Security!
Chapter Twenty-Three: Assault
Lisa's drawings were quick and clean; she did a plan of the upper level, then the lower level. A side view gave us a good perspective on how it fit together.
"The vault door here; this is where the Case 53 is?" she asked, tapping the marker on the paper.
I leaned in. "That's correct," I replied. "There's two vault doors, one inside the other. Or maybe he hasn't had time to install the second one. I know that becomes a concern at some point."
"Is this person that dangerous?" asked one of the PRT officers.
I nodded. "She'll start out as an A-class threat, but escalate to S-class, given half a chance. Originally, she was a sweet young woman named Noelle Meinhardt, but then ..." I paused, thinking through my words. They didn't need to know everything, not right away.
"She made a bad choice, or rather, she was forced into a bad choice. All the Travellers were. She got powers, but they're unbalanced, and they're forcing her body into a monstrous shape. Upper body is human, lower body is a mass of flesh with heads, arms and legs sticking out of it. Roughly the size of a couple of elephants."
One of the officers looked thoughtful. "I seem to recall reports of something like that in New York, only smaller."
"You may well have," I replied blandly. "But here and now, unless handled very carefully, she's a menace. Coil may well try to turn her loose, set her against us. She could even break free during the fight. She
is strong enough to burst through those vault doors, given enough incentive."
The other officer looked sceptical. "We've dealt with big and strong capes before. I fail to see what's so overwhelmingly dangerous about her."
I sighed. "Because she
eats people. Absorbs them directly into her mass. Worse, she can encapsulate a cape and spit out twisted clones who have variations on the powers of those capes, and are utterly inimical to them and all they love. Classic evil twins. Also, they have all the memories of those capes, and are quite willing to tell all and sundry their deepest, darkest secrets." I looked around the table. "Anyone here got secrets they don't want anyone knowing?"
Into the silence that followed, I added, "Plus, she's insanely strong, regenerates almost on the scale of Crawler, and can burrow underground. No doubt she's been shot in the head before. It didn't take."
The officer's voice was flat. "And you're saying we
shouldn't kill this thing."
"I'm
saying," I told him, "that I can avoid all that hassle. Sidestep it. She's a
victim, not a monster. I neutralise her powers, send her and her friends back where they came from."
"And where is that?" he asked quickly.
"I'm sorry, but you're not cleared to know that," I replied firmly. "Or rather, more to the point, if I answered that question, it would raise others. And still others. We would be arguing half the night, and I really want to have this show ready to start by seven-thirty."
Grue tilted his head. "Why seven-thirty?"
"Because that's the time he set for himself, earlier," Tattletale told him. "So if the timeline split and his other self had other things to deal with, he would still know to be there at that time."
Her smug look became even more so as I gave her a nod of confirmation.
"So … what
are we going to do about this Noelle Meinhardt?" asked the Director.
"Two-stage plan," I told her. "Canary is here to keep her calm. You can do that, right, Canary?"
Paige nodded her head jerkily. "I – I can do that," she affirmed.
"Excellent. Second stage of the plan, I have her powers neutralised, then Panacea helps me get the core body out of that mass of flesh."
Amy blinked at me. "I can
do that?"
"Well, I bloody well hope so," I told her bluntly. "The majority of her body was created by her powers, and is maintained by them. Once the powers are gone, the extra body mass is going to be dying, but she'll still be attached to it. She's going to be in all kinds of shit unless we can cut her free. You're the only one I know who's got half a chance to do that. Think you're up to it? Save a life, give someone a second chance?"
Her nod was tentative, but it was there. "I can try."
"
Good girl."
As I turned back to the plans, I saw the slight flush of pleasure at this praise, and made a mental note to give her more in future.
Christ, do these jerks think that putting on a costume makes these kids into robots? I knew that, realistically, they didn't, but it sure as hell seemed like it sometimes.
"Okay," I asked. "Where's the armoury and the barracks?"
Tattletale tapped her nail on the sheets. "Here and here."
"Right. Okay, everyone, listen up. He's got about fifty or so men in the base. They're from all over the world, they're well trained, and they're loyal. They've got assault rifles with underslung laser mounts. These mounts generate a purple beam that can apparently cut through steel. They've also got superior body armour, maybe PRT standard, maybe better. It might even be PRT regular armour, repainted."
"Which would fit in with him being Calvert," commented Armsmaster.
I nodded, then looked at Grue. "How well does your darkness effect work against lasers?"
He shrugged. "If it's just light, it stops. If it's some bullshit pseudo-laser beam weapon, then I have no idea."
"As far as I know, they're just lasers. So you'll be our primary defence against those weapons. Weaver, if you can bring in a swarm, it would help if you could target anyone with a laser attachment on their weapon. Just in case Grue's darkness isn't as great a defence as I'm hoping it will be." I paused. "Also, if you can kill his computer as soon as we start our entry, that might help us out. A lot. He's got the place wired to blow and that's set up with a computer link, so if you can stop that, this would be handy."
Weaver nodded seriously. "Swarm, I can do. Computer, yes."
"Good. We'll do a pass over the base beforehand, so you can map out who is where in the base. Last minute intel is always useful."
"I think we're getting ahead of ourselves, here," interrupted Armsmaster. "You say Coil will be in that base, as well as his fifty mercenaries. Grue's darkness may or may not be able to stop their lasers, but those assault rifles will be firing real bullets, and advancing into that sort of defended position
will cause casualties. Do you have a plan for that, too?"
I nodded to him. "As it happens, I do. I'm just going to need something from you. A little Tinker-tech item, something highly miniaturised and efficient … which I seem to recall is your speciality."
"What would this item be?" he asked suspiciously.
Tattletale vented a
ha! which had everyone looking at her. I raised an eyebrow; she grinned that grin of hers and enlightened the room. "A loudspeaker. For Canary to use."
I nodded, then turned to the yellow-haired girl. "What do you say, Paige? Up for some crowd control?"
"Uh … one little problem with that," she ventured cautiously. "I can't really aim my power that well. If I'm using it, then everyone in earshot of my voice is affected."
Director Piggot frowned. "Improve the plan, Mr Allen."
"Ah," I agreed. "Let's see now." I cleared my throat. "'The PRT is your friend. Trust the PRT'."
No-one sniggered, or even smirked; I was vaguely disappointed that no-one got the reference.
"That will make
us suggestible toward trusting the PRT, won't it?" asked Grue.
"Not if we target the lyrics a little more directly," Tattletale put in. "'Don't attack the PRT, or related forces', maybe?"
I reached out, grabbed one of the unused pieces of paper and one of the markers, and wrote several lines on the paper. When I was finished, I passed it around. A few minor suggestions were made, and implemented, but by and large, it was accepted. Paige accepted the paper, read it carefully, and nodded.
"This should work," she told me in that remarkable voice of hers.
"Excellent."
I looked around at the people around the table. "So, we have a plan of attack, then?"
"How do we get in?" It was one of the PRT officers.
"I know how," Tattletale told him, then turned to me. "But you knew that, didn't you?"
"I did," I acknowledged.
"You seem to be bypassing all the physical stuff. Why am I needed again?" asked Glory Girl.
"Well, we might encounter some locked doors on the way," I explained. "We could use explosives, but that's dangerous and time-consuming. Or we could have someone along who can rip them off their hinges. Think you're up to it?"
She smiled faintly. "I thought you'd never ask."
"Okay, now, as for the Travellers," I went on. "They're extremely dangerous in their own right. But if I give Canary two statements to make, they should stay out of it." I wrote the lines on another piece of paper. Canary took it, read them, nodded, and tucked them away as well.
"You're okay with this?" I asked her.
She nodded. "Sure. I'm used to writing my own lyrics, but I'll do my best with yours, just this once."
The joke was weak, but I chuckled; a moment later, so did most of the others in the room.
Regent spoke up. "So wait; what are me and Bitch supposed to be doing in all this? I notice we don't have some cute tactic attached to us."
I nodded. "Well, if you want to stay here, that's your choice. Or you can come along and make sure the mercenaries stay honest once we've taken the base."
"Oh, okay." He shrugged. "Sure, I guess."
I looked at Bitch, who was still holding the sleeping puppy. "Rachel?"
"I'll come along," she replied bluntly. "I never liked Coil. Now I
really don't like him."
"I can understand that." I looked at the Director. "So, do you have any questions?"
"Many," she responded, "but none that are relevant to the situation at hand." She nodded to the PRT officers, who gathered up Tattletale's plan of the base. It was remarkably detailed, even showing alternate exits. "They'll brief the men. We should be ready to go by your seven-thirty deadline."
She raised her voice. "Removing security protocols." A press of the button, and it clicked upward; the ever-present discordant hum died away, leaving an odd ringing in the ears. The doors clicked open and the guards entered; Piggot and the officers exited.
Glory Girl rose and rounded the table to start a conversation with Aegis; Panacea stayed seated. I watched as the blonde hero began speaking in what was apparently a vehement undertone; I couldn't hear the words, and I've never learned how to read lips, but the agitated gestures, and the occasional glances at Canary, clued me in on the subject.
I looked at Canary, who was studying her hands. "Are you sure you're okay with this? I know you don't like conflict."
"If it will save lives, then I can do it," she told me quietly. "And to be honest, the way Alexandria put it, I don't really have a choice."
I grimaced. "Sometimes, these people can be a little … heavy-handed. I'm sorry all this has happened to you. That you've been forced into doing this."
She chuckled nervously. "Don't be. It's not your fault. I should have been more careful with my word choice, back in the beginning of this."
"Hm," I mused. "Which reminds me. I need to have a word. If you'll excuse me?"
I rose from my seat. "Weaver, meet Paige Mcabee. Paige, Weaver here took down Lung, not so long ago. I'm sure you'll find something to talk about."
Rounding the table, I moved toward where Glory Girl was speaking with Aegis. Sure enough, as I approached, she fell silent.
"What?" she asked.
My expression and voice were polite. "You were expressing an opinion that Canary should not be allowed on this mission; am I correct?"
Aegis looked startled; Glory Girl looked stubborn.
"So what if I was?" she demanded. "I'm allowed to have an opinion."
"Not if that opinion might cause you to hesitate for half a second before helping her out of danger, you're not," I stated firmly. "Besides, have you thought about how close you are to being in her position?"
Aegis frowned. "I think you'd better explain that."
"It's simple. Vicky, you and Dean have regular fights, right? Break up, make up, rinse and repeat."
She blinked. "How did you know ...?"
"I know a lot of things about a lot of people," I reminded her. "Now, about you and Dean ...?"
"Well, I really don't see what business it is of yours," she began defensively.
I raised an eyebrow.
Finally, reluctantly, she answered the question. "Yeah, sure, but all couples have spats."
"But
you have an emotion-affecting aura. What if it's affected him to the point that one time you tell him to 'go fuck yourself' and he
does?"
She shook her head. "No, that's impossible. The effect of my aura wears off."
I raised an eyebrow. "Are you absolutely
sure about that?"
"Sure I'm sure," she replied immediately.
I didn't look away. "Scientifically proven?"
"Well … no."
"Then theoretically it
could happen." I paused.
"Have you ever told him to go do something anatomically impossible?"
Her silence was as good as an affirmative.
I nodded. "Yup, thought so. Well, just keep in mind; Canary said just those three words. She didn't mean them, any more than you mean it when you say them to Dean. She would take them back in an instant. So don't be so quick to condemn her. In another time and place, it might easily have been you." I turned away, then paused. "Just remember; people in glass houses shouldn't kick dumpsters."
Leaving her staring at me, I strolled over to Rachel. She saw me coming, and held the puppy a little closer to her chest defensively.
"Don't worry, I'm not going to take the puppy away," I told her. "But it can't come on the mission, you do know that."
"Of course I know it. I'm not stupid. And she's a she, not an it."
"Oh, okay," I noted. "She's cute. What breed is she?"
"Ridgeback cross," she informed me at once. "She's been well cared for." Her voice held reluctant approval.
"Does she have a nametag?"
"Yes," she told me defiantly, "but I can't read it."
"I probably can't either, not until I put my glasses on." I did so, then peered at the tag. "Phoebe. Huh. A nice name for a dog."
"Phoebe," she repeated, then she looked at me directly. "You're not PRT. You're not as much of a dick as everyone else around here. People around here listen to you.
You had us captured. What's going to happen to me, and my dogs, after this, after Coil?"
"I can't guarantee anything," I told her bluntly, "but I am going to push for you to not go to prison. You just want to be left alone with your dogs. I think that can be done. Do you trust me to try?"
She frowned. "People don't just give you something for nothing. What do you want from me?"
I took in her wary look. This was a girl who had lived on the streets, who had seen far more of the seamier side of life than I had. A reasonable, friendly authority figure was probably even farther outside of her experience than it had been outside of Taylor's. As far as she was concerned, people never gave without demanding a price, and the price was rarely worth it.
"Nothing," I told her. Her wary look intensified, and I saw scepticism as well.
"No-one gives you something for nothing," she repeated flatly.
"How about this, then," I ventured. "I want you to stop doing crime. You train dogs better than anyone else alive. If you agreed to do that and, say, ran a dog shelter, stayed out of trouble with the law, that might be good enough for the PRT to leave you alone, to give you a pass."
Her wary look decreased, although it didn't go away altogether. "If they let me run it on my terms, I guess I could do something like that."
But I can't see it happening. Her unspoken words were loud and clear.
I nodded. "If my plans work out, then I suspect that people will listen to me. If they don't … well, we'll have other problems to worry about. Really big problems."
She nodded in return. "Okay. I don't really trust you, but you haven't tried to bullshit me yet, so I'll go along. For the moment."
"I appreciate it," I told her frankly. Carefully, so as not to spook her, I reached out and scratched the puppy behind the ear. "I'm doing my best to make sure everyone gets as good a deal as possible, here."
"Why?" she asked bluntly.
"Because I can," I replied, just as bluntly. "I see you and the rest of the Undersiders, having to fight for everything. You didn't ask to be this way. You didn't ask for this life. I'm trying to change things, fix things. Help you. Help others."
"Like that Canary girl?" she asked, indicating where Paige was talking to Taylor. "She someone you're trying to help?"
"Yeah," I agreed. "She screwed up with her powers just once, and she was going to the Birdcage. Now she's not. Hopefully."
"You can't help everyone who got a raw deal," Rachel pointed out, with a great deal of accuracy.
"No, I can't," I agreed. "But the people I know of, I can. Or I can try."
"And assholes like Lung and Coil, you're taking down."
I was impressed; people dismissed Rachel Lindt as being brutal and unsubtle, but she was capable of analytical thinking if she tried.
"Exactly," I told her, "and precisely."
I left her communing with the dogs, and went back toward the table. Tattletale intercepted me.
"Okay, how the hell do you know how to do that?" she asked.
"Do what?"
She indicated Rachel with a nod. "Talk to her. That's the longest conversation I've seen
anyone have with her, that didn't end in blows. Even
I have trouble talking to her. You don't
know her, but you know how she thinks. How?"
I thought about telling her, but decided regretfully that the risks were too great.
"I'm not trying to screw with your head," I told her. It was mostly true, too. "But … I know this stuff. And I can't tell you how. Not all at once. Because there's some serious revelations involved, and I don't know how well you'd handle it. You might take it in your stride, or you might go catatonic. And I don't want to risk that, not at the moment."
She shook her head in frustration. "There's something bigger there, behind what you're saying. But I just can't see it."
"Don't look too hard," I advised her. "But … if you have a yes-or-no question, ask. I might even answer it." She opened her mouth. I raised my hand.
"After we take down Coil. Okay?"
She closed her mouth again. "... fine," she grumped. "Okay."
=///=
The PRT truck was large enough inside to have a table with the base plans pinned down on to it. We were parked close enough to where Lisa said the base was, that Taylor could sense all the bugs within it, using her power. Even though I knew exactly how her power worked, even better than she did, it was still fascinating to watch bugs crawl over the plan, indicating exactly where everyone was in the base.
A big black beetle showed where Coil was; from its movements, he was apparently pacing back and forth in his office.
"What's up with him?" Alec asked, indicating the beetle.
"At a rough guess, in the other timeline, he's starting to feel the pinch. Maybe he's already foreseen being arrested, and he's trying to figure out what's different in this timeline." I paused; the beetle had moved to the side of the room. "Weaver, is he at his computer?"
"As best as I can tell," she informed me.
"Great. Time?"
"Seven fifteen."
"I think it's time we started the ball rolling," I suggested.
Armsmaster nodded. "I think you may be right." He looked around at the disparate group in the back of the truck. "One more thing. Rogers. Simons. Mayfield."
Three troopers stepped forward.
Armsmaster pointed at me, at Canary, and at Panacea. "You will each shadow one of these people. You will not allow them to come to harm. That is the entirety of your duty in this mission. Is that understood?"
All three men nodded assent, and the one called Rogers moved to stand beside me.
I went to protest, to tell him that I'd be fine. I knew I'd be fine, because Contessa wanted to talk to me on Friday. But then I had a thought.
What if I'll only be fine because this guy is there to protect me? So I said nothing.
Glory Girl, however, chose to speak up. "I'm perfectly capable of protecting my sister."
"You might be needed doing something else," Armsmaster told her flatly. "We can't afford you getting distracted." He looked at me, and at Canary. "Any problems with this?"
I sensed that even if I had a problem, he wouldn't spend too much time thinking about it. "Nope, no problem at all."
Canary glanced at me; I nodded slightly. "I'm fine with it," she agreed.
"Good." His tone didn't change, but he must have opened a radio channel. "Armsmaster to all troops. Prepare to move in."
I turned to Weaver, and held out my fist. She bumped it.
It was go time.
=///=
The skeletal building towered over us as Lisa led the way to the high fence surrounding the construction site. A large sign on the fence caught my eye, the large lettering easily legible, even in this dim light.
"Property of Fortress Constructions," I murmured.
Beside me, Rogers had obviously read it at the same time. "After this, we're probably going to have to look at all the other Fortress properties around Brockton Bay."
I nodded. "Probably not a bad idea. Might want to pass that one up the chain."
There was a gate, secured with a chain and a padlock; Lisa pulled a keyring from a pouch on her belt, and opened the lock. The keys, as far as I could tell, all looked close to identical in the dim light. If that had been me, I would've been there ten minutes.
Super-intuition must be so useful on occasion.
She turned and looked at me as she slid the padlock off the hasp.
"Yes," she told me. "It is."
Despite myself, I was momentarily startled, then I realised what she'd done.
"Smartarse," I muttered.
She grinned as she opened the gate.
=///=
Once everyone had trooped through, she closed the gate, hung the lock on the latch, but did not secure it. I took the moment to take stock of the area. Crushed gravel, lots of heavy machinery, and twenty storeys of unfinished construction above us.
Lisa, with Armsmaster closely shadowing her, led the way between the machinery to the base of the skeletal structure itself. Gravel crunched as we followed, Rogers shadowing my every move. We ended up, as I had known we would, at an unobtrusive hatchway, set in a concrete slab. A black and yellow sign indicated dire consequences for anyone opening it; Lisa found another key, and unlocked this one as well.
The sign on the hatch promised hazardous materials and noxious gases, and I could almost believe it; the stairs led down to what looked remarkably like a storm drain, and the smell wasn't so great either.
Armsmaster turned to Lisa. "If this is some sort of trick -"
I stepped forward. "It's not," I advised him. "This is the right place."
He turned to me. "You're sure."
I nodded. "I am. There's a barred metal door at the bottom of the stairs, then a long corridor."
Lisa gave me that how-did-you-know-that look again, then raised her voice slightly. "That's entirely correct. You'll be able to go side by side, but it'll be cramped. The room at the other end of the corridor will have a security camera and a door that's locked on the other side. One of Coil's men is on the other side of that door at all times, watching a monitor. No lights, and as little sound as possible."
The PRT troops had been issued with night vision gear; I wished I had some, but the truth was that I probably wouldn't have any idea of how to use it.
Armsmaster spoke up again. "I'll go first, with Tattletale. A soldier will escort each of the non-PRT personnel. Sergeant Andrews, you'll follow on with your men and the protectees. Leave two men behind to watch our rear."
Andrews saluted. "Sir!"
Lisa and Armsmaster descended into the darkness; he was using the night vision built into his helmet, while she probably used her intuition to not stub her toe in the dark. Off to the side, I heard Regent mutter, "Well, I feel useful about now."
Grue elbowed him. "You'd rather be in a jail cell right now?"
"I'd rather not be here."
"You volunteered."
"Not my finest decision, I'm beginning to realise."
Glory Girl tugged at Grue's arm. "Come on. They're waiting on us." She went down the stairs alongside a PRT trooper, and Grue followed with another one.
Rachel bridled as a trooper moved toward her. "Back off," she snapped. "I don't need you." He stopped, glancing at Andrews.
"She'll be fine, sergeant," I advised Andrews.
He nodded, then gestured to the trooper. "Leave her go."
The trooper stepped back. Rachel nodded; clipping a lead to Judas' collar, she urged him toward the stairs; he led the way, sniffing at the ground as he went. Brutus followed behind obediently.
Two at a time, we went down the steps, Rogers holding my elbow to steady me in the darkness. I had to admit, the PRT troopers had my respect; I had been fitted out in the largest set of body armour they could provide, and I was still fairly uncomfortable. If they wore this stuff on their day to day duties, they were tougher than I was. As it was, I was sweating by the time I got to the bottom of the stairs.
"Last step down, sir," murmured Rogers. Behind him, I could hear Simons and Mayfield walking Panacea and Canary down the stairs. I took the step, and reached out to feel the metal door, then the concrete wall beyond that.
We moved in as much silence as we could manage, with only the occasional scuff of a boot or the clink of a slung rifle on a buckle or something to break the sound of heavy breathing. I was sure we weren't all panting like steam-trains, but the closeness of the tunnel seemed to magnify even that minor sound.
Lisa hadn't been kidding. It was a long corridor.
I was beginning to wonder if we'd passed through the city limits when Rogers' hand tightened on my elbow. "Slow down, sir," he murmured in my ear. "We've reached the room."
He was right; the echoes had changed slightly, and I could feel the heat emanating from all the bodies in a fairly tight space. We stopped, less than six inches behind the people in front of us. I knew this, because I reached out and touched them. I had no idea who they were; I could see absolutely nothing. I felt a sniffing at my leg, then a doggy nose touched my hand. The dog – Brutus, I figured – licked my fingers, then moved on.
Behind me, I felt the closeness of the rest of our party as they also came to a halt. There was a long pause, and utter silence fell. It was so complete, complementing the utter blackness in which we were standing, that I actually heard the tinny sound of Rogers receiving a message over his helmet radio.
"Sir, we're about to open the door," he murmured to me. I could just hear the same message being reported to the others around me.
I nodded; he could see me, even if I couldn't hear him. "Time?" I replied.
There was a pause. "Seven thirty five," he reported.
"Good. Let's do this."
=///=
Coil was confused. Events were not making sense. Things had started coming unravelled at around the time that the abduction was supposed to take place. In one timeline, he had sent out his men to do the deed; in the other, he had held them back. In both, of course, he had sent the Undersiders to rob the Brockton Bay Central Bank, as well as setting other villains to perform acts of mayhem around the city. The more disruption the better, to mask the kidnapping of a twelve year old girl from her school.
Dinah would have known what would happen if she did not choose to go willingly with his men; her precognition would have told her that he had fully intended to order his men to perpetrate a massacre if she did not do as he said.
But what had happened was somewhat different. His men had … disappeared. There was no call of distress, nothing. No disturbance at the school at all. So, in that timeline, he had gone to the PRT building to see what was going on. Discreet enquiries had left him none the wiser, and he began to suspect that something was up, that he was being stalled, stonewalled. He had left again, gone home, intending to try again the next day. But he thought he may have been followed, that there was a car tailing him.
There was nothing connecting him, as Thomas Calvert, to the events; he knew that. But he was still nervous. So he decided to have a quiet night in. And then, right on the dot of seven PM, his phone beeped, showing an alert from his computer. Clicking on the alert showed that several automatic cash transfers had failed to go through.
What the hell?
Going online via his phone was tedious, but he did it anyway. As he checked one account after another, the bad news unfolded. Each of his accounts had been frozen, even the ones that only had the most tenuous connection to him.
And then, as he was trying to figure out what was going on, the front door was kicked in. Despite his protests, he was seized, handcuffed. Accused of being Coil. Accused of other crimes, ones he was sure had never been even detected.
And then Emily Piggot walked in the front door. She stared down at him.
"
I knew you were scum," she told him. "But I didn't think it went this far." She handed over a document to the PRT officer in charge of the task force.
"
What's that?" he asked.
She gave him a hard smile. "I know exactly what your capabilities are, Calvert," she told him. "And that document is a kill order. You're too dangerous to let live."
The officer's gun lowered toward his face; he begged, pleaded, threatened.
The last thing he saw was the muzzle flash.
The timeline closed of its own accord, and Coil was left sitting in confusion at his desk.
What the hell is going on? he asked himself. What just happened?
He was pretty sure he was free and clear in this timeline; the kidnap attempt hadn't even been made. But just to be sure, he checked up on the security systems in his house. Nothing; there hadn't even been an attempt to gain entry.
Might as well go home and get a good night's sleep while I try to work out what happened, he told himself. Splitting the timelines, he stayed in the chair while he got up and headed for his office door.
He'd almost reached it when the computer beeped; a second later, so did his phone.
Clicking on the alert tag, he saw the same thing that he'd seen before; his accounts had been frozen. He was being locked down. But this had happened minutes after it had happened on the other timeline. Why the disparity?
He was still trying to puzzle that out when the alarms went off.
=///=
There was a crunch and shriek of tearing metal, and light flooded into the small room. Glory Girl stepped out into the dazzle, which was all I could see with my darkness-adjusted eyes, and I heard the meaty
thump of her hitting someone. But she must have been too late; there were alarms wailing in the base, even as we moved forward.
Over my head, I heard and saw a massive swarm of bugs also pouring out into the base; Taylor had gathered them over the last couple of hours, and they had accompanied us into the base on the ceiling. She had, of course, not needed assistance in the darkness.
Shouts of alarm sounded, changing to cries of pain in some instances. Shots rang out; I wasn't sure who was shooting, whether it was from our side or theirs, but this was rapidly getting out of control. Pushing through the crowd, I found Canary.
"Time to do your thing," I advised her. She nodded, pulled the first piece of paper from her pocket, and unfolded it. I handed her a torch that I'd found in a belt holder – the PRT had the
best utility belts! - and helped Simons shield her from the press of people. In the meantime, she took out the apparatus that Armsmaster had given her, and turned it on.
I had suggested a loudspeaker; he had gone one better. This device literally hijacked any sound system in its vicinity, taking it over for our purposes.
She began to sing; at first wordlessly, and then reading out the lines we had worked out.
"
Everyone aligned to Coil … lay down your arms … surrender peacefully … you will not be harmed … Coil has no money … his accounts have been frozen … Coil, do not resist … everyone aligned to Coil … lay down your arms … surrender peacefully … you will not be harmed … Coil has no money … his accounts have been frozen ..."
Her voice was
gorgeous. I wanted to listen to her talk forever.
The gunfire from outside petered out, then cut off altogether.
=///=
Coil reacted at once to the alarms. He began to set up the self-destruct to the base on his computer, but then the screen flickered and went dead. Smoke began trickling out of the base of his computer. He stared, then pulled off a panel. Dozens of cockroaches and other bugs were busily gnawing at the wiring of the computer; as he watched, one sacrificed itself, short-circuiting the motherboard.
In the other timeline, he dashed to the secret exit hatch in the back wall of his office. He hated to flee in such an ignominious fashion, but one of him had to survive, to get away.
And then the sweet, impossible-to-ignore, voice came trickling out of the speakers. First, the sweetest of singing, wordless, gorgeous, amazing. And then the words. Telling his men to surrender, that he had no money to pay them. Telling him not to resist.
I'm not resisting, he told himself as he levered at the panel. I'm fleeing. There's a difference.
He got it off, ducked inside, and pulled it back into place. Grimly, he set off down the passageway.
Once I'm clear, I'll blow the place.
In the first timeline, he didn't make it to the escape panel. He sat, waiting to be captured.
It would be interesting to see who his captors were, before they died.
=///=
Rogers allowed me to risk a peek around the corner of the doorway. The base looked pretty well as I'd imagined it, though a lot less cave-like. It could have been taken from some sort of military base. All around, the mercenaries were laying down their arms.
Over the speakers, Canary continued to sing, reinforcing her commands from before.
"Anyone hurt?" I asked Andrews; Armsmaster and Miss Militia were already out in the base proper, rounding up the mercenaries.
"Just a couple of bruises, sir," he assured me. "They only fired a few shots before that Canary girl did her thing." He glanced up. "You might want to get back under cover, sir."
I looked where he was looking; a costumed man was standing on the opposite side of the atrium, on the lower level. A man in a top hat and theatrical mask.
Trickster.
"That's funny," I muttered.
"Sir?" asked Rogers.
"Trickster. He usually doesn't run solo. Pass the word to look out for the rest of the Travellers."
"Will do, sir." He touched the side of his helmet, and I heard him murmuring.
"Hey!" yelled Trickster. "You need to get the hell out before -"
Canary had been passed the word by Simons; she began to sing the second set of instructions.
=///=
Francis was angry and frustrated. He had been visiting Coil's base, talking to Noelle, when the alarms started going off; initially, he had taken cover behind one of the larger crates till he saw how this came out.
But Noelle was now no doubt agitated and upset, and it would take forever to get her to calm down again. And that singing was exhorting him to not fight, not resist.
I'm not in this for the money, he gritted. I'm in it for Noelle.
The shooting seemed to be over; he came out into the open.
"
Hey!" he yelled. "You need to get the hell out before -"
The song changed. And he had no choice but to listen.
"
Travellers, do not fight. Do not resist. We have a cure for Noelle, and we can send you home."
And that got his complete and total attention.
=///=
Timeline A
Coil scrambled along the escape tunnel. It led to an inconspicuous manhole half a block away, which could only be opened from the underside. Once he got out, he'd send a signal via his phone to blow the base. He really did regret the loss of the base, and of the Undersiders and the Travellers as assets - with Trickster and Noelle dead, he would have no hold over the latter group - but he would gain more minions.
He would rebuild.
The manhole was just above him. He started to climb.
=///=
Timeline B
Coil was hustled out of his office by two PRT troopers. They had searched him, and relieved him of his gun and phone, but that was to be expected. His primary weapon now was his brain; he would garner as much information as possible, including how and why he had been uncovered, before he terminated this timeline.
And then he came face to face with the very last man he expected to see.
"
Hey," Michael Allen greeted him.
"
What – you – what are you doing here?"
"
Taking you down. Making sure you're no longer a threat to my friends."
His tone was so matter-of-fact that Coil had trouble comprehending the words. He tried to reason it out.
"
But – I let you go. You assured me that you wouldn't hold a grudge."
Allen shook his head. "I didn't, and I don't. Not from that. I was planning to bring you down since, oh, last week. Because I knew you were going to try to take Dinah Alcott today. So I made sure you failed."
Coil stared at him. "But how could you -"
Allen leaned close. "The same way I know what your powers are. The same way I know you tortured me. The same way I know that whatever you're doing in the other timeline is doomed to fail."
He turned away, then stopped and addressed the guards. "Oh, and the zipper for his costume goes along the white snake. The tab's down near his ankle."
Then he headed for the stairs, moving down toward the leader of the Travellers, who was still standing near the vault door, not making any aggressive moves. Coil watched him go; his mind was spinning too hard to even begin to formulate a response. One thought was uppermost.
How does he know these things?
=///=
Timeline A
Coil scrambled up the ladder to the manhole cover. He carefully turned the wheel which unlocked it. Pushing it up, he felt a gust of cool evening air. He began to climb out -
"
Coil."
Spinning around, he stared at the woman standing there, holding the pistol almost negligently.
"
Contessa – I -"
Her voice was cool, detached. "I warned you. Told you it was your last chance."
"
I – I -"
She fired, once. The bullet impacted just beneath his right eye-socket.
=///=
Flanked by Rogers and Armsmaster, with Glory Girl and Panacea following behind, I strolled along the concrete floor of the base until I was face to face with Trickster.
"In case you're wondering," I told him. "It's true. Every word. Noelle can be cured, and you can all go home."
He shook his head violently. "Coil was -"
"No," I overrode him, "Coil was
not finding a cure for her. He was holding her as leverage for you, until you outlived your usefulness. It's the way he works. Worked."
"You could just be saying that," he shot back.
I sighed. "Your name is Francis. The other Travellers are called Luke, Marissa and Jess. They're out and about somewhere?" I indicated toward the upper level. "Except that Jess is with Oliver in your apartments up there, and Noelle's in the vault. You were all setting up to play Ransack when the Simurgh happened, and you ended up in Earth Bet. Chris was killed when something fell on his head. One of you got a cut on the leg. How am I doing so far, Krouse?"
"What the
fuck?" he demanded. "How do you even know that?" He paused. "Wait, what apartments? What are you talking about?"
I paused.
Trickster rarely goes out on his own. He's here to visit Noelle. She's only just been moved in.
"Ah," I spoke in realisation. "You haven't moved in yet. You and the others are still based elsewhere, right?"
"Wait a minute," Armsmaster interrupted. "The Travellers are from
Earth Aleph? And they're
Simurgh victims?"
"Check and check," I told him. "I propose to send them back there, so they won't cause any more problems here. Do you have an issue with that?"
He paused. "... actually, no," he admitted. "Although you still haven't told me how you're going to pull off that little stunt."
I grinned. "You don't need to know. Really, you don't."
"I'm getting a little tired of hearing that," he gritted.
"So, how's Dragon doing these days?" I asked cheerfully.
" … fine," he growled. "Keep your little secrets."
"Thank you," I told him sincerely. I turned back to Trickster. "So, as I was saying. I know a crapload about you. About what you've done, and what you were
going to do. I know you love Noelle. And I know you want to get her cured and get home. I can do both for you."
I paused. "Now, here's the thing. I can just do this, and wave you on your way. Or I can offer you a paying job, using your abilities, while you still get to go home and relax at the end of the day."
Trickster stared at me. "Do we all have to agree on one or the other?" he asked at last.
I shook my head. "Nope. I know, for instance, that Marissa hates the whole 'being a parahuman' thing. She'd be happy just settling down with no powers at all, right?"
Trickster paused. "Yeah. She makes no secret of it ... to us. But how do
you know
?"
I shrugged. "I could tell you. But you wouldn't believe me. Anyway. Think about it. You don't have to decide one way or the other, not yet anyway." I indicated the door to the vault. "I need to talk to Noelle."
=///=
Trickster pressed the button on the intercom. "Noelle? How are you doing?"
A face appeared on the small screen; a brunette, in her late teens or early twenties. She looked strung out on drugs, though I knew that was not actually the case. Under ordinary circumstances, she would have been quite pretty; with good makeup and a nice hairstyle, I figured that she could be stunning. But at the moment, her hair was straggly, her lips were chapped, and she had bags under her eyes.
"
What's happening, Francis?" she asked. "
What were those noises?"
"I … uh … something's happened, Noelle," he told her. "Things have changed. There's a guy here who's offering ..." He paused. "What was your name again?"
I rolled my eyes. "Sorry. Got ahead of myself. The name's Mike Allen."
"
What? Who was that?"
I leaned into the pickup range of the camera. "That would be me. Sorry. Call me Mike. I'm here to make you the offer you've been waiting for since you got your powers."
Her voice was suspicious. "
What offer is that?"
I wanted to grin, but she might not have taken that so seriously. "How would you like me to help take your powers away from you, permanently?"
"What?" blurted Trickster.
Noelle was silent for a long moment. "
What's the catch?"
I shook my head. "No catch. It might be risky, given that we're gonna have to dig what's really you out of a mass of meat the size of a brontosaurus, but you
will lose your powers, and you
won't keep going the way you are."
"
But … Coil said ..."
"Coil," I told her flatly, "couldn't lie straight in bed. The man was just holding on to you and pretending to look for a cure, when he could have gotten one at any time. But he preferred to have his super-powered minions. Me, I just want to give you a second chance."
Another long silence. "
I … just be careful. If you come in here … I might attack you."
I nodded. "I know. So I brought along a friend. She'd like to sing to you, if that's all right."
Her voice was doubtful. "
I … guess?"
I stepped aside, and pulled out earplugs as Paige stepped up to the intercom. "Everyone," I warned as I put the plugs in, "if you don't want to feel soothed down, cover your ears."
Paige opened her mouth, and the most amazing voice spilled out once more. Every time I heard it, it was like the first time. It was like she had all the positive aspects of the voices of every singer I'd ever heard, all at once.
She sang a lullaby, simple and sweet, her tones soothing and lulling Noelle. By the end of it, the girl's eyelids were drooping, and she had a faint smile on her face.
I looked at Trickster and the others. Everyone was still alert; no-one had opted to listen.
"Okay," I told them. "I'm going in there, with Panacea. I'll be turning off the camera feed once we're in there, and also the sound. I don't want anyone seeing or hearing some of the stuff that's going to be happening."
"Why?" asked Trickster. "What are you going to be doing?"
"You're not cleared to know that," I told him bluntly.
"That's not an answer," he snapped, sounding annoyed.
"It's all the answer you're going to get," I advised him.
He began to reply hotly, when Noelle interrupted him from the intercom.
"
Francis, let him do what he's going to do," she murmured dreamily. "
I feel so good now. I don't want you to argue."
He drew a deep breath, then stepped back. "Okay, fine," he growled. "But if she doesn't come out of this okay, you and me are going to have
words."
I ignored the implicit threat; I had to concentrate on the matter at hand. "Open the vault door, please," I requested.
"Coil's the only one with the combination," he retorted, his voice sourly satisfied.
I turned to my PRT shadow. "Rogers, could you pass the word to get Tattletale here, please?"
"Someone say my name?" she asked, from directly behind me.
I yelped and jumped, then turned on her.
"Seriously?" I demanded. "Are you
trying to give me a heart attack?"
I had never before seen someone pull off a look of innocent smugness. "Didn't know I was going to be there, did you?" she grinned.
"It doesn't
work that way," I gritted. "Okay, you know why I was going to get you here. Open the vault, please?"
"But of course," she replied, flexing her fingers as she stepped toward the combination keypad.
I held up a hand. "Just a moment. Panacea?"
"Here," she replied, stepping forward.
"Okay," I told her seriously. "This is it. You wait outside the vault until I call you in, all right?"
"All right," she agreed, with a serious expression on her face.
I paused, and looked directly at her. "Are you good with this? Am I putting too much pressure on you?"
She shook her head. "Oh, no. This is something different. Something interesting. And I'll be taking that time off, after. I'm looking forward to that." She offered me a slight smile. "Thanks for this. For everything."
I shrugged. "Hey, Noelle's not the only one who deserves a second chance, remember." I took a deep breath. "Okay, everyone, places."
=///=
Lisa's fingers danced over the keypad, then paused and looked at me. "Combination's done. All you have to do is hit the Enter key.".
"Got it," I agreed, stepping up to the vault door. Panacea stood back a little, flanked by Mayfield. Rogers went to step forward as well, but I held up a hand.
"Trust me, this is one case when less is more."
"I have my orders -" began Rogers.
I pointed at the vault door. "Inside there is an unstable monster, barely kept in check by the mind of a badly traumatised teenage girl. She sees guns, she just might snap out of her happy place. And if that happens, all you'll accomplish is to get eaten
first."
Armsmaster came over. "What's the matter here?"
"He's trying to lock me out, sir," Rogers reported. "I won't be able to do my job from out here."
"Me neither, sir," agreed Mayfield, from beside Panacea.
"Believe me when I say that it's safer if Rogers stays out here," I told the armoured hero. "He will
not be able to protect me if she gets aggressive, and the sight of a gun just might tip the balance.". I paused. "Once it's done, and I call in Panacea, you guys can come in."
Armsmaster took a deep breath, not liking the situation. But I knew that his helmet-mounted lie detector was reporting to him the truth of what I was saying.
"Okay, fine," he growled at last.
"Thanks," I responded, and pressed the Enter key. The door
clunked as the locks disengaged.
I heaved it open, just far enough to squeeze through, then pulled it shut behind me.
=///=
The interior of the vault was bigger than I'd expected. The rotting-meat smell was something I had read about, but the reality was something else altogether. And Noelle …
She was a tiny extrusion on the top of the giant creature that would be called Echidna if it escaped. The dog-like heads snarled at me, but they were lackadaisical, almost asleep. The eyes that dotted the lower part of the body were heavy-lidded, some of them closed altogether.
"Who are you?" she asked dreamily.
I cleared my throat. "Noelle. My name's Mike Allen, and I'm offering to take your powers away, and send you home. Are you interested in this?"
She thought about this. "Oh, yeah. You said. Can you really do that?"
"If I can't," I told her grimly, "I'm gonna be really embarrassed in just a moment or two."
She giggled. "Go ahead then."
"One moment," I told her. Turning to the intercom panel, I hit the switches to turn off outgoing audio and video. Then I turned back to her.
"Ready?" I asked.
She nodded.
"Close your eyes and cover your ears, please."
"What, really?" she asked with another giggle.
I nodded. "Really. Please."
Obediently, she closed her eyes, and covered her ears.
I took a deep breath.
"Door to the Removalist."
=///=
When I had raised this topic with Contessa, she had initially refused to even admit to the existence of a cape who could remove Noelle's powers. I didn't blame her; for most capes, knowing there was someone out there who could simply take away that which made them special would be ... terrifying.
But I had argued the point; Cauldron, I reminded her,
told the recipients of new powers that if they did not fulfil their side of the deal, then the powers would be removed. As I recalled, Battery had raised the question of the powers having an off-switch, and she had been told that no, it was a cape employed by Cauldron.
Contessa had acknowledged the existence of the cape then, but had argued that revealing his existence was not worth the benefit. I insisted that it was. It was around about then that the question of clearance had come up; we argued through it.
In the end, I got my way, and a name; the Removalist. But this left me with a nagging question in my mind.
Can Contessa truly not use Path to Victory against me, or did she deliberately lose that argument?
The question was still bothering me as I spoke the words.
For a long moment, nothing happened, and I thought,
Great, I've just made an idiot of myself.
And then the doorway opened in space, right beside me. On the other side was a well-furnished room, panelled in some dark wood; the walls were lined with bookshelves.
In a comfortable-looking armchair sat a tall, thin man, wearing what I pigeonholed as 'English-gentry' clothing. He was reading a book, but looked up as the portal opened.
"Ah, you're here," he observed. His accent was in keeping with his dress and surroundings; very British, with an upper-class smoothness to it. Carefully placing a bookmark to keep the page, he shut the book and put it on a side table. Rising from the chair, he stepped through the portal.
"Good evening," he greeted me. "This is the one you want … treated?"
"She is," I agreed. "Contessa told you I was going to do this?"
He nodded. "She advised me to be ready. Best step back. I don't want you to accidentally lose your powers as well."
"Oh, I don't have any," I assured him.
"What, really? Intriguing."
"Uh, can I open my eyes yet?" asked Noelle loudly.
"Not yet!" I shouted back. I gestured to the Cauldron cape.
He nodded and held out his hands. A shimmering field extended from each palm, merged into one, and then grew to engulf Noelle's bloated body.
"It's
so much easier when they're cooperative," he muttered, more to himself than to me.
The shimmering built to a crescendo, and then winked out.
"It's done," he advised me, stepping back into the portal.
"I, uh, thanks," I told him, then was distracted by a tremendous thump that shook the entire vault. Noelle's massive legs had failed; they had folded under her, and she had dropped to the ground.
"Noelle!" I shouted, looking back over my shoulder as ran to the communication panel. "How do you feel?"
"Help me!" she screamed. "It hurts!
It hurts!"
There was no time to waste. I opened the audio channel again. "Okay, it's clear. I need Panacea, stat."
=///=
Willing hands heaved the door open, and Panacea came in. She was followed in short order by Armsmaster, Rogers, Mayfield, Glory Girl and Trickster. We watched in fascinated horror as outer-lying parts of the body began to crumble and dissolve away. And in the middle of it, Noelle – her original body – was in agony.
"I don't know what to do!" confessed Panacea. "I don't know how to fix this!"
"We have to get to Noelle," I told her. "She's what we've got to save. The rest of it doesn't matter." I went to the edge of the mound of dying flesh and tried to climb up, but handfuls of material, rotting as fast as I touched it, just came away.
"Oh christ," I groaned. "How are we going to get up there?"
Noelle screamed again.
"Holy shit," marvelled Glory Girl, looking up at the bulk of Noelle. "How the fuck do we deal with this?"
"Get me up there!" snapped Panacea. "I need to be able to reach her!"
"Okay, Ames, okay," Vicky told her. "Don't get your panties in a wad."
Hefting her sister, she flew up over the vast bulk of dying flesh. They were so small next to what Noelle had become. I hoped that Amy would be able to help her.
Trickster turned to me as I wiped the remains of bits of Noelle off on my pants legs.
"Fuck, is she going to be all right?" he asked.
I shrugged. "I thought it was going to be easier than this. I didn't realise how big she'd gotten."
The tone of the screaming changed; I shuddered. I didn't know if that was a good thing or a bad thing.
"So … she could
die?" he asked.
I nodded. "Hopefully not, but … yeah."
He turned his face toward me. I could not see his expression, but the venom was clear in his voice. "If that happens ... " He didn't finish the threat.
I didn't blame him, but as Rogers took a step forward, I held up a hand to stop him and Armsmaster both; the latter stood right behind the supervillain, halberd at the ready. Trickster didn't even know he was there; for a man in armour, Armsmaster could move very quietly when he had to.
I forced my voice to steadiness. "Her powers are
gone. We have the world's best biokinetic working on her. If anyone can do this, Panacea can."
And if she can't, it might just destroy Amy's faith in herself. But I couldn't dwell on that.
Things had gone silent where Panacea worked with Noelle. I didn't dare look that way; I feared the worst and hoped for the best.
More and more of Noelle's immense body was now disintegrating, crumbling away. I looked around as Glory Girl touched down with not one, but two passengers. One was Amy, wearing a T-shirt and jeans. The other was … I guessed it was Noelle, wearing Panacea's robes.
I slapped myself on the forehead. "Duh! I told myself and told myself, bring pants. So what did I forget to do?"
Panacea's voice was tired but amused. "Bring pants?"
"And the lady wins a prize."
Trickster interrupted; stepping forward, he pulled his mask off, uncaring that we could all see him. His face was swarthy, with a hooked nose. "Noelle?" he asked hesitantly. "Are you really all right?"
The brunette pushed back her hood. She was still looking pretty well wrecked, but there was colour in her cheeks now. She wasn't actually standing on her own, I realised; Amy was supporting her on one side, and Victoria on the other.
"I've been better," she admitted in a soft, low voice. "But I've been a lot worse, too. My legs aren't really working at the moment ..."
"That's because you've never used them before," Amy scolded her. "I just
made them. You've got to learn to work the connections. Sheesh."
Noelle smiled at her. "... but, as I was saying, that's far preferable to being stuck like
that."
Francis stepped up to her. "Please?" he asked Glory Girl. Vicky shrugged, and got out of his way. He put his arm around Noelle, helping to support her. She held him tightly.
I nodded. "Yes. Definitely preferable."
She looked at me, head tilted. "You're saying that like you know something."
I took a deep breath. "I know how it would have turned out if this hadn't happened."
Noelle swallowed. "Do I want to know?"
"You and a lot of others dead, Trickster Birdcaged, enslaved and then dead, the others back home." I shrugged. "This way? Everyone gets to go home."
"Except Cody."
Trickster stared at her. "Seriously? You're thinking of
Cody at a time like this?"
"He
was one of us," she replied defensively.
"He nearly got Marissa
killed," he snapped. "He
did try to kill you!"
"As I understand, Cody
is a bit of a dick," I observed.
Panacea gave me a stern look. "Wasn't it you who was going on about second chances?"
Noelle nodded wearily. "And I've done far worse things than Cody has."
Leaning back my head for a moment, I closed my eyes.
What would Hope do?
I didn't have to ask; I already knew.
Fuck.
I sighed. "Okay, fine, you got me. Could everyone leave the vault, please?"
"Why?" asked Armsmaster.
I drew a deep breath. "I have to deal with the Cody situation."
Not without several backward glances, they went; Panacea and Trickster supported Noelle between them.
=///=
I went over and turned off the sound again; taking a deep breath, I said the words.
"Door to Cody."
The Clairvoyant obviously knew which Cody I meant; the doorway opened into a barracks, a row of beds against a wall. A young man lay sleeping on the bed. He had Caucasian features.
I could see the light from the vault spilling through the portal, illuminating the barracks. We didn't have much time. I stepped through, into the barracks, hoping like hell that it would not close and strand me in China. Grabbing Cody by the shoulder, I shook him hard.
He came awake with a start, flailing at me. "Huh, what, who -"
I batted his arms away. "Sh! Cody. I can get you home. Back to Earth Aleph. Do you want to go?"
He was blinking, trying to bring his brain online. "Who the fuck are you?"
"A friend. I can bring you home. But you have to let bygones be bygones."
"What do you mean?" he demanded. I heard noises of people stirring. One man sat up and looked at us curiously.
"You have to leave Krouse and the others alone. Make up your mind, now!"
"That motherfucker!" He surged up out of the bed. I met him with a forearm to the chest.
"No! Leave it go, and get out of here … or don't, and stay."
People were climbing out of their beds now, approaching us. Someone called out a question in what I figured was Chinese.
He ignored it. "You want me to just forget what he did?"
"Just let it go, Cody," I urged him. "Start fresh." This was not the time and place for this argument.
An arm grabbed at me, and I pulled free. A fist swung out of the darkness, smacked me in the cheekbone. I staggered, saw stars. I managed to keep my feet under me, got my arms up, blocked the next punch. I got kicked in the stomach for my trouble; he'd only been feinting at my face. The kick really didn't bother me; the PRT body armour was good like that.
Then the lights came on. A loud, authoritative voice called out. I looked up; and saw the guy in uniform. Then I saw the rifle he was aiming at me. That was when I decided enough was enough and dived for the portal. The rifle went off, and I felt a smashing impact in my ribs. I sprawled on hard metal, trying to catch my breath, rolled over.
Through the portal, I saw Cody fight free of grasping hands. Another shot rang out; he jerked, blood spraying from a hole in his upper torso. And then he flickered, was unhurt, took two steps and dived through the portal. It closed before he hit the floor.
=///=
My heart was beating at about a thousand miles a second; I sat up, supporting myself with both arms. My ribs were killing me. "Fuck, I never want to have to do that again."
Cody started to get up, looking around in a daze. "What the fuck? Where is this place?"
"We're in Brockton Bay," I told him.
"Seriously? Place smells like a slaughterhouse."
"You're not far wrong there," I grunted, trying to get to my feet without further aggravating my ribs. I wasn't entirely successful.
He grabbed my arm, helped me up. "You okay?"
"I'll be fine," I told him. I mustered a grin. "Oh yeah. Congratulations, you've just been rescued."
Just at that moment, the vault door was pulled open, and Rogers burst in, followed closely by Armsmaster. "We heard shooting!" snapped Rogers, his gun tracking on to Cody.
Cody threw up his hands. "Wasn't me!"
"Hey," I broke in. "It's fine. Danger is over. Please vacate the premises."
"What just happened?" demanded Armsmaster. If I wasn't careful, I would soon have way too many witnesses in here. Too many questions to answer.
"I'll tell you outside," I insisted. "Please leave the vault."
Reluctantly, they left.
"And close the door!" I called. The vault door swung all the way shut.
"Wow," observed Cody. "Intense much?"
I grinned at him. "You just met Armsmaster. He kind of takes 'intense' and makes it his bitch."
"Right, right," he muttered, then pointed at the decomposing mass of what had once been Noelle. "And what the fuck is that?"
"That," I observed dryly, "is what was left behind when we fixed Noelle."
He stared. "Noelle's here?"
I nodded. "Her and Francis, yeah."
"Krouse." It was a growl.
I made my decision. It was obvious that Cody wasn't about to forgive and forget; nor, for that matter, was Trickster. "Okay, did you have any gear that you want?"
He blinked at me. "Uh, in my locker?"
I nodded. "Door, to Cody's locker."
The portal opened before us; I reached in, grabbed clothes, tossed them to him. There wasn't much there, but we got it all. The portal closed again.
"How the fuck did you do that?" he demanded, his arms full of clothes.
"You're not cleared to know that," I told him. "Door, to Brockton Bay, Earth Aleph."
Another portal formed. Beyond was a cityscape shaded by night. I nodded to it.
"Wait," he blurted. "That's
it?"
I pointed at the portal. "
Home. Did you want an engraved invitation?"
He took a step toward it. "The others; where are they going?"
I shook my head. "You're not cleared to know that either. Now, are you going or not?"
He stepped through. The portal closed behind him.
=///=
As I emerged from the vault, Panacea moved up alongside me; she had obviously noticed how I was favouring my left side.
"Did you get hurt
again?" she asked me. "What is it with you and your ribs? Is it some sort of hobby?"
"What happened in there?" interrupted Armsmaster. "What was the shooting about?"
I sighed. "The last Traveller, a kid called Cody, was in China, not by choice. I pulled him out, then sent him on to the Brockton Bay of Earth Aleph." They stared at me; I shrugged. "I needed him out of the way, otherwise he could disrupt some other plans I have running."
Armsmaster's voice was sceptical. "And China isn't far enough out of the way?"
"Nope. Earth Aleph might be, though."
He fixed me with what I presumed to be a glower. "And you got him from China … how?"
"Sorry," I told him. "Can't tell you that."
Panacea interrupted him. "Sorry, I have to deal with some fractured ribs and – what is this on your face? Did someone
hit you?"
I grimaced. "The Chinese, uh, objected to me taking him." A shrug. "Thus the shooting."
"You got shot, didn't you?" Amy accused me.
"Seriously?"
"I got shot," I admitted reluctantly. "Must be what got my ribs. Good body armour, by the way. Saved my life, I guess."
Panacea laid her hand over the graze on my cheek. I felt the torn skin close, and then the ribs stopped hurting, just like that.
I nodded to her. "Thanks."
"Wait a minute," Armsmaster interrupted. "You went to China?"
"That's where he was," I responded.
"I just hope you didn't cause an international incident," was all he said.
"I might have; they seemed pretty upset with me," I admitted. "But if I can get the Travellers back to their world, even if the C.U.I. comes looking, they won't find a thing."
"I suppose," he admitted grudgingly. He didn't sound all that broken up about the C.U.I. not getting what they wanted.
I dusted my hands off. "That's settled then; good. Okay, time to get the rest of the Travellers home."
"How are you going to do that?" asked Armsmaster.
"Classified," I told him blandly. "Francis, Noelle, into the vault, please."
"What?" asked Trickster. "Why?"
"Earth Aleph?" I prompted. "You want to go home or not?"
"What about everyone else?" asked Noelle.
"It'll be taken care of," I assured her. "Come on."
I stepped back into the vault, with Trickster and Panacea supporting Noelle, following me.
"Uh, Amy, you can go outside now," I told the healer.
She shook her head. "No. I need to come along, make sure you don't get hurt again."
Which I considered to be a fairly specious argument, but it was a sign of initiative, so I let it slide. "Okay. Just one thing. What I'm about to do, no-one else can ever hear about. Okay?"
She firmed her jaw and nodded once. "Okay."
I took a deep breath. "Door to Oliver."
=///=
Oliver looked up in shock. He had been sitting on the couch, watching TV, when a doorway opened in midair, right in front of him. And stepping through were Trickster and …
"
Noelle?" he blurted. "You're … wow, what happened?"
And then two more people stepped through the portal.
Things got a little confused after that.
=///=
"Okay," announced Trickster. "I think we're set." He had changed into civilian clothes; his mask and costume were hidden in his baggage. Everyone else was gathered around, also in street clothes.
I nodded. "No problem." Then I paused. "Just by the by; as you can see, I've had Noelle's powers removed. Anyone else want the same service, before I send you back?"
There was a pause, then Marissa stepped forward. "What … how does it work?" she asked. "Can you do it for me?"
I nodded. "We're just going to have to step into another room. And I'll have to ask you to close your eyes and cover your ears. Okay?"
"Okay," she replied doubtfully, then Oliver stepped forward as well.
"And me too?" he ventured. "My powers are more problematic than helpful."
"Sure," I told him. "Same thing. You can't see or hear what I do."
They both nodded in agreement; I led the way into what turned out to be Trickster's study.
=///=
Jess stared at Marissa. "Your powers are gone? I mean,
gone?"
Marissa nodded. "I've been trying to make a sun for a couple minutes now. Nothing." A grin spread across her face. "Never again. Oh god, never again."
"Okay," I told them. "I'm gonna send you back now. Just remember; if you're interested in extra work as a parahuman, someone will come knocking on your door."
"Sounds good to me," Luke agreed. "Kickin' ass for a sweet paycheck."
"One way to put it," I grinned. "Okay. Where would you like to go?"
They conferred quickly. Francis turned to me. "Madison, Wisconsin."
I nodded. "Sure. Door to Earth Aleph, Madison, Wisconson."
The door opened. Francis nodded to me. "Appreciate the help. For me and for Noelle." He hefted his bags, tossed them through, picked up two more.
Marissa ran over and hugged me; I patted her back.
"Thank you," she whispered. "For everything."
I shrugged awkwardly. "It's all right. You better go; you might miss the bus."
She giggled and kissed me on the cheek, then ran back to grab her bags.
Oliver wheeled Jess toward the portal, but Amy told him, "Wait."
Curious, he paused, and she leaned over Jess for a moment. Then she murmured something in the brunette's ear. She nodded to Oliver. "You can go now."
He wheeled Jess through the portal, and looked back at me.
"Thanks, dude," he told me. "Really."
And then the portal closed, and there was just myself and Panacea in the room; she had reclaimed her robes from Noelle.
"Holy crap," she commented. "And I can't tell anyone what happened?"
I shook my head. "Not right away, no. Later on, maybe."
"Okay," she agreed. "I can live with that."
I tilted my head. "What did you just say to Jess?"
"Oh," she confessed. "I told her that I'd fixed the nerves in her back. She's going to need serious physiotherapy, but she'll be walking in six months."
"Huh," I commented. "Nice one."
She smiled.
=///=
The PRT transport pulled up outside the Hebert house. I got out, and helped Taylor and Amy out; both were in civilian garb. Taylor was wearing her mask, which she took off as she got out of the truck. I'd had to give back the body armour, which was a little bit of a wrench, but it was so much easier to move and breathe without it.
Taylor led the way up the path to the front door; she skipped over the bottom step, and I waved Amy ahead of me. The front door opened, and Danny stood there.
"Danny, this is Amelia Claire Lavere," I told him. "Amy, this is Danny Hebert."
"I'm pleased to meet you, Mr Hebert," Amy told him politely.
"Come on in, come on in," he invited, and we all trooped up the steps and in through the entrance hall. I closed the door behind me.
"Come on," Taylor told Amy, "I'll show you where you'll be sleeping." They thundered up the stairs; I grinned as the ceiling shook and dust drifted down.
"Believe it or not," I told him, "she's here for peace and quiet."
He quirked a smile. "Well, I've always heard good things about her. So we'll try to give her as normal a life as possible while she's here."
"That's exactly what she needs," I assured him. "She'll be seeing a therapist to deal with the worst of her problems, but here and now, just having people who treat her as a normal person, who welcome her into their home, that's what she really needs."
He adjusted his glasses. "Well, it's been a while since we had two teenagers in the house, but I'm sure I can manage."
Just as I was shaking his hand, the thundering herd reappeared, hurtling pell-mell down the stairs; at the bottom of the steps, it resumed the form of Taylor and Amy.
"So, Amy, do you like the accommodations?" I asked politely.
She nodded and smiled, eyes bright. "Yes, Mr Allen. Thank you." She turned to Danny. "And thank you for putting me up."
He shrugged awkwardly and patted her on the shoulder. "I'm just glad I can help," he told her. Raising an eyebrow, he added, "Dinner's almost ready. Who wants some?"
As we all headed to the kitchen, I remarked, "I hope you made enough. I've heard these teenage girls can eat you out of house and home."
Amy poked her tongue out at me.
=///=
Director Piggot put her phone on speaker. "Report."
"
The assault went off without a hitch," Armsmaster replied. "Coil was captured, and the dangerous Case 53 was … neutralised without incident."
"
How exactly was she neutralised?"
"
I do not know," confessed Armsmaster. "Mr Allen played another of his little tricks, and caused Ms Meinhardt to lose her powers."
"
Are the Travellers in your custody, at least?"
"
... no. Only Trickster was on site. In addition, Security revealed that the Travellers are natives of Earth Aleph, and that they were brought here by the Simurgh."
Piggot blinked. "Dear Lord."
"
Precisely. So when he undertook to send them back, I agreed."
"
He sent them back? To Earth Aleph? How?"
"
The means are unknown," Armsmaster told her.
"
Perhaps similar to the other matter?"
"
I was thinking the same thing," agreed Armsmaster. "If he is allied with them -"
"
He spoke as though he was not, if you recall," Piggot reminded him. "But if they have given him access to how they get around ..."
"
And can neutralise the powers of capes at will ..."
"
Then yes, kid gloves. Very much kid gloves." She paused. "Anything else to report?"
"
Yes, actually. We spoke before he left; he made strong recommendations that the Undersiders be given as much freedom as possible without actually letting them go free and clear. He stressed that each of them had their reasons for being criminals, and if approached correctly, they might be willing to consider changing sides." He paused. "Also, Canary performed flawlessly; I consider that she was a major factor in reducing potential casualties to nil."
"
Just as Mr Allen suggested," the Director observed.
"
Indeed. He recommends, and I concur, that she remains with us, as a paid civilian contractor rather than a prisoner. She has, after all, just helped prevent a potential S-class threat from attacking the city."
"
So you believe Mr Allen's analysis of the situation?"
"
Implicitly."
"
Indeed. Thank you, Armsmaster."
Piggot hung up the phone.
"
Well," she said out loud to the empty room. "We'll do it your way for now, Mr Allen. We'll see where that takes us."
Leaning back in the chair, she took off her reading glasses and rubbed her eyes.
Listen to me. Talking to myself. I must be tired.
Putting the glasses back on, she leaned forward again, and perused the next item of paperwork.
There was more to do before she was finished tonight.
End of Chapter Twenty-Three