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Taylor Hebert, Medhall Intern [Worm Fanfic]


I don't speak for the first poster, but in my opinion it's too deus ex and changes the tone of the story in a way with which I'm uncomfortable.

At the start of the story it was Taylor's intelligence, grit & determination, and human-level skill that led to success. The wastebin fire was marvelous, and the story stayed human-level even when Hookwolf showed up at Winslow. The principle's office scene was absolutely delightful, the plotline of data analysis vs corporate espionage was very nice, the cliff rescue was marvelous and Greg's victory over Hess was human triumph in the face of terrifying odds.

Introducing Brian in a non-villain situation was nice, as were the introductions of Tammi and Theo. All the conversations, interactions, thoughts and so on were human-level, and the problems were solved with human-level skills. Powers were a factor and nicely mentioned in passing, but there weren't any blatant uses. Up until part 21 it was humans winning because of *their own* skills & abilities.

Then Tracy triggered, Brian uses powers, Theo triggers, Taylor triggers and suddenly it's a thirteen-page parahuman battle. Yes believable escalation, yes dramatic, yes lots of internal dialogue and tension. No to staying at street-level with humans in a parahuman world, but hey - it's Worm and escalation's gonna happen sooner or later. While not what I'd hoped for it's not unexpected so I can cope. Let's see how Taylor escapes from Empire!

Then it turns from 'Taylor and her friends in a desperate battle' to 'Cauldron ex machina'.

Bleh.

Where's the personal triumph in that? What's the point to struggle if Contessa says you're going to win no matter what? The fight becomes meaningless without the risk of loss. Oh, Taylor & Co definitely struggled and felt like they could die, but as a reader I'm looking back at a dozen pages of fight and thinking 'there's no point to reading that, ever again.'

Would I feel the same if there was no Alexandria & Taylor made it to the PRT on her own merits, and the Cauldron Base coda was still there? Possibly. Possibly not, because what really jarred me was Alexandria physically showing up and saying 'you can't do this on your own'. That hurt my concept of what the story's about.
 
Well said. It feels like it takes away from the struggles and it feel like it came out of left field.
Either it needs some follow up chapters to fill in the back side but as is you could have all the PRT, Wards and Protectorate do a mini throw down for the same effect.
 
Legend and Alexandria being there at the end and only taking maybe Purity into custody did feel really weird. I would have preferred either more captures right then as they were gunning for the PRT building, or the local PRT stepping in and fulfilling the same role Cauldron just did even with all the E88 getting away. Ex, I think Dauntless could tank Purity's blast to save them and militia shoot her while Assault and/or velocity deals with the Potential RPG from Kaiser. This leads into a bigger fight forcing Taylor and Co to turn around and defend themselves and the PRT resulting in a front the E88 can't assail without a plan so they retreat and the PRT is positively predisposed to Taylor and Co.

Admittedly, I would also have liked E88 to have taken more lasting damage from this mad dash, though that would have been hard on Taylor's mental health later. I didn't think Othala's regen was that good that it would have got Rune or Victor back in the fight today like it did, but I am not an expert and Othala being involved at all meant the only lasting harm Taylor and Co would manage would have been fatal.

I have faith in Ack that this will have an interesting pay off later, but in the moment it was somewhat jarring.
 
Legend and Alexandria being there at the end and only taking maybe Purity into custody did feel really weird. I would have preferred either more captures right then as they were gunning for the PRT building, or the local PRT stepping in and fulfilling the same role Cauldron just did even with all the E88 getting away. Ex, I think Dauntless could tank Purity's blast to save them and militia shoot her while Assault and/or velocity deals with the Potential RPG from Kaiser. This leads into a bigger fight forcing Taylor and Co to turn around and defend themselves and the PRT resulting in a front the E88 can't assail without a plan so they retreat and the PRT is positively predisposed to Taylor and Co.

Admittedly, I would also have liked E88 to have taken more lasting damage from this mad dash, though that would have been hard on Taylor's mental health later. I didn't think Othala's regen was that good that it would have got Rune or Victor back in the fight today like it did, but I am not an expert and Othala being involved at all meant the only lasting harm Taylor and Co would manage would have been fatal.

I have faith in Ack that this will have an interesting pay off later, but in the moment it was somewhat jarring.
They didn't take Purity into custody. The PRT did that.

Pretty sure Dauntless can't tank a Purity shot. He's still ramping up to those levels.

The trouble with bringing in the PRT or the Protectorate to save Our Heroes is that they both need time to mobilise, and the Empire was already mobilised in strength. The fight would have done a lot of damage, and the Empire would've been focused on killing all seven of the focus characters while fending off the PRT and heroes, something they could possibly have managed.

Sudden Alexandria Interrupt cut that off at the pass.
 
Because, as much as I enjoy a sudden Alexandria Interrupt, having Cauldron show up to save them when they almost managed it on their own makes it feel like all that effort was pointless. If it were the local Protectorate, that would be something else, but having two of the Triumvirate randomly show up for seemingly no reason just makes it all feel cheap.

Edit: I think, if we saw Taylor attempt to use another trick to save them, and fail, it would feel better. As it is, Taylor, the central character, who the story has closely followed doesn't get to even try to solve the problem.
 
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Because, as much as I enjoy a sudden Alexandria Interrupt, having Cauldron show up to save them when they almost managed it on their own makes it feel like all that effort was pointless. If it were the local Protectorate, that would be something else, but having two of the Triumvirate randomly show up for seemingly no reason just makes it all feel cheap.

Edit: I think, if we saw Taylor attempt to use another trick to save them, and fail, it would feel better. As it is, Taylor, the central character, who the story has closely followed doesn't get to even try to solve the problem.
They did their best, but the Empire simply has more throw weight. Early on, they were lucky enough that the Empire was throwing threats at them individually (and before that, they were specifically up against capes they were optimised against). Going against the Empire en masse was a recipe for death.

Taylor, Greg or Brian would die to a headshot from Victor, and Tracey would get stomped by either of the Valkyrie twins.
 
It really depends on what role the Cauldron intervention is supposed to serve in the plot.

Were you having trouble getting the protagonists out of their predicament and this is the Deus Ex Machina band-aid? Bad, please rework the chapter and figure out something else.

Is this set-up for a future plot point involving Cauldron? Then we'll see how it plays out.

Regardless, I'm not a fan of this development because so far this fic has felt like a street level story that's reaching its climax and suddenly an organization from way beyond the previous scope has gotten involved. But ultimately this is your story and only you know where it's going.
 
It really depends on what role the Cauldron intervention is supposed to serve in the plot.

Were you having trouble getting the protagonists out of their predicament and this is the Deus Ex Machina band-aid? Bad, please rework the chapter and figure out something else.

Is this set-up for a future plot point involving Cauldron? Then we'll see how it plays out.

Regardless, I'm not a fan of this development because so far this fic has felt like a street level story that's reaching its climax and suddenly an organization from way beyond the previous scope has gotten involved. But ultimately this is your story and only you know where it's going.
I was totally not having trouble.

This was planned.

People were saying, "Wow, another curb-stomp story," and I wanted to show that they couldn't just curb-stomp the ones they weren't optimised against.

Once the Empire got its arse into gear, it was a serious obstacle.
 
Once the Empire got its arse into gear, it was a serious obstacle.
I think part of the problem is that they haven't seemed to be an insurmountable one (that's why I said that it would work better if Taylor and her friends had managed to try and fail at something before 2/3 of the Triumvirate showed up). A challenge, sure, but one our heroes could overcome through clever use of their powers and determination to keep going. Then out of no where, at the last minute, Alexandria and Legend show up to save the day. They even acknowledge that they barely did anything and that the Undersiders and co. were already almost at their destination.
 
I think part of the problem is that they haven't seemed to be an insurmountable one (that's why I said that it would work better if Taylor and her friends had managed to try and fail at something before 2/3 of the Triumvirate showed up). A challenge, sure, but one our heroes could overcome through clever use of their powers and determination to keep going. Then out of no where, at the last minute, Alexandria and Legend show up to save the day. They even acknowledge that they barely did anything and that the Undersiders and co. were already almost at their destination.
Greg was hurt, he was unable to muster the shield that blocked Purity's blast, and Kaiser had an AT-4 launcher. Plus, Victor was prepping to start shooting again.

Alexandria was understating the danger, because it wasn't dangerous to her.
 
They didn't take Purity into custody. The PRT did that.

Pretty sure Dauntless can't tank a Purity shot. He's still ramping up to those levels.
For Clarity, I by custody I meant essentially captured. It's weird that they showed up, lol nope'd Purity, and let everyone else in those 4 vans go despite being essentially within arms length of Kaiser and the Twins.

They started up and drove off, leaving the missile launcher still in the middle of the road, not far from Purity's unconscious body.
It's noted that legend dropped Purity to the ground practically next to Kaiser, given where the rocket launcher was. It would not have taken either of Alexandria or Legend significant time in that situation to collect all 4 capes present compared to just the 1. I suppose there might be a "let them go to call off the rest of the mess" thing present, but it still is super strange that it happened. Victor and co still seemed far enough out that they could have seen Alexandria and called it off, plus they are far enough away to not bother with, unlike the 4 literally at their feet.

I was not aware Dauntless was that lacking, but I am very unfamiliar with Canon levels so eh.

Given this was a contessa plot, I assume something about the cluster is special and I look forward to finding out what (wild guess, Tracy can maybe recharge Eidolon).
 
For Clarity, I by custody I meant essentially captured. It's weird that they showed up, lol nope'd Purity, and let everyone else in those 4 vans go despite being essentially within arms length of Kaiser and the Twins.


It's noted that legend dropped Purity to the ground practically next to Kaiser, given where the rocket launcher was. It would not have taken either of Alexandria or Legend significant time in that situation to collect all 4 capes present compared to just the 1. I suppose there might be a "let them go to call off the rest of the mess" thing present, but it still is super strange that it happened. Victor and co still seemed far enough out that they could have seen Alexandria and called it off, plus they are far enough away to not bother with, unlike the 4 literally at their feet.

I was not aware Dauntless was that lacking, but I am very unfamiliar with Canon levels so eh.

Given this was a contessa plot, I assume something about the cluster is special and I look forward to finding out what (wild guess, Tracy can maybe recharge Eidolon).
Alexandria and Legend let the Empire go for two reasons.

Publicly, this was a statement. "You'll keep," mixed in with "you're not worth our personal time to chase down each and every one," with a strong dash of "congratulations, you just got our attention. Don't make us come back here."

Within Cauldron, Contessa told Legend and Alexandria not to bother, because the Empire's losing 99% of its resources once Taylor & co get to tell their story.

As for why they were saved, that cluster has great synergy (even better once they practice at it) and would be a useful resource in Endbringer battles.
 
That cluster doesn't just have great synergy within the cluster, they clearly are all Kiss to each other and synergize with a non-malicious villain that has potential to be a beloved Protectorate Hero.
 
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I've never heard of a complete list of explicit powers. And in at least one fic, the lack of known Changer, Stranger, or Master powers was speculated to be due to them being kept secret, both for utility and deniability, rather than because she couldn't grant them.

If I'm not mistaken a specific example of that sort of speculation is in early chapters of Ack's own fic "A Darker Path", when the PRT and Armsmaster are willing to accept that sort of conclusion initially because it seemed reasonably credible, then later specifically wanting to avoid irritating Atropos by finding out her civilian identity.
 
If I'm not mistaken a specific example of that sort of speculation is in early chapters of Ack's own fic "A Darker Path", when the PRT and Armsmaster are willing to accept that sort of conclusion initially because it seemed reasonably credible, then later specifically wanting to avoid irritating Atropos by finding out her civilian identity.
You're right, it is! Couldn't remember exactly where I saw it, which is weird, because I reread the whole thing two weeks ago... Which was also a year ago, so maybe that's why I'm confused.
 
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I guess Contessa told Legend and Alexandria to let the E88 capes go because all I can think about is how bad that's going to look for them after everyone finds out that two of the strongest hero's just decided to let a bunch of Nazi that were right in front of them go for seemingly no reason except that they didn't feel like it.
 
I guess Contessa told Legend and Alexandria to let the E88 capes go because all I can think about is how bad that's going to look for them after everyone finds out that two of the strongest hero's just decided to let a bunch of Nazi that were right in front of them go for seemingly no reason except that they didn't feel like it.
"We were busy."

All they need to say.
 
"We weren't saving a random band of petty thieves. We were saving a trio of Parahumans who got their power that day from fighting the Empire 88. A trio of Parahumans who have powers that synergize with each other, and Grue of the Undersiders. They will make excellent members of the Protectorate, especially since they want to be heroes. Saving the Undersiders from being murdered was just a side-effect. Though we do hope that Grue is willing to rebrand as a member of the Protectorate."
 
Part Twenty-Two: Debrief
Taylor Hebert, Medhall Intern

Part Twenty-Two: Debrief

[A/N 1: This chapter commissioned by GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]

[A/N 2: This has been one hell of a month, and it's not done yet. I went through a cyclone, fought off a cold, had a friend visit over the course of a week, and I've had to deal with a dodgy ankle. Still, here's the chapter. Whoo.]



Taylor

"Shit!" Brian stopped in his tracks, even as we headed for the elevator. I thought he'd maybe figured out that as armoured up as we were, with five monster dogs (even ones that were steadily shrinking back to normal size, which didn't look weird at all) there was no way in hell we were going to fit into the passenger elevator.

Director Piggot looked back at him and opened her mouth, but Tattletale held up her hand. "Something's wrong," she said.

The other two members of the Undersiders immediately looked around warily, no doubt used to treachery from their line of work, but Brian shook his head. "Families," he explained. "We have to contact them right now."

Shit! Dad! I immediately felt terrible for not remembering that sooner; in my defense, we'd been on the back foot more or less since I'd connected the dots in Tracey's office, using her login. The trouble was, I didn't own a phone; hell, back in the Medhall building, I'd had to use a landline to call Greg for help. "Can I borrow a phone, please?"

"The PRT would be happy to—" began the woman in the business suit.

"Nuh-uh," Tattletale interrupted. "No doubt you'll be trying your hardest to find out their real identities anyway, but you're going to have to work a little harder than that. Guys, your phones?" Demonstrating that she meant what she said, she pulled out a sleek latest-model smartphone, and woke it up with what looked like an eight-digit passcode while shielding the screen with her other hand. "Here," she said, handing it to me. "Knock yourself out."

"Thanks." I zoned out then, concentrating so I didn't get Dad's office number wrong. In the background, I was vaguely aware of Regent and Bitch handing their phones over to Greg and Tracey, but I wasn't paying them a great deal of attention right then.

I hit the last digit, scanned the number to make sure it was correct, then tapped the Call icon. Immediately, it began to ring.

Come on … come on … pick up. Please pick up.

<><>​

Dockworkers' Association

Danny Hebert


When the phone rang, Danny frowned slightly. Taylor always rode home on the bus with Greg—nice boy, definitely good for Taylor—so there'd be minimal reason for her to call him before five. The TV across the room—he usually kept it on mute—was playing a new spot about the Empire Eighty-Eight getting into a running battle with someone who might have been the Undersiders, though it looked like they weren't sure. Even if it wasn't, gangs came and went all the time in Brockton Bay; they usually had to either work at not antagonising the big dogs or be aware that if they Fucked Around there would inevitably be a Finding Out phase.

Turning his attention from the scrolling chyron at the bottom of the TV screen, Danny picked up the phone. "Good afternoon, you've reached the Dockworkers' Association. Danny Hebert speaking, how can I help you?"

"Good afternoon, Mr Hebert." The reply was smooth and confident and just a little familiar. "This is Max Anders. I'm calling about your daughter Taylor."

"Uh … Mr Anders, right!" Yes, he definitely remembered that voice now. After all, they'd spoken face to face not so long ago, on the road up Captain's Hill. "What … what about Taylor? Has something happened? Is she hurt?" He recalled all too vividly the fright he'd felt after the Shadow Stalker incursion into the Medhall building.

"Oh, no, it's nothing like that." Anders chuckled warmly. "Here, I'll put her on. She can fill you in herself."

That didn't sound so bad. Danny relaxed back into his chair. "Okay, sure." Taylor could've definitely made many worse choices for her boss than Max Anders, he reflected.

"Hi, Dad." Taylor sounded fairly cheerful. "So, this is basically my fault. I stayed back to finish one last thing, and Greg was going to wait for me, but he got a call from his mom so he left before I finished. But now I really don't want to ride the bus alone, so could you come pick me up from the Medhall building, pretty please?"

"Absolutely." He was far enough ahead in his paperwork to be able to leave early this once. "I'll be there as soon as I can. Pick you up around the back?"

"Sure, that'll be perfect." He could hear the relief in her voice. "You're the best. When we get home, I'll make you a cup of coffee just the way you like it."

"Yeah, that'll be great," he said absently, already in the process of shutting down the ancient desktop computer that was all his budget could cover. "See you soon."

<><>​

Kaiser

Max shook his head admiringly as Victor ended the call. "I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it. You really do have all the skills, don't you?"

Victor cleared his throat a couple of times, then smirked. "It helps that I spent so much time in her presence. And that she doesn't have a squeaky chipmunk voice like that idiot Clements girl. If I wanted to emulate her voice, I'd need to do something drastic to my most prized possessions."

"Good thing we didn't have to go that far." Max shook his head. "Othala's stretched to the limit as it is, healing Stormtiger again as well as Fog, and dealing with the rest of Rune's broken bones. Also, trying to fix whatever the fuck it was they did to Krieg." He still remembered the agonising chill touch of the black tentacles in the sub-basement of Medhall.

"Weren't we going to try to contact the other families?" asked Victor. "The more hostages the better, and all that?"

"I've got people on the way to the Veder house and the Laborn residence as we speak," Max explained. "Danny Hebert's the only one who doesn't carry a cell phone. Better to go to where they are than to trust we can pull them to where we are."

Victor frowned. "Somehow, I can't help thinking that no matter who we grab, those three will be spilling the beans before we can start applying pressure. Shouldn't we be concentrating on pulling our visible assets so we can go underground?"

"The guilty flee where none pursueth," Max quoted. "I know we're actually guilty of what they'll be saying, but the PRT won't be able to prove it, at least not immediately. And if our lawyers can muddy the waters sufficiently before we force them to recant, we might even be able to sidestep it altogether."

"Ever the optimist, hmm?" Victor grinned and slapped Max on the shoulder. "You know what I'm going to regret most about this whole shitshow? Apart from Purity taking it on the chin, I mean?"

"We can break her out," Max declared confidently. Though he wouldn't rush the jailbreak too much. She'd never roll over on him, but maybe a few extra days sitting in a cell would underline how much she depended on him and the Empire Eighty-Eight, especially now that she was well and truly outed. Though coming to think of that … "Send someone to pick up Theo and Aster from Kayden's apartment before the PRT gets there."

Given Kayden's avowed intention to go hero, being the one who had control over her daughter would go a long way toward determining her ongoing loyalties. He didn't think Director Piggot would take the initiative in recruiting her, but stranger things had happened before now.

"Sure." Victor started sending a text, but he kept talking without looking at the screen. "So, what I'm going to regret most of all isn't the bullshit we just went through, but how we had someone like Taylor, with all that sheer goddamn potential, working for us … and it was never going to work out. Not in a million fucking years."

Max didn't want to concede that last point. "I'm not so sure about that. If we'd had a few more months to work on her, cement her loyalty to us as people, we might've been able to pull another Harcourt. And Veder would've followed in her footsteps."

"Grimshaw would've been a complication, no matter what," Victor reminded him. "According to Harcourt, she was competent but she didn't have Taylor's spark of genius and level of resourcefulness. And even though she's been working for us for years, she still didn't hesitate to try to sell us down the river."

"Maybe if Justin was still alive, he might've been able to talk her around," Max suggested, but he personally wouldn't have bet his life savings on it. "But even if that wasn't the case, you should really have killed her off then and there, rather than getting complicated by faking her death. Why the fuck didn't you do that, exactly?"

"I told you," Victor said tiredly. "She sent off a text, and I decided we needed to find out who to before we put her in the ground for good. Events were moving too fast. Bad calls were made."

"Well, now we really need to cut all this off at the pass." Max straightened his suit jacket. "Did Hebert sound convinced?"

Victor's smile would not have looked amiss on a shark. "Entirely."

<><>​

Taylor

The phone rang for what felt like forever before someone finally picked it up. "Good afternoon, you've reached the Dockworkers' Association, Danny Hebert's office." I recognised Lacey's voice, albeit a little breathless. "I'm sorry, Mr Hebert's gone home for the day, but if you want I can take a message."

I frowned. Dad, going home for the day this early? Right when I needed to talk to him urgently? That made no sense; or rather, it made sense in a way I didn't want it to.

"Hi, Lacey, it's me," I said. "When did Dad leave, and did he say exactly where he was going? Because I really, really need to get a message to him."

"Oh, Taylor." She switched seamlessly from 'professional' to 'personal'. "He, uh, he actually said he was going to pick you up from the Medhall building. Something about how your boyfriend ditched you?"

It was the worst possible news I could've had. "Lacey, you've got to stop him! He can't go to Medhall!"

"What? Why? Isn't that where you are?" Kurt and Lacey didn't have any kids, but I still heard 'concerned parent' in her voice. "Taylor, what's going on? Why don't you want your dad to pick you up?"

"I'm not there! I'm at the PRT building!" The words spilled out of my mouth. "Medhall is full of Empire Eighty-Eight, and they just tried to kill me! Stop him! Please!"

I wasn't quite sure what part of that got her attention, but I heard the phone handpiece hit the desk. Distantly, I could hear Lacey calling out to others in the office, but her voice was too faint for me to make out the words. As my hand clenched around the phone, the plastic creaking in my grip, I saw the blue-suited woman staring at me.

"Is that true?" she demanded.

I nodded, still listening intently to the phone. "Yeah. Tracey figured it out, so they faked her death and when they got what they wanted from her, they were gonna kill her for real. Then I figured it out too, and me and Greg and, uh, Grue made a run for it. Hookwolf and Stormtiger and Victor were chasing us through the service passages, inside the walls."

"And Max Anders?" she asked, her tone intent. "Does he know about it? Is he complicit? Or are they using his business as cover behind his back?"

Greg laughed hollowly, apparently done with his phone call. "Ma'am, he's Kaiser. I'd be downright astonished if he didn't know about it."

The woman blinked, apparently taken aback for the first time since she'd entered the discussion, which said a lot for her ability to handle new information. "Anders is Kaiser? You know this for a fact?" From the tone of her voice, she was reconsidering some of her prior assumptions.

"Yup," Greg confirmed. "We were right there in the room while him and Victor and Stormtiger and Hookwolf and Cricket discussed how they were going to coerce me and Taylor into being loyal to them. To Medhall."

"Murder," I filled in. "It was going to involve murder. I was supposed to kill Tracey, and Greg was supposed to kill Grue, and they'd hold that over our heads forever. The alternative was that they'd murder me and Greg and Dad and Greg's mom, so there wasn't really a good option."

"Wait." That was Armsmaster. "You're teenagers. What do you have to offer that Kaiser and the Empire Eighty-Eight would be willing to give you even that much leeway over? Unless it's your powers …?"

Armsmaster's lack of social adroitness was something even I knew about, so I chose not to be offended by his words. "No, it's not the powers, though he probably would've been even more interested if we had them then. We, um, kind of saved him a ton of money, back when we were interns." I paused, thinking. "Greg clobbered Shadow Stalker after she nearly murdered Victor and tried to murder me. I found a bunch of Coil's moles in the building. And I'm pretty sure Grue saved the Empire Eighty-Eight from being outed, totally by accident, after me and Greg convinced Kaiser to hire him on as a security guard."

The silence that fell across the parking garage was broken by a bark of laughter from Regent. "Haha, you fucking did what now?"

"Coil? You're sure?" The woman in the blue business suit was zeroing in on me.

"Wait, wait." I held up my hand to give her the message that I preferred having personal space. "Who exactly are you, again?"

"Director Emily Piggot, Parahuman Response Teams." The response was as curt as it was automatic. "You were saying about Coil?"

"Uh, yeah," I said. Holy shit, she's the PRT boss! And she's talking to me! If my adrenaline glands hadn't already been sending out for more supplies, I would've felt as breathless as I had once been when talking to Max Anders (though not as awestruck because, to be fair, she just wasn't that charismatic). "They had me checking employment records and I noticed some of the social security numbers were in sequence, so I pointed this out to my boss. There was a huge investigation that I was totally left out of. But they told me after the fact that I'd uncovered an infiltration by Coil's people."

"Was there any indication—" she began, but just then I heard voices on the phone I was still holding to my ear. I held up my hand again, and turned away from her. Talking to the Director of the PRT was absolutely a big deal, but Dad came first.

<><>​

Danny

It wasn't until Danny was pulling out of the Dockworkers' Association parking lot that something Taylor had said made him frown. They usually drank tea rather than coffee at home, and Danny always made the coffee when they did drink it. So why did she say she was going to make me a cup of coffee the way I like it? She's got no idea how I like it.

It was a puzzle, and Danny didn't like puzzles. Thinking back, she'd sounded just a little hoarse, like she was coming down with a cold … or she'd been crying. But she'd been outwardly upbeat, like nothing was wrong.

Something just didn't add up.

A car horn sounded from behind him, and he realised he'd rolled to a stop in the exit to the parking lot while he'd been thinking about things. He waved to acknowledge his gaffe and put the car into gear, preparatory to driving out of the parking lot. But then the horn sounded again, repeatedly and insistently.

Looking in the rearview mirror, he saw Lacey in the car she shared with Kurt, waving frantically out the window. He couldn't decipher most of the gestures, but one seemed to mean 'come back' and another was a horizontal slashing cut-off motion. Puzzled, he put the car in reverse and waited; she backed up almost immediately, giving him the room to reverse as well.

As soon as he was out of the exit, he pulled to one side and stopped the car. Lacey was getting out of her car, so he set the handbrake and got out as well. "What's up?" he asked. "Is there some sort of emergency?" He was going to have to call Taylor back, he figured.

"Oh, thank God I caught you!" She stopped, leaning against her car with one hand raised while she caught her breath. "Taylor's not at Medhall! She's at PRT building!"

"What? But I just talked to her." This wasn't making any sense at all.

"No, no, no, that wasn't her. The real one just called." She straightened up and half-ran over to him. "Medhall's full of Empire Eighty-Eight, and she found out."

"What?"

"It's okay, she's fine. She's more worried about you."

"Me? Why me?"

"Because you were going to Medhall!" she shouted.

Even with the doubts he'd been having earlier, this was still something he had trouble getting his head around. "Taylor's at the PRT building? Are you sure?"

"Of course not," she snapped. "I regularly have heart attacks trying to stop you from driving off to be a hostage for supervillains for fun."

"Hostage? Why?" Events were moving too fast.

"Because she knows who they are." She gestured toward the Association building. "I dropped the phone on your desk and ran, so she might not have hung up yet."

Still not at all sure what the hell was going on, he returned to his car, turned off the engine, and locked it up. "Who was pretending to be her? Was it Emma again?" On second thought, he doubted very much that Emma (for all her faults) would be affiliated with the Empire.

"She didn't say. All she said was that Medhall was full of Empire Eighty-Eight."

Despite the fact that she'd already covered that, he still had trouble believing it. "But … Medhall are good people. I've met some of them. They think Taylor walks on water, and she thinks the same about them."

"I'm guessing that's before she found out they were Empire Eighty-Eight." Lacey turned her hands palm up to emphasise her words. "But she sure sounded genuine about it."

"Okay, okay, I got it." Danny headed back into the building at a fast walk, with Lacey trailing behind him. When he got to his office, the phone handset was still lying on the desk from where Lacey had apparently left it. Sitting down in his chair, he scooped it up. "Hello?"

"Dad, thank God." Whether this was Taylor or someone else—the idea had occurred to him on the way back into the office that this could be a fake—it certainly sounded like her. She also sounded stressed as hell. "Lacey told you?"

"Lacey told me what you said, yes." Danny was listening hard to the ambient noise at the other end of the phone call. There were echoes, and other voices in the background, but none he could pick out. "What's going on?"

She took a deep breath. "Okay, long story short? Medhall is Empire Eighty-Eight. Max Anders is Kaiser, Bradley is Hookwolf, Mr Grayson is Victor, and I don't think you met anyone else. When they realised I knew this, they tried to grab me, but I'd gotten hold of Greg and the new security hire, and we got away through the maintenance passages and rescued Tracey on the way."

He frowned, uncertain how to say this. "Honey … Tracey's dead. You told me that yourself."

"I thought she was too. But they faked her death when she found out about them, so they could kill her when it suited them. Greg and I found her and rescued her, then busted out of there."

This was starting to sound more and more like the plot of an action movie. He wanted to believe it was Taylor he was talking to, but there was still the chance he was being punked. They'd done it once, after all. "Taylor … don't take this the wrong way, but what's the nickname your mom always used for you?"

"What? Oh, right. She called me Little Owl." She paused. "Wait, if they can pretend to be me, then they can pretend to be you too. Um, back when me and Emma were still friends and we used to play heroes and villains, when she played Alexandria, who did I play?"

Now that was going back a ways. He paused, racking his brain. It had been a very distinctive name, to do with her hair … "Ah. Aha. The Infamous Doctor Curlyhair."

"That's the one." She sounded pleased just for a moment, then her tone went serious again. "Can you just come to the PRT building, please? I don't think home or work's safe. Not until we can deal with the Empire once and for all."

"Yeah, I can see that." Taking family members hostage to menace someone into not testifying against them was totally something Nazis would do. It had been the go-to tactic for organised crime long before the Empire came on the scene, after all, and nobody had ever accused Nazis of possessing a superior moral compass to someone like Al Capone. "I'm on the way."

"Drive safe."

"Always." He ended the call and came to his feet. "Lacey, we're shutting down until Monday. Right now, I'm heading to the PRT building. Get the place locked up and everyone offsite." The last thing he wanted was one of his friends and colleagues to end up with a gun to their head.

"Got it, boss. Go."

"Going."

<><>​

Taylor

"Thanks," I said to Tattletale as I handed her phone back to her. "That's a huge weight off my mind."

"Hey, don't worry about it." She grinned impishly—she'd removed her helmet, as had Regent, though Bitch seemed to have taken hers off, liked the look of it, and put it back on—and tilted her head toward Brian. "Grue seems to think you're worth helping out, so I'm just going along with that. Also, I'm truly intrigued as to how you put together the clues about Max Anders and the rest of the Empire Eighty-Eight. You'd think they would be more careful about dropping hints about that sort of thing in front of interns. Especially ones who've already shown a talent for connecting the dots."

"I would also be interested in such things," the Director stated bluntly. "Especially if you happen to possess actual proof. Personally, I would be willing to take your word that Max Anders is Kaiser, but the moment we attempt to set one foot inside Medhall, we're going to need a warrant backed up by cast-iron evidence."

"Um." I thought for a moment. "Purity is Kayden Russel, Max Anders' ex-wife."

The Director tilted her head. "Is that so? Intriguing and problematic for the man, but at best circumstantial."

"But the fact that I knew it before you unmasked her means I've been into their files." I tapped my breastplate with my fingertip. "I took notes."

"Anyone can write anything." She looked and sounded as though she truly regretted the words she had to say. "I need something that can't be faked in five minutes by someone with a grudge, or a lucky guess."

"How about screenshots?" asked Tracey. She held up Bitch's phone. "I emailed them to myself before I told Ms Harcourt."

"Let me see that." The Director took the phone and started flicking through the images, zooming in on some of them. "Okay, yes, these are definitely … I need these images pulled down, backed up and deep-analysed, stat." Turning to Armsmaster, she passed the phone to him.

"Hey!" Bitch protested. "That's my phone!"

"It's also the same phone you deliberately lose every other day," snarked Regent. "Why is it you only want it back when someone else finds it useful?"

"Because it's my damn phone, and she can't just give it away to someone else!" Bitch actually sounded angry at this. At her side, no doubt picking up her mood, her dogs growled. "Especially an asshole like Armsmaster, who'll get everything else off it!"

"We have spares," Tattletale assured her. "There's nothing on there that we can't handle them knowing."

"But it's my phone," Bitch insisted stubbornly. "Give it back, or I start growing my dogs!"

"Oh, for fuck's sake," Brian said irritably. "Give it back to her. Tracey, here." He passed her his phone. "Pull up the emails on that."

I looked between the Undersiders as Bitch snatched her phone back from Armsmaster. I'd only been exposed to their interactions for a relatively short time, and I didn't know everything about them—that seemed to be Tattletale's jam—but I already had a rough idea of their interpersonal dynamic and their motivations. They were villains, but not in the same way as the Empire Eighty-Eight were.

The Undersiders weren't united by a cause of hatred like the Empire, or pseudo-racial unity like the ABB. As far as I could tell, they were a bunch of teenagers who were in it for the money; the trouble was, there wasn't enough camaraderie to overcome the snark and anger. What the final glue was that held them together, I couldn't quite figure out. Not yet, anyway.

Brian's action seemed to disarm the tension as Tracey went into her emails again, then passed the phone on to Armsmaster. I caught Tattletale looking speculatively at me, as though she'd figured out what I'd seen in her group. "You're actually pretty good at this," she said cheerfully. "I'm better, but for someone without any powers or formal training, you've definitely got a talent."

"Gee, thanks." I didn't want to piss her off, so I left out some of the sarcasm I was feeling. "Seems like all it's really good for is getting me in over my head in a Nazi organisation without actually telling me that they were Nazis. I mean, Greg and I were getting hand to hand training from Hookwolf and Cricket!" It was hard to express how totally bizarre that was without shouting, but I did my best.

"If that's the session I'm thinking about, Grue was helping Hookwolf and Cricket train you," Tattletale agreed, sounding highly amused. "Apparently Kaiser's son was there, and some other girl …?"

"Theo's actually a nice kid, but the other one was Rune." I glanced over at Brian. "I'm pretty sure she had her costume and school ID in her pack when you stopped those ABB assholes from mugging her. There's no other good reason why Kaiser and Hookwolf would've been so insistent on her doing the training. Basically, punishment duty."

"So why was Theo being punished?" asked Brian. "Bradley—I mean Hookwolf—made sure I didn't go easy on him either."

Greg chuckled. "He got drunk at the wake we attended for Justin. You've never seen a guy who wanted less to be there."

"Why would Kaiser punish him for that?" asked Tracey. "Did he cause a scene or something?"

I shook my head. "No. Greg and I put it into his head that he should tell his old man that he didn't want to inherit Medhall. So I'm guessing he did, while he was still drunk. And he probably opted out of the Empire Eighty-Eight at the same time."

"Hahaha, wow." Tattletale's grin broadened. "For a control freak like Kaiser, that's gotta be right up there in the 'fuck you and the horse you rode in on' stakes."

"All that and more, yeah." I glanced at Greg and Tracey. "Oh, and you do know Justin was Crusader, right?"

Tracey nodded heavily. "I know. I couldn't believe it when I saw it at first, but …" She sighed. "I guess it's better this way. I don't have to devote any time to hating him. He's dead, along with the man I thought he was."

"What, really?" Greg sounded surprised. "Huh. I never made that connection."

"Justin …" Director Piggot's head came up. "The man Shadow Stalker killed, right? On Captain's Hill."

"Yup." I shook my head in mild disbelief. "In one of the biggest strokes of irony in recent history, she murdered Crusader and damn near killed Victor, all the while having no idea what she was really doing."

"Wait, does she get to walk because they're really supervillains?" asked Greg, sounding worried.

"Hm, no." The Director chuckled grimly. "Intent matters, here. She had no idea who they were, otherwise she would've made it clear at the time. In any case, they didn't have kill orders, and they weren't committing crimes requiring a lethal response at the time."

I rolled my eyes. "For her, 'existing' and 'breathing the same air as me' were sufficiently heinous crimes to warrant kicking the shit out of someone. Been there, done that. Wouldn't recommend the T-shirt."

"Holy shit, you know Shadow Stalker personally?" Regent's voice was positively gleeful. "How much of a coincidence is that? You know an ex-Ward, you were working for supervillains, and you were working with another villain."

"None of which I knew about at the time," I retorted defensively. "I'm pretty sure I don't know anyone in Coil's organisation, and I'm damn sure I'm not part-timing for the ABB. Also, Grue's pretty heroic in my book. Saved my life and Greg's more than once, and Tracey's too." I turned to the Director. "Did anyone tell you he was going to take on Hookwolf, Cricket, Kaiser, Stormtiger, and Victor all by himself, just to give the rest of us a chance to get out of Medhall?"

I couldn't see Brian's expression, but I got the impression he'd just rolled his eyes. "To keep the record straight, I thoroughly underestimated Cricket. She kicked my ass all by herself."

"Still, you made the effort," Tracey said. "And I seriously appreciate it."

"Your phone." Armsmaster handed Brian's phone back. "Images have been saved and backed up. Just out of curiosity, what's that armour made from? I'm having trouble placing the exact alloy."

"Oh, it's not my doing." Brian indicated Greg. "He made it. We're just wearing it."

"Ah, yeah," Greg said awkwardly when Armsmaster turned toward him. "I guess it's one of my powers. I take whatever metal's available and make it into this stuff. I call it 'darksteel'. Kind of dorky, I know."

Dorky or not, it had saved our asses, so I weighed in on the matter. "As I recall, this is made up of Kaiser's metal, Hookwolf's metal, Stormtiger's chains, Cricket's head-cage, a few bullets, and most of an elevator."

Armsmaster took a step back. "So … Shaker rather than Tinker, then. You can control it, right?"

"Oh, totally." Greg chuckled nervously. "Don't worry, your halberd's safe from me. But if you want a sample, I can give you one." Holding out his hand, he made a curl of metal detach from the top of his shield and reform in his palm as a short-bladed knife with a contoured handle.

Stepping forward again, Armsmaster took the knife, holding it close to his visor like he was examining it minutely. "How do you achieve the darkening of the alloy?"

"Literally darkness. I mix it in." Greg gestured toward the rest of us. "We've all got themes of darkness in our powers. I think we get it from Grue."

Everyone turned to look at Brian then, and I suspected that we were only just starting to delve into the discussion about our powers and how they interacted.

So long as we got food in the process, and so long as Dad was safe, I really didn't care.

<><>​

Kaiser

Max's phone rang. He turned away from where Victor was briefing Medhall's legion of lawyers on his version of the upcoming shitstorm—for shitstorm it would assuredly be, no matter how well-prepped they were for it—and took it out. The caller ID read Bradley, so he opened the door and ducked out into the corridor, already swiping to accept the call.

"Please tell me you have good news," he said. Once they had Hebert in custody, the danger posed by Taylor would be greatly reduced; depending on how good Victor was at posing subtle threats, they might even be able to leverage her into overturning the testimony of the other two. The Veder boy, at least, could be depended on to follow her lead.

They were already winding up to spin the Grimshaw woman's supposed death as a stunt by a disgruntled soon-to-be-ex-employee, rewriting her fitness reports post-Crusader as someone who had gone off the deep end into a morass of conspiracy theory. The exact substance of their cover story, he knew, didn't matter so much as the emotions it evoked. As with everything else important, it would be decided in the court of public opinion long before the legal system ever got their teeth into it.

"How long ago did you contact Hebert?" asked Hookwolf in a way that told Max immediately that no, there was no good news in the offing. "He should've been here already." As it was, he was stuck watching the rear parking lot along with Cricket, so as to take Hebert into custody as soon as the man arrived.

Max checked his watch. "Yes. Yes, he should have." For Hebert to have taken this long meant that either Victor had screwed up somehow in his impersonation of her, or something else had alerted Hebert to the ruse before he got to Medhall.

Between Hebert's absence and the time that had passed, he had to assume that the four perfidious employees had spilled the beans about Medhall's connection with the Empire Eighty-Eight, though there was still an element of doubt regarding exactly how much they knew. And even if they knew things, knowing and proving were two entirely different breeds of feline. They could tattle all they liked to the PRT, but this would hardly be the first time a perfectly blameless corporation had had such allegations levelled at it.

"Keep waiting?"

He considered the option, then shook his head. "No. Put one man on it, with orders to bring Hebert to you if he shows. Also, check in with the men you sent to pick up Veder's, Grimshaw's and Laborn's family members. I need to know how that's going."

"Will do." Hookwolf paused. "How bad you reckon this is gonna get?"

"We'll get through it," Max assured him, working to convince himself as much as Hookwolf. "The Empire Eighty-Eight's bigger than both of us, and it's not about to fold because of a few snitches. I'll stand firm, look them right in the eye, and challenge them to prove a damn thing."

"Gotcha." He wasn't sure how much he'd convinced Hookwolf of his words, but the man ended the call without arguing, which was a good thing.

Deciding on the next course of action, Max re-entered the conference room where Victor was still expounding on legal strategies. "Mr Grayson, a word if you will?"

"Of course, Mr Anders." Victor turned to the legal team. "Take five. Brainstorm some ideas between yourselves." As perfectly composed as ever, he followed Max out the door and closed it behind him. "Yes?"

Max opted to start with a softball question. "How's it going in there?"

"Depends." Victor gave Max a serious look. "If we can flip any of them, I'd say we've got a good chance of skating free and clear. Have we got Hebert yet?"

"No." The time for softball was over. "I think it's time Kaiser got seen committing some dastardly deed in public."

Victor frowned. "Is that wise? If this goes badly, reminding the public that we're villains who occasionally hurt people might not be a good move."

"True. But while Kaiser is out and about raising hell, Max Anders will be giving an extremely public press conference out in front of the building." Max waited to make sure Victor got the idea.

"Ah. Of course." They'd done this before, but not very often.

While having Victor make a public appearance at the same time that Kaiser committed a public act of villainy made for a great alibi, the fact was that Max didn't need an alibi. Not once in all the years that Medhall had been active had anyone seriously connected the dots between it and the Empire. Nobody had even suggested that the popular, handsome, wealthy Max Anders might be a supervillain.

"Finish up in there and I'll set it up," Max decided briskly. "The PRT won't move on anything they've been told for at least a couple of hours, while they cross all the t's and dot all the i's. That's the downside of being the good guys; they've got to at least pretend to follow the rules."

"Agreed. Are we breaking Purity out?"

It was tempting, but Max shook his head. "That would be hitting them where they're strongest, and suggesting that they're on to something. We'll do that in a few days, after all this has died down. Where has the ABB made its latest advance?"

Victor didn't even need to stop and think. "The elementary school on the corner of Fisher and Richmond. There's a couple of grocery stores on that block."

Max nodded. "Well, we're taking it back, while you make a speech about the importance of law and order in our fine city. Finish off with a vague promise to donate to some worthy cause or other. That's always good for a few column inches."

"I'll make it some minority group, to really throw them off," Victor suggested with a smirk. "Every mixed message we give them is a good message."

"Absolutely." Max didn't give a damn which charity got the money, so long as he was seen to be donating it and looking good in the process. "Let's get this done."

The hostage plan might have fallen through—given the lack of messages from Hookwolf, it seemed that more than Hebert had evaded his tender mercies—but he had more than one string to his bow.

We can still win this. He had to believe it.

<><>​

Danny

Parking in front of the PRT building and walking in felt a little risky to Danny, especially with the Empire Eighty-Eight potentially gunning for him. Drive-by shootings didn't take place quite as often in Brockton Bay as they had in the Bad Old Days, but they were absolutely still known to happen from time to time. So, as he didn't feel like headlining the nine o'clock news, he found his way around the back of the building, to where two armoured guards stood behind polycarbonate windows, on either side of a very firmly closed blast door.

"Sir!" A voice crackled out of a speaker. "Turn your vehicle around and leave! This building is on lockdown!"

"Wait, wait!" he called, waving his arm out the window. "I'm expected! My daughter asked me to come here! My name's Danny Hebert!"

There was a pause. "Your daughter? What's her name?"

"Taylor," he said. "Taylor Hebert. This is about the Empire Eighty-Eight thing. She asked me to come here for my safety."

Again, there was a brief pause. "Exit your vehicle and face the camera. Do not make any sudden moves."

Carefully, Danny did as he was told. The camera lens was shielded behind the same sort of polycarbonate that the guards were using, and he looked directly into it. He had no doubt that he and the car were being scanned a dozen different ways by less obvious detectors, but he didn't care. So long as he could get to where Taylor was and make sure she was okay, he was fine with whatever they did.

After what was probably only thirty seconds or so, but felt like several hours, the speaker crackled once more. "Mr Hebert, enter your vehicle and drive forward slowly. Follow the instructions of the guard. Do not deviate, or you and your vehicle will be foamed. Do you understand?"

He nodded several times. "Yes. Yes, I understand." He got back into the car and let it roll forward at a crawl. The blast doors rumbled upward out of the way, but he kept his movement nice and slow until he was sure the car would fit underneath.

Once the car was inside, he saw the guard gesturing for him to pull into a vacant car spot. Up ahead, as his eyes adjusted to the glare of the harsh fluorescent lights, he saw a bunch of people in black armour, but that wasn't his problem right then. Doing what he was told, then getting to Taylor, was his entire concern.

Pulling into the parking spot, he set the handbrake then killed the engine. On getting out of the car, he was confronted by the guard. "Do you consent to a pat-down, sir? Security reasons."

"Sure, go ahead." Danny had been frisked once or twice before, in the aftermath of accompanying Anne-Rose to protest marches. It had been quite some time ago, but some things never changed.

The guard was professional and quick about it, and stopped short of the point where Danny would've felt the need to suggest the man buy him dinner first. "Done, sir. Over there." The helmet faceplate was opaque, but the guard pointed at the group of black-armoured people.

"Thank you." He walked in that direction, hoping that one of these capes—they had to be capes, given that most of them were wearing medieval style plate armour, with one even sporting a large shield—could tell him where he needed to be.

"Dad!" Taylor's voice suddenly echoed through the parking garage; he looked around, trying to pinpoint where she was. And then a slim figure broke away from the crowd and ran in his direction; he blinked as he registered that it had to be a teenage girl, but wearing the same armour as the rest of them. "Dad!" she shouted again.

"Taylor?" He started forward into a run himself, tears springing into his eyes. He had no idea what was going on here, especially why Taylor was wearing some Renfaire knockoff that made it hard to focus on her in the less than stellar lighting down here, but he honestly did not give a flying fuck right then.

They came together in a hug that drove the breath out of him, but he didn't care; wrapping his arms around her, armour and all, he spun her around. Her helmet had a hinged faceplate; raised, it showed her laughing teary expression. "Dad, I was so worried about you!"

"It's good to see you're okay too," he said, not quite wanting to let her go yet. "But what's going on? What's all this about Medhall and the Empire Eighty-Eight? And where did you get that armour from?"

She giggled, a release of tension. "Well, let's just say, it's a long, long story."



End of Part Twenty-Two
 
Well, good to see Taylor managed to reach Danny before he left...

Should be interesting to see how things go from here. While I don't expect the Empire's plan to obfuscate things to be fully successful, I do expect it to throw enough confusion that it slows things down.
 
Part Twenty-Three: Second Wind
Taylor Hebert, Medhall Intern

Part Twenty-Three: Second Wind

[A/N: This chapter commissioned by GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]

Nina Veder, Psychologist

The phone in Nina's purse buzzed just loudly enough to be audible. She looked over and frowned, then put the patient notes down and retrieved the phone. Her next appointment was in ten minutes, and she preferred to be up to speed on the progress they'd made so far. However, very few people had the number for this phone, so it was probably a good idea to answer.

When she saw the unknown number on the screen, her frown deepened. Who's this, and how did they get my number?

Just for a moment, she considered declining the call and blocking the number, but her innate courtesy suggested otherwise. If she answered and found out who it was—Greg might be using his friend Taylor's phone—she could always end the call and block them then if the call turned bad. Accepting the call, she put the phone to her ear. "Hello, Nina speaking. Who is this?"

"Hi, Mom, it's me." Greg's voice sounded echoey and a little strained, but it was definitely him. "I need a huge favour. Biggest favour I've ever asked. Please?"

She didn't hesitate; with Greg, she would never hesitate. He was her only child, and she would fight the world for him. "Of course. What is it?"

"You know how you once told me that if I ever really wanted to tell you something, anything at all, that I just had to say so and you'd listen? Remember that? I need you to listen now."

The urgency in his voice struck a chord in her, and she nodded involuntarily. "Okay. I'm listening. What's the matter? What's going on?"

He took a deep breath, then another. "You need to leave work. Get out of there, right now. Don't go home. Go somewhere safe. Maybe get a motel room. Just don't stay where you are. You're in danger."

She blinked a couple of times, then glanced at the clock. Eight minutes until the next appointment. Her first instinct was to argue. I've got obligations. I can't just leave. But he sounded so urgent, and he'd been so responsible recently, that she paused long enough for second thoughts to creep in. "Tell me why I'm in danger and I'll go."

"Medhall is basically Empire Eighty-Eight. Max Anders is Kaiser. He tried to kill me. I'm at the PRT building, right now. The Empire will want to grab you for a hostage against me. Get out of there, now. Please."

Nina wasn't quite sure what convinced her: the tone of his voice, the sheer bizarreness of his story, or the fact that deep down, he would always be her baby boy and she'd always have his back.

If someone had come up to her on the street and told her that Medhall was a hotbed of white supremacy, she would've laughed it off, but Greg loved that company. Every day he went there, he'd come home with amusing anecdotes about the people he worked alongside. There was no way in hell he'd be spreading a story like that about them … unless something was seriously, seriously wrong.

"Okay," she said. "I'm going. I'll let you know when I'm safe." Standing up, she dropped the patient file back in the cabinet, grabbed her purse and walked out of her office.

Shirley, her receptionist, looked up as she came out into the front office. "Oh, Ms Veder," she said. "Your three-forty-five appointment, Mrs Danvers, says she'll be here in a few minutes—"

"Call her back." Nina didn't slow down. "Reschedule. I have to leave. Family emergency. Lock up when you're done." She paused briefly at the door to give Shirley a sympathetic smile, then she pushed the door open and stepped through.

She'd been about to go out through the main doors of the building then around to the side parking lot, but two cars had just pulled up across the road, and a bunch of guys were getting out of them. Normally she wouldn't have given such an incident a second glance, but after Greg's call she was a lot more suspicious. She turned instead and headed down a side corridor, bypassed the public restrooms, then hesitated as she reached the fire exit door that led directly to the parking lot.

If I open this door, the fire alarm goes off. She had a well-developed sense of the social contract, including what one did and did not do, and setting off the fire alarm for no good reason came under 'thou shalt not'. On the other hand, there was a bunch of guys she strongly suspected to be Empire Eighty-Eight closing in on the building, and she did not want to end up as a hostage in their hands. Screw the social contract, I want to live.

Taking a deep breath, she shoved the nudge-bar of the door and it opened; the alarm started blaring immediately, a siren overlaid by the clanging of a bell. "Sorry!" she yelled over the cacophony and bolted out into the parking lot. Her keys came readily to her hand, and she opened her hatchback door. Diving into the front seat, she was just shutting the door when she spotted movement in the rearview mirror.

When she looked more closely, she stiffened in fear. Two of the ominous men had apparently figured out her plan and were running into the parking lot. Running toward her.

Reflexively, she smacked her elbow onto the central-locking button, jammed the key in the ignition, and turned it. The engine coughed, sputtered, then caught, just as someone came running up to the car and tried to open the passenger-side door. She didn't waste time seeing if they were going to try to break the window next; throwing the car into gear, she gunned it out of the parking space, swerved around the second man, and bolted for the street exit.

There was a thud on the back of the car, then a wrenching craack as (she belatedly realised) the second guy grabbed and tore off the rear window wiper. Both men chased her, but while her hatchback had a relatively small engine, it had great power to weight ratio, which meant good acceleration. This allowed her to get to the street exit with enough time to spot a gap in traffic before they caught up.

One of them almost made it, swinging a piece of metal like a club, but she found her gap and floored it. The little engine shrieked, the tyres spun, and the car shot out into traffic, merging with the flow within seconds. As her heart rate began to finally slow down, she reached up and carefully put her seat belt on.

"Okay," she said out loud. "Okay. Okay. I'm alive, I got away. I'm fine."

She didn't feel fine. If she was being honest with herself, she didn't think she'd ever feel fine again, not after the terror of the last minute or so. All she really wanted was to get to Greg, make sure he was safe, then have a perfectly reasonable nervous breakdown.

But first, she had get away from the Empire Eighty-Eight, which meant making sure she'd thrown them off her trail before heading into the PRT building.

<><>​

Otis Grimshaw, Shoe Salesman

The lady's foot slid into the size nine and a half sandal, but to Otis' practised eye, it was too loose. "Hmmm …" he murmured. "I think eight and a half would be too short, so let's try a nine, shall we?" Removing the offending footwear, he tucked it back into the box then rose to his feet. "I'll be just a moment."

"Thank you," the lady replied. As he moved away toward the rack of shelves holding the sandal he required, he heard her speaking to her friend. "Didn't I tell you? He always knows exactly what you need."

He didn't hear what the friend said in reply, because at that moment, his phone rang in his pocket. Managing not to frown, he took it out. At this time of day, he figured, there was only one person it could be: his wife, Marjorie.

Marjorie was taking Tracey's death quite hard, and she hadn't liked it when he'd needed to come in to work. The fact of the matter was, there'd been nobody else available to cover his shift, even though he was grieving the loss of their daughter just as deeply as she was.

He stepped into the stock room and closed the door behind him, so as to have privacy for his phone call. He didn't begrudge the few minutes it would take to speak to Marjorie and bring her around to a happier frame of mind. In any case, he'd be finishing for the day in less than two hours; after that, he'd be able to devote his entire attention to her and the funeral arrangements.

To his surprise, the number showing on his phone screen was one he'd never seen before. Now that he was behind a closed door, he did allow himself to frown in puzzlement. The phone continued to ring; pursing his lips, he tapped the Accept icon.

"Hello?" he said, ready to end the call if it was one of the vultures that inevitably came crawling out of the woodwork at times like this. However, what he wasn't ready for was the voice he heard in his ear.

"Dad! Oh, God, it's good to hear your voice! It's me, I'm alive, you have to listen to me, please!"

Just for a moment he thought it was actually Tracey, and that the events of the last few days had been one horrible, protracted nightmare. Then he came to his senses again, and anger filled his gut with a cold fire. "I don't know who you are," he growled. "And I don't know what your game is. But if you don't leave us alone right now, I will find out who you really are, and I'll spend all the money you're trying to scam out of us in making sure you go to prison for a long, long time."

"Dad, no!" It really did sound like her, and his heart ached at what could never be again. "The Empire Eighty-Eight faked my death! I found out stuff I shouldn't have, and they were holding me prisoner until it was safe to kill me for real!"

He blinked, knowing he should end the call now, but the edge of urgency in the voice had him hooked. And it really did sound like Tracey. Still, he couldn't let them keep the initiative like this. "So, I suppose I need to pay a ransom to get you free, or something like that?" The moment the scammer said 'yes' (because what else could this be?) he would cut them off, no matter how much like Tracey the girl sounded. And he would never, ever tell Marjorie about it.

"No, that's what I'm trying to tell you." She took a deep breath, with the same little half-hiccup Tracey had when she was over-stressed. "I'm at the PRT building. I was a prisoner, but then I got rescued by Taylor—you know about Taylor, I gushed about her enough to you—and some other people, and it's been totally insane, but we're safe now. But now you need to get safe. I know way too much about the Empire Eighty-Eight for their liking, so they're probably going to where you are right now to grab you as a hostage so I won't spill the beans. Mom, too, probably. So you need to get out of there, grab Mom, and come to the PRT building as fast as you can. I'll be there and boy, have I got a story for you!"

He stared at the phone.

On the face of things, it was utterly improbable and implausible, but it really did sound like Tracey on the phone, and her story kind of made sense, for a given definition of 'sense'. The mention of Taylor was another large chip out of his scepticism; Tracey had told them all about how smart her new intern was, and how proud she (Tracey) was of her.

Still, it could be some truly weird and well-informed hoax. Time to ask a question that only Tracey would know the answer of. "Okay, if it's you, what did I get you for your ninth birthday?"

"Nothing," she replied immediately. "You were working late and you forgot, so you got me a present the next day and you and Mom tried to convince me that I'd had it all the time and forgotten to open it." She snorted. "An apology would've done just as well, you know."

The hard little knot of pain in the centre of his chest began to loosen. That's Tracey. It has to be. Nobody else would know anything about that. "Okay. I'm going now. But when I see you, I'm going to want to know all the details, young lady."

"And you'll get them. Just go, please!" The call ended.

He took the time to breathe deeply, in and out, twice. His heart rate was now hammering along as the knowledge fizzed through his bloodstream. Tracey's alive, Tracey's alive! But the rest of what she'd told him sobered him up again. I have to go, now.

Stepping out of the stock room, he caught the eye of one of the girls and gestured toward the customer he'd been serving. "Amanda, Mrs Richardson there needs a size nine in the blue Olga Perensky. I've got to go and pick up my wife. Family emergency."

Not giving her a chance to argue or ask questions, he hustled out of the store and headed for the underground parking lot where the shop staff members kept their cars. As he moved, he called Marjorie's cell number. Come on, pick up, pick up …

The phone rang for what seemed an eternity before his wife answered. "Otis? What's the matter? Why are you calling?"

He'd been married to her for nearly thirty years, and he knew her moods. With the state she'd been in since they'd been advised of Tracey's apparent death, if he presented her with too much information at once, she'd get all flustered and nothing would get done. So he had to treat her with kid gloves. Fortunately, he had been married to her for nearly thirty years.

"Honey, I need you to do something for me. I can't explain all of it right now, but I need you to go across to Mrs Wilkinson's house and stay there until I pick you up. Can you do that for me, please?"

Fortunately for his needs, they'd been living in the same neighbourhood for the whole of their married life, and were good friends with their neighbours on both sides for several houses along. Mrs Wilkinson was a widow, with a large number of cats, who was in the same bridge club as Marjorie. There was no doubt in his mind that Marjorie would be welcomed in if she knocked on Mrs Wilkinson's door; the best part was, the driveway to that house was around the corner from the street that he and Marjorie lived on.

"I—I can do it, certainly, but can you tell me why?" She was starting to sound uncertain. This was not a good thing.

"It's a surprise. I'll tell you when I get there." He let some of his newfound elation leak into his tone, but not too much; he didn't want her asking awkward questions instead of doing what he needed her to do. "Just do this for me, alright? I'll see you soon."

"All—alright. I'll go over there now." He heard her push back the chair and get up from where she'd been sitting at the kitchen table. "I love you, Otis."

A fond smile settled on his face. "I love you too, Marj."

He ended the call and used his staff pass to access the elevator down to the underground level. As he stepped out at the bottom, he looked around carefully, but no sinister figures lurked in the shadows to ambush him. He even checked the back seat of the car before opening the door and climbing in.

As he drove the car up the ramp out of the parking garage, he couldn't help replaying the enigmatic phone call in his head. The person had sounded like Tracey, and had known things only Tracey would know, but could he really be certain?

I'll only know for sure when we get to the PRT building.

For now, he knew, he would have to make a leap of faith and hope he stuck the landing.

<><>​

Aisha Laborn, Juvenile Delinquent

Homework absolutely sucked and should die in a fire. That was Aisha's opinion, but unfortunately her father didn't share it. Even more unfortunately, living with him was marginally less unpleasant than living with her druggie whore-bag of a mother, even if he did make her actually start in on her damn homework the minute she got home.

Celia didn't care about homework, just like she didn't care about Aisha keeping her room clean, being home at a reasonable time, doing chores, or basically anything except when she was getting her next high. Most specifically, she'd shown a total lack of care factor when that one boyfriend of hers kept getting handsy with Aisha, right up until Brian had to come over and beat the snot out of him. And then, Celia had been pissed at her for 'leading him on' and Brian for 'overreacting'.

In short, homework wasn't the only thing that could die in a fire as far as Aisha was concerned. It wasn't even the main thing. But right then, it was the one she really wished would have something nasty happen to it. Where's a supervillain attack when you really need one?

Her phone vibrated on the table beside her. She went to pick it up—thank you, God, any distraction is a good distraction—but her father got there first, snatching it away from her reaching hand.

"Hey, what?" she protested. "That's my phone!"

"Not until you finish your homework." He tapped to answer, then held the phone to his ear. "This is Aisha's father. She's currently unavailable. May I take a message?"

Grumbling, Aisha subsided back into her chair. There was no percentage in trying to grab the phone off him; his reflexes were somehow better than hers, and he was the one who'd initially taught Bri how to fight. He wouldn't hit her, but he could certainly fend her off indefinitely with one hand, even if he was busy doing something else with the other.

"Wait, what?" he asked, frowning and putting his hand over his ear. "Say that again, son, and slow down. It's hard to hear you."

"What's going on?" Aisha asked, standing up from the table. "Is Brian in trouble or something?" She'd been pretty impressed when he got the job working security at Medhall (even if she'd never admit it to him). That was serious business, right there.

He didn't answer for several seconds, listening hard to whatever Brian had to say. Aisha wasn't sure what was going on; saying 'I've been arrested, can you come bail me out' didn't take all that long (as she knew from personal experience). Also, he didn't seem to be getting all steamed up like he'd done when Aisha called him to pick her up from the cops.

Finally, he ended the call with a "Got it." When Aisha saw his face, his skin was almost grey, as though all the blood had drained from it. "Jesus Christ," he muttered. "This goddamn city." Then he saw her watching him and took a deep breath, as though to give himself strength.

"What?" asked Aisha again. "What's going on? What did he want?"

"Grab whatever you can't replace," he said roughly. "We're going out the door in one minute. Move!"

"Okay, but why?" she asked as she headed for her bedroom. She wasn't arguing on behalf of the homework, now forgotten on the table behind her. This was a broader 'why'. She wanted to know what the fuck was going on, so she'd know how scared to be.

"Brian found out the identities of some of the Empire Eighty-Eight capes!" he yelled from his bedroom. "They'll want to use us as hostages! Now hurry the fuck up!"

She absolutely hurried the fuck up. TV had taught her long ago that being used as a hostage by anyone was bad for the health, and she knew from personal experience that the Empire Eighty-Eight were even less likely to let her go alive afterward than the normal run of dirtbag gangster assholes. So she grabbed the backpack from under her bed and shoved everything from the top of her dresser into it: random trinkets, a shell she'd once found on the beach and liked, and a photo of her and Brian from back when he was still her cool big brother and not a pretend adult.

She was sitting on the bed, pulling on her sneakers, when her father called out from the living room. "Go! Let's go!"

"Okay, I'm coming, I'm coming!" Jumping up, she grabbed the backpack (filled the rest of the way with random clothing grabbed from the drawers) and hustled out of the room. Her father was waiting by the door, with a somewhat larger bag slung over his shoulder. She spotted her phone where he'd left it on the table, and stuffed it into her back pocket.

"Stay right behind me," he ordered her tersely. "When we get to the car, get in and stay low. We'll be going straight for the PRT building. That's where Brian said to meet him. Clear?"

A dozen more questions were whirling around in her head by the time he finished talking but this didn't seem like the time to air them, so she nodded. "Clear."

"Good. On me." He opened the door and ducked out into the corridor, checking both ways with a sweep of his head that made her imagine a rifle with a laser dot doing the same. This was a side of her father she hadn't seen since he came home from the Navy.

She followed obediently as he hustled down the corridor, trying not to tread on his heels. When they got to the top of the stairwell, he glanced back once at her, nodded, then started down. Heart rate elevating all the time, she followed along.

And then the door at the bottom of the stairs crashed open, and she heard footsteps thundering into the apartment building. "Apartment three-four-seven!" a voice yelled. "Go-go-go!"

Aisha's heart stopped, and her everything clenched. Three-four-seven was her father's apartment. The conclusion was inevitable: these were the Empire Eighty-Eight guys.

Booted feet were pounding up the steps, going a lot faster than Aisha and her father had been going down. She incautiously peered over the railing, spotted movement and an upturned face, then heard a yell from below. She didn't need her father's growl to know that she'd just fucked up in a big way.

"Back!" he snapped. "We'll go down the fire escape!"

Turning, she sprinted back up the stairs, staying barely in front of her father. Going all the way to the roof might have been an option, but these guys were gaining and she didn't want to run across a wide-open space with no cover to stop them shooting at her. All this went through her mind in an instant, then made way for the singular urge to get away.

They bolted along the corridor and into the apartment; he hadn't locked it when they left. He paused to do just that, while she darted across the room to where the window leading out to the fire escape was. They'll probably be watching the car, so we're gonna have to run for it. No problem. I know the area around here like the back of—

She heaved the window open, then her thoughts skidded to a halt, dominated by one word.

Fuck.

"Uh … Dad?" she said, her voice higher than it normally was.

"What?" he said from behind her, then paused. "Oh."

"Yeah, oh." The Empire guy with the gun in Aisha's face gestured with it, and she backed up. Climbing in through the window from the fire escape without moving the gun away from her couldn't have been the easiest thing in the world, but he managed it. "Now get that shit away from the door and open it again, asshole. You want to try and be clever, remember: we only need one of you."

As her father took away whatever he'd shoved in front of the door, Aisha's shoulders slumped. There was no getting away now.

I was wrong. There are worse things than homework.

<><>​

Taylor

Calling my name out, Dad started forward into a run. We met in a mutual hug that would've driven the breath out of me if I hadn't been wearing the armour, and he spun me around. I raised my faceplate, laughing and crying at the same time. "Dad, I was so worried about you!"

"It's good to see you're okay too." He didn't let me go, and I didn't want him to. "But what's going on? What's all this about Medhall and the Empire Eighty-Eight? And where did you get that armour from?"

The last of my tension drained out of me in a giggle. "Well, let's just say, it's a long, long story."

Director Piggot cleared her throat. "A long story which, hopefully, we can put aside for the moment. We still have the issue of proving that Max Anders is Kaiser, and ensuring that there are no moles within this building, in the pay of Coil or anyone else."

"Oh, you'll have moles from all the gangs," Tattletale said cheerfully. "Coil, the Empire Eighty-Eight, the ABB. Hell, the Merchants would probably have people in this building if they could stay sober long enough to pass the drug tests."

Brian—Grue—elbowed her discreetly, or as discreetly as could be done when both parties were wearing metal armour. Predictably, there was a muted clang and the jab had no effect on her. "Don't antagonise her," he muttered, barely loudly enough for me to hear him.

"I'm not." She didn't bother keeping her voice down. "If there was something you needed to hear, would you prefer the comfortable lie or the harsh truth?"

From Director Piggot's tight-lipped expression, I figured she preferred the truth but didn't appreciate being caught short. "Miss Hebert, considering that you've already shown some level of expertise in this field already, would you be amenable to working with my people—"

"Whoa, whoa, whoa there," Dad broke in with a chuckle that almost sounded natural as he let me go and we started back toward the group. "Director Piggot, I know you weren't just about to suggest that my daughter perform highly skilled work without first laying out a contract specifying terms of employment. Given that she's a minor, I'm going to want to look that contract over first and make any necessary changes before she signs and I co-sign it for her."

"Uh, Dad, I don't really mind—" I began.

He cut me off with a flat knife-hand gesture. "Hon, what have I always told you about unpaid overtime?" Raising his eyebrows, he gave me a you-know-this-one look over his glasses.

It wasn't hard to recall. "Don't do it," I replied automatically.

"Right. And the phrase 'I don't really mind' only ever applies to close friends. For the rest, it's business, and you need to cover yourself, hon."

"Mr Hebert, this is important—" the Director began.

"Good, then word the contract accordingly," Dad countered. "None of that bullshit half-pay you've got the Wards on. If Medhall could stand to do it, then you can too."

"You appear to be better informed about the pay rates of the Wards than I'd expect a non-cape and a non-employee of the PRT to be," Armsmaster observed. "Why is that, Mr Hebert?"

"Because, among other things, I'm the head of hiring for the Dockworkers' Association," Dad retorted. "It's my job to know about how the working conditions for the Dockworkers stack up to those in the rest of the city. And I happen to know that once Taylor is signed up to work as a parahuman PRT employee, even temporarily, you're legally bound to never reveal her secret identity or make use of it for your own benefit."

That gave me a brainwave. "Which reminds me," I said brightly. "I'm going to need three assistants, under the same conditions as me. Tracey, Greg and Grue." Tattletale and the others, I figured, could handle their own secret identities.

If the Director's lips had been thin before, now they looked like she was doing her best to suck a lemon dry from the inside. "That clause only counts if the parahuman is using their powers in the service of the PRT," she gritted. "Thinkers and the like."

Dad shook his head. "If that's part of the standard contract—which I seriously doubt—you can take it right out again. You are not holding my daughter's cape identity over her head."

Wow, Dad, you go. As she chewed that one over, I looked at my father with new eyes. Up until the Director had asked me to work with them to (I figured) find moles hidden in her building, he'd been on the back foot and unsure what was going on. But the moment we'd set foot on his turf, he'd engaged negotiation mode and come out with all guns blazing to make sure I got a fair deal.

After a few moments, she nodded briefly. "I can work with that. Come up to conference room A, and we'll serve refreshments and work out the nitty-gritty."

"That invitation's for everyone, right?" I asked. "I'm only asking because Grue's going to be one of my assistants in this, and I figure you wouldn't try anything underhanded like splitting up the Undersiders." I gave her my best innocent gaze.

To her credit, she didn't hesitate. "That is correct. It's for everyone." Turning to Bitch, she added, "I'm going to assume your dogs are house-trained, yes?"

"You could say that," Regent snarked. "Any more house-trained and they'd be using the bathroom like everyone else."

"I wouldn't teach them something stupid like that." I couldn't see Bitch's face inside the snarling-dog helmet that Greg had made, but her voice definitely made up for it. "Dogs need to shit, they let me know and I take them outside."

"Fine, I'll take that as a 'yes'. You can all come up." The Director gestured toward the doors of the freight elevator. "I'll ride with you, just so you can be sure there'll be no funny business en route. But once the contract is signed, I will be needing Miss Hebert to apply her skills to the problem."

I glanced at Tattletale, and noticed that Brian was doing the same. She looked from him to me and back again, and gave us a slight but noticeable nod. It seemed Director Piggot was on the level.

"Sure thing," I said, and headed for the elevator. "Let's do this."

<><>​

Kaiser

Max Anders looked up as the two people were manhandled into the sub-basement room the Empire Eighty-Eight tended to use for its planning sessions. The whiteboards had been wiped clean, the LCD screens dark and silent. Not that his involuntary guests were likely to survive the experience, but after the earlier debacle he had fixed on a policy of giving zero information to anyone not cleared for it.

He frowned as the blindfolds were yanked off the heads of the older man and the teenage girl. Given their specific skin tone, he could easily narrow down who they were. "You've brought the Laborns, I see. Where are the others?"

Hookwolf, who had accompanied them into the room, shrugged. "Hebert never showed, the Grimshaws weren't where they were supposed to be, and Veder's mother made it out of the parking lot just in front of our guys. By now the PRT will know what's going on, and there's no way we'll be able to blockade the approaches to the building. So, this is what we've got to work with." He gestured at the father and daughter.

Max grimaced; he wanted to pinch the bridge of his nose, but his metal mask would get in the way. His plan would have worked much better had he access to the relatives of all four of the inconvenient witnesses to his identity. But he'd never been a man to simply give up when the going got tough, unlike his weak-willed excuse for a son.

He surveyed the two people before him. David Laborn's hair was starting to go grey but he held himself proudly upright, despite the swelling lip and other evidence that Max's men had been more than a little rough with him. The dossier Victor had thrown together indicated that he'd spent time in the Navy, reaching the rank of petty officer, before being honourably discharged.

Aisha Laborn showed the telltales of fear, but she also stared back at him defiantly, despite her hands being fastened behind her back, as her father's were. Her dossier betrayed a life barely started, yet already misspent on petty crime and minor brushes with the law. Max supposed that with a mother like Celia Laborn (his men hadn't bothered picking her up; with her history of drug use, any real mistreatment would likely see her dead of a heart attack, for no good purpose) this wasn't entirely unexpected.

"Do you know why you're here?" he asked.

David Laborn glared at him. "You want to use us as hostages to stop my boy from telling the PRT exactly who you are, and where this place is."

"Never work," Aisha Laborn added, just to be contrary. "Bri'll do what Bri will do. You might as well surrender to the PRT right now."

"You'd better hope you're wrong, girl." Max took a step forward, looming over her. "Your role in all this is to convince him otherwise. Succeed, and you both live. Refuse, and I give one of you to Hookwolf while the other one gets to watch. Fail, and you both die in ways too excruciating for me to adequately describe. Would you like to serve as an example for your father right now?"

He was lying when he said they would live, and they probably knew it, but he'd always found the ability of people to talk themselves into believing a comforting falsehood to be nothing short of miraculous. Their role in this wasn't strictly to force Grue to recant and for his recantation to be believed, but to throw doubt upon his whole story (and thus, by association, the testimonies of the others). Once they'd done that, they would be surplus to requirements, to be disposed of in the most efficient way possible.

It wouldn't do to have them testifying that they'd been kept hostage to force Grue to change his story, after all.

The elder Laborn growled and nudged his daughter, no doubt to warn her that Max wasn't bluffing; and indeed he wasn't. The very future of the Empire Eighty-Eight was at stake here, and there was nothing—and nobody—he would not sacrifice to assure its safety and security. From her sudden change in demeanour, she'd gotten the message.

"No, I get it," she mumbled, head down. "I'll talk to Brian and tell him not to be such a dick."

Max smiled coldly. Sometimes all it took was a little persuasion.

<><>​

Taylor

I had to admit, once the Director said to get stuff done, stuff got done. Dad had no sooner looked over the contract and declared it to be kosher, and I'd signed it (with Greg, Tracey, Brian and Dad adding their signatures where needed) than a tech came in pushing a trolley bearing half a dozen laptops. These were arranged in an arc in front of where I'd be sitting alongside Deputy Director Renick, who came in last of all.

Mr Renick, a tall, spare older man with a grandfatherly air, had apparently been a forensic accountant before he ended up as the Deputy Director of the PRT in Brockton Bay; I was certain there was a story there, but one I was unlikely to hear. He shook my hand after I'd taken most of my armour off, and invited me to call him by his first name. "If we're going to collaborating on this, young lady," he'd said, "'Deputy Director' is far too unwieldy for casual conversation."

In all honesty, weirder things had happened to me even that day, so I took it in my stride. "Just so long as you don't steal my coffee," I agreed, and Tracey stopped inhaling pastries at the far end of the table long enough to snort in amusement. Greg also chuckled, from where he'd dragged a chair to sit behind and beside me for moral support.

"I don't get it," Brian said, looking from Greg to Tracey and then to me.

"Crusader used to steal her coffee regularly, and even Kaiser did it once," Tracey explained. I noted her use of their villain names; a fairly transparent way of emotionally distancing herself from her former colleagues (and deceased ex-boyfriend). I wasn't going through that, and wasn't likely to (unless Greg had some deep, dark secrets he hadn't told me) but it wasn't my place to judge her for her coping mechanisms.

"I believe I can avoid that." Paul Renick nodded to me genially. "So, shall we get started?"

It wasn't only me and him, of course. There were other guys trawling through the employment database, some of them watching electronically over our shoulders to see if they could spot anything we couldn't. But it seemed that nobody else had found anything, so we were the definition of 'fresh eyes' on the situation.

No pressure, of course. None whatsoever.

But I'd done this sort of thing before, and while there was a certain amount of stress involved, I also had a stake in ensuring that Kaiser went down hard. So I buckled down, let my mind submerge itself into the flow of data, and went looking.

About ten minutes in, I frowned and back-keyed to the previous screen, then grabbed a quick screenshot and flicked it over to the laptop to my right. Something had changed, and I wasn't sure what. The question was, had the change been a once-off thing, or was it ongoing?

And then the change happened right in front of me, so smoothly that I would've missed it if I wasn't looking for it, and I knew I was right.

"Someone's in the system right now," I said out loud. "I think they're pulling the dodgier employee files as we speak."

That got me the undivided attention of everyone in the room. The Director had already been watching me like a hawk, but now it felt like I was under a microscope. One with a laser sight attached.

"Lock all users not in this room out, right now!" the Director snapped, and Paul hit a key combo on his laptop which apparently did that very thing. Then the Director got up from her chair and came closer. "What makes you say that, Miss Hebert?"

I rolled my chair back a little so she could see my screens better. "That's this page of employees as of just before you called the lockdown. And that's a screenshot of that same page, from thirty seconds before. See if you can spot the difference."

She wasn't slow off the mark. "Corporal … Jasper Reed is missing from the refreshed screen. You're saying he's a mole?"

"Probably a link between moles," Tattletale remarked from where she was sitting with Regent and Bitch. She hadn't been offered access to a laptop—mainly because Director Piggot wasn't an idiot—but she'd been following the action all the same. "I bet if you look it up, he gave someone else clearance into the system."

That made a lot of sense to me; unbidden, I entered the search query to see who the redoubtable Corporal Reed had been linked to, clearance-wise. The list of names that came up caused my eyebrows to raise. Director Piggot didn't swear audibly, but I got the impression she was thinking some curse-words pretty loudly.

"How did you spot that?" asked the Deputy Director as he started on some of his own queries.

"I was following a line of inquiry, and something was missing from the last time I went over this page," I explained. "Can we look to see what's been deleted recently from employee files?"

"Doing that right now," he murmured, then he sat back. "Director, you need to see this."

Just about then, Brian's phone rang. I was impressed that a room this deeply buried in the guts of the PRT building even got a phone signal, but then I dismissed the thought as I went back to the search. Paul could handle Corporal Reed and his merry band of moles, but I was more curious about who had cleared him.

But before I could get properly started on that, I heard Brian's voice. It was quiet, but I'd heard that hopeless tone before, from my own lips. "Yes," he muttered. "Yes. Okay. Yes."

Those three words rang every alarm bell in my brain, and I sat up. The Director and Deputy Director were delving far into the rabbit-hole I'd unearthed, and neither one looked around as I got up from my chair and approached Brian. Greg, not sure what was going on, followed me anyway.

While Brian's helmet visor still covered most of his face, I could tell from the little bits of expression I could see that all was not right with his world. "What's the matter?" I asked in a low tone.

Tattletale was the only other one who seemed to have noticed, and she shot me a glance before putting a hand on his shoulder. "The Empire Eighty-Eight has his family," she murmured. "He's got to do what he's told, or they're dead."

That was about as bad as it could get. The Empire had already done its damnedest to kill all of us, and they were playing for keeps. "Well, fuck." I kept my voice down as a matter of course.

"So, let's go save them." That was Greg to a T, right there, and one of the reasons I loved him. "Any way to know where they are?"

"Maybe." Tattletale grabbed Brian's phone from his unresisting hand. "They didn't call from Aisha's number. There's two possible reasons for this."

I nodded. "One, she lost it. Or two …" I frowned. "What's two?"

Tattletale grinned. "Aisha stashed it." She showed me the screen of the phone, where she'd called up a phone-tracking app. The GPS location had it right where Max Anders certainly wouldn't want a locator beacon pinging from: the Medhall building.

"Okay, and I bet I know where." Greg knew as well, and so did Brian. We were somewhat acquainted with the Medhall sub-basements. "There's only one more thing we've got to do, and you're going to hate this bit."

"Hate what?" She stared at me. "Oh, shit, you're not going to—"

"I am." I turned toward Director Piggot and raised my voice. "Ma'am, may I have your attention for a moment?"

She looked up from the screen, and again proved that she wasn't just another suit as her eyes narrowed. "Something's wrong. What's happened?"

"The Empire got Grue's family," I explained succinctly. "We know where they are. Their lifespan will be measurable in minutes if Kaiser gets the idea that Grue isn't bending to their demands. We need to go back in there and get them out."

"You signed a contract." It seemed to be an automatic response on her part. "We've found some moles, but there's no guarantee that's all of them."

"Oh, I have no doubt there's more to be found, but right now I'm sure you're more interested in figuring out which of your people with the clearance to pull files clear out of the system is actually doing it." I gestured at Grue and the others. "If the PRT moves on this, Grue's family will be dead before you get within three blocks of where they are. We've got the wherewithal to get closer and the knowledge of the interior of the building. We're the only chance they've got of coming out of this alive. Tell me I'm wrong."

She frowned, but it wasn't to her previous lemon-sucking standard. Eventually, she nodded. "You're not wrong. Well, you brought this to my attention before jumping in feet first, so there's that to be said for the situation. Do you have a plan?"

"Just the beginnings of one," I conceded, then looked around at the various capes in the room. "But I'm sure we can improve on that."

Tattletale grinned. "Count on it."



End of Part Twenty-Three
 
Always a delight to see this updated; and the steam roller of karma grinds ever onwards...
 
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It's pretty high grade wishful thinking for Max to believe the E88 has any way out of this. Now that the secret's out, the only question is how long it takes the PRT to get sufficient evidence to nail the whole lot of them.

But stubborn refusal to accept defeat is a supervillain standard, and accepting such a sudden collapse in fortune is a hard pill to swallow.
 
It's pretty high grade wishful thinking for Max to believe the E88 has any way out of this. Now that the secret's out, the only question is how long it takes the PRT to get sufficient evidence to nail the whole lot of them.

But stubborn refusal to accept defeat is a supervillain standard, and accepting such a sudden collapse in fortune is a hard pill to swallow.

To cross-post from a similar thing in SV:

Kaiser is suffering from a massive case of Victory Disease.

Under his leadership, the Empire Eighty-Eight has done nothing but succeed for the last few years.

Under the very nose of the people who would be taking them down if they just knew who he really was, he's been essentially the evil Bruce Wayne, rich businessman by day and notorious supervillain by night.

He has acquired the impression that he can get away with anything, if he just tries hard enough.

So, between Grue being coerced into recanting his story and 'Max Anders' (Victor) prepping to call a public press conference while Kaiser commits a crime across town, he thinks he can skate clear of this.

Because he always has before.
 
Part Twenty-Four: Return to Medhall
Taylor Hebert, Medhall Intern

Part Twenty-Four: Return to Medhall

[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]



An Underground Bond Villain Base

Coil


Thomas Calvert hated being forced into a course of action, rather than being the one who initiated said action. He much preferred to be able to set up a choice so that he could have his cake and eat it too; no matter how matters panned out, he would be on the profitable side. But as of half an hour ago, his hand had been forced. Word had spread through the grapevine that the same girl who had uncovered his moles in Medhall (though the people talking about it didn't know that specific detail) was sitting down in the same room as Director Piggot to check out the PRT's employee records.

It would've been highly tempting to dismiss the entire previous incident as a teenage girl fluking her way to a win, but Calvert had learned never to ignore danger signals like that. His preferred course of action would've been to get to her (and, in a perfect world, recruit her to his cause) but just the presence of the Undersiders made that impossible, so he had to go with the next best option. Or rather, the next least worst option and the worst option of all.

Neither one was what he would've selected if he had any other choice in the matter, but it was a truism that when facing competent opponents, the good options tended to evaporate. In one timeline, the one where he was in his base, he accessed the employee records and set about deleting the ones he had personally provided clearance for; in the other, where he was in the PRT building, he did his best to monitor what was being done, but made no changes himself.

It didn't really seem to help, either way. He wasn't quite sure what system Hebert was using, but after about fifteen minutes on the non-interference timeline, she started flagging records. Not every name she picked was one of his, but there were at least two other gangs involved, so he would not have bet so much as a bent nickel that the other names were false positives.

In the other timeline, he got away with removing a few names, then she spotted something; he managed to drop one more name off the rolls before he was shut out of the system altogether. Still, he didn't drop that timeline. In the non-interference one, she seemed to have located a string and was tugging on it as hard as she could, unravelling his entire internal PRT network, which would inevitably lead back to him.

Getting up from his desk in the PRT building, he left his office and headed for the exit in an unhurried fashion. About the only bright spot in all this mess was that the Hebert girl had positively identified Medhall as an Empire Eighty-Eight front, and Max Anders as Kaiser. Calvert had speculated about this being a possibility, but never seriously. His career with the PRT was almost certainly circling the drain right now, but that information (if leveraged correctly) had the potential to be very useful indeed.

<><>​

Taylor

"Step one of the plan," Tattletale said cheerfully. "Getting out of the PRT building without alerting the Empire that we're on the move. Step two is getting into the Medhall building, again without alerting the Empire that we're there. Step three is finding Grue's father and sister. And step four is getting everyone out alive. Questions so far?"

"Just one." Regent raised his hand like he was in class. "You're talking like we're going to be tagging along with them. Why are you talking like that?"

"Because he's your team member, and he'd do the same for you." Tattletale's tone was sugary sweet.

"Rescue my family for me?" Regent snorted. "Puh-leeze. The Empire could keep them."

"Fine." Grue gave him the stink-eye, which was pretty impressive with his metal mask. "We'll leave you here. In the PRT building. Alone, with all these PRT troopers."

Regent looked around at Director Piggot and the other PRT personnel in the room, and seemed to think for a moment. "On the other hand, I do kinda feel like getting out and stretching my legs. Count me in."

"Glad we could sort that out." Tattletale dusted her hands off. "So, getting back to step one. While I doubt very much that the Empire Eighty-Eight has this building surrounded three-deep, they've almost certainly got every exit under surveillance, specifically looking for people riding big dogs."

I spoke into the expectant silence that followed. "So when we leave, we can't do it riding big dogs?"

"And the tall brunette in the front row wins first prize." Tattletale touched her nose then pointed at me.

"If we're not riding my dogs, how do we leave?" Rachel didn't sound enthused by the idea. "Isn't like we can just walk out the front door. Place is on lockdown."

Greg shrugged. "PRT van, maybe? Those things have got tinted windows."

"Which is as good as a neon sign telling everyone that they're sneaking us out. Ideally, we do it in a way that they don't even suspect anyone's left at all." Turning to Director Piggot, Tattletale tilted her head slightly. "You do have secret exits, right?"

"We do," the Director replied steadily. "Do you want to bet your lives on the Empire moles not having found them already?"

Tattletale grimaced. "No, you're right. They'd totally know about them."

I blinked as an idea occurred to me. "Are any of the Empire fliers near this building right now?"

Director Piggot glanced at me curiously. "Purity's in custody, and Rune's not exactly subtle. Why, were you thinking of being choppered out?"

A grin spread across my face. "No, but I'd like to try something, and I didn't want them spotting me doing it. Is there any way I can get the loan of a pair of binoculars?"

<><>​

Director Piggot

"Get her a set of binoculars," Emily ordered, not even caring who got it done. "What's the plan?"

Tattletale gave the Hebert girl a curious look. "Yeah, I'm kind of wondering about that too."

"Hah." Grue's voice was quietly amused. "So this is what it feels like." The Veder kid nodded and grinned, and they bumped armoured knuckles with a quiet clack. "Think you've got the range?"

"Maybe." Hebert accepted the binoculars that had magically appeared out of nowhere. "Only one way to find out."

"Find out? Range for what?" Emily was rapidly losing patience. Being enigmatic was all well and good, but not when she was trying to get simple answers to simple questions.

Hebert looked her in the eye. "I intend to teleport directly to the Medhall building, but I need line of sight to do it. How do I get to the roof?"

"Escort them to the roof. Keep a watch for flyers and snipers." Emily turned back to where voices were being raised over the search for moles. "What's going on?"

Renick answered her without looking up from the screen he was working on. "We've separated out three lines of enquiry, and traced back to who gave one group their initial clearances. Same person who was doing the deletions. It's Commander Calvert, ma'am."

"Calvert?" With that one name, the ongoing situation with Grue's family went straight to the back burner. She knew Calvert, better than most. "He can't be Empire or ABB. Has to be working for Coil." This wasn't a huge surprise for her. The man had always been a snake; in her expert opinion, someone who would shoot their captain in the back to get into a chopper first just couldn't be trusted. "Okay, so where the hell is he?"

Renick swivelled one of the screens to show her. "He never came in today. Called in sick. And he's got his cell-phone turned all the way off. No way to locate it."

The conclusion was inescapable. "He knows we're on to him. Secure his computer and start prepping a request to drag his cell-phone data off the cloud. I want to know all his movements. Also, set up a password change, building-wide, ASAP. When we drop the lockdown, I don't want him burrowing straight back in and reading our mail."

"Roger that, ma'am."

<><>​

Coil

Couldn't the Empire have stepped on their dick any other day?

Thinking further about the matter, he realized it wouldn't have mattered. Any day that Taylor Hebert showed up on their doorstep with the Empire slavering for her blood would've locked down the PRT building and sparked a mole hunt: one where her capacity for uncovering his tracks apparently outstripped his for hiding them. The fact that it had been inevitable merely made it all the more irritating.

While Piggot was less intelligent than him (everyone was less intelligent than him, by definition) she could probably reach the appropriate logical conclusions, given enough of a head start. He'd been locked out of the system a lot earlier than he'd expected to be, though he was reasonably certain this was down to the Hebert girl picking up on his shenanigans. In the PRT timeline, he suspected he was also locked out of it by now anyway, but it didn't matter.

It didn't matter because he'd tried to ram his way past the lockdown ahead of the inevitable room-by-room search of the PRT building, and now his car was thoroughly encased in containment foam, and going exactly nowhere.

In the timeline he knew he was keeping, he set about emptying his public bank account—it held far less than his private ones, but money was still money—and moving his other resources to places he could still access them, but were out of the reach of official retribution. Losing his hooks into the PRT would put a crimp in his criminal career, though not to a level that he couldn't recover from. He would also have to dump his identity as Thomas Calvert, which would be extremely annoying.

The only bright spot in all this was the outing of Max Anders as Kaiser, though he would seriously have preferred to learn that information without having his own secrets exposed at the same time. With any luck, the PRT would focus on hitting the Empire while they were vulnerable, and leave him until later (by which time he would be safely ensconced in a perfectly legal profession under a totally unsuspicious identity).

He would, he decided gloomily, probably have to grow a beard and shave his head, so as to change his appearance enough to go out in public.

As always, though, he would survive.

<><>​

Taylor

The PRT had nice binoculars. Even before I looked through them, I could tell they were a precision instrument, well made and equally well maintained. I put the strap around my neck without being prompted—binoculars are not light, and the last thing I wanted to do was repay the Director's generosity by dropping them—then put them to my eyes.

I already knew I could see the top of the PRT building from the base of the Medhall building, so by definition, the reverse should be true. Peering through the binoculars in the right general direction, I twiddled the focus until it came into sharp clarity for me, then started examining the target building. The afternoon was getting on, so there were plenty of shadows around the base of Medhall, and I nearly went for the biggest one.

However, then I had a thought. If Max Anders is Kaiser, how would he get from his office to that sub-basement in a hurry without letting people know about it?

I thought I knew the answer, but all I had was speculation. However, there was a way of confirming it. "Greg, question."

Even though I wasn't looking directly at him, I knew his head had just come up. "Yeah?"

"How many elevator shafts in Medhall?"

I heard Regent mutter, "what kind of a stupid question is that?" but I ignored him. If anyone knew the internal structure of that building, it would be Greg.

"That's a really good question," he said slowly. "There's a bank of them that service most of the floors, one of which goes all the way to the sub-basement. But now that I'm thinking about it, there's another gap in all the floors, separate from the others, and it lines up with the back wall of Max Anders' office."

"You're thinking secret elevator," Tattletale said immediately.

"I am," I confirmed as I took the binoculars away from my eyes and looked at her. "If we got access to his office, do you think you could figure out how to open it for me?"

"Pfft." She rolled her eyes. "Ask me a difficult one next time."

"Excellent." I glanced at Tracey. "Are you sure you're okay with going back in? I mean, we just got you out of that hellhole."

She'd come up in the elevator with a pastry in one hand and a bottle of water in the other. By now the pastry was gone, though she was still working on the water. "Br—I mean Grue—helped get me out of there. The least I can do is help save his folks." She didn't look certain, but she did look determined.

Brian nodded. "And I totally appreciate it."

"I'll have to give the other Undersiders proper armour if we're going back in now," Greg said. "What you guys have now is okay to run away with, but not so great against people who are personally targeting you."

"I can personally attest to that." I shrugged one shoulder, recalling the hammer-blow that had struck it. "Victor's got access to some stupid big rifles."

"I'd ask permission first, if I were you," Tracey cautioned him. "Director Piggot's been a perfectly wonderful person so far, but she might take it amiss if you started dismantling her building around her."

I blinked a little at the glowing description of the testy Director, but I figured it was a matter of perspective. Director Piggot had given us refuge and only asked a few things in return, not even trying to arrest the Undersiders. While I wouldn't have gone so far as to call her 'perfectly wonderful', I was entirely willing to forgive the little power plays; people in authority did that sort of thing as naturally as breathing.

"I might be able to help there," Armsmaster offered. He'd come up on the roof with us, and was observing the back-and-forth with some interest. "I have a secondary workshop in this building, and I keep a store of metal there for my use and Kid Win's as well. You're welcome to it, if it will assist in getting innocents out of the line of fire."

"Totally," Greg agreed immediately. "I'm pretty sure I'll be able to grab more once we get there, but every little bit helps."

"I appreciate this, Armsmaster." Brian spoke with feeling. "They're my only family, and we both know how unlikely it is that Kaiser will just let them go, afterward."

Armsmaster held up his hand. "You didn't let me finish. There's one condition."

"What condition?" I asked cautiously. My eyes flicked to Tattletale, but the broad grin on her face was not in the slightest bit helpful. Either what he was about to say was too stupid for words, or …

He unracked his halberd from his back and snapped it out to its full length. "I'm coming with you."

The gathering tension popped like a particularly anaemic soap bubble. Brian and Greg shared a glance, and I was pretty sure I was able to interpret the bro-look between them as what the fuck? and no, I didn't see that coming either.

"Um, sure?" Greg sounded like he was waiting for the other shoe to drop. "The more the merrier, I guess. Just, um, me and Taylor and Tracey, we've got our own way of doing things. Getting our powers all at the same time, kind of thing. Grue's pretty good about following our lead, though." He turned to Tracey and me. "Sorry, I shouldn't be talking for you. Are you okay with Armsmaster coming along?"

Tracey shrugged and nodded. "Like you said, the more the merrier. Having a bona fide superhero along has gotta help our chances." She gave Lisa and the other Undersiders a smile. "That's not to say the villains haven't been doing a brilliant job so far, just want to make that clear too."

I grinned. "Oh, he's totally welcome." Ever since he'd stepped inside my power's radius, I'd been aware of his range of skills. Here was a man who didn't fuck around when it came to getting good at hand-to-hand combat. Everyone who was going into this fight—and I had zero doubt there would be a fight—would be doing it with a serious competence upgrade.

Taking up the binoculars again, I began scanning the Medhall building again for a good teleport destination. It would need to be some place we weren't visible to casual observation, while at the same time able to gain immediate entry to the building itself. Fighting our way in through the front doors, for instance, would be a hell of a lot harder than fighting our way out had been.

If we can avoid all that …

And then, as my eyes lit on one particular spot, I grinned.

Oh, hell yes.

<><>​

Medhall Building

Kaiser


The phone on Max's desk rang. It was a burner, which thus far had been used for exactly one purpose: to deliver the ultimatum to Grue about his family. As soon as that business was concluded, it would be destroyed and the fragments discarded, in much the same way as he discarded anything else that was surplus to requirements.

This attitude extended to people as well as things, which he recognized and was entirely unapologetic for. He could, so why not?

Taking up the phone, he tapped the icon to answer. "Hello?"

There was a chance—slim but not outside the realms of possibility—that Grue had spilled all to the PRT and they were making this call to entrap him with his own words. Thus, he knew to be careful with his phrasing. This was not, in the age-old idiom, his first rodeo.

"It's me. Grue." The young man was keeping his voice down. "Are Dad and Aisha still alive?"

Max hadn't been advised otherwise, and he firmly doubted that any of his people would colour outside the lines that hard anyway. "Nothing has changed. Do you have a change in developments regarding your associates?"

"Yeah. What if I can bring them to you? Will you let my father and sister go then?"

It took him less than half a second to figure out what to say. "I'm sure arrangements can be made." This could still be a trap, but the chance to silence all three of them was not something he wanted to pass up. "How is it going with explaining the true state of affairs?" Specifically, that Medhall (and Max himself) had nothing at all to do with the Empire Eighty-Eight.

(The word 'true' in that context was more ironic than otherwise.)

"People are listening to me. Armsmaster has been detailed to escort them off the premises."

Max sat up at that. As a trained public speaker, he was good at telling when someone was shading the truth, or even outright lying. The Laborn boy was not trained for that sort of thing, and so far Max hadn't picked up any hints of deception. "Well done. The rear parking lot entrance would probably be best. After all, I'd love to see them all again."

And kill them. Preferably slowly. He still had a faint scar on his hand from that goddamn black tentacle the Grimshaw woman had hit him with.

"Actually, I've got a better idea."

Max frowned. Something about Grue's voice had changed, become more assertive. "And that is?"

Grue came up from a crouch, right next to Max's desk, where the afternoon sun left a pool of shadow. He was wearing the black armour the Veder boy had equipped him with, though his helmet faceplate had more of a demonic visage than before. In his right hand, he held a long black staff which he spun with assurance.

Blackness billowed out of his left hand, covering Max in an instant. A blow more akin to a speeding truck than a teenage boy holding a stick slammed into Max's chest; Max went over backward, spilling out of his chair. He rolled over then came up on his hands and knees, trying to seek refuge under his desk. His duress buttons, also under the desk, would alert the rest of the Empire Eighty-Eight.

A metal-booted foot smashed into the side of his chest, knocking him sprawling across the luxuriously carpeted floor. Winded, he flopped onto his back, trying to regain his breath. Something hard pushed down in the middle of his chest; as the darkness faded away, he saw it was Grue's staff. Grue was also standing on his right wrist.

Also in the room were the Hebert girl, Grimshaw, and Veder (who was standing on his left wrist), as well as the Undersiders, all clad from head to foot in that same black armour. As a singular contrasting note, Armsmaster rounded out their numbers.

"Well, I brought them here." Grue's tone held no humour whatsoever. "Where's my father and sister?"

Max thought very fast indeed. "Armsmaster," he managed. "You have to believe me. These people were on the verge of being fired, so they must have—"

"Save it," Grimshaw told him bluntly. "Before I took the evidence to Ms Harcourt, I took the precaution of emailing it all to myself, just so it couldn't be deleted before we could take it to the authorities. The PRT now have that email in their possession. They've got everything. Now, where's Grue's father and sister?"

Well. Shit.

<><>​

Taylor

"Sub-basement, right?" asked Tattletale. Mr Anders didn't seem to react, but she nodded. "Yup, definitely sub-basement."

"The same level you had me on?" asked Tracey.

Again, there was no apparent reaction, but Tattletale nodded again. "Got it in one."

This time he reacted, glaring at her. "I didn't say anything!"

She grinned at him in a way that would probably have been immensely irritating if she wasn't on our side. "I'm psychic. Just keep on trying not to think about the answers, and they'll be in the front of your mind for me to read."

That wasn't how her powers worked—like, at all (she'd quietly filled us in while other things were going on)—but he was totally taken in. Setting his jaw, he stared at her defiantly. "It's impossible to read the human mind. Scientists have proven that."

"Just like it's impossible to bend a spoon with the mind?" Greg suggested. "Didn't scientists prove that too, once upon a time?" The metal staff he was holding (identical to the ones the rest of us, including Grue, had) curled in a corkscrew motion, then straightened again.

It turned out that Armsmaster had trained extensively with the staff before he'd gone on to the halberd, and I was currently providing everyone in the team with that level of skill. Armsmaster wasn't coming out of it empty-handed, however; Grue was pretty adept in MMA, which meant we were all getting a boost in that.

"We're wasting time," Armsmaster said. "Kaiser, tell us exactly where in this sub-basement level the hostages are being held, and I'll testify that you cooperated when you go to trial."

"If you go down there, they'll die." Mr Anders wasn't giving an inch. "Even if you take me down as a hostage, my people have two and you've only got one. Which one are you willing to lose?"

"I trusted you." Tracey's voice dripped with venom. "I idolized you. I thought you were a good man. A great man. And all the time, you were just a sneaking, stinking Nazi. A villain pretending to be an actual human being. Hurting people because you could." She held out her hand toward him and a black tentacle oozed out of the palm of her gauntlet. "If you won't help us rescue Grue's family, then what use are you to us?"

Mr Anders reacted to that, his eyes widening. "Armsmaster, she's about to torture and kill a helpless prisoner! Are you going to allow this?"

"He just wouldn't give up," Regent remarked in a spectacularly uncaring tone of voice. "Just kept fighting, even when it was clear he was going to die if he didn't surrender. Truly, a villain of stunning determination. Or stupidity, one of the two."

"I don't see a damn thing," Bitch added. "Fucker lets Hookwolf kill dogs. He deserves to die."

Brian didn't say a word. He just leaned on the staff, putting more and more pressure on Mr Anders' chest.

Armsmaster straightened up. "Anders, you're putting me in a very difficult position. Right now, there are seven people in this room that you've personally tried to kill, four of whom are villains, one of whom has relatives under direct threat from your people. I'm your only hope of getting out of this unscathed, but you've got to work with me here. Give me something, anything, so I can get them to back off."

I wondered if Mr Anders would realise I'd borrowed his skills of negotiation and intimidation and bestowed them on everyone (including Armsmaster); this was straight out of the good cop/bad cop playbook (minus giving the prisoner a cup of coffee and a cigarette), and Armsmaster was playing his part to perfection. It didn't hurt, of course, that we were all perfectly willing to wreck Kaiser's shit if it helped get Brian's folks back to him alive.

The black tentacle extended, writhing ominously as it closed in on Mr Anders' face. He tried to pull back from it, but flat on his back as he was, there was nowhere to pull back to. I could see the whites of his eyes, the fear growing in them.

"Tell me, Mr Anders, which eye-socket do you want this to go into?" Tracey's voice was flat with menace. "If you don't choose, I will."

Frantically, Mr Anders rolled his head from side to side to avoid it; it was less than three inches from his face by now. "Armsmaster!"

"Give me something!" Armsmaster bellowed.

I saw the exact moment when his resolve broke. "Alright, alright! They're in holding room three-B! There's an armed guard at the door!"

"Lie," Tattletale and Armsmaster said at the same time. Grue leaned on the staff, and the tentacle oozed an inch closer.

"Two guards! Two guards!" Mr Anders was almost sobbing with terror.

"How many capes down there?" asked Brian. I was impressed; in my mind I'd equated 'guards' with 'capes', and I never would've thought to ask the separate question. At the same time, the black tentacle slithered an inch closer to Mr Anders' left eye.

"I don't know. I don't know! They, they come and go down there! When you got away it was all hands on deck!" White was showing all the way around both irises by now. "Stormtiger's still in the infirmary with Othala after what you did to him, and Rune's still got broken bones! The rest are all … around!" He seemed remarkably bitter that he was suddenly facing the consequences of his actions.

"My heart bleeds," Tracey said coldly, but the tentacle retracted a few inches. "How do we make sure he won't raise the alarm as soon as we move on from here?" The implication was obvious, and he flinched away as the tentacle flicked toward him again.

"I will not be a party to cold-blooded murder." Armsmaster's voice was only mildly censorious. I got the impression he knew Tracey wouldn't go all the way and kill Mr Anders (I was still having trouble thinking of him as Kaiser) and it helped to keep the asshole frightened enough not to try anything stupid.

"Oh, I've got that covered." I gestured to the wall. "Kaiser, your secret elevator is right through there. How do we get to it?"

He blinked at me, apparently surprised that I'd pointed directly at it (he didn't know about my ability to sense all metal within about sixty feet). "There's a—"

"—sliding panel, got it." Tattletale moved to where I'd pointed, eyed a painting of a bearded man bearing a distinct likeness to Mr Anders, then pressed a section of what I'd thought was decorative wood carving. There was a click and that section of wall slid aside, taking the painting with it. Behind it was a rather modern-looking elevator door … with an electronic panel attached. No buttons in sight. "Ah, I see. Biometric reader. No high-tech villain lair should be without one."

"Ooh, ooh," Regent said. "I know this bit. This is where we cut his hand off so we can fool the handprint readers." He was probably only saying it to mess with Mr Anders, though I was almost fooled myself.

"Wouldn't work." Tattletale's disappointed act was almost perfect. "Those things register your pulse at the same time."

Brian reached down and grabbed Mr Anders by the front of his shirt. With a single heave, he put the man on his feet. "Hand on reader, now. Pull any shit, any at all, and I'll let her have you."

"Why won't your armour allow metal growth inside?" asked Mr Anders. He seemed sufficiently cowed that he allowed Brian to push him up to the reader, though it seemed to me that he was regaining his self-confidence.

Greg spoke up. "Because fuck you, that's why." His staff curled at the tip and snaked around Mr Anders' neck, not quite tightening into a noose but certainly making sure the asshole knew it was there. "Now, be a good little supervillain and open the secret elevator for us."

With very little choice in the matter, Mr Anders relaxed and allowed his hand to be placed on the reader. After a second or so, it beeped cheerfully and the elevator door slid open. I looked inside, and spotted the problem immediately.

"Okay, so where's the rest of it?" asked Greg. What we were looking at would hold two people, or four if they didn't mind brushing shoulders. Our contingent of eight, all armoured, plus Bitch's three dogs (not grown yet), wouldn't have a hope in hell of cramming in there. Even if we shed our armour (Armsmaster too) with the plan of re-donning it once we got down to our destination, we still wouldn't fit.

"It's a secret elevator." Mr Anders shrugged, very carefully. "I didn't need a bigger one."

Tattletale facepalmed. "And there's no buttons on the inside. You step in, the door closes, and it takes you to the other end of the line. Your palmprint on either end is what makes it work."

Well, fuck.

I began trying to sketch out in my head the fox-goose-grain problem that this incurred, ferrying one or two of our people down at a time while keeping an eye on him and making sure he didn't raise the alarm somehow with half of our people separated from the other half by the entire height of the building. It didn't look promising, especially with the glint I could see returning to Mr Anders' eye. If he got half a chance to screw with us, he would absolutely do that.

"Fuck it," Greg decided. "We got this. Bag him and tag him, he's not needed anymore."

"What?" asked Armsmaster. "How do you propose—" He stopped himself. "Well, if you're sure."

Greg nodded. "I am."

I tilted my head to get Armsmaster's attention. "Tell your roof guards that Kaiser's on the way. Make sure he can't skewer them once he gets there."

"Understood." With quick, practiced movements, he secured Mr Anders' hands behind his back, then put a drawstring bag over his head and tightened the string until it wouldn't slip off by accident. At the same time, I could barely hear him muttering into his helmet radio.

Once Armsmaster was done, Brian grabbed Mr Anders and manhandled him around to the spot we'd all been avoiding; the pool of shadow alongside the desk (now somewhat darker than normal). "Watch your step," he advised, then shoved him forward. Mr Anders' startled yelp as he tumbled into the portal was music to my ears, even as sharply cut off as it was.

Once he was through, I closed the portal. We were committed now. The only way out was forwards.

"Wait," said Bitch. "That was still open?" She'd been highly dubious about stepping through the portal in the first place (her dogs hadn't liked it at all, and had only done it because she was there).

"You shut it?" Regent carefully prodded the carpeted floor with his foot. "How are we supposed to get back now? Because we can't all go down at once, and once you're down, you can't send the elevator back. So unless two of us want to go down there on a one-way suicide run—"

Greg gestured at the elevator. The doors, plus the elevator itself, flowed out of the open doorway and stacked itself in a neat pile of ingots out of the way. There were quite a few of them. Once he was done, the only things in the way were bits of plastic that had previously held circuitry and an open elevator shaft with the end of a cable hanging forlornly at just over head height.

Turning to Bitch, Greg indicated the surplus metal. "You think that'll be enough to armour your dogs with, once they get up to size? I mean, I know they're tough as fuck, but the Empire will be absolutely playing for keeps and I don't want to see them getting hurt."

Tattletale clapped her hands together, her eyes alight with sheer glee (and not a little deviltry). "Haha, wow! Now I see how you beat them the last time." She gestured toward Armsmaster. "How long do you think it would take you to break his suit down to the circuitry?"

"A question we will never see answered," I said, giving her a really? look, before he could come to the conclusion that she really meant it. "Thanks for opening the way, hon." Moving forward, I braced myself on either side of the now-empty opening and peered down the shaft.

After about ten feet down, it got really dark, but that didn't bother me. Since I'd gotten my powers, darkness and I were old friends (and I may have been humming that tune under my breath). We understood each other really, really well.

Even without the binoculars (I hadn't dared bring them through) I could see the bottom clearly enough to do what I did next; specifically, slap a shadow on the wall next to the opening and step through, ending up on a concrete ledge above the bottom of the shaft itself. This was a good thing, because the bottom of the shaft had (if I was reading the metal built into the shaft walls properly) about a foot of water in it, courtesy of Brockton Bay's notoriously high water table. The exterior elevator door was about chest-level for me and was almost certainly designed to stay locked until the (now non-existent) elevator showed up, but that was fine. I didn't intend to open it all by myself.

Leaning back through the portal, I looked over at Greg, whose armour had gone from impressive to almost cartoonish in the short interval that I'd been gone. Everywhere it could hold extra metal, it was, with even his shield almost a foot thick. He looked like the medieval armoured version of the Michelin Man.

It was a good thing, I decided, that his darksteel apparently didn't weigh any more than cardboard to him. Armsmaster and the Undersiders (now that was a catchy band name) were staring at him as though unsure of what to make of this trick (except for Brian, of course). "Okay, fine," I said. "That's one way to carry it through, I guess. Now quit showing off and get in here."

"Yes, ma'am." He stepped on through, and I guided him to make sure he didn't take a header into the water. "Okay, I can't see a thing, just saying."

"Well, there's a two-foot drop into a foot of stagnant water," I told him. "You won't drown, but squelchy shoes are the absolute worst. Move to your right, so you can make room for the others."

"Can't argue with that." He followed my direction, moving to where I put him, and staying there. That was one of the many things I liked about him; he never, ever second-guessed me.

Once he was in place, I leaned back through the portal. "Armsmaster, you're next. We need some light on the subject."

"Coming through," he agreed. Lights clicked on at various points on his armour, and he stepped through as I moved to the side. His helmet turned to the left and right as he took in the bottom of the elevator shaft (which was getting crowded), then he looked up at the door. "That's a useful power. Can it get us through the door without making noise?"

"No, but I can," Greg said. "If I made a small hole, do you have any tech-gizmos that'll let us see what's on the other side?"

There was almost physical pain in Armsmaster's voice as he replied. "If you promise to never call them tech-gizmos ever again, then yes, I do."

"Good," I said briskly. "I'm thinking that once we get the all-clear, Greg makes the door into steps, you guys go through into whatever's on the other side, then I bring everyone through as fast as we can, and work from there."

Armsmaster cleared his throat. "I have a question. We are some distance below ground level. How are we going to get out if we have to retreat in a hurry?"

"Grue gives us cover of darkness, and Greg and I make an exit with the judicious application of teleport portals and blowing holes in shit until we have a way out." I raised an eyebrow. "Any suggestions you might have for us at the time will definitely be taken on board."

"I suppose I can't fault that. The hole you spoke of, Mr Veder? And had you people settled on cape names yet? It just feels wrong calling you by your real name."

I chuckled as Greg began teasing slivers out of the base of the elevator door. "We haven't really had the time to consider it. If you must have a name for me, call me Portal."

"And I'll be Alloy," Greg offered. He stepped to the side again as a tiny dot of light showed under the door. "All yours."

"Thank you, Alloy." Armsmaster put his hand up to the hole and a slender cable extended from the base of his armoured wrist, slithering into the gap like it was alive. He paused for a moment. "Looking around now. We have a concrete corridor, off-yellow walls, fluorescent lights. It tracks very much with your description. No people in sight."

"Excellent." I gestured at the portal. "I'll give them the word that we're about ready to move."

"Good … wait." He held silent for a moment, then lowered his voice. "Two people coming. No costumes, but they aren't dressed like the guards you mentioned. One has a pistol in a shoulder holster. Coming up to the elevator door." Another pause. "Facial rec puts one as Alexander Grayson, Medhall legal department, and the other as a Geoff Schmidt."

I kept my voice way down as well. "Mr Grayson is Victor. I don't know the other guy. Now shh." Closing my eyes, I listened as hard as I could. Voices filtered through the door to me.

"… up there for a while. Not answering his phone."

"Do you think something has happened?"

"I don't know. Nobody's approached the building, even from the air. His office door reads as being electronically locked from the inside. He could just be having a quiet drink, or it could be something more."

"How long does this elevator normally take?"

"Less time than this."

"Greg," I whispered. "On my mark, pull the door. I'll get the others." I waited until he nodded, then I held up my finger. "Three. Two. One. Mark."

Things happened very quickly after that.

Greg grabbed the whole door with his power and thoughtfully spread it over the base of the elevator shaft, covering the water with a sturdy-looking metal grating; almost as an afterthought, he added a convenient set of steps up to floor level. Armsmaster didn't even need it; proving to be extremely damn agile in his armour, he leaped four feet vertically with the assistance of his halberd. Then, as soon as his feet hit the concrete floor above, he swung the halberd in a short arc. The base of it encountered Geoff Schmidt's chest (whoever he really was) and electricity sparked, knocking the guy back a few yards to land heavily on his back.

As Greg thundered up the steps (I didn't want to even try to guess how much his armour actually weighed now), I stuck my head back through the portal. "Come on!" I shouted. "We're in!"

Pulling back out, I went up the steps myself as fast as I could, as people started spilling through the portal into the confines of the elevator shaft. Brian was right behind me, with Tracey on his tail. After that was Tattletale, Regent and Bitch, but I wasn't sure about the exact order.

I was just in time to see Armsmaster take Victor down with what looked like a ranged wireless taser shot, while Greg applied metal manacles to Geoff Schmidt's wrists and ankles. Victor's pistol clattered to the floor … but then Schmidt stirred and blew out into a cloud of particulates, surrounding Greg. "Shit!" I shouted. "It's Fog!"

A howling gale blew past me, ripping Fog away from Greg where his cloud reformed farther down the passage. I recalled how Tracey had done that to Victor once upon a time, sending him tumbling out of control. The trouble was, Fog wasn't vulnerable to bruising or concussion in this form. He could always regroup and come back at us—

Armsmaster skidded a thing like a hockey puck down the corridor toward Fog. As it vanished under the cloud, he must have done something, because the interior of the cloud lit up with a whole lot more electricity than he'd used with his taser. The cloud collapsed inward, and Fog was lying unconscious on the ground.

"Okay, dang, nice work, but how do we keep that contained?" asked Regent. "Soon as he wakes up, he's all Mister Murdercloud again, and you can't have too many more Hockey Pucks of Lightning stashed away."

Armsmaster spun his halberd and jabbed Fog with the butt end of it. Instead of zapping him this time, there was a pssst sound, and I was pretty sure I saw a needle retracting as he took it away. "Tranquilliser," he said briefly. "It'll hold him for an hour."

"By which time we'll have either won or be dead," Tattletale finished. "Great. Good to know."

"We're gonna win this," Greg assured her. "We've done this once, we can do it again. Now, let's go find room three-B, and kick the asses of anyone who tries to get in our way."

I high-fived him. "Let's go do that thing."



End of Part Twenty-Four
 
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