"Place the light in a dark place, and it will become a fire that consumes the world." The Prophet said, starting his chant.
The room was a concrete one, concrete walls and floor and a well-insulated plaster ceiling. It was wide enough that eleven people could, and did stand around the raised central plinth without being crowded. It was lit by a single bare bulb in the center of the ceiling, right over the altar. I stood there, knife grasped loosely in my right hand, trembling with fear, and trying to confront my demon.
My demon looked like a better dressed, better groomed version of me. A teenager with dark hair, gangly limbs, a lean figure and slightly over-average height. He wouldn't have been as imposing if it wasn't for his eyes, glowing red with ancient fires.
"Why are you making me do this?" I pleaded, gesturing to the girl on the altar. She was about my age, fourteen or fifteen. What was that fancy word for brown hair, brunette, she was a brunette, but the brown was only a few shades away from gold. She wore a simple white robe, and lay with her hands across her chest.
"When you look for answers. The answer is death, always." The Prophet said. He wasn't talking to me though, just continuing his chant.
I didn't know the girl. The Prophet had picked her out, kidnapped her, drugged her, placed her on the altar and then given me the knife. He said my demon needed sacrifices, or the world would end.
"I'm not making you do this. I didn't give you the knife." My demon's voice was a parody of mine. Exactly the same, but filled with so much of the confidence I lacked.
"But I have to or you will burn the world, The Prophet knows it." I held the knife out at him, like it would do any good.
"How long have I been with you Jurric?"
"For life. Blood must be paid." The Prophet said, talking over him.
"Three weeks." I said, ignoring the prophet. He had told me that now was the time to talk to my demon, to try and get it to go away, though he didn't think it would work.
"I know we haven't talked much. You keep saying I'm leading you to evil. But have I ever given you the impression I want to burn the world? This world is fun. There are movies and girls and sports and games, so much to do. One day, I might try to rule the world, but I would never destroy it."
"You can't. You can't question The Prophet like that." I said, casting my eyes on the scars on my hands, just to reassure myself. "And I won't let you control me. I won't let you rule the world."
"I can't control you." said my demon. "The rules are simple, I help you awaken the powers within you, and you decide if I exist."
"Then don't." I said, though I had tried this before. "Don't exist."
"Do you think I exist now?" My demon chuckled and waved his hand through the head of the girl on the altar, his wrist rippled slightly, less solid than mist.
"Even that phony prophet only pretends he can see me." My demon said. "You are the only one who can. Later, when you are stronger, you'll be able to push me out into reality. But for now I'm stuck in your head."
"If you don't want to destroy the world, then what do you want?" I asked. I trembled a little; The Prophet had warned me about this, told me never to bargain with the demon, never to let him trick me.
I couldn't kill the girl though. I don't have that in me. Maybe there was another way.
"I want fun." My demon said. "And at the moment I can only get that through you. Being tied to some poor kid brainwashed by a sick cult isn't fun. So... I think it's time we ended that."
"What do you mean?" I asked.
"I mean that you want to save that girl up there. Maybe get some revenge in the meantime. I'm going to help you."
"I can't, you can't make me turn on them. The Prophet guides me. The Guardian watches me. The..."
"Shut up. I know you, I know you deep down. You are stronger than them and they haven't broken you yet. Not completely. Now I'm going to give you the power, and what you do with it is up to you."
The Prophet led the other men in a long, slow chant, no words, just sounds.
I stepped up, towards the altar, the knife in a hand now covered by red scales, the leather grip smoking from the heat of my palm.
"You know, even if I could make you do things. I would never make you do this." I wasn't looking at my demon as he spoke, I was watching The Prophet. His eyes didn't even flicker. "It's a waste of a perfectly pretty girl. There are a lot of things I'd rather you be doing to her. Oh look, she woke up."
I turned back to the altar; the girl had opened her eyes. She was still groggy, lethargic, but her eyes found my knife and filled with fear.
"The Beast, the Rock, the Demon and the Daughter of Death. May The Powers that Will bless us, and spare this pitiful world." The Prophet finished, and gestured angrily at the girl, I was supposed to kill her as he mentioned the Daughter.
"No one is making you do anything Jurric. What you do now, you have to live with." My demon smiled, and I hefted my knife.
***
Andrew Parker, the Sonic Stinger and Defender of Whitewall Bay, slumped at his desk his head in his hands.
He had been in the front lines of the fight against the Neaurotico and faced his undead horde without flinching. He had joined the army raised to stop Mechanaborg, four weeks of forced march through enemy territory, constantly fending of guerilla attacks by invisible assassin droids. He had even been hit with one of Dreadmaster Zim's despair rays and lived to talk about it. None of that was as frightening as what he was now facing.
His wife, Keri, was in hospital. She was currently undergoing emergency surgery to remove a bullet from her pelvis. Dr. Pearl, the only metahuman in Whitewall bay with healing abilities, was attending a conference half a planet away. Andrew had called in a favor to get him to come back, then another favor to get a long-distance teleporter to take the doctor directly from his conference to the emergency room. No word yet on if Dr. Pearl had arrived in time.
Andrew would have loved to be there, by his wife's side, but he knew she would never forgive him is he lost their daughter.
Ester Parker had been taken for their family home two hours ago, the men who had taken her had known of her powers and gassed her room before abducting her. When her non-powered mother had tried to chase them with a kitchen knife they had shot his dear Keri and left.
Andrew raised his head and shook it to re-focus himself. His own ability didn't lend itself to tracking, but two of his teammates had enhanced senses and both had volunteered to try and track the van Ester had been taken in. The Silver Cowl was already in the meaner parts of town, interrogating contacts about any old enemies of Andrew making moves in the area. He had managed to get in contact with the local supervillan group, the Green Band, they had hastily denied involvement and offered a couple of leads on Metahuman hate groups still young enough to try and brave the Blacklist.
Across the room Lanceebot was doing initial recon on both groups, while also checking all recent CCTV footage in the Whitewall Bay South area for suspicious activity. He sat; chrome head slightly slumped so the USB cable connecting the back of his neck to the Defenders computer system could reach. Lanceebot was a mercenary, later his help would cost Andrew, for now it didn't matter.
For now Andrew sat alone in Defender HQ anxiously waiting for a phone to ring. Worry tore at him and when the doorbell downstairs rang he almost had a heart attack. He stopped himself form leaping for the nearest phone.
He brought up the security camera for the downstairs door. The camera showed him a neatly dressed policewoman in her late fifties, sharp features, and green eyes. No one he knew.
"Badge please?" he asked.
The policewoman held up a badge, apparently her name was Alisa Wallburn. Protocol required he run the numbers on her badge then ask her a security question in case of shape shifting, but the badge looked real and Andrew did vaguely recall contacting the police, they had mentioned something about a liaison. Protocol be fucked.
"I'm on the eighth floor; the elevator will be down shortly."
He let her through the doors and sent down the elevator, and then he ran the numbers on her badge.
Andrew scanned her file quickly; she seemed ideal, some experience with metahuman affairs, some experience with hostage negotiations, commendations for excellent inter-departmental relations.
The lift gave a soft ding when it reached the eighth floor. Andrew was surprised to hear two distinct sets of footsteps from the lobby, had Alisa brought someone? Andrew was tense enough to draw two defensive Flows around himself. Peter walked in, saw the Flows and gave a small smile to ease the tension. Andrew relaxed; of course his brother didn't need to buzz in. He knew the tower codes.
Peter was an imposing man, the same average height and dull brown hair Andrew had only served to frame a hard face and harder eyes. Peter was in his official uniform. A large black leather jacket that stretched to the ground, with diagonal red lines emblazoned on the collar and cuffs.
Alisa followed a few steps behind Peter, if she was nervous about having to share a lift with a Crosser she didn't show it. She gave Peter a quick nod then offered her hand to Andrew.
"Mr. Stinger, a pleasure to meet you, even under such unfortunate circumstances. I would like to assure you that the Whitewall police department is doing everything in its power to get your daughter back. We have already issued an APB for the men who took your daughter, and we have several detectives on standby to investigate the scene of the kidnapping. Do they have permission to go through your home?"
"Of course, whatever they need to do. I might ask them to sign a confidentiality agreement later, if we can make it through this without my family's faces plastered on the front page."
Andrew realized he was still pumping Alisa's hand and stopped. Once he had pulled his shirt over his head and fought someone... the Grey Manitcore maybe? Anyway he had fought blind rather than risk exposing his civilian identity. Now he honestly couldn't care less right now.
"Thank you; I will inform my department immediately." Alisa moved away and pulled a phone from her hip.
Peter stepped forward, gave Andrew's had a quick shake, and then hugged him.
"Peter, it's good to see you." Andrew said, drawing back out of the hug. "But don't get me wrong when I say I hope you aren't needed."
"We'll get her back Andy. Don't worry." Peter said. "Whoever took her, they know the hell we can bring down on them if they harm a single hair on her head."
"Are there any Blacklister's in town?" Andrew asked. It would be bad if there were, the Blacklist was a list of supervillans classified as kill-on-sight. They had committed crimes terrible enough that there could be no other ruling than the death sentence, and had powers deadly enough that keeping them contained for execution was impossible. Crossers, like Peter, were the only ones licensed to deal with them.
"None that I know of. I have some contacts in the gangs around here, they're still looking."
"Attacking a Hero's family is almost enough to get you on the Blacklist by itself." Andrew mused. "Who would be stupid enough to do this Peter?"
"I don't know, but..."
The phone rang. It was the one that used to be his landline number, but had now been re-routed, tapped and attached to one of the fastest and most accurate triangulation devices Lanceebot could create. Andrew picked it up on the second ring.
"Hello, this is Andrew Parker speaking, how can I help you?" Peter moved over to the computer and put the phone on speaker while Andrew was talking.
"Dad this is Ester..."
Lanceebot unplugged himself from the main computer and stood up. A large screen flickered to life on his chrome chest, it read: Voice analysis confirmed. Ester Parker.
"Are you alright? Did they hurt you? Do you..." Andrew stopped, he knew better than this.
"I'm fine dad. You don't need to worry about me. The men who took me are all... we killed them all, ok dad. I'm still underground though, and I don't know where we are. Can you... can you track this phone and come get me?"
Andrew froze and then consciously made himself relax. Ester was fifteen, he should have protected his daughter from that, he thought. Later he would blame himself. For now it was still much better than most of the scenarios that had been running through his mind.
"Sure thing sweetie, I'll be right there."
"Don't worry dad, not an imitator, I still hate it when you call me sweetie."
Andrew sighed in relief; it really was his daughter then. Lanceebot gave Andrew a thumbs up and switched the display on his chest to show the location of the phone his daughter was calling from, a large mansion in the western suburbs. Andrew memorised the road names, he knew the rough area, and he could make it there in less than ten minutes.
"I'm coming to get you now Esty. I can't fly and talk but I'll have my phone on me, and I'll land if you try and give me a call. OK."
"Wait dad... just when you get here; remember I'm fine, OK? You don't have to worry, no matter what it looks like. And please hurry. I think Jurric needs help."
"I'll be there soon."
Who was Jurric? Never mind. Just needed to get there. Maybe less than five minutes if I don't bother with wings, Andrew thought.
Lanceebot had already opened the tower windows; the cyborg was nothing if not on his game. A new message was scrolling across his chest. Ambulance + Lawyer + Metahuman Psychologist called.
"Could be a trap still." Peter said. "Mind if I come to?"
"I have medical training." Alisa volunteered at the same time.
"Carry her." Andrew snapped, and then he jumped out the window. Behind him Peter was extracting lightweight aluminum pieces and strapping them together, to form a long, sculpted wing.
Both brothers had the same power, technically classified as telekinesis. They created a Flow, a patch of blue-ish air that they could make any shape or size they desired, and then within that shape they could generate or manipulate kinetic energy. By filling the Flow with kinetic energy it could be made to act like a solid object. Most of the Parker family started out using their Flows as enormous legs or arms, actual flight required years of practice and almost guaranteed broken bones in the learning stages.
The problem lay in the fact that Flows always anchored to the body of the one generating them, making them less like actual telekinesis and more like tendrils of solid power. They also had a range limit that differed from individual to individual, but was rarely more than twenty meters. Of course the Parkers could create solid wings and then move them to achieve flight, most of Andrews extended family used that method and it was the only method Andrew was keen to teach to his daughter. But, if you were desperate to go faster and had a high tolerance for G-forces, there was another way.
The toughened, bulletproof glass of Defender's Tower rattled as Andrew took off.
Now Andrew surrounded himself in four Flows, one was in front of him, generating a constant low stream of outward kinetic energy to act as a windbreak, and shaped to give him lift. Each arm was surrounded by a solidified, paddle shaped Flow, which he could use to steer. Finally one flow was merged with his own body, seated deep in every cell. That one Andrew used to give kinetic energy to himself.
It wasn't like flying, it was like being thrown. Andrew's aunt, Stacy had killed herself trying to perfect Flow based kinetic propulsion. She'd lost concentration, placed a little too much kinetic energy into one thrust, and snapped her own neck.
Andrew himself had perfected the technique during the Mechanaborg champagne. He had made the discovery that it was much safer with a glider, or a large wing held in place by additions Flows. With a wing you could give kinetic thrust to the wing, instead of your own body. The wing would take the stresses involved much more easily than the human body could, and even if you lost concentration on it for a split second, it could buy you time and stability to recover if you lost control over the four Flows flying required you to constantly maintain.
On the other hand, the extra mass meant you couldn't go quite as fast.
Andrew used his Flows to manifest wings when he spotted the mansion Lanceebot had shown him. They caught the air and he decelerated sharply, descending into a steep dive the left him on the front porch.
Andrew rolled his shoulders and winced in pain. Giving kinetic energy to your own body was like being hit with a hammer on every muscle, bone and fiber at once. He had come away from this better than most times, a couple of wrenched muscles in his shoulders and back, nothing serious. It was well worth it, the trip had taken less than four minutes. He took out his phone, the screen had a few cracks in it, but it still worked, he had chosen one that could take a beating. He redialed the last number.
"Esty?" He asked when the call went through.
"Dad. Are you here yet?"
"Yeah I'm here. Are you still underground?"
"Yep."
"You sure? They didn't just take you to a windowless room."
"Yes dad, Jurric says the only way out is to go up the stairs, but the door at the top is too thick for either of us to destroy."
"Don't worry, I'll come get you. Stay away from the door. I'll make a lot of noise and you just tell me when I'm getting closer ok?"
Andrew placed a Flow over the front door and gave the wood enough kinetic energy to blow it to splinters. The hallway beyond was empty. He walked down it demolishing every door he came across and some of the walls. No one tried to stop him; he didn't hear anyone trying to run. Was it a trap?
"You were getting closer dad, but now you're getting further away, it sounds like fighting, what are you doing up there?"
"Just guaranteeing a clear exit Esty."
Andrew re-orientated and kept walking. He was getting deeper in the mansion now, though it still looked like an average house for the obscenely wealthy. Finally he found a door very different from the others. It was made of stone, covered in a relief of crying angels. He hit it, and the stone broke off, revealing it hadn't been stone, just a carving placed over a metal surface. A very thick metal surface, if his first blow hadn't damaged it.
"I think I just hear you hit that door I told you about dad."
Good, so he had the right one. Perfect. Andrew thought. He made a flow and began filling it with kinetic energy, more than he normally ever bothered to try and hold.
"I'm going to have to hit the door really hard Esty. Get away from it ok. Maybe see if you can put a table between you and the door."
"There are a lot of rooms down here dad; I'll just go into the next one."
"You do that."
Andrew let lose. The energy hit the door, ripped the last remaining shards of rock into lethal projectiles, turned the wooden paneling on the walls on either side of the door too dust and shattered every window in the house. The energy traveled in waves through the door frame, ripping off more paneling, revealing that the roof and sides of the descending staircase behind the door were also metal.
The door itself bent, a little.
Andrew grinned. It was frustrating to be this close, but not able to reach his daughter. On the other hand it had been a frustrating day, and here was finally something he could vent his anger on.
When Peter landed he didn't need to go in through the front door. Andrew had released enough energy on the stairwell door to tear a hole in the roof. Peter set a shaken Alisa down gently, on the most stable section of rubble he could find, and then dismissed his Flows. He let the aluminum wing far over his head fall on one of the less damaged sections of the roof and went to stand beside his panting brother.
"This thing is steel, ten inches thick. You can't buy that at the local hardware store. Who do you recon builds these stupid secret lairs?" Peter asked.
Andrew grunted, took a deep breath and stepped through the mangled remains of the door. He took the stairs down two at a time, Peter and Alisa following.
The room below was a charnel house. Four robed men lay in bloody pools, variously burnt, dismembered or with vital organs torn from their bodies. Two still had guns clutched in dead hands.
Alisa moves to the nearest one, stepping over the dead man's intestines to put her fingers to his neck.
"Dead." She said. "Somewhere between five minutes and thirty."
"Fifteen, I'd guess, from the state of the blood." Peter added.
Andrew stood, shaking. He wanted to go into the next room, his daughter should be there, he could protect her, get her away from all this. He just had to make his legs move.
He threw a glance at Alisa, his brother killed people all the time, and he would sympathize with what Ester had doubtless been forced to do. Alisa was a cop, there would be an investigation. Alisa was also human. Fragile. Easily silenced.
Andrew snapped out of it when Ester ran out of the adjoining room and hugged him. He hugged her back, pushed her away and blinked tears from his eyes to check she was ok, and then hugged her again.
"It's going to be OK." He said. "I'll make sure it's all going to be ok."
Peter went into the room Ester had just left, took a second to look around and came back out. Alisa was still inspecting the bodies when he tapped her on the shoulder a gestured at the room he had just left.
"There's another kid in there, curled up in the corner and crying. Most folks are intimidated by the Crossers, do you mind..."
"Of course not." Alisa said.
"Wait!" Ester said, pulling herself away from her dad. "He's really scared, I'll introduce you."
"Alisa is trained to help people who are scared Ester, introducing them is fine, then we need to get you out of here, we'll wait on the porch until an ambulance arrives." Peter said.
"Ok." Ester said. Andrew followed Ester and Alisa into the second room. There were six bodies in this one, all as gruesomely destroyed as in the first. A boy sat in the corner, knees pulled to his chest. His shirt was torn to reveal intricate, asymmetrical tattoos chasing themselves over his arms and chest.
"Jurric. This is Alisa; she's going to help you." Ester said gently.
"No she can't. She can't come near me. I'll hurt her. It'll be my fault, the world is going to burn and it's all my fault." Jurric said, rocking back and forth a little.
"It would be best if you left." Alisa said. "He might be more comfortable with fewer people around."
"You do know he's probably got powers." Andrew said.
"I'll be fine." Alisa gave a tight smile and started moving towards the boy again, making soothing noises.
Well, that woman certainly has courage, Andrew thought as he put a protective arm around Ester's shoulders and lead her out of the ruined mansion. Peter was waiting for them, lounging against the remains of the doorframe.
"Ester, I know you've been through a lot, but I want you to tell me, right now, why you said that 'we' killed all those men."
Ester blinked. Only just realizing her uncle was there.
"Uncle Peter, you came to. Um... I'm glad you came but you aren't needed. Really."
Peter sighed.
"I'm not here on business, I assure you, but I do know what it looks like when someone is killed with Flows. I know none of those men were killed by you. Was it that boy, or someone else?"
Ester looked down at her shoes.
"Esty, you don't need to protect him. I swear we're going to do the right thing here, but we need to have enough information to figure out what the right thing is."
Ester looked back up her face decided. "It was some weird cult thing. I think the men were trying to initiate him... Jurric I mean. They wanted him to kill me, but he didn't. Wouldn't. And when they tried to make him... his power is scary, but he apologized to me after, for scaring me. He keeps muttering to himself, I don't think he's well. I was frightened of him, but when I got a good look at his tattoos I noticed that they are drawn over scars, burns or something, there are a lot of them, some are still red and..."
"And you think that they had to have pushed him very hard to make him snap like that." Peter finished for her.
Andrew shared a look with Peter.
"I'll get our lawyer to talk with him; we should be able to work something out." Andrew said
"Of course." Peter agreed. "He's a minor, they were armed, obvious signs he was abused, and positive testimony from Ester, any lawyer worth his salt can spin that as self-defense."
"I'd be willing to testify that he honestly doesn't seem to want to hurt anyone." Alisa said. Andrew whirled to stare at her. Peter didn't. It was hard to surprise Peter; he had probably been saying that for Alisa's benefit.
"I came out because he wouldn't talk to me. He said to send back in the first one he saw. I think that was you Peter."
"Unusual, do you think he knows what a Crosser is." Peter asked.
"No, but he seems to want to be around someone who can handle him if he looses it, maybe restrain him?"
"You don't have to do that." Ester said. "I was talking to him before, I managed to get him to calm down a bit, you just have to keep talking. He says he doesn't have to listen to his demon then."
Andrew frowned and gave the hand he had around Esters shoulders a short squeeze. She had been drugged, locked underground, her life threatened, then trapped with ten corpses and the insane child who had killed them. It was the stuff parents nightmares are made of. Jurric had saved his daughter, he would help him, but he also made a mental note never to let Ester near the boy again.
"I think he wants to be restrained, he's frightened of himself and what he did. He talked about the world ending and someone called the Prophet lying to him as well. I think that was babbling though, he was contradicting himself a bit at the end there." Alisa continued.
"The world isn't ending; we have real precogs that would pick up on something like that. I'll talk to him; tell him I'm powerful enough to stop him or this demon of his, so we don't need restraints. I'll take him back to the tower as well. I take it that the police are on their way?" Peter asked.
Alisa nodded.
"Are you prepared to concede he is a metahuman responsibility?"
"Obviously, although there will still have to be an investigation, and a trial."
"Fine, but you don't talk officially to him till I have a chance to get him some time with a psychologist and a lawyer. We have a few rooms at the tower designed to hold people with trouble controlling their powers, I'll take him back there. Andrew, you should take Ester home, maybe get some rest. You look beat."
"Yeah." Andrew said, suddenly becoming aware of the aches and pains that his rapid flight had cost him. He looked at Ester again, to reassure himself she was there. The pain was well worth it. Andrew started to form wings, but Peter stopped him.
"The police will be here soon, just ask for a lift, you're too tired for the flight home."
"Good idea." Andrew said numbly.
Andrews's phone rang and for a second he was back in the tower, head in his hands, helplessly waiting for a phone call he dreaded. Then he had the phone up to his ear.
"Mr. Stinger, this is Dr. Pearl. You will be please to know that your wife is stable, we were able to save her."
***
I paced, relentlessly. The world hadn't ended. The prophet had been lying. The world hadn't ended. The prophet had been lying. Those two thoughts chased themselves around my head, sending delirious shivers down my spine.
"You're acting like you hate being cooped up in here, but you're still wearing that dopy grin." My demon was leaning against the wall, a smaller smile on his face than on mine.
He had liked what I did yesterday, reassured me it was the right thing. Like a demon knew what the right thing even was. Still, the Prophet had lied about the world ending, maybe he had lied about my demon to.
"Calm down. Sit on the bed and read or something; they have a few nice books here. We can talk." He said.
It sounded like good advice; I couldn't see how it would hurt, so I sat down. Then I had another episode, I was overtaken by the smell I remembered coming from the Guardian as I disemboweled him, and only just made it into the bathroom in time not to throw up on the nice carpet.
"Tell me, which would be worse? To relive that day for the rest of your life in your dreams, or to have killed the girl, reassured yourself it was for the greater good and then gone back to following every order the Prophet gave you."
My demon was leaning against the shower now. He didn't bother to walk from one lounging point to another, he just appeared there.
I finished heaving, filled a glass with water at the sink, swilled my mouth out and spat vigorously. Then I nodded slowly. My demon smiled wider.
"You're not talking to me because you don't want them to think you're crazy?" He asked. I nodded, gestured vaguely in the direction of the camera, it was obscured by the toilet door at the moment, and they didn't have the bathroom monitored.
I had thought my demon could read my mind, but I guess he just knew me well.
"That's wonderful. I didn't realise you were coherent enough to realise that yet. Thought that I still had to coax you away from that blathering wreck you turned into earlier."
I shook my head a little, tried my best to give him an angry look. The expression felt odd on my face, the Prophet had said emotions were tools of the devil, so I had been hiding them ever since I figured out how. It felt good to be angry. It felt good to be happy. The Prophet had been lying. The world hadn't ended.
My demon gave another small chuckle. "Not talking to me is good and all, but you babbled too much yesterday for them to think that there isn't something going on in that head of yours. So, here's what I want you to do. They have a metahuman psychologist coming in today, when she comes and she asks you about me I want you to tell her that I'm the mental manifestation of your power, you get that? Mental manifestation. Then ask her to go outside and say or do something, I'll follow, watch her, and then tell you what she does. That should prove I'm not just a hallucination, or split personality or something."
"I don't want to lie." I said, trying to give him a serious look.
"Who says you're lying. For all you or I know we might be telling the truth, I didn't come with a fucking manual."
I ignored him and left the bathroom, picked a book with an interesting cover and started to page through it. I sort of zoned out a bit, and then my demon brought my attention back to reality.
"They're coming. The nice killer and the psychologist. I heard them talking, her name is Dr. Ashley Whit. You should total freak them out when they knock, just say 'come in Ashley', or something like that. Make them think you're a psychic."
I put down the book, but otherwise I didn't respond to my demon. He was still grinning that half grin, and I found myself copying it. He knew I didn't want to freak anyone out, why was the thought of it even funny?
The knock came, polite and businesslike.
"Jurric, this is Peter, I have someone here to meet you. Can we come in?"
"Come in." I said, biting back the smile.
Peter entered first; he looked different today, without the black jacket. He was still a hard man, but less serious. My demon kept insisting he was a killer, but he had been nice to me, if a bit awkward, and the policewoman didn't seem to mind him.
The woman who entered after him must have been Dr. Whit; she was a redhead, in her mid-thirties, dressed conservatively in a grey and green skirt and blouse. She smiled at me reassuringly, which was nice. My demon looked her over carefully, head to toe, but stayed mercifully silent.
Peter introduced us and we started chatting about small things. Did I like the room? I did. Did I want anything? I didn't. Did I like the book I was holding? I didn't know. I tried to stay calm; it was easier than I thought it would be, she kept the questions simple.
"She'll send Peter away before she asks any serious questions." My demon said, looking bored. "He's only here now to make sure you're calm enough not to kill her." I tried to ignore him while I answered Dr. Whit's question about how I spelt my name. I don't think I succeeded.
"Peter, would you mind leaving?" She asked.
"Not at all, I'll have my pager on if you need me." He replied.
"Do you mind if I sit?" She asked, as Peter left the room.
"No." I told her.
She pulled up a chair, and my demon walked through the wall for a few seconds.
"You should know that everything you say to me now is completely confidential. I'm on your side Jurric; you can tell me whatever you're thinking."
My demon came back in while she was speaking.
"I guess she's telling the truth, Peter's just down the hall, he's turning off the monitors. I didn't think they would trust you this far just yet." My demon reported.
I realized I was looking at him and snapped my attention back to Dr. Whit. She was busy shuffling a few pieces of paperwork she had brought. My demon stepped closer to her, leaning in near her face.
"Oh, she caught you there Jurric, realized you were listening to someone... guess she's too polite to say it though. You're going to have to learn a better poker face, boy." My demon moved back and found a wall to lean against, watching us both with interest.
"What's a poker face?" I asked, and then I realized just how stupid I had been. My demon laughed it off. Dr. Whit put her paperwork down and answered.
"Normally, in poker, you have to hide your emotions from the other players. A poker face means one that doesn't display emotions, do you want to hide what you are feeling Jurric?" She asked.
I thought about it for a few seconds. "No." I said. "I don't want to hide my feelings."
I waited for her to ask why I wanted to know, she didn't. She waited to see if I had more to add, then changed tracks.
"What do you think your powers are Jurric?"
"I turn into a demon." I told her. Peter and I had discussed that a bit yesterday, although I hadn't been coherent through most of it.
The Prophet had told me the demon was a curse only I could contain, because he had prepared me with the scars and the tattoos. Peter said that sometime people were just born with powers, and mine were no different from the ones he had or the ones the Prophet and Guardian had. I had decided, at midnight last night when the world didn't end, to trust Peter. It was taking time for that to sink in, after years of believing the Prophet.
"Do you think it's safe for me to see?" She asked.
I shook my head, remembering the smell of released bowels and the coppery tang of blood.
"No." I told her, so there could be no doubt.
"That's fine. This demon you can turn into, is it the one you were talking about yesterday?"
"No." I said again. "I think they're different. There's a demon I talk to, and he lets me turn into one when... sometimes... well one time. I'm not sure I could do it again even if I wanted to."
"You could." My demon said. "I gave you the power, you can use it whenever you like."
"This other demon, can you tell me about him?" Dr. Whit asked.
"He looks like me, and he says he's the mental manifestation of my power. I don't think I can always believe him though." I said, settling on a compromise with what my demon had said earlier.
"Does he have a name?" she asked.
"He doesn't..."
"It's Lucifer." My demon said.
"Seriously? Ok. He says his name is Lucifer." I informed Dr. Whit.
***
I sat at the computer, quickly scrolling down through the pages and pages of legal information Lucifer had asked me to search for, he peered over my shoulder at it, taking it in. I reached the bottom and turned to look at him.
"Well?" I prompted.
"One minute." He said. "That was a lot to take in."
I let him concentrate and instead examined the server room. The prophet hadn't let me use any of the computers in his mansion, perhaps worried I would be able to contact someone. I knew very little about how they worked, but Lucifer claimed he had a photographic memory of every event that had taken place within two hundred feet of me since I was three, and he had picked up how to do a lot of things, like how to use a search engine.
The Whitewall Guardians had been nice, I had the run of the towers thirteenth and fourteenth floors, which included the dangerous powers containment facility, the server room and the Silver Cowl's workout room, which I was allowed to use provided I never touched the button marked 'level 10'.
Ms. Whit had talked with me for a few hours, which was nice. She recommended a few books to read that might fill me in on information the prophet hadn't wanted me to learn and gave me some mental exercises to help with the panic attacks. She had assured Peter I wasn't a danger, and asked him to give me access to the whole tower. Peter had explained that most of the tower held dangerous equipment or was open to civilian tours, and the thirteenth and fourteenth floors were what they settled on.
"Ok, that wasn't exactly the information we needed, but it pointed me in the right direction. Search for the Superhuman Holding Act of 1975 and the Powers and Abilities Amendment to the Human Rights Constitution." Lucifer said.
I obeyed, eventually finding both documents and scrolling through them. Lucifer watched intensely, and then leant against the library wall again to ruminate.
Ms. Whit had also asked us both to try and experiment with what Lucifer could and couldn't do. I'm still not sure if she thinks he's real; apparently there are clairvoyants who can see things through walls, so that muddies the issue. Ms. Whit always acted like Lucifer was real though, and she did mention there are powers that can create life, so...
Sometimes I wonder if I am some sort of clairvoyant, and Lucifer is just me being really screwed up in the head.
"Are you ready for the cliff notes?" He asked.
"Ok."
"Don't be all submissive like that, be assertive. Try saying, 'hit me' or 'go.'"
"But I don't want you to hit me?" I said.
Lucifer hit his head against the wall; it went a little way into the plaster and came out without leaving a mark.
"Ok, we'll work on making you assertive later. We have legal issues to discuss." He said. "Long story short you should be ok, the laws for Metahumans are a little bit tighter in some areas and a little loser in others. What happened to you falls loosely under the 'unreasonable provocation' precedent. Basically people who knew you were dangerous pushed you to the point where you couldn't reasonably be expected to control yourself or respond with non-lethal force. Suicide by Meta almost. This is all even before you bring in the self-defense aspect."
"You said should." I pointed out. I don't like the word 'should'; you don't know where you stand with it.
"Getting worried?" Lucifer said, smiling that annoying half-smirk. "We can still escape. I know the code for the elevator, and if anyone tries to stop us... we can take everyone in this building except Peter in a fair fight, and I'll steer you clear of him."
"No." I shook my head. "Peter asked us not to try and escape."
"And you're just going to do that?"
"Yes. Now, tell me why you said 'should.'"
"Metahuman trials are very different from ordinary ones; judges are important people, and they don't like being immolated or crushed or electrocuted by angry defendants, so you'll have to be guarded at all times by a minimum of two A-rank Metas. The A-ranks have better things to do than sit around a courtroom for months on end, so the entire trial has a maximum duration of one day, and they're often shorter. You're not allowed a jury, so you're at the mercy of the judge. The good news is that he doesn't have the authority to execute you, and you're under eighteen and quite powerful. As a minor he can only send you to prison if he is convinced you are a clear and present threat to public safety, as a Metahuman of C-rank or higher you cannot be sentenced to youth correctional facilities."
"So what do I need to do?" I asked.
"Basically, just do what you're doing now, sit there and look scared. Your lawyer will handle most of it and they might call Ashley to report on how mentally stable you are. She'll probably ask you if she can talk about your sessions with her then she comes around this afternoon. I think you've managed to convince her you aren't all that crazy. So... Say yes and freedom is in the bag."
"Is Ms. Whit still in the building?" I asked. Lucifer had told me when she arrived about half an hour ago; he said she was talking with Silver Cowl about creation powers.
"She asked you to call her Ashley." Lucifer observed.
"It seems kind of rude." I said.
"She asked you, it's ruder to ignore her, not that I care if you're rude. It's the same deal as earlier, you need to get some personality, you've got this whole 'yes sir, no sir' thing going on, it gives you all the personality of a tablecloth."
"Sorry."
"Don't say sorry, get angry at me. I'm telling you what to do here, and no-one should do that. Try and hit me or something, it can't possibly hurt." Lucifer ran his hands through his hair in frustration, and then did the odd flicker that meant he was looking elsewhere. "Ashley is still around; she's on the computer now looking up a hero named Claydoll. It says she could make golems, each with a distinct personality."
She was still here, that was good. She told me we had an appointment this afternoon, but I had been afraid she would decide I wasn't worth the time. I re-focused on what Lucifer was saying.
"I don't always do what you tell me. I didn't sneak down to the trophy room like you wanted me to last night." I said. That had been hard, Lucifer had described the place to me, and it sounded awesome.
"Yeah," said Lucifer, "because that would be fun. Look, I really don't care what you do from here, hell if you end up going to jail it may be just the thing you need, toughen you up a bit or something. Call me if you need me."
He vanished, although that didn't mean he wasn't still around. I don't think he had ever not been around. Not since the day the prophet had finished burning the final spiralling scar on my right calf.
I spent a few hours reading the books Ms. Wh... Ashley had asked me read. It was nice to just sit quietly, able to feel calm for the first time in years. This was close enough to freedom, I decided. No one was making demands on me, no one needed me, I wasn't in pain or danger.
The book confirmed the prophet had been insane; all the strongest precogs were at risk of losing their minds if they looked too far in the future, the most any of them had ever managed was a month. The prophet had brought me from my mother when I was three and kept me for the best part of twelve years before my powers triggered, seeing that far had to have sent him over the edge.
I was already near the end of the book, so I finished it before taking the lift up one floor to my room. The bathroom mirror was screwed in place, so I used a nail file to un-screw it and took the mirror across the hall to the dangerous powers containment room.
The door was thick, a layer of steel over a layer of lead. Instead of a doorknob it had a wheel, you had to turn the wheel left, right and then left again to get in or out. I went in, locking the door behind me. The interior of the room was lined with fire-resistant foam. I set the mirror down in the corner. Lucifer had been bugging me to try this for some time now and I had kept putting it off. It felt better, safer, doing it without him here, even if I knew he was probably watching.
I took a deep breath and reached deep inside of me for that feeling of power. I had to stop and do one of Ashley exercises when I almost had another panic attack, but slowly I felt scales form at my fingertips and creep up my arm. There was no fire this time, no smoke. I thought about it and turned my hand over, slowly pushing power into the air above my hand until a small flame danced on my palm. My stomach rolled at the stench of burn flesh, but it wasn't real. I stopped, calmed myself again and snuffed the flame. I pulled more deeply on the power, drawing the scales up my arm. The arm grew a little longer and claws, nearly as long as a ruler and viciously sharp along the front edge, started to take the place of the last joint on my fingers. I did the same for the other arm, and then started again from the toes. My feet grew, my ankle becoming a second joint in my legs. Only my toes stayed in contact with the ground, and they shifted together, becoming two large, clawed talons. I stood taller, like this, gaining at least a foot in height.
When the change reached the tops of my thighs I felt a shifting in my trousers, I patted them, a bit embarrassed, and noticed my genitals were gone. Made sense I guess, no way I would need to breed while I looked like this. A tail began to grow, just high enough up my back to come out over the top of my trousers, it was long, sinuous, no spikes or spines, just thick muscle covered in the same silvery scales.
I stopped there. I vaguely remembered ripping my shirt to pieces the first time I had changed, and I didn't want to rip this shirt, it was a gift from Mr. Parker. I took the shirt off, folded it carefully so my claws didn't rip it, and placed it on the floor next to me. I turned back to the mirror and watched as the scales climbed my chest, they flowed over the scars, grew in a concealing canopy over the burns and sprouted over the tattoos, leaving my chest looking solid, protected. I turned so I could see my back and observed where the scales were knitting, forming a long, flexible armored section along my spine.
More armor was growing from the scales; it was smooth and looked a bit ceramic. It grew in swirls over my vital organs, and then flowed down over and along my arms and legs, leaving my joints free to move. Two new joints began to grow on my back, both beneath and closer to my spine than my shoulder sockets. The wings that slowly emerged from my back were each at least as long as I was tall, they looked bat-like, but sleeker, leaner somehow, more predatory. I stopped peering over my shoulder at the wings and turned my attention back to the mirror. The scales had swept up my face now; changing the line of my jaw into something reptilian, my ears were gone and my eyes... they were exactly the same as Lucifer's, glowing with an inner fire.
"You can't fly you know, your wingspan is far too small relative to your total weight." Lucifer said as he stepped out of the door behind me and picked a wall to lean against. I didn't bother to look at him, instead watching the final claws grow on the joints of my wings. When the growth stopped and it was obvious that the transformation was finished I turned away from the mirror and flexed my claws experimentally.
"Is this what you really look like?" I asked, gesturing at my body.
"Nah, that's what you really look like. I'm just a... facilitator. I don't think I could do that even if I wanted to. Which I don't, why mess with perfection?" Lucifer smiled, struck a body-building pose and kissed his right bicep.
"A facilitator for who?" I asked.
"Dunno, like I said, no manual. One day I woke up with your memories, a few nice instincts and the intelligence to realise you needed help, that was the day I was born and the day we met."
"So you weren't lying earlier, about the... what did you call yourself?"
"The mental manifestation of your power. We went over this, might be the truth, do not know. I'm smart, not omnipotent." Lucifer stopped lounging and went to stand by the door. "You should go to the gym like that; I'll bet you're a ton stronger. You should get all of Silver Cowls heaviest weights and put them on top of the climbing wall, he'll go in there and be all, 'how did those get up there, it couldn't be Jurric because he's to scrawny and weak.''
"We have exactly the same body." I pointed out.
"But I wear it better." Lucifer said, smiling again, like he had won something.
I found myself smiling to, but that faded as I looked at the mirror again.
"It is demonic, isn't it." I said it as a statement, but Lucifer treated it as a question.
"Hmm, maybe, with the right lighting, I was thinking draconic."
"What's draconic mean?" I looked back at Lucifer, but he was gone, vanished.
"Lucifer?" I called.
He appeared in front of me, right in my face. I took a few quick steps back, getting away from those fiery eyes. He put his finger to his lips.
"Quiet, I'm trying to pull off a dramatic exit here." He hissed at me, and then vanished again. I let him go, shrugged away the scales, shifting back to human form and put my shirt back on. I left the containment room, put the mirror back and went back down to the server room. Lucifer had taught me to search for things after all.
Half an hour later I decided I liked dragons, sometimes they were dumb animals, sometimes they were very intelligent, sometimes they were vicious, sometimes they were noble, they varied hugely in size and shape. They didn't exist, but people seemed to like them anyway. A few things seemed kind of universal though, scales, fire, wings. I had those things. It would be far cooler to turn into a dragon than a demon, I thought. Of course most dragons weren't bipedal, but I could say I turned into a cross between a human and a dragon, that worked. It was better than turning into a demon anyway.
"You know what the best thing about dragons is?" Lucifer said, appearing behind me as I tried to find a picture close to what I looked like so I could show it to Ashley.
"No."
"Nobody messes with dragons, they can be good, they can be evil, and it doesn't matter. You don't tie one of them down and burn marks into their flesh for kicks. You don't try to hunt one down and kill it unless you have some sort of pressing reason. You don't toss them in a cage and expect not to get roasted for your trouble. If you're stupid or crazy enough to try... you deserve what you get." Lucifer grinned again, leaned in close to me and whispered. "Do you want to be a dragon?"
I thought about that. It sounded like everything I wanted.
"Yes." I said.
***
"You've never spent much time with a psychologist, have you Peter." Ashley said. She had been in the Guardians tower doing some research, trying to determine just how she should treat this 'Lucifer.' Metahuman powers broke the rules in every field, even psychology.
"No. Never really seen the need for it." Peter said.
"Of course not, if you had then you would know this is a breach of confidence. Observing a client's privacy helps to build trust, and I want Jurric to trust me."
"You were asking for his medical records just this morning."
"Yes, but I asked Jurric about that during our last session. He was fine with it."
"Alright then, your call." Peter said, switching off the monitor. "I don't really need to watch him anyway. I wouldn't even have known what he was doing if the containment room cameras didn't turn on automatically when there's movement inside."
Ashley considered the images she remembered for a moment; she would discuss them with Jurric later. His other form did seem a bit demonic; she could see how he drew the comparison. His willingness to take the form, and to do it in a safe and controlled way, was a huge step forwards. It was almost too good of a reaction, considering all he had been through.
"Tell me Peter, have you ever run across any powers that allowed for the creation of sentient life?" Ashley asked. She had browsed the archives, but they were incomplete at best and completely restricted to her at worst.
"Hmm. No, never personally, creation powers as a whole are rare. In fact I've only heard of three, Genisborgue, Mannequin and Streamer. Hmm, there might be a ton more if you let me count Intelligence powers used for cloning or making AI's."
"Those aren't the cases I'm interested in. Genisborgue's file is locked, but I read up on the others, and another, Claydoll. I'm not surprised you never heard of her, she was active for only two weeks before one of her own creations killed her."
"So you're wondering if this Lucifer is real, and if he's on Jurric's side? Lucifer told Jurric not to kill my niece, I got that much out of the poor kid's babbling a few days ago, and as far as I'm concerned this invisible friend of his is alright. Picked a silly name, but alright. I wouldn't care if he was imaginary or just some weird trick of my power so long as he gives good advice."
"It's more so I know how to continue his treatment..." Ashley stopped when the Silver Cowl came in.
"Peter, sorry to interrupt but you have a call in the conference room, it's someone calling themselves Pilot-fish." He said.
"I better take that, he's only supposed to contact me if it's urgent." Peter said. He grabbed his cloak and left the room at a brisk jog.
Silver Cowl sat down; he was a tall man, bulky, but with muscle, not fat. His skin was a dark gold that went well with the silvery cape and hood he wore. He was probably and bastard offshoot of the Golden Family, he had the enhanced strength, speed and endurance that most of the family possessed, though none of the more rare powers that might signify which branch of the family he was from.
"Dr. Whit, I didn't think you were coming in until this afternoon?" He said, reaching out to turn the blank monitor back on. The monitor stood out, on a wall covered in live camera footage from various parts of the tower and possible hotspots around town.
"I asked to come in early and do some research. Powers often present me with a unique challenge, but this is a bit of a curveball for me." Ashley said, noticing that Jurric had left the containment room. As she watched the monitor changed to show a stream from one of the external cameras, the containment room only needed to be watched when there was movement inside.
"Have you been able to judge the extent of the boys more physical powers?" Silver Cowl asked.
"No, just a few vague descriptions."
"A shame, I don't like living with an unknown over my head like this. Oh, the time of his trial was set this morning; do you think you can get him ready in nine days?"
"I'd like a more time." Ashley said, running through her schedule for the next week and a half, that would mean only three more sessions, hopefully it would be enough to prepare Jurric for the stress involved in a rushed court case.
"You know how restrictive metahuman containment laws are. We can't hold him any longer, and we can't release him into the public without a trial." Silver Cowl said.
"I'll talk to him this afternoon, try and get him ready."
"His lawyer will be by tomorrow as well. You may want to warn him, prepare him for another visitor."
"I will. Do you mind if I continue my research?"
Silver Cowl shook his head, so Ashley stood and left the monitor room.
Four cases, she had to find more, four was too small a sample size to know.
Jurric was progressing very well, Ashley's instincts told her it was some trick of his power, some deep link to this Lucifer that allowed the boy to suppress the damage done by over a decade of abuse. Perhaps it was a simple as receiving regular advice from a friendly face, perhaps the confidence Jurric had described Lucifer as possessing was bleeding across from one mind to another. Real or not Lucifer was having a positive effect on Jurric, despite the boy's initial misgivings about his invisible friend. It wouldn't be a problem, but in all four cases where powers were used to create life, that life was born without conscience, sometimes self-serving, sometimes with a desire to aid their creator, but never willing to help others or refrain from harming others to achieve their own ends. Charming, intelligent, confident and perhaps manipulative, almost the textbook definition of a sociopath.
No four was really far too small a sample size to know, Ashley thought. She would have to try and get Jurric to relay a conversation with Lucifer this afternoon, try to get a better feel for him.
***
"So you're saying I should go to the trial, and then run if it goes bad?" I said. I was sitting on my bed, talking to Lucifer across the room. He flickered occasionally as he checked that we weren't being watched.
"Yeah basically, you'll be watched very closely by a couple of A-ranks, but I think we could take them." Lucifer stretched and yawned, I don't think he got tired, but he liked to act like it when he was bored.
"Do we know which of the hero's here will be guarding me, you said before we couldn't fight Peter." I said.
"The ones who watch you will be from another city, probably the capital, there aren't any A-rank hero's in Whitewall."
"So what rank is Peter?" I asked.
"C-rank, says it on his security badge, you've probably seen it yourself."
"Oh, so the ranking is like security clearance, not how powerful they are." I said.
"Nope, it just determines how strong and versatile your power-set is. A-rank means at least three powers, all very strong and useful in a variety of circumstances. Andrew is the only B-rank I've seen in this tower."
"Then how do you expect me to escape from two people like that." I said, frustrated. One cage to another would be too cruel.
"Listen, relax. You'll probably be fine; if you do have to escape there is a way to become strong enough to do so." Lucifer stood a little straighter, a slight furrow in his brow. He wasn't bored now. "Weird, didn't know this till just a second ago, popped into my head."
"What is it?" I asked.
"You need to embrace your Aspect. Each power you have has one Aspect, related to what that power is, at its core, getting closer to the Aspect increases the strength of that power. The Aspect of your fire, your pyrokinesis, is wrath. Get angry enough and you'll be able to create hotter and stronger flames. The aspect of your dragon form, your shape-shifting, is territorialism. If you fight to protect something you view as yours then that form will get stronger, faster and more durable." Lucifer seemed to change as he spoke, becoming, not brighter, but more defined, more real somehow, and for a second I could have sworn he was casting a shadow.
"And you, if you're a part of my power, does that mean you have an Aspect?"
"Dunno. Remember this though, you are not a creature to be held, or directed, or chained. You are a creature of blood and bone and fire. You can go where you want, do what you want, take what you want, and no one has the right to stop you." Lucifer uncrossed his arms and kicked off from the wall. "I'm gunna leave you to mull that over. Think about it carefully, I just heard the trail is only nine days away."