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Darkseeker
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Commander Hoffen of Foxtrot | #34 | Male | Schnauzer/Wolf cross | M: Kämpe The contact felt unnatural. How long had it been? Three years? Four? Five? Too long. Something in him wanted to shudder, to recoil from the sensation. Yet at the same time he wanted to lean in, for it to last longer. Of course, it didn't. In an instant she was struggling to her feet, swaying as she tried to keep her balance. Hoffen wanted to steady her, it would be the practical thing to do, he told himself, but he didn't dare. A quick glance around left him quizzical. No body? She wasn't one to move a body out of sight. It would be left to rot, yet another thing to inspire fear of Beta. His attention snapped back to the Chief, scanning her for any serious injuries. The hum of his programming bid him to return to headquarters, escort the commander to the medic and get his own wound treated. It was the last thing on his mind as soon as she spoke. The question made his stomach twist. He had already sealed his fate as a slave to Beta, might as well tell her, right? Yet something, deep inside of him, something buried after years of being trapped inside his own body bid him not to tell her all he knew. Hope was a fickle thing, wasn't it? "Yes," he murmured, a flash of something crossed his face. Vulnerability, for half a second, then it was gone. "I thought the rebellion was long gone." Not exactly a lie. His face hardened, and Hoffen stood stiff, "you know the rest. The Kilo Cull was Chief then." His muzzle curled in something like humor, "I wasn't made a Cull for my loyalty to Beta back then." He fell silent. She could piece the pieces together. She had learned briefly of his past after his malfunction. He licked his bloodied jaws, eager to change the subject. "I assume you have removed the defector?"
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Lightbringer
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Kämpe | Female | Cheif Cull (German Shepherd Cross) | 24 | M: Hoffen, Zadolt There was a flash of vulnerability on Hoffen's face, but it vanished as quickly as it had come. Again, that emotion Kämpe had never seen on any other Cull. It was curious. It didn't ever occur to Kämpe to question his honesty. Any regularly programmed cull wasn't able to lie to the Cheif. Although she knew there was something different about Hoffen, in her mind, he had to be unable to lie to his superiors, just like the rest of them. A vague outline of humour flickered across his features - again, foreign and strangely intruiging. Despite the revelation, her mind was as emotionless and cold as ever. He had been a rebel. How had Beta gotten to him? How was the rebellion formed? If he was anything like her, memories would have been forgotten - but perhaps asking wouldn't do any harm. She was on the verge of inquiring when he spoke. His next words chilled her. She had expected him to notice, she supposed. But most culls wouldn't question her actions. She knew she should reprimand him for questioning her, but she felt no motivation to do so. Only because it would waste time, she told herself. I'm a traitor to Beta. Traitor. Her programming seemed unable to grasp the concept of such a thing. "I let him go." Kampe knew she was physically able to lie to a lower-ranking Cull or dog, although her programming set a sort of caution mechanism - Culls only lied when it was logical to do so. But, for a moment, logic seemed irrelevant, plunging into the deep void in her mind. That void - it was the dog within her. The memories she suddenly realized were missing, as a result of her newfound history of a brother. Indeed, she recalled six or seven clear scenes of her past with Zadolt in them. Once he managed to break through her programming, he had left a permanent wound in her machinery. She remembered the memories he had brought up, and although they were faint, vague, and random, they appeared set on remaining within her mind. Yet she could not find anything else in her head. Just a perplexing void of darkness where memories should be. The only memories of her dog life she could possibly have were the ones that broke through her programming - nothing more. It was unnerving, and made her feel as though she was missing something. Kampe was intelligent, sharp, unaccustomed to missing a detail. Yet the darkness in her mind yawned still, ominous and strangely empty. All aside - there was a reason she wouldn't lie to Hoffen. He hadn't lied to her. And there was some part of her - something canine - that felt she could not betray his honesty. That it would be morally wrong to do such a thing. Morals. That was a word that was a part of that void within her. Kampe could also trace the outline of what a dog might call gratitude. He had saved her life. This faint semblance of emotion made little sense to the cull, but she knew she could not speak lies when he spoke truth.
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Darkseeker
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Sabre / Female / Wolfdog (wolf-GSD-Alaskan malamute) / Foxtrot / I.D: 65 / M: Anfall, Rache, Pfiel, Taipan, Wolf Sabre glared at all the canines except Anfall, her pelt slightly fluffed up. Yes, there was still a wild streak in her. One that didn't easily go away once she let it show. One that she didn't let show very often because it endangered her. It endangered her mind. It endangered the possibility that she could escape. In her mind, she tried to calm the turmoil that was showing through as rage. No dog should be turned into a machine. She knew that she ought to direct her rage on Beta, but she couldn't fight them tooth and claw unless she did so through those who "led" her. Beta had no right to take away a canine's brain. It was cruel. If you needed machines to keep your hold on the world, you didn't need that hold at all. Her teeth were still slightly bared, though she did commend the two new transfers for standing up to the new cull. It was about time that someone did. She knew that they would probably regret doing so afterwards, but the fact that they were doing so now surprised her. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Taipan / Male / GSD x Golden Retriever / Mike / I.D. 76 / M: Pfiel, Wolf, Sabre, Anfall, Rache Taipan kept his cold gaze on the cull as he stood by 29's side. He may not agree with all of 29's opinions, but he did on this one. They were brought here to restore order. They knew different techniques, and if the cull couldn't trust them to do their jobs, then there was a misunderstanding that needed to be worked out here and now. Before 29 and him decided that it had been a mistake coming here. Before they decided that Foxtrot and Bravo were so out of controll that they needed to be dealt with more severely than they were going to.
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Darkseeker
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Commander Hoffen of Foxtrot | #34 | Male | Schnauzer/Wolf cross | M: Kämpe The massive dog's stony features twitched, for just a split second. Then whatever had been there was banished to the back of his mind. He scanned her face, she was one of the few dogs he had never been able to read. After years of being caught up in the motions, the commander had learned a valuable survival skill: reading intent from a dog's face. And he was good at it, or so he thought. When the female spoke once more, her words made his programming-or was that his heart?-thud in his chest. Hoffen knew that it was unlike a cull, especially the chief, to leave any survivors. He briefly wondered if she could recall her past life as a dog like he could. No, that was a foolish notion. He had never been like the other culls, it was something he had known since his days mentoring under Gin-Cull forty-six. His hind legs tingled, like a thousand sharp needled digging into his long-gone flesh. The phantom pain was back again. It was a reoccurring phenomenon ever since his legs were injured beyond repair in the initial blast, and something that took him years to accept. The cold metal was a part of him now, or maybe it always had been. His attention snapped back to his commander, she seemed lost in thought. And he too fell down that rabbithole. Why had she told him? Culls weren't supposed to be able to lie, that was it, wasn't it? And yet again Hoffen made another impulsive decision. "Was he of any importance? I'd think a traitor would be killed on sight." The massive dog curled his neck backward in the semblance of a stretch to cease the twitching he felt was night. "We should head back now."
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Lightbringer
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Kämpe | Female | Chief Cull (GSD cross) | 24 | M: Hoffen, Zadolt Kämpe's shockingly blue eyes didn't slide away, didn't lose intensity at his inquiry. There was no reason to hide from the truth she didn't wish to face, and there was no emotion behind her words. Simply the familiar darkness of nothing at all. "In most cases, yes. I have my reasons for allowing his life to continue, none of which are of great importance in the moment." A twisted truth - the reason for Zadolt's sruvival was certainly of great importance to Kämpe, but now was not the best time to delve into her newfound memories. The commander spoke once again, and Kämpe had already began to turn away. "Yes," she responded briskly. She padded away, metal claws clicking. The Chief needed to leave this place, where her memory and programming had been far too rattled for comfort. That wasn't to say that that Beta was any less daunting - she was convinced that her mistake with Zadolt might very well bode her removal at long last. Although she had formulated more than one excuse for her actions, all were feeble and petty. The Chief Cull never did hold his or her position for long. One might live to acheive the rank, and one could be sure she would die in that rank, probably far too soon. She had held the position for far longer than the normal, but she was sure it wouldn't last. Nothing ever did. Not even the cold apathy she had been blessed and cursed with. At every moment a memory triggered the apathy to slip away, she felt herself longing for the silence once again. It was easier to feel nothing. No love, no loss. No pain, no guilt, no greif. Nothing. Just silence.
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Lightbringer
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Alrighty. So, time skip, mainly because we need a change of pace: It's late at night, almost down for the evening shutdown. The dogs are still quarreling in the training arena, and the Kilo dogs are back at home base. The Kilo dogs are getting ready for their night routine, but are gathered first to discuss their next plan of action. Kampe and Hoffen are just making it back to the Beta Compound, and must sort out the chaos that has unfolded.
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Lightbringer
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Afton | Male | Kilo | Bouvier/Dalmation/Pyerenees | 82 | M: All
Afton had been dutifully training when the chaos unfolded. First Ty left, along with Arrow, then Hero and Gin followed. They returned with a new dog. Then Ty left once more, Arrow in tow, along with Gin. Again. Now they were back, and it was obvious that something was off. They seemed to have gained two new dogs, while losing Ty in the process. The scent of blood was thick in the air. Afton immediately broke formation, approaching the group. His dark, golden-brown eyes flicked across the gathered dogs, worry etched into his features.
"Commander Gin? What is happening? And where is Tysta?" The massive dog had held his curiosity in check, but his concern and, well, fear, had grown too strong, far more so than his sense of discipline. No more questions. Let them catch their breath, his mind muttered, but he found that it would be far simpler to just let the cull answer everything, here, now. "And who are the new dogs? The three of them?" Beta, his mind whispered. It was the only logical conclusion - he hadn't seen either of them, and by the way the odd long-dog struggled, it was clear she wasn't too happy about this. The other two dogs were larger, and held themselves like soldiers, in a way Kilo dogs never did. Afton's eyes narrowed. Enemies. Gin had brought enemies into the Kilo base. Were they to be interrogated? Why were the two larger dogs not fighting? By all the dirt below his paws, what was happening? The large dog waited, posture wary, making no move until he was ordered to do so.
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Darkseeker
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Aadya | Female | Pembroke Corgi | #62 | Mentions: Ginger, Arrow, Afton, the others but not as directly The small dog bared her teeth, snapping at the small terrier who happened to get too close on her side, the dog hardly reacted, just slid over out of the Corgi's way. Being escorted like a prisoner was a direct affront to Aadya's pride, even if she was indeed a prisoner. Her hackles rose at the sight of the big, heavyset dog down the tunnel who was approaching them. Her attention was soon stolen by the terrier, the white on her chest soaked with blood that was not her own as she reacted to the male's words. "Ty-Tysta-he-he's-" The little dog's words quivered and wobbled air, then snapped, as if some force has been holding them back. Something turned over in Aadya's stomach at the sight of the broken creature. Pity? Sorrow? she couldn't identify it. The golden dog's name was Tysta? And then the little dog darted off down a small side-tunnel and out of sight. Aadya was brought back to the present when she heard another dog moving behind her. She whirled around, the spell broken and her teeth bared once more as the lines on her face deepened into something unpleasant, highlighted by the thin spray of blood that had dried into dark specs on her coat and face. The female was surrounded, and her comparatively small size didn't help her situation. However well-trained she was, multiple dogs towering over her meant the odds of escape were low. Still, Aadya refused to lower her body to the ground in any sort of defensive position. Confidence-or at least an outward mask of it-had been something absolutely essential to her survival at Beta, and she wasn't about to lose the only thing she had left to cling onto: her composure. Edited at May 30, 2020 06:42 PM by Grimm
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Lightbringer
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Kämpe | Female | Chief Cull (GSD cross) | 24 | M: All The Cull had fallen into an empty sort of apathy. Just, really, nothing at all. It really was vast, the change from the familiar stoicism to flash of memory, of feeling. Kampe found her room for thought was far more ideal when there was nothing but cold logic and metal in her mind. She had developed reasoning for her prior actions, a plan that might spare her life while retaining honesty. She was to report to Beta headquarters immediately, assuming that there was no other issues to be dealt with. Kampe took more time to analyze the past events, her actions, Commander Thirty-Four's actions, the newfound Kilo. Sixty-Two, Twenty-Eight. Kampe trusted Sixty-Two to report back with information shortly. Perhaps most importantly, she had information to bring back to Beta, which might very well be her alibi for the release of Twenty-Eight. If not, she had a backup plan. Two, actually. If all failed, she would most likely never live to see another day. Kampe halted at the side gate. Lockdown was still in place. Sending her line of thought through her programming in a practiced act, she let her command run through her mind. Lift Lockdown on side outer-gate, West Wing, entryway 12. Lock after my and Commander Thirty-Four's entry. Her transmitter flashed, and the almost unnoticable light atop the steel door flashed. The thing drew aside with a metallic rumble, and Kampe padded forward, her first stop being the training arena, to ensure all was well before continuing on to the headquarters. She wound her way through the halls, never stopping to look back. What she walked in to was chaos. Kampe stepped forth into the arena, her piercing blue gaze flashing across the mess. Twenty-Five, the new cull. He pinned the wolfblood, Twenty-One. Sixty-One, Sixty-Three, and Sixty-Five were quarelling, though Sixty-Five seemed to have been neutralized. Two new dogs were on the scene - ah. Mike canines, it must be. No other regiment would have dogs that carried themselves with such authority that they were willing to glare at a cull. Run diagnostics on the newcomers, she commanded her programming. Instantaneously, her programming responded. Twenty-Nine, Wolfblood, Regiment Mike. Seventy-Six, Pureblood, Regiment Mike. Both here by orders. Whatever had happened here was complete and utter failure. Perhaps not on the new cull's part, as it seemed he had just arrived on the scene, nor the Mike dogs directly. Though, the Mike dogs would need to learn some respect, it seemed - their gazes were perhaps a bit too disdainful, disrespectful. No. It was the Bravo and Foxtrot dogs that had failed, and the Charlie dogs that had been unable to keep the rebellious canines in check. Without missing a beat, Kampe strided into the arena, features cold, radiating command. "What. Is. This." She snarled, whirling to face the Mike dogs. They must fear her, and she had no doubt that they would. Her alarmingly blue eyes flashed across Bravo and Foxtrot, then the Charlie dogs, then Cull Twenty-Five. She left a void of silence, to let the tension rise, so her arrival would carry more weight, instill more fear.
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Darkseeker
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Commander Hoffen of Foxtrot | #34 | Male | Alleged Schnauzer/Wolf cross | M: Kämpe, Others He walked at the female's shoulder, his ears ringing louder than the buzzing of his brain. Hoffen couldn't tell where he ended and the machine began. Maybe it was all him, or he was all machine. There wasn't a difference anymore. He was a machine of Beta, a Cull. The massive dog's transmitter flicked, and the buzzing in his brain of new information finally drowned out the ringing in his ears. There were newcomers: regiment Mike dogs, and the new cull. The dog that had gotten Maze, one of his wolfbloods, removed. The series of events that had led to someone being killed. The name of the dog slipped his mind, the dull apathy washing over him in waves made him forget. He was grappling at the emotion in his mind like a slippery...something. He couldn't hold onto it for long, however much the forlorn cull wanted to. He was jolted out of his thoughts at the loud sound of dogs fighting. Reacting before thinking, the massive dog stiffened as he entered the room, then a harsh bark rumbled from his throat. The frustration, the outrage, the anger at himself for the betrayal of those that had trusted Hoffen. "SILENCE!" Hoffen's roar faded out as his commander spoke. Looming behind Kampe, it wasn't until the dogs turned their eyes to her in fear he recognized the gaze of one in the back of the room. No it wasn't-there were no survivors. Hoffen was the only one, he must have been seeing things. It had been years, he wouldn't look the same. No, no Hoffen must have been losing it. Edited at June 1, 2020 12:24 PM by Grimm
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