Born-On-Board
Inactive Member
Garvey smiled as endearingly as he could to the Freespacer. "Dat's mos' righteous, seh ya. Guess ain't be no ting to worry about, den."
Pets? He was curious. Were there definition the same? Garvey got a sudden mental image of a kitten in a doctor's getup taking someone's pulse, and it was all he could do to stifle a gale of nervous laughter. Instead a constipated snrrrrk! noise escaped his lips. Before he got a chance to claifry though, Corporal Romero spoke up, and suddenly, it became go time. He, Arc, and Phase were a team now - Phase was an unknown quantity, but the heavyset, stolid Arc Vinidict was a huge relief for Eli.
"Alright den. See you on de uh, silly sausage den, Phase. Mebbe I can see one of yah pets do some tricks or sum ting, seh yea?" He smiled again. "And may I say it be a pleasure to work wit ya, Arc. Go Kangaroos."
Garvey threw a wink at Phase's monoeye, then began to pull on his armor, piece by tedious piece. In training the Golem armor had been something of a suprise to him - in the slums where he'd grew up, rich gangers had worn something similar, suits of armor made from local scrapyards and welded together by junior artisans in garage workshops. That monstrosity of spot-welded steel had been called a Bumbaclot suit - Eli didn't really know why - and even though the Golem armor was on a whole different level, he still slipped up and called it by the old terms, the old ways.
He attempted to put on his helmet, and frowned. His beloved dreads were in the way. He hemmed and hawed, fiddled to and fro, then eventually released the adjustment straps on the helmet's interior liner. At one notch from the widest width possible, it fit snugly onto his head, and he breathed a sigh of relief. His dreads could stay.
He picked his M3 rifle from a rack, working the action back and forth a few times, inspecting the meticulously clean chamber. He'd requested his M3 with a short barrel, and to his pleasure and relief, that was how the gun remained. Swinging a full-length M3 through the tight confines of a ship would've been a nightmare - the period on the end of the bad joke of his life in a firefight.
He considered attaching the supressor every M3 was issued with, deliberating carefully, swinging from yes to no several times, then with a huff, attached it. The added length (and added cleaning time later, the M3 ran really dirty with a supressor) was going to be worth the severely reduced dazzling effect produced by prodigious muzzle flash and blast - plus the lower muzzle velocity provided by the supressor would aid in the whole, 'don't pierce the hull of the ship and get us all spaced' talk from Chief. Garvey'd heard all the old stories from salty void sailors; of ships so decrepit the only things separating the crew from hard vaccuum was a few scant layers of Haze Grey paint and rust. He was going to do his damndest to make sure that didn't happen to him.
He threw on his webbing over the armor, then stuffed every pouch he could with concussion grenades, scalar grenades, and magazines. He rocked one into the receiver of his rifle (it made a satisfying clack-snap sound, seh yea), yanked the charging handle, then put the gun on safe. The Styrling .45 followed, being quickly stuffed into a thigh holster. More mundane gear was acquired - two canteens on the back of his belt, a multitool in an unused pistol magazine pocket, a flashlight, a pocketknife, his combat axe (never knew what you were going to have to chop or pry open, they were a search-and-seizure team after all), and most peculiarly of all, several snacks and candy bars that went into a dump pouch. The suit was heavy and gear was heavier, but, humping loads had been a soldier's job for a long time, and Eli was excited to finally be released from
the draconian, sometimes farce-like discipline of a servicemember in training, and do some real work.
He jumped up and down a few times on the spot, testing how snugly his gear was secured
(he'd hit a sweet spot, his gear was snug but not uncomfortable, and this filled him with immense pleasure), then waited for the rest of team Killer Kangaroo.
Pets? He was curious. Were there definition the same? Garvey got a sudden mental image of a kitten in a doctor's getup taking someone's pulse, and it was all he could do to stifle a gale of nervous laughter. Instead a constipated snrrrrk! noise escaped his lips. Before he got a chance to claifry though, Corporal Romero spoke up, and suddenly, it became go time. He, Arc, and Phase were a team now - Phase was an unknown quantity, but the heavyset, stolid Arc Vinidict was a huge relief for Eli.
"Alright den. See you on de uh, silly sausage den, Phase. Mebbe I can see one of yah pets do some tricks or sum ting, seh yea?" He smiled again. "And may I say it be a pleasure to work wit ya, Arc. Go Kangaroos."
Garvey threw a wink at Phase's monoeye, then began to pull on his armor, piece by tedious piece. In training the Golem armor had been something of a suprise to him - in the slums where he'd grew up, rich gangers had worn something similar, suits of armor made from local scrapyards and welded together by junior artisans in garage workshops. That monstrosity of spot-welded steel had been called a Bumbaclot suit - Eli didn't really know why - and even though the Golem armor was on a whole different level, he still slipped up and called it by the old terms, the old ways.
He attempted to put on his helmet, and frowned. His beloved dreads were in the way. He hemmed and hawed, fiddled to and fro, then eventually released the adjustment straps on the helmet's interior liner. At one notch from the widest width possible, it fit snugly onto his head, and he breathed a sigh of relief. His dreads could stay.
He picked his M3 rifle from a rack, working the action back and forth a few times, inspecting the meticulously clean chamber. He'd requested his M3 with a short barrel, and to his pleasure and relief, that was how the gun remained. Swinging a full-length M3 through the tight confines of a ship would've been a nightmare - the period on the end of the bad joke of his life in a firefight.
He considered attaching the supressor every M3 was issued with, deliberating carefully, swinging from yes to no several times, then with a huff, attached it. The added length (and added cleaning time later, the M3 ran really dirty with a supressor) was going to be worth the severely reduced dazzling effect produced by prodigious muzzle flash and blast - plus the lower muzzle velocity provided by the supressor would aid in the whole, 'don't pierce the hull of the ship and get us all spaced' talk from Chief. Garvey'd heard all the old stories from salty void sailors; of ships so decrepit the only things separating the crew from hard vaccuum was a few scant layers of Haze Grey paint and rust. He was going to do his damndest to make sure that didn't happen to him.
He threw on his webbing over the armor, then stuffed every pouch he could with concussion grenades, scalar grenades, and magazines. He rocked one into the receiver of his rifle (it made a satisfying clack-snap sound, seh yea), yanked the charging handle, then put the gun on safe. The Styrling .45 followed, being quickly stuffed into a thigh holster. More mundane gear was acquired - two canteens on the back of his belt, a multitool in an unused pistol magazine pocket, a flashlight, a pocketknife, his combat axe (never knew what you were going to have to chop or pry open, they were a search-and-seizure team after all), and most peculiarly of all, several snacks and candy bars that went into a dump pouch. The suit was heavy and gear was heavier, but, humping loads had been a soldier's job for a long time, and Eli was excited to finally be released from
the draconian, sometimes farce-like discipline of a servicemember in training, and do some real work.
He jumped up and down a few times on the spot, testing how snugly his gear was secured
(he'd hit a sweet spot, his gear was snug but not uncomfortable, and this filled him with immense pleasure), then waited for the rest of team Killer Kangaroo.