This chapter beta'd by: mrwizard70 (Thank you!)
—
Saint licked his finger and turned the page. The whir of computer fans and general heat within in the small apartment had him all the way down to shorts and a t-shirt. He rubbed his face, and continued to force himself to read the blasted book in front of him. It had been a long year and a half.
It might not have been nearly as bad if they had kept him in the dark, instead it had been a constant strain to have his personal failures repeated continuously in every conversation. Kurt was unsympathetic in the extreme and Geoff couldn't really find it in himself to blame the man.
Not only are you wrong, your mathematically illiterate and boring to talk to.
He flicked to the next page stifling a laugh. They'd given him a reading list, like he was a grade school
child. He glanced up at the click, Dragon was uploading herself now from her body. He stood for a moment and walked to a laptop double checking the monitoring scripts, nodding to himself quietly before flopping back onto the cot.
Another turn of the page and Geoff watched as Dragon flew through her usual habits, the woman was nothing if not consistent, and now that Kurt was constantly poking at his paranoia it was sort of hard to ignore just how boring Dragon actually was most of the time. He rubbed his hair, tracing the metal on the side of his head with a grimace.
He blinked slowly, and set the book down sipping his coffee. What exactly did it say about his personal character that he had to have brain surgery to start functioning normally again. He took a gulp of the coffee and set it down harshly. It wasn't his fault that Teacher got in his head, not really, and he couldn't be blamed for the other man's influence.
He breathed out and went back to the book. There was more than enough blame to go around, and he had his fair share, and he was nominally attempting to make up for it all. It did very little to actually soothe his mind though.
Kurt passed into the room and refilled his coffee. "You want me to take over?"
Geoff shook his head, "I'm good for another hour or two. Dragon is active at the moment. I think she's finishing up her work with Paige right now."
Kurt twitched a bit and Geoff pushed on, "I really shouldn't have had to argue with you about that."
Kurt raised his eyebrows and looked about to retort before he smirked, "I guess that's fair."
Geoff set the book down and put some cream and sugar in the refilled mug. "Honestly the whole thing stank. I'm no saint," he grinned as Kurt chuckled, "but if we're in the business of saving the world we should maybe strive to make it the kind of place worth saving."
Kurt hummed. "Not that I disagree intellectually, but we are in the business of saving worlds plural. Bet could by a dystopic nightmare and so long as we win the vast majority of earths will be worth saving."
Geoff shrugged. "We've had this conversation before, I don't think either of us are wrong."
Kurt tilted his head. "Probably not. I'll be right back."
Geoff took another sip of his coffee and went back to the book. He startled a minute later at the blinking and warning sound from his laptop.
What?
He stood up in a flash and rushed toward it. His hands moved across the keyboard as quickly as he could manage. The blood drained from his face before he felt his mouth open.
"Kurt! No… no no no no no no."
Kurt rushed into the room as Saint's hands continued to move through commands.
"I can't stop it!"
Kurt lifted him up and slammed into the wall and Geoff let out a whoof.
"Why the hell would you activate it?"
Geoff struggled against the hand on his neck for a moment searching for words. He finally stuttered out his response. "I didn't! I swear it. It activated itself."
Geoff knew Kurt didn't believe him, which hurt a little all things considered. Kurt's phone buzzed and he glanced at the screen pulling it out.
He's telling the truth.
Kurt dropped him to the ground and looked over at the laptop. "She's dead now."
There was a moment of silence before Geoff burst into tears, and Kurt stepped back in surprise, "Was it all for nothing then?"
The phone buzzed again and Kurt spoke, "No.
Obviously not."
Geoff slumped against the wall, pulling his knees to his chest, taking deep breaths.
"Can you try and figure out why Ascalon activated? I didn't think it had any way to self activate?"
Geoff stood and leaned over the desk with the laptop and spoke softly, "There was always that section of code neither of us could interpret. Endless layers of obfuscation, I don't even think Richter knew what it did. It could have been hiding in there. Something tripped it though."
Kurt stilled. "What was she doing right before it happened?"
Geoff sat down and read the logs, his hands still shaking, "She was talking to Glaistig in the Birdcage, it'll take me a bit to pull up the archive data and make sense of it. I'll let you know when it's done."
Kurt pulled up his phone and started talking, "Contessa, it's worse than we feared."
—
I woke, feeling refreshed for the first time in days. Dad and Hana were still asleep so I gently woke Amy up myself. I decided to head to the hospital with her since it was still quite early in the morning. I thanked the universe for small mercies when we arrived since Carol was nowhere in sight. Vicky was wide awake and looking content, sitting up in her bed and idly changing channels on the television.
Her smile was brilliant when we entered. "I was getting so bored. They won't let me leave."
Amy cringed, and I put my hand on her shoulder, squeezing it in comfort. She relaxed a bit, and we sat down on opposite sides of Vicky's bed. Vicky grew quiet as Amy shrunk into herself.
There was a mutter and then Amy coughed and sat up straight, looking Vicky in the eyes. "I - I broke one of my rules."
Vicky's smiled sadly and asked, "Why?"
Amy rubbed her hands together before gesturing wildly. "You were going to
die. The surgeons excised some of the diseased tissue and the moment the tools touched it, it… changed. What Bonesaw did wasn't purely biological. It was a nano-virus. I had to do something, but - but…"
Amy took a deep breath looking at me and all the shadow's in her eyes grew over her face into shame.
"The virus was changing things about you, changing you into something else. So I stopped it!"
The pained whisper that followed hurt to hear. "It wasn't free."
Something flashed in Amy's eyes and she blurted, "Vicky - I - I - I love you."
She deflated instantly and shame radiated off her like the humidity in a rainforest. I looked at her closely, wondering why, when I noticed the tension and desperate position of her shoulders and eyes. The pieces fell together and I sucked in my breath.
No way.
Vicky looked at me and seemed to get more from my reaction than Amy's words, and her eyes went as wide as a breakfast skillet.
Her hands flew up to her mouth, her voice taking on a hysterical lilt. "Oh… Oh my god.
Really?"
Amy's countenance said it all and I grabbed her hand as she tried to shrivel up in front of me. Vicky laughed.
Amy jumped in surprise before Vicky started giggling.
"All those times… God... I mean, we aren't
really related. And… and..."
She drifted for a moment, trailing off, her eyes going distant before every movement and twitch in her body ceased. She was deathly still as a look of pure horror formed on her face and her teeth began chattering.
Her words dripped with revulsion when she finally spoke. "It was
me."
Vicky took a deep gasping breath and breathed out again too rapidly. Her breathing went out of control as she started hyperventilating. The tension in the room was so high I needed to take a deep breath before I grabbed Vicky's hand, "Deep breaths Vicky. Calm down, it's
not your fault."
Amy had grown still and contemplative and a strange look of relief was on her face. Maybe it wasn't so strange, if all the pieces like this were true, then it was terrible, tragic even, but completely understandable. I decided that I wasn't above manipulating people on the edge and said, "It's
neither of yours fault. And there is nothing wrong with either of you. Amy still has something to say, and it's important. Maybe we should table this particular discussion okay?"
Vicky took a moment to get her breathing completely under control and Amy seemed to stare at my eyes for a long time before they both nodded at me. It felt
weird to be in charge. When did I become the emotionally secure one?
Amy took a breath and continued, "The… The virus, it was twisting you. It was going to make you
love me. I'm not sure if Bonesaw knew or if she really is just that twisted. I had to make a choice, if I let the partial nano-virus run its course, it would make irrevocable changes to your brain. It was giving me options though, I had to change you and I had to allow some of the virus into myself. It wasn't difficult, trivial really, but that was the trick. Accept the nano-virus into me and make one change, any change in you, to your brain."
Amy shook herself for a second and stood up before she sat down again, leaning in, her voice earnest and desperate.
"If you would have been awake, I would have asked, I would have done
anything to know what you wanted, but I wanted you to live, and I also didn't want you to think that I did something out of my own selfishness, so I changed something but it wasn't that."
Vicky was quiet for a while and whispered, "I would have been okay with it. I would have understood. Much worse fates honestly."
Amy nodded a very small smile on her face, "Thank you. I wanted to do it, I was tempted to do it, but I kept thinking of the conversation I had with Taylor before we headed to the hospital about things we won't do. I was willing to give up my rule about brains, for you, because I love you. I was not willing to live with the shame of
coercing you into loving me. I would have never been able to accept it, I would rather have died than know it was fake, something I manipulated you into being."
Vicky's hand had found Amy's and she asked quietly, "So what did you change? And what did the virus do to you when you absorbed it?"
Amy drew up the sleeve on her left arm, scar tissue taking the shape of letters and I could see the virus still at work as new scar tissue formed at a glacial pace.
Was all that had appeared so far.
"I can't see what it's going to spell, it's only working on one letter at a time. If I were to guess though? I bet it finishes whatever it's doing on Ostara."
Amy nodded before a small smile appeared on her face. "The nano-virus wasn't that smart. It just wanted me to alter something, with very few caveats. I had to make a quick decision though and I wanted something positive, or at least not negative."
Vicky grew impatient. "What did you do Amy?"
Amy shrugged. "Honestly? I made an adjustment to the way your brain perceives flavors. You'll barely notice it unless you're eating ice cream."
I sputtered, "That's what had you so worked up?"
Amy shook her head. "No, of course not. I broke
every rule I've ever made about how I would use my power. And I — sure, I changed something innocuous — it's just ice cream. But… you see my point? I could make that specific change. It was trivial, my power just told me how. I could have rewritten her, or anyone, that's why I have that rule — had that rule."
She grunted in frustration. "Bonesaw didn't ask for much. If I thought her capable of it I'd say she was playing softball with me. Maybe she wasn't completely sure if my power could do it and wanted to torment me if I couldn't? I could though, and I did. I did it."
She closed her eyes and let out a soft keen. Vicky pulled her into her arms and Amy finally broke, starting to weep. She pulled slightly away and blubbered on, "It was the
right choice. I just had to throw away every promise I ever made to myself to do it. And the very idea… that I was forced to do it — that — that the woman I love and my sister would die or be made into something she wasn't if I didn't?"
She breathed out in a strangled huff. "I needed to say this. This needed to be out cause I'm not going to live like this anymore. Not when they're still here, waiting for a mistake."
Amy shuddered through a few choked sobs and continued. "I lost though. Bonesaw won. She made me play her game. I'm
not going to let her win again."
Her tone was steady and I believed her.
Amy spoke again, "I'm not going to keep the same rules anymore. I'm not sure how Bonesaw knew, but she used it against me, and she said it was just the beginning."
Vicky nodded and glanced at me, "I think I need some time alone with Amy."
I gave her a smile, nodded, and left the room.
—
December, of the previous year
She had never liked tight spaces. Even before it all happened, she'd never been the kind of kid to be fascinated by storm drains or anything like it. Brightly lit small spaces were bad enough, much less dark spaces that made her feel like the air clung to her skin. She'd been in this exact cell once before; the previous time they'd actually tied a live wire around her waist to keep her from escaping.
This time the custom-made cuffs took the wire's place. They weighed down and she felt like she was burning up from the inside while the walls pressed in, and the single light in the room felt too bright. She had steadfastly ignored the tears that had pricked at her eyes and slid down her cheek; it was bad enough that she had cried at all.
She couldn't even wipe the tears off her face; the cuffs covered her hands completely and the dirty sleeves from her costume would just irritate her eyes. The only thing it would accomplish was to exasperate her growing feeling of being in a strange human sized petri dish.
Just breathe, Sophia.
She tried. It didn't work, and she didn't dare close her eyes at the moment. That always made it worse, losing her sense of what was around her. She tried to breathe again and got zapped by her cuffs as she flickered for just a second.
She screamed in frustration, and leaned her head back to stare at the ceiling while the walls mocked her. She put her head between her legs and took deep breaths, trying to make the cell feel less small. It was the only lesson Yamada had given her that Sophia had listened to.
I hate this.
"Fuck. Fuck… fuck..."
She couldn't even put her head in her hands properly. There was no chair or bed in these cells either, they weren't meant to hold someone for more than a few hours. She turned into the wall, placing her cheek against the coolness of it. It helped give her a little bit of comfort.
She jumped to her feet instantly at the sound of movement, grimacing as she wiped her tears away on the dirty sleeve. She wasn't going to look weak in front of anyone.
"Hey kid."
Sophia turned, facing the voice. "What do you want Assault?"
"To talk."
She scoffed internally as despair quickly flashed into anger. "I've got nothing to say."
Assault held up his hands in surrender. "Hey, hey, I'm not here to make fun. I don't believe for a second that you have nothing to say. I might believe you don't think you have anything to say to
me. I have something to say to you though."
Sophia sneered. "Not here to gloat? That's a fucking first."
He grinned but it was brittle. "Hardly. I came here to make a deal with you."
She crushed the glimmer of hope but it survived anyway. "You're gonna get me out of here?"
Assault frowned. "No…"
Sophia growled, "Then why the fuck should I care?"
Assault's frown turned into a grin. "Because if you don't, you spend a lot more time in jail and you don't have any hope of joining the Wards again when you're done. You'll end up with a felony record. Which means even if the Protectorate takes you on, you'll be in probationary status long enough to recruit your own grandchildren. Trust me… I know how this works."
"How the hell would you know what this is like?"
Assault chuckled and leaned against the wall. "Well, because there was a time when I was sitting in the exact same position you are."
"Bullshit."
He let out a short laugh. "You ever hear about a villain named Madcap?"
Sophia's eyes widened. "You're Madcap? The Birdcage Buster? No way… Why are you telling me this?"
He shrugged. "Like I said, I want to make a deal. I think
you want to make a deal. I know what it's like to rage against the machine. But here... I've got one single solitary string to pull for you but I need to ask a question first."
A scowl and a tentative nod was her response.
"Why be a vigilante? Why not rob some places? Why be a hero?"
Sophia bit her tongue to keep a sour retort from forming. She knew Assault had some pull, she had to see what he was offering. She churned on the question and Assault pulled up a chair and waited. There wasn't any condemnation in his eyes, not even a bit of pity. It wasn't an expression she was familiar with from him. He was honestly just giving her time to think.
"I don't know. I just can't stand the thought of doing anything else."
He ran his hands over his sleeves as he spoke, "That's… fair. In fact, that's probably the most anyone has ever gotten from you the whole time you've been here. I know you've been frustrated. You hate being told what to do."
"You're damn right I do," she snarled.
Assault laughed. "Welcome to the club." His voice changed from lilting to a growl. "I couldn't stand the injustice of the Birdcage. I still don't like it."
He shook his hands out. "It's not the only injustice in the world though. You want to put all those weaklings in their place right? All the idiots who think the world owes them something cause they've got a gun and poor risk management skills."
"Fuck em."
Assault nodded. "Fuck em. I want you to be able to
keep doing that. So here's my deal, I pull my one string. Instead of going to Malsberg Pen, you go to Anderson Asylum. All you have to do is promise to be good and talk to the counselors there. Put real effort into it."
She grunted. "You want to send me to one of the Cape Asylums?"
"It's a lot better than the alternative and they can actually help you, Sophia. You also won't have to put up with a bunch of gang bangers you probably helped incarcerate. I know you can handle yourself, but I want you back here when it's all done. Not rotting for another ten years when you shank the idiots who try to come after you."
Sophia thought it over. She knew she could handle prison, but that wasn't what Assault was really offering though. He was offering to have her case treated as a mental problem, not a felony problem. All he was asking was that she be
good and talk. She could do those things. She hated to do those things, but she'd be out sooner. She could get back to doing what she was meant to do.
"Okay."
—
The psychologist in front of her frowned slightly as he read quietly on the other side of his desk. Eventually he spoke, his voice dripping with disdain.
"So I've been reading some of your codswallop in the transcripts. Strong versus weak, predator and prey. All very
enlightening. You have quite the makings of an armchair philosopher. Really, I admire your consistency. I managed to wrangle some confessions out of your case worker as well. Bullying, violence, a shitty family life."
Sophia blinked. "What the hell is your problem?"
"It's been two weeks, Sophia, and you've somehow gotten the rest of my colleagues to give up on you. That's actually a record. I'd be impressed if it wasn't so pathetic."
She was about to retort but bit her tongue. "You haven't given up though?"
He chuckled a bit, stood up, and pulled the other chair up to sit across from her just on the very edge of being uncomfortably close. "I'm taking a different approach. I'm going off script."
He paused for a moment, as he made sure they had eye contact. "What the fucking hell were you thinking pinning thugs to a wall with a lethal weapon? You
had to know you were going to get caught."
He shook his head. "So I've been thinking about that and I have a question. What got under your skin so bad you lost your damn mind Sophia?"
Sophia leaned back a bit at the vehemence.
"Who the hell do you think you are?" She breathed it out, almost not believing her own words.
He grinned. "Don't make me call Assault."
Don't you fucking mock me.
She wanted to say it but held her tongue as he pulled out his phone, ready and able to dial. She gasped and then growled, "Fine. FINE!"
She stood up and the chair fell backwards while she leaned into the man's face. He hadn't even introduced himself! "You fucking want to know? We'll how about this? You know that stupid bitch I was bullying? Emma and I fucked her up
good at the beginning of the school year. Not two weeks later her Dad is pulling her out of school and I've got to put up with Emma's fucking whining for months."
She scoffed, standing up straight and tugging at her sleeves. "I thought the stupid bitch was strong but she was… She was
boring. Without Hebert there, she was just another stuck up b-rate model wannabe. So we fought, and I told her she was a waste of my time."
She picked the chair up and sat down with a thump. "I was so fucking angry. She was supposed to be my friend, but she was just using me like a crutch."
Her hands came up, rubbing her face, a tinge of hysteria working its way up. "I went for a walk. I went down to the boardwalk. I wandered around for a bit and then what the fuck do I find? Taylor fucking Hebert eating ice cream with her dad and some older lady I didn't recognize. She's fucking smiling, not a care in the world. Like the whole year of hell I put her through was
nothing."
A choked sob escaped her, and she snarled at herself before taking a gasping, calming breath.
"She looked up and saw me, but she wasn't angry, it was like a queen looking down on a dirty peasant. She was just too damn happy with her Dad to care about me at all. Like I wasn't worth her fucking time. Like what I had done didn't even matter."
She felt her arms come up and start rubbing as she leaned over. "I was
jealous. I was fucking
jealous. Like fuck, how pathetic is that. That weak ass bitch gets to be happy, and I'm rutting around doing the same stupid bullshit every day with the kiddy Wards and their fun time special. It's pathetic."
She huffed before looking him in the eyes. "So I went out, I grabbed all my old shit and I was gonna make some stupid gang banger
hurt. Then a new ass hero, with a stupid fucking hat, comes out of nowhere and she puts me out like I don't even fucking matter. Fuck! I fucking matter!"
She was standing again and the chair was knocked over.
"I
matter." She barely whispered the last words. The room felt too small for a moment. but out of the corner of her eye she saw him smile. It wasn't mockery. Her shoulders fell, the tension falling out of her.
His grin grew wider. "That's more like it! That's the Sophia I want to talk to!"
He stood up and leaned slightly in. "Sophia, you
do matter. I
want you to succeed here. So come at me with that same honesty every single time. I am not fragile. You aren't going to scare me by telling me you hate someone or that you enjoy hurting people. I'm not your judge. I'm not your jailor. You want to be a hero, right?"
Sophia was silent for a moment. "Yeah. I do."
"Then instead of trying to say all the right things, instead of trying to toe the line, let's start with where you
actually are. Then let's figure out where you want to be. Then we'll talk about how to get from here to there. Can you do that?"
Sophia paused for a full minute before she spoke, her voice barely above a whisper. "Yeah. I can do that."
He picked up the chair and sat her down in it, leaning in and looking her in the eyes. "You're goddamn right you can. You can call me Alex."
Sophia smiled softly.
—
I arrived back at the apartment and blinked in shock at the change. The wall that had previously housed the TV was now an array of folding tables, with equipment organized fairly close to my lab on the Rig.
I turned my head to the kitchen and held back a laugh. Hana was leaning over the island, nursing a cup of coffee as she groaned quietly as my dad rubbed her shoulders. The sight was strange at first, but then it clicked.
I'd never seen Hana expose her back to anyone by choice. When we ate together in the cafeteria she would pick tables near walls, during briefings she picked the corner of the room to stand in, if she had to stand in the middle of a space her stance was always wide with her shoulders tense and ready. She was coiled tight, even at her most relaxed, and this was the first time I'd ever seen her so exposed.
I turned away from the sight, feeling like I was intruding on something. She had never talked about her trigger event to me, not that I had ever expected her to. I knew how to read a history book and do math though, and she'd never been particularly close lipped about her ethnicity, so I had a fair guess of just what kind of situation had shaped her.
I waited a minute or two, moving as quietly as I could, so I wouldn't interrupt, and sat on the folding chair, fiddling with a few of my tools. I pushed the hair out of my face and put it in a ponytail, then looked over the arrangement in front of me. Dad had pulled out the relevant blueprints and arranged them in order with the tools required as near as possible.
I took another quiet breath and started to work. There was a rustle behind me. I tilted my head and couldn't help but smile as my Dad wrapped Hana in a tight hug. I put it out of my mind and deliberately sunk into the fugue. There was work to be done.
I faded back into the room with a sandwich plate sitting in front of me and Dad rubbing my back.
"You should probably eat something Taylor. Didn't even hear you come in."
I smiled at him. "I didn't want to interrupt."
He smiled a bit crookedly and pulled at his collar a bit. "Well, I appreciate that. Why don't you sit at the kitchen table and discuss with Hana what we talked about last night."
I nodded, setting my tools down and grabbing the plate. I took a bite out of the grilled cheese.
"This is good!"
Hana laughed. "Glad you appreciate my culinary skills, but it's just grilled cheese."
Dad sat down at the table and I joined him, taking another bite. Hana squinted for a second before she spoke, "I'm putting you in for a medal."
I took another bite of sandwich and nodded.
"Yesterday was… less than ideal. You performed far beyond my expectations and those were already high and gained us valuable intelligence, after that bastard cut off your hand, you stood right up and kept fighting. I'm… I'm not sure how I feel about that, you shouldn't have had to, but you did, and you did it well. I'm beyond proud of you."
I smiled at her and she shifted awkwardly, "I wish I didn't have to be proud of you though."
Dad grunted in agreement but gave me a grin.
Hana rolled her shoulders back and tapped her fingers on the table. "Let's discuss next steps. Director Piggot is unlikely to call us in for at least a day. I know that we should expect some rapidly shifting allegiances. My best guess is we'll get at least two members of the Empire onside, and the rest are going to bunker down. Lung may still be compromised by the Nine, it's hard to tell, but his regeneration should eventually overcome anything they might have done. He's overcome Master effects before, and we know he overcame the Yangban's indoctrination methods. He was actually larger when he broke out of the sinking rig than he was when he faced Leviathan in Kyushu, if the reports are to be believed."
Hana paused, taking a sip of coffee. "He won't take the pardon, he's too proud either way. Coil's organization will probably disband and lay low since he's apparently dead. Unfortunately, I think this means it's likely to end up a three-and-a-half way fight. The Empire has wanted a chance to take the city for nearly a decade now, and the Nine are going to do what they do, and Lung is going to try and kill at least one of the Nine."
Dad spoke up, "You seem pretty certain about the particulars."
Hana ran her hand through her hair, the light curls bouncing in the light for a second. "I've dedicated my life to the Protectorate, and I don't regularly need to sleep. Sitting and fussing over intelligence reports isn't so much a hobby as it is a coping mechanism. It's lonely being up all night."
Dad blinked for a second and I felt some surprise myself. Hana very rarely talked about her emotions.
Dad's voice came out with a lilt. "You
can sleep though."
She grunted. "Yes, but then I
remember."
A small whine escaped me as the weight of that word hit me like a wave and the utter frustrated despair that tinged it. I rubbed my hands together nervously. Her expression left me in a strange lurch. I was about to stand and move to hug her when her shoulders shifted. A tension was there: a flight response I rarely saw in her. She looked ready to stand up and leave and Dad seemed to be stuck in the same quandary as I was. A long silent set of seconds passed and I settled for putting my hand out palm up.
"Thank you for telling me."
A flash of something passed on her face, before she set her hand in mine and squeezed it, before pulling away and falling silent.
Dad looked between us both for a few seconds before he came to a decision.
"We need to discuss your conversation with Tattletale."
I nodded and we settled down to business. I quickly went over the discussion I had with Lisa and detailed my concerns.
Dad tapped his fingers on the table while Hana spun the spoon in her cup of coffee.
Hana eventually spoke, "You said the Siberian might not exist?"
I nodded. "Well obviously she exists."
"No, I get that. I get it all too well."
Hana was silent for a moment. "I've never faced the Nine, I've only dreamed of taking the fight to them from positions of safety. I was an original ward member and they were active then too, like a ghost story. When they come to town, people die, your friends die, and you might find yourself
joining them. A twisted little reflection of you sputtering on.
"And that's not even the worst of it — when Bonesaw came along, and her abominations, twisted mockeries of flesh skittering around, with the faces of people I
knew, people I cared for."
Hana rubbed her face with her hands, thoughts on the Siberian seemingly gone for a second. "When they hit Atlanta three years ago, Space Cadet sent me a text, saying he was caught out and wasn't gonna make it. You'll remember he kind of went out in a blaze of glory. That was deliberate — he couldn't get away, and he didn't want to end up a plaything for Bonesaw. So he threw himself at them, and he made sure they couldn't capture him."
She paused closing her fists tightly. "And now they're here and there's nowhere to run."
I swallowed slowly as I watched Hana's fists open and close over and over.
Dad was staring intently at her before his eyes flickered. He dropped his sandwich onto his plate and broke in with a choke, "Crusader?"
Hana's eyes widened and she stood up in a flash, her eyes moving around the room frantically. I dialed Tattletale who picked up the phone and I said it, "Crusader."
I pulled the phone away from my head as Lisa cursed. "Tell Militia to pull up the video feeds of their assault on Woodland Park, Colorado. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck. Tell your Dad he's a damn genius. It's so fucking obvious now. Listen, I've gotta go, pretty sure I'm being watched again. I'm heading out. Stay safe, okay?"
The phone clicked and I said it out loud, "Woodland Park, Colorado. PRT response."
She stilled and her eyes slowly widened and seemed almost dreamlike for a second. "I remember that. I was in the newsroom watching the live feed wishing I could be on the hill overlooking the supermarket. There was a white van outside the pizzeria, I remember thinking it was strange because there was a man sitting in the driver's seat and I felt like I should have recognized him. It was just a few months after the Simurgh's first appearance."
"I thought he was just a victim. He was deathly still, but I couldn't take my eyes off him, but I remember the camera panning and he turned his head to adjust the rear view mirror."
Her eyes came back to her while her power flashed erratically for a second before she pulled out her phone. "Shut up and listen. Velocity, pull up the Woodland Park incident, tell me if there's a white van outside the pizzeria."
There was a short moment before I could hear Velocity murmur. "Okay, pull up the combat report. There should be three instances of the Siberian momentarily disappearing during the fight to reappear at a flank somehow."
My eyes widened at the next question realizing where she was heading. "Okay, can you correlate the time frame of the second disappearance and when the man in the van adjusted his mirror?"
There was a lengthy silence and I didn't hear the response but Hana's smile turned deadly, fanged, and satisfied. "Master/Stranger Alpha Alpha Seven Tango Kilo Sierra, distribute to all, Siberian is a projection. Repeat, Siberian is a projection. Likely source is older white male, balding, no other info at this time."
She listened again. "Got it, I'll be in later today."
She lowered the phone and there was a tight smirk on her face. She rubbed her fingers along her jean pockets for a moment before she pocketed her phone.
"We're going to get him."
Hana was breathless for a second, her eyes a mixture of crazed disbelief and unplaceable relief. She turned to me, her voice excited and breathy. "We can win. We can win this."
Dad scoffed, "There was never any doubt."
Hana's eyes flicked to him her stance shifting ever so slightly. "You're so getting lucky tonight."
I squawked at her. "I'm right here you know!?"
She laughed, picking up her coffee and smiled at me. "Oh, don't take that attitude with me. You told him my weakness for cinnamon cookies."
Dad snorted, "It's true. You did."
I stood up from the table and shook my head. "You're both... "
I paused, considering my words, looking back and forth between them. Dad was smiling and there was a bright blush on his cheeks and Hana was sipping her coffee waiting for me to finish my thoughts. The sun was shining in the window and just a touch of the smell from my earlier work was drifting around the room.
I reflected on it for a moment before I looked Dad in the eyes and spoke quietly, "Better together."
He startled for a moment at my words but the smile that grew on his face made me feel warm all the way down to my toes. I ran my hand through my hair and fixed my ponytail and turned back to my workbench. There was work to do.
—
AN: Vicky's conclusion is her conclusion, not necessarily my conclusion on how that all worked. Taylor is a little too caught off guard by it all to dissect the issue in a meaningful way other than preventing anyone from flying off the handle too much. Don't read too much into it.
I apologize for the nasty code tag in the middle, but I couldn't figure out how to preserve white space without it.