The Slippery Slope
Part Twenty-Five: Backlash
[A/N 1: This chapter beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]
[A/N 2: Reminder for the reader that Taylor is a member of the Empire Eighty-Eight in this fic, and may express racist views that the author does not share.]
Saturday Morning, February 19, 2011
Remote
I walked the damaged suit into Victor's workshop. He was already there, machining parts for later use, his movements sharp and precise. Glancing around at me, he nodded briefly, then went back to his work.
There was none of the banter from when we'd been assembling this suit the first time around, which I understood. While my power was down, I had wept for Othala as a dear friend, but she had meant even more to him. He did not have the capability of cutting off all emotion as I did, so he was working through it in his own way.
As he put the angle-grinder down and raised his goggles, I saw the dark circles under his eyes but I said nothing. It was not my place to raise a concern in this matter. If I believed he was pushing himself to the point that he would incur self-harm, then I would inform Kaiser of this conclusion so that the matter could be addressed on the proper level, but I would not attempt to correct Victor's behaviour myself.
Mourning, after all, was an important element of dealing with loss, and everyone mourned in their own way.
As I began to disassemble the suit, he came over to observe and assist me. "You said something about stopping Lung from melting the suit. I'd be interested in hearing your ideas on the subject."
It had been a thorny problem. Though we weren't making a point of saying so, this iteration of the suit was being designed with the specific aim of permanently removing Lung from consideration. However, in order to achieve this, we first had to prevent him from immobilising the suit and killing me inside from the sheer heat. Practically speaking, I would die long before he melted it into a puddle (in Hookwolf's ignorant terminology) and I wanted to prevent that.
"Would it be possible to run water in ductwork throughout the suit and pull heat away, like the radiator system in a car?" I asked. "The suit is fairly robust as designed, so it doesn't need to be kept cool, just cool
enough. If this is combined with improved heat insulation, I believe I would be able to continue to act long enough to disable and kill him."
He frowned, an expression I associated with deep thought. "That should be possible, yes," he agreed. "It'll mean a little more bulk, which would normally require re-engineering the power system, but luckily we don't have that problem here." A sharp nod toward me seemed to denote approval, but then he paused. "At some point, you're going to have a tank full of boiling water, because Lung never runs out of heat. How were you going to radiate it away fast enough?"
I'd had ideas about that too, so I told him.
For the first time, he smiled.
<><>
Lung
Last night was a disaster.
Kenta sat alone in his chair, built of fire-resistant materials and reinforced to take the weight for when he sometimes bulked out. Taking up a bottle of sake—one of his few indulgences—he drank from it, then put it down again. As proud as he was, he could not force the events of the previous night into any shape that equalled 'victory'.
The ambush had been
perfect. Lee and he had come upon the Empire Eighty-Eight contingent and taken them by surprise. The first strike, on the Trump called Othala, had worked perfectly. Far too many times, she had caused him problems by healing the various members of the Empire.
But then Hebert, the machine controller, had appeared and turned the tide of the battle. She had dealt Oni Lee a fatal wound, and actually injured Kenta a couple of times. Her interference had prevented him from finishing off Kaiser once and for all; even with the damage to the power armour, she was a formidable enough foe that he had not wanted to face her and Glory Girl simultaneously.
At the time, he'd felt that he had done enough damage to the Empire Eighty-Eight. Kaiser had been badly hurt, perhaps enough to kill him. Othala had been stabbed and dropped to fall to her doom. Rune had also been stabbed, but Lung didn't know exactly where Oni Lee had gotten her.
If Othala was dead (and as skilled in medical issues as Victor could be, he surely could not work miracles) then the Empire was now severely hampered, with Rune still suffering a stab wound and Kaiser dead or dying. But all that did not match the fact that with Oni Lee, the ABB had lost half its cape roster. And if Othala had (against all odds) survived, then Rune and Kaiser might well be hale and hearty by now.
And Oni Lee would still be dead.
Kenta's anger seethed within him, aimed partly at the Empire Eighty-Eight (particularly Taylor Hebert, who had driven him off
twice now) and partly at Coil, for thinking to use him as a catspaw while suffering none of the consequences. The Empire was still his target of choice; he had the measure of the Hebert girl's suit now, and was sure he could destroy it (and her) at their next meeting, especially with Kaiser and Rune out of commission. But once he had rendered them harmless, then there would be a reckoning with Coil.
Nobody uses me as a playing piece.
He took another long drink from the bottle before the heat radiating from him set the alcohol on fire. This didn't matter to him; he just kept drinking until the bottle was empty, then he hurled it across the room to smash against the wall.
Tonight, he decided, he would go into Empire territory and destroy them once and for all, starting with Taylor Hebert.
<><>
PRT Building, Director's Office
Director Emily Piggot
"You wanted to see me, Director?"
Glory Girl stood in front of Emily's desk, not quite at attention but fairly radiating good intentions all the same. She was neat and tidy, hair brushed and costume freshly ironed, every inch of her giving the impression of an earnest young superhero.
Emily didn't trust it for an instant.
"Why, yes." She hit a couple of keys on her laptop to bring up the windows she wanted, then looked up at the girl. "I would just like to clarify a few matters, such as your whereabouts last night from about eight PM onward."
"I wasn't on duty last night …" Glory Girl ventured.
"I'm aware." Emily allowed a little acid into her tone. "However, as part of your probationary membership in the Wards, you're not supposed to go on patrol without having another Protectorate or Wards cape along as your supervisor."
Glory Girl blinked. "I thought that probationary status thing was all just a formality."
"Formalities still have to be observed." Emily gave her a level stare. "Now, with the understanding that your phone tracker was active last night, kindly give me a run-down on your movements last night."
She already
had Glory Girl's movements up on the screen. What she wanted was the girl's explanation for them. Given her knowledge of certain other things that had happened the previous night, this promised to be an interesting interview.
Glory Girl had what might have been deemed a reasonable poker face in most situations; the '
oh shit' expression was there and gone almost too fast to register. But Emily had been playing the game longer than Glory Girl had been alive, and for much higher stakes than the girl was used to. To put it bluntly, she was
done with this shit. "In your own time," she invited, in a tone that meant
stop stalling.
"Uh … I'd heard somewhere there was going to be something going on with the Merchants, up near the Trainyards." Glory Girl paused, then went on. "I wasn't going to
do anything, just check it out, and call it in if necessary."
Heard somewhere. Right. Emily would've bet a large chunk of her pay that the 'somewhere' was the Wards common room, and she'd probably heard it from one of her fellow Wards. At a guess … "Gallant told you, didn't he?"
For Glory Girl's sake, Emily hoped that she never sat down to play poker for money with any of the hard-bitten troopers in the building. With tells like that, they'd skin her alive inside of ten minutes. "Uh, no! I mean … maybe?"
Emily sighed at the look of concern on Glory Girl's face. "Don't worry. He's not going to be in trouble over this. Wards are supposed to share information …
and act on it wisely." She waited until she saw the barb sink in before she continued. "So, walk me through what actually happened when you got there."
Glory Girl took a deep breath. "Well, I didn't see the Merchants, but I did see Lung fighting some guy in a power-suit. It looked like there'd been a battle. Members of the Empire Eighty-Eight were there, some were down, and so was Oni Lee."
Emily made a
go-on gesture. "So, what did you do?" The 'guy in a power-suit' sounded like the report of a giant robot, which was an interesting correlation.
"What
could I do?" Glory Girl spread her hands apart, palm upward. "Lung was ramped up pretty hard, and it looked like the power-suit guy was going up against him
and the Empire. His armour looked pretty beat up, too. So I body-checked Lung, to give him the message to back off." She paused, then her shoulders slumped. "Lung left, then … well, I found out the hard way that the power-suit guy was actually with the Empire. We got into it, and he cleaned my clock. Somehow, I found my way home afterward."
"You got into it, and he cleaned your clock." Emily leaned forward in her chair. "That sounds remarkably devoid of details. Who started the fight, you or him? I only ask because if the Empire had injured as you said, they'd be unlikely to initiate hostilities with a new arrival."
"I don't remember who started it." Which, in teenage-speak, meant '
I started it, but I'm not going to admit it'. "I was fighting him, and he grabbed my legs with some kind of mechanical tentacle and I punched him in the helmet … and the next thing I remember, I'm waking up this morning and heading down to breakfast with Ames. So, I'm guessing he got in a good hit on me, they all backed off while I was loopy, and I made it home on autopilot."
"Autopilot. Right." Emily turned her laptop part-way around. "You see that? Your phone tracker shows you moving directly along McIntosh Street at about five miles per hour faster than your best flight speed. We have reports of a strange low-slung multi-wheeled vehicle with capes on top, including a giant robot, moving at very high speed along McIntosh in the exact same time-frame. Do you have any kind of explanation for that?"
Glory Girl blinked, long and slow. At Emily's best guess, this was a sign of genuine confusion rather than an attempt at evasion. "I honestly have no idea, Director. Like you said, I just can't fly that fast." She leaned across the desk, eyeing the line on the map. "And it stops there, then heads straight back to my house."
"It does. And you have no memory of what happened?"
"After I went to punch the power-suit guy in the head, none at all."
Emily turned her laptop until the screen faced her again, then leaned back in her chair. In her personal opinion, the Dallon girl was telling the truth about not recalling the anomalous trip along McIntosh Street. "Very well. What I want you to do is write up a
complete report of everything you saw and heard and did last night, from the moment you left home to the point you woke up in bed. Everything. Put enough detail in, and I might be able to overlook your unauthorised activities." She paused, thinking. "Actually, one more thing. You didn't happen to see Shadow Stalker while you were out and about, did you?" It was a long shot, but long shots had paid off before today.
Glory Girl shook her head, frowning. "No. I didn't see her at all. Isn't she supposed to be confined to base?"
"Yes," Emily said heavily. "She was. Now, go write your report. Hand it in to Triumph when it's done.
All the detail you can remember. Who was down, who was injured, all of that. Also, what you recall of the power armour. If the Empire has a proper Tinker, then this can only mean trouble."
"Yes, ma'am." Glory Girl nodded hastily, then scuttled out of the room.
Emily sighed as the door automatically closed behind her. Even after the illuminating talk with Glory Girl, there were still mysteries to be unravelled about the previous night. Not least was,
where the hell is Shadow Stalker?
<><>
Shadow Stalker
Where the hell is the PRT?
Sophia was honestly starting to worry, though she'd never admit it even to herself. She'd never been captured before (at least not by villains) and the Empire Eighty-Eight was just about the worst possible group she could see herself being held by. The horror stories about what they'd done to black girls and women (and men) were legion; some of those, she could even verify.
So far, though her treatment had been merciless and unpleasant, it hadn't gotten as bad as it might. This was a good thing, if the barely contained rage she'd felt radiating off the Empire capes was any indication. The only person who'd been allowed to come into physical contact with Sophia was—to her personal shock at the time—Hebert herself.
But it wasn't the Hebert Sophia had known and enjoyed casually slapping around at Winslow. This was a different girl, as unalike as night and day. There had been no emotion in her eyes, even when she'd asked whose idea it was to abduct her father. It had been creepy as fuck, like talking to a robot wearing her face and programmed with her voice.
Sophia had been braced for physical torture, but although the suggestions for making her cooperate (or 'breaking her in') had been as vomit-inducing as they were plentiful, Victor himself had vetoed them. The skill-thief's burning gaze had terrified Sophia far more than it should have. He'd simply asked questions; not about the PRT or anyone's secret identities, but about whether it was Coil or someone else who had hired her to break into the Medhall building.
She'd spilled her guts, though she didn't actually have a lot to say. Circus had left her well and truly in the lurch, so she felt zero compunction in telling them everything that had happened from the moment she'd gotten the key onward. Her only pushback had been when Victor suggested that Coil was behind the whole plot, but that was only because she hated the idea of dancing to someone else's tune.
It wasn't as though she'd joined the Wards of her own free will, after all.
However, as she couldn't muster any real reason for it not to be the case, and he'd reminded her that Circus only worked for money, she'd admitted that the original note had mentioned 'certain interests' that were willing to pay a lot for Hebert's father. That had been a good incentive, but the chance to get revenge on Hebert herself had sealed the deal. So, while it may well have been Coil behind the whole thing, she didn't know and honestly barely cared.
Still, this hadn't improved her position noticeably. On the other hand, it hadn't gotten any worse. She was still locked in a ten-by-ten cell with an extremely rugged cuff wrapped around the same ankle that the tracker bracelet had been attached to. The thick electrical cord that acted as her tether also ensured that she couldn't just go to shadow form and get out of there.
A noise came from the door, and she tensed. Was this it?
Have they finally come to throw me to the wolves? She grimly prepared to die before submitting to whatever they had planned for her.
If I can't kill them, I'll make them kill me.
But when the door opened, it was just Hebert, still with that blank expression. When Sophia looked into her eyes, something ancient and not at all human looked back. She stepped into the cell; behind her, the door swung shut and locked firmly.
"So, you come to slap me around?" Sophia was determined to not let them see her sweat. "Ask some more questions about Coil and stuff?"
"No." Hebert may as well have been declining an invitation to go to a boring movie. "I have one question. Even though you were promised money to abduct my father, why were you preparing to kill him before you were interrupted? You know he does not follow the cause of the Empire Eighty-Eight, and never has."
Sophia managed to muster a sneer. "Because of you."
Hebert looked at her for a long moment. "Explain."
Wow, she can't even get mad at me now. "Sure. I accepted the whole deal to fuck with you, personally. I don't give two shits about your dad, but I couldn't get to you. Hurting him hurts you. So if I couldn't take him away, I was gonna make sure you couldn't have him either."
"I have a second question." Hebert continued to survey her with that eerie robot gaze. "Why? What is your reason for wanting to hurt me?"
It was weird that this was the first time this specific question had come up. She'd assumed that they already knew by now. "Everyone's got their place. Your place is below me, in the fucking dirt. You wouldn't stay down there. So, I had to teach you your place. End of."
"I see." Hebert turned to leave, then paused. "If you were not black, you would make a very effective Nazi. Your views are very similar to theirs."
"
I'm nothing like you!" Her voice was harsh in her throat as she screamed the words as loudly as she could.
"Yes, you are. But I think Kaiser prefers you to be black and doing what you do. Your actions have made you a more effective recruiter for the Empire Eighty-Eight than any of us could ever be. I know I would not be here if not for you. So, thank you for that."
The monotone words struck home harder than a hundred shouted curses. Before Sophia could muster a response, the door opened and Hebert left the cell. It swung closed and locked again with another series of definitive clicks.
She'd been telling the truth. As much as Sophia wanted to deny the words, she suspected Hebert was unable to lie while in that state. The deadpan delivery just made it worse, puncturing her illusions and bringing home to her exactly how badly she'd screwed up in every possible way.
Arching her back, she let out a long and guttural scream.
"FUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!"
<><>
Taylor
Victor looked up as I re-entered the workshop. "So, how'd it go with Stalker? What did you want with her, anyway?"
"Better and worse than I expected." I sighed. "Thought of a question I wanted to ask her."
"And how'd that go?" He turned toward me and waited expectantly.
"Well, I asked her why she was gonna kill Dad …" I related the conversation as best I could recall it.
By the time I'd finished, he was chuckling darkly. "Well, you're not
wrong. Bet she wasn't pleased. Way to knock the props out from under her."
I shrugged. "It was only the truth. What are we going to do with her, anyway? I mean,
yes, she's a dangerous cape and a murderous black bitch, but I'm uncomfortable with the idea of lowering ourselves to her level and just killing her in cold blood. Not if there's another option."
Victor folded his arms. "I assume you're not suggesting we just pat her on the head and let her go. She knows far too much."
"Well, no, that's true." About the only thing that would exceed the speed of light would be how fast Sophia snitched to the PRT about the Empire being based in Medhall. "It's kind of a pity, though. She really is a great recruiter." A funny thought occurred to me, and I chuckled. "Now, if Hollywood had it right and a bop on the head could consistently induce memory loss, we could send her out to keep on pushing people our way. I'd even volunteer to be the one to smack her upside the head."
"There'd probably be a line-up for the privilege, but no." He shook his head. "A hit to the head can produce a great many effects, even amnesia, but not reliably. However …" His eyes went distant for a moment. "Wait a second. You might be on to something there."
"I am?" This was news to me; I'd just been joking around. "What am I on to?"
"A possible option. I'm going to have to think about this." He slapped me on the shoulder and gestured toward the rebuilt suit. "In the meantime, look it over. With the suggestions you made, as well as a few ideas I came up with, I think you've got a much better chance of taking down Lung."
I allowed my power to wash over me, submerging myself in its comforting embrace. Every mechanical device around me sprang into detail, and I focused on the suit. Most of its working parts were quite familiar to me, having been salvaged from the original model, but a few things were new.
Assume positive control: suit.
It came to life, stepping forward off the stand Victor had been using to work on it. I could see it, inside and out, and I catalogued the improvements and differences. "You removed the generators to make room for the water tanks."
He nodded.
Analysis: agreement. "Yes. Electricity didn't seem to have much effect on him, and we don't want potential leaks and electrical short-circuits getting to you in the middle of a battle. It saved a bit of weight."
"Understood." I had one of the cutting chains extend so that I could examine it more closely. My initial impression turned out to be correct. "This is a little larger than the original version."
Another nod. "Lung's hide is pretty tough, especially when he starts growing scales. We lost a few blades due to wear and tear, so I figured fewer blades but larger would let you cut all the way through arms and legs … or necks."
I was entirely in favour of removing Lung's body parts until he gave us the information that we needed. Then, of course, I would kill him. He was an ongoing danger, not just to the Empire Eighty-Eight, but to all of Brockton Bay. Objectively speaking, and I was capable of seeing the world in no other way while using my power, his execution should count as a public service.
Open suit. At the mental command, the suit knelt down and the front opened up. I climbed in and settled myself into the padded interior. Victor had replaced the damaged tablet screen, placing it into a more robust frame and better heat insulation.
Close suit. It buttoned up, encasing me in steel from all directions. The periscope came easily to my eyes, giving me a good view of the outside. "Testing. Testing." I could hear the modulated voice on the outside.
"Yeah, that works." Victor looked up at the suit. "What do you think?"
"It is responsive, and the modifications seem to be appropriate to the task." I had the suit turn in a complete circle, then worked the arms to the limits of their sockets. "The tungsten flechettes did not seem to have a great deal of effect when I used them last. Why did you keep them?" In the shoulder compartments, the attack drones waited with their aluminum blocks full of flechettes.
"You did
some damage to him with them." He spread his hands.
Analysis: attempting to get his point across. "I was thinking, if you mag-dumped them into him at relatively close range, you could really tear chunks out of him."
His point was valid. I had been relatively sparing with my shots, before. When facing Lung on his own, I would not have to be.
I spent the next few minutes discussing the other modifications with Victor. They worked well enough under test conditions, but only time would tell how effective they were in the field. He was optimistic, however, and I considered the engineering to be sufficient for my needs.
When I left the workshop again, I was satisfied that we were as ready as we could be.
<><>
Taylor
"Hey, Dad!" I made sure to put a smile on my face as I entered his new room. The last thing I wanted was to make him think I didn't want to see him. "How are you feeling?"
He didn't answer, of course, but I was pretty sure I could see his eyes following me from under half-closed lids. The new nurse nodded respectfully to me, and I nodded back. I was sad that Mary had been killed by Shadow Stalker—by
Sophia, for fuck's sake!—but I was also pleased that Mr Anders had found another nurse for Dad.
Mary, as far as I knew, had been a loyal follower of the Empire Eighty-Eight, unskilled in combat but willing to help the team where she could. Stella—she was wearing a nametag—was younger and more muscular than Mary had been, and a quick flash of my power revealed that she was wearing a concealed firearm in the small of her back. Peter had told me that she was ex-military, trained as a combat medic as well as all the skills she'd need to take care of Dad.
I approved of the precaution; only an idiot would continue to leave civilians unguarded in a sensitive location if the enemy had already gotten in once and shown willingness to harm or kill them. And Mr Anders was no idiot.
It was true that Sophia was the one who'd murdered Mary (and Circus had castigated her over it, according to Peter) and that we currently had Sophia in lockdown, but that did
not mean we could relax. While Circus was probably going to be (unsurprisingly) keeping her head down for some time, there was no guarantee that Coil wouldn't come after Dad again with another cape (or two, or three). Which was why Dad was now in a different location, there were several extra layers of electronic security between him and the outside world, and Stella had access to an assault rifle stored behind an inconspicuous panel.
"Good morning, Miss Hebert." Stella didn't know I was Remote, but she did know I was very important to Mr Anders, so that was good enough. "Your father is resting comfortably. When I told him you were coming to see him, he seemed happy."
"Thanks. I'll call you if I need you." As she silently left the room, I drew a deep breath and looked down at Dad. This was the time I needed my power the most, to stop myself from breaking down into tears when I saw Dad every day, but I could not and would not cheat like that.
While I was growing up, he'd been one of the most important people in my life. He'd always been there (well,
nearly always) and once Mom passed away, I needed him more than ever. Even when I disagreed with him, I loved and respected him, and I always looked for his approval in everything I did.
(He hadn't been
thrilled when I joined the Empire Eighty-Eight, but he'd come around to accepting that as well.)
And now … I was having to be the strong one. Helpless in a hospital bed, with a hose feeding oxygen into his lungs (they'd told me that his breathing reflex had been impaired by the brain damage), he was the one who depended on me. While Othala was healing him, he'd been improving incrementally, day by day. But now with her death, even that was gone.
The world had been good. Things had been getting better. I'd had hope for the future.
But then Coil had decided to stick his nose where it didn't belong. Lung and Oni Lee had ambushed us; Kaiser was stuck in a wheelchair, and Othala was dead. Circus and Sophia had infiltrated the building and murdered Mary. It was only because of Peter that Dad was still alive.
No doubt Circus had reported back to Coil what they'd found out before vanishing into whatever hole they'd pulled in on themselves. Which meant he had an indeterminate amount of information about the Medhall building itself, but (hopefully) no proof of the identity of any given Empire Eighty-Eight cape.
Sophia had been captured by Mr Fleischer as Kreig, but Circus had long since fled by then, so Coil wouldn't have that information.
Nobody thought for a second that Coil would stop coming after Dad. We didn't know what his turnaround time was to hire a new cape and brief them, or even how loud or quiet the next incursion was likely to be. Which was why Victor and I (mainly Victor, with some input from me) were building my next suit as fast as we could, so I could go after Lung.
It was, in my opinion, a bit of a long shot, but the fact remained that Lung had to die anyway. He had no doubt given the order for Oni Lee to kill Othala, and he'd personally crippled Mr Anders and tried to kill him. With Oni Lee already dead at my hands, that would leave the ABB without cape leadership and ready to be rolled up once we were in a position to do so.
If we could get answers out of Lung (I had my doubts; he seemed the stubborn type) about Coil, we could act on them. Otherwise, we'd have to fall back on plan B, which had the downside of being exceedingly tedious but was otherwise hard to beat. Fortunately, while my power was running, I was immune to tedium.
Pulling my chair to the side of the bed, I took Dad's hand and squeezed it. To my delight, there was a faint but detectable return pressure. I squeezed again; he returned it.
"So yeah," I said chattily, still holding his hand. "Circus got away, but we captured Shadow Stalker. Would you believe she's
Sophia Hess? Literally a school bully, and she was pretending to be a superhero." I snorted derisively. "Diversity hire, more like. I could've told them she was a thug from the get-go. I mean, it's got to mean
something when in a town this size there are at least two black villains, and the only black so-called hero is a murderous bitch who should've been shoved into juvey long ago and left to rot. But instead, they overlooked all that and paraded her around in the Wards. Well, I bet they're feeling pretty stupid now."
He squeezed even harder at that, which I took as agreement. Letting go his hand to rest on the covers, I took up the book from the nightstand and opened it to the bookmark. They hadn't moved the bookstand in here yet, but I could cope. Settling back in the chair, I cleared my throat and started reading out loud.
<><>
Greg
The blindfold was tight around Greg's eyes, but he tried to control his nerves. He'd agreed to this. He'd
asked for this. When Kelly had come back to him and said there would be a test, he'd just asked when and where.
Well, the 'when' was now, and the 'where' was … well, he didn't know where he was, because he'd been driven here with the blindfold on. Any attempt to Sherlock Holmes his location from the turns and stuff would've gone out the window in about thirty seconds flat, because he just didn't know Brockton Bay well enough to pull that shit off.
All he knew was that he was indoors, because there wasn't any bright light shining on the blindfold, and it felt cooler than normal. It was a kind of echoey space, but that didn't actually cut down on the number of places it could be. After Lord's Port got shut down, the number of empty and abandoned warehouses in the district had made it a mecca for minor villains and would-be vigilantes, or so Greg had heard.
Suddenly, the blindfold was pulled off his face. He blinked, looking around to get his bearings. The light in the building was dim, with only a couple of the overhead fluorescent lights illuminating the scene, but he could see fairly well anyway.
This was not necessarily a good thing.
Crowded around him were guys and girls, some he recognised and some he didn't. A lot of them had shaved heads and tattoos; all were looking at him with some degree of curiosity or interest. Some had sneers on their faces, which correlated fairly well with the ones he recognised.
"Everyone!" Kelly's voice rang out from a little distance away. "This is Greg Veder! Some of you know him as a bit of a dick, and that's reasonable, because he is one! But he's asked if he can join the Empire Eighty-Eight, and I've got my reasons for letting him try! So, everyone who doesn't think he should get in, line up between me and him!"
A bunch of the people, ones Greg didn't know, shuffled out of the way, but quite a few more stepped in to take their places. These ones he knew, alright. It seemed they recalled him as well, but not in a fun way.
Once everyone had ceased moving, Kelly spoke up again. "Okay, then. Greg, all these people between me and you have some sort of grudge with you. You want in, you gotta get past them. Go!"
Oh, shit. Oh, shit. Oh, shit. Greg had never seen so much flat malevolence being projected at him at once. He seriously wanted to piss, but right now peeing himself was probably one of the few things that could make this situation actually worse than it was. He took a deep breath. "Okay, before we do this, I just want to say, I'm totally sorry for all the shit I ever said about you guys."
If he'd been expecting anyone to relax and step out of line, he was doomed to be disappointed. One boy cracked his knuckles. Another spat off to the side.
I can walk away, or I can do this. There was no third option. And if he walked away, he'd never be able to look any of these guys in the eye again. Or Taylor, for that matter.
It was the thought of Taylor being disappointed in him that galvanised him into action. Wrapping his arms around his head to protect his face, he clenched his eyes shut and lunged forward. Whether he succeeded or failed, he just wanted to be able to know at the end of the day that he'd tried.
The first punch bounced off his right forearm but then someone hooked him in the ribs, driving the air from his lungs. He stumbled onward, weathering punches and shoves, not even sure that he was going the right way anymore but unwilling to lower his arms and look.
Another shove, coinciding with a kick to his shin, tripped him; he landed on all fours, opening his eyes by instinct. They were yelling now, and he saw kicks coming from all directions. He scrambled onward as more blows found his arms and body.
Gathering his legs under him, he staggered to his feet, only to meet a fist coming the other direction that caught him in the mouth. Down he went again, landing heavily on his back. He was barely able to breathe by now, and he curled up in a foetal position to try to shield himself from the worst of it.
After a moment, the punishment abated. He fought for breath as he uncurled and looked around to see them staring down at him. Kelly was there, in full view, only a few yards away.
As he tried to come to his feet again, they closed in once more. Slaps and punches and kicks assailed him from all sides, but he lurched toward his goal. Someone tripped him, but this time he just kept going on all fours until he ran into a pair of legs that didn't move aside and didn't try to kick him.
Looking up, he saw Kelly's face, and a hand extended downward. He gingerly accepted it, and Kelly hauled him to his feet. There were bruises on his face and body, he knew, and he was wobbly on his feet, but he'd
made it.
"So, you still want to join?" asked Kelly.
Greg nodded. "Yeah. I do."
Kelly had to raise his voice to be heard over the cheers and shouts of congratulation. "Good. You get a week to think about it, then next Saturday's your final initiation." He clapped Greg on the shoulder. "Well done, Veder."
He knew he didn't have to think about it. This was what he wanted. As he was repeatedly slapped on the back by the others—a far cry from the punches and kicks he'd been enduring just moments before—he knew he'd never felt more alive.
Taylor's going to be so proud of me.
<><>
Taylor
Tammi and I were talking quietly with Peter—Dad had drifted off to sleep a while ago—when Justin opened the door and leaned into the room. "Lung's been spotted," he reported, keeping his voice down. "He's got a couple dozen of his people with him, and he's burning shop-fronts. They say he's calling out for the Tinker bitch to stop hiding and come face him."
"Oh, he is, is he?" I came to my feet. It didn't matter that I wasn't actually a Tinker, nor was I trying to hide from him. He was wrong in every possible way about me except one (that I was a girl) and I was
still pissed at him.
"Taylor, you don't have to do this," Peter began. "The last time you faced him—"
"The last time I faced him, I hadn't known I was going to fight him, and I hadn't prepped for it." I leaned over Dad and adjusted his covers slightly, then kissed him gently on the forehead. It was Lung's fault that he was in that bed, so I was going out to get some payback.
Justin stepped back out of my way as I exited the room and waited for the other two to follow me out before I closed it. "We've got your back, you know that. You don't have to do this alone."
I looked him in the eye. "I appreciate it, but we both know your ghosts can barely touch him. He literally heals their stab wounds faster than they can stick him with their spears. Besides, he tore up Kaiser last time out while I was right there. I need to show Brockton Bay that that shit doesn't fly."
"You know Hookwolf's gonna want a piece of him, and Stormtiger too." Tammi was hustling along at my shoulder. "And I wouldn't mind dropping a firetruck or two on his fuckin' head."
"They've had their chance." My jaw was set. "And he's too good at dodging when he's ramped up. If we beat him by dogpiling him, we'll just look like little bitches, and there's always the chance he'll get hold of someone and tear them apart like he tried to do with Kaiser. We need him focused on me."
"But he nearly wrecked your suit, the last time," Peter protested. "I saw what it was like, afterward. It was a
mess."
"A lot of that was Glory Girl," I reminded him. "Victor and I saw what worked, and what needed work, and he's reinforced the suit. Lung's the whole reason Dad's in a coma, and Othala's dead. I know how to hurt him, and I'm pretty sure I can kill him."
There was worry in Tammi's eyes as she faced me outside the elevator down to Victor's workshop. "Okay, if you're sure. But I'll have your back anyway."
"We both will," Justin added. "All the way there and back again."
"Thanks," I said, then hugged them both. Better friends, I couldn't ask for. "I appreciate it." Then I gave Peter both a hug
and a kiss; just because he wasn't a cape didn't mean he couldn't support me. His love meant more to me than anything in the world.
He held me tightly for a moment. "Please, come back safe."
I squeezed him back. "Damn right I will." The elevator doors opened, and I stepped inside. "Time to go kill a fucking dragon."
<><>
Remote
Even wheelchair-bound, Mr Anders was showing that his will was unbent by his injuries. Hookwolf and Stormtiger were, as predicted by Rune, demanding that they be unleashed on Lung instead of me. He was adamant, however, which didn't do their equilibrium any good.
"
You've gotta be shitting me!" Hookwolf raged over the radio link that we were all currently sharing.
I was almost alone in the back of the truck that was conveying me to where Lung was perpetrating his rampage and proving our point that he didn't deserve to live another hour longer. Outside the suit, Victor was looking his handiwork over and ensuring that he hadn't forgotten anything at the last moment. I could've put his mind at ease—my power could analyse the makeup of the suit down to the last screw, bolt and ball-bearing—but I suspected he needed this to keep his mind off the upcoming battle.
"
I assure you, I am not." In contrast, Mr Anders was coldly precise. "
You have not seen Remote in action. She is the only member of the Empire Eighty-Eight to have successfully driven off Lung twice, out of two encounters. Her suit survived the first encounter largely intact, and Victor assures me he's improved on its capabilities since."
"
Fucking bullshit pretend Tinker tech," scoffed Stormtiger. "
It's not real Tinker tech. No force fields, or brain lasers, or even real lasers. That's what you need to fight Lung. Not some kid in a puppet suit."
I keyed the radio mic. "No, what you need to beat Lung is an awareness of how to take away his strengths and get past his defenses. You've just been trying to fight him. I intend to
kill him."
"
Big words." Hookwolf's voice was a sneer. "
There's no way you can do this on your own."
"You never laid a hand on Oni Lee, in all the time you were fighting him," I reminded him. "I broke his arm in our first encounter, and killed him in our second one. Now it's Lung's turn."
"
Ooooooohhhh," Crusader broke in. "
Daaaaaaamn."
"
Enough," Krieg snapped. "
Kaiser says this is Remote's show, so this is Remote's show. Unless you have something constructive to say, don't say anything at all."
"We're nearly there." Victor's tone was calm and measured. "
Reports say Lung's on the next block."
"I will be getting out here," I said, taking control of the truck and pulling it to the side of the road. At my command, the rear doors opened and the clamps holding the suit in place disengaged. "Feel free to distract his men. Lung is mine."
"
Copy that." Flying overhead on a new metal disc, Rune had a large number of pieces of metal she could use as projectiles at a moment's notice. "
Go kick that overgrown lizard's scaly metal tail right up his ugly ass."
"In the figurative sense, I intend to do just that." Performing that act literally seemed a little unrealistic, but I understood the gist of what she was trying to convey.
I climbed down out of the truck, and headed in the direction of where I understood Lung to be. While the suit wasn't as fast as the truck, its legs were longer than mine so I could still maintain a reasonable speed. As I ran, I popped both auxiliary units and sent them skyward; one to give me a better picture of the situation, and the other to act as flying artillery.
The camera came online, sending its images to the tablet before my eyes. As I watched, Lung sent another gout of flame roaring into a shop-front. People burst from the open doorway, some of them on fire. I did not feel anger, because I could not, but I knew he needed to be stopped.
"This is Remote. Engaging."
I sent the armed auxiliary unit down in a steep dive toward Lung. He looked up more quickly than I had expected, but that did not help when the flechette launcher began firing on him. Wary of his speed in dodging, I did not loose every single flechette in a single shotgun blast, but instead I started shooting them at him, at a high rate of fire.
He was already ramped up, more than we had hoped but less than we feared. A few of the flechettes sparked off his tough metal scales where the angle of incidence was inconvenient, but the rest blasted chunks out of him. Lightweight they may have been, but the flechettes were hitting at extreme velocities, far higher than an assault rifle could deliver them.
As Victor had advised, I emptied the entire 'magazine' into him, blasting the armour clear off his right thigh and some of his stomach and chest. He staggered backward, blood boiling out of the injured area, though he was very clearly not out of the fight yet. A burst of flame reached out for the auxiliary unit, but I danced it out of the way and headed it back toward my suit, where a reload awaited.
"Coward!" I heard him bellow. "Fight me face to face, not with machines!"
At that moment, I came around the corner. "As you wish," I said over the suit's speakers. The auxiliary unit landed, discarded its empty block, and latched onto another one. In the meantime, I was closing with him. The flechettes had never been meant to win the battle for me, just soften him up.
Lung's followers saw me and opened fire with everything from low-calibre pistols to high-velocity assault rifles. This, then, had been his plan; to lure me out and then have his minions execute me with massed gunfire. It was as cowardly and underhanded a plan as he had accused me of. Had I been capable of feeling emotions, I might even have been offended.
Victor's handiwork showed its worth, however; although the cacophony of the ricocheting bullets was audible even through my noise-cancelling earpieces, not a single round got through, or even did any noticeable damage to the suit. I expressed my lack of concern for the bullet storm by not even reacting to it, never deviating in my path toward the man who had briefly been my nemesis before I became his. When I was just a few yards away, he opened his mouth and I saw flames billowing up out of his throat.
I turned to narrow my profile down. While the suit had its heat-reduction ductwork, it was better not to be struck by flame at all. Accordingly, I braced myself and brought up my left forearm in a classic blocking motion; unfolding from the back of it was a lightweight aluminum framework covered in the same kind of ceramic heat tiles that they'd used on the Space Shuttle, back when it was still in use.
The blast of flame hit the shield and splashed outward from it. Flimsy though it was—a thrown knife probably would have penetrated it with ease—it weathered the massive heat spike with little in the way of problems. Only a few parts of the suit were contacted by the raging inferno, and the ducted water pulled the heat away quickly.
Armed with the new block of ammunition, the auxiliary unit took to the air again. In the meantime, Lung's followers seemed to be either reloading or standing back to see what happened next. Nobody wanted to get between him and his chosen prey.
As the rush of flame died down, I stepped forward, folding the shield away. Lung came for me then, blazing with fire and steel talons spread to rend me limb from limb. I lashed out with the chain from my right arm, the reel on my back spinning as it dispensed the jointed metallic tentacle.
It wrapped around his right thigh where the first burst of flechettes had shredded away the protective scales, then I turned the blades into the correct alignment—heavier than the first iteration, they were able to support more sawteeth—and started them spinning. At first they had trouble getting a purchase on his scales, then they chewed their way through. Lung clearly didn't like the idea of this; temporarily abandoning the attempt to get at me, he grabbed the chain with both hands and yanked hard at it.
I wasn't sure whether he was trying to reel me in or break the chain, but neither one was in my plans. The blades where he was holding the chain started spinning as well; as it turned out, the scales on his palms and fingers weren't nearly as durable as those protecting his thighs. In less than a second, he was devoid of any working fingers. The chain around his thigh was also still tightening by the second, the high-speed blades tearing through his muscles and into the bone like an out-of-control chainsaw, only more so.
When the blades broke through the bone and the leg separated, he was perhaps as surprised as his minions. I was also a little surprised when I realised part of the already-cut muscle had begun to reattach, but that was easily remedied by expanding the circle of the chain again. Wrapping around the severed limb, the chain tossed it off to the side.
However, Lung was not that easy to put down, in any sense of the phrase. Balancing on one leg, aided in this by his tail and his one remaining saurian tridactyl foot, he vomited a blast of flame at me, followed up by an overhand smash with both his hands (from which the fingers were still growing back). Unfortunately for him, I saw the move coming and reacted the way Peter had trained me; grabbing his right wrist in both hands, I twisted away from his left hand and performed a reasonable shoulder throw. The flame washed over me before I'd completed the move, but the ductwork was performing its job effectively, pulling the heat out of the metal surrounding me.
Lung smashed down onto his back, and I swooped the armed auxiliary unit in for a strike. Keeping him on the ground seemed like a good idea, so I directed one burst at his left knee, the flechettes chewing through it until only muscle and sinew held it together. Paradoxically, they would have punched straight through a baseline human, but as Victor had calculated, Lung's denser flesh caused the kinetic energy in the high-velocity rounds to blast fist-sized chunks out of his body, like heavy-calibre bullets striking wood or stone.
He burst fully into flames then, but it did him no good. I walked the next burst up over his stomach and chest to his head, ripping aside scales and bones and exposing his heart and lungs. By now he had lost his mask, and the last shots in the burst tore off half his jaw and part of his skull.
Bereft of working legs and with nothing that he could really use for hands, he still did his best to get up and keep fighting. His wounds would have killed any normal man ten times over, but Lung was no quitter. Were I capable of admiring anything at that point, I may have admired his stubbornness and tenacity.
Of course, it wouldn't have changed the outcome in the slightest.
He hit me with a third blast of flame, raising the temperature of the water in my storage tanks to near boiling. It was getting uncomfortably warm within the suit, but it still wasn't as bad as it had been during my previous combat with him. Besides, I had plans for that water.
My chain flicked out and wrapped around his right arm, just above the elbow. Bright metal scales, stained with blood, flew off in all directions as the cutting blades engaged and began to tear into his arm. With the amount of damage I was doing to him, his regeneration was starting to falter, but still he fought on.
The water reservoir on my back was much more than a simple tank. Using pumps and valves, I separated out the live steam from the still-liquid water, then directed each into its own section. As he tried again to douse me with flame—it seemed he had trouble learning that his big move wasn't working so well anymore—I activated a heretofore quiescent nozzle mounted alongside my right wrist.
Steam pressure, building all the time from the heat pouring into the system, propelled high-temperature (but still liquid) water out of the nozzle in a cutting jet. Emerging with sufficient speed and energy to slice solid steel like butter, it lopped off his left arm at the shoulder with barely a pause, carving through scales, flesh and bone alike.
At the same time, the cutting chain chewed through the scales and muscle of his right arm and set to work on the bone. The blades, tough as they were, had been worn down by the stellar work they'd performed so far, so they were taking a bit more time. That was fine by me.
I knelt down alongside Lung, and reached inside his open chest to take hold of his beating heart in my mechanical grip. "Tell me one thing, and I will make this quick," I said to him. "Who betrayed us? Who sold us out?"
With his one good eye (the other had been blasted to ruin and beyond by the last burst of the auxiliary unit), he glared up at me, then a chuckle that was more akin to a death-rattle forced its way from his throat. He tried to spit at me; I would later find spatters of blood on the suit's 'visor'. "Coi … ugh …
" he rasped, his speech distorted by his own power mutation and the loss of half his jaw. But it was enough.
Coil.
"Thank you," I said, and released his heart. Then I sliced his head off with the water jet, leaving a three-inch channel in the roadway under his neck. It rolled free, and I picked it up.
As I rose to my feet, I looked around. The members of the ABB he'd brought along were no longer there, except for a few prisoners being held tightly by Crusader's ghosts. Others lay wounded or dead in the roadway, victims of Crusader and Rune.
I held up Lung's head for them to see. "Lung is dead," I announced. "The ABB is no more. Spread the word." Then I turned and started back toward where the rest of the Empire Eighty-Eight contingent awaited me.
I knew this was no time to be complacent. Even with Othala and Kaiser avenged, we still had to figure out how to take the fight to Coil. But I had faith in Victor to figure out something.
And someday, preferably soon …
… Coil would face me too.
End of Part Twenty-Five