OUTBREAK: ZERO is a semi post-apocalyptic pandemic roleplay set in the fictional city of Lethford, USA. Current season: Winter, 20/21.
March 2020. The world is in pandemonium as one month ago, GHNv-20 was confirmed, five months after the beginning of norovirus season. The number of the infected are in the higher hundred thousands, and the death toll is at an estimated 250,000, with about seventy percent of the rest of the population experiencing mild to moderate illnesses connected to the S. pyogenes bacteria.
The fear of the unknown has caused mass hysteria and panic.
In an attempt to provide a semblance of safety and control, military personnel patrol the streets, even here in Lethford City, and the police force is trying to keep up with the rising street violence, assault, and theft.
Welcome to OUTBREAK: zero. Will you survive?
HAYANA
SITE OWNER + HEAD ADMINISTRATOR
Hi! I'm Haya. I'm pretty much your girl for everything! If you have any questions regarding our plot, membergroups, etc. don't hesitate to ask me. I'm also in charge of coding, graphics, anything skin related, and advertising/affiliates.
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ADDI
ADMINISTRATOR
Hey! I'm Addi. Hit me up if you need help with anything. I'm always for plotting so don't be shy. I like coffee, booze, and working out. I'm back from a long hiatus the dead so if you need anything, best ask the others until I get back into the groove of things!
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FINNLEY
GLOBAL MODERATOR
Hi hello! My name is Finnley, or Finn, call whichever and I'll be there for you (yes like the FRIENDS theme song). I am in charge of the claims and helping with miscellaneous things. Let me know if you have any questions!
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OPEN MODERATOR POSITION
outbreak
/ˈaʊtbreɪk/ zero /ˈzɪərəʊ/
a sudden occurrence of something unwelcome, such as war or disease. number, no quantity or number; nought; the figure 0.
The masks made everything impersonal these days, at least on the surface. For him it just boiled it down to something far more intimate, Grey thought as he watched his sister slipping her mask into place. They called eyes the windows to the soul for a reason. In the blue eyes that peered above that black mask Grey was pretty sure he could see the sister who’d been snatched from his life leaving a gaping hole behind, one that had eventually been filled with lies and half truths while everything else around it slowly hardened into a shell. Glossy in some places, splintered and ravaged by violence in others.
It was that gloss that had him extending his hand to her even though he knew better. All feigned, all a cover to allow him to slip into her life seamlessly without busting that door wide open again. That veneer of doubt and skittishness leaving him uncertain of what to do here. As she confirmed he had the right person Grey bobbed his head, that hidden smile curling beneath his mask again. ”It’s a pleasure to meet you Ms. Torres,” he murmured. That much was the truth at least. He’d spent years working towards this point after all, only given the opportunity thanks to the current situation.
How long would he have waited if the world hadn’t ended up practically on fire? Years? Decades? Would he ever have managed to track her down? Maybe not. Maybe he’d have gone to his grave not knowing, just like his father. Blinded to the truth but those who had wanted to take what belonged to his family and had in a way as they had taken his sister from the life she’d known and left her … here.
Someone had definitely done right by her, getting her to law school, into a glossy office. Grey lowered himself into the seat opposite hers, separated by that expense of desk. He cleared his throat, trying to relieve that rough edge as he stumbled through his explanation for why he’d booked the appointment with her in the first place. Letting out a sigh as she agreed to look into things, Grey allowed himself to slump forward slightly. He nudged at the file with his fingertips, pushing it closer towards her. The file filled with lies, a cover that had to be just like a dozen others that had come across her desk since this had started. ”You’ve got no idea how glad I am to hear it,” he rumbled hoarsely. ”We’ve been so alone with it…” A lie. Perhaps in a way he had been alone but that was the way he’d wanted, a step above those he had working for him here. The only way to operate.
Grey let his eyes widen as she took the recorder from the desk but as she asked about recording it he was shaking his head. He had no problem with it, considering he wasn’t about to mention a word about the grey area he actually worked in. ”That’s no problem,” he promised. ”Anything that’ll help with the case. I just … need someone to listen, someone who wants to help.” He let that desperation bleed back in. The same tone his mom’s voice had taken on that day they’d taken his sister. She’d sobbed, her voice high and ready until someone had given her something to knock her out, leaving his dad to deal with it all.
Teeth raking his lip, Grey handed the folder he’d brought with him to her. There were faked documents in there, ownership of the store, information on all the provisions they’d tried to put into place to stay open with all that was going on. Bullshit, all of it, but believable enough he thought. ”Federal,” he breathed, although that was the riskier of the options. ”The store was ours, we didn’t owe a penny on it for any lender to be grabbing it back now. They …” His lips pressed together before his mask, his voice trailing off before she shot that polite smile his way and asked if he wanted anything. ”Some water maybe.” A prop, like anything else. Something he wouldn’t actually touch.
He curled back into his seat, his hands shifting restlessly down the neatly pressed thighs of his suit pants. Grey swallowed hard, not because he had to, but every action was a part of this little play and he wanted to radiate nerves. ”It started in New Orleans I guess. That’s where my parents came from. They had a business there, one that had been in the family for years. They were happy I guess, at least as much as they could’ve been until … my little sister went missing. Someone grabbed her off the street. It devastated my parents. They weren’t the same afterwards and when years went by and they thought … they had lost her entirely … they moved here. Every dime they had was sunk into the store. It was all they had, all I have now … they’re both gone. This thing … they were infected fast and they died. I took over … tried to keep it coming but then there was a raid … can they really take people’s livelihoods that way?” The desperate edge bled back into his voice, his fingers curling into his thighs.
Sat in the reception outside of her office, Grey drummed the fingers of his right hand against the still perfectly creased knee of his suit pants. Watchful green eyes had swept every single person beavering back and forth through the place. Masks shielded their faces, cut everything down to hair and voices and eyes. A narrow slot to try and figure people out, clues running thin.
He raked teeth over his lower lip, glancing back at the receptionist who’d put the appointment together for him that morning. An arm bent to worm him into the system. That was the price of having a brother who’d slid over the line into the zone that was getting greyer and greyer with every passing day. Grey’s lips pressed together as he glanced away again. His dad would’ve loved it. He’d always flourished in those moments where everything seemed to be balanced on the edge of a precipice, walking away when the footing was steadier like the one who hadn’t come away from it scarred.
Almost every time at least. His one failure? His daughter.
Grey glanced as another woman emerged, this one with eyes that creased at the corners above her mask as she called his name. An underling, he had enough to know exactly what they looked like. He straightened up, a hand smoothing down the front of his shirt while the other gripped the slim folder he’d brought with him. An assistant maybe, his sister’s major domo greasing the wheels of this place, probably working overtime with his sister only just being back at work.
Glancing over his shoulder at the receptionist, Grey let a smile curve under his own mask as he lifted his file and used it to tip in her direction in a silent thanks. Another crumb of information he’d trailed here, hoovering them up until finally, after more than twenty years she was right there at his fingertips. The one who’d gone and not come back, the cuckoo in another nest who didn’t have a clue who was being shuffled into her office now.
Sandy brows rose as the assistant opened the door for him and stepped back to gesture him in. Skittish, like they all were these days, too essential to be able to hole up at home, hoping to hell the four walls would shield them from what was running rampant out there. ”Thank you,” he murmured to her, his voice muffled behind the mask. Maybe before he would’ve extended a hand, glad-handing it as his dad would’ve said. Now it was a smile forced into his eyes over the lip of his mask, one that grew almost sheepishly as he turned towards the desk and its occupant.
Grey stepped forward, extending his hand before he made an embarrassed sound and dropped his it again. He cleared his throat behind the shield of his mask, switching the file from one hand to the other. ”Hi. Ms Torres I presume.” Polite, stilted enough as he gestured with the file to the seat on the other side of her desk. ”May I? I’m … I’m Grey Maddox. Your receptionist was kind enough to squeeze me in with your assistant for this afternoon. I know it’s a little last minute but … I’m desperate. I guess you’re hearing that a lot at the moment. Everybody’s kinda in the same situation. They’re taking my store…” There was a rough, reedy edge to his voice, skilfully added as the smile that had still been hidden behind his mask melted away, leaving a hollow look in its place. In reality it had been the other way around, the store he’d taken over previously owned by an old guy who’d gone in the first wave of this, leaving behind nothing but a debt with his bookie. That was all that was gonna be left when this was done, bookies, taxes, duct tape and cockroaches. They survived everything after all.
Positive: Resourceful, charming, suave, a skilled actor, logical, meticulous, eloquent, persuasive, shrewd and subtle.
Negative: Wrathful, rash, grudging, amoral, calculating, cold, tender hearted though he tries not to be, deceptive, enigmatic, envious and callous.
[attr="class","ozapptitle"]BIOGRAPHY
Triads. Mob families. The Yakuza. All Hollywood exaggerations right? Nobody actually lived that way, not now at least, right? Wrong. Just because Hollywood popularised it and left every street corner punk in every city thinking he or she was a part of all of that didn’t mean it didn’t exist. It was still there, most had just gotten wise and kept what they were up to below the radar. Nobody went around calling themselves wise guys and bragging about their criminal enterprises. If they did they soon learned that it was a one way ticket to a jail cell, a bullet or, shitting you not, the witness protection program, which was anything but, and a life on the run.
Silence was a lesson Jimmy Maddox and his boys learned right back in the 1920s. Tired of Capone and his hold on Chicago Jimmy got himself out. He travelled south to family, ending up practically ruling the docks in New Orleans just a couple of years later. His boys would take over the family ‘business’ when he got too old to keep a slippery grip on it and it was into that grey world of smuggling and illegality that Malcolm and his wife Mae would eventually bring two kids sixty years after Jimmy had bolted from Chicago. As the first born son, the mantle Malcolm bore heavier than either of his younger brothers, Grey would eventually be expected to take up his place at his father’s right hand shoulder. An eventual boss to the gang, a man to be respected, a man expected to keep the crown and the slippery hold on their corner of New Orleans’ criminal niche.
Grey was familiar with it all before he even hit elementary school. He’d grown up in the hallowed halls of their French quarter pile, accompanying his dad on his ‘errands’ while Mae wrung her hands at home. She hadn’t grown up in the life, not in the way Malcolm had and as she’d later learn was rightfully worried about her husband and her boy. Grey was perfectly safe, the slippery shield that allowed everything to bounce off of his father extending to him. Even if it hadn’t the families who ruled what was pretty much New Orleans’ underworld had rules about this things – you didn’t touch the kids. If Malcolm had known then that the rule was more a ‘guideline’, especially for those encroaching on the docks and his monopoly, he would’ve stamped them all out, left the unrecognisable parts rotting in the bayou like so many others.
Five when his mother had become pregnant again, Grey had been told by his dad that he was gonna be expected to watch out for the little sister who was coming. That was as much his duty as the work was. Women were to be protected, taken care of. His face serious Grey had nodded, even if he didn’t understand much of it. He was gonna be a big brother, that was enough. Months later, there was a commotion in the middle of the night, his father coming in to bundle him up and buckle him into the back of the car. His ma was in the front, yelping, red faced in a way that had him panicking until his dad told him they were just heading to the hospital, it was time for his sister to be born. They rushed in ten minutes later, him on his dad’s hip, thrust unceremoniously off onto his uncle Connor when he appeared only minutes later. He and Uncle Connor sat in the hallway for hours, him dozing on and off, before his dad had appeared, all smiles and cigars. They had a daughter, perfectly healthy, just as pretty as her ma.
Babies were loud, messy too, but Grey did as his dad asked and watched out for her all the same. For the next two years he doted on his sister, encouraged her when she started crawling, got her walking after him and eventually chasing him around the house. He taught her the first word that would bubble out of her mouth – Ga – Grey. It was idyllic, at least for the two of them. They didn’t know who their dad was screwing with or the damnation he’d bring down on them. That side of things didn’t touch their lives, not really, it just slid off of that shield.
Until, one day, she was gone. Uncle Connor had been the one picking him up from elementary school, a heavy hand on his shoulder as they headed out to the car. Some days it was his dad, sometimes ma, more often than not one of his uncles or his dad’s people who came to get him. Always the same quiet trip home. Always. Only today the paging thingy on his uncle’s belt burst into life as he was getting buckled in. The change in Uncle Connor was instant and scary, he slammed the door, yelled at Grey to stay put as they raced home through traffic at a break neck speed. He was scooped out at the other end, rushed into the house and up into his dad’s office where his ma was balled up in a corner sobbing. A bruise blackened her eye, blood trickling from her mouth. Grey panicked, scrambling up into her lap. She sobbed, clinging to him, his sister’s name keening from her mouth.
Grey wouldn’t learn the details until much later. A kidnapping in the middle of the day. His ma walking down Bourbon Street with his sister asleep in her stroller, a walk they’d taken a thousand times, one that should’ve been safe even without the cover of his dad’s people around her but not that day it wasn’t. A black van screeching to a stop in the intersection, men in ski masks with weapons, turning the butts of their pistols on her face, knocking her down as they grabbed the stroller. One of the men had bent to hiss in her ear while the others bundled the little girl into their van. No police, no warfare, just wait for the call and their girl would be safe. Lies. Every single one of them. The call came that night, the terms negotiated, they were gonna give his sister back if his dad gave up his hold on the docks. His dad would’ve done almost anything for his family but that … He balked and that was all it supposedly took. His sister was dead, screams down the phone that cut off. Screams he heard over his mother’s. No body ever came, the stone set in the side of the vault in the cemetery that they visited every Sunday covering a void instead of remains. The street ran bloody for years afterwards.
It was in that blood bath that Grey grew. The shield thinned and his own hands ended up bloodied before he hit high school and for his ma’s sake he cleaned up his act at least a little. The Grey Maddox who graduated with a 4.0 GPA at 18 and headed for Tulane to joint major in Business Administration and Criminal Justice was an all-American clean cut kid on the surface. Nobody at the school knew he spent his weekends helping run guns, drugs and anything else black market his dad could get his hands on through the port of New Orleans. Nobody ever would if he had his way. None of them would learn he was spending all his spare time digging into the men who’d taken his sister either. Revenge had been extracted but it wasn’t enough. Somewhere out there his sister was slowly turning to dust … or she wasn’t. No body had ever turned up. No unidentified kids found in the City around that time, none matching her description since. He couldn’t bring it up to his ma, the loss of her daughter had shattered her, leaving her a ghost of the woman she once was and his dad and the rest of the family, they wouldn’t even say her name anymore.
He never found anything more though. The trail had gone long cold and as just a college kid he couldn’t get any deeper into the system to try and pull answers out of anybody. It didn’t sit well with him but Grey had to tuck it deep down inside for the time being. One day he’d find the people who’d done it and fingernail by fingernail they’d give him the answers he wanted. At 22 Grey graduated, valedictorian of his class and prepared to head back home to take up that hallowed position at his dad’s right hand. Not immediately of course, that wasn’t the way it worked even among the Maddox clan. You worked you way up, you took your lumps. For close to the next decade that was what he did, proving himself invaluable. An enforcer for his father to start with and then gradually the brains behind the family’s endeavours. A smartly dressed public face for what the Maddox family had continued to rule down at the docks.
Grey was on track to eventually take over his dad’s seat at the table but a year ago things rapidly went downhill again. Not another bloody snatch but something as pedestrian as a bad storm, a night out with friends in Baton Rouge and a drive home that never should’ve been attempted. Another car on the road swerved into the car driven by one of his dad’s people. Two vehicles found crushed like cans amongst the cyprus trees the next morning, both torched black by the violence of the crash. Bodies identified only by DNA and an era in New Orleans over. Nobody questioned the reason for the accident, it looked just like that but Grey’s suspicions always ran deep. He spent months prying into every bit of information he could, wielding far greater pressure this time. Nothing broke free but maybe there was some hint about his sister. The trail not so cold this time around, although the universe still wanted to shut him down it. Just when it felt like maybe his little sister was at his fingertips, real evidence that maybe she’d survived the kidnapping right there, the virus hit.
A nightmare raging through the world in what felt like an instant. Suddenly people were dropping like flies and people like him were in greater demand. People growing desperate for stuff as ridiculous as toilet paper and pasta, the real essentials – alcohol, weapons and medicine leaping in price. Walking away from his home base right then might’ve been one hell of a mistake but Grey could see the writing on the wall. Things were focusing on Lethford City, the lockdown taking people beyond desperation and into riots. Getting into the city wasn’t easy but what was in his life? Leaving the family’s holdings in the control of his cousin, a man who moved up to that major domo spot at his right shoulder since his parents had died, Grey made the leap, pulling on his connections to get himself into the city and back at a big table. The locals weren’t a patch on his own people back in New Orleans but it was close enough. They were willing to work for a cut and profit was plentiful. And his sister … Ruby. Ruby was right there. God. The baby all grown up and sitting on a nest egg that wasn’t just a golden goose, it was a whole damn flock of them. Now aware of his sister’s new identity and just whose bed she’s crawled into Grey’s working his way closer. The world might’ve been a mess but it’s certainly time for a reunion.