Development 2.5
Making a quick breakfast, I started to get ready, picking up my mask before pausing. I looked at the mask I held, the mask which had been formed from my costume, but was now completely separate from the rest of my suit. Turning on Power Sight, I could see the threads of energy that ran through my costume, and one seemed to drift off in the direction of the mask before fading into nothing. At the mask what could only be the other end of the thread faded into sight, running through the length of the piece of 'cloth'. Moving it moved the faded ends, the two hanging, phantom threads always pointing at each other.
Now that I looked at the mask, it,
too, was odd. Where I had assumed there were eyeholes, was nothing but blank, black material the same color as the mask. Moving it towards my face, it was black until I put it on, where it lightened until I could see again. Walking to the bathroom, I didn't see my own prismatic eyes through what appeared to be clear holes in the fabric, but instead just the black of the mask staring back. Concentrating on wanting to see my eyes, the blackness faded until my eyes
could be seen, however taking off the mask again showed no eyeholes, only clear sections for my eyes, like the cleanest glass.
Thinking about it I reformed it into one of my first mask ideas, a white domino mask with red the color of arterial blood forming a border around it. Instead of eye-holes I had the white continue, covering the eyes completely. Putting it on, more pressing it to my face really, it stuck and I could see perfectly fine out of it. Looking in the mirror I saw just white where my eyes were, none of the telltale prismatic light shining through. Touching it lightly, I found that while the material had been soft when I handled it, the mask was now hard, resisting the pressure of my fingers easily, even, I hesitantly found out, on my eyes.
Reaching up to feel the edges, I found it flush with my skin, and couldn't find any point I could leverage to take it off. As I started to panic about being able to take it off, thinking
was it changeable until I settled on a superhero costume? it immediately peeled off in in my hands, feeling like a somewhat rubbery fabric. Taking a deep breath, I held it and put it on, sticking to my face, before willing it off again, catching it as it fell.
Finished with that, I turned my attention to my costume. As I did so, the darm material turned to a pristine white bodysuit with a matching red set of gloves, boots, belt with pouches, and a strip at my neck where the costume ended. I considered adding a cape, but all I could think of was Edna Mode's emphatic "No Capes!" Instead, I emblazoned a red caduceus, tweaking the snakes a little to give them the subtle horns of the Entities' Shards.
Smirking at the joke, I checked the network to see when the PRT opened for visitors, noting that my new identity had already been made, a Lee Elric, from Iowa. Specifically, I was from a town that had been wrecked when a cape named Voidshadow, who the ability to effect gravity, had been killed, either before or after setting off a micro-black hole, destroying half the town and killing most of the people who lived there.
Really, I thought,
Voidshadow? What was he, 14? I checked just in case, but she was twenty-seven, so I was secure in my snark instead thinking badly of a kid with problems. My official documentation would be arriving today, at a secure box in a nearby post-office, but I had a social security number, bank account with the minimum required to keep it open, A credit card with a couple thousand in debt,
jerk, and everything else your average person would need. I had a college degree for liberal arts, and had been doing odd-jobs to make ends meet on my work history, along with a single paid-off ticket for speeding several years ago. Number man cost top-dollar, but the identity was surprisingly complete.
The PRT opened at seven, which meant if I left now, I'd probably get there right as it opened. Checking that both my friends were sound asleep I cleared out the last of the bugs, including a couple that had snuck in without my help, and left the base.
Flying just over the buildings until I left the trainyard, I took off and did a quick patrol over the docks and boardwalk, seeing the people just starting work, opening up shops, and milling about early on Sunday morning. As I flew, I could
feel the bugs below me, but my power worked in a sphere several hundred meters around me, allowing me to detect the ones
directly under me, but not those more than a block at a time at my height far above the city. I tried to control some that were flying below me, but I didn't breach the triple digits like I had in the base while I tried to also fly, while paying attention to my surroundings.
Floating onward I headed downtown, lazily drifting past the skyscrapers, waving casually at the cleaning staff on one floor as I flew by them. Looking around, I finally spotted the PRT building, as opposed to the Protectorate' 'Rig', a decently tall building of stone instead of glass with barred windows, a Helipad on top, and two guards on the rooftop looking up at me as I descended. I made sure to keep at least a hundred feet away, and they held their guns at the ready, but didn't point their rifles at me. I waved at them as I dropped to street level, pushing open the clear glass doors of the lobby, stepping in lightly past the armored guards who watched me warily, what must be foam sprayers ready, but not pointed at me either.
Behind the front desk was a middle-aged man, who was trying to look calm as I walked up to him, and mostly succeeding.
Should I hold up my hands to show I mean no harm? I thought.
No, that will make them think I could do harm, and maybe treat me like an armed gunman instead of someone potentially dangerous. I tapped into bugs around the base, and saw that in adjacent corridors soldiers were moving into position, as several analysts freaked out, A spider in the break room, along with the fly caught in its web showing me someone dropping their coffee as a sound went off and they started running.
This is a bit much, I thought.
They really should have had a 'New Hero? Click here!' option on their website if they didn't want them just to walk in. I pondered that obvious oversight for a second.
Then again, with powers pushing for conflict, they might not have that many takers instead of people jumping into fights and meeting the Protectorate on site.
"Hello," I told the man cheerfully, like this was perfectly normal and I was coming in to register a new car or something. "I'm a new Hero and I'd like to register, as well as register an independent team. What forms do I need to do that?"
The man looked at me as if I had asked for a baby chihuahua and a quarter pounder with cheese. "What?" he asked dumbly.
"I'm a new Hero, and I figured that before I went hero-
ing I should register with the Parahuman Response Teams, see if there's a do's and don'ts booklet or something like that, and register me and my partners as an independent team. They think this is kinda stupid," I only half-lied, "But hey, good communication is necessary to working together, and prior planning prevents piss poor performance and all of that!"
He looked down at his computer as a phone rang. He looked at me hesitantly, and I shrugged. "Take your time," I told him. "I'm not in a hurry."
He took the phone, giving out several "Yes sirs", a couple "No sirs", and one where he glanced at me before going "This wasn't in the training,
sir". He finally looked up at me asking, "If it isn't too much, what is your power. . ."
I smiled. "I was thinking of going with Vejovis for a name, unless that's taken, and I have the Alexandria package, bug control, and a limited healing ability."
He stared. "How do those go together?"
"How do powers work in general?" I asked, shrugging.
"Bug control?" he questioned instead.
I pointed at the spider making a web in the far corner of the room. "Is it okay if I use my power in here?"
No need to be rude I thought.
He looked taken aback before nodding hesitantly. Taking direct control of the spider, I had it abandon the web it was making and descend, scuttling across the floor before climbing onto the desk, stopping halfway between the two of us, the fingertip sized arachnid raising its forelegs in greeting. My power told me it was a funnel weaver, and that even if it did bite, it would be practically painless.
As he watched I made it cartwheel across the table, falling on its back. I extended a finger and flipped it back over, making it bow in thanks before turning towards the man and standing at attention, one leg raised in a salute. "I'm still getting a handle on it," I told him. "General orders like 'come here' or 'go there' get a lot more, but I'm limited with fine control."
He looked at me, then the spider, then back to me. "Is it poisonous?"
"Even if it did bite you, you'd barely feel a thing, and it's not a threat to people," I told him, answering the question he meant to ask.
He nodded before going back to the phone, relaying what just happened while I had the spider do yoga, or as close to it as an arachnid could, pretending that I wasn't listening in on what he was saying. After a bit a woman in her early thirties walked in with some paperwork, wearing what looked like office wear, but she was a bit too muscular and moved a bit too smoothly to be the corporate drone she dressed as.
Taking the paperwork, and producing my own pen, turning down her offer of one, I stood there and filled out the forms, occasionally making the spider look as if it was checking my spelling. I left the forms for personal identity, trigger circumstances, past actions, and other potentially incriminating fields blank, as I started to get the suspicion that I was being played.
"You need to fill those in," she informed me, as if I'd done something wrong.
I raised an eyebrow. "Oh, so, what was the worst day of your life ma'am, please don't shy away from graphic detail."
"What?" she asked starting to get offended.
"It's what you're asking for, so it's only polite to share." I told her, motioning towards the blank fields. "If this is what's actually required to register, I can now see why no-one ever does, and why my compatriots thought this was a fool's errand. For instance," I indicated the page I was currently working on, getting the spider to point to the relevant section. "You're asking for a blood sample. Not only is that incredible invasive, but with the amount of rogue Tinkers out there, I'd rather not have to fight some cloned mutated version of myself in the future, let alone the possibility of powers that let you affect someone through their blood. I'll fill in the information I'm willing to give, and if that's not enough I'll leave."
"That's if you are allowed to," she replied hostily, but, even with the few powers I'd picked up, there was nothing they could to do hold me with who they had on staff, and at short notice.
Hmm, I thought. This woman's not an administrative assistant. I'd say either security or management, maybe both. Mark this down as reason 8 why I'm never joining the Protectorate.
"You're holding me? On what charges?" I asked mildly, watching the two guards shift behind me uncertainly.
Good, she was undoubtedly taking a chance trying to goad the unknown parahuman who had demonstrated a low-level Master power, and was likely high on her own authority instead of following orders. I hoped her stupidity wasn't mandated, just probably encouraged. "I did make sure to hire a lawyer before I came here, and if you were to take the blood sample you wanted, I'm pretty sure that counts as illegal search and seizure."
Note to self, go hire a lawyer.
She just glared at me, so I stopped filling in sections, flipping through the "registration" form, finding nothing else they really needed to know about me. Turning to the sweating desk-clerk I asked. "This should be enough. I expected to have to be careful of being tricked by villains, not the good guys. Is there a 'form' for independent teams or should I just give you the basics?"
The 'aide' bit out, angry at my obvious dismissal of her presence, "If you and your friends come for a full testing, they will receive a stipend in order to follow PRT Guidelines."
I didn't even look at her. God, I hated these people. "We have no need of that, I was coming here as a courtesy. Now, would you like information on my team or should I leave?" I asked the man. The woman started to say something when the phone rang again. The mand working the desk picked it up, before handing it to the woman who listened, before angrily shoving it back to him snatching the papers I'd filled out and stomped out a side door.
I watched her go before turning back to the guy, and I couldn't help but comment "Some security people really need PR training. Has anyone checked to make sure she's not secretly a para-human? I've heard that sometimes the powers make you a bit antagonistic towards other capes." Both were completely true statements, but what they implied was completely unfounded as I would have Seen her power if she'd had any, and she was completely mundane.
The man behind the desk looked pained, as if he wanted to say something but doing so would get him in trouble. Turning the conversation back to why I was here, I said, "So, right, Independent Hero Team. I'll be setting up a PO box later today, so I'll just mail you guys a postcard or something. As for the name, we're called the Penumbral Protectors, and our members-" I was cut off as the phone rang again. "Do you want to just put them on speaker or something?"
The poor receptionist took the call, and told me, "I'm being told you can't call yourselves Protectors because it's too close to the Protectorate, and I can't put him on speaker." The man looked scared. At least
he understood the dangers of people with unknown powers.
I sighed, resting my face in my palm. "No, that makes sense. If I had some kind of 'hear my voice and be hypnotized' power keeping me here and contained would be ruined if I could talk to someone in charge." I looked up to see his panicked expression. "I don't have one of those, but you guys couldn't have known that. So, no protectors, it's not like they own the copywrite to the word, but okay," I mused as the man calmed down somewhat. "Um. . . hmmmm. How about Penumbral Defenders?"
He listened in before nodding. "That's okay. Who else is on your team?"
"Right now it's myself and two brothers. One calls himself Break, the other is Enter. Both have strength and toughness that increases as they fight, kinda like Lung without the whole turning into a dragon thing, they heal as they fight, and Break turns into dinosaurs."
He looked at me in disbelief. "Dinos?"
"Yeah," I nodded. "all kinds, he turned into a T-Rex once, and can do little ones as well. No idea how that fits, but it does. And either Enter turns invisible, or something else entirely, he didn't want to explain." The guy I was talking to looked around nervously as the guards by the door shifted again, sprayers pointed towards the empty air where I wasn't standing.
"I don't think he's here," I told him as I watched the rest of the base started to freak out through my bugs, going into full Master/Stranger protocols. I wasn't gonna mention that part, but the security chick had pissed me off. "I don't think he's here,
probably," I corrected. "He's like seven feet tall. Either way it's just the three of us."
The PRT clerk looked up at me. "A team with three members. That's small."
"Yeah," I responded a bit defensively. "We're starting small, then growing later. You know, 'started from the bottom now we're here'!"
He gave me a look of sheer disbelief before taking down the information. "You're actively recruiting?"
I nodded. "Yeah, but we're mostly settling in, getting a feel for the city, fighting crime, all that good stuff. Is that it?"
He listened to his boss before asking, "How long have you been a team?"
"Today. Right now, we just registered," I replied, frowning, waving a hand to indicate the forms I just filled out.
Again, listening. "How long have you known them is what he meant," the man clarified.
"Oh! Break I've known for years, way before he got his powers. We used to play D&D together and chat online. His brother I've only known for a few days. He's kinda an ass, but follows Break's lead. If there's anything else, I was planning on heading over to the hospital and see if I could help. Oh, and before I leave, do you want me to take the bugs out of your base? I can kinda feel them out there and around, so I could tell them to come here and just take them out like the cleanest exterminator ever, but it'd probably freak people out." I advised.
A few more moments of listening and he turned down my offer, wishing me a good day. I casually walked out, pausing by one of the guards who stiffened, but relaxed when I asked which way it was to the nearest hospital. He gave me the directions and I thanked him, leaving and taking flight from the sidewalk, heading to my next stop that day.
<AB>
Landing outside the Brockton Central Hospital, I walked into the ER, and, seeing no one in line, I approached the desk. I informing the woman there that I was a healer who'd registered with the PRT (neglecting to mention I did so less than hour ago), and that I was here to help. A doctor was called in, looking annoyed at having to show up, and he questioned me on my capabilities. Telling him I could heal, but only if I knew what was wrong, seemed to actually make him happy for some strange reason, as well as the fact that my ability to generally heal things didn't work on anything more than a low-level problem. I was sent to a patient, an older man on a hospital bed, and told to wait there. The likely patient was unconscious, and had a number of tubes connected to him, but otherwise the room was empty, quiet except for the occasional beeping.
After a few minutes the door opened, and a girl walked in. Average height, with messy brown hair and freckles, it was the bags under her eyes I noticed first as she slowly walked in, like someone half asleep. If it wasn't for my Sight and her costume, I wouldn't have recognized her, having not looked at her too closely yesterday, as I'd tried to show I was more interested in Boojack's wellbeing than her.
The hood of Panacea's white and robe put her face in shadow, hiding it, and the red scarf also served to distract, both emblazoned with pseudo-Caducei, the snakes having stars instead of heads, turning them into intertwined shooting stars below a first aid symbol instead of the winged staff on my chest. She started to walk over, her power a guttering candle to the campfire it had been yesterday. She stopped and looked at me for a second, light returning to her eyes as the Flame stabilized. "Who are you?" she asked in the confused tone of someone not sure if they're dreaming.
"Vejovis, hero, independent team, new Trigger and newly registered," I told her, holding out my gloved hand for her to shake numbly. "I asked the PRT for the nearest hospital to help at and they sent me here. I assume they want me to work with you because of your diagnostic power."
That got her attention. "What?" she asked, coming more awake. "How do you know about. . ."
I shrugged "I'm a healer, but
I need to know what's wrong before I can heal them, or I might miss something. From what I've heard you don't, so you obviously have some kind of Thinker power that lets you diagnose things for you to heal, which is kinda awesome, so what's wrong with this guy?" I asked, jerking my thumb at the guy in the bed.
She glanced at me, muttering to herself nonsensically, "Hero healer. That's what heroes do." Honestly I wouldn't have heard her if I wasn't cheating, and I got the feeling that if she were more awake, she'd never have said it. She started to ask, "Do I have. . ." before noticing he was out cold. She looked back at the doorway at a doctor who was waiting, looking both bored and annoyed, and the other man nodded.
She touched the patient nodding to herself before shaking her head, looking at me. "He's got a broken pelvis, a weak heart, and a UTI from the catheter," she instructed. I walked over, miming manipulating something as I pulled off the index finger of my glove, putting it in my belt pouch as I touched the man's chest. I tried to focus on my copy of her power as I said, "Okay, Pelvis is just reconnecting the bone, but I'm not sure about the heart or UTI, that's," I motioned towards his lap, "right?"
She nodded, walking me through the steps of healing, feeling my progress as I worked. Happy with the progress, she turned to leave and I followed. The doctor, however, looked unsure. "Where are you going?" he asked me.
I motioned towards Panacea who didn't look nearly as tired, though she was still swaying slightly, watching us. "I follow her and she can walk me through healing someone while she heals someone else. It won't
double the rate of healing, I'm not on her level, but it'll go a lot faster." She looked at me, brow furrowed in confusion to some part of my statement, though I wasn't sure which part, as it was all pretty self-evident.
When I looked back at her, she turned to look somewhere else, the doctor thinking for a moment before saying, "Yes, of course, I was just wondering why you were walking that way." I didn't point out that I had just followed Panacea, letting him officiously lead us to out next set of patients. From there we worked through room after room of sick and injured, Panacea diagnosing and walking me through the process while she healed someone else at the same time, my speed of Fleshsculpting drastically increasing in rate and precision under her expert instruction. I avoided my general 'get better' technique, since I wanted to run that by her somewhere that, if I was doing something wrong, wouldn't get me in trouble. There were
some problems though.
"What? Why are you healing me? Why can't Panacea do it?" An older man with a clogged heart asked me indignantly.
"You have a clogged circumflex artery, and the others need to be cleaned, which is easy, and I've done two of already today. She's curing cancer, which I'm still learning. Do you want the healing or not?" I asked, baffled that anyone would complain about painless, near instant life-saving healing with no long-term effects.
"I came here to be healed by Panacea, and I paid top dollar to do so!" he retorted angrily, puffing up his already ample chest.
By this time, we were attracting stares, and I was losing my patience, as every minute spent dealing this blowhard was another I could have spent healing some kid in bad shape.
Is this how she feels all the time? I thought, glancing over her as she sleepily moved onto another patient.
No wonder she pushes herself.
Taking another track, I looked at him in questioning distaste. "Sir, there is
literally no difference between Panacea or I healing you, except she can do it faster or. . ." I trailed off. "Is it the fact that she's a teenage girl, and you want her to touch you? Because, that's not appropriate, in the slightest."
He sputtered as the stares all around us turned from curious to disgusted. "Just heal me," he commanded imperiously as I rolled my eyes, touched the top of his hand, and cleared the arteries in seconds.
We kept working, moving from room to room as the time slowly moved on. After a bit I recognized that we were, with two exceptions for critically wounded patients, moving in a giant circle as the staff shifted new patients into our path. Several times I had a doctor or nurse try to direct me away from Panacea, telling me that I knew enough and that
their diagnosis would be good enough. I pointed out that it was my first day, and that for every new thing I dealt with I still needed her explanations, which made them upset for some stupid reason, but they had no convincing argument against it so each one gave up after a few tries, and one literally stomping away in anger.
After the first attempt, I started reading the patient's charts as Panacea diagnosed them, finding a handful where they had been mis-diagnosed, and if I had gone from the chart I would have,
at best, done nothing to help them, and, at worst, possibly
killed them as instead of joining together a break, I would have fused two separate bones together and cut the tissues between them, or something far worse.
By the time noon rolled around, my stomach was rumbling and I needed a break to relax. Heading over as she gave sight back to a heavily scarred young woman, I tapped Panacea on the shoulder as I had taken to doing when I needed an explanation on how to heal something. "Oh, something new?" she asked hopefully, eyes drooping as she half smiled. "What is it this time?"
"Lunch," I told her, motioning towards the clock on the wall.
"What?" she asked, processing the words slowly. "Oh, um, you go, I need to keep going."
I snorted. "I've been with you all morning and neither of us have eaten, or even taken a break. Come on, it'll be twenty minutes, then we can go back to healing the masses."
She shook her head, "No, I'm okay, I'll just keep going," she insisted, the woman looking around in amazement as Panacea healed her burn scars. As I gave her a disbelieving glance her stomach gave a growl like a corned lioness.
She blushed as I asked, "When's the last time you had something to eat? I had some breakfast six hours ago, when did you?"
"Um," she said, not meeting my eyes. "I had something yesterday," she admitted, letting go of her now healed patient.
Rolling my eyes, I stepped beside her and put a hand on her back, pushing her towards the door calling to the rest of the room, "We're gonna grab a quick lunch, then we should be back!"
A couple of the people inside cried out in anger, but I ignored them as we left and I started to head towards the cafeteria we'd passed a few rooms ago. The doctor that had been 'helping us' looked up from his phone as we passed, fiddling with it before running after us. "Where are you going?" he demanded, "You still have patients to see!"
"It's noon," I explained slowly, not stopping. "We haven't had a break all morning, we're going to get some food."
He ran in front of us, barring the way. "You can eat when you're done," he commanded, as if he were in a position to dictate terms to us. "Heroes wouldn't stop while people still need them," he added, almost vindictively, eliciting a wince from my companion, who made an attempt to turn back around, but gave up when I provided a bit of token resistance with my hand on her back.
I stopped, looking at him. "Yeah, no. I'm taking a break and," I looked over at Panacea, who was leaning into my hand, struggling to stay awake. "Panacea, how long have you been working and how many breaks have you taken."
She looked sleepily back. "I started last night, and I haven't. People need me." My look of shocked disbelief prompted her to add. "They do, and I couldn't sleep anyways."
I looked back at the doctor. "She's been working all night? Why haven't you made her take a break, I'm pretty sure that, by law, you
have to."
His look of indifference spoke volumes. "I started this morning, it's not my fault she didn't take any breaks." The man scoffed, "Can't she just make herself not tired, or is that
beyond her capabilities?"
"Panacea, can you heal your own tiredness, or make yourself not hungry?" I asked calmly, looking at this dumbass and wondering how he finished medical school.
"Huh? No, can't heal myself. Don't do brains, it's wrong," she murmured, leaning more on me for support.
I looked at him with finality. "There you go. We're taking a break."
"You can if you want to, she still has work to do," he answered dismissively, reaching out to grab her shoulder, looking offended when I blocked his hand.
"Okay asshat, here's what's going to happen," I spoke calmly, reaching out for every insect in range. "You're gonna step out of the way, or I'm gonna do the hospital a favor and make all the insects in it leave." He looked unsure. "And I'm gonna do so, by making them all follow you for the rest of the day," I threatened as I started to pull them out of nearby rooms, the amount small at first, but starting to group together around him.
He shrieked and ran off, with the bugs starting to follow him, but going back to where they came after he turned the corner. Pushing Panacea forward as she muttered about not being nice, we entered the cafeteria as I responded that no,
he wasn't. I moved her along as we got food, putting it all on a tray that I carried as people stared. Getting to the end the cashier blinked at us, before giving us the price.
"We're healers," I told her. "Take it out of what the hospital is paying us."
"Um," she glanced between the two of us nervously, checking her screen. "I don't have an account for Panacea or you Mr. . ?"
"Vejovis," I told her. "Today's my first day here. I've probably done over a hundred thousand dollars' worth of healing for the hospital this morning. I'm not sure how much they're paying me, but I'm sure it'll cover my lunch, and Panacea's even better at it than I am." The girl looked between the two of us, unsure. "And of course Panacea has an account, she's been doing this for a while, right?" I added.
The cashier nodded slowly. "She's been here for months, she must," she responded thoughtfully, "You might not be in the system yet. I'll go get my boss, go ahead and eat."
I brought our food over, directing her to a chair, commenting as I ate my burger. "That was weird, did you have that problem last time you ate here? How much are they paying you?"
She munched on her fries, eyes almost closed. "Never ate here, too busy, need to heal, be a hero, heroes don't ask for money." She looked almost zombie-like. No wonder, if she had been here since yesterday. I remembered how in the book, Amy had been running herself ragged healing trying to prove herself as a hero to her adopted mother, Brandish, who was always looking for evidence that she was a villain because Amy's dad was the villain Marquis.
That was a messed-up family dynamic that I'd need to take steps to fix, let alone the entire 'sins of the father' thing that was pretty un-Christian. Normally, especially for teenagers,
especially for teenage girls, someone would have stepped in to help, but if the doctor's attitude, and the fact that she didn't even
have an account in the cafeteria were any indication, something was rotten in the state of Denmark.
Or the halls of its hospital.
The metaphor still worked.
A call of "You!" broke me out of my thoughts. I saw an older man in a suit coming over, Dr. Texts-a-lot behind him along with two orderlies that wouldn't look out of place as gang muscle. I glanced over at Panacea who had fallen asleep as I pondered the situation, and stood up to meet them.
"Can I help you?" I asked politely, aware of the other people in the cafeteria, two of which had already pointed their phones at me.
"What the hell do you think you're doing?" the man demanded.
"Well," I responded in a carrying voice. "Panacea and I had been healing patients all morning, and we took a quick break to eat some lunch before going back to work. Is there a problem?"
"You bet your ass there's a problem! You still have people to see and you attacked my doctor!" he yelled.
I looked at him, adopting a confused body posture.
Is this guy an idiot? I thought
Or just so sure of his own power he thinks I should just bow. "I'm sorry, I must have misheard you." I asked him in a confused tone. "I've been working for four hours, and Panacea twelve without a break. Also, I never touched the man."
"You sicced your bugs on him!" he accused, ignoring my point.
Like Lung, is that a thing here? Is this why Herb hates New Hampshire?
"One," I started slowly, "So you
agree that we had been working hours without a break and two, no I didn't. I suggested, that since he was so busy that he was trying to physically drag the teenage girl who was on the verge of passing out back to work," I stated, waving towards the currently sleeping girl, "I could get the insects that have nested in the hospital to follow him out, so he could help while we got food. He turned down my offer. Neither I nor any insect I controlled touched him."
"And the food!" The man continued. "I've been informed that you didn't pay for it. As the Administrator of this hospital I could call the cops and have you arrested for stealing!"
Dear god, is it like a disability or something? And he's the Administrator? Oh, no, I realized.
I know what this is. He's either making things up or taking them out of context to make his point, and instead of admitting he's wrong he's just jumping to the next thing. I've met people like him before. This is not a person I can have an honest dialog with, time to change tactics.
I straightened up and looked him in the eye. "Are you telling me," I asked calmly, but letting the offense into my voice, giving it the qualities that would carry straight to several phones I saw recording. "That we've been working at your hospital, performing services for which I'm
sure that you've charged hundreds of thousands of dollars for, today alone, and not only are you
not paying us a thing, you aren't even supplying us food and demand that your volunteers are not allowed to leave, acting the same as
kidnappers? I've been here less than a day I'm sure that the local news would love to hear how this hospital, despite having a nigh-
magical healer was paying her nothing, denying her breaks, and was giving her no support whatsoever. On top of that, when said hospital gained the service of a
second super-powered healer they managed to alienate him in. A. Single. Morning!"
The director looked like he wanted to punch me, but doubled down on his high horse, settling for. "You are no longer welcome in this hospital, leave and never return, but first pay for the food you stole!"
I looked at him for a second, before I had to laugh. "Fine, whatever, you'll never see me in Brockton Bay Memorial Hospital again." I reached into my belt, the orderlies tensing as I took out my wallet, grabbing a fifty and leaving it on the table. Stowing it I turned back to Panacea. "Wake up Panacea, we're apparently not wanted."
"Not her!" he said. "Just you. We'll take care of her. Leave or you will be forced to leave!"
Again, I looked at him for a moment.
What is wrong with this guy? I thought, before it clicked.
Powers, most people have one, maybe two. He hasn't been informed I have an Alexandria Package.
He's underestimating bugs and thinks that I can only heal, like Panacea claims. If I obviously use my biologically themed powers to attack people who are physically attacking me, he can try and play victim and fearmonger, but if I drop them with fisticuffs, he can't use that angle. "Yeah. No." I said. "This girl's been run ragged, call her emergency contact and I'll leave when I know she's not with people that work her to exhaustion."
"I will do no such thing!" he yelled, motioning for the orderlies to do something. I looked at them with an eyebrow raised.
"Yeah, you are
not police officers, and if you put your hands on me, I will defend myself from your assault." They glanced back at the Administrator, who motioned them forward. I waited until one of them grabbed me before taking his arm, pulling it off my shoulder and shoving him backwards into the space between tables. He skidded several feet, looking surprised. "Right, I also have an Alexandria Package. I'm not moving until I'm sure she's safe, as apparently this hospital likes to assault people, or someone with
actual authority shows up. Call. Her. Contact."
"I don't negotiate with criminals!" The blowhard stated, arms crossed, having now spotted the cameras.
"Then you shouldn't talk to yourself, since you've technically committed conspiracy to commit battery, and have all but admitted to false imprisonment. If you won't call her contact, I'll borrow her phone to do so." I told them, walking over to her robe and reaching a hand in her pocket to get her phone."
"He's molesting her, get him!" the idiot yelled, trying to play to the crowd. Leaning over to get the phone, one hand in her pocket I was in an awkward position, but still had no problem swinging out with my other hand slamming it into the chest of the other orderly who tried to tackle me, sending him into a table as a few people screamed.
Standing back up I looked at her phone, accessing her emergency contact, which was her adopted sister, Victoria, A.K.A. Glory Girl. "Are you high on painkillers or something?" I asked as I waited for her to pick up. "I told you exactly what I was doing. Throw incitement of violence on that list of reasons why you're a criminal."
"Hey Ames, What's up?" A teenage voice answered from the phone.
"Hello, this is Vejovis, new hero, healer, I'm at cafeteria at Brockton Bay Memorial Hospital. I was working with your sister when she collapsed from exhaustion, and the hospital staff refused to call you, attacking me when I tried. I'm guarding her until you can get here."
"What the fuck!?" she cried, and I could hear a quick "Sitch at the hospital Ames is in trouble, got to go, Dean" Before the sound of wind picked up. "Stay right there!" and the phone disconnected.
Looking up I saw the Orderlies trying to take phones from the people that had been recording. "Put it in an e-mail and send it to yourself," I told them. "Then the file isn't just on your phone."
"You!" The administrator raged futilely. "Do you know what you've done? You'll never work in another hospital again!"
"Oh no, I'll never work for free without breaks in a place where I get yelled at if I try to leave and attacked if I try to help my coworkers?
Whatever will I do with myself? Oh wait, I'll stay here until Glory Girl shows up." I drolled, glancing at the Orderly moaning on the remains of a table. "I want to say I'm sorry, but you did try to attack me when I was distracted, so I wasn't able to be as nice."
I stood there, waiting as several more Orderlies showed up and tried to force people to leave. Several near me who hadn't stopped recording moved around me to keep doing so, and when the orderlies tried to shove past me I shook my head at them, indicating the injured one who they carried away before backing off.
I heard someone shout "wait!" and felt a feeling of artificial awe a half second before Glory Girl flew through the door, the sounds of footsteps coming behind her as an unpleasant looking man ran in behind her. She took one look at the cafeteria, myself standing between her sister and a squad of orderlies, and the people filming it all behind me before demanding, "They say you kidnapped her! What the hell is going on?"