Project Nemesis is a fan driven website for games that use the One-Roll Engine (like Nemesis, Wild Talents, Reign and Monsters) or Chaosium's Basic Roleplay System (BRP) (like Call of Cthulhu) and the Delta Green setting.
Let me begin by
saying: STILL NO FRANKLIN'S GHOST! Good grief! This is a resource! A
fair smattering of points went into it! It could help their asses OUT.
But nothin'. Not an ectoplasmic sausage. Sheesh. This session,
we were missing Leo's player and I hadn't prepared as much as
previously, but it went okay. Not great, but a decent building session.
I'm probably going to go through character-by-character until they're
together -- there was a lot of individual action this session.
After
a good night's sleep, Seth went to talk to the chief about hiring Bolt
on payroll. The chief was all for it, as long as Bolt would, you know,
unmask and provide a SSN so they'd know he wasn't an escaped felon or
something.
SETH: C'mon, when you bribe an informant, you don't ask for his tax identification number and a receipt.
CHIEF:
That's true, but we don't ask informants to take violent action against
dangerous criminals in volatile circumstances. If we pay Bolt and he
makes a mistake, it's on us. We're liable, and we'd deserve to be,
having asked an untrained and unknown person to do our jobs for us.
SETH:
Forget the SWAT type stuff, then. Think about him as a first responder.
He TELEPORTS. Can you imagine how many lives he could save in a
time-sensitive disaster?
CHIEF: Hey, I'm all for this guy saving
lives. Citizen involvement, yay rah. I just can't pay him for it unless
he's willing to go on the books.
Back at his office, Seth found
that his secretary had checked over the budget and that the city had
decided it was a better allocation of resources to buy body armor for
the cops who WEREN'T already bullet-resistant. But on a brighter note,
a guy named McAllister wanted to take Seth to dinner and personally
thank him for rescuing his (McAllister's) bearer bonds from the Mime.
McA mentioned in passing that his bonds were still tied up at the
department.
Lucien went out to San Francisco, first sneaking
into the PT building to make the jump. (His usual mole in the building
was already in trouble for leaving the door unlocked once, so he didn't
want to let Lucien in again. Lucien just snuck in. It's easier to sneak
when you can teleport around locked doors.) Due to a misunderstanding,
he called a police detective (Harriet Prills) in persona as Surge,
rather than as Lucien. She was startled and agreed to a meet by the
Golden Gate bridge. When she arrived, Surge met her and asked why she
was calling around. She explained that she was doing after-the-fact
investigation of the gas attack and was trying to get statements from
everyone who was present -- but that she hadn't expected SURGE to
respond. She took his statement. When he mentioned getting tipped off
by a homeless guy, she paused and described the guy -- vaguely, but
accurately.
SURGE: Yeah, that sounds like him. Who is he?
PRILLS:
I wish I knew. It's just... someone loses their grip on a baby
carriage, and this homeless guy stops it right before it goes into
traffic. Someone drops his insulin on the bus and this homeless guy
brings it back to him just in time, miles from the bus stop. Who pulled
the fire alarm ten minutes before anyone else smelled smoke? This
homeless guy. Who led a doctor to an alley in time to save a knifing
victim? The homeless guy. He's always in the right place at the right
time with the right thing... but no one knows who he is. He's like an
urban legend.
SURGE: I'd like to thank him.
PRILLS: How do I know you're the real Surge, anyhow?
LUCIEN'S PLAYER: I'll teleport away.
GM: From your new position, you can faintly hear her say, "If he ain't Surge, he does a damn good impression."
That
took care of the first of the investigators waiting for him in San
Fran, but there were still two left, along with the appearance of
graffiti reading "SURGE WHERE ARE YOU?" all over town. The first
detective was named Randall Putney, and he was working for a lawyer
named Lawrence Munk. This is the guy that Surge accidentally
lightning-bolted in the Transamerica Building while halting the
terrorists. (In his defense, after mild Sarin exposure, his vision were
badly blurred.) Putney said he was interested in getting information
for a class-action suit if they ever found someone who could be proven
to have funded the attack. Lucien gave his song and dance about being
on the train when Surge showed up and the terrorist panicked.
PUTNEY: Would you say Surge's appearance CAUSED the terrorist to drop his briefcase and release the gas prematurely?
LUCIEN: I don't know. It was pretty chaotic. I think it would've been a lot worse without Surge.
PUTNEY: Hm. Can you describe Surge?
SETH'S PLAYER: "He was a veritable olympian god made flesh!"
CECILY'S PLAYER: "I'm not gay or anything, but if Surge asked..."
GM: "He was just POURED into those tights!"
LUCIEN: He was pretty tall, um...
They
then rolled to see if Putney was suspicious about Lucien's lies. The
same rolls were made a few scenes later, when Lucien talked to a P.I.
named Adam Kwok, who said he represented a private citizen whose
daughter had been badly harmed in the attack. "My client doesn't fully
trust the government," he said, "So he's funding a private, parallel
investigation. If we uncover anything the police are unable, or
unwilling to act on... well, he'll plan his next move."
Having
gotten through that gauntlet, all he wanted to do was go home and
teleport back to Ohio, but when he walked into his brother's pad the
phone rang. Not his burner cell, his brother's telephone.
LUCIEN: Hello?
MYSTERIOUS CALLER: Hey Surge. How's it going? I imagine that hole in your chest is itching pretty badly right about now.
LUCIEN: Excuse me? Who is this?
MYSTERIOUS
CALLER: You can call me... eh, PC will do. Relax. I'm not interested in
outing you -- if I was, I'd have ratted you out to Munk by now. I
really have your best interests in mind. Do you know how much of a
bounty Al Qeda has on your head? A million bucks.
LUCIEN: I don't feel real comfortable discussing this on the phone. Can I meet you?
PC: Me? Um... that's probably a nonstarter for a lot of reasons, but I think I can send someone to talk to you face to face.
LUCIEN: Do you know who's behind the 'Surge where are you' messages?
PC
gave him a detailed description of the guy who'd been doing it -- name,
address and "his liver's in bad shape. He seems to just be a conerned
citizen, no connection to any power group." When Surge suited up and
visited, he found himself in an area where he'd once prowled and
patrolled.
THE GUY (I had a name for him, but didn't write it
down): I... I was worried! You just vanished! People said you'd gotten
poisoned in the attack, that you were dead! I was scared.
SURGE: I didn't go anywhere.
THE GUY: But no one's seen you.
SURGE: Well, there's this lawyer who wants to sue me.
THE GUY: Oh no...
SURGE: So I'm laying low for a while. But I'm still around.
THE GUY: The crooks, the gangsters... they're not scared anymore.
SURGE: They will be. Oh, and you should probably schedule a doctor visit.
THE GUY: Huh?
SURGE: Trust me on this, 'kay?
Lucien
then got to a meeting in a park with a pretty young woman in typical
"superhero wannabee" style-clothes - goggles, a sort of aviator helmet,
etc. On closer examination, she looked a little older than the typical
gogglechick. She introduced herself as 'Meg'.
LUCIEN: So... this 'PC' guy. How does he know about me?
MEG:
He knows. That's just his thing. (Tilting her head.) One thing he
doesn't know is how you got injured, and where you go when you
disappear from here. Don't suppose you want to tell?
LUCIEN: Leave me with some mystery. You've got me at a real advantage, though. Who are you people?
MEG: We work for the U.S. Army. You're not government, are you? DIA, NSA, CIA...?
LUCIEN: Strictly freelance.
MEG: Nice. There's a lot to like about that. A LOT. I mean, I don't regret going on Uncle Sam's dime, but...
LUCIEN: Are you trying to recruit me?
MEG:
Actually no. Look. We find out a lot. With PC. But a whole big lot of
it is inadmissible in court. I mean, they can't just toss someone in
jail on the say-so of a mutant, even if he's been right EVERY SINGLE
TIME for THREE FRICKIN' YEARS... whoo hoo, hooray for the Bill of
Rights. Anyhow. We're accountable. We have to file reports on our
actions, explain and justify everything. So there are times when we
know a guy is bad, but our hands are tied.
LUCIEN: I begin to see your interest in me.
MEG: You're in their crosshairs. If you let them get a fix on you, they'll come after you, and THEN we'll be able to swoop in.
LUCIEN: Give me names and addresses. My afternoon's clear.
MEG:
No, not just yet. We don't know you well enough -- no point in getting
you needlessly killed. Besides, you might not be able to handle these
guys alone.
LUCIEN: I'm not alone.
MEG: Hold on a... (Puts hand to ear through her helmet) Crap, I gotta go.
With that, she ran off at inhuman speed.
LUCIEN'S PLAYER: Nice.
Cicely
went to class, studied, talked briefly to Annette, and was in her
apartment when Dr. Eden Majors (the head of the Applied Parapsychology
department) dropped in to see her. The blow-by-blow of their
conversation isn't really important (meaning, I don't remember it) but
mainly Eden was interested in the imprisoned Dr. Park (aka "Gandalf
Lechter"). She wanted to know if he seemed crazy or stressed or
desperate. She didn't seem happy when Cicely said, "No, he seemed
pretty composed and controlled. He was working out." Eden was appalled
by Park's conditions, and speculated that a real sorcerer would (given
enough time and effort) be able to cast spells without needing things
like ink or paper or hair. "Plenty of spells can be cast with only
breath, or by contorting the body," she said. "If he was what they
claim, why would he still be there?" Then she narrowed her eyes and
said, "Of course, he may not be the only one who's not what she seems."
Having implied that she knew Cicely was a rogue sorceress, Eden bid her
farewell and left.
Cicely's next scene was with Seth as they
talked to Eisenerbrecht about the notebook code. Eisenerbrecht, in his
typical roundabout way, said that it had a lot of very interesting
stuff, but that it was clearly someone's personal notes -- meaning that
there was a lot of shorthand, a lot of references they just couldn't
crack. He suspected, however, that the author was working on a
variation on summoning spells.
EISENERBRECHT: Currently, there
are two modalities for summoning -- well, two subdivisions within
Invocation and Conjuration, but never mind for our purposes. It's
like... okay, here we go. Imagine that there were two ways you could
contact people on the phone. One was to pick up a phone and dial
randomly, talking to whoever happened to pick up. Some summons' are
like that. Or, you could call a specific person... but only on a
dedicated phone line, so that you'd have to have a separate phone for
your mother, one for your sister, a phone for your boss and so on. You
might have seventy phones, or you might only be able to specifically
call three or four people, yes? Now imagine someone describing the
phones we use, where one phone can call a specific person. That's what
this research seems to be seeking, one spell that can specifically
summon many spirits -- just by filling in the blank with their
identity. Instead of needing to learn dozens of spells, a magician
would only need one.
Not liking the sound of that, Seth called
the chief and was told the book had been sent back to the bank vault
"where it belongs." Seth asked the professor to destroy his copy of the
notes, and Eisenerbrecht, with great reluctance, said he would. He also
mentioned that the last entry in the book was "Success. Now to
penetrate the next circle." In the process of explaining how important
the discovery could be, he revealed a fair incidental knowledge of
several occult power groups: The Russian spy agency Direktiva Nul, the
European Projekt ELSA, and the criminal Xoloti Cartel.
That
night, Seth and Cicely went out boozing and cruising. Seth was
specifically looking for someone 'disposable' -- someone he could hook
up with and then leave with no hard feelings and not enough connection
that anyone might, say, be able to decapitate her and turn her into
another Nemesis host. Cicely was also operating on the assumption that
the best way to get over Trey would be to get under someone else.
Penalized Sense+Sight rolls were made, and with his big pool, Seth got
a hinky feeling about one guy quietly drinking alone. He went over and
started hassling him -- badged him, asked for ID, got up in his face.
The guy produced a Wisconsin drivers' license for Nick Koroviev, acted
very surprised and nervous, but Seth couldn't make the roll to place
him. Cicely (who'd failed her Spot check) asked if this Koroviev guy
was cute.
GM: No cuter than he was at the Tiger Lily the other night, when you and he were both there drinking.
Koroviev
bugged out, Seth had to make a penalized Seduction roll -- I'd made it
clear to him that it was a no-roll no brainer if he DIDN'T go over and
hassle the dude. But even after abruptly leaving his arm candy at the
bar so he could go aggress, she was patiently waiting when he got back.
Cicely, on the other hand, found an acceptable English major who
invited her back to his place to hear some poetry.
CICELY'S PLAYER: Is the poetry any good?
GM: Excuse me?
CICELY'S
PLAYER: Cicely's an educated woman, she's smart and informed. Is this
guy's poetry any good, or is it trite and self-serving.
GM: (Rolls 4d, gets nothin'.) It's nothing above mediocre. Does that influence her decision?
CICELY: I'm out of here. Good grief, don't quit your day job.
She
then text-messaged the worst lines of the verse to Seth while he was
making love up in the clouds. He actually paused in his screwing
("Don't fall off now") to check the message. Then the pair went home to
their lonely beds and slept.
Next day, Cicely went to see Tracy
again. Though fully recovered from her burns, she still had scars on
her thighs and also wanted to give him another chance. Plus, she asked
him to look at her car. At first, Tracy only wanted to examine the car,
but having failed his Mechanics roll (and recommended that she take it
to the guy who bought his garage when he retired) he relented and tried
to heal her again. This time, it worked. With a rush of vitality and
sensation, she was made whole.
CICELY'S PLAYER: Is it like an electric shock, or something else?
GM: It feels GREAT! Afterwards, it seems like colors are brighter, you feel awake and energized and healthy.
CICELY: Wow. You really batted that one out of the park!
TRACY: You want some tea? I always get really thirsty after doing it.
CICELY: I bet this is going to be the best tasting tea of my life.
Seth
went to his meet with mysterious DHS spy Chlotilde Giroux. They'd
arranged to meet at an outdoor cafe, and she had time to ask him what
his concern was, and be told "Someone called and said a letter from
Prague had arrived for you..." before a bullet slammed into her chest.
Seth threw himself in front of her, and was hit with a bullet big
enough to injure him. A young girl -- looked 12 or 13 -- came up to him
with a hissing gas canister just as Chlotilde disappeared. Then he saw
a stocky man with a handgun and a weird headset aiming through the gas.
The headset was a gas mask from the nose down, and something like
sealed night vision goggles with a relentlessly rising and falling blue
light in the center of it. Seth, having grabbed Chlotilde before she
turned invisible (!) lifted off as both the hidden sniper and
goggle-man continued to shoot. Goggler tagged her in the arm, and then
Seth flew away at top speed. He could feel Chlotilde pushing him
through the air, too -- greatly increasing his speed.
At the
hospital, Chlotilde returned to opacity and was rushed to the OR. An ER
nurse tried to dig the bullet out of Seth's arm and was unable to.
"Your muscles have locked around it... I can't probe them, they're too
strong. I'd need a miniature Jaws of Life. If I put you under..." Seth
refused anaesthesia and called in a lockdown to the cops. Then he
called Cicely, who called Tracy, and they hit the hospital together.
Cicely invoked the Celestial Physician, who gave Seth all the surgical
knowledge he needed to operate on himself. After several hours, the
surgeon emerged from the OR, stripped off his bloody gloves, threw them
on the floor and raised his arms like a triumphant athlete.
DOCTOR: Anybody want to see what a surgical genius looks like? Right here! Right here! (Exits)
NURSE:
The arrogance would be a lot harder to take if he wasn't actually
making some spectacular saves. That bullet missed her heart by
millimeters.
By the time Chlotilde woke up, she'd somehow
developed a French accent, and Bolt had arrived. She explained that "A
Letter From Prague" is the nom-de-guerre of a Russian agent. "He
probably followed you in order to find me." When asked about the
accent, Chlotilde explained that she'd been raised in France, the
daughter of an American serviceman. Tracy then rolled to heal her and,
once again, did a bang-up job. From death's door, she was now bruised,
but fully functional.
GM: Tracy says "I felt the spirit in me." Then he passes out.
When
the doctor and a nurse came into Chlotilde's room, they made several
remarkable discoveries. (1) They couldn't get an IV needle through
Tracy's skin, (2) Seth had operated on himself with Mayo Clinic level
skill and (3) Chlotilde seemed to have undergone a month's worth of
recuperation in about ten minutes. He kind of freaked.
CICELY: He's a mutant healer, but you're the one who saved her life. He never could have stabilized her.
DOCTOR: Okay... you know, the AMA would sue the hell out of you all. You can't just practice medicine without a license!
CICELY: He's not practicing medicine, he's using a mutant power.
DOCTOR: Oh, and Murhpy suddenly being able to operate on himself? (To Seth) Do you know what this is?
SETH'S PLAYER: What is it.
GM: Some medical whing-wang gadget. You have no idea what it is.
SETH: (Shrug)
DOCTOR:
Because you used it with a level of skill that, frankly, I envy.
(Glaring.) Listen, medicine is not a hobby! There's an article in the
Lancet about a mutant with flesh controlling ability who tried to
fix... it was a broken arm, actually... and wound up killing the
patient, who'd been STABLE before the interference.
CICELY: When Tracy can't make it work, it just fails.
DOCTOR:
Then you're far luckier than you know. Look... just... if anyone asks,
I did this stuff, okay? And for God's sake, don't use this stuff inside
a hospital again!
After some discussion, in which it emerged
that Chlotilde thought Letter From Prague was chasing after a
potentially very valuable occult notebook, it was decided that Bolt
would teleport her away to a safe house (i.e., his apartment). Upon
arrival, Chlotilde asked if it was okay for her to go get herself some
water, and after he agreed, she started asking questions.
CHLOTILDE:
Are you associated with any particular group, city... anyone paying
your bills? I'm sort of involved in, mm, sensitive and covert matters,
if you get my drift.
BOLT: I'm very uncomfortable with outing my identity and signing on to a formal payroll. I have people to protect.
CHLOTILDE: Oh, I'm sure that for someone of your talents we could work up some kind of... informal arrangement.
Back
at the hospital, Seth and Cicely were heading out when they spotted
Anjelica (Tracy's much-younger girlfriend) going into a room in the
long-term care wing. Following her to say hi, they walked in on her
passionately kissing a patient who clearly wasn't Tracy.
CICELY: Oh, you slut!
GM: She spins around and turns paper white. "Please..."
CICELY: Tracy's right upstairs you know. Should I go get him?
GM:
She sinks to the floor and breaks down sobbing. "Don't! Whatever you
do, please don't tell him." Behind her, you can now see the patient in
the bed. He's in a coma.