10:41 am (UTC)(link)
Just. This face.

Mamoru had heard about abilities, and even before that, he heard and knew people who had one hell of a tolerance for pain - both drugged to that effect and not. Even though the display was projected into his sight as a mere criss-cross of lines, he couldn't help but tilt his head at the subtle hitch of breath at each dig, the muted sound of a shell dropping onto the muddy ground.

Still, he snorts under the gas mask. This was hardly a milkshake workshop and the tunnels were definitely not a yard. Still, there was a question was a little more pertinent than a jab. "They still had time to shoot you in the bombing?"
thingpuncher: (mask) (to the gay bar gay bar gay bar.)

[personal profile] thingpuncher 2018-02-01 02:34 am (UTC)(link)
"I might've had to run into No Man's Land a few times. Duty called." Midnighter says, before bringing his inner elbow up to his mouth and sucking out a bullet. He spits it out, frowns, and sticks his finger back in the bloody wound. "Fucking thing split in two. These bullets are cheap as hell."

Or maybe his bones are hyperdense carbon reinforced monstrosities. Either / or.
prizeneck: (2)

[personal profile] prizeneck 2018-02-01 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
" 'S not really a matter of price. More what they're hitting and the angle," he says, a shrug dissimulated into a cross of his arms over his chest. It doesn't look like this guy needs any help, but still, he watches carefully the way the wire-grid surface shifts with the stretch of skin. "How many soldiers did you scare with that party trick?"


thingpuncher: (face) (upstanding citizen.)

[personal profile] thingpuncher 2018-02-04 01:38 am (UTC)(link)
"Believe me, I know all about angles," Midnighter says, tone dry. "It's more the bones they're hitting." Special bones. Midnighter continues to pick for the other half of the bullet.

"I did more than scare them," he says, not looking at his companion, but pride edges in. Pride, and bloodlust.
prizeneck: (11)

[personal profile] prizeneck 2018-02-04 11:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Said pride and bloodlust don’t need to be palpable for Mamoru to recognize them. He’s met a fair amount of people whose fuel was limited to only those two ingredients - both opponents and... not, at least at the time.

“Yeah? What else did they do besides shitting their pants?”
thingpuncher: (face) (midnighto.)

[personal profile] thingpuncher 2018-02-10 07:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"Compliments before the first date? You're pretty easy, Shades." Midnighter says it with a wink. He reaches into a gash in his arm, pulling out a bit of metal splintered off from a cheap sword. "They died. That's the important thing."

He's not, actually, in the business of detailed bragging about killing human beings, especially when they're stuck in this shitty war same as everyone else. Monsters, human or not, that's another story, but this was a horror of convenience and a severe lack of better options.
prizeneck: (30)

[personal profile] prizeneck 2018-02-12 12:53 pm (UTC)(link)
The wink and the jab metaphorically fly past him, even if for a fleeting moment Mamoru's expression sets into something resembling confirmation that yes, more than plucking bullets and shrapnel out of his own flesh with less than a wince, this guy is a weirdo for flirting in the wrong places, towards the wrong people. He'd seen it done, though - hell, lived with a person who made it her job to tease the hell out of her team - so it's not new.

The admission of the soldiers' death doesn't really phase him, either. Context makes the subject grow cold, into a fucked up sense of normalcy. It's the reason why he's not really concerned about some of the COST members that touched base with him, unprepared and seemingly bewildered, not at this time. He's more concerned with the aftermath when everything sinks in. "That's a... shitty way to go."