Price of Blood
Part Seven: Mixed Results
[A/N: With many thanks to my beta (for this chapter and many previous ones) who has done her best to ensure a certain standard of quality. All hail Lady Columbine of Mystal!]
Danny Hebert
The PA speaker in the infirmary crackled to life.
"Attention. Attention. This is Armsmaster. The PRT building is now under lockdown. Master/Stranger protocols are in effect with regards to Shadow Stalker. If seen, call in her location immediately. Do not approach unless appropriately equipped. All non-lethal measures are now approved. This is not a drill. I say again, this is not a drill. Armsmaster, out."
Danny's first instinct was to check on Taylor. She had rolled on to her side and pulled a fold of the covers almost over her head, but she was still fast asleep. He grinned slightly; both he and Anne-Rose had teased her about her habit of 'cocooning' when she was younger.
His next thoughts were about the content of the message.
Shadow Stalker? Master/Stranger protocols? What are they?
Wait a minute. A Master is a cape who controls people, isn't it?
A moment later, his memory delivered to him a playback of the car ride, giving a lift to Clockblocker and Shadow Stalker herself.
Was she under control even then?
She'd been abrupt, almost rude, and convinced that she knew him.
Why? I'm pretty sure I've never met her before. He puzzled over that for a moment.
If she was under control, maybe whoever was controlling her thought they knew me? But I don't know any capes, let alone any Masters. He paused, rethinking that.
Well, apart from Taylor. But I'm pretty sure that she's not controlling Shadow Stalker. From what everyone says, her thing is bugs.
This still, of course, left the huge issue unaddressed.
Taylor and I are in the same building as a parahuman that they're trying to capture. This is not a good thing.
Going to the door, he opened it and leaned out. The PRT guard stationed in the corridor turned to face Danny and for a brief moment, Danny caught a glimpse of a phone in the man's hand. "Can I help you, sir?"
"Yes, you can," Danny said bluntly. "I just heard that PA message. I don't feel safe here, and I don't feel that my daughter's safe either. I want to take her home."
The guard shook his head. "I'm sorry, sir. That's not going to happen."
Something about the guard's attitude rubbed him entirely the wrong way. "You can't force us to stay."
"It's not just you, sir." The guard's voice seemed patient. "The building's under lockdown. Nobody enters or leaves until we've resolved the situation."
"And if Shadow Stalker decides to take one of us hostage?" Danny's voice was challenging.
"Highly doubtful, but we'll resolve the situation if it comes up." The guard wasn't budging an inch, physically or figuratively. "Now please, go back in the room."
As much as he wanted to stand there and argue, Danny could tell that it wouldn't get him anywhere, so he closed the door again. Taking a second to make a rude gesture toward the door, he crossed the infirmary to the small bathroom and went inside.
I was going to get some sleep. Like hell. Bending over the basin, he took his glasses off and splashed water on his face.
<><>
Clockblocker
" …
not a drill. Armsmaster, out."
Dennis shook his head as the lift continued upward. "I still can't believe it."
"Trust me on this," Gallant said grimly. "Armsmaster's mad enough to bite his halberd in half. And I saw Shadow's aura when she walked in. One look at Aegis, and she went from I-know-something-you-don't-know to fight-or-flight. I'm guessing it was the phones that gave her the clue. She
knew we were on to her. That's why she bolted."
The doors opened and they stepped into the corridor, Gallant leading the way. Dennis was still having trouble getting his head around the whole thing. "I mean, wow, she's not exactly easy to get along with, but to actually
bully someone out of costume? Long term? Hard enough to make them trigger? That's something a
villain would do, not a hero."
"That's basically why we're trying to capture her right now," Gallant reminded him. "If she's guilty of all that, then she's effectively a villain. You can spin a one-off clash as a temporary thing. A whole series of deliberate acts? That's no mistake. She had to have
meant it."
Ahead of them, a set of locked doors barred the hallway. Two guards watched them approach. One stepped forward with his hand out, while the other hefted his foam sprayer. "That's as far as you go without authorisation. Cards, please."
"Sure." Gallant got his card out; beside him, Dennis did the same. "You do realise that this lockdown's all about Shadow Stalker going off the reservation, right? Nobody else here's been compromised, yeah?"
"Not part of my orders," the guard told him. "Building's on lockdown, nobody gets past without authorisation. End of story." He accepted the cards and handed them back to his partner.
"Oh, for God's sake!" burst out Dennis. "We're
Wards! We're even in
costume! It's not like there's that many teenagers running around the building!"
"Doesn't matter," the other guard said flatly. "You do your thing, and we'll do ours. Right now, our thing is manning this checkpoint and making sure that nobody gets through without authorisation." He swiped the cards through a slot set in the wall, one at a time, taking care with it. Each time, the reader emitted a clear triple beep. "All right then, you're clear."
"Thank you," Gallant told him gravely, accepting the cards back. "You're just doing your jobs, is all."
At some unseen signal, the doors slid apart and the guards stepped aside to let them through. Dennis was still fuming just a little. He was tempted to freeze one of them, but he pushed the impulse down. It wasn't easy.
"Just doing their jobs, my
ass," he muttered as they walked away from the now-closing doors. "They could
see who we were."
"And if we weren't supposed to be there?" Gallant gestured back toward the doors. "How much trouble would they be in if they let us through without challenging us, and we got hurt?"
Dennis shook his head. "Well, if you're gonna use
logic …" he muttered.
"Damn straight I am. Now could you humour me and at least
pretend to be professional?" The infirmary was just around the next corner, but as they neared it, they heard the pounding of boots.
They both looked at each other. Gallant got in first. "What the hell is that?"
By unspoken agreement, they both took off running.
<><>
Thomas Calvert
After an interminable period of dead air, Shadow Stalker's voice came back over the line. He could hear the echo of her breathing, which told him that she was in an enclosed space.
"Commander Calvert?"
"Where are you?" he asked.
"
Air ducts." She was panting.
"They didn't give me any warning, but they were taking the phones off the Wards, probably to plant evidence on mine. Aegis is in on it, I think. I saw him giving me a weird look and realised it was on. So I bolted. Makes me look more guilty, right?"
"Well done," he told her warmly. "Now, you have to keep moving. What floor are you on?"
"
Third, I think. I'm trying for the roof. They'll never catch me if I get that high up."
"No, you'll have to get out of the ducts soon. I don't know all of the security protocols, but overlooking the air ducting is a rookie mistake. The Director and Armsmaster aren't rookies."
"
But the corridors will be manned. If I want to get out, I'll need to show myself. And if the troopers aren't in on it and get the drop on me, I'm done."
"Okay, I'll cut you a break." He pursed his lips. "Fifth floor. The guard on the infirmary will look the other way. Make the most of it."
"
Fifth floor. Got it."
"Good. Call me back once you're out of the building."
Without giving her a chance to reply, he ended the call. Time was critical now; he sent a text to Corporal Reed's burner phone. SHADOW STALKER COMING YOUR WAY. IMPERATIVE THAT SHE ESCAPES.
As he did so, the PA system came to life.
"Attention. Attention. This is Armsmaster. The PRT building is now under lockdown …"
<><>
Shadow Stalker
Now that she had a goal, Sophia went for it with everything she had. Alternating between physical and shadow forms, she hoisted herself upward through the building's air ducts, looking around for any clue as to where she was. At first, there was nothing to see, but then the air vents began to close. That was worrying enough. Although she didn't need to go through them, it heralded something bad. She just
knew it.
The first confirmation came as a strong puff of air against her immaterial form, pushing her back a few feet. She turned solid, feeling the breeze increase against her body. She was sweating heavily inside her costume, but that was from exertion and heat, not fear. Never fear. Though the breeze was temporarily welcome, cooling her down.
But then it began to blow more strongly.
Oh shit, that's what they're doing. Flushing me out with high-pressure air.
Grimly, she climbed upward, the force of the wind starting to count on her now. She was almost at the fifth floor now. Over the edge she wriggled, having a much harder time now that she was stuck in physical form. The ducting widened, reducing the impact of the air on her, but still making it impossible to resume shadow form without being blown back down the air shaft.
Have to keep moving. I'm a survivor. I don't give up. I don't lose.
The wind was now close to a howling gale. She could feel the air pressure in front of her as she clawed her way along, fingernails hanging on to the joins in the metal. Then she heard another noise. A strange metallic clattering.
She was in a long straight stretch of the ducting, with air vents at regular intervals along the 'floor' of the duct. Looking ahead, she could see bars of light appearing and disappearing as each air vent opened and then closed in sequence, one after the other, getting closer to her all the time. She wasn't quite sure why this was being done, but just like the increase in air pressure, she knew it wasn't good. However, it did give her an idea.
Watching the vents, she unclipped her cloak but hung on to it, braced for dear life with her free hand and both feet. The vents were still opening and closing, rapidly approaching her prone body.
Wait … wait … now!
She let the cloak go and the howling gale caught it, bearing it back toward the vertical shaft. For a moment, just for a split second, it caught, trapping the air. At the same time the vent that was next to her opened; turning to shadow, she felt herself being blasted between the slats of the narrow vent. Her shadow form brushed against the electric motor that opened and closed it, and she felt a charge jolt through her.
She came to on hands and knees, feeling dizzy and sick. White tiles were all around her and the smell of industrial-strength disinfectant was strong in her nostrils.
Bathroom. I'm in a bathroom. As her vision began to clear, she could make out the male urinals.
Men's bathroom. Yay.
Over the PA system, she heard Armsmaster's voice talking about how this wasn't a drill and knew she had to get moving. She reached out to the nearest basin and pulled herself upright. Her head still spun, but it was getting better.
Okay, where to from here?
It was as if her question had been answered by a revelation from on high. Right beside the door was an emergency evacuation plan, complete with a red dot to show where she was.
And the infirmary is … there.
Flipping down her Tinker-tech lenses once more, she looked around. There were wires in the walls, but she could avoid them. Taking a deep breath, she went to shadow and dived through the wall, into another bathroom.
Women's, this time. At least I'm in the right place.
Heavy boots sounded in the corridor outside. "In here! Spread out!" For a second, her heart was in her mouth until she realised that they'd kicked open the men's bathroom door.
Still, that was way too close. And then the shout rang out, audible even through the drywall. "Not in here! Try next door!"
Shit, they're on to me. Her head had cleared somewhat, so she leaped upward, turning to shadow and slipping through the fragile plasterboard just as the door was kicked in. As the noisy search went on below her, she ghosted forward, unwilling to trust her weight on the ceiling panels. Until she encountered a large duct carrying far too many cables to get past. This ran, if she had things right, along the centre of the corridor outside the bathrooms.
Nothing for it. Dropping down into the corridor with her crossbows in hand, she prepared to go on the offensive. But the only PRT soldier in the hallway was standing outside the infirmary. For a long moment, neither one moved, then he deliberately turned his back on her.
Fucking yes. Something going right at last. She dived through the wall into the infirmary proper, going solid and rolling under the first bed before registering the fact that there was someone in it. Someone who definitely wasn't an adult.
What the fuck's a teenager doing in the PRT troopers' infirmary?
Going shadow once more, she slid out from under the bed and stood up. As she returned to solid form, she stared down at the inhabitant of the bed. She could only see a little hair, but that hair was black and curly.
I know someone with hair like that. Suspicions began to unfold in her mind as she reached out for where the covers had been pulled all the way up.
That was when something hit the back of her head with a metallic
clang.
<><>
Danny Hebert
He was just wiping his face when the flicker of darkness caught the corner of his eye. Turning, he put his glasses on just in time to see the girl emerge from a cloud of darkness, right beside Taylor's bed. She wasn't wearing her cloak, which was what immediately threw him, but the crossbow hanging at her hip gave him the clue.
Shadow Stalker! And she's going after Taylor!
He didn't have time to think; the renegade Ward was even now reaching for the covers, to pull them down. Beside the basin, several bedpans were stacked on a bench. He grabbed the topmost one and threw it. Hampered by both the cramped circumstances and the odd nature of the projectile – he could honestly say that he'd never thrown a bedpan before – he couldn't muster all the power that he wanted, but his aim was satisfactory.
With a loud
clang, the bedpan bounced off the back of Shadow Stalker's head, then clattered noisily on the floor. She staggered, lurching away from Taylor's bed, as Danny charged out of the bathroom like a bespectacled avenging angel. "Stay the hell away from her!" he shouted. Grabbing the costumed girl by the arm, he spun around and threw her at the far wall; she slammed into it with a loud
thump and a grunt of forcibly expelled air
.
She was tough, he had to admit that. Two good hits and she still wasn't down, though the impact with the wall had sent her to one knee. He moved forward to finish the job, but she raised her head. All of a sudden he was facing the business end of a crossbow.
"You!" Her voice sounded equally angry and surprised. "Who the fuck
are you? What are you doing here?"
He fumbled for an answer, but before he could find one, the door opened.
Fucking finally.
A teenage voice – Danny wasn't looking around to figure out who – yelled, "Hey, there she is!"
<><>
Gallant
As Clockblocker darted around the corner, Dean was right on his heels, wishing his armour didn't slow him down quite so much. A moment later, he didn't have to worry quite so much, as Clockblocker slowed down anyway. Instead of the milling troops that Dean's ears had told him to expect, there was just one armoured trooper, standing guard in front of the infirmary door. His aura, although a little hard to read at this distance, showed a mixture of caution and wariness.
The thing was, while they couldn't
see the PRT troopers, they could
hear them. The cacophony of crashes and bangs was relatively close, but still out of sight.
"Okay," muttered Clockblocker. "Where did they go?"
The question was answered almost immediately, as troops began emerging from two different bathrooms. Their auras were bright with excitement, tempered somewhat with frustration. Someone that Dean recognised as a sergeant began to bark orders, telling them to spread out and search the surrounding rooms.
"They haven't gotten her yet," Dean said by reflex.
"Yeah, duh, got that one," Clockblocker retorted. "I say we help search. We're her teammates, after all. If she'll surrender to anyone, it'll be us."
Dean shook his head. "No." He pointed at the trooper outside the infirmary. "We're supposed to go help that guy stand guard."
"But we can help out -" Clockblocker began.
"We can help out by
doing our jobs," Dean pointed out. "Let's go."
"Oh, man. You are
such a buzzkill." Clockblocker's aura radiated disappointment as they began to move forward. "I'm reporting you to the union."
"We don't
have a union."
"I'll
start a union, then complain to it. And you'll rue the day you crossed the Associated Wards, uh …" By Clockblocker's aura, he had given up on the argument and was just trying to be funny now.
"Yeah, we'll go with that." Dean's voice was dry.
They came level with the closest troopers, who looked at them expectantly.
"Here to help?" asked one of the armoured men. "We can do with it."
"Sorry," Dean told him before Clockblocker could agree. "We've been told to guard the infirmary."
"Damn. Oh, well." The trooper stepped aside. Dean moved past him, followed by an obviously reluctant Clockblocker.
They approached the guard, who was showing an unusual amount of apprehension, growing by the moment.
That's … odd. On reflex, he checked the man's ID tag. It said REED.
"Infirmary's clear," Reed announced. "Checked it myself." In direct contrast with his swirling emotions, his voice was confident and firm. If Dean hadn't been able to see his emotions directly, he would never have known they'd just been told a bare-faced lie.
This guy can act.
"That's nice," Dean said. "Please step aside. We've got orders to go in there."
Clockblocker's head came up slightly, wariness colouring his aura. The phrase 'that's nice' was a prearranged signal;
this person is not what he seems.
"I'm under orders not to let anyone in or out."
Despite Reed's almost bored tone, Dean could see his apprehension spiking hard.
Oh, yeah. He's definitely up to no good.
Then, in a lull, they heard from within the room a metallic clatter, followed by a yell then a thump. Though severely muffled by the door, the sounds were just audible enough to not be mistaken for anything else.
"Did you hear that?" asked Clockblocker.
"I'm going in there," Dean said, reaching for the door handle.
Look at me, look at me …
Reed's foam sprayer came up; his aura was going crazy. "I can't let you -"
He froze in mid-movement; Clockblocker took his hand away from the man's arm.
Dean wasted no time in opening the door.
Inside the infirmary, one bed was occupied. That person was asleep, their aura cycling through the fuzzy emotions of dreamstate. However, his attention was drawn by the other two people in the room, and a more disparate pair he could not imagine.
On the one side, not far from the occupied bed, was a tall gangly man wearing glasses and rumpled clothing. With his weak chin and balding head, he looked almost harmless. Except, of course, for the clenched fists and the palpable waves of rage that were rolling off him, all directed at the third person in the room. There was fear in there too, but the anger overrode it.
The third person was Shadow Stalker. Her cloak was missing, and she looked more than a little dishevelled herself. Shorter than her adversary by maybe a foot, she was compact and lithe, giving the impression of a jungle cat. A
really pissed-off jungle cat. At that moment in time, she was just rising from a crouch, one of her crossbows trained on the tall skinny guy.
"Hey!" yelled Clockblocker. "There she is!"
Dean restrained the urge to face-palm, or at least helmet-palm, as Shadow Stalker's head whipped around to face them.
Thank you, Captain Obvious. Even through the eyeholes of her mask, her glare should have been enough to bore holes through solid steel. If anything, her level of anger ramped up a few notches, but there was also an element of caution in there now. With a muttered curse, she broke for the window.
Shit, she's getting away. Hastily, Dean raised his hand and fired off an emotion bolt.
Let's see how you deal with a guilty conscience. A flare of alarm told him that she'd seen it coming; just before the bolt struck, she went immaterial and leaped toward the thick glass. Dean's attack passed through her shadowy form but failed to stun her, splashing against the window and dissipating.
As for the emotional aspect of the bolt, Dean wasn't sure. He'd always had trouble reading her aura while she was in her Breaker state, so he didn't know if it had even had an effect on her. He didn't get a chance for a second shot; a moment later, she had passed through the window and was gliding away on the breeze.
No. She can't get away. Not now. "Clock, cover the civilians." He moved as fast as he could toward the window, trying hard not to bowl the skinny guy over in the process. Belatedly, he added "'Scuse me."
"'kay, I got this," Clockblocker said from behind him. "You okay, folks? Want anything? First aid? Coffee? Tea? Dancing girls?"
He made it to the window as he pulled his phone out. Shadow Stalker was sort-of gliding over the street; it looked like she was making heavy weather of it in the absence of her cloak. Long practice let him hit the right buttons for speed dial.
"
Yes?" Armsmaster's voice was a bark.
"Infirmary. Shadow Stalker just got past us and out the window."
There was a moment of silence.
"Damn. Are either of them hurt?"
"One second. I'll find out." He raised his voice without taking his eyes off of Shadow Stalker's dim form. "Anyone hurt?"
"We're both fine," the balding guy answered, sounding a little shaken. "Thanks. I think you got here just in time. Pretty sure she was gonna shoot me."
"Apparently they're fine," Dean relayed to Armsmaster. "I have eyes on Shadow Stalker. She just landed on the roof opposite. Heading north, it looks like, on Farley."
"
North on Farley," repeated Armsmaster.
"Roger."
"Okay. I've …" He shaded his eyes against the reflection of the lights from within the room. "I've … lost sight of her, sorry."
"
Never mind that. How did she get into the infirmary?"
Dean grimaced, turning away from the window. "It was before we got here. I think the guard was in on it, somehow. Clockblocker froze him."
There was another, longer, pause.
"Damn. Okay, sit on him. Vet anyone who comes to get him." It went without saying; Armsmaster had trusted Reed, after all.
"Will do." The call ended, and he put the phone away.
" … only uses tranquilliser arrows," Clockblocker was saying. "Wait a minute. You were in the car, earlier. Petrowski gave us a lift."
The skinny guy was still tense, but it was starting to drain away now. Relief and cautious hope welled up to replace it. "Yeah, I remember. I just didn't expect … I mean, what was
that all about?" He gestured at the window. "Is she going to come back?"
Dean shook his head. "I doubt it very much." He'd read as much from her aura. She'd wanted to be
gone. There was something familiar about the guy himself, but that could wait.
"What's going on here?" asked a voice from the doorway. They all turned to look; it was the sergeant in charge of the squad. "Why is this man frozen?"
"He was acting oddly, then tried to prevent us from entering after we heard sounds of a fight from in here," Dean reported crisply. "Clockblocker froze him. When we opened the door, this guy was facing off against Shadow Stalker. She went out the window before we could get to her."
"So she got away?" The sergeant's mood shifted, then settled on unhappiness. "God,
dammit. He
said he'd checked."
"Pretty sure he's in on it somehow," Clockblocker said. "Not sure how Shadow Stalker ended up with a minion, though."
"Oh, we'll be finding out." The sergeant's voice, and his aura, held certainty. He turned to look at Reed, and spoke to the other soldiers crowding around. "Watch him. When he unfreezes, disarm and secure him. The brass is gonna want to have
words with him." He reached up to his lapel and spoke into a microphone. "Delta Squad, Sergeant Miller calling Armsmaster. Shadow Stalker has left the building … ah, you already know about it? And … hold the accomplice? Yes, sir. We're already on that, over." As the sergeant spoke, Dean scanned the rest of the squad. Nobody's aura showed false colours. If anything, they showed anger and embarrassment, at one of their own being a traitor.
One of the troopers pulled the door shut. Dean looked at Clockblocker, then at the skinny guy. "Did you really go up against Shadow Stalker?"
The guy nodded wearily.
I know him, Dean thought.
He's with the Dockworkers or something. One of their higher ups.
"Yeah. I was in the bathroom, washing my face …"
<><>
Shadow Stalker
Sophia barely made it to the rooftop of the building across the street. When she returned to normal, she staggered, weakness washing through her body. Worse, her mind was assaulted with conflicting emotions. Part of her was elated that she had escaped, while another part was adamant that she should return to face the music.
I should go back and give myself up, she told herself.
Tell them everything I've done. It's the only right … only right …
Yanking her mask off, she hauled off and slapped herself, hard. Her ears rang, but at least her head was more clear now. "God,
dammit," she said out loud. "Stop being such a whiny little bitch. That's not
me. That's Gallant's blast. The fuckin' asshole."
A deep breath of the night air served to help clear her head some more, and she put the mask back on. Moment by moment, the weakness was fading, as were the unfamiliar emotions. She could feel her old attitudes re-asserting themselves, and she welcomed it.
I don't feel guilty. I've got nothing to feel guilty for. Every single one of the assholes had it coming. Especially Hebert.
Something tickled her memory at that point. Something about the guy in the infirmary, and the colour of the hair on the pillow, and a photo on her phone …
An unfamiliar ringtone emerged from her belt pouch, initially confusing her. Then she belatedly recalled the burner phone, and the orders to call Calvert back.
Oh, shit. I forgot.
Reaching up, she tapped on the bluetooth headset. "I'm here," she said, trying to catch her breath.
"
Good." His voice was cool.
"Corner of West and Farley. There'll be a white van. Get into it."
"West and Farley, white van, got it." She turned, getting her bearings.
Okay, West and Farley is two blocks that way. I need to get moving, they'll be moblising soon to chase me down.
As if to underline that thought, a blurred form streaked across the street, zipped up the front steps to the PRT building, and disappeared inside.
Oh, shit. That's Velocity. The rest of the Protectorate won't be far behind.
She started across the rooftops, keeping to cover where she could.
If I can get to West and Farley before they catch up …
"Shadow Stalker!" It was Aegis' voice, coming from above and behind her.
I had to fucking jinx it. She glanced around, seeing the red-costumed Ward swooping down toward her. "Fuck off!" she yelled.
If he's in on it, then he has to know that I need to escape, here. He didn't seem to be taking the hint. Turning, she aimed both crossbows at him. "Back off. I
will fucking shoot you."
He slowed to a hover, about ten feet away, but shook his head almost pityingly. "Your tranquillisers won't hurt me. I'll adapt -"
She pulled the triggers on both bows at the same time. He didn't even try to dodge; the arrows struck centre mass, delivering the chemical payloads directly into whatever he used for a bloodstream. Not waiting to see how it went, she turned and ghosted across to the next building. At the same time, she was reloading the crossbows with two of her meagre stash of lethal arrows.
By the time she got there, he was hovering in front of her, holding both used-up tranquilliser arrows in one hand. His costume had two small holes in it, but he didn't seem to be bothered in the slightest. "Seriously. Give it up. Come on back. You're just making it worse for yourself."
Go through the roof? She wasted half a second on looking downward.
No. Too many wires. Fuck. Plan B, then.
She growled, deep in her throat, and charged at him. He dropped the arrows and held his hands out, ready to take hold of her. At the last moment, she went to shadow and billowed around him. As his hands grabbed at nothing, she continued onward, to put an air-conditioning unit between them, at which point she reformed once more. With her back pressed to the unit, she held her breath, hung one crossbow on her belt, and grasped its arrow in her hand.
"Shadow Stalker, I can do this all day. You wanna play hide and seek, I can play hide and seek." His voice was still calm. "You can't get away." Leaning around the unit, he reached for her. "Boo."
She swung the arrow around to strike at him. The razor-edged tip punched through his wrist and nailed it to the a/c unit. Then she kicked away from the unit, going ghostly as his other hand flailed toward her. Waiting until he reached to pull the arrow out, she triggered the crossbow; a second razor-tipped arrow slammed into his free hand, nailing it to the unit as well.
"Wait – what the – Shadow Stalker, what the
fuck?" The shock and surprise in his voice were music to her ears. But she didn't hang around to gloat; he'd pull himself free sooner rather than later. In that time, she had to be
gone.
<><>
Thomas Calvert
"
Attention. We are no longer under lockdown. Personnel may now move freely about the building. Thank you."
It wasn't Armsmaster's voice, which indicated that Armsmaster was busy. Shadow Stalker had gotten away, which meant that there was only incidental fallout to deal with. Reed had not yet called back with an update, which meant that he was either busy or in custody. The latter definitely counted as 'incidental fallout'.
He accessed a very customised app on his phone; this gave him specific access to a certain number of modified handsets. Selecting Reed's, he activated the camera function. An image swam on to his screen, then sharpened.
"Shit," he muttered. He'd know Armsmaster's helmet anywhere. A gauntleted hand, made enormous by proximity, loomed on his screen.
He saw the camera come on!
Moving with frantic haste, he tapped the button at the bottom of the screen marked 'DESTRUCT'. A second prompt came up. ARE YOU SURE?, with a YES/NO option underneath it. He couldn't tap YES fast enough, almost bruising the tip of his finger. The picture winked out.
Heaving a sigh of relief, he sagged back in his chair. Then he forced himself to sit upright once more.
Time to cover my tracks.
A random-seeming command entered into his computer, followed by a mouse-click on a seemingly innocuous part of the screen, opened a window which really should not have been accessible to him. He accessed the server logs of the calls that Reed and Shadow Stalker had made to his desk phone, then entered the command to delete them; in seconds, they were electronic confetti. Then he closed that window and called up the spreadsheet he'd been working on before this all started.
Next, he pulled the back off of his cell-phone and prised out the SIM card. Taking out his wallet, he removed a small foil packet from an unobtrusive compartment. This contained a SIM card of the same type as the one he had removed from the phone, but bearing a different serial number. Swapping them around was the work of a moment; he tucked away the foil packet once more and snapped his phone closed.
Then he let himself relax.
It really was not easy staying ahead of the forces of law and order sometimes. However, this time he simply had not been able to resist. The chance to recruit a disgraced Ward did not come up every day, after all.
Leaning back in his chair, he mulled over the events from the timeline where he had not contacted Shadow Stalker. There had been no lockdown or other alarm, which told him that she had been taken into custody without any particular fuss. She would no doubt be interrogated at length.
I wonder if I could sneak a peek at the transcripts …
End of Part Seven