• LNH: Classic LNH Adventures #217: LNH Comics Presents #508/System Corru

    From Arthur Spitzer@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 26 21:37:12 2021
    You can sift through the racc list archive https://lists.eyrie.org/pipermail/racc/
    or you can try google groups racc for these issues of LNH Comics Presents
    and System Corrupters.


    And Martin Phipps also gets into the whole Wil Alambre cover art inspiration game with this issue of LNH Comics Presents #508 where we go back to the year 1776 and meet Lord New Hampshire. Will Lord New Hampshire be successful in squashing those Rebellious Yanks Dreams of Liberty? And will we get some explanation of why it's King Charles III and not King George III? (Also
    I should point out that Wil Alambre did write a couple issues Host of Net.Libertines, which was in a way inspired by my Leaping Nacho Hurter
    issue of LNH Comics Presents)

    Also we have Rob Rogers writing System Corrupters #27. Some kid with a nickname of the Minotaur just wants to make it big in the big city, but
    will he be able to navigate through the twisted pathways of the System Corrupter Zone? What? That's not a thing? Rod Serling's estate wants
    to talk to me?

    Anyways...


    _
    | | Classic
    | | =
    | | ____ ____ _ ____ ___
    | |__ | [] | | [] | | | | [] | | _ \

    |____| \__] \__ | |_| \__/ |_|\_\
    ||
    |_| OF NET.HEROES

    ADVENTURES #217


    =====================
    LNH Comics Presents #508/System Corrupters #27
    =====================




    From: Martin Phipps martinphipps2 at yahoo.com
    Date: Sat Aug 20 03:26:54 PDT 2011

    London, July 13th, 1776

    Word had gotten to King Charles III that the colonialists in America
    had declared independence. This could not do. He summoned me and
    twelve of my closest friends to his presence.
    "Thank you for coming so quickly," the king said.
    "Your majesty!" I said. "It is our duty to serve!"
    "Indeed!" the king said, "but some of your brethren have forgotten
    their duty! These Americans!"
    "What would you have us do?" I asked.
    The king nodded. "You will no longer be known by your old names.
    You are to be Lord New Hampshire." He addressed each of us in turn
    and gave us all titles corresponding to each of the thirteen
    colonies. "I want you to lead my army again the American rebels! I
    want you to inspire them to fight! I have provided you all with
    bright red uniforms. Please follow the courtier to the other room so
    you can change into them."
    The thirteen of us followed the courtier to a changing room. The
    uniforms were made of the finest cloth and colored with the rarest of
    dyes. They truly reflected the greatness of Britain.
    The courtier brought us back to face the king.
    "Ah! very good!" the king said. "Especially you, Lord New
    Hampshire! You look especially dashing!"
    "Thank you, your majesty!"
    "In fact, seeing you in your uniform gives me an idea! The fleet
    won't be ready for another week so, Lord New Hampshire, I have a job
    just for you!"
    For five nights I put on two shows a night in a local theater, as
    per the king's orders. Ten women, five on each side of me, were
    dressed in the summer dresses as I stood there in my new uniform and
    read aloud a speech for the audience to hear. This was propaganda: we
    were to get the people behind this war against the colonialists.
    Anyway, just as I was finishing my speech the fun part came.
    "Lord New Hampshire!" a child cried out. "It's George Washington!"
    The child was the same child every night for both shows. He was
    part of the act. As was, of course, the man dressed up as George
    Washington. He would come up behind me and I would turn around and
    hit him and knock him to the ground. It was all in fun!
    Anyway, that all ended when we had to get in our ships and sail to
    America. The trip took a couple of months so I'll spare you the
    details. Ultimately we arrived in Boston and began our attack.
    The war was going well. We were trained soldiers fighting militia,
    after all. But there was one American who was a real threat.
    He was known as the Orange Skeleton. Rumor had it that he was one
    of the terrorists who participated in the Boston Tea Party. But he accidentally fell in the water. All that tea mixed with sea water:
    it... changed him. His skin became jaundiced and he became so very
    thin. Yet he had become a symbol of American resistance! He
    therefore had to be stopped!
    We learned through a spy we had placed among the rebels that the
    Orange Skeleton had a plan to strike back against England! I had to
    find out what that plan was! The thirteen of us were sent as a group
    to fight our way through the rebels and get to the Orange Skeleton.
    Only I survived to face him!
    "The Orange Skeleton!" I said. "We meet at last!"
    "You are too late, Lord New Hampshire!" he said. "My plan has
    already been set in motion!"
    "What have you done?" I asked.
    The Orange Skeleton gestured to the sky. There I saw a big red
    balloon. It was a hot air balloon.
    "This balloon will cross the Atlantic and travel all the way to
    London! The king will see it and be... very scared! He will have to
    order his army to surrender!"
    "You fiend!"
    "Ha ha! But, like I said, there's nothing you can do!"
    "That may not be true!" I said. There was a rope dangling down from
    the balloon, just close enough to the ground for me to reach if I
    jumped. So i did. Then I climbed up into the balloon.
    "Ha ha!" the Orange Skeleton said. "You can't stop it! You'll die
    trying!"
    I decided I would rather die than give up! But the Orange Skeleton
    was right: I couldn't do anything to stop the balloon.
    Luckily for the king, the Orange Skeleton was wrong about one thing:
    the balloon would not reach England. You see, the shortest route from Massachusetts to England passes close to the Arctic circle and when
    the balloon started to ice up on the northern side it started drifting
    ever farther northward until the ice covering the balloon became too
    much and it couldn't stay aloft.
    As a result of the high altitude, my breathing had slowed. And as I
    slowly got colder and colder, my entire metabolism became slower and
    slower.
    At least, that's what I was told by the doctors who revived me two
    centuries later. After a rehabilitation period back in England, I
    decided to come back to America to finish what i had started, namely
    fighting injustice and protecting this country from terrorists!

    Net.ropolis, present day. Ultimate Ninja's office.

    Lord New Hampshire smiled. "So that's my story. May I join your
    legion?"
    Ultimate Ninja grimaced under his mask. "Those terrorists you talk
    about were the founders of this great nation!"
    Lord New Hampshire looked disappointed. "You mean... Washington and
    his cronies won?"
    "Yes!"
    "Oh dear."
    "And you hit George Washington!"
    "An actor..."
    "Ten times!"
    "playing...
    "To the floor!"
    "Washington."
    "Get out!"
    "I'm sorry?"
    "Get out now!"
    Lord New Hampshire sighed. "Very well..."
    "Now!"
    "I shall leave."
    "Before I kill you!"
    Lord New Hampshire got up and left.

    The Ultimate Ninja took a moment to regain his composure. Then he
    pressed the intercom and asked for the next applicant to be sent in.
    The next applicant walked in and sat down.
    "And who are you?" the Ninja asked.
    The applicant cleared his throat and spoke. "I am the Likeable
    Noodle Handler. I work in a Chinese restaurant handling noodles...
    and people like me."
    The Ultimate Ninja sighed. It was going to be one of those days.

    The end.

    Martin

    From: EDMLite robrogers72 at gmail.com
    Date: Sun Sep 18 17:44:45 PDT 2011

    [Cover shows a man in a red cape staring at the bull's
    head mask in his hands. All around him unwind the walls
    and twisting passages of a labyrinth].

    -----------------------------------------------------------
    System Corruptors #27

    "Labyrinth"

    By Rob Rogers -----------------------------------------------------------

    Let's cut to the chase.

    You want to know why we exist. Why we bother.
    Why we continue to fight, and to make our plans, when so few
    of them seem to work. Why we continue to go up against the
    Legion of Net.Heroes, when they always win, and why we do it
    in Net.ropolis, when it's their backyard?

    You ask because you've seen the perp walks on TV --
    some smug county prosecutor hauling Wardriver or The
    Invisible Hand before the cameras, their faces purple
    with bruises and scarred by whatever scheme has just
    blown up in their faces.

    And you've said -- even if it was just to yourself --
    that if you could do what they did, you wouldn't bother
    with wrenching the city dam in half, or turning every trader
    in the Net.ropolis stock exchange into a gorilla. You'd
    steal something quietly, or you'd join the Legion and fight
    crimes instead of committing them. Or you'd just sit on
    your ass and tell no one about your powers, only using them
    every now and then to lift up a woman's skirt, or send a
    particularly irritating bike messenger over his handle bars.

    But suppose for a moment that you were one of those
    people -- as it says on the LNH recruitment posters -- whom
    "fate has blessed with abilities beyond those of your
    friends and neighbors."

    Nothing too powerful; nothing like flight or
    invulnerability that would let you set up as a super-hero on
    your own, but something that might work well if you were
    part of a group. Maybe you have the power to make everyone
    and everything around you a little more resilient, so that
    it's harder for them to get hurt. Or maybe you can put your
    hand on a package and say exactly where it's been without
    having to bother with the tracking slip.

    Or maybe you have a knack for always knowing the best
    way to get in and out of a building, or a city, or a
    situation. The line you choose at the supermarket or the
    bank is always the one that moves fastest. You've never
    been stuck in traffic. And your little sister cried
    herself to sleep for weeks because her hamster never did
    find its way out of the wooden maze you built.

    Maybe the guys on your football team started calling
    you "the Minotaur" because of this, even though the
    Minotaur of legend never found his way out of the labyrinth
    -- that was Theseus -- and your high school girlfriend said
    you looked more like River Phoenix than some guy with the
    head of a bull. But the name stuck, and it followed you
    all the way from your hometown to Net.ropolis on the day
    you went for your audition.

    Because that's what you really wanted. You'd grown up
    reading the LNH comic books, watching the anime -- your
    favorite was "Dvandom Force Go!" -- even eating the cereal.
    You'd made it to the second-to-last level of the SuperNES
    game playing as the Ultimate Ninja. You wanted to be one
    of the Legion, one of the heroes. And you bought into the
    idea of what that meant, that someone like you whose power
    had always made his family and his friends and even his
    girlfriend just a little uncomfortable wasn't a freak, but
    a hero in the making, someone who had a responsibility to
    use his ability to help others.

    So you walked the six blocks from the bus station to
    Legion headquarters and kept warm in the all-night bagel
    shop across the street, waiting for the lobby to open --
    and when it did, you stood in line with the rest of them
    and filled out all the right forms and said all the right
    things, and so you were just as shocked as everyone else
    when you were told there was no need at the moment for your
    services.

    You didn't have a Plan B, or a place to stay, or a
    ticket home, or even the money to come up with a ticket.
    While everyone else you knew had been spending the last
    year applying to colleges and angling for scholarships,
    you'd been meeting with costume designers and rehearsing
    what you'd say to Catalyst Lass when you finally met her.

    You're staring at the cinder-block wall of the YMCA
    on Scavenger Avenue, wondering why your 'ability' picked
    today of all days to give out on you -- because you sure as
    hell can't see a way out of this situation -- when you
    see a flier for the Action League, and you reach out and
    grab one of those little perforated strips of paper at the
    bottom like it's a lifeline. And it is.

    The Action League isn't the LNH. You're always
    running down bank robbers and bagmen instead of guys in
    costume. But you don't care, because you discover that
    you're better in a fight than you thought, and you like
    what you're doing, and surely someone from the Legion
    has to notice? And you get along with the other members
    of the League, even if one of them has blades where his
    thumbs ought to be and another doesn't seem to have
    anything special about him except that he's big, God-awful
    big, and that he's really good at hurting people.

    You like the work and you like the company and you
    don't have a degree in law enforcement, after all, so it
    takes you a couple of weeks to put together that all of
    the guys you're bringing down are members of the same
    gang. And it's a few more weeks before you realize that
    that gang has its rivals in the city, and that you and
    your friends work for one of them, that the "Action
    League" is really an outfit put together by someone
    called the Waffle Queen to recruit potential enforcers.
    Which is what you are.

    So you try to get out of it. You didn't come to
    Net.ropolis, you didn't leave your little sister at
    home and break up with your girlfriend and put yourself
    in harm's way because you wanted to run errands for the
    mob. And even though your boss, a guy who you suspect
    could probably have you rubbed out if he wanted, has very
    kindly taken the time to point out that you have been
    responsible for taking more bad characters off the street
    in the last month than the LNH has -- and that several
    neighborhoods are safer than they were because of you and
    your friends -- you're ready to walk away.

    And then there's a fight, and Kevin -- the one you
    thought of as the big guy who's good at hurting people,
    who also happens to have a pretty wife and a great sense
    of humor and who would lend you the shirt off his back
    if he thought it would help -- gets shot by Master
    Blaster. You visit Kevin in the hospital, his face gray
    and his skin smelling like antiseptic and his pretty
    wife alternately screaming at you for not being there and
    crying into your shoulder.

    It's at that moment that you see the LNH for what it
    really is: a group of people who fight when they have to in
    order to protect each other and to maintain control over a
    particular territory. There's a word for groups like that.

    That word is "gang."

    And when someone from another gang -- not the police,
    not the Army, just another street gang, no better than yours
    -- when somebody from their gang puts somebody from yours, a
    guy you've come to think of as family, into the hospital,
    then there are certain steps a man needs to take.

    You make arrangements with the part of your
    organization that controls Mutant Town, and they agree to
    give you and the other members of the League free reign
    over three alleys off Mistlock Way -- three curving,
    twisting switchbacks, the kind of place where a super-hero
    who isn't intimately familiar with the neighborhood could
    get lost.

    When the first patrol appears, day-glo costumes and
    fresh young faces on what is probably their first
    assignment outside of Legion headquarters, you and your
    friends are waiting for them at the center of your
    maze, and you discover a savagery within you that you
    never dreamed was there...

    Kevin tells you to lay low for a while after that.
    But the organization has taken notice, now, and they
    want to know if you have any other ideas. It turns out
    you do. It turns out that the old Financial Trust
    Building, where Kevin had worked as a security guard
    before the League recruited him, is one of the largest
    secure repositories for bearer bonds in the Tri-State area.

    They've changed things since he worked there, Kevin
    tells you. In his day, everyone worked at an open desk.
    Now it's all cubicles, floor after floor, grey felt walls
    stretching from colorless carpet to the ceiling.

    Make a few changes -- shift a wall here, create a blind
    alley there -- and the whole thing becomes a perfect maze,
    the kind that allows your team to slip in and out, bonds in
    hand, while the police and the LNH are wandering around,
    hopelessly lost, just a few feet away.

    You net nearly $7 million on that job, and now your
    boss is clapping you on the shoulder -- only he isn't
    your boss any more, not really, and Kevin's wife just
    about faints when she sees the check you give her, and
    your sister gets a scholarship to attend the private
    university of her dreams, though she never knows the
    source.

    Now even your former boss is telling you to take it
    easy for a while, but you don't want to. You want the LNH
    to come looking for you. You want it so badly that you
    agree to wear the red cape and the bull's head mask you said
    was ridiculous when you were first invited to join the
    League.

    You've had a plan to trap the LNH simmering in your
    mind for months, but you've kept it on the shelf because
    there's no money angle: revenge brings you respect, and
    it's satisfying as hell, but it doesn't pay the bills.

    Then you learn through an especially talkative woman
    at your gym that three researchers working on something
    called a biometric cloak -- a nanotechnological gimcrack
    that effectively makes its user invisible to detection by
    electronic surveillance methods -- will be attending a
    conference in Net.ropolis.

    What you're considering now qualifies as kidnapping,
    industrial espionage, possibly even treason; the government
    considers the device to be a potential threat to national
    security, as evidenced by the details they've posted around
    the convention center and its hotels. This is real crime,
    real super-villainy; you can't justify this as anything that
    will make society better, or provide for the needs of your
    family or Kevin or Kevin's wife (and the need to provide for
    Kevin's wife has become more acute in recent weeks, as your
    relationship with her has become more interesting).

    You know that you are about to cross a line that cannot
    ever be un-crossed. And yet you also know that you will
    never be able to convince Master Blaster and the other big
    guns of the LNH to come after you simply by robbing banks.

    The convention center is in the middle of downtown --
    there's no chance of bottling anyone up in a remote alley
    this time -- so you propose a plan to reconfigure the city's
    sewer system, something that will prevent any flying heroes
    from avoiding your maze.

    But re-routing the sewer requires more in terms of
    manpower and resources than you have at your disposal, which
    is how you wind up on the 57th floor of one of the tallest
    skyscrapers in Net.ropolis, in the executive office of the
    Waffle Queen.

    You never see her face -- only her long, enameled
    fingers, zebra-striped by the shadows from her blinds --
    and after you've made your pitch, she keeps you standing
    in front of her desk for a long time.

    And while you're staring at your reflection in the
    black volcanic glass of her desktop you think about what
    she wants you to be thinking about, which is that even if
    everything goes exactly according to your plan, you are
    going to end up owing her organization more than you can
    expect to make on this job, or the next three jobs.

    You don't want to think about what will happen if
    things don't go according to plan. If you were going to
    walk away, to reconsider, the time to do it is...

    And then she leans forward, and with something that
    looks like a little round waffle on the end of a fork
    she stamps your request: APPROVED.

    Two days later two of her people in mustard-colored
    blazers show up in front of your apartment, and though they
    are very deferential and say, over and over, that they are
    only on site to implement your plan, both you and they
    understand perfectly who is in charge, and it is not you.

    And you don't care.

    Because twenty-four hours later your crew -- people
    Kevin recommended -- emerge from the earth like fiddler
    crabs and pull the scientists, their research and the only
    working prototype of their device into the earth.

    The sky fills with helicopters and caped heroes, and
    the ground vibrates with sirens and you sweat beneath your
    ridiculous bull's mask, your hands clenched around the
    $60,000 vibro-ax that the Waffle Queen's people insisted you
    carry and wait for the inevitable to happen.

    They don't play by the rules. The Ultimate Ninja
    slices through your carefully-constructed walls. Irony
    Man disables your electronic traps (though the mechanical
    ones work just fine, and you have the satisfaction of
    seeing the armored hero squirm beneath a spring-loaded crush
    trap like a wriggling rat). And Catalyst Lass -- what,
    besides the obvious, did you ever see in her, anyway? --
    does something to Kevin's men so that they turn against him,
    leaving the southern portion of your maze without defenders.

    And you don't mind. Because they're here. The A
    squad. The cream of the Legion of Net.Heroes has arrived on
    your doorstep. And even if you can no longer quite remember
    how Kevin looked in the hospital -- even if, though you
    would never admit it, even to yourself, it might be
    convenient if Kevin were to go away for a while -- having
    the LNH here is the opportunity you've been waiting for your
    entire life, and you have no intention of wasting it.

    One of the hostages begins prattling on again about
    something -- you'd have thought the bull's head and the
    vibrating ax would have dissuaded most people from trying
    to negotiate with you, but he is an engineer -- and you
    growl at him, not wanting to distract yourself from looking
    for the Ultimate Ninja, who has disappeared from your
    surveillance network. That's not a problem; you don't
    need to be able to see your foe to defeat him, after all,
    but it would help to know where he is...

    ... and then you see what you've been waiting for.

    Master Blaster.

    So arrogant that he doesn't even bother to seek cover
    as he bulldozes his way into your inner sanctum, his twin
    ray guns or energy pistols or whatever they are knocking
    two of your new hires, Jeremy and Evans, through the nearest
    walls (you told them to apply for the supplemental health
    insurance, and did they listen? No. But you can be sure
    one or both of them will have hired a personal injury lawyer
    come Monday).

    Master Blaster stands there, smirking, saying something
    that you assume he believes to be clever, despite the fact
    that his ears, like yours, must surely be ringing from the
    echo of his gunfire in the tiny chamber...

    ...and what you feel at that moment isn't fear of the
    man...

    ...or anger at what he did to your former friend...

    ...or resentment at the LNH for ruining your life...

    ...or recognition that if the Legion doesn't destroy you
    in the next 30 seconds, the Waffle Queen's people surely
    will...

    What you feel is bloodlust, pure and simple, and perhaps
    curiosity to see what the ax in your hands will do when it
    bites into the armor of the man standing in front of you.

    And just when it finally occurs to you to wonder why
    Master Blaster is standing there -- just standing there! --
    you feel the rush of air behind you, and in that instant
    you know that the next thing you will feel is the sensation
    of the Ultimate Ninja's foot shattering your jaw.

    The last thing you remember before the room fades to
    purple is that you and your sister used exactly the same
    strategy to take down the final boss in the LNH video game,
    so many summers ago.

    Your sister visits you in prison. No one else does,
    not Kevin or his wife, which tells you all you needed to
    know about the future of that relationship. She doesn't
    say anything during the visit, though you ask her about
    school and her experiments and that boy you heard she was
    seeing.

    What you expect, while she stands there with one hand
    on the glass partition between the two of you, what you
    hope, is that she will shake her head and roll her eyes and
    say "A bull's head? Really? Really?"

    You've forgotten that she's in college, now.

    "The Minotaur was a creature of royal blood, with the
    power of a god in his veins," your sister says. "No one
    alive knew the passageways of the Labyrinth better than he.

    "So why did he never leave?" she asks.

    And that is the last you see of her.

    You want to tell her not to worry about prison -- it's
    simply another maze after all, and you've always been good
    at finding the best way out of any situation. After three
    weeks, when the damage to your jaw has finally begun to
    heal, you hear through the prison grapevine that something
    has happened to the Waffle Queen, and you feel as though you
    can breathe again: you are free in a way you had not dreamed
    would ever be possible again.

    You can leave the city, not for home, but perhaps
    for someplace better. Sao Paolo. Or Prague. Or Crete.
    You've heard wonderful things about Crete.

    And then, two nights before you are about to execute
    your plan of escape, you hear someone in the yard talking
    about how glad they are to be in a state prison, rather
    than in the holding facility beneath Legion of Net.Heroes
    headquarters.

    "It's like a maze down there," they say...

    ...and though you try to ignore the comment, the
    thought that the LNH could be trapped in a maze of their
    own making, that you could turn their very building
    against them, that your last proposal very nearly worked,
    except for a few minor structural defects...

    ...all of that is a record that plays day and night
    in your brain, until without thinking of it at all,

    you have begun to plan...

    -----------------------------------------------------------

    Catalyst Lass created by Elisabeth Reba.

    Irony Man created by Doug Moran.

    Master Blaster created by Robert Ramirez.

    Ultimate Ninja created by wReam.

    All other characters created by and (c) the author.


    "It is by its promise of a sense of power that evil
    often attracts the weak."
    --Eric Hoffer

    -----------------------------------------------------------

    ==========
    Next Week: Something that has LNH in title probably...
    ==========

    Arthur "Same Classic Channel. But Same Time? Probably not." Spitzer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)