Aftermath
Part Eight
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Outside the Hebert Residence
"Okay, raise your arms, please, sir."
Obediently, Danny lifted his arms. The officers attending him were in the process of placing a protective vest on him when her voiced a question. "Just out of curiosity, what will this actually do for me?"
The officers stopped and looked at him.
"It's a
protective vest," explained the one – his name tag read ROGERS – in a patient tone. "It'll stop a knife, and maybe a bullet - "
" … so why am I putting one on, here?" asked Danny, indicating the swarm. It was by now not only covering his house in its entirety, but filling the yard and spilling over on to the street and two other yards in the process. The combined humming and buzzing was quite audible where they were standing, fifty yards away.
"Regulations, sir," the other one put in, placing a hand on his shoulder. "Now if you'll just -"
"
No," Danny snapped, and they both stopped as though frozen in place. Immediately, he became aware of three different guns pointed at him. He raised his hands. "Shit, sorry. Didn't mean to do that. But we're going to be facing
bugs. What the hell use is a bullet-proof vest going to be?"
"Stand down," Armsmaster ordered, and the guns were lowered. He stepped up alongside Danny. "Your point is valid. You won't be facing bullets or knives in there; we can still give you the protective clothing if you wish."
Danny shook his head. "No. I'll go in as I am. Either Taylor knows me, and listens to me, or … she doesn't."
<><>
Armsmaster didn't know what to do in this situation. The man was obviously resigned to his fate. If whatever was controlling those bugs, causing them to swarm, was indeed his daughter, then he was in no danger. If it was not her, or had been her but was no longer sapient or even sentient, then he stood a very good chance of being stung or suffocated to death.
If she's dead, he doesn't want to live.
Awkwardly, he put his armoured gauntlet on Hebert's shoulder and squeezed slightly. "I understand, sir." He didn't, not really, but it was something that someone in a movie might say, so he said it.
Hebert didn't answer; to break the silence, Armsmaster turned toward the other Protectorate capes on scene. "There'll be four of us going in to support you, as well as the two police officers. I've adjusted my armour so that nothing can get to me without passing through a very fine filter. Aegis, Shadow Stalker and Clockblocker will be accompanying us; Clockblocker's costume is full-body, Shadow Stalker can go to shadow form in an instant, and Aegis is in little danger from a swarm of bugs."
Hebert looked at Aegis a little curiously.
Good, he's paying attention. "I … I can see how the others are protected, but how do you … ?"
Aegis smiled. "My powers are all about adaptation and adjustment, sir. Also, I can fly. If I get stung, my body adapts to the venom almost at once. If they get in my eyes, I can see by light hitting my skin, or echo-location."
"And if they get in your mouth?" asked Hebert.
"Then I'll breathe through my ears," Aegis informed him. Armsmaster was not surprised; he had heard of the boy pulling that stunt once before. Clockblocker seemed to think it was funny; at least, he sniggered when it was mentioned. Armsmaster wasn't sure why.
Hebert drew himself up to his not inconsiderable height. "All the same, I want to thank you. All of you. You really don't have to go in there with me, I know. So I appreciate it."
Aegis nodded and held out his hand. "You're welcome, sir. And may I say, you're a braver man than me. I know
I wouldn't want to walk in there without powers or protective clothing."
Hebert shook it. "I can't
not do it," he stated simply.
While Hebert spoke to Aegis, Armsmaster turned to the other two Wards. "Clockblocker, Daniel Hebert is your responsibility," he warned the boy seriously. "If it's looking like the swarm's not listening to him, then be ready to freeze him. If that happens, we'll bring in containment foam, cover him, then carry him out of the swarm that way."
"And me?" asked Shadow Stalker.
"You can't protect anyone, but you can scout," Armsmaster told her. "Look around the house, see if there's a nexus for the swarm, where they're particularly concentrated. If we have to destroy the swarm, any information you gather could be particularly valuable. But don't risk yourself; if they look like attacking you, go to shadow."
She nodded. "So, we got a layout of the house? So I know where to look?"
He nodded and pointed at a folding table with several sheets of paper on it. "Not enough time to jump through all the hoops to get the official blueprints out of storage, but Hebert's a fairly good freehand artist. Basement, first floor, second floor."
"Got it," she told him, and wandered over to examine the drawings. Armsmaster saw one finger lower itself to the drawings, tap on the paper. She was obviously thinking, deciding where to check out first. He decided not to bother her, instead re-checking his halberd.
Along with his armour, he had adjusted it for this mission; the EMP would now blast out a localised electrical discharge, frying any bug within six feet of him. It would feel strange to a person, but the police – who would be wearing protective clothing – would be unharmed. One shot wouldn't drain the power supply, but nor was it unlimited. He would accompany one officer, while Aegis stayed with the other; in the case of emergency, the Ward was to fly them both out of the building.
Of course, if Hebert managed to get the swarm to calm down and disperse, all of this planning would be immaterial. But he preferred to make plans as if every single one would be carried out in full.
Better to have a plan and not need it, than to need a plan and not have it.
Collapsing the halberd once more, he stowed it on his back. All he needed now was the green light to go in.
<><>
Winslow High School
"Please take a seat."
Emma Barnes pulled out the chair and sat down; she eyed the policewoman warily. "Am I going to need a lawyer here?"
"Not unless you believe that you're being accused of a crime," Dana McAllister replied easily. "Right now, this is just a follow-up interview, to go over some things we may have missed before."
Her tone was matter-of-fact, but Emma felt uncomfortable, as if there were a trap looming that she could not see. She shifted in her seat, and glanced at the school counsellor. The grey-haired lady nodded encouragingly. "I'm sure it's nothing, dear."
"Maybe I should call my dad," Emma ventured.
Detective McAllister shrugged slightly. "Be my guest. But in the time it takes for him to get here, I'll be interviewing someone else. So you'll be waiting."
She seemed nonchalant about it; almost
too nonchalant.
I think she's trying to bluff me into not calling him. "I think I
will call him," Emma decided. She stood up from the chair and moved to the door of the meeting room. "Who do you want me to send in?"
McAllister consulted her notes. "Sophia Hess, please."
Emma froze for a moment.
Sophia's off being a Ward. "Oh, uh, I don't think she came in today," she temporised. "She might be sick."
Call someone else in.
McAllister frowned. "I didn't get notified of that by the principal's office." She looked up at Emma. "Go, call your father. I'll still be here when he arrives."
The dismissal was obvious; Emma exited the room and closed the door. Pulling out her phone, she dialled; the number she called was not her father's.
<><>
Outside the Hebert Residence
Shadow Stalker looked down as her personal phone trilled. She hooked it out of the pouch, and had just enough time to see that it was from Emma before a shadow fell over her. Swiftly cancelling the call, she glanced up to see Armsmaster.
"That wasn't a PRT phone," he observed.
Well, no shit, Halbeard. "No, I carry a private phone."
His lips tightened behind the fine-weave mesh designed to stop bugs getting into his helmet. "Now is not the time to be taking private calls, Shadow Stalker. Turn it off or turn it over."
"But -"
"We're about to enter a highly dangerous environment where
any distraction could prove fatal," he snapped. "The phone gets turned off, or you give it to me. Now."
Reluctantly, she nodded. "Yes, sir. I'll turn it off." She waited, but he didn't move; she pressed the button to turn the phone all the way off. He continued to watch as the phone shut down, and as she stowed it back into the pouch.
Then he leaned close. "If that had gone off inside the house, Mr Hebert could be dead right now. Do you want that on your head?"
She waited a few seconds, until she realised that the question was not rhetorical. "Uh, no, I don't."
He nodded. "Don't turn that phone on again until we're done here. That's a direct order."
Fuck. Violating a direct order wouldn't breach her probation, but it wouldn't do her any favours, either.
Now I'm gonna have to wait to find out what Emma wants. "Sir," she replied.
"Good." He moved off, but she didn't dare pull the phone out again. For someone as blind to social cues as Armsmaster was, he was damn good at noticing things like that.
Come on, let's get this over with.
<><>
Winslow High School
"
Sophia? No, she's not sick. She went to school the same as usual, this morning."
"Thank you, Mrs Hess," Dana replied. "Do you know of any place that she might be, that I could contact her at?"
"
I'm not sure. She has a friend, Emma someone?"
Despite the fact that the other woman could not see her, Dana shook her head. "I just spoke to Emma here, at school. If Sophia's away, Emma's not with her."
"
Hmm." Sophia's mother sounded concerned.
"She may be seeing her social worker. She does that some days."
"Social worker? Okay. Got a number?" That was interesting; the notes from the Hess interview didn't mention a social worker.
"
There's one around here somewhere … ahh, here it is." She read it out. Dana scribbled it down.
"I hope that helps."
"I'm sure it will. Thank you very much for your time, Mrs Hess."
"
Not at all." In the background, Dana could hear a crying infant.
"I'm sorry; I have to go."
"Have a good day." Dana put the phone down, then picked it up again, and dialled the number that she had been given. While it was ringing, she idly clicked through some files on her laptop. A folder caught her eye;
Winslow Photos.
That was the set of pictures she had gotten, and gone through fruitlessly to find if any of Taylor's alleged friends were with her in them. She clicked it open again, and started looking through them once more, an unformed suspicion driving her.
One photo almost leaped off the screen at her; a photo of Emma Barnes and Madison Clements congratulating Sophia Hess on getting the one hundred yard prize at a school track meet.
Emma. Madison. Sophia. All three names were very prominent in Taylor Hebert's bullying diary.
As the phone continued to ring, she flicked through more photos, looking for the same three faces. Again and again, she found them together. More than could be attributed to simple coincidence.
Those three are friends. Just not with Taylor Hebert.
"
Hello, Sara Foster speaking." The voice on the other end of the phone was female, youngish, somewhat frazzled.
"Hello. This is Detective Dana McAllister of the BBPD. Am I speaking to Sophia Hess' social worker?"
"
I … yes, I'm her social worker. What's this about?" Dana thought she detected suspicion and wariness in the other woman's tone.
"I need to get in touch with her. You may have heard about the murder at her school?"
"
Yes. It was a terrible thing. You don't think that Sophia's got anything do do with that, do you?"
"I don't know anything yet, Sara." Dana took a breath. "But some evidence has come up that's potentially implicated her, and I'd like to re-interview her on the matter -"
"
You're wasting your time, Detective." The tone was flat.
"Sophia had nothing to do with it."
Dana blinked. "I … you sound very certain. What makes you so sure?"
"
Take it from me. Sophia is the very last person in the world to do something like this."
"Sara, listen to me. I have a stack of notes here that directly accuses Sophia and her friends of orchestrating a vicious and ongoing bullying campaign against Taylor Hebert, since at least September of last year. If they would do this, then -"
"
It's faked."
Dana was taken aback. "You haven't even
seen this. How can you know such a thing?"
"
Because Sophia wouldn't do it. Trust me, I know."
"For God's sake,
how do you know it?" demanded Dana McAllister.
There was a long silence.
"I'm not at liberty to discuss that."
Dana frowned. "You're acting like she's a secret agent or something."
"
Detective, if you pursue this, you will be putting Sophia's life in danger. More to the point, you will be breaking the law."
Dana took a deep breath. "Sara, I
am a police officer. The law has already been broken. A girl is
already dead. Sophia Hess
is a suspect. You have yet to give me anything concrete to say that she isn't."
In the back of her mind, she was turning over what the 'social worker' had already told her.
Dollars to doughnuts, she's no damn social worker. She's more than that. But she's responsible for Sophia in some way, and now she's trying to cover her ass as hard as possible.
What could Sophia be mixed up in that warrants this sort of protection from above?
Sara's voice interrupted her train of thought.
"This conversation is over." The phone went dead.
Dana stared at it. "What the
hell?"
People didn't hang up on police officers. It just wasn't done. Or rather, doing it was a dead-certain way of drawing
more attention down on themselves. So why would Sara, whoever she really was, have risked such a thing?
And what's Sophia mixed up in?
Carefully, methodically, she began to note down the conversation with the 'social worker', in as much detail as she could recall. This would have to be followed up on; once she got back to the station, she would have that number traced and hopefully located.
Before she was finished, her phone rang again. For a moment, she thought it might be Sara, ringing back with more obscure admonitions. But it was Lieutenant Fahey, from the precinct.
There must be a break in the case.
Thumbing the 'answer' button, she held the phone to her ear. "McAllister."
"
Detective. I have a message for you."
"Shoot."
"
You are to cease investigating … what was the name … Sophia Hess … immediately. Whatever the case is, she's not a part of it."
Dana's jaw dropped.
"What? Sir, all my evidence suggests otherwise!"
"
Nevertheless, the captain just passed the word on. Hands off Sophia Hess."
"But
why?"
"
Not my department, Detective. Captain's orders." He paused.
"A written copy of that order has been emailed to your phone."
Dana heard the ping in her ear that told her the email had arrived. "Sir, just do me one favour?"
His voice was cautious.
"That depends."
"Could you ask the captain where this order originated? I'd like to know who's shutting us down like this. Because I just got off the phone with a so-called social worker who gave me the same spiel without providing a single goddamn reason why I should believe her."
He paused.
"I can try. Can't promise anything. But if I get a verifiable answer, you'll drop Sophia Hess as a suspect. That's an order."
"Understood, sir. And thanks."
"
Don't thank me yet, McAllister." The phone went dead.
Dana laid it down on the desk and started going through the notes. She used a yellow highlighter to colour in Sophia's incidents, a pink one for Emma, and a green one for Madison. She was halfway through the second page when the phone rang once more. It was Fahey again. She snatched it up.
"Lieutenant?"
"
Detective. I just spoke to the captain. He said it was the Deputy Director of the PRT. Sophia Hess is, and I quote, a person of interest in an ongoing investigation. Now can you drop it?"
"But why would the PRT be investigating a high school student? It doesn't make sense."
"
I did you your favour. You have your orders."
"Sir." She ended the call, and sat there for a long moment, thinking hard. Then she turned to the laptop and opened a browser page. Another long moment passed, then she typed in
Brockton Bay Wards and clicked the 'Image' tab.
The laptop processed her input, then flicked up a list of responses. She clicked on the second one, a recent publicity picture of the Wards ENE, as they were officially known. There was the leader, Aegis.
Where's Triumph? Oh, wait, he went on to the Protectorate. The irreverent Clockblocker, with clock-faces crawling over his costume. Gallant, in his metallic armour with the highlights. Kid Win, twirling a raygun of some sort on one finger. Vista, shorter than everyone, younger, for all that she'd been in the Wards longer than everyone except Aegis. And the last one, the most recent recruit. Dark clad, edgy, carrying twin crossbows. Her very mask a scowl of disapproval. Dark skin showing here and there. Long black hair, spilling out from under the hood.
Shadow Stalker.
She pulled up the photo of Sophia accepting the prize, looked back at the image of Shadow Stalker. They could definitely be the same person.
They are the same person.
It was not so much a realisation as a sudden flash of intuition, a leap in the dark. But she
knew, with a cold certainty, that it was true. It
had to be. It was the only thing that fit all the facts.
Sophia Hess is Shadow Stalker. I'm sure of it.
Which doesn't prove that she did it. But the things Taylor wrote down; she's prone to be more physical than the others. Shoving Taylor into the locker, if any of those three did it, it would be her.
And she's being protected by the PRT. They probably don't know she did it – at least I hope they don't know – but they're covering up for her so that her cape identity doesn't come out into the open.
So if Sophia Hess has dropped off the face of the earth … where's Shadow Stalker right now?
She was pretty sure that if she called up the PRT again, she would not get a straight answer. The 'social worker' using the name Sara Foster had probably called the Deputy Director and put a flea in his ear, thus precipitating the call to the captain.
Her superior outranks my superior.
I'm not finished with this yet. I just have to figure out how to attack it.
While she was considering that, she picked up her phone and dialled a number from memory.
<><>
Hebert Residence
Taylor Hebert had discovered an interesting fact. The more bugs she gathered to herself, the more clearly she could think. And so, right at that moment, she was pulling as many bugs into the house and surrounding area as she could possibly manage. She couldn't feel them as individual entities; they were part of the Swarm, each of them contributing a tiny bit of itself to house her consciousness.
I'm not losing myself, she decided.
I'm all here. I can remember my childhood, and what Dad and I had for Christmas dinner.
She had also detected her father; he was down the block just a little way; however, there were people with him, people in uniforms. Her senses were still fairly basic, so she couldn't determine much past 'uniforms', but they were official in some way.
Are they the police? Has Dad gotten into trouble somehow because of me?
The men who came here last night, did he send them?
She began to wonder if she had been a little precipitate in chasing them away. But on the upside, she had managed to finish her note to her father.
He'll know it's me. He'll know I'm alive.
<><>
Brockton Bay Central Precinct
"Homicide, Don Garbutt speaking."
"
Don, this is Dana."
Don leaned back in his chair, propping his feet up on an open desk drawer. "Detective. What can I do for you?"
"
Actually, I was wondering how you were going with Organised Crime and Daniel Hebert."
Don snorted. "That's done with. I asked them about Hebert and the Dock Workers, and they assured me that they weren't running any operations there, because the man's as pure as the driven snow."
"
You're certain of this."
"Absolutely. Some of the Dock Workers have been known to take jobs with villains, but there's not even a whiff of kickbacks to make sure this happens. About the only tie to criminal activity is his wife; she was a follower of Lustrum in college. And that was maybe twenty years ago, and his wife died two years ago."
"
So, nothing."
"Zip, zero and nada."
She paused.
"Okay, what's the progress of getting those notes from the Hebert house?"
"Currently? PRT's setting up some sort of operation to go in. They've got Hebert, plus our men, and they're sending them into the place with protective gear on. Also, some capes from the Protectorate and Wards are going along to protect them."
"
Why Hebert?"
"Hell if I know. Or even where he's been over the last twelve hours."
There was a long pause from her end.
"Don, what capes are on site there?"
Garbutt frowned and glanced at his notes. "Uh, Armsmaster, Aegis, Clockblocker and Shadow Stalker, looks like."
"
Christ, so that's where she is."
"What?" He brought his boots to the floor with a
thump. "Why are you so interested in Shadow Stalker all of a sudden?"
"
I can't tell you, Don. Not right now. In fact, we never had this conversation."
Garbutt frowned. McAllister was a pain in the ass sometimes, but mostly she was a straight shooter. This sort of double-talk was not what she usually did. "What's going on?"
"
Not something I can talk about. But do me a favour?"
"Uh, I guess. If you're allowed to tell me what it is."
He could almost hear her rolling her eyes.
"Smartass. Get hold of the email that the PRT sent us with those sheets, and forward it to the Director of the PRT, with a covering note that the 'Sophia' mentioned is Sophia Hess, and that she's a suspect in a murder case. See what shakes out."
"I … okay, sure, I can do that. But why? It's not like the PRT investigates homicide cases."
"
Just do it, okay, Don? Thanks, I've got to go." Her voice was jerky, like she was running.
"Wait -"
But it was too late; she had ended the call. With a sigh, he turned to his computer, and started running down the email address for the Director of the PRT.
Not sure what McAllister thinks she'll get out of this, but hey, she wants me to do it.
<><>
Outside the Hebert Residence
Armsmaster raised his voice. "All right, everyone! We have the green light to proceed. There are troops on all sides of the house with insecticide sprayers; if you find yourself being swarmed, run toward them. We all have been issued with individual cans; only use them if you feel that you are
personally under threat. We're going to try to do this the easy way
first, to give Mr Hebert the chance to talk to the swarm. Only if that
fails do we try the other way. Does anyone
not understand this?"
No-one raised an objection, although everyone except Hebert himself was clutching at least one canister of the concentrated insecticide that had been supplied for this mission. Armsmaster nodded in satisfaction; turning to Danny, he gestured toward the house. "Okay, sir," he added quietly. "Let's go talk to your daughter."
<><>
Winslow High School
With her briefcase in one hand and laptop case in the other, Dana McAllister took the steps outside of Winslow two at a time. Once she finished the call with Don and was able to put the phone in her pocket, she was able to swap the laptop to her other hand and run faster, but it was still too slow for her.
Reaching her car, she fought to catch her breath while she dug her keys out of her pocket. The central locking
pip-pipped open, and she climbed into the vehicle, tossing the cases on to the passenger seat. She stabbed the key into the ignition; the engine started on the first try. Seconds later, she was peeling out of the parking lot.
Even as she drove, she was connecting the dots at an alarming rate. Pieces of the puzzle which she had thought to be totally unconnected were fitting together in new and unexpected ways.
Sophia Hess is Shadow Stalker. She's been bullying Taylor Hebert for at least four months, maybe more, with the help of Emma Barnes and Madison Clements.
It occurred to her that murder had not been Hess' intention, but no matter the
intent, Taylor Hebert was still dead. We'll let the courts work that one out.
Taylor dies. No witnesses willing to talk, so Hess thinks she's free and clear. Until the Veder boy approaches Danny Hebert. Someone saw them talking, maybe Hess herself. She could have gone to him that night, as Shadow Stalker, found out what he said. Fed him the line about organised crime. He said it was a cape who told him that.
It made sense. She changed lanes, whipped around a slower car, and accelerated again.
Someone put a plastic bag over Veder's head and suffocated him. No signs of struggle, so it must have been someone he trusted, someone who could leave him in a locked room. Shadow Stalker would fit that profile. He gave us the information she wanted him to give, then she killed him in a way that should have been passed off as a stupid accident. If it wasn't for the posters …
She paused to think about Shadow Stalker. The girl was a bully; a violent one at that. She had joined the Wards in October; she had been a vigilante for a year and a bit before that.
Wasn't there some report regarding her, about excessive force? I'd have to check that.
It was a long-standing trope that putting on a mask allowed people to express themselves in ways they normally repressed; if Hess was a bully
normally, what was she like in costume?
We need to see if Hess has access to zip-lock bags like that. Evidence bags, right. Okay. So, she goes to Winslow. The 'social worker' was her contact with the PRT. Some sort of liaison?
So now we're sending people into the Hebert house, where Taylor left her notes. Shadow Stalker is going in as well, along with Taylor's father. If he reads the notes, and she does too, she'll realise they implicate her, and that he's seen them. Which means that he's in danger from Shadow Stalker, unless I can get there in time.
She considered calling ahead.
But even if I had someone's number, what do I say? That Shadow Stalker might try to murder Danny Hebert, just like she did his daughter? How do I even do that, without outing her secret identity? I know PRT personnel have the area closed off, but I don't have a contact number. I'm better off talking to someone in person.
Her hands clenched on the steering wheel. The speedometer was showing numbers somewhat in excess of the limit.
I just hope I'm in time.
End of Part Eight
Part Nine