originally posted in:The New Dojo
[b]Ko Rudo Mountains // Midnight // Meghan[/b]
Meghan’s car rolled along the long stretch of highway between Dojoville and a small village in the Ko-Rudo mountain range at midnight. Normally she didn’t like to drive anywhere at that time of the evening, although she was just getting back from a friend’s house outside the city and didn’t want to overstay her welcome too long. The road ahead was empty, so she trailed her bright orange eyes off of the road in front of her and started to look out the windows at the snowy countryside that surrounded her. Nothing back home was like it, with all of the slopes and hills that were covered with an elegant sheet of white that she could only dream of seeing when waking up every morning. She sighed with a want to just stare at it forever, to get lost in the mix of twinkling stars above and snow below, although she was quickly brought out of her wanting gaze when she heard a rather loud noise in front of her.
Several meters ahead of the woman was a roadblock. Six or seven cars were all lined up in two rows in front of her, with one blocking a small pathway offroad that had been cut out of the railing on the side of the road she had found herself on. Figures moved about in her headlights, each one dressed up in a bright blue jacket and with some form of rifle or pistol on their gloved hands and armour lining their forearms. One walked over to Meg’s car and scratched gently at the armoured ski mask on his face, staring her down with eyes hidden away behind a pair of orange ski goggles.
Meg wasn’t currently armed to the teeth - The blue-skinned woman was wearing a red dress that had ended just below her thigh, and the only form of weaponry that she kept in her car at the moment was her fists, which were already sparking with blue energy and her intention to fight her way out of this. The man approached and rapped on the window to her left lightly, which slid down as she dully looked out to him.
“What,” she asked him.
“Gotta pay a toll if you want to get past,” the man responded, his voice maintaining a tone of calmness, like this was routine for him.
“And if I don’t pay?” Meghan defiantly asked, although it was more of a statement than a question.
“Then my and my friends here will have to use the car as payment, while we pass you around,” the man aggressively responded. Meghan didn’t say anything to him though. She leaned forwards slightly and gave a quaint grin, then opened her door just enough for her to slip out. She had left her heels in the car and put her bare foot on the ground, which made her cringe slightly, though she kept the feeling suppressed. The man had lowered his gun and looked to her with a curious gaze.
Meghan moved beside him and whispered into his ear, though he would soon feel a cold barrel press against the back of his head. Meghan reached down into his sidearm holster and pulled out the pistol he held, although as his friends each raised their gun to her, Meg slid herself behind him. Now he was a bargaining chip, and Meg kept the gun extended, standing sideways for extra style points.
The soldiers looked confusedly to one another and asked each other what to do, though Meghan couldn’t quite hear them since she was fairly far off. Getting quite bored of the men, Meghan had slipped the rifle to the side of his head. She squeezed down on the trigger and a bullet zipped out of one end, flying through the cold air with a grace matched only by that of her form, which barely moved from recoil. The bullet found its mark in one of the cars used to block the road off, and it embedded itself into the gasoline tank, which started to spray liquids like a hose. Some of the others had been coated in it, and a second shot to the car would send a few sparks of hot metal into the gasoline. It, like three of the bandits, had been set alight before they could find a good spot to shoot without killing their friend.
Meg hit the back of the man’s head with her pistol and grabbed his gun as he collapsed, before she moved back to the spot behind her truck in all of the confusion and chaos. When the other five bullets of her pistol were expended taking on people that had tried to push up on her, she tossed it to the side and held the rifle in either hand. She checked the gun’s magazine - Fifteen rounds, it looked to be a marksman’s rifle from the make of it.
Someone rounded a corner to meet Meghan with a gun raised to her, although she kept herself low and shoved the stock of her gun into the bottom of his jaw and shot him in the shoulder twice. Someone came from behind her then, but she found herself putting a bullet into his lower chest. Three more came; Meg only aimed at one of them, but she was being stared down by all of the soldiers.
“You have three injured people, and about three people staring me down. Either you drop your guns and help your friends, or they get hypothermia and die,” Meghan stated, her confidence overwhelming. Truly she didn’t remember exactly how many people were there, but she had a guess and hoped she was right. The bandits looked to be mulling it over in their heads, but they soon found themselves looking to the guy in the middle.
“How do I know you won’t shoot me as soon as I lower my gun?” The bandit asked. He had the clear advantage and knew he could just shoot her now, but he knew that if he shot her, then Meg would clench her fist and both of them would go.
“I could ask the same thing. I’ll get in my truck, and one of your guys will move that car. Cross me, and I’ll run your friend over when I’m dead,” Meghan said with a grin as she looked to the man. Death wasn’t an important thing for her - She was a Guardian after all, and death was meaningless to her - but she wanted to get out of here without killing anyone. It took the bandits a moment of hesitation, but eventually they motioned to the car in the dirt road and had one of the three move it. Meg climbed into her car with a sly smirk and the rifle, which she put in the passenger seat next to a pistol from one of the men. When the car moved her muffler blew smoke onto the face of a soldier, and she was on her way out of the bandit roadblock.
((Open!))
English
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[i]Meg grabbed the sidearm from the passengers seat and tossed it to the Hunter. [/i]
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She aimed the gun at her head and pulled the trigger. Her Ghost revived her.
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[i]"See? Told you it would work." [/i]
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"Yeah."
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[i]"So, Hunter, what kind of Hunter are you?" [/i]
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"Who me? I'm a a**hole Hunter."
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[i]"I guessed, but I mean what type of Light do you pull out of that fine ass?" Meg casually joked, looking at her in the mirror of the car. [/i]
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"Well, I'm a Nightstalker, and a Bladedancer. Also a Gunslinger, but I mastered the first two more easily."
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[i]"Bladedancer, huh? I take it the Super store was all out of strîpper poles so you settled for some nice knives?" [/i]
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"I'm sorry, but have you seen my collection of knives? I'm not turning them in for f**king pole."
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[i]"Hey, those poles are nice!" Meg said with a laugh, looking to the road ahead once again. [/i]
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"Yeah, but the knives are sharp."
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[i]"The poles can be sharp." [/i]
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Edited by Splashback77: 12/24/2017 2:31:51 AM"Yeah, but that's when you add a blade to it."
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[i]"No, you can sharpen it." [/i]
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"That's when it becomes a spear."
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[i]"Doesn't necessarily mean it isn't a staff still. Could be a staffspear. A stear." [/i]
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"For me, the sharper, the better," she replied.
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[i]"Then do you like bullets? They're the sharpest of all." [/i]
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"Yes. Especially sniper bullets."
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[i]"I was thinking flechettes, but that works too." [/i]
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"Even better..."
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[i]"Yeah..." [/i]
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"So... how about you? You a Hunter, a Titan, or a Warlock?
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[i]"Titan. Nobody uses their hands better than me in a fight." [/i]