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QT:NW continues the official Spin Off for the Quaranteam universe originally created by CorruptingPower. You do not need to have read the original series to enjoy this one, but you really do need to start with Chapters 1-4 (I really suggest you read the original though, it's great!). Fans of the original should be pleased to know CP has approved the story and the continuity. This chapter includes elements of mind control through chemical substance, anal, squirting (like, a lot) and MFFF group sex.
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The reunion between Miriam, Leo and Erica was even briefer than what she and I had. Miriam had only met them that one time when she had returned stateside a few years ago and took the time to come find me. We'd taken Miriam out drinking in Portland, and the next day she'd flown out for wherever her next posting was.
What struck me was how easily Miriam could switch between her casual demeanour and 'Serious Officer' personality - I wasn't sure what she'd been doing since Germany and the 'incident,' but her voice and command had the calm confidence of someone capable of taking on any challenge.
The new introductions were a little more interesting. "Lieutenant Colonel Abarbanel, this is Ivy, who is partnered with Erica and I, and this is Danielle, Leo's vaccine partner."
"Nice to meet you both," Miriam nodded with a soft smile.
"It is very nice to meet you aussi," Ivy said, as usual slipping into bits and pieces of her native Quebecois french when the words were similar. Then Ivy surprised us by wrapping Miriam into a hug. Ivy was a small woman, and certainly the smallest of our weird little family, and Miriam had a couple of inches on Erica so it was almost like seeing a pre-teen hugging an adult.
Ivy went up on her tiptoes and quickly whispered something in Miriam's ear, and Miriam's face blanched and then she coughed, covering her mouth and said, "I see." Ivy was grinning, and I couldn't tell if it was just happiness or one of those more naughty grins she could get. I looked at Erica and she met my eye and shrugged with a mildly confused expression as well.
"Alright," I said. "Erica, could you get the coffee brewing, and I'll give the Lieutenant Colonel and Captain the nickel tour?"
"Sure," Erica said and kissed me on the corner of my lips.
"Thanks, hon," Miriam said. "We've been up since about 03:00 prepping for the day, though it looks like Harri and some of you have been up longer."
"All night," Danielle said with a soft smile.
"Shit, were you worried?" Leo asked his partner.
Danielle's smile turned broader as she looped her arm around Leo's. "Not at all, baby. Not at all." She winked at me and then turned Leo back towards home and started walking away. It was hard to miss my dad's 1911 handgun tucked into the back waistband of her pyjama pants.
"She seems like trouble," Miriam muttered as Erica and Leo led Ivy and Danielle back to the RV compound.
"I think I might be in love," the Captain chuckled.
"Captain," Miriam said, chuckling in mild surprise.
"What?" Captain Bloomberg asked. "That woman could turn a straight-as-laces old school granny a little queer."
"She's not wrong," I said with a smirk. "Dani is something else."
"I'm assuming that's your firearm?" Miriam asked, shaking her head at me and the Captain.
"She grew up as an Australian military brat before her father passed," I said. "She's firearms safety trained and borrowed it as a precaution for last night. To be honest, I think I trust her with it more than I do Leo with the bear shotgun."
Miriam and the Captain glanced at each other. "Harri," Miriam said. "I think this brings us into... let's call it business, but the three of us know this is FUBAR already. This is technically federal land at the moment and everything is a grey area, but sooner than later it's going to be considered an Air Force base even though it'll look like a suburban neighbourhood. Exactly how many firearms do you have in your possession right now?"
"Well, I can show you my gun safe, or I can run you through last night. Where do you want to start?" I asked.
"The firearms can wait," the Captain said. "Shooting incident first, then the protestors. That's my advice, Lt. Col."
I knew that tone well. It was the 'I'm not in charge, but everyone here knows I'm in charge' voice that practical members of the military used. Of course, it took a well-functioning relationship between officers for that sort of thing to work. There were plenty of dickwads who made rank and had to swing their dicks in every single situation. Thankfully, it seemed like Miriam hadn't fallen into that trap as she climbed the ladder. She was in charge, but the shooting could be a legal matter and the protestors were definitely a legal matter, so while she was the Commanding Officer, the Captain was in the lead as the judge's advocate and legal adjunct.
"Good thinking, Captain," Miriam nodded. "Harri, why don't you run us through it? We've gotten briefed, but you've got the firsthand knowledge."
"Don't skip anything," the Captain said. "Give it to me like you're making an incident report, MP."
So I did. I walked them through the construction camp, outlining the situation and framing it as a military judgement call. The construction area and offices were the operating theatre and valuable assets, the RV compound was our base camp position, and the protestors were a potentially hostile force. I outlined my assessment of the situation as potentially dangerous, my reasonable preparations, and then my engagement report including my best estimation of timing between spotting the incoming potential hostiles, their approach, and my non-lethal engagement.
I was finished by the time we rounded the last temporary office portable. "You can just see where I was positioned up there in the tree line," I said, pointing up the south hill. "About three yards right of that tree with the gap in its foliage. And the primary target was... well, you can see where he was."
We stopped walking in front of the blue cloud that was sprayed onto the portable, the outline of a surprised person stencilled onto it. The paint can was still on the ground, its side ruptured in a gouge by my .308 bullet. It looked like I'd been an inch from missing.
Miriam eyed the shot from the position the person had been up to my sentry post. "Pretty good shot," she said.
"I was happy with it," I said. "Not so different from trying to cleanly hit a deer during hunting season."
"Well, I'm just happy you didn't decide to tag the fucker," the Captain said. She'd been scribbling notes in her leather folder. "You didn't happen to take recce pics, did you?"