Enter the Nemesis
Part Two: Encounters
[Author's Note: Yes, this is about a character in Cauldron's Nemesis program. All OCs, to date.]
I slept like a baby, as comfortably as though I was in a four-poster feather bed.
Translation: I woke up every half-hour or so (have you
ever known a baby to sleep through the night? I have to admit, I'm not well-acquainted with the larval stage of humanity, but all anecdotal evidence suggests otherwise) and the four-poster bed simile is accurate, so long as you understand that the bed was stuffed with concrete, and littered with half-burned trash. And inhabited by cockroaches the size of rats, and rats the size of small dogs. Or large cats.
Well, maybe I'm exaggerating the size by a little. But not
that much. Those were some big-ass roaches.
In any case, I had other things to worry about when I woke up. Like the kid who was going through my pockets.
I mean, seriously. Here I am, having the absolute most
shit day of my life (okay, it's the
only day of my life that I can remember at this moment, but my point still stands) and this little delinquent decides, "Hey, his day isn't bad enough already. Let's
rob his sorry ass!"
Personally, I blame those kids' TV shows. I mean, the Teletubbies? What parent in their right mind would let their child take lifestyle advice from a bunch of creepy-looking overweight walking TV sets, with antennae on their heads? That's just
begging to have your rugrats loaded down with more subliminal messages than a McDonalds ad. And 'ignore your parents and watch more TV' is probably the
least creepy of them.
So when I felt the hand rummaging through my coat pocket, and realised it wasn't mine, I woke up instantly, alert and ready for anything.
Or, you know, blearily opened my eyes. There was a crust on them thick enough for tectonic movements, but I got them open and blinked at the kid.
"Wha'th'
fuck?" I mumbled, realising as I did so that the taste in my mouth had somehow gotten
worse while I slept. And it had been nothing to write home about then, except in the general sense of "Oh my god, get my tongue out of this hellhole!"
There's a dirty joke in there somewhere, but I just can't see it. I must be losing my touch.
The kid had shoulder-length straggly hair; I guessed it was either a skinny girl, or a skinni
er guy. Then again, if my main source of income was picking the pockets of homeless guys sleeping in alleyways, I'd probably be a good bit skinnier too. Mainly because I suck at picking pockets.
What? Don't tell me that you've never tried picking someone's pocket.
Anyway, I had a good look at the kid while he or she backed away from me. Dirty white-blonde hair, shoulder-length as noted - 'dirty' as in that there was actually dirt in that hair - a pale pinched face, grimy hoodie and jeans ... and that was it. I couldn't pick another detail about him, her or it. It was like someone went to central casting and ordered 'one generic street kid, to go', and specified absolutely nothing else, not even gender.
As I sat up, the kid backed a bit further away, then turned to run. I caught sight of something being tucked into a pocket of the hoodie.
Oh, for fuck's sake. There was actually something in my pockets? I hadn't even thought to check.
But I'm fairly tall, and I can run; I had proved that last night. I was willing to bet that I could outrun some undernourished street rat. And as I got up, I noticed something else; all the aches and pains that I'd been suffering from had vanished. Still hungry, but I felt like I could run forever.
That is, until I took my first step. My foot travelled a grand total of six inches forward, then
stopped. My body, which had been throwing its own weight in that general direction, in anticipation of the chase ... didn't.
The sneaky little shit had taken the precaution of tying the shoelaces of my ratty sneakers together,
before rifling through my pockets.
Which produced the inevitable result. As my upper torso careened forward without any way to stop, and indeed without any visible means of support, I managed one massive, hobbled, hop in the right direction. I had hoped that this might get my legs under me, and that gravity and I could chalk this up to a misunderstanding, and we could go our separate ways.
Unfortunately, this was not to be. My face-saving giant leap forward encountered a stray garbage bag, which pretty well stopped that from happening. I began to topple, arms windmilling wildly. My left hand smacked down on another garbage bag, which was perched on top of a random garbage bin. As it did so, through sheer instinct, my hand opened.
My right hand had found the wall, so I didn't fall all the way. But I had a ringside seat as to what happened next. My brain, still a little groggy, had just enough time to realise,
Oh shit -
There was the usual streak of liquid fire up my left arm, yadda yadda. Lightning burst from the palm of my hand, straight into the garbage bag. Now I don't know exactly what was in the bag; all I know is that the dark green plastic fluoresced wildly for a few seconds, while my wits were still gathering themselves. But just as I was beginning to reach the conclusion that it might be a good idea to
close my fucking hand … the bag exploded.
Not a big explosion, nor a damaging one, or even a deafening one. It was more a big POP than anything else. But an explosion it was; bits and pieces of shredded plastic, and smoking garbage, were spread all over the walls and floor of the alleyway. And, more importantly, all over my left side. And my face, given that I was looking that way at the time.
Garbage? Smells bad. Burned garbage? Smells
infinitely fucking worse.
Fuck. My. Life.
<><>
I tumbled to the floor of the alleyway, and spent the next few moments swearing – quite inventively, I assure you – while I fumbled my laces apart and retied them. This was not easy with my right hand only, but my left hand had caused quite enough problems already. I considered just taking the sneakers off, but while they might look as though they had been rescued from the back of a charity bin – probably had – they were still my only shoes.
Then I cleaned myself up, which mainly involved scraping the remains of the garbage off my face. With my right hand; my left hand was staying closed. Very firmly closed.
I also took the time to more closely investigate what I was wearing. Sneakers, check. Worn and slightly tattered jeans, check. A torn and tattered T-shirt, check. A longish coat, also torn and a bit tattered, check. A layer of grime and exploded garbage over most of that, check.
The pockets revealed not much more; nothing in the long-coat pockets, but there was a card in the right hand jeans pocket, and something that crinkled in the left hand pocket.
I got the card out first. It was business card size, plain, white, blank. On it, in neat handwriting was the word COSTUME? Under that, what appeared to be a phone number.
I puzzled over it for a moment, then put it away again. I was more interested in what was in my left hand pocket, but getting it out without incinerating it would be interesting.
In the end, keeping my hand mostly closed while sneaking two fingers down into the pocket worked. I hooked out the crinkly object, which turned out to be a sheet of note paper, folded over. Opening it out, I found a series of names. Cape names, apparently.
Electromaster
Zapmaster
Lightning Master
Killer-Watt
Killer-Volt
Electrocutioner
Storm Cell
Blue Bolt
Dark Sinister
There was a definite trend to these names. Several trends, in fact. Most, or all, of them seemed to refer to my inability to avoid treating my surroundings to uncontrollable bolts of lightning whenever I opened my left hand. As for the last name … 'sinister' referred to the left hand. Subtle.
And more alarmingly, the names sounded … villainous. Definitely villainous.
Was I a villain? Had that hovering presence in the alley named me correctly?
I tried to imagine robbing a bank. The image came to me, all too easily.
Holding up a convenience store? Yeah, I could do that.
Taking candy from a baby? I could probably even pull that off, though the thought of being smacked around the head by the mother was a little daunting.
Wait, maybe I am a villain.
I considered that. The evidence certainly seemed to suggest it; a calling card from a costume maker, a list of potential names. I might be a rookie villain, just recently fallen to the dark side. I didn't seem to harbour any qualms about committing criminal acts. And just to put the icing on the big-ass cake made of fuck-you that was bearing down on me, just last night I had murdered a cop in front of a parahuman hero.
Fuck. My. Life.
<><>
There was nothing in the alley for me, and I was getting hungrier by the moment. Just for a few seconds, I considered looking through the garbage cans for something edible, but I wasn't
that hungry. Or at least, not yet.
In any case, it was time to get out and about, to see what was happening in the world. To see, in fact, where the fuck
in the world I was. So I picked the worst of the garbage off of myself, ran my hand through my hair to dislodge anything that might be lurking there, and straightened my coat.
Hopefully, I told myself, trying to ignore the little voice down at the back of my mind that cackled madly at my naïve optimism,
nothing else is going to happen to me today.
Of course, given that Murphy apparently has my personal number,
that shit was never gonna fly.
<><>
I got out of the alley, and on to the street, without further incident. As I did so, I began to form the opinion that maybe the same fuck-knows-what that bestowed these oh-so-fucking-
wonderful powers on me had also made adjustments to my digestive system. To wit, it felt like everything back of my navel had been made over into a gravitational singularity.
Or to put it another way, I was hungry enough to eat a horse, and give the rider a run for his money.
The street was lined with low-rent shops, the sort of places that deal in quantity rather than quality. Half of them were empty, boarded up; some of the rest had merchandise out on the sidewalk, the better to attract the suckers.
As I proceeded along the sidewalk, I looked for some place selling food, or any acceptable substitute. My lack of legal tender, I was going to have to deal with
after the fact. Or someone was.
Nothing even vaguely food-related - not even
McDonalds, for crying out loud - had shown itself, when I became aware of another problem. Specifically, I was hallucinating.
Considering the various types of hallucinations I
could have had – pink elephants, floating hamburgers, the female cast of
Glee doing the can-can in the nude – the one I did have was fairly mundane, if somewhat obscure. What I was seeing was … ribbons. Ribbons of various shades, hanging in the air or stretched along the ground, all rippling in an unfelt wind. And some part of me
liked those ribbons, thought they were wonderful, wanted to get close to them.
I wasn't entirely sure that I trusted that feeling. Scratch that; until I knew
why I felt like that, there was no way on God's green Earth that I was gonna go near one of those ribbons. Okay, the ones on the ground were kind of hard to avoid, but I wouldn't be touching them. Of course, they were more faded and see-through than most, but I still didn't trust them. After all, it wasn't like
anything had done me any favours since I came to, last night.
That was when I spotted the convenience store.
Convenience stores had
food.
Food was on or about my top priority right about then, followed by information. I figured that I could get both in the store. Finding out about these damn ribbons was a distant third, or maybe a tenth; once I had food inside me, and knew where I was, I could maybe puzzle out what the hell they were about.
So I stepped off the pavement, checked for cars, and crossed the street. People looked at me oddly as I approached the store; I stared right back at them. After all, it wasn't as though they could know who I was. I was just another face on the street, albeit a smelly one.
It's amazing how wrong you can be about the most basic of assumptions.
There was a stand for newspapers just inside the door to the convenience store; I barely glanced at it on the way in, then did a perfect double-take. The front page was all headline, wrapped around a half-page picture in glowing colour.
OFFICER DOWN
"
Electro-Killer" Slays One Cop, Wounds Another, Flux Says
The picture was of … I guessed it was me. After all, the hand raised toward the camera, outlined by the flash, showed the familiar glowing blue scar in the middle of the palm. Behind it … a male face, unshaven, teeth pulled back in a snarl. But … blue marks tracked across the face, in a vaguely lightning-like pattern, continuing into the hairline. My/his hair was white, with blue streaks through it, following the lightning marks on the face.
Holy fuck. Do I look like that?
Quickly, I stepped back out of the door, and looked at myself in the window. Colours were hard to make out, but sure enough, my hair was white, and there were marks of a different colour on my face, continuing in my hair. Not only was I
not just another face in the crowd, but
the fucking newspaper had printed my picture.
I looked around. More people were looking at me now. Phones were out; they were either taking pictures, or making calls. And I was damn sure they weren't doing selfies, or calling Grandma to ask her if she'd like some milk from the fucking store.
Oh, no. They were dropping a dime, grassing me up, selling me up the river, doing me the dirty, squealing to the pigs.
Fuck my life.
<><>
I had minutes, if that. The gnawing hunger in my midsection hadn't ceased in the slightest – in fact, I was fairly sure that if I held really still, I would be able to hear it chant 'Ia Ia Fhtagn Ia' – so food was definitely a priority. Any sort of food.
I dashed back into the store. Payment wasn't going to be an option, and after all, I was already wanted for murder, so what was a little petty theft? So I started stuffing whatever was on the shelves, and ready to eat, into the capacious pockets of my coat. Packets of cookies, tins of tuna, a jar of honey, it all went in there. When I headed for the drinks fridge, the owner behind the counter seemed to wake up. He was an older man, maybe Japanese or Korean or something. I didn't care. I just wanted some of that chocolate milk that was in the fridge. Just waiting for me. Tempting me with its rich smooth chocolatey goodness.
As I headed for the fridge, I noticed that the lights in the store had their own ribbons, as did the fridge itself. But I didn't care in the slightest. I didn't know what the ribbons were, and they weren't doing anything to hurt me, so they weren't a priority for me.
Just as I was opening the fridge, I heard the sound from behind me. It was a sound that I recognised. The sound of a gun being cocked.
Then it hit me. I had no idea how this could be. I remembered absolutely
nothing from before the point when I came to, last night. For all I knew, I had popped into being, fully formed, at that point, never having existed before.
But I
knew things. Little things. Things like how to speak English, and what shoes were, and which way cars would come from on the road, and – most importantly right now – what a double-barrelled shotgun sounded like when someone pulls back one of the hammers.
"You put stuff on counter now!" called the store owner. "Not in pocket!"
I turned and made the universal sign for 'wait'; I wanted to think this through.
How could I know some things – like what money looked like – but not others, such as what my own
face looked like? How could I know what mobile phones – and selfies – were, but not where I was, who I was, and, for fuck's sake,
what I was? Because I sure as fuck wasn't really human any more.
"Hey!" yelled the store owner. He eared back the other hammer. "You pay for stuff now, get out of store!"
Fuck it. I could hear approaching sirens. I wrenched open the fridge and grabbed that chocolate milk. The old guy wasn't about to shoot someone in the back for stealing
milk, was he?
There was a thunderous
boom, and a hammer-blow smashed into my back, just under my right shoulderblade. I was driven forward into the fridge, ending up face-to-tub with a serving of Delicious Dairy Yoghurt. Warmth trickled down my back, under my coat.
Son of a bitch. He fucking shot me.
Pushing myself back upright, I turned dazedly, to see the old fart pointing the shotgun at me again; I'd had enough. I raised my left hand, palm out, and opened my hand for about one second.
This was the first time that I'd used my power deliberately, and results did not disappoint. Crackling arcs of electricity sprang out from my hand, accompanied by the usual feeling of power surging up my arm. Blue-white tendrils of lightning shorted out the lights, set fire to a stand of souvenir teddy bears, touched on to the shotgun barrel (knocking Shotgun Billy ass over teakettle) and blew the living
fuck out of his cash register.
The sirens were a lot closer now. I looked around for the chocolate milk, but could not see it.
Fuck. I couldn't stop and look for it, especially since the lights had gone out. The teddy-bears were burning merrily, and the ruins of the cash register were still sparking, but that didn't give me enough light to look for it.
So I turned and stumbled out of the store. My back was still on fire from being shot, but I didn't seem to be coughing blood, and my right arm still worked, more or less, so I guessed that he had used a really low-end round. Murder charges are still murder charges, after all. Was it wrong that I counted it as a good thing that I'd only been shot with
small shotgun pellets?
The first police cars screeched to a halt just seconds after I left the store. Doors flew open, and officers pointed guns over them. Guns pointed at
me.
This was a disturbing trend, of late. People pointing guns indicated a certain level of hostility on their part, which raised feelings of anxiety and irritation on my part. I decided to remove those feelings from my psyche. By venting them. Was it my fault that I chose to vent them at the cop cars?
Raising my left hand, I unleashed my power once more. This time, I not only did not close my hand, but I slowly panned from left to right.
Crackling energy poured from my hand; it struck the cars, struck the officers behind them, struck everything that could possibly carry a charge. The officers were flung backward, landing awkwardly; the cars didn't seem to suffer much, except for smoke trailing up from under the hood of each one.
"Fuckin' just
leave me alone," I muttered to the world, and turned to stagger away, down the pavement.
"That's just not going to happen," claimed a new voice, and he dropped down, out of the sky.
The hovering figure from last night; here he was, in plain view. Clad in a black and silver costume, with dashing good looks, he posed in midair as he faced me.
"I've come to take you in, villain," he declared. "Resist, and it will go badly for you."
I felt a surge of anger at the word 'villain'; seriously, what the fuck? Where did he get off, calling me that? "And who the fuck are you?" I demanded.
He smiled broadly. "Flux, at your service. Or not."
"Flux, huh?" I grunted. "Well, you can just fluck off." I had noticed that part of his costume included silvery bands of metal around his biceps, forearms, thighs and calves. Electricity grounds to metal. This bastard was just a flying lightning rod.
Thrusting out my left hand, I opened the fingers dramatically. "Right the fluck now!"
Once more, lightning burst from the star-mark on my palm. It surged toward him, tendrils of blue-white electricity seeking to ground in the bands of metal, treat him to the joys of electrical conduction.
He flinched back, but my lightning was faster. I could see the arc reaching for him, wrapping around him … but it never touched him. A full inch of air, I could see, separated him from the crackling charge.
"Ha!" he crowed. "You'll have to try harder than that …
villain."
Groans behind me told me that the officers were gradually coming around. And in front of me, a superhero that my powers couldn't touch. My back still ached from where I'd been shot already. And I
still hadn't had that damn chocolate milk.
Fuck. My. Life.
End of Part Two
Part Three