The Slippery Slope
Part Twelve: Meetings and Conferences
[A/N: This chapter beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]
Peter and I walked hand in hand, following Othala. Her costume was bright red, with some sort of utility belt around her waist. It would have been eye-catching even if it
wasn't form-fitting. Peter had his head half-turned to look at me; I wasn't sure if this was because he found me fascinating, or because he didn't want to get caught staring at Othala's butt. For a moment, I found myself wondering how some cape teams dealt with the problem that they were all standing around in what was essentially skin-tight underwear.
That line of thought would take me nowhere good. I cleared my throat. "Othala, the symbol on your costume …?" I let my words trail off, not sure how to ask the question.
Fortunately, she guessed my meaning. "It's a rune called
Odal or
Othala, so yes, it's my cape name. It means 'heritage'."
"Huh." That made a certain kind of sense. "Sort of like people can 'inherit' powers from you."
"Basically, yes," she agreed. "It also means 'family', in a way. In the Empire, we're very big on family ties."
"I can see that." It was obvious to me that Peter had a good relationship with his father, and even though he had pretended annoyance with his youngest sister, he had been very quick to come to her assistance at the country club. And to mine, for which I would forever be grateful.
I wish Dad could see this side of the Empire.
Othala stopped and turned to face Peter and myself. "We're here." We were standing in front of a large set of double doors. In keeping with the lush carpet and the subtle (but
very expensive looking) wallpaper, they were made of some kind of highly polished wood with a gorgeous grain. The handles gleamed like gold, but were probably something like brass.
I looked from Peter to Othala. Some kind of communication passed between them, and he nodded, looking resigned.
"What's going on?" I asked uncertainly.
"This is as far as I go," Peter said softly. "When Kaiser's holding a meeting of this kind, the only people who get to attend are capes. That's you."
"Peter …" I felt suddenly lost. He had been my rock for so long. It was due to
him that I had become a Friend to the Empire. He had become my boyfriend, and his friends had become
my friends. When I had made my decision to join the Empire, I imagined that we would basically do everything together. Never had I even considered that I might surpass him in such a bizarre fashion.
"Hey, it's okay," he said reassuringly. "You'll be fine."
"No, I won't," I protested. "I figured that once I joined, I'd get to meet Kaiser sometime. I just thought
you'd be there, too." It was true. Peter steadied me emotionally, and made me realise my own worth. After the months of bullying from Emma and her friends, my self-esteem had been a battered and broken thing, but Peter's steady admiration had done wonders for it. I knew, intellectually, that I could do things without him. I just didn't
want to.
"It's all right, honey," Othala assured me. "I'll be there, right beside you. And Kaiser specifically asked for you at this meeting. He's not going to yell at you. If anything, he's going to try to make you look as good as possible."
I bit my lip. "But what if he expects more of me than I can deliver?"
Othala chuckled and hugged me. "Taylor, you triggered
last night. He's not going to expect the world of you." She delved into one of her pouches and came out with a folded piece of white cloth. Unfolded, it turned out to be a bandanna with cog-wheels inked on to it. The artwork was quite nice. "Though you're going to need a mask, just for form's sake. Until you're a member, of course. Then we all unmask. It's a solidarity thing."
I took it from her and spread it out, admiring the artwork. In the back of my mind, I knew that I was delaying the inevitable, but I didn't care. "It's amazing. Where did you get it from?"
"Victor drew it last night, after he finished talking with Kaiser," she said. "He thought you might like it."
"I do." I ran it through my hands. "I'm just not sure if it's going to fit with whatever I end up using as a costume."
She smiled indulgently and ruffled my hair. "That's up to you. For now, it will do as a temporary mask."
"Okay, thanks." I handed it to Peter. "Mask me up?"
"What am I now, a henchman?" he asked with a grin, but he stepped around behind me anyway. I shivered as his hands brushed the back of my neck, pushing my hair out of the way.
"Nope," I told him, doing my best to keep my voice level when all I wanted to do was fall backward into his embrace. "You're a
minion. You're going to have to work harder than that to make henchman."
"And we hadn't even worked out my pay details yet," he said jokingly.
"I'm sure we could work out
something," I replied, trying to sound suggestive. I wasn't exactly great at this. Othala looked amused, but cleared her throat anyway. Peter got back to tying the mask.
"Well there's definitely worse people to minion for, I'll grant you that," he said cheerfully. Fastening the last knot, he let my hair fall back into place. "How's that?"
I pulled the bandanna up so that it covered my nose and mouth, and turned to face him. "The fit's pretty good. How do I look?"
He tilted his head. "Pretty good, actually. As a cape, I mean. As my girlfriend, you look
awesome."
I rolled my eyes. "I bet you say that to all the people you minion for." I took his hand and squeezed it; he squeezed back. "As soon as we're finished, I'll come and find you. Okay?"
"Okay." He couldn't kiss me without disarranging the bandanna, but he leaned forward until our foreheads gently bumped. "I'll see you then. Knock 'em dead."
"I guess I'll try?" Taking a deep breath, I turned toward Othala.
Don't screw this up, don't screw this up, don't screw this up …
She studied me, then nodded. "Yes, this is a big step," she said, apparently in reply to my innermost thoughts. "Don't stress it, though. We're on your side. You've already passed any conceivable test that we could set for you."
While that didn't calm me all the way down, it did help a bit. Still, my heart was hammering away at a mile a minute.
They'll see how nervous I am, and just see me as a kid from now on. I knew all too well how damning a bad first impression could be, Othala's reassurance notwithstanding.
If I was using my powers, I wouldn't be feeling any of this …
The realisation hit me. I
could use my powers!
Without further ado, I submerged myself in the powers, leaving useless emotion behind. Every action became logical, calculated.
My awareness expanded, cataloguing the machines to be found all around me. I was on the fifth floor of a tall office building; I could detect cars driving by on the street below, more cars in the parking garage five storeys beneath my feet, and quite a few firearms being carried about the building.
Conclusion: this building is an Empire front. Chances of Azn Bad Boyz attack: minimal to zero.
All of this had taken less than a second. Othala was reaching for the door handles.
Assume positive control: doors.
The handles rotated at my command, then the hinges swung the doors soundlessly outward. Othala hesitated, then dropped her hand. She stepped forward into the room. I followed, my power fully aware of certain hidden items.
Within the room was a large table, oval in shape. Eleven of the thirteen chairs surrounding it were occupied. The occupants turned to look at us as we entered.
Male, encased in interlocked armour with crown of blades. Armour registers as machine. Identification: Kaiser. Category: Provisional ally.
Male, militaristic costume. Identification: Krieg. Category: Provisional ally.
Females, wearing jointed armour, carrying sword, shield, spear. Armour registers as machine. Identification: Fenja and Menja. Category: Provisional allies.
Male, shirtless, metal wolf mask. Long hair, tattoos. Metal spikes protruding from skin. Identification: Hookwolf. Category: Provisional ally.
Female, scarred, short blonde hair, simple costume. Metal cage around head registers as machine. Identification: Cricket. Category: Provisional ally.
Male, shirtless, white tiger mask. Chains over shoulders. Identification: Stormtiger. Category: Provisional ally.
Male, black breastplate over red shirt, short cropped blond hair. Identification: Victor. Category: Proven ally.
Female, juvenile, red and black robe. Long blonde hair. Identification: Rune. Category: Provisional ally.
Male, jointed metal armour, long spear. Armour registers as machine. Identification: Crusader. Category: Provisional ally.
Male, white costume with black gloves and mask. White skin and hair, white eyes. Identification: Alabaster. Category: Provisional ally.
Firearm, loaded. Location: drawer next to Kaiser.
Toy car, metal. Registers as machine. Location: drawer next to Kaiser.
Analysis: items are oddly specific. Conclusion: test.
"Welcome," Kaiser said as we entered. Chairs scraped back as everyone stood. "Please, have a seat."
The two empty seats were situated between Victor and Rune. Othala moved toward them.
Observation: Allies 'Othala' and 'Victor' are partners.
Conclusion: She will sit next to him.
As I had calculated, Othala took the chair next to Victor. I pulled out the seat between Othala and Rune. Rune leaned over and whispered, "Hey."
Expression: smile. Conclusion: friendly. Voice: familiar. Height, eyes, build, hair all congruent with ally 'Cassie'.
Conclusion: Rune is Cassie. Cassie is proven ally.
Conclusion: Rune is proven ally.
I gave Rune a single deliberate nod and turned my attention to Kaiser.
"Please be seated," he said, his voice smooth and powerful.
Kaiser's voice is familiar. Max Anders was wearing platinum pin. Max Anders holds position of power in Empire Eighty-Eight.
Conclusion: Kaiser is Max Anders. Max Anders is proven ally.
Conclusion: Kaiser is proven ally.
I sat, my eyes on Kaiser.
<><>
Carol Dallon climbed out of her car and locked it. Briefcase in hand – because a good lawyer
always has her briefcase to hand – she crossed the street toward the PRT building. At the doors, she encountered Manpower, in his civilian identity of Neil Pelham. Even though not in costume, Neil was as imposing as ever, looming more than a foot over Carol.
"Hey," he greeted her. "Any idea what this is about?"
She grimaced. "The Director didn't tell me a thing. Just informed me that not showing up was a non-option."
"Yeah, I kinda got the same message." Neil shrugged. "I already called Sarah and the kids. They should be on the way. Where's Mark and Vicky?"
"Mark's at the hospital with Amy," Carol said shortly. "Victoria said that she would join up with Sarah and your children."
Neil pointed. "That'll be them, right there."
Shading her eyes, Carol looked up into the sky. He was correct. A scattering of dots in the sky soon resolved itself into a group of four people; namely, one adult and three teens.
Unlike Carol and Neil, the four newcomers were costumed up, and Eric – Shielder – had his customary blue hair dye in. They came in for a smooth, fast landing. Vicky chose to land normally on her feet, rather than in that ridiculously overblown three-point landing that a lot of the wanna-be Alexandria packages were showing off with these days.
"Carol," her sister greeted her.
"Sarah," she said in turn. "Do
you know what's going on here?"
"Only that the Director told me that the future of New Wave was on the line. No, I'm not sure what she might have meant by that, either."
"How about we just go in and find out," suggested Neil.
"How about we do that," Carol agreed. She didn't have court for another two hours.
With any luck, we'll be done here by then.
<><>
Medhall Building
Justin lounged back in his chair, wondering what all the hoo-hah was about. There'd been something on TV about a fight between the Empire and the ABB last night, but he hadn't been involved, so it was none of his beeswax.
Nobody's got any burns on them, so either Othala got to them, or Lung didn't get too close. That big-ass chink was way too powerful for Justin to want to tangle with. Sure, he had his ghosts, but Lung was just too tough for them to hurt in any meaningful way, even if they dogpiled him. And if Lung ever actually got his hands on Justin, it would be lights out in a big way.
No fucking thank you.
So the meeting wasn't about the fight, which was good. It meant that he didn't have to worry so much about paying attention. Except that there was this new kid, maybe sixteen or seventeen. Kinda cute, if you liked the tall skinny librarian look. Nice hair; she obviously took care of it.
She was obviously new to the game if she didn't even have a costume yet. Though he wasn't too sure what the bandanna with the cog-wheels on it was all about.
Are we actually getting a Tinker? That thought alone made him sit up just a little. It was so totally
unfair that the Merchants had a fucking Tinker, while the Empire, with three times as many capes, didn't.
"Ladies and gentlemen."
Whoops, Kaiser's talking. Better look like I'm paying attention.
"You may have heard of the altercation with Lung and Oni Lee last night. You will be glad to hear that both Asian capes had to retreat from the battlefield in disorder, leaving more than a dozen of their dead behind."
Justin's eyes widened behind his metal mask.
Holy shit. Someone chased off Lung and Oni Lee? I am seriously fucking impressed.
Kaiser was still talking. "I regret to say, that victory cost us the lives of two of our more promising junior members, Bronson diAngelo and Jenna Parsons. Their sacrifice will be remembered in a service later next week. Also present was Peter Ferguson, who will be recognised for his bravery at the same time." He paused dramatically.
Wait a second. Ed Ferguson's kid? Didn't he have a new girlfriend at the last Gathering? Justin took another look at the new kid. He hadn't been paying too much attention at the time, but he seemed to recall that Pete's arm-candy had been tall and skinny with glasses, just like this one.
"However, these lives were not lost in vain, for they paved the way for our newest member to join our ranks."
Kaiser was
good at this. Justin found himself sitting forward expectantly.
Pausing, Kaiser turned his head toward the teenage girl. "That is, I understand that you were intending to join the Empire Eighty-Eight. Is that still your wish?"
The girl's expression never changed, but her tone was definite. "Yes."
Justin couldn't see Kaiser's face behind the helmet, but the smile came through in his voice. "Excellent. Normally, we wait until prospective members have passed the initiation process, but given last night's events, I'm going to declare the initiation well and truly passed. Now for the issue of sponsorship. Do you have a sponsor here?"
Well and truly passed? Justin blinked.
Wait – was she the one who chased off the chinks and killed a dozen of them?
The girl's question was almost free of inflection. "Sponsor?"
"Well, yes." Kaiser's voice was patient as he explained. "Your original sponsor is no longer valid. To join our number, you need a sponsor who is both a cape and a member in good standing."
Justin had little trouble in deciphering that.
She didn't have powers till really recently. Her original sponsor doesn't have powers. If she's the girl I think she is, he would be the Ferguson kid. Man, oh, man. His little bit of fluff just got powers and hit the big leagues. Sucks to be him.
Othala raised her hand. "I will stand as sponsor."
Before Kaiser could acknowledge her words, Victor's hand had joined hers. "
We will stand as sponsors."
Kaiser nodded. "Acceptable. Let's have a show of hands. All in favour?"
Victor and Othala already had their hands up. Rune's hand went up a moment later. Justin shrugged and raised his hand as well, looking at the girl with interest.
If she's a Tinker, we need her.
One by one, around the table, hands went up. With a scrape of metal on metal, Kaiser raised his hand, followed an instant later by Fenja and Menja. The only ones left were Hookwolf and Cricket.
Kaiser looked at them, tilting his head slightly to the side. "We have a clear majority here, but may I ask why you're holding out?"
Hookwolf lifted his chin. "I haven't seen what she can do yet. All we've got is word of mouth and a fancy mask. Gonna need something more than that." His tone was harsh, as close to an actual challenge as Kaiser usually allowed.
Kaiser paused. "You would like to see a demonstration of her power?" Leaning forward slightly, he turned his helmeted head toward the girl in the bandanna. "Are you willing to do this?"
She did not hesitate. "Yes."
"Very well, then. A demonstration it will be." Kaiser pulled open a drawer at his end of the table and produced what looked like a toy car, about four inches long. He placed this on the table. "Well?"
The girl did not react visibly, but the car began to roll forward along the table. The sound of the rubber tyre treads on the highly-polished tabletop was only just audible. However, it was barely crawling along; Justin began to wonder what all the fuss was about.
When the car reached the centre of the table, it rolled to a stop. Nothing happened for a few seconds.
"That's
it?" scoffed Hookwolf. "I could put a rubber band in it and -"
The back tyres began to spin, while the front ones stayed still. Under the impetus of the spinning wheels, the car crept forward, the rear end wobbling from side to side. Hookwolf shut up, watching. The whole car was vibrating now, showing far more energy than it had before.
Abruptly, the back end of the car swung around to the right in a complete three-sixty, back tyres still howling against the tabletop.
Someone's gonna have a job, buffing that rubber off the finish.
When it had finished the first circle, the car reversed direction just as suddenly, pulling another complete circle to the left. Then, leaving a tiny trail of scorched rubber, it shot off down the table like a startled rabbit. Justin watched it whip past him in the general direction of Alabaster.
The white-skinned Brute barely reacted to the car's approach. However, before the toy could launch itself from the table, it turned its headlong rush into a curving turn, swinging perilously close to the table's edge as it completed its reversal of direction. All eyes followed it as it headed toward Kaiser.
With a grinding of metal, obstacles arose from the table top; walls and poles, scaled to the car. The girl did not seem to react, aside from a very slight narrowing of her eyes behind her glasses.
She didn't know about this bit, then. The car swerved wildly, clipped the first obstacle, then bounced off the second one and stopped.
However, a few seconds later, it took off again. Pulling a long drift around both the obstacles that it had just hit, it then proceeded to complete the ad hoc course by swerving around each subsequent barrier in turn until it pulled to a halt in front of Kaiser. It did not, Justin noted, hit any more obstacles, although it came close a few times.
Into the silence that fell over the table, Victor remarked, "Now, imagine that's a dozen full-sized cars."
Justin turned his head toward the skill thief. "What, all at once?" he blurted.
"That's what I saw," Victor affirmed, a slight smile on his face. "She beat the living
fuck out of Lung with them."
"Very impressive," Kaiser stated, in the tone of voice that says
but of course that's not all. "However, how would you deal with something like … this?"
From the same drawer, he took a pistol, and aimed it directly at the new girl's face. In the silence that filled the room, he thumbed back the hammer with a distinct
click-click-click.
She didn't respond at all. Justin saw Kaiser's trigger finger move. The silence was so complete that he actually heard the tiny click as the trigger stopped its rearward travel. Nothing else happened.
The girl spoke for the first time since Kaiser had initiated the demonstration. "Safety's on."
Okay, she's got style. Justin had to admit, that was an absolutely
classic line. He chuckled very slightly, and heard a couple of the others doing the same. Kaiser turned the pistol slightly, flicked the safety off, then aimed it at her again.
This time, when he squeezed the trigger, the gun … fell apart. One second, Kaiser was holding what Justin presumed to be a fully functional nine-millimetre pistol. The next, he was holding the frame. Metal parts bounced off the table; Justin was pretty sure that some of the screws fell on the floor. After all the clattering had finished, the only sound left was a few of the pieces rolling back and forth on the polished surface.
Hookwolf broke the silence first. "So … she can control cars and fuck up guns? Kind of specific, isn't it?"
The girl turned to face him and spoke, her voice as expressionless as her face. "Anything with metal moving parts."
Justin jolted. "Wait, wait. Like,
armour? Like
my armour?"
Her gaze swung toward him. "Yes."
That flat voice is creepy as fuck. Almost as creepy as Night and Fog. It's like her body's a puppet and she's pulling the strings, just like she controlled that car.
"So you could move me around because I'm wearing this armour?" It seemed important to get this straight. For the first time, he began to regret the concept of wearing full plate like one of those badasses from the Crusading days.
Again, that flat stare. "Yes."
"Actually," broke in Othala, "it's not that bad. You're not thinking about the upside."
Menja and Fenja were murmuring to each other now; the twins' Valkyrie armour wasn't styled like his, but the pieces were still connected together.
"Upside?" he asked. "What upside?"
"Battlefield rescue," Victor said. "Even if you're injured or unconscious, she can walk you back to Othala to get healed, without ever risking herself. Or, for that matter, stopping what she's doing."
Justin blinked. "I … wait, really? She can do that?"
"Yes," said the girl.
"And what
I want to see," Othala added with a particularly vicious grin, "is the meltdown on the PHO boards after she makes Armsmaster do the Macarena on streaming video."
"Oh … oh, shit," whispered Justin as the realisation burst upon him like a newborn sun. His voice strengthened as he went on. "I thought you were a Tinker. But you're not. You're every Tinker's worst nightmare. Aren't you?"
The girl nodded once. "If it has metal moving parts, then I can control it."
Rune began giggling uncontrollably. Justin frowned; he hadn't thought the girl's comment had been all that funny. But then the teenager managed to get out one word, and he got the joke as well. He began to chuckle, then to laugh himself.
Squealer.
Oh, man. She's going to shit so many bricks she could build the chinks their own Great Wall of Fail.
I really want to see that. It might even be funnier than watching Armsmaster doing the chicken dance.
"Question." That was Stormtiger.
The girl looked over at him. "Yes?"
"What about plastic guns? Can you screw with those, too?"
Kaiser fielded that one with a chuckle. "No such thing. Not a truly plastic gun, anyway. Except for Tinker tech, because they follow their own rules. But mundane guns need metal working parts, even if they have plastic frames."
"Actually, talking about Tinker tech," said Alabaster unexpectedly, "
can you affect it?"
"I don't know." She said it with no hint of apology or other emotion in her voice. "I haven't tried. But if it has metal parts? Probably."
"One more thing," Hookwolf said bluntly. "What about range? Sure, the thing with the car and the gun were cute, but three yards isn't a great range for stuff like that."
Smoothly, she turned to face him. At the same time, she held up her hand. Three fingers were extended.
"Three?" He sounded confused. "Three what? Miles?"
She folded one finger down. Justin got it. "It's a countdown."
"What the fuck?" Brad sounded even more perplexed now. "A countdown to what?"
The second finger folded down.
Kaiser leaned forward.
Oh, shit, Justin realised.
He's got no idea what she's doing.
"My dear," the leader of the Empire Eighty-Eight said smoothly. "I do hope that what you're doing is neither impetuous nor reckless."
The last finger folded down. Justin found himself holding his breath. For an instant, nothing happened.
She played us -
Someone banged on the door. This was not a polite 'may we please disturb you' knock. This was a 'you need to open the damn door NOW' sort of knock.
Kaiser looked at the girl, then at the door. "Is that …?"
She gestured, not bothering to speak.
Go ahead, answer the door.
With a single glance back at her, he stood and opened the door.
"I trust that this interruption will be entirely justified?" he asked coldly.
"Uh, yes, sir." Justin could see past Kaiser to the security man he was talking to. The guy was solid, well-trained, and competent enough that he knew at least some of the true identities of the people in the room. He had
earned his place in Medhall. And yet, he was sweating. "Sir, it's the cars in the underground garage."
"What about them?"
Yeah, what about them? Justin had a beauty of a sports car, bright red with a Confederate-flag license plate, that was parked down there.
Gloria, honey, if someone's so much as scratched your paintwork, I'm gonna string 'em up by the nuts.
"They've all started. All the vehicles. Including your limo, sir." Which, Justin just
happened to know, had a top of the line engine immobiliser built into it. With the keys physically separated from the car, it should be literally impossible to make the motor turn over. "It's
got to be a cape doing it, sir."
Oh. I see. Justin nodded to himself, looking at the new girl.
The parking garage is sixty feet straight down. Range? We got it.
"Indeed." Kaiser may well have been commenting on the weather. He turned his head toward the girl wearing the bandanna. She nodded once at the unspoken question. With her left hand, she made a horizontal slicing motion.
Kaiser turned back to the man at the door. "Check again."
"Sir." The man took hold of his shoulder microphone. "Charlie Delta calling Golf Whiskey. Report on vehicle situation. Has it changed? Over."
There was a long pause. Justin somehow
knew the answer; he wondered how many of the others were absolutely
certain in the same way he was.
"
Golf Whiskey, here. The vehicles all turned off their engines just now. I say again, the engines are off. Over."
Kaiser nodded. "Good. This was a test. Your response time was adequate. Return to your regular duties."
Closing the door before the guard had a chance to reply, he made his way back to the table. Instead of sitting, he stood beside his chair for a moment, looking at the girl in the bandanna. "Are any of the vehicles damaged?"
"No." Her tone was matter of fact. "There is ongoing wear and tear to most of the vehicles that will eventually require repair, but that's a pre-existing condition."
Justin made a mental note to have a quiet chat with the girl about whatever needed to be done to Gloria, just as soon as possible.
"I see." Kaiser sat down. "Well, ladies and gentlemen, I believe that to be an adequate test of our prospective member's powers. If I may have a show of hands?"
Justin's hand went up immediately. By the time he looked around, nearly every other person had a hand in the air as well. Hookwolf and Cricket were the last two, but that was more a matter of timing than reluctance.
"Well, then," Kaiser noted, putting his hand down again. "It's unanimous. Welcome to the Empire."
"Thank you," the girl said. Justin blinked; he could've sworn he'd just heard emotion in her voice. "It's good to be here."
<><>
PRT Building
Well, at least they knew we were coming, mused Neil as they travelled upward in the elevator. Between him, Sarah, Carol and the three kids, the confined space was already cramped; adding a PRT soldier into the mix made it even more so. "What's the big deal?" he had to ask. "We've been to Piggot's office before, and we didn't need a babysitter."
"We're not going to her office, sir," the soldier said.
"Where, then?" asked Sarah.
The answer turned out to be 'a conference room'. The PRT soldier got to the door first and opened it, holding it so that the others could come through. Reflexively ducking under the door frame, Neil looked around at the room. Neil hadn't been in this particular conference room before, but there tended to be a sameness about them. Piggot sat at one end of a long table, facing the wall-sized screen at the far end of the room. Standing in a corner of the room was another PRT soldier.
"Come in," Piggot said bluntly. "Sit down. We have something serious to talk about."
Neil made sure that he was the last one in; the door swung closed behind him. Carol took a seat at one side of the table, with Vicky beside her. Crystal chose to sit next to Vicky. Neil sat across from Carol, with Sarah facing Glory Girl and Eric looking across at Crystal.
As soon as they were all seated, Piggot took out her cell phone. She dialled a number, then placed the device on the table in front of her. A few moments later, Neil heard a familiar voice.
"Hello, Director. Mark Dallon here. Are they there?"
"They are," she replied. "Are you with Panacea?"
"
I'm here," Neil's other niece said.
"Good. I'm about to replay the footage. I'll let you know when I've paused it."
Picking up a remote, she clicked a button. The screen bloomed to life, showing a jittery image of the Boardwalk in the late evening. Zooming in and out slightly, the footage focused in on two figures; the shorter one was eating an ice-cream. If Neil squinted slightly, he could recognise both of his nieces.
"This is us yesterday, on the Boardwalk," Vicky said. "So?"
Piggot gestured at the screen. "Keep watching."
They were too far away for any dialogue, but the image was clear enough. Neil watched as Vicky's image on the screen turned, then the camera swung toward three vehicles parked haphazardly at the side of the road. It followed a single figure stumbling and then running toward Vicky and Amy. He couldn't hear any of the words, but the body language was abundantly clear; she was desperate for Amy to come back with her.
But Amy didn't. Vicky stood in the way and argued with the newcomer, a tall skinny girl with dark curly hair. At one point, the girl grabbed Amy by the sleeve, but Vicky intervened, forcing her to let go again.
When the shot sounded, it made Neil jump slightly.
What the hell? The person holding the camera must have thought so as well, because the picture swung crazily for a second. It angled back toward the vehicles, where Victor stood with a smoking gun.
Director Piggot paused the footage there. She ran her eyes over the members of New Wave who were present. "So, you were faced with a civilian clearly in some distress, pleading for assistance from New Wave, and you withheld it. Why?"
"We were off duty," Victoria said at once. "I
explained that."
The look on the Director's face as she shook her head made Neil wince.
Wrong answer. "The unmasking that your parents went through ten years ago means that while you have far more freedom in the use of your powers than your masked peers, you also have much less of a dichotomy between your cape and civilian lives. You were recognised as Glory Girl and Panacea; to identify you as such broke none of the unspoken rules. You were specifically approached
as superheroes and asked to save lives. Why didn't you?"
Neil glanced at Vicky, who was looking stubborn.
Don't dig yourself in any deeper.
"Are you trying to assert that Victoria and Amy broke the law?" Carol said sharply. "May I remind you that there are no laws specifically requiring Amy to assist anyone -"
Piggot held up her hand. "I am doing no such thing," she stated flatly, raising her voice slightly. "Believe me, I've looked at it. On the one hand, she's the world's number one healer. She's got a one hundred percent success rate
and she's a publicly known superhero for whom healing someone is apparently next to effortless. On the other hand, she's a minor, she has no
actual medical credentials, and she's only ever volunteered her healing duties. All of that adds up to a massive grey area, a legal morass, that lawmakers could argue over for a century without coming to an agreement. In fact, I would be thoroughly unsurprised if this very topic is being discussed
right now at the highest level of government. And that they're getting nowhere." A dry smile crossed her lips. "Fortunately, that problem is not one that I am required to solve."
"
Uh, if Amy isn't required by law to do anything, what's the problem?" asked Flashbang. Neil had been wondering exactly the same thing. He had a feeling that he would find out, very soon.
"Because official laws or otherwise, this promises to subject you to a judgement far more arbitrary and vicious than any you would find in a courtroom," the Director said. Her eyes found Carol's. "I'm referring, of course, to what's commonly called the Court of Public Opinion. Especially given that someone apparently died while you argued with that girl."
Carol's lips thinned, which was enough to make Neil worry. "Are you going to fan the flames here?" asked the lawyer tightly. "Make it worse for us?"
"On the contrary," Director Piggot said. "I've sent a high priority request for Scapegoat to be flown in from San Diego. The PRT is going to make every attempt to assist New Wave in this trying time, and the public is going to know it. The message that I'm sending is that you have the full weight of our support."
"Scapegoat?" Sarah frowned. "I've heard the name, but not what he can do. Healer, I presume?"
"Not really, Mom," Crystal said. "He can take wounds away, but
he gets them instead. Then he passes them on to the bad guys."
Oh. Okay, that is bizarre. Mentally, Neil shrugged.
When you think you've heard it all …
"We're getting off the topic here," the Director said. "Glory Girl, why did you refuse the Hebert girl's request? Panacea, why did you let her?"
"Because she's
Empire," Victoria explained.
Director Piggot waited for the teenager to continue, then cleared her throat when no more was forthcoming. "I'm going to need more than that," she prompted.
Victoria rolled her eyes. "Okay then. Ames was talking about how there's been a whole truckload of ABB in the hospital from Empire guys beating on them, and the latest ones were repeating a message not to mess with Taylor Hebert. And
I heard from one of your Wards that Taylor Hebert's a big wheel in the Empire junior ranks, and that she's the queen bitch of Winslow. She's teflon, or that's what she thinks anyway. So when cars pull over and she comes running up, it's kinda obvious that they've been in a firefight and that she thinks she can just start sh, uh, stuff with the ABB and then just snap her fingers and get Ames to heal up her guys for the second round. So I said no."
"I see," was all Piggot said, although Neil heard a whole
world of meaning behind those two words. "Panacea?"
"
Basically, what Vicky said," the healer replied. She paused, then burst out,
"I don't see why I should reward them for hurting other people!"
"Please, stop," said Piggot. Slowly, she raised one hand, closed her eyes, and pinched the bridge of her nose. "Now, Panacea, think very carefully. Did you
know that the injured people were the instigators of any conflict?"
"
Vicky said that the girl's father, the Hebert guy, was well in with the Empire -"
"Stop!" The Director was on her feet, the whip-crack of her voice bringing Amy's voice to a halt. She turned to look at Vicky and, despite the fact that the girl was an Alexandria package in her own right, Neil wasn't surprised to see her leaning back from the almost palpable waves of Piggot's anger.
Normally it's Glory Girl doing it to other people. I wonder if she'll realise that this is how other people feel around her?
"Glory Girl." The Director's voice would have caused helium to freeze solid. "Which of my Wards did you hear this from? And where in the
hell did you hear about her father having Empire ties?"
Victoria blinked. "Um, Shadow Stalker, both times. She was pretty emphatic about it."
Piggot's fist crashed on to the table, making Neil jump. Everyone else looked a little startled as well; the phone and remote both clattered a little on the table top. He stared at her as she stood with her clenched fist still resting on the table, her eyes squeezed tightly shut, and her head lowered. For a long moment, she stayed like that, before raising her head and opening her eyes.
"Let me make one thing
exceedingly clear," she growled. "Shadow Stalker is
in no way a credible witness, especially when it comes to Taylor Hebert. She is currently under investigation for activities unbecoming a Ward, specifically to do with crimes involving Taylor Hebert. In which the Hebert girl was
not the instigator. Is that
understood?"
<><>
Carol observed the Director, possibilities turning over in her mind.
If Victoria and Amy were working off of false information, then they may have just stepped into a legal minefield. She hadn't forgotten Piggot's earlier mention of the 'court of public opinion', and she knew full well how that sort of thing could twist a matter that was otherwise cut and dried, legally speaking.
"I'm sure they both understand it," she said carefully. "Now, if I understand
you, what you're saying is that neither Taylor nor Daniel Hebert are as enmeshed in the Empire Eighty-Eight as Shadow Stalker was alleging?"
Piggot's face cleared somewhat. Carol tagged that as her
at last, someone sane! expression, flavoured with a certain level of irritation. "Daniel Hebert," the Director said, "is the head of hiring for the Dock Workers. He's also the union rep. And he's
specifically the reason that no gangs have managed to get their hooks into the Dock Workers in the last ten years. And yes, that
does include the Empire Eighty-Eight."
Carol frowned, thinking through her next words. "I'm not disputing your statement. However, it seems to me that there must be some kind of reason that they were travelling with Empire personnel."
The sour look was back on Piggot's face. "I can think of several, none good." She slowly sat down. "Panacea."
"
Uh, yes?"
"What was Daniel Hebert's physical state before and after you treated him?"
"
Unconscious," Amy said promptly.
"He had a gunshot wound, broken bones, and brain damage."
"How severe was the brain damage?"
Where is she going with this? From the pause, Carol wondered if Amy was thinking the same thing.
"
Uh, unless Othala can do some pretty serious brain repair work, he's going to be in a coma for a long time, if he ever wakes up at all," Amy said slowly.
"I don't know exactly what happened to him, but he'd suffered major trauma. Over and above the gunshot wound, that is."
"Such as a car accident?" asked Piggot.
"
I … yes, that would probably fit," Amy said.
"I can't be certain, of course, and there was no bruising consistent with a seatbelt or an airbag, but I would rate that as a high probability."
Carol nodded slightly. Her personal feelings about Amy aside, the girl had obviously learned to avoid committing herself on matters before she had learned all the facts.
Well done.
"And you healed them to the best of your abilities?" That was Piggot. The woman could have been a fair prosecuting attorney, if she could learn to control her biases.
"
Understanding that I can't do brains … yes. The boy was fully healthy once I finished, apart from a minor concussion, and the girl didn't respond to my power at all."
The Director did not let up. "In your opinion, had the girl been dead for long?"
"
I honestly can't say." Carol controlled an internal wince. That was usually code for "no, but you can't prove otherwise"
. However, Amy went on almost immediately.
"Her skin wasn't any cooler than normal, but that could mean she'd been dead for one minute or fifteen. All I know for certain is that when I got to her, I couldn't register her with my power at all."
Carol leaned forward. "Director, I must protest. You're badgering her, asking the same question over and over. If the girl was dead, the girl was dead. Panacea being there changed nothing."
"I'm merely asking the same questions that others will be, in time," Piggot said. "If nobody can
prove that the girl died after Panacea could have gotten to her, then when someone asks
me, I can point that out."
"I see." Carol sat back again. "Was that all?"
"Not exactly." Director Piggot picked up the remote again. "I'm going to play some more of the footage."
Carol turned to watch the screen. The action rolled on; Empire thugs holding hostages, Victor making his demands. Carol winced inwardly as she saw Victoria continuing to argue, then Amy pushing past her to carry out the demands of the villain.
That, right there, is a very dangerous precedent. We should never let villains know that we can be coerced into using our powers to their benefit.
A moment later, she came to the conclusion that this possibility had always existed; it was only now that it was being realised.
We're going to have to ensure that nobody can exploit it in future.
Still not sure exactly how that was to be accomplished, she watched as Victoria faced off both Victor and the girl called Taylor Hebert. She was mildly impressed at how the teenager managed to withstand the fear-aura that her daughter had to be emanating at this point.
On the screen, Amy climbed down out of the truck, the hostages were released, and the Empire contingent prepared to leave. Which was when Victoria pulled her play.
To her mild surprise, Piggot did not pause the footage at that point. Glory Girl posed, Victor shot Panacea, Glory Girl grabbed him and flew him into the sky. When she punched him straight down, Carol winced.
The screen paused once more. Victoria had gathered Amy into her arms and was flying into the distance. Othala and the Hebert girl were on their knees. Victor was crumpled in a heap on the grass.
"So, tell me." The Director's voice was like ice. "What happened here?"
<><>
Vicky's lips were suddenly dry. She licked them. "Uh, I tried to stop them from leaving?"
"Wrong."
Director Piggot's steel-grey eyes bored into her.
She doesn't have powers. Does she? Right now, Vicky could not swear to that. "Um … I'm pretty sure that I did."
The Director shook her head. "What you
did was exacerbate an already-precarious situation to the point where someone got hurt. This was irresponsible in the extreme."
"But … but … they were
criminals. Victor and Othala were
villains! They'd just committed a crime, right in front of me. I couldn't just let them
go."
Mom and Aunt Sarah had spoken to her the previous night about this, and while Vicky had to admit that they had made some good points, in her heart of hearts, she still believed that she had done the right thing.
Maybe if I'd punched out Victor first …?
Anyway, she was going to find Victor soon, and then she was going to explain to him in
detail why
you do not shoot my little sister.
"Yes." Piggot's voice broke into her thoughts. "You could have. And you should have. There were many better options that you had, but you took none of them. Instead, you pushed matters to the point where Victor shot your sister, so you did what? Tried to kill him?"
"He deserved it!" she burst out. "He shot Amy!"
"Do you believe that Victor tried to
kill Panacea?" asked Piggot, almost gently. Vicky saw her mother open her mouth; the Director shook her head fractionally, and Carol closed her mouth again.
"He, uh, he
could have been?" Vicky hedged.
"Come now, Miss Dallon," Director Piggot told her firmly. "We both know what his power lets him do. He's a skill thief. One of the best there is at virtually any field of endeavour, which includes pistol shooting. If Victor shot your sister in the leg, it's a given that he
intended to shoot her in the leg. Add in the apology which he offered before shooting her, and it's more or less a guarantee that he did not mean her any lasting harm."
"But he still shot her," Vicky said doggedly.
"For which you tried to kill him?" Piggot's tone was uncompromising. "Knowing that you were being recorded?"
Mom cleared her throat. "It was in the heat of the moment, Director. Remember that."
"Which pushes it from attempted second-degree murder down to attempted manslaughter," the Director said.
"But he was invincible anyway, from Othala," Vicky muttered sulkily. "I didn't hurt him at all."
Director Piggot shook her head. "That doesn't matter. What
matters is that there is a great body of footage, taken from several different angles, showing you grabbing Victor and retaliating in a vastly disproportionate fashion to a bullet wound to the leg. Disarming him, perhaps dislocating his wrist, that would have been appropriate. Maybe even breaking a leg or arm. But spiking him into the ground like that? No, that was a clear attempt to kill him."
Vicky felt a chill go down her back. She wasn't sure where this was going, but she didn't like it at all.
"
But she didn't, right?" That was Amy.
"He's fine. He got up and walked away."
"Yes. He did. Which
still means that there's a possibility that New Wave might just find itself being sued by the Empire Eighty-Eight for excessive brutality," Piggot said heavily. "What you did goes against the unspoken rules, Glory Girl. And while they don't have the force of law, you won't find many capes standing in your corner on this one." She grimaced. "And that's not even counting the people who've been asking about the possibility of you being tried for attempted murder."
Wait, there's people who want to try me for attempted murder?
"Manslaughter," Mom reminded her. "Not murder. Heat of the moment."
"If they get a conviction, I doubt it will matter to the public," the Director said.
"
Sued?" Vicky burst out.
"By Kaiser and his bunch of racist jerks? Could that even happen?"
"Even if they try and fail, it will still be a matter of public record that they tried." Piggot's voice was implacable. "And there's a chance that they won't be shot down."
"But -" Vicky's voice was higher this time.
I could be in real trouble. She didn't get any farther than that, as her mother raised a hand. She shut up.
"But you've got another idea in mind, don't you?" asked Mom. "Something that is likely to benefit you and the PRT, and wipe out the problem, all in one fell swoop." Suspicion was strong in her voice.
Director Piggot smiled slightly; as far as Vicky could tell, there was no humour in the expression at all. "I believe that I do."
<><>
Medhall Building
"Traditionally, the next step is to unmask to each other," Kaiser went on. He did something to his helmet; the faceplate split and slid away to reveal the face of Max Anders. "Do you have a problem with this?"
"I
thought that was you," the girl said almost breathlessly. Justin hadn't been mistaken; moments ago, she had been showing all the animation and emotion of a robot, and now she was talking in an excited tone. "But
knowing it's true is
so much cooler." Reaching up, she pulled the bandanna down, revealing a wide mouth currently wearing a shy smile. "Hi, everyone. I'm Taylor Hebert. I'm pleased to meet you all."
Justin raised the visor of his helmet. "Hi, Taylor. I'm Justin. Pretty sure we met at the last Gathering. You were Peter's plus one, right?"
She nodded quickly, her smile widening. "Yeah. I remember you, too." She looked from face to face as the rest of the Empire capes unmasked and offered her their names. "Wow, no
wonder Peter looked so pleased with himself. He was introducing me to most of you guys, and I never realised it for a moment."
"Young Ferguson is one of our rising stars," Krieg said. "We were, of course, interested in his choice for a companion. I'm pleased to say that he's managed to impress us all this time."
Justin saw a flush spread over the girl's cheeks. "Well, I'll try not to disappoint you," she said hastily.
Victor chuckled. "After what I saw last night,Taylor,
disappointing us is about the last thing you're likely to do."
Okay, now I wish I'd been there. Victor doesn't throw praise around like that without good reason.
"Which brings us to our next topic," Kaiser said with a smile. "Taylor needs a cape name. Does anyone have a suggestion, or should we just go with the most obvious one?"
"Obvious one?" Taylor sounded puzzled. "Which one's that?"
"'Panzer', of course," Krieg supplied. "It's perfect."
A murmur of appreciation went around the table. Justin pulled his mind away from the puzzle of Taylor's robot act – if act it was – to consider it a moment.
Krieg's right. It is perfect.
"I'll vote for it," he said out loud.
"Wait, wait," Taylor said, looking concerned. "Is this how it works? You guys vote on the name, and I don't get a say?"
"Well, of
course you get a say," Kaiser assured her. "You're free to choose whatever name you want. We'll just offer suggestions."
"Uh, sure, okay," she said. "But why Panzer, anyway?"
<><>
As far as I could tell, Mr Fleischer didn't seem to understand my question. "Why
not Panzer?" he asked. "It's a strong name. It suits you, and it suits the Empire Eighty-Eight."
I shook my head in mild frustration. "No, what I mean is, why does it even have to be a German name? I'm not German. I don't speak the language. Who in the Empire Eighty-Eight even
does?"
"I do," Krieg pointed out. "I am, in fact, German."
"Well, okay, yeah," I said, trying not to flush with embarrassment. "But everyone else here's American, right?
I'm American. The Empire Eighty-Eight is an
American organisation. Most of your
names are in English. Crusader. Hookwolf. Cricket. Alabaster. Victor. Why do I have to give myself a German name?"
"Most of us here have German heritage," Mr Anders said. "We're paying homage to that."
"You're paying homage to a
specific part of German history," I said, trying to sound respectful. "Nazi Germany, right? Eighty-Eight stands for H-H. Heil Hitler."
"Well,
yes," Justin said. "And what's wrong with that?"
"Um, apart from the fact that Nazi Germany lasted just twelve years, until Hitler took poison and shot himself?" I spread my hands. "Guys. The Empire Eighty-Eight has
already lasted longer than that. Why should we blindly follow a legacy that ended so badly? Why don't we make our
own legacy? We're
American. From what I've been told, the Empire's mainly about supporting our brothers and sisters, and making sure that the blacks and the Asians don't push us down. Why don't we keep doing that? Look forward instead of looking back?"
In the silence that fell over the table, I felt my face heating up.
In future, talk something like this over with Peter in private before bringing it to the big table.
"Taylor …" Kaiser's voice was careful. "Do you no longer
want to be in the Empire Eighty-Eight?"
"What? No!" I shook my head. "Of
course I want to be one of you guys. All the shit I've been through over the last few months, the
only people to take my side have been Empire Eighty-Eight. Peter was my only friend for the longest time, even when I kept rejecting him. And when I accepted your Friendship, your people stood by me, even when it meant getting into trouble themselves. You've been there for me, over and over. Some of you have even -" I stopped and swallowed a lump in my throat. "Even died for me. I can't, I can't -" I began to sniffle.
Wordlessly, Othala handed me a handkerchief. I wiped my eyes, then blew my nose. "Thanks. Uh, what I was saying, I can't just walk away from that. That'd make me an even worse bitch than the bitches were to me."
I drew a deep breath. "That black bitch Sophia Hess shoved me into a locker full of shit. Peter Ferguson pulled me out again. Jenna stood up for me, over and over again. George took on a dozen ABB for me, and nearly died. Bronson threw himself on a grenade for me, and
did die. Victor and Othala helped save my dad's life. I owe you all a debt I can never repay. I'm committed to the Empire, to helping you guys, and everyone like you and me, against race traitors and niggers and chinks who want to push us down and make us less than they are."
I was vaguely aware of the hateful terms that I was saying. I didn't mean them, not really, but I knew that the capes around me would listen more closely if I said it the way they wanted to hear it. "And that's what
I see the legacy of the Empire as being."
"Well spoken, Taylor. Well spoken, indeed." Kaiser didn't applaud – it would have sounded weird, with the metal gauntlets he was wearing – but the warmth in his voice worked just as well. "I suppose that's what we
are all about, when you come down to it. Supporting each other, and making sure the lesser races don't push us down."
"Well, that's the way I understood it, anyway." I gave him an anxious look. "So it's okay if I pick a name that's not German?"
He chuckled indulgently. "You were very articulate on the subject, and made a few good points. I can hardly deny you your logic. Did you have one in mind?"
"Yes," I said slowly. "I think I do."
<><>
PRT Building
"Well, what is it?" asked Vicky nervously.
The Director of PRT ENE looked directly at her. "You join the Wards."
<><>
Medhall Building
"Well, don't keep us in suspense," Victor said. "What is it?"
I took a deep breath.
Well, here goes. "You can call me Remote."
End of Part Twelve
Part Thirteen