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I made a tiny little tech priest blorbo for my gfs upcoming rogue trader ttrpg. her name is ϴ30-QT (or Theta if you're normal)
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luckily I posted some of it to my main so i can just rebubble alot of it for ease of viewing before i post newer stuff -w-
hopefully settled on a display name now! here's my fursona :3 (\_/) (*x*)
Spider-Posse -> LichMopp for my followers btw having a bit of identity exploration at the moment, why i've been changing my profile repeatedly but i think this'll stick, at the very least Mopp will as i think it's a good handle :3
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Needed a marker case and customized a Moppe from ikea.
That is all
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bro I'm just trying to draw coated blake
#gerry anderson#supermarionation#the secret service#ロンドン指令x#art#traditionalart#thesecretservice#trumptonshire#camberwickgreen#camberwick green#mopp
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SCP AMTF Nu-7 Cosplay - Hazardous Environment Level III
Depicted here is the standard loadout of a conventionally armed Nu-7 operative in a Level III rated hazardous environment. Each level, ranging from I to IV, has a typical hazardous environment protection requirement that outlines the necessary support that a task force member needs to complete their objectives within the working area. Note that Level IV Hazardous Environment protection encompasses all hazardous environment loadouts which include thaumatological or anomalous equipment intended to protect from specific anomalous entities or regions. As such a Level IV loadout may appear as any of the previous three loadouts with the aforementioned supplementary equipment.
Showcased here is an example of a Nu-7 operative working within a Level III Hazardous Environment. Required protection when working in this environment is a standalone gas mask with a filter rated for all CBRN threats and a fully sealed CBRN suit equivalent to US military MOPP (Mission Oriented Protective Posture) Level 4 standard. This standard includes a full seal gas mask, gas mask hood, gloves and overgloves, boots and overboots, and the CBRN overgarments itself. The standard issue gas mask of Nu-7 forces is the Avon Protection C50. This is a variant of the famous M50 which uses standard NATO 40 mm thread filters. In addition, the Avon C50 and M50 series gas masks are designed to be worn under a ballistic helmet. In this protective level, the Avon C50 is paired with a standard issue Avon Gas Mask Protective Hood. When secured to the wearer and worn under body armor this hood provides full seal protection around the neck and face. The standard issue overgloves and overboots are AirBoss lightweight models. The overgloves are paired with a glove liner for additional comfort. The overboots are worn over standard footwear. The Foundation supplies state of the art CBRN suits to all AMTF units which provide full protection against all threats while also providing some comfort for the wearer. This example is a GORE CPCSU-2 CBRN Jumpsuit. This suit uses advanced materials that allows for increased freedom of movement, less noise when moving, and less user fatigue over time.
The primary use case of Level III Hazardous Environment equipment is when the element is operating within an area that has a known threat of CBRN agents. To counter this threat, the operative is equipped with a CBRNCF50 (NIOSH) Filter that protects from all gaseous agents specified in the NIOSH CBRN standard. This operative carries his Avon C50 in a gas mask bag slung bandolier style over the right shoulder. The usual combat clothing will not suffice in such an environment, so the operative wears a CBRN suit over his standard uniform. The operative cannot remove this uniform until proper decontamination protocols are completed under any circumstances. This includes the good, the bad, and the ugly of sustainment in the working area. Because of this, AMTF units that work within such an environment are quickly rotated out in order to prevent total fatigue. CBRN suits quickly drain the wearer of water as the lack of airflow causes a buildup of perspiration and exertion increases body heat which in turn increases perspiration, causing a vicious cycle of losing liquid. As such water intake is extremely important when operating in a CBRN environment, and the C50 gas mask allows for the operative to safely drink water while in the working environment using the built-in drinking tube paired with a canteen with a gas mask cap. This drinking system allows for the user to safely drink water without the risk of exposing themselves to any deadly contaminants in the air.
The fully sealed nature of a gas mask means that it is difficult to speak through the faceblank and filter and still be understood in a combat environment. A Voice Projection Unit, or VPU, allows the wearer to speak through a microphone placed inside the gas mask that projects the wearer's voice through a voicebox mounted on the front of the gas mask. This allows the wearer to speak audibly without yelling to nearby peers. Should the element choose to speak solely through the radio, a separate wire is needed that connects the C50 to the communications headset. This allows for clear communication through the radio but decreases audible effectiveness towards anyone not within the radio network - a positive or negative aspect depending on the scenario.
Full Resolution Here.
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Moppe Apparatus TD-MP1
Torkel Doehmers Research Lab
#art#design#motorbikes#e-bike#bike concept#concept#moppe apparatus TD-MP1#torkel doehmers#honda SS50#Moped#honda
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Rival Magic✨💜
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mopp drew this for Team Wizard.
March 8th, 2019
#splatoon#splatoon 2#mopp#team wizard#fabulous#splatfest#splatfest march 2019#wizards vs knights#wizards#knights#nintendo#nintendo switch#plaza#plaza art#queue
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27 February 2018 The military has this drill where servicemen do their daily chores while wearing full combat and biohazard gear. So here is Judy Hopps doing the same. #drawing #sketch #art #mydrawing #mysketch #zootopia #judyhopps #disney #mopp #cbrn
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Max OPPENHEIMER (1885 Vienna - 1954 New York City) “Selbstporträt” / “Self Portrait” on view at the LEOPOLD MUSEUM Vienna. Max Oppenheimer - later known as MOPP - was an Austrian Painter and graphic artist. Studying at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna (1900-1903) and at the Academy of Fine Arts Prague (1903-1906) he was considered along with Egon SCHIELE (with whom he shared a studio in 1910) and Oskar KOKOSCHKA as one of Austria’s leading avant-garde artists.
#Max Oppenheimer#leopold museum vienna#vienna 1900#wien 1900#viennese expressionism#leopold museum#vienna#wien#vienne 1900#viena 1900
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I forgot to post these goblins after I switched back from cohost!
#my art#mopp art#pixel art#aseprite#goblin#tw blood#i called the frog Monsieur Grenouille (don't worry he's fine)
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I've made an art blog now that cohost is no more: @mopp-art it'll mostly be my backlog from that website until i have some new stuff to share
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Warbirds
Pairing: Carol Danvers x Reader
Summary: Ships and planes and weapons of war named after women and dubbed she, her. Powerful, deadly. Yet, the real thing, the real body is demeaned and made less than man. When you and Carol are up in the sky and screaming through the air in your metal birds, they will see just how fragile you are.
Following Carol and Reader throughout their training in the Air Force.
Word count: 4.6k+
Warnings: smut, mild violence
A/N: It feels so good to post again! I’m so sorry I haven’t written anything in a bit, my finals this semester have been c r a z y, I’ve written 20 pages worth of papers and I still have one more left before I’m fully on winter break :’) but almost there!
I’ve had this idea for a while and....I honestly had too much fun with this. I did a lot of research and watched some documentaries on what trainees experience through basic training and I find military uniforms more attractive than I should so I didn’t hold back on this one.
Please enjoy my girl Carol!!!
“Wake up! Wake up! Open that day room door! Lights on! PT uniform of the day, PT shorts and shirt!”
The piercing voice of Dorm Chief Williams shatters the air. Fluorescent white blinds you, pulse thundering as you’re jerked from sleep, kicking off your covers. Your muscles scream, vision blurred and swimming and you stagger to your feet.
Cadets around you are already making their beds and changing into their gear. You reach for your own combat uniform, pull on the deep navy tracksuit with the reflective insignia of the U.S. Air Force glowing over your left breast.
You turn and see your bunkmate starting to stir. You feel your heart hammer in your throat and push at her shoulder.
“Carol. Get up. Hey, let’s go, Warbird.”
Williams, a tall and intimidating woman personifying dread itself, marches over to your bunk.
“Danvers, am I keeping you from your beauty sleep?” Williams barks with the most intensity you’ve ever heard from her at 0600. “Should I call the canteen and have them bring you breakfast since you’re so busy slowing down my whole squadron?”
Carol jolts to attention. “No, ma’am!”
“Then get the hell away from me and into gear. Now.”
“Yes, ma’am!”
Williams scowls, watching Carol fly to her post to dress before she turns on her heel and makes her rounds through the rest of the dorm. Finished with your own tasks, you help with Carol’s bed, smooth out her uniform, secure her hair in a tight bun. She gives you a tired smile.
“Fall out!” Williams calls.
You’re out the door in a minute flat. The short, sharp blasts of Reveille drive motion around you as you fall in line with the male recruits.
The morning is brisk, stimulating, turning your breath into puffs of steam as sweeps of indigo crack open the sky like the pearly, iridescent insides of seashells. It’s pretty, the color reminding you of waves and ocean.
Maybe you should have joined the Navy instead, Carol would say, a quick quip about how you would make such a charming sailor girl bobbing away on a ship. She always likes to tease you for your love of beautiful, superficial things.
From the moment you shed your civilian status, the Academy taught you to appreciate the little things in life; the glow of morning that tints the clouds with amber and cream as you watch the world from your cockpit. Chirping birdsong, a sort of secret you like to think that exists only between birds and Airmen, the few humans capable of sharing the sky.
You loathe how much Carol affects you, since day zero, the very start of BMT. How you can hear her voice in your mind this goddamn early.
Your MTI picks up a cadence and you match your step to the young men and women beside you, your wingmen. You feel unity, harmony beating through your bloodstream as you jog in time with your sergeant’s calls, the crisp air making you feel well rested and energized despite getting your usual four hours of sleep.
Moments like these that give you purpose, the indescribable excitement of being a part of something bigger than yourself. Of belonging.
“Lookin’ good and feelin’ good! Who are we?” Your drill instructor booms.
“USAF! Aim high! Fly, fight, win!” The squadron sounds off in unison.
**
You’re three weeks into BMT. Twenty-one days of primal shock, verbal abuse, blood, sweat, tears. Four weeks, twenty-eight more days until you graduate from the ranks of cadet, four weeks until your MTI awards you your dog tags and the title of Airman. The start of your career as a fighter pilot.
But until then, you’ll have to survive the next twenty-eight days.
You’ve learned more about yourself in these three weeks than you have in your entire life, your mind and body hardened with discipline. Broken down psychologically and physically and molded into the young woman your squadron needs you to be.
You and Carol are reminded of your womanhood every day. You and the others have to push yourselves harder, faster just to prove you can keep up. O’Neill, a petite little firecracker of a girl and fresh out of school, had gotten her period last week. You’d watched her wretch up bile after morning drill, the exertion and stress and cramps too much for her body to handle. The MTI had screamed at her, blue in the face, ordered her to drop on her stomach right there and crank fifteen pushups.
You cannot separate your femininity from your body, even in a military unit that declares that all are treated equal as soldiers. You are not an equal by default.
It’s belittling. Exhausting.
But you’ve shown that you can hold your own against the boys. You’ve learned how to shoot clean and fight with your bare hands, how to assemble, disassemble, and repair your M-16. You could do it in your sleep, the sharp click-click of a reloading magazine heard in your dreams.
This week, along with your usual physical conditioning, you have CBRNE training, MOPP training. You’ll be exposed to CS gas and simulations of biological warfare, your leadership skills put to the test.
You can do this. With Carol by your side, you feel like you can do anything. Little fledglings earning your wings, pushed from the nest, learning to fly when the ground is rushing up to meet you. Make or break.
Twenty-eight more days.
**
The gas is meant to simulate suffocation, they tell you.
“Masks off! Break the seal! Break, break, break!”
You’re already dizzy, head spinning from the chamber exercises when you stick your fingers in between the small space of your mask and pull hard.
The seal breaks with a sharp hiss.
Fire floods your eyes, your sinuses, down your throat, constricting tight like smoke and flames and hellfire. You taste fireworks, poison. Your eyes instinctively shut, blurry with tears and you cough hard, sputter, hear the echoes of other cadets hacking and gasping.
The simulation is meant to put trust in your equipment, to make you vividly remember that your mask and gear will save your life. And as you stand there with your lungs struggling to expand and the MTIs rounding on each of you in the hazy, cloying smoke, you believe it.
“Airman Recruit Danvers, Division 164!” You hear Carol pant somewhere in the fumes, along the walls of the chamber where you’re all lined up. You keep your mask raised above your head as instructed, waiting, suffocating in silence until it is your turn to state your name and division number. The MTIs move down the line with their masks still fixed. Haunting, weaving through the gas and toxins like plague doctors. The image of death. Vultures tearing fledglings apart with pointed beaks and white bone as you watch cadets choke on their own breath.
The primal impulse of fear trickles from your hypothalamus as the minutes tick on, until your lips and tongue buzz like fire ants, until you can no longer feel the tips of your fingers. You’re sweat-slicked and gasping when an MTI turns to you, screams for your identification.
You sound off. Your entire body is shaking, fevered. You are the last in your row.
You burst through the doors and out into the afternoon air with a stream of cadets behind you, taking flight as you thunder on the asphalt to the open courtyard.
You all cough, spit, clear out your lungs with curses and muted laughter as your squadron stands together beneath cotton clouds and blue sky.
Carol finds you in the mix, the few precious seconds where you’re not forced to fall in line. Seconds to catch your breath. Her skin is flushed and wisps of hair fall to frame her face, her bun messy. She grins and the two of you bump fists, playful.
Your cheeks redden, lungs tight with something other than CS gas. It’s strange seeing Carol disheveled when you’ve been so hardwired with self-control, down to how you’re expected to wear your hair, present yourself.
You like seeing her like this.
“Do we have confidence in that gear?” MTI Galloway emerges from the chambers and asks of you all.
“Yes, Chief!” You roar.
**
Carol calls you Phoenix after that, running so fast out the chamber and looking like a fire had been lit up your ass.
The nickname is fitting for a duo like you. Raptors, birds of prey, fierce and skilled and yet simultaneously embracing and shielding your femininity with unfurled wings.
Have women not been compared to birds in art and literature throughout history as a means to show fragility? Fleeting beauty?
Why not strength? Why ever not for sleeker attributes, or as hunters?
It’s curious. Ships and planes and weapons of war named after women and dubbed she, her. Powerful, deadly. Yet, the real thing, the real body is demeaned and made less than man.
When you and Carol are up in the sky and screaming through the air in your metal birds, they will see just how fragile you are.
**
You hit the ground so hard that the air rushes out your lungs in a loud wheeze. You can’t breathe. Your face burns, ears ringing. You can hear the screams of your MTI. You’d rather die of embarrassment right here.
The rope dangles in front of you, fifteen feet straight up, still swaying from where you’d fallen, taunting. Physical conditioning for your Basic Expeditionary Airman Skills Training examination next week, fittingly dubbed the BEAST. Rope climbing and complicated field obstacle courses after you’ve crawled through miles of sand and dirt, navigated through tactical drills with your full pack of gear.
Your arms tremble, your entire upper body drained of all strength, skin biting from the sand. Weak, exhausted. Your palms raw from the rope. Tears of frustration sting at your eyes as your MTI screams out your surname in another bloodcurdling roar to get your ass up out of that dirt.
Yet, the low scoff of a nearby cadet is what piques your attention.
Dalquist. A boy a few years older than yourself with an ugly, crooked grin and sandy hair. A show-off, a boy who thinks himself a man. He smirks again with crossed arms, tuts his tongue as his eyes flicker over you.
“They’ll never let you fly.” He snickers.
Then, Carol is there beside you. She grips your waist strongly, shifting your weight and the two of you slowly rise together amidst the swirling dust. You draw in a shuddering breath.
Maybe he’s right. Maybe they’re all right. Maybe you don’t belong here.
You feel Carol’s muscles tense and manage to squeeze her arm in a silent warning. The entire squadron watches the three of you. The last thing you need is falling to Dalquist’s level and getting punished for it.
So she hits him with a reply quite enough only for the three of you to hear.
“You better hope not.” She rasps.
**
Your time in the classroom is a welcome break from the stresses of field training. You meet Dr. Wendy Lawson, an incredibly gifted and terrifying brilliant quantum physics scientist when she’s brought in to give you post-deployment training. She teaches you flight mechanics, squadron resources and financial management. You learn about her research on quantum energy.
Lawson is especially kind to you and Carol upon hearing your aspirations to take to the skies as fighter flyers. Her standards are higher for you and she encourages you to speak out when you’ve been too timid to respond to the whole class, the twinkle in her eye giving you courage, a voice for the first time in your life.
Together, Lawson and Carol work to coax you out of your shell.
**
The days trudge on. You throw Dalquist’s remark behind every new simulation you’re given, every mile, every pushup of your physical conditioning.
And it shows.
Your endurance and stamina have nearly doubled, bringing out new muscles in your back, your arms. You’re stronger than you’ve ever been, strong enough to grapple an unsuspecting Dalquist to the ground during field training. He stares up at you in humiliation and horror and you push him harder into the dirt, until your MTI snorts and tells you to let him up.
The mile and a half lap you take known as the Airman’s Run the week of your graduation is a breeze. Your body is familiar with the motion and exertion, the rest of the cadets who’ve made it through BMT with you dressed in new uniforms of pressed blue shirts and the trademark navy garrison cap.
Family and friends watch as your squadron marches in a parade of waving flag and timed step. Your heart swells with pride, with unparalleled accomplishment.
You’re finally presented with the Airman’s Coin and your dog tags. You’ve completed Basic Training. You are no longer a cadet, a trainee, but an oath-sworn member of the Air Force. Next weekend, you’ll be moved into dorms and officially begin your pilot training.
And then you’re free. For the first time in seven weeks, you are dismissed after the ceremony and to spend the rest of the weekend however you please.
Free time. Privacy. Privileges you took for granted as a civilian. You feel giddy, excited.
“We did it, birdie.” Carol’s voice sounds from behind you. You turn, her smile radiant as ever and mirroring yours.
She looks like she was born to wear the uniform, her shirt crisp and cap perfectly straightened atop her pinned back hair. Your pulse stutters, you find it difficult to swallow.
“We did it.” You laugh, a little too breathless with the way she’s looking down at you with that mischievous glint in her eyes. Her gaze catches your lips, a smirk tugging at the corner of her mouth.
God, so self-assured. So confident.
Honestly, you could use a little of that confidence.
“What do you say we get out of here? Go see what this city has to offer aside from base?” She says.
Your knees nearly buckle. You have a feeling that you know what will happen off base, at least, what you hope will happen.
Technically, you wouldn’t be breaking protocol.
And with the two of you buzzing with adrenaline and boosted egos, how can you even think of saying no? You deserve to celebrate.
You leave Lackland Base and head to downtown San Antonio for the rest of the weekend, for two whole days all to yourselves.
**
You visit the River Walk and explore as much of the fifteen-mile long city park as you can, strolling along the banks and gorging yourselves on street food and local cuisine. No curfew, no officers screaming orders, just the two of you leisurely enjoying a Friday night beneath a soft sunset and twinkling fairy lights.
You have dinner and drinks at a quaint little steakhouse with a live band and music, the musicians donning cowboy hats, boots, chaps and all. It’s corny. It’s absolutely perfect.
The lime juice is sharp and bitter on your tongue as you throw back your third shot of tequila, lap up the salt you’ve sprinkled over your knuckles. Carol isn’t far behind you. Pretty soon, the tavern lanterns swim pleasantly before you and you sway gently to the music in your seat, blissed out, flushed, content.
Carol’s fingers fondly brush your cheek and she laughs, her eyes crinkling and you think it’s the most beautiful sound you’ve ever heard. You grin back, a bit too eager and lopsided, lean across the wooden table to grasp her hand.
You drag her to the attached karaoke bar next door and slide a few quarters into the jukebox before she can stop you. The two of you belt out your renditions of Nirvana, Heart, Elastica. Your blood is warm and Carol dances beside you with wired microphone in hand, laughing so hard you’re both crying, pulse pounding behind your temples until finally the jukebox clicks with the last of your change and the next requested song is queued up.
The hotel you check into is just down the street and you practically fall through the doorway trying to get each other out of your uniforms. It’s jumbled and chaotic as you slip out of your combat gear, tripping over boots and pants as you finally touch overheated skin, giggling like children.
Disorderly when your lips meet, her hands coming to cradle your face, holding you still with a low groan, a grip that surprises you. It heightens the flush of alcohol sitting in the pool of your lower belly as you kiss her back, wind your arms around her.
You gasp when she tightens a hand in your hair and pulls, mouth ravaging the skin of your neck with tongue and teeth. She walks you blindly until you’re flush against the wall, turns you around with her frame pressing hard against your back.
Her fingers are sure and true when they cup, caress your heated flesh, not an ounce of hesitation in her. You keen, circle your hips hard into her as she works at unraveling you, forearm circling your neck, leaning to put her lips at your ear, breath hot.
“So pretty. My birdie is so pretty.”
It’s been so long since you’ve last been intimate. The military discipline over your physique has made you forget what it’s like to treat your body with love, to feel pleasure, to be touched by a young woman you’d do anything for.
“Let’s see you fly high, hmm?” She breathes. “You want it faster? I wanna see my little birdie soar. Can you do that for me?”
It’s so easy to let go.
Your flesh clenches around her and you sigh, your entire being quivering. Carol braces you, holds you close as you tremble with aftershocks, burning and burning.
Your world is hazy, melting when Carol leads you to the bed and hoists you on top of her, thighs straddling her lap. The liquid courage returns, coy when you grasp the cool metal of the dogtags between her breasts and yank her forward for another breathless kiss.
Her arms are strong, hard with muscle and hands splayed against the naked skin of your back as she coaxes you to earth shattering heights again and again. Until the grey light of day.
Sunday morning, you sleep in until ten o’clock, roused by streaming sunlight and birdsong. Peaceful quiet, a treat in itself with Carol’s arms lazily draped around you.
**
Your stomach drops when the sergeant cracks open the C-17 door and the atmosphere shrieks into the aircraft. Your gear is heavy, you’re sweating hard, and your Airborne Division is about to jump. You find it hard to breathe and try not to lock your knees, try not to faint. Gut wrenching, everything inside you screaming that this is suicide. Leaping from a roaring aircraft with nothing but a kevlar sac to break your fall.
You see the Airman in front of you subtly cross himself, pretending to scratch his chin.
You feel like you’re going to be sick.
Fingers grip your waist. Carol stands beside you.
It’s too loud for conversation, the air and engine pressing down on your eardrums with tight pressure, but she gives you a nod, another squeeze of your hip. Her lips mouth a single word.
Fly.
Then, the men in front of you are rushing towards the yawning mouth of the plane and you and Carol are running together, side by side, fearless. And then you jump, spreading your arms, dive like hawks.
The sky is a dome of robin’s egg blue, sun shining and tipping the edge of your gloved fingers with liquid gold. You fall fast, hard. Wind rips through and around you, weightless as gravity pulls you to earth.
Pulse ramming, pure adrenaline, ten agonizing seconds of freefall. You pull the pin and your parachute deploys, rocking you backwards as the fabric unfurls and catches the air. You grip your harness tight, float through the heavens and watch as dozens of parachutes dot the horizon around you.
You whoop, shoot Carol a “hang loose”, smiling wide, goofy and vibrating with excitement.
Her laughter carries across the sky.
**
You’re there beside her when the two of you are promoted to officer rank. First in your class, looking out over a sea of grim, bored looking faces that stare back at you with quiet hostility.
Your officer uniforms are sharp, handsome. Crisp navy suits decorated with shining medals and visible proof that you have fought tooth and nail to be on the stage where you stand now. You wouldn’t want anyone else here with you but Carol. Your wingman. Your everything.
Your names are called and you rise together in unison as Senior Airman Dalquist pins your new patches to your uniforms.
**
Weeks later, you learn that Dr. Lawson’s plane has gone down. It punches a hole straight through your chest, wrenches up your insides when the news is broken to you.
After BMT, you’d lost contact with her. You wish you could have told Lawson that you’ve done it, that you and Carol are dominating the skies.
And now she’s missing.
You’re in the hangar and up in the air before anyone can stop you.
**
The crash site is still smoldering when you touch down at a hidden lake surrounded by a halo of pine and sand. You and Carol rip off your helmets, jump out of the cockpit as soon as your wheels are on solid ground, racing towards the wreckage of an eerily familiar F-16 Fighting Falcon.
Lawson lies slumped forward, still strapped into her seat. The glass of the cockpit has exploded all around her, leaving her open and exposed. It looks grim.
“Doc?” You say. Your voice shakes a bit, but you quickly will all fear out of your mind, take a deep breath and allow your body, your muscle memory to take over. Let your training come back to you.
You push back at her helmet visor, sit her upright. Press three fingers against the artery of her neck.
Cold. No pulse.
Then, you see the smoking hole in her chest, where plasma energy has burned through her jacket and blood drips bold and blue onto her lap.
You exhale hard, ignore the strangeness of the latter to check Lawson’s dashboard for any working electrical machinery. No luck. All fried, all scrambled from the crash.
“Carol, we need pararescue stat. Get them here.” You order.
Carol nods wordlessly, composed, turns on her heel to radio them from your own plane.
You brace yourself against the frame of the cockpit, hang your head in shock. You can’t bear to look at Lawson like this. You don’t want to remember her like this.
In those tense moments of silence, a soft, strange humming reaches your ears, seeming to emulate from the F-16 itself. You take a step back to fully survey the wreckage.
The crash has exposed most of the plane’s wiring and paneling, including the engine. Though, this is no engine like you’ve ever seen.
Monstrous, pulsing with blue light and an aura that draws you closer, pulling at your curiosity. It distracts you long enough for you to almost miss the approaching silhouette of a man from behind the suffocating smoke.
He’s dressed in a bizarre emerald jumpsuit with a blazing yellow star in the center of his chest. His step is charismatic, unfaltering.
And what scares you most is the unholstered gun in his hand.
Carol calls your name in a frantic shout.
You put two and two together. Lawson’s killer.
“We have no interest in hurting you.” He tells you, finally pausing at the crest of the crash site. His voice is surprisingly charming and it sends a chill straight down your spine.
We?
You’re afraid. Your old commanding officer, one of the strongest women you’ve ever known, lies shot and killed with blood the color of toxic waste. Her engine looks foreign, otherworldly. Your mind begins to race.
“The energy core. Where is it?” The man asks and brandishes his gun. You force your breathing to steady, to find a sense of calm. You have to focus. Questioning will make him irritable, panicking will get you killed.
Intuition is enough to tell you that the core is not to leave in this man’s hands by any means.
You catch sight of the glinting handle of a pistol resting between Lawson’s knees. You flicker your gaze away and to the proximity of the engine. Then, you look to Carol.
Her eyes shine with tears in the shimmering heat. Her body is tense, drawn tight like a bow, fight-or-flight. You fear she’ll run to you, that she’ll get herself killed trying to protect you. If the roles were switched, you know you would do just that.
So you act before she has the chance to. In one fluid motion, you draw Lawson’s gun and fire a single shot at the exposed engine.
It explodes like heat and magma. Azure energy engulfs you in a millisecond. Like lightning striking your bones, fire that scorches through your entire being and condemning a blazing death of unbearable, burning power, collapsing like a supernova reborn.
Your nerve-endings detonate, a fusion of flesh and skin and pyro that incinerates you to your very core, destroys you from the inside.
You scream, high and horrible. You’ve never felt such pain.
Your eyes ignite in crimson, red hot, flaring with light. Everything inside you rushing upwards and expanding until your mortal frame can no longer contain this threshold and you burst, combust with starfire.
The blast hits Carol next, lifting her up and dissipating, coiling like mist through her skin in synergy. She glows like an iridescent comet, blue light rolling off of her like water and waves, her own eyes flaring turquoise, then white.
When the two of you hit the ground, trees and sand bend and blow around you, knocking the man unconscious as the inertia from your combined energy throws him backwards.
You cry out as you try and hold yourself, crumpled. You are charred, your body humming with poison, radiation and flame, eager to crackle out of you at your slightest impulse, eyes still flaring powerfully.
“I-It hurts..” you gasp weakly.
A true phoenix. Broken and born from ashes.
Carol is there cradling you as tears leak down your face. Wisps of magenta and teal ripple around her with every movement, glittering with cosmic potential, like she contains her very own galaxy. Achingly beautiful.
“I know, birdie.” Carol murmurs as you choke, sputter from the pain. “Fight it. Give it to me.” She says and reaches for your hands.
Carol yelps softly when you push a bit of your glowing gold into her, as she trades starpower for fire and you watch the cage of her chest bloom like a lantern, veins and eyes rimming with ember. She does the same, giving you the moon and stars and the gleaming, lavender milky way.
You let go and Carol gasps as she absorbs a new piece of you. Your mind clears, the pain nothing more than a dull ache.
Exhaustion and shot nerves finally set in as the two of you lie there, quiet enough to hear the wind whistling through pine. You throw your arms around her, your kiss tasting like tears and sand and flushed sunlight.
Carol braces you against her, hoists your arm around her shoulders and lifts you upright. Side by side until the very end.
Then, you take to the skies, blazing like comet streaks and crimson hawks.
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FLommischen No340
número 340 « apporter una mopp »
playlist di FLOMM
53 tracks [3hr 56 min]
listen on spotify
new playlist every monday morning ❤
FLOMM is a faux MODERN ART movement • art history resource • that promotes learning •• education thru nü •• alternative media •••
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Auswahl des besten Friseurs für das Hairstyling
Ein Mensch muss sich auf jeden Fall die Haare schneiden lassen, da dies zu den wichtigsten Dingen gehört, die wir tun, wie Atmen und Essen. Es ist notwendig, Haare zu schneiden, und die Gesellschaft wird Sie blenden, wenn Sie dies nicht tun. Und sie werden wie ein Mopp aussehen. Es gibt eine Fülle von Friseuren, die zeigen, dass es ein profitables Geschäft ist. Nun, Leute, Leute nutzen diesen Service sehr oft.
Das Frisieren ist ein integraler Bestandteil Ihres gesamten Stylings. Es ist sehr wichtig, die richtige Frisur zu haben, die zu Ihrem Aussehen und Design passt, die zur Form und zu Ihrem Gesicht passt. Es kann viel Zeit und Mühe kosten. Menschen auf der ganzen Welt geben in Friseursalons viel Geld für ihren Haarschnitt, ihre Haarfarbe und ihre Frisur aus.
Holen Sie das Beste aus Ihrem Friseur
Auch Ihr Friseur Backnang sollte Ihnen die richtigen Haarprodukte für Ihren Haar- oder Kopfhauttyp verschreiben. Wenn Sie eine neue Haarfarbe erhalten möchten, sollte die Person Ihnen sagen, welches Shampoo, welche Haarspülung und welche Behandlung dafür geeignet sind. Es kann auch sinnvoll sein, eine feuchtigkeitsspendende und färbende Haarkur zu wählen, die verhindert, dass das Haar trocken und rau wird und dadurch Schaden und Bruch erleidet. Empfehlenswert sind auch Stylingprodukte und alle Geräte wie Haarfestiger und Haartrockner oder Lockenst��be. Auch die Suche nach einem qualitativ hochwertigen Haarglätter ist eine gute Wahl. Das liegt daran, dass diese auch für Lockenwickler und Haarformung sowie zum Glätten verwendet werden können. Außerdem wird ein Top-Stylist die Zeit, die Sie benötigen, um den gewünschten Look zu erzielen, minimieren und die Wahrscheinlichkeit von Haarschäden minimieren, die billigere Haarglätter verursachen.
Ein Friseurdienst sollte eine Methode der Zwei-Wege-Kommunikation sein. Sie sollten alle Anstrengungen unternehmen, um sicherzustellen, dass sie alle Informationen gesammelt haben, die sie benötigen. Und der Kunde muss transparent sein und offen Fragen stellen, wenn er etwas nicht kennt, was ihm der Friseur Backnang bei seinem Salonbesuch erklärt hat. Eine Schönheitsbehandlung ist teuer und zeitaufwendig, und sowohl der Friseur als auch die Kundin wollen die bestmöglichen Ergebnisse erzielen.
Stylen Sie Ihr Haar mit einem professionellen Friseur.
Wie eine Person in der Gesellschaft gesehen wird, hängt davon ab, wie sie ihr Haar frisiert. Es nimmt eine sehr wichtige Rolle ein. Die Art und Weise, wie wir unser Haar tragen, ist ein wesentliches Element, wie wir unseren persönlichen Stil und Zustand vermitteln. Daher ist der Einzelne sehr wählerisch, wie sein Haar geschnitten und gestylt werden soll. Friseurinnen und Friseure in der heutigen Welt akzeptieren diese Tatsache, und genau aus diesem Grund Job Friseur Backnang ist zu einem Beruf geworden, der viel Ausbildung braucht.
Der HaarschneiderBacknang weiß jedoch, dass die Kunden am Ende des Tages verärgert wären, wenn ihre Haare nicht gut aussehen. Das zeigt sich in der modernen Welt; Friseure müssen ein gewisses Maß an zwischenmenschlichen Fähigkeiten besitzen, um dieses schwierige Terrain zu erobern.
Was schließlich das Friseurgewerbe betrifft, so müssen neue Friseure mit den neuesten Technologien und Geräten Schritt halten.
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Zorzin Logística abre novas vagas para motoristas carreteiros
Zorzin Logística abre novas vagas para motoristas carreteiros
A empresa Zorzin Logística, fundada em 1970, abriu vagas para motoristas carreteiros. As informações foram enviadas para o Blog do Caminhoneiro com exclusividade. A empresa exige Carteira Nacional de Habilitação categoria E, Curso do MOPP atualizado, e experiência comprovada. As vagas são para a região de Embu das Artes, em São Paulo. Os interessados devem enviar currículos para a empresa por…
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