Collateral Damage
Part Eight: Totally on Purpose
[A/N: This chapter beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]
Taylor
"
Dibs?" Dad turned to me disbelievingly. "You can't just pre-emptively claim a kill like that."
I snorted in derision. "Sure I can. You're just salty because I said it first."
"Are you honestly trying to
compete with me on kills?" He still sounded like he was trying to make sense of it all.
"Compete? No. Catch up, maybe yeah." I gestured broadly. "You've got a
massive head start on me. Behemoth, Houston, the CUI. I've got the Bitches Three plus Brandish. If you jump in every time we're facing someone who needs to die, I'll
never get enough notches on my belt to ensure nobody's willing to fuck with me when you're not there."
"Hm. I suppose so. Have at it." He gestured magnanimously at the solid wall of steel columns that had appeared between us and Max Anders. He'd been strongly suspected to be Kaiser by Director Piggot, but never by quite enough margin to act upon; the barrier definitely proved it, but also blocked him away from us.
Or so he might have thought.
Stepping forward, I flexed my hands around the haft of the sledgehammer, then swung it into the face of the steel wall. The hammer wasn't light, but even if I'd swung a normal hammer with all my strength, there would've been nothing more than a dull
clang and an embarrassing rebound. I could've pounded on that wall all day long and done nothing more than mar the finish here and there.
The hammer, being Dad's tech, was anything but normal. At the moment that the head made contact, the mechanisms he'd built into it flared with indigo light and released a truly staggering burst of kinetic energy. The harder the impact, the more powerful the resulting kinetic burst; I hit the wall even harder than I'd attacked the desk back in Winslow.
There was an explosion like a baby nuke going off (though my ears were protected from the worst of it) and when my eyes cleared, the wall had been shredded. So had the desk, the wall behind it, and indeed most of the top of the Medhall building. Chunks of concrete and steel and glass were likely raining down all over Brockton Bay, but that was kind of an ongoing theme with us.
I stalked forward, fully aware that Kaiser wouldn't have survived the blast if he was fully exposed to it, but interested in seeing if there were bits and pieces of him left behind. Instead, I found the square opening of an elevator shaft where there should be no elevator shaft. Supervillains and their secret exits: what can I say?
"Great," I groused as I kicked random bits of rubble aside and peered down the shaft. "He probably got away because you were pissed at me calling dibs."
"Me?" Dad gave me a
Look, like I'd just tried to sneak an extra piece of pizza on TV night. "You're the one who
called dibs in the first place!"
"And I was utterly within my rights to do it, like I already told you." I rolled my eyes. "You know what? Fuck it. I am totally over this argument already." Holding the hammer up out of the way—I didn't want to destroy the
whole building, at least not yet—I jumped into the open shaft. However far down Kaiser had stopped, I figured, was where I wanted to be.
I fell for a couple of seconds, then I hit something hard. Just like when Dad threw me out of the hospital, the necklace flared indigo and blew a crater in my landing point, which happened to be the top of the elevator as well as the walls of the shaft. As usual, the explosion cancelled my downward momentum, which was useful because I saw a bunch of faces staring at me out of the hole in the side of the shaft, including Kaiser's. Faces I really, really wanted to talk to. (And by '
talk to' I meant '
blow the fuck out of'.)
However, I was about to start falling again, and I couldn't depend on the elevator to stop me, because me running into it had more or less destroyed it; what was left of it was falling too. I didn't want to fall all the way to the basement and have to climb all the way up again (because that would just piss me off
more) so I did the only thing I could think of.
Twisting sideways, I pulled some bugs to the soles of my feet and exploded them to redirect my fall through the hole into the area the Empire capes were staring at me from. This wasn't controlled flight, or anything like it. I had only the vaguest means of steering, and it was dependent on having enough bugs for forward thrust, but in this situation it was good enough.
Blasting in through the gaping hole I'd blown in the wall of the elevator shaft, I landed awkwardly and tumbled on the floor. The hammer wasn't the easiest thing to hang onto, and I lost my grip on it. Striking sparks from the floor, it clattered away from me until it was stopped by a foot.
Hookwolf's foot.
I looked at it, and gauged the distance to it. Then, as I climbed to my feet, I watched as he leaned down and wrapped his metal-clad hand around the haft. For a moment, I hoped Dad had maybe built a Mjolnir effect into it, but no such luck. He picked it up just fine.
For some reason, the knowledge that I really needed to work on my landings pissed me off even more. "You're gonna want to give that back," I said.
He shook his head and grinned at me as he hefted the hammer. "You know, I don't think I will. So you're what, Ragnarok junior? The kid trying to step into the old man's boots?"
"Right for the first bit, wrong for the second. Learning the trade alongside him." I ignored the rest of the Empire Eighty-Eight as I walked up to Hookwolf. He was a fearsome sight, already bulking out into his metallic battle form, but I was more angry than scared. "You're gonna give that back right now, or shit is absolutely going to get real."
He looked at me for a moment, then he hit me with the hammer.
The necklace flared indigo as it absorbed the impact, but to my disappointment, it didn't explode Hooksy into a million shards of bloody shrapnel, or even send him flying. I was the one who was slammed backward, rolling across the floor until I hit the far wall. It blew out, of course, but I stopped first.
"Well, that was a bit underwhelming," Hookwolf said, looking down at the hammer. "Hey, Alabaster, hold still a moment."
"What? Why?" Alabaster frowned, then the penny dropped. "Uh, you think that's really a good—"
Holding the hammer in one hand, Hookwolf hit him almost casually with it. I wasn't entirely sure what he was expecting, maybe for Alabaster to be thrown back against the wall like I'd been. Instead, he got the Brandish treatment. There was a brief flash of indigo light and Alabaster
exploded, like someone had shoved a live hand grenade up his ass and pulled the pin.
Make that two or three grenades; Alabaster went
everywhere. It was actually pretty impressive.
"Jesus
fuck!" After wiping some of Alabaster out of his eyes, Hookwolf stared at the hammer with a whole new level of respect, while the rest of them looked around as though they expected their teammate to just pop up again out of nowhere.
Off to the side, Othala gagged as she evidently realised what had happened. "I got some in my mouth!" she choked out, before she started throwing up.
"Give me that!" Kaiser, now wearing his trademark armour, reached for the hammer. "What were you even
thinking?"
"That it wasn't turned on or something," Hookwolf protested, reluctantly giving up the weapon. "
She took it okay."
"That's because she's his
daughter, you inconceivable moron," Kaiser hissed. "Do you honestly think he'd give her a weapon she could be hurt by?"
All eyes turned to me; I carefully didn't look down at the pendant Dad had given me. I did, however, start belatedly gathering more bugs together. Making them bite people was plan A, while making them blow the shit out of people was also plan A. Call it plan A
plus.
But if Dad came down here and saw that I'd lost the hammer to the Empire Eighty-Eight, I'd never live it down. So I had to get it back. And it seemed that even Hookwolf swinging it couldn't do much more than pinball me around; the pendant would save me from harm to anything but my dignity.
But I was totally
done with assholes taking my shit and playing keep-away with it. "Hey, Kaiser," I said. "I'm gonna need that back. Hand it over right now, and I
won't shove it up your ass and light you up like a road flare."
He hefted the hammer as he looked around at me. "You already tried to kill me once, girl. What makes you think I'm going to let you have a second chance at it?"
I was all out of fucks to give. "You're a villain in Brockton Bay. The fact you're not running for the city limits as fast as you can means you
are gonna die. Nothing you do or say is gonna change that, so why be an asshole about it?"
Hookwolf let out a derisive bark of laughter. "Christ, girlie, you've got stones bigger than your father's. Do you even have a name?"
I shook my head. "I'm not like you. I don't have the urge to play dress-up, to put on a face that isn't mine. Now, I've asked you to give me my hammer back three times. I'm done asking."
"Oh, the fuck with this!" Crusader pointed his spear at me. "Just fucking kill her already!"
Kaiser shook his head. "Not a great idea. Any attack that hits Ragnarok bounces back on the attacker ten times over. I'm guessing she's got something of the same going on."
"But Hookwolf hit her with the hammer and he's still here!" Crusader turned to look at me, and I saw it happen. I'd seen it before and I'd probably see it again, but never quite so clearly as right then: the birth of a Truly Stupid Idea.
"It's
her hammer, you ignorant fuck," Hookwolf reminded him. "You think it wouldn't be shielded against whatever the effect is, in case she accidentally hit her dad or something?"
"Don't call me ignorant! I
know it's her hammer! Kaiser, give it to me for a second!" Crusader's eyes were alight with the fervour of his plan. It was clear as day to me: he thought he'd figured out a loophole.
Loopholes, Dad had once told me, were a great way to stick your neck out and get it chopped off.
"I wouldn't bother trying to hit her with it," Kaiser advised, handing over the hammer with more than a little reluctance. "Hookwolf tried, and it only knocked her around."
"And if you knock me off the building, I'll only blow a hole in the sidewalk, then I'll be right back up here," I added. "I
will come after you, and I'll kill every one of you."
"Not if you're dead." Crusader looked around at his comrades. "Watch this."
"You forgot the 'hold my beer' part," I jeered. I had quite a few bugs gathered now. Hiding a bunch of them behind my back, I fired them up with the indigo glow. Whatever Crusader did now, I
was going to get the hammer back.
"Shut up." He did something that pulled all his ghosts back into himself, then made them come out again. This time, they were carrying replicas of the hammer. "This thing hits really hard, and my ghosts bypass normal protection, so fuck you. You're going to die."
"You're forgetting one thing." I braced myself, knowing I'd get one chance at this before I had to call on Dad for help, which I'd
never hear the end of.
"Yeah? What's that?" He didn't bother to wait for my answer. Two of his ghosts rushed me, swinging their hammers.
I felt the slightest tap of impact, then the pendant flared indigo. Crusader's armour flew off in all directions and he was crushed and torn apart bodily, like he'd just come between the collision of an eighteen-wheeler and a diesel locomotive. Even as the hammer slipped out of his grip, I detonated the bugs at my back, rocketing me forward so I could snatch it out of the air.
Hookwolf grabbed for me on the way past, but I was pretty sure that was more a reflex move than a consequence of considered thought. Given the way his arm explosively shattered all the way up to the shoulder, I got the impression that he probably hadn't meant to. He was armoured up, so the explosion caused a spray of shrapnel in all directions.
Kaiser and Menja and Fenja were protected, and Cricket did some cool acrobatic-ninja bullshit to get out of the way, but Stormtiger took a big hit and so did Purity. Both of them went down hard, with what looked like critical wounds. Othala was another unarmoured one, but Victor got in the way at the last moment, shielding her from the flying razor-edged steel.
"Never fuck with Ragnarok's tech," I said, and tapped the hammer into my palm. "Okay, who's next?"
"Secure her!" shouted Kaiser. "Nothing damaging! Nothing even remotely lethal!"
"Make me invincible," Victor said to Othala. "Make it so nothing can hurt me."
I raised an eyebrow. "You realise that even if I can't hurt
you, I can spread her all the way across Brockton Bay. Then, once she's dead, I
can hurt you. Moron."
"Dizziness isn't lethal," hissed Cricket. "And I'm real interested in seeing what it is that's flashing under your shirt."
"Too bad," I sneered. "You can die in ignorance."
Note to self: get Dad to figure out how to block the glow.
Pivoting, I hefted the hammer in both hands, prepping to piledrive Victor into the next county. As he came in, Cricket opened her mouth again. I wasn't sure what that was supposed to achieve, but the pendant flared and Cricket was blown backward. Everything from her sinuses down to her lungs erupted from her body, leaving her face and chest a cratered mess of bone shards and steak tartare.
I swung the hammer at Victor, but he got his hands around the haft and pulled it out of my hands. So I punched him instead, in the face. It didn't faze him in the slightest, but Othala went over backward with a cry of pain, blood spraying from her nose. When I tried to punch him again, he got behind me and put the haft of the hammer across my neck. He was bigger and stronger than me, and I didn't have the strength to stop him.
But that was okay. I didn't need it. Grabbing the hammer with both hands, I lifted both feet off the ground and drove them back against his kneecaps. There was a double crack of bone shattering, and Othala shrieked with pain as she collapsed.
Still, he had that thing up against my throat and it was starting to press pretty hard. I tried to elbow him in the ribs, but he swayed to one side. Menja (or maybe Fenja) came at me, and I kicked upward at her; my foot made contact and she was launched upward through the ceiling in a welter of blood and gore, leaving one armoured foot behind. I wasn't sure if she'd make it out of the building, but I didn't much care either.
I was tall for a girl, but Victor was taller. This gave me an idea but before I could implement it, the other Valkyrie ran at me. Screaming a name that sounded like "Nessa!", she swung a sword overhand at me, carving a huge gash in the remaining ceiling tiles.
By the time the sword came down on my head, she was scraping what was left of the ceiling, but she could've been at full height and it still wouldn't have helped her. The pendant flared, and what she would've done to me happened to her, only ten times as lethally. Shredded down the middle as messily as if I'd used a circular saw, her head more or less missing in action, she fell apart into two extremely rough halves. Her sword clattered to the floor.
I jerked my head backward, thumping it into Victor's armoured chest. It wasn't a serious impact between me and Victor, but it was for Othala. Already on the floor due to her shattered knees, she was slammed onto her back by an invisible impact that caved her chest in. Lying there with blood leaking out of her mouth and nose, she turned desperate eyes toward where I was still struggling with Victor, reaching out toward him.
Even without looking at her, I could tell the moment the light went out of her eyes and her body fell limp. I had the nails of one hand digging into Victor's wrist and the other on the haft of the hammer, and between one instant and the next, the texture of his skin went from as unyielding as granite to the consistency of marshmallow. It wasn't that I was super-strong; Dad had explained that to me. But while I was wearing the pendant, anything that had the potential to do harm now did a
lot of harm.
He was strong and he was trained, but all the will in the world was useless when I plunged my nails through his wrist and ripped half of it away. Letting out an ugly sound of agony, he let me and the hammer go, and fell away to the side. He stared up at me from his knees as he nursed his ruined wrist, and I thought I saw something in his eyes change. About one second later, I realised what I'd seen was his eyeballs melting and dribbling from the sockets as he screamed—briefly—and clutched at his head before falling over.
I didn't even know what that was about, but to be brutally honest, I didn't care either.
As I turned toward Kaiser, hammer raised and ready, he broke and ran. I didn't really blame him; the rest of the Empire Eighty-Eight had tried their best against me and failed utterly. The only one left alive was Hookwolf, still missing the arm, but stepping between me and his boss all the same.
If this had been a movie, there would've been a tense standoff between me and Hookworm. Something along the lines of me saying '
let me past' and him knowing he was going to lose but saying '
I can't do that'
. There'd be a fight, which I'd win, but it would delay me long enough for Kaiser to get away until the ultimate clash in the third act.
Like I gave a shit about dramatic pacing. A bunch of my glowing bugs flew straight into Hookwolf's face, burrowed under his mask, and blew his head clean off. I didn't so much as break stride as I ran past him.
For a guy wearing forty pounds of articulated metal armour, Kaiser was pretty damn fast on his feet. All I could think was, he must have had a lot of practice. He dashed out through a door and slammed it behind him; I heard the lock click.
Of course, he'd neglected to recall that I was carrying the Hammer of
Oh Fuck, which doubled as the ultimate lockpick. I took the door off its hinges, and the frame clear out of the wall, without slowing down. As I reached the corridor, I saw him ducking around the corner.
I decided to take a shortcut, so I hit the wall in front of me and shattered a massive hole through into what looked like a server room. The servers looked really expensive but they were also really in my way, so I swung the hammer a couple more times to open a path. Amid more sparks than the Fourth of July, I reached the far wall, opened a hole there, and emerged no more than a few yards behind Kaiser.
There was no way he could get away now, but he was going for it anyway. He bolted down the corridor to the stairwell exit, and slammed the panic bar to open the door …
… only to find Dad looming in the doorway.
I had to admit, Dad could do a really good loom. He had the 'silent menace' thing down to a fine art, and the glow of his chest-piece just put the icing on the cake. Kaiser certainly didn't go any farther, and he'd been the uncrowned king of the Brockton Bay underworld for
years.
"Really?" I asked. "You're stepping in now, when I've basically got this over and done? You know I would've caught him anyway."
"I know." He shrugged. "I was just thinking we could hurry things along. I've got a reputation to uphold, and this is dragging on a bit."
Kaiser stared from him to me and back again. "So you were here all along?" he demanded. "Why didn't you step in earlier?"
Dad shrugged. "She called dibs. As childish as that might be—"
"Hey!" I objected. "It's a perfectly valid claim!"
He rolled his eyes. "And childish. But anyway, what sort of a father would I be if I didn't step back and let my daughter cut loose once in a while? So here we are." He turned to me. "Anyone left?"
"Only Krieg, I think." I frowned, thinking. "And Rune. Maybe Night and Fog. But everyone back there's either dead or dying."
Dad nodded. "Good. Okay, finish this and we can get going."
I grinned and hefted the hammer. "Okay, Kaiser. Any last words?"
"Wait, wait, you don't have to do this." Kaiser raised his hands in supplication. "I'll turn myself over to the PRT. Testify to everything the Empire's done. Work at fixing the damage."
Dad snorted. "Do we look like
heroes to you?"
While Kaiser was looking at him, I swung the hammer. It hit Kaiser in the chestplate; there was a massive flash of indigo light, and a
CRACK of the sonic boom as he went out through the wall. More precisely,
all the walls. I wasn't sure all of him had made it out of the building, but I didn't much care either.
"Empire Eighty-Eight, done," Dad said, taking out a notepad and drawing a line through one entry. "We can mop up the remnants later. Coil next?"
I raised an eyebrow. "Do we even know where he is? The notes said he was fairly tricky."
He smiled in a way that boded ill for anyone crossing him. "They also said he was suspected of using minor gangs as his catspaws. Shall we go talk to them?"
I grinned in reply. "Let's do that thing."
End of Part Eight