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janitorscloset2017-07-12 05:06 pm
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Entry tags:
[meme] RvB & Halo AU Meme

Ever wonder what your Freelancer would do if they were able to fight in the war, or how the Spartans would behave if they were recruited as Freelancers? Here's your chance to find out!
How to play:
- Post a top-level with your RvB or Halo character
- List preferences and ideas, or write a starter
- Tag around! It doesn't have to be strictly characters from the other setting, either. Put two Freelancers in the ODST, or put Master Chief and Cortana in Project Freelancer. Let your imagination be your guide!
- Have fun!
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There was more to that statement than was what was at face value. It was more than just a jesting boast, he wanted to have a way of contacting Matt again rather than letting him drift right back out of his life again. It was probably breaking no less than sixteen regulations and opsec but honestly, this one conversation with Matt had him feeling better than he'd felt in months. His morale was instantly boosted with the knowledge that another brother was still alive out there and still carrying on the fight.
"I sincerely hope that myself, Matt. I've seen too many of my soldier's lives wasted because they had inferior gear when it came to fighting toe to toe with the damned Covies. The problem is, no one can match Halsey's quality of tech without a price tag that would make your head spin. I heard rumors people have been trying to come up with their own cheaper versions of the suit but there's no way they're going to be able to reach the same ballpark as MJOLNIR." He'd been speaking about their own attempts to improve the SPI armor but had unknowingly also referenced Freelancer's attempt to clone Catherine Halsey's technology.
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"Nothing could compare," Maine admits with another pained utterance. Perhaps the undersuit could be mimicked. But full armor? Hardly. There were just some things that couldn't be done. Director Church did not compare to Halsey. The Counselor was well aware that Maine felt that way too. No reason to compare but the Director seemed to. Maine avoided it. "The Doctor is brilliant. She gave us everything."
A sentiment he once heard Washington echo about the Director. Maine didn't explain how he was wrong.
As for the contact request, Maine was certain it would be forbidden.
"Would if I could, Kurt. Don't have one."
Perhaps that would say all he needed to say about his own presence. Even foot soldiers got to contact home. ONI ops were the ones that were... harder to touch. Except there could be ways, couldn't there?
"Unless..."
Maine smirked to himself. There were ways to piggyback signals, and even out on the Hopeful there would be ways to set up a comm message. Not even remotely real time, but like old fashioned letters. Niner already smuggled everything else for Freelancer. Why not a letter to what family Maine could get at.
"You are up for putting those bar to use. We've rigged more complex things."
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That level of pragmatism had been bred into all the Spartans. The Covenant had a deep religious aversion to using human tech while the Spartans had no such compunctions about stealing and using the generally superior tech for the good of the mission and beyond. Kurt had implemented elements of the Elite’s active camouflage into the III’s SPI armor and it had proven to be one of the best decisions they’d ever made in the program.
Maine’s smirk and the gleam in the other man’s eyes caught Kurt’s attention and he cocked an eyebrow at his ex-squadmate. “What did you have in mind exactly, Maine?”
He didn’t make mention of the fact that technically, as ranking officer on Onyx, he had access to some of the most high tech communications gear available in the UNSC including a Slipspace Beacon of which there were only a handful in the entire galaxy. Why did Onyx have one? He honestly had no idea because that fell into the murky, secretive Zone 67. “I think between the two of us, we can figure something out.”
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Freelancer fun could be drinking or destruction. Not a SPARTAN idea of a good time. He wanted to have fun that was productive. Which would mean the less than legitimate requisition of some means to stay in touch. And surely Kurt, who was always so much less serious than Matt had been, would appreciate the moment for letting loose. Kurt had been the one who often told Matt to loosen up.
"Or rank make you serious?"
They were serious because they were old. Old and supposedly dead or useless or something else.
He needs something. A good memory. Something to make him feel young again before he has to go and lose this last connection.
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So long as he didn’t see Gamma though, opsec was still being maintained as far as Kurt was concerned and there was no reason to feed the information of the breach up the chain of command just yet. He just needed to keep his brother out of trouble for the next nine hours or so. “I suppose it depends on what your idea of ‘fun’ entails these days. You’ve been hanging out with the rank and file, should I be worried about you having picked up any bad habits, Matt?”
Like Kurt had any room to talk? He’d been infamous for being friendly with their DI’s and the enlisted personnel back on the base during training. He’s nearly been caught a few times breaking curfew because he’d been hanging out in the enlisted barracks as well.
Of course, as base commander, these days Kurt couldn’t be seen hanging out with the enlisted playing poker or getting into mischief. So yes, in a lot of ways, rank had forced him to become more serious.
“I’m sure we can figure out something to pass the time without endangering both our military careers."
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Freelancers were about their down time. Maine had taken up playing poker so he wouldn't get forced into strip poker. The latter meant too much showing off of his augmentation scars and he had gotten enough prying from normal enlisted men to deal with the far nosier Freelancers. He had worked to make sure his shower schedule didn't line up with anyone else. There was also the spree of pranks played by his coworkers and the ever insane list of bets that Florida maintained.
Maine had been forced to adapt, and perhaps learn to have fun.
"Not worried about mine," Matt shrugs. The Director had a use for him. "But if you don't want to make sure we can stay in touch, can we at least find some playing cards."
Probably shouldn't get an officer in trouble.
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Kurt had always suspected the reason they put him on Green team was because he was so very different from Linda and Matt in both personality-wise and how they approached a situation. Linda had been the sniper, the one who could provide overwatch with deadly accuracy while Matt and he had been better suited for direct combat. Kurt had been good at mid-range versus Matt who’d been more oriented towards closed quarters and other short-ranged attacks so at the end of the day, the three of them could cover three different targeted areas of attack.
The fact that he had been more gregarious and intent on bonding with the two infamous loner-type Spartans was probably another reason for their unusual team composition. But at the end of the day, with Kurt leading Green and his ability to puzzle out traps and the composition of a battle plan at an almost preternatural speed meant they had continually scored near the top in most every team competition. Sure, they might not have won out against John and Blue Team, but they had definitely given him a run for his money.
“Oh, I’m not too worried about that. But so long as we’re not trying to shanghai a Pelican, I doubt old Jeromi will find any reason to make any complaints. Though I am curious about your plan to accomplish this on a medical station.” Though Kurt suspected he could probably figure out a way to establish a fairly incognito method of communication between them if given enough time, he didn’t know if they could manage that before Gamma was scheduled to ship out later tonight.
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His desires are far simpler. "Datapad. Encrypted. Have a friend that could clear it for me, use it as a system to receive messages from you. Another friend can get it places to pick up messages. She owes me a favor."
Actually getting him here alive might make them even. Not that he cares. The man looks away. This... isn't his style. Caring. But he does, and so soon after nearly dying, he wanted to get something back from his past. After all the loss in this program... he was supposed to be getting further enhanced strength mods, the Director clearly intending to push his armor closer to Mjolnir capabilities. Except who knew what that would do to him.
"You're family, Kurt. Don't get to see any of you. Don't get to fight the way I would want to."
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But just as Kurt had teased Matt about picking up some bad habits from the so-called rank and file, it had been twenty years since he’d been amongst the stifling confines of the Spartan-II program and he’d lost a lot of the rigidness they’d tried to instill in them. Kurt-051 had always been adaptable though and had never let the strenuous conditioning completely stamp out his innate friendly nature.
“Ah, that’s much easier to attain than a Pelican. I know exactly where we can get one.” He had one in his assigned quarters right now that they could use. It had the latest ONI encryption installed as well as a few backdoors he’d put in so that he could communicate with Mendez on less than official channels. Kurt had picked up a few useful tricks over the years thanks to his experiences dealing with the UNSC spook branch and now, it felt like he could put that information to good use for something positive.
Maine’s words really struck a cord with the other man and there was a wealth of emotion in the brunette’s hazel eyes when he reached out and grabbed the other man by the shoulder once again. It was as close as a Spartan was normally going to get to something as demonstrative as a hug. Usually, they just relied upon the hand signals and sign language they’d worked out as a class all those years ago in training.
“You’re the first brother I’ve seen in years, I’m not gonna let you drift back out of my life again, Matt. Even if it’s just us sending messages via a data pad, we’ll find a way of keeping in touch from here on out.”
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"You have dimples," Maine points out, shaking his head. "SPARTANs don't get to have dimples. Especially when he's got a job. Which means getting me a datapad. And maybe cards. I've got to wait until your work here is done and if you can be spared to distract me, then let's do that."
Drift back out? This is a war, Kurt. They won't drift apart. They will go hurtling apart, driven that way. But damn if this wasn't a fight he'd give himself to for a while.
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Yes, he’d sought to protect the truly gifted Spartans from each class and transferred them out from underneath his superiors’ noses rather than seeing their potential being wasted but even that had been driven by pragmatism. This though, he had no excuse for his selfish desire not to be separated from his brother yet again.
The observation drew a snort from the dark-haired man. “I guess I don’t really get to call myself a Spartan then these days.” There was an edge of truth in his self-deprecating humor and with one final squeeze to that beefy shoulder, Kurt let his hand drop as he pulled back.
“Why don’t you get us some cards and other things we might need as a distraction while I concentrate on getting us that datapad. We’ll meet back say here?”
This solitary location halfway between the occupied medical bays that Maine had escaped from and the empty part of the ship where the Spartan-III’s were being cordoned off in would give them some much needed privacy.
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"Meet here," Matt agrees, pushing off of the bed he leaned against. "I'll hold up a nurse or something for it. And probably have medication I should take."
Maybe even a checkup. Not that he wanted to see them. Any moment with medical staff was a moment that wasn't being spent with Kurt. Which, of course, was not acceptable.
With the instruction provided he gives Kurt another salute, this one far looser, clearly casual and perhaps even a bit teasing at the difference in rank between them. His unspoken but clearly still voiced jibe between them, he slipped from the room. There were other things he intended to acquire as well. Namely food. He didn't think he'd find anything much better than ration bars but given the fact that he had to consume something and presumably he was good to eat slid food since no one had told him otherwise, he set out for his part of their little operation. Part of him also cried out to find his armor, he'd been too long in it to like being out of it, but like Kurt he had his own secrets to keep, and the armor would only raise questions.
Getting the cards, it turned out, was the easier part of his mission. He found some orderlies in a nursing station playing cards, and all he had to do was loom there in the doorway, looking pointedly at the cards before they offered to lend him the deck. Even heard some mumbling when he was leaving about how soldiers never respected them. Right now Maine couldn't care less. He gathered the cards and then slipped off again, gone more quietly than he was used to, and not minding it at all. It had been a while since anyone had expected him to be sneaky. Maybe he should practice it back on the MoI for personal amusement. As he thought of that he slipped back into his own hospital room. It didn't take long to decode the doctor's writing on the datapad hanging just inside his door. Upside, prognosis was good. Downside, apparently solid foods were a no go. Which would clearly mean more difficulty for procuring food. Or it would have if he wasn't lucky enough, moments after leaving his room, to walk by a meal cart, loaded with meals for patients. Finding one marked with his room number was simple. Lifting a second that looked likely for Kurt was just as easy. With food and cards in hand, and carefully balanced, he turned and headed back to where he had come from, happy to find Kurt and pass a few hours.
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Once upon a time, he’d saved them from an unspeakable hell. Lucy had been on the verge of being marked as unfit for duty and being shuffled off to some ONI scientific lab to no doubt be poked and prodded while Tom had almost gotten whisked out from underneath him by Ackerson who’d wanted a pet Spartan of his own. Kurt wasn’t the kind of man who threw his weight around but for Tom and Lucy, he had fought tooth and nail for them and to keep them safely at his side. He’d argued who better to train Spartans but other Spartans?
Thankfully, the higher ups had seen it his way and in doing so, he knew he’d bought their undying loyalty. So when he shot off a quick message to his attaché’s requesting that he not be disturbed except for the anything short of massive catastrophe or attack on the station, he knew the order would puzzle them, but they would follow it without question.
He returned to his quarters and fetched the datapad he’d been using the past few months and fetched it. Thanks to the communiqué he’d received from Deep Winter, he knew no one would bat an eyelash when he told them he’d destroyed the datapad rather than risk there being any chance of latent code from Onyx’s doomed smart AI on his datapad.
With his part of the mission accomplished, he made his way back through the tangle of hallways in a round-about way back to the room they’d chosen to make their own. This part of the station was under strict blackout conditions so he knew none of the cameras were monitoring him but some habits were automatic and on the off chance someone else spotted him roaming the halls, he didn’t want to lead them directly back to Maine.
It also gave him time to make sure he wiped all traces of incriminating information about Onyx from the datapad until he was relatively certain it had been pretty much wiped back to near factory defaults.
Once he reached the room, Kurt slipped inside brandishing the pad with a smile. “Got it.”
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In addition to the food he had already shuffled up the 'borrowed' deck a few times as he settled himself onto the floor. Sure he could trust the bed enough to hold up his own weight, but he wasn't going to bet that the thing would be as amenable to two adult SPARTANs who had clearly kept themselves fighting fit.
"Got food. Sit and relax."
Hopefully the world won't look to end with them playing cards. They could have something, right?
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He said it with a healthy dose of good humor in his voice but there was unmistakably a note of authority there as well. Some things remained the same and Kurt had spent years leading Matt and Green team and that authority had only a more comfortable mantle to wear over the past two decades. The datapad was tossed onto the foot of the bed and he held out a hand to his brother in a silent offer to help him both to his feet off the potentially space germ riddled flooring.
“I should have thought to grab some pudding cups while I was out. Was it you or Linda who was mad for chocolate pudding, I can’t recall?” It felt like those memories were a million years ago back when excelling at training was the biggest care in their worlds. These days, they had much bigger concerns facing them every day. Or at least Kurt did and he imagined it was much the same for Matt no matter where he ended up landing. Which appeared to be in some kind of place where code names were being used. Not that a Spartan-II had claim to a real name since they’d all simply been known by their given names and a numbered tag for decades. It had taken him years to become comfortable with the idea of his assumed name.
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"Have a friend who steals them for me now."
Wash was good for that. Maine gave over his jello cups in return. Couldn't trust the jiggly stuff.
On his feet he moves to the bed and starts to deal out the cards. "Find a chair, Sir."
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Not that it was easy considering he almost always either on Onyx under communications blackout or he was being shuffled from one ONI cruiser to the next for various secretive briefings that couldn't even be trusted to take place over the UNSC communication networks. It wasn't like he got the luxury of shore leave like regular UNSC personnel did.
"I'm glad to hear it. I thought with the throat injury they might have you on a liquid or semi-solid diet for a while." He accepted Maine's jello cup and the barely veiled look of disgust on the man's face with a repressed smile and moved to draw up a chair. "Hospital food, huh? Always a delightful treat."
The brunette murmured laconically as he poked at the contents of his purloined tray. It looked about as under-seasoned and bland as hospital food generally was the universe over. Apparently doctor's had an aversion to spice or taste in general because they were afraid their patients would upchuck their cookies at a moment's notice.
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He starts to play out cards quickly in front of them. Better than think about what was going on with cards than think about what would happen when he went back to the Project.
"Don't wanna think about going back, thanks."
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Mainly because he remembered Serin and the downright vicious protective way she’d been around food during those first few months in the program. They’d been forbidden to discuss their home lives and eventually, the memories of that life before the Spartan program had faded away for all of them. Kurt himself had very few clear memories of his life before the Spartan program. His parents’ names, their faces and even the name of his home had deteriorated from his mind.
For the Spartan-III’s though, they weren’t happy children plucked from hearth and home, they were war orphans who had already been traumatized and often half-starved by the time they’d gotten picked up for the program. More importantly, Kurt hadn’t wanted them to forget about their lost families and the broken homes they’d suffered. He wanted their anger and rage against the Covenant as a unifying factor to give them the determination and desire to make sure this never happened to another human planet to drive his Spartans. So in that way, his training methods had been wildly different from Halsey but it remained to be seen which were superior thanks to the way the Spartan-III’s lives were sacrificed so readily and wastefully. But Kurt liked to think they were just as determined and capable as his fellow II’s. Noble Team alone had proven that since their inception.
He gathered up the cards that had been dealt to him and studied them silently for a moment. Something in Maine's tone seemed to draw his attention though and those far too keen hazel eyes studied the other man over the top of his cards.
“That bad huh? Can you transfer to a different unit?” Kurt suspected Matt had somehow ended up in some secret program not so dissimilar from his and that it wasn’t an option to request transfer. Instead, he was quietly feeling Matt out to see if he’d be open to the idea of transfer. If he was then he’d see about trying to steal him away from whatever program he was in and bring him to Onyx. Even a failed Spartan was a more experienced trainer for future classes of III’s. Once Gamma finished their graduation exercises, they would be transferred off to new posts and the preparations would begin for the next class of Spartan-III’s. So it was the perfect opportunity to scout out new trainers.
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"Transfer won't happen without a body bag. And then I am pretty sure I default to being Halsey's property. Probably easier to transfer you in to my unit."
Which would never happen. Director didn't want cohesion. Maine served as a dividing line after what happened to York. And his comfortable spot on the leaderboard helped keep the tension between the Dakotas. No, he was bound here. No reason to think of anything else.
"Sorry, LT. SPARTANS seem pretty set in their units."
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"Technically, I think our asses are owned by ONI and that tends to trump just about anyone's prior claim." He murmured mildly. "And I doubt that's going to happen, they've invested a lot of time and effort in my current assignment, I can't see that happening anytime soon. But I could see if there are any openings in my unit if you're interested in a transfer for real."
Kurt wouldn't do the same thing Halsey had done to them all those years ago. He wouldn't try and abscond Matt away without getting the man's input before hand. And he deliberately kept his offer vague as far as who all would authorize such a transfer. Technically, he was the one who inspected and approved all finalized personnel transfers onto Onyx but Maine didn't need to know that just yet.
Better he assume he was just some middle man if only for reasonable deniability on his part.
"I can understand being loyal to your unit but if you're unhappy or not being utilized to your fullest then let me know and I'll see what I can do. I know we could make use of you in my unit. It might not be as exciting as what you're doing these days though, but no less fulfilling in my opinion."
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"My desires don't figure into this, Kurt. At all. And no one can make full use of a SPARTAN but a SPARTAN team. No one else understands what we can do. Not really. And if they can't openly acknowledge what they have..."
And he didn't expect his ONI tied superiors would play Kurt's ONI bosses requisitioning him. Didn't mean he wouldn't want a chance to actually serve the war, not the Director's questionable ends.
Was he being used well? Maine wasn't allowed to run. Not really. He got to do a SPARTAN version of a jog because, well, people would wonder how Maine running without augments could let him keep up with Carolina over a short distance.
Focus on the cards, Maine reminded himself. He should be grateful to see Kurt, not bitter over not contributing to the war. The war he had been kidnapped for. Lost all memory of his family for. Perhaps stopped being all human for.
"Dealer takes two," he announces as he discards. If Kurt isn't going to play Maine will make him play.
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Matt might not be able to don MJOLNIR but he was still in his heart one of the most highly trained soldiers humanity had ever created.
“Maybe so but I feel like we’ve both had enough being traded about like pieces on a chess board at the hands of others so I want your opinion on the matter before I go kicking over hornet’s nests on your behalf, Matt.” Kurt said; voice deadly serious now as were his eyes. Was this the true Kurt-051? He was no longer the teenage Spartan Maine had once known. But perhaps that was to be expected considering it had been more than twenty years and the better part of a war since they’d last seen each other.
“If you don’t want to go back to that unit, let me know and I’ll find you a spot on our ship when we leave tonight. We can come up with a believable cover story for your disappearance. It wouldn’t be the first time, I assure you.” This was said with a hint of self-deprecating humor. No, it wasn’t the first time they’d faked a Spartan’s death in order to abscond them into Kurt’s unit.
“I’ll take one card.” That certainly said a lot about his hand. He could have two pairs or was working his way towards a flush or a straight or even a full house.
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But what if it hadn't. Director would have just scooped him back to MoI if he was out of surgery before Kurt descended. Maybe this is an out. Not like he would miss the program, or the program him.
"You would have to get Jeromi to fake her report."
Given how many people Maine had interacted with, it would take a lot of quashing. Every doctor nurse and orderlie. Was that possible?
"I don't have anything I would miss back at my posting other than a few people. But all your unit would get is me and this pair of fatigues that aren't exactly standard issue."
He can't mention the armor.
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“Be that as it may but having been absconded into an ONI black ops program not once but twice has given be a firm belief in the power of choice. I refuse to stoop to that level.” Which was why every single one of his Spartans were given the choice. They all wanted to be there and in his opinion, it made them more dedicated to the cause for that very reason.
“But yes, it would be hard to sell your sudden death after it appears you have been making such progress. Though, there are other ways of making people disappear. By all rights, breaking the security cordon could have easily led to you being shot or made to disappear for opsec reasons.”
Because that was what ONI did. They made their sticky problems disappear either into a black bag or into some other fate worse than death.
Of course, Kurt was coming dangerously close to breaking opsec himself for even telling Maine that much. The fact that they were protecting whatever it was they were doing on this station by order of death or a lifetime in prison…that level of clearance was one Matt might only have been around the time of the Spartan-II program.
The brunette was looking at him with a patient look on his face but his eyes were sharp and keen as though he could will Matt to make the connection about why they would need a Spartan on a medical station literally out in the middle of nowhere protecting a secret of that magnitude.
“It goes without saying that you would be forbidden from ever reaching out those people again. If you are officially marked MIA, you will have to stay that way.” That had been the worst part the assignment for him. Being cut off forever from his brothers and sisters Spartans. Even Mendez could not truly grasp what Kurt had been deprived of when they took him against his will and placed him in control of the new Spartan-III program.
“You don’t have to make up your mind just yet but the sooner you let me know, the sooner I can start the wheels spinning. Either way, if you choose to go back to your unit, I’ll still figure out a way to remain in touch with you. Because that proverbial cat is out of the bag already.”
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