Verse
Star
- Joined
- May 8, 2011
Once upon a time there had been common interest between the Shichen and the Vory.
The centuries old bloodlines of the Shichen treasured good genes over all. And as this new era had cured them of prejudice such a purity of origins and noble names, they roamed the modern world looking for ways to enhance their warriors, still sought after in dark channels of never ending, power struggles. And lately, at least from a historical perspective, some interesting theories were being pursued in Russia. Good money and aligning fundamental views made a marriage of convenience, promising to yield somethin useful for both the Vory and the Shichen.
That truce was long gone now, in a Vory stronghold.
This storage building front was a headquarters for a lot of Russian, criminal activity. While there were still some initiatives within the organization to further strong blood and flesh, it had been mostly taken over by short-sighted greed. That was why this conclave of illegal work was predominantly contraband focused; capital of violence, and its own perpetuation. And, sometimes, when you peddle pains, you will get them back.
A long shadow had visited the tall place. The ceramic plates on his torso, over the body-close, black keval mesh, was mostly shot up, so the figure was coming through the Vory-owned corridors dressed in matte-anthracite shards. But apart from the gray-on-black layer, there was a coat of crimson that reflected the pipelights overhead, whenever he didn't slip out of sight. It was of course blood from the motherland; Vory soldiers who'd been made martyrs for the family's illegal cause, turned into the sum of their fluids on the teachnological armor of the intruder.
Wou Li Youn had been steeped in the traditions of the Shichen. Raised into a monster and hammered into what he'd become. A prince of a hidden kingdom that sought expansion by simply broadcasting their strength, and taking work with whoever had the right mission, and the right amount of gold. His job was to live his life, acquiring more strength; for himself, for the Shichen. Tucked away, somewhere, he had had one of three sisters, who'd been a promising collection of biological ventures once. He questioned her of what she remembered of her days in a lab, so he may find it, on day. Her fevered confessions through chapped lips that smelled like his cum had lead him here.
Now he was cutting his way through the automatic-equipped guards and their ilk to dig out the Vory's old secrets through their new inventory of drugs and stolen goods. The small things that the girl still remembered was hazy at best, but he had been able to confirm some of the machines she described already. Maybe there were more trails, laying around.
Full of the fire of youth, Wou Li had a furnace of energy in his guts to draw from when the overwhelming forces of the Vory became privy to the intrusion. The alarms were loud, and even though he should retreat, he thought this might be an opportunity to show the Vory there was something hunting them. Time to carve out a fairytale for the Russians to blow out of proportion by the campfire.
Three military-grade individuals came into the already shot-up lab, with workers strew about on each other's allocated limbs. The first one, with the close-quarters firearms most suited for this tight space, suddenly groaned through his balaclava and fell to his knees, bleeding through his chest-rig until his cargo pants went from the urban-camo pattern to simply a dark red stain. As his two associates looked back and then twisted their sights about the room and its metal tables and machines to see who'd done it, they missed that their fallen friend was one knife short in his belt. It was returned to the mid-range specialist still standing. The black blade crushed three front teeth on its way it, lodged so deep the only sound the soldier could make on his way down was a pressurized hiss. Perhaps the Intruder had not liked the screams of the first guard dying.
The last standing guard fired around himself; a concentric delivery of bullets. But a shrill sound and the halving of his bulky rifle brought that waste of ammunition to a halt. He yelled in fearful frustration, and pulled out a machete and a handgun. The blade rung in the silence, and it enticed the otherwordly visitor.
Out of a pile of human parts, built by the very same, a long figure stood; forearms and thighs and larger organs pouring off him and his shattered but still attached armor. Wou Li Youn, of the Shichen, a half-length black sword in hand. He pulled his black mask off, to provide the Vory guard with all of his features, instead of just the slit for his eyes. A young asian male with deep cheeks and proud cheekbones. Long hair to his jaw. The Vory solder roared and Wou Li stomped over gore to get to him. The handgun slowed the sprint down to back-jerking strides, but soon the soldier swung at the Shichen shadow. Wou Li blocked with the still intact plate on his wrist and punched with his sword-holding fist. It brought the guard back, one step. Wou Li waited for the disheartening clicks to tell the guard he was out of bullets.
The machete swung downward and Wou Li let the edge slide off his tilted sword. A dismissive twitch nicked the guard's gunhand, and had him drop the useless trinket. Wou Li humored the guard and his deft waving of the machete. There was some training there, he could tell, by the conserving of energy and powerful angles. But, as had been the theme of this headquarter; the sword art was underwhelming. Fitting in shallow cuts between the blatant unguarded turns, Wou Li had soon reduced the guard to a tattered scarecrow, with his tactical gear falling off his sliced torso.
"Where is the old archives?" he asked in English, with a subdued but present accent. He cut the man's free hand off at the wrist and repeated the question. He went through the process at the middle of the forearm, the elbow, and at the belly of the bicep before the guard stuttered through his crying; noises that sounded like three numbers in his mother tongue. Wou Li nodded and stepped back, out of range from the machete, and sheathed his sword on his back. But he drew it soon again, sensing someone else coming. The footfalls were not that of traditional Vory staff.
The centuries old bloodlines of the Shichen treasured good genes over all. And as this new era had cured them of prejudice such a purity of origins and noble names, they roamed the modern world looking for ways to enhance their warriors, still sought after in dark channels of never ending, power struggles. And lately, at least from a historical perspective, some interesting theories were being pursued in Russia. Good money and aligning fundamental views made a marriage of convenience, promising to yield somethin useful for both the Vory and the Shichen.
That truce was long gone now, in a Vory stronghold.
This storage building front was a headquarters for a lot of Russian, criminal activity. While there were still some initiatives within the organization to further strong blood and flesh, it had been mostly taken over by short-sighted greed. That was why this conclave of illegal work was predominantly contraband focused; capital of violence, and its own perpetuation. And, sometimes, when you peddle pains, you will get them back.
A long shadow had visited the tall place. The ceramic plates on his torso, over the body-close, black keval mesh, was mostly shot up, so the figure was coming through the Vory-owned corridors dressed in matte-anthracite shards. But apart from the gray-on-black layer, there was a coat of crimson that reflected the pipelights overhead, whenever he didn't slip out of sight. It was of course blood from the motherland; Vory soldiers who'd been made martyrs for the family's illegal cause, turned into the sum of their fluids on the teachnological armor of the intruder.
Wou Li Youn had been steeped in the traditions of the Shichen. Raised into a monster and hammered into what he'd become. A prince of a hidden kingdom that sought expansion by simply broadcasting their strength, and taking work with whoever had the right mission, and the right amount of gold. His job was to live his life, acquiring more strength; for himself, for the Shichen. Tucked away, somewhere, he had had one of three sisters, who'd been a promising collection of biological ventures once. He questioned her of what she remembered of her days in a lab, so he may find it, on day. Her fevered confessions through chapped lips that smelled like his cum had lead him here.
Now he was cutting his way through the automatic-equipped guards and their ilk to dig out the Vory's old secrets through their new inventory of drugs and stolen goods. The small things that the girl still remembered was hazy at best, but he had been able to confirm some of the machines she described already. Maybe there were more trails, laying around.
Full of the fire of youth, Wou Li had a furnace of energy in his guts to draw from when the overwhelming forces of the Vory became privy to the intrusion. The alarms were loud, and even though he should retreat, he thought this might be an opportunity to show the Vory there was something hunting them. Time to carve out a fairytale for the Russians to blow out of proportion by the campfire.
Three military-grade individuals came into the already shot-up lab, with workers strew about on each other's allocated limbs. The first one, with the close-quarters firearms most suited for this tight space, suddenly groaned through his balaclava and fell to his knees, bleeding through his chest-rig until his cargo pants went from the urban-camo pattern to simply a dark red stain. As his two associates looked back and then twisted their sights about the room and its metal tables and machines to see who'd done it, they missed that their fallen friend was one knife short in his belt. It was returned to the mid-range specialist still standing. The black blade crushed three front teeth on its way it, lodged so deep the only sound the soldier could make on his way down was a pressurized hiss. Perhaps the Intruder had not liked the screams of the first guard dying.
The last standing guard fired around himself; a concentric delivery of bullets. But a shrill sound and the halving of his bulky rifle brought that waste of ammunition to a halt. He yelled in fearful frustration, and pulled out a machete and a handgun. The blade rung in the silence, and it enticed the otherwordly visitor.
Out of a pile of human parts, built by the very same, a long figure stood; forearms and thighs and larger organs pouring off him and his shattered but still attached armor. Wou Li Youn, of the Shichen, a half-length black sword in hand. He pulled his black mask off, to provide the Vory guard with all of his features, instead of just the slit for his eyes. A young asian male with deep cheeks and proud cheekbones. Long hair to his jaw. The Vory solder roared and Wou Li stomped over gore to get to him. The handgun slowed the sprint down to back-jerking strides, but soon the soldier swung at the Shichen shadow. Wou Li blocked with the still intact plate on his wrist and punched with his sword-holding fist. It brought the guard back, one step. Wou Li waited for the disheartening clicks to tell the guard he was out of bullets.
The machete swung downward and Wou Li let the edge slide off his tilted sword. A dismissive twitch nicked the guard's gunhand, and had him drop the useless trinket. Wou Li humored the guard and his deft waving of the machete. There was some training there, he could tell, by the conserving of energy and powerful angles. But, as had been the theme of this headquarter; the sword art was underwhelming. Fitting in shallow cuts between the blatant unguarded turns, Wou Li had soon reduced the guard to a tattered scarecrow, with his tactical gear falling off his sliced torso.
"Where is the old archives?" he asked in English, with a subdued but present accent. He cut the man's free hand off at the wrist and repeated the question. He went through the process at the middle of the forearm, the elbow, and at the belly of the bicep before the guard stuttered through his crying; noises that sounded like three numbers in his mother tongue. Wou Li nodded and stepped back, out of range from the machete, and sheathed his sword on his back. But he drew it soon again, sensing someone else coming. The footfalls were not that of traditional Vory staff.