Mercer, leaving the side entrance, emerged into a small chamber, the air heavy with humidity. A 10 ft long, 5ft wide steel bridge spanned a large
water reservoir below, the surface of the water rippling gently from the activity of three massive pipes. The pipes, clearly part of the substation's cooling system, sucked water with a constant, powerful hum.
Mercer paused at the edge of the bridge, taking a moment to survey the scene.The bridge itself was narrow and the metal grating underfoot clanged softly with each step, the sound swallowed by the larger ambient noise of the substation.
On the other side of the bridge, a heavy steel door marked the entrance to the
emergency batteries and auxiliary generator room. The door was slightly ajar, a dim light spilling out into the chamber.
Mercer signaled back to
Douklan and the others, indicating that he was looking further. He pushed the door open a little more, just enough to
see inside without making a sound. The room was spacious, dominated by rows of emergency batteries and auxiliary generators that hummed with stored energy.
He scanned the room quickly, noting the recent additions: improvised barricades and several type A and type B recharging stations rigged to multiple generators. A couple of them were even at work, charging depleted batteries. This was definitely the work of the
supposed scavengers, a makeshift fortress within the substation that they
claimed.
Meanwhile, back at the terminal,
Hank worked quickly, his fingers flying over the controls. He was able to bypass the basic security protocols. The screen flickered, then resolved into a more complex interface. "
Looks like they've been using this to monitor the substation's systems and possibly control some of the defenses." - he whispered to Maya.
As Hank worked, the screen displayed a wealth of possibilities: maps, power distribution networks, surveillance feeds, and control over various security systems.
"
Interesting," Hank thought. "
They've set up a pretty sophisticated network here. I can see the living area was recently reformed, there are multiple camera feeds and even some kind of automated defense system. This is not someone working alone"
The substation was organized into several key sections. The main entrance corridor, protected by concealed and automated turrets, led to a central corridor, from which tunnels branched out in many directions. Each tunnel led to different operational areas: besides the
auxiliary generator room that Mercer already noticed, there was
the transformer yard, the control room, the maintenance bay, the living quarters and the equipment storage area.
To get deeper into the system and access the surveillance or defense controls,
Hank would
risk detection.
Mercer and Douklan could also
enter the complex, moving ahead of the group, taking a more direct or a more discreet approach.
OOC:
You’re around the red X. This map is 225 ft wide and will probably be further detailed in my next posts. What do you do?