I whooped in pure joy as the RailCycle did yet another rail change to avoid an oncoming subway car. We were blazing through the subway system at incredible speeds with me riding behind Hardback. If I couldn't cling to things, it would have been a bit awkward, but as it was, I found the ride exhilarating.
Whereas being trapped in a tin can while Squealer hurtled through the streets had been terrifying, riding on the open back of the cycle was just fun! I supposed it had to do with the fact that I was pretty confident I could jump clear of any real danger on the cycle. The fact that we were zipping through the 'exotic' scenery of subway tunnels was just an added bonus.
Eventually, however, the trip was over and we pulled into a very small station that didn't look much like the others we had passed through. In fact, the station looked armored and brightly lit, with cameras everywhere.
"This is the Protectorate HQ station. There are a couple of special trains that run here from the big hubs, but you need to have authorization to use those," he declared as he parked the cycle next to two others just like it. "It's one of the perks of the job."
"Yeah, I can see why," I declared, trying to look as dignified as possible as I straightened out my costume a little. I had a feeling that I was completely failing.
"I won't lie, part of the reason I wanted to be on Team Three was because we get access to the bikes," he said with a grin that made the fact that he was still a teenager quite clear.
"It was pretty cool," I agreed neutrally. If it hadn't required me to move to New York, an offer that included getting to ride those RailCycles often would have been pretty tempting.
From the station, it was a short elevator ride to a manned security station where we got checked out by a couple of guards. After that, we boarded a slow-moving tram to get to the building itself. Of course the Protectorate HQ wouldn't be built directly over a vulnerability as obvious as a subway station.
"So, what's Brockton Bay like?" Hardback asked as we watched a short section of tunnel moving past at about the speed of a slow jog. The tram tunnel was much smaller than the subway tunnels had been, though it was a lot nicer to look at with bright paint and Protectorate logos everywhere.
"Well, I haven't really spent much time at the Protectorate base, so I can't comment much. They've got an old oil rig with a big glowing shield which seems pretty cool, but I doubt it's as polished as this," I gestured out the tram's window. "Outside of that… I haven't had much time to check out the streets here, but I assume you have fewer Nazis. Probably fewer dragons, too."
"Can't say I've seen much of either." Hardback chuckled dryly. "But you can probably just wait a while and we'll get some of each. There's pretty much always something new going on in this city. It seems like there's always a new villain or gang popping up, only to disappear a week later. Sometimes they pop back up later in another part of the city and sometimes they're just gone. The only groups that seem to stick around for long are the cultists and the capitalists."
"Capitalists?" I asked curiously.
He nodded. "The Elite. They're…" he paused as he looked for a way to describe them. "They tend to focus on selling their powers more than street crime. The PRT has contracted with them on a few things, like the force field you have in your city. What they do is still technically illegal, so I can't exactly endorse them, but they aren't the worst. I hear that we're lucky that way, though. Apparently, the Elite groups in other cities aren't as well behaved."
That did sound vaguely familiar. The tram arrived at the other end of the tunnel and we boarded another elevator. "I see. And the cultists?"
He snorted at that one. "They call themselves the Adepts. They believe that parahuman powers are magic and they have all of this mystical stuff about getting and making them stronger with rituals and stuff. It's creepy and dumb, but they suck in a lot of people that desperately want to be capes or want to make their powers better. They even pull in some former Wards and Protectorate members that should know better."
I didn't really have anything to say to that, other than to make yet another mental note not to mention shards to anyone. If powers even came from shards in a world with no Scion, anyway.
The elevator dinged and the doors opened.
"Welcome to the New York City Wards!" Hardback declared as he stepped out ahead of me and gestured expansively. "Well, the lobby thereof, anyway."
I followed him and I had to admit that the lobby was pretty impressive. Posters covered most of the walls showcasing the twenty or so local Wards in their glossy, PR best. I'd already seen many of the same photos on the web when I'd gone looking earlier.
The vast majority of them didn't register with my other-memories at all, though a few stood out.
"To be honest, most of us operate out of the Protectorate substations scattered around the city. HQ is where we go for big meetings, PR functions, and the like. That said… There are usually a few people here at any given time. Most of the Protectorate works out of this building if they don't have a specific reason not to, and Saturdays are a good day to meet up with your cape mentor so it's likely to be busier than usual. The mentor thing is a big deal for our newer or younger members, or ones with specific kinds of powers," he lectured as he led me to a set of double doors at the back of the room. They opened to the side automatically at his approach to reveal a big open room with lots of seating and a few tables. It looked kind of like a cafeteria crossed with a lounge crossed with a conference room.
Indeed, there were a few of the Wards present, looking considerably less glossy than the posters in the room we had just left. I found myself slightly surprised that there had been no delay at the door to allow everyone to mask up, but I supposed that the rules in NYC must have been different. The overall team was probably too big for them to allow Wards to unmask to each other, though I bet there was a lot of that in smaller subgroups.
"Weaver, right?" asked a particularly deep voice for a teenager. He was fairly tall, though not as broad as Hardback. He was just as armored, though where Hardback's armor looked like it was forged in place, his was much more medieval. He had some sort of spear - broken into halves - on his back.
"Yes, and you're…" I tried to remember names I had read on the Internet. There hadn't been that many wearing heavy armor and I had already met Hardback. "Jouster, right?"
He nodded. "Got it in one."
"Hey, hey, hey, no trying to poach the prospect," Hardback butted in. He tried to make it sound jovial, but I immediately caught on to the tension between them. Whether that was because of me or not, I had no idea.
"There is no dibs in Ward team recruitment," Jouster rebutted. "It's all power suitability and personal preference. Plus, who wants to be a tunnel rat if they don't have to be?"
"Tunnel rat? I'll-"
A soft, fake cough interrupted the brewing argument before it could get started. I recognized the deep purple, skintight outfit and visor immediately. I didn't even have to see the quiver on her back or the oversized monster of an arbalest sitting on the table beside her to know who she was.
What was it with the Protectorate's PR team and putting teenage girls into the tightest outfits possible while giving the boys more armor? They had even done it to Sophia to some extent, and she had the sex appeal of a rusty screen door.
"You both read the same brief that I did. Weaver is just taking the tour today. She isn't signing up, and if she was, she would probably be doing it back where she actually lives." Both boys had the good grace to look sheepish at the reminder, which made me pretty sure that they hadn't been fighting over me so much as they had been fighting with each other. She stood up and moved to shake my hand.
"Flechette," she offered. I reached to take her hand but stopped myself at the last minute. This was exactly the kind of event that led to me getting sucked into another vision, I realized. Instead, I turned the attempted handshake into an awkward fist bump.
Much to my chagrin, that did nothing to stop the vision from happening.
//\\o//\\
Despite my momentary brush with idiocy, I had been at least a little prepared to have a vision before I touched Flechette's hand. That seemed to make a difference - or I was somehow getting better at having visions - because there was a moment of vertigo followed by several images that flickered by in a rush.
A young girl, maybe seven or eight, crying as she watched someone walking away.
Myself, massive sword in both hands, standing over something white and unmoving. I was naked, of course, because why wouldn't I be?
A slightly younger Flechette wearing a purple leotard that was much less skin-tight and much more covered with white arrow shapes than her current costume. Visor on, she had a hopeful expression on her face as she walked into the Wards lobby.
Flechette - older - in a very compromising position with a person with dark hair.
There were more, as well, but they fuzzed out before I could make sense of them and the display settled on a single sequence to show me.
"Lily, meet your new sisters, Mary and Alice." It was an older woman speaking as she introduced a younger woman - just barely a teenager - to two girls a little older than her.
There were some awkward hellos before the woman left the room and the older girls dropped their smiles.
"Listen up, you do what we say and we'll get along." That was Mary, I thought. The other one nodded. "No one sticks around here for long, though, so don't get too comfortable. If you make trouble, they'll get rid of you in a heartbeat."
"I won't be any trouble," Lily promised, the sincerity and pain in her voice making my heart hurt.
For a moment, I felt what Lily felt. A desperate need for acceptance. Fear of being rejected. Resignation to being cast aside yet again.
No wonder she'd slotted herself into place as Parian's lieutenant so easily. If future-Lily was anything like past-Lily, she would have latched on to the first person to show her real love and held on with both hands, no matter the consequences.
As quickly as it started, the vision faded away and I was back in the room, still giving a fist bump. I put my hand down awkwardly.
"Nice to meet you. I'm Weaver." I did my best to keep my voice even. I had a feeling that few people would appreciate me peering into their past and future as much as Armsmaster had. Then again, I'd more or less told him that his project could kill an Endbringer, which was the kind of news almost any Tinker would be happy to have.
"Want to see more of the Wards area while our noble team leaders have their… discussion?" She made it clear what she thought of the posturing going on between Hardback and Jouster, both of whom made indignant noises.
"Sure," I agreed. "Later, gentlemen."
Apparently sensing the way the wind was blowing, Hardback cleared his throat and nodded his head toward a corner of the lounge area with several computer terminals. "I'll just be over there if you need anything."
Jouster didn't even say that much, just gave us both a curt nod before wandering off on his own.
When both of them were gone, I snickered. "Thanks for the rescue."
Flechette grinned, which was very visible as her only head covering was a tinted one-way visor. "No problem. I think it's something that just comes with being the team leader of a combat team. Before Hardback, Adamant was the leader of Team Three, and he got along with Jouster about the same." She led us over to a table a bit farther into the big room.
"Are those the only two combat teams, then?" I asked, still not sure how all of this worked.
Flechette held up a hand and pointed to each finger as she named a team. "Team one is the lancer team, and they are the combat-focused ones with high mobility. Team two is the sidekick group, and that's mostly the new members or the ones whose powers benefit the most from working alongside the established heroes. Team three are the heavies, and they're combat-focused like team one but without the mobility. Team four are the younger capes that don't want to be sidekicks, and they do foot patrols in the safer parts of town. Finally, there is team five, who are the desk jockeys."
"We are not!" That was proclaimed by a girl with a pair of oversized goggles and a tool belt as she sat herself down at the table beside us. "Some of us are grease monkeys. Kitbash, by the way."
"Weaver," I replied, with a nod.
"Fine, yes, Team five is made up of Thinkers and Tinkers that are more inclined to work out of their labs here or inside one of the Protectorate bases instead of going out on patrol." Flechette was probably rolling her eyes, though I couldn't tell due to the visor.
"We're the smart ones," Kitbash agreed smugly. "We get to be heroes at a nice temperature year round instead of sweating or freezing." She turned her head to the side and fixed her gaze on me. "Pop quiz. If you were a NYC Ward, which team would you be on, Weaver?"
I thought about it for a second. "Probably team one," I admitted. "If I could resist punting Jouster off a building, anyway."
Kitbash laughed. "I like you. We should be friends."
"Easy as that?" I asked, laughing lightly but pulling out my cell phone. "Trade numbers?"
Kitbash's phone appeared in her hand, and Flechette pulled hers out as well. "Cape phone, right?" Flechette asked, suddenly struck by a bit of indecision.
"Yep," I agreed, which made her relax a little.
"Good. Your costume doesn't really scream 'newbie', but it's better to ask. Capes out themselves in the dumbest ways sometimes."
Like by having their powers spontaneously make them naked, I didn't say. "Yeah, that'd be silly," I covered, instead.
We traded numbers and then chatted for a while. Kitbash was loud and a Tinker. Her specialty was taking existing items, even Tinkertech, and making them into something new. It wasn't reverse engineering like Dragon since the result was still standard Tinkertech, but it did mean that she was able to maintain the stuff instead of the original Tinkers. Apparently, it was a huge asset when it came to repurposing equipment seized from villainous Tinkers.
"Weaver, did you want to see the rest of the building?" Hardback asked a bit later, and I was surprised to see that we had been talking for an hour. I couldn't even really remember what we'd been talking about.
"Wow, I should probably do that," I agreed. "That was the whole point of coming in for a tour, wasn't it?"
That got polite chuckles from everyone.
"I can show her around, if you have something else to do," Flechette offered.
"As long as you don't go poaching her for Team One," he grumbled, but he was still grinning.
"No danger there, I live five hours away and don't plan to move," I declared, which seemed to be good enough.
"I'm going to get back to my workshop, too." That was Kitbash, who was making a bit of a show of getting up and stretching. "If I'm outside it too long, I might turn to stone."
"Nice meeting you - both of you," I offered.
Flechette stood up and then offered me her hand with a grin. "Shall we?"
I grinned back. "Sure," I said and took her hand again. This time, I wasn't barraged with visions.
//\\o//\\
The NYC Protectorate was huge, and not just in terms of manpower.
I had seen the roster on the internet and known that there really were a lot of capes involved in the organization - both in the regular Protectorate and the Wards - but it was more than just that. On some level, I had expected the wide, thirty story building the Protectorate occupied to be shared with the PRT or other agencies, but no. The PRT had their own building across town.
The building was all Protectorate from top to bottom. In fairness, some of the groups within the NYC Protectorate were national in scope - like the Image division - but a lot of it was needed just to directly support the capes in a city the size of New York.
"Most of the rest is just the same. Lots of boring offices and bunk rooms and labs," Flechette said as we finished our walkthrough. I hadn't seen many Protectorate members, though I did get to meet Prism and Astrologer. I didn't run across Legend, the one my other-memories actually knew a bit about, but that wasn't too surprising.
"So, uh," I didn't know how to say it and it was bugging me. I'd only just realized something, and I was dying to know. "Do you think Kitbash was flirting with me?"
I was embarrassed before the words even left my mouth.
Flechette paused for a moment as though considering the question. "Probably not. She's… well, she doesn't do social skills too well. It's a pretty common thing with Tinkers, I think. She comes across as flirty a lot, but it doesn't seem to mean anything. At least, I've never known her to actually make a move on anyone."
"Oh, okay," I said, letting out a deep breath. I'd realized that, from a certain perspective, she might have been hitting on me.
"Me, on the other hand, I was definitely flirting," she said as she turned to lead the way to the elevator.
I stumbled over my own feet and sputtered, which just made Flechette laugh.
"Very funny," I grumbled as I caught up to her.
"I thought so, yes," she agreed, grinning really big. "I mean, unless you're interested…"
It was my turn to laugh, though mine was considerably more nervous. "I'm not," I said before I could think better of it. While I was pretty sure Flechette would be fun to go out with, I was equally sure that she'd get really serious really fast. "At least, not right now. I'm kind of seeing someone, though it's not really serious."
That just made Flechette's grin a bit broader - more relaxed. She pushed the button for the rooftop level. "That's cool, too. I'm always looking for new friends, especially cape friends."
"Well, good. Cape friends," I agreed.
The elevator dinged and the doors opened to another security station, this one more compact than the one I had originally come in through and also more high-tech.
"Tinkertech scanners," my guide supplied as I looked at all of the equipment. "Looks for explosives and a few other things, as well as confirming identities and authorization. They have the same setup on all of the entrances, but there's not enough space up here to hide it all in the walls."
"Why do you need space on a rooftop?" I wondered, half to myself.
My question was soon answered as we stepped outside and found that the rest of the roof was taken up by hangars, landing pads for helicopters, and an area that was marked off for teleporters.
"So you said you'd fit on Team One, right? Think you can make it across Manhattan on the rooftops?" Flechette asked, her voice raised just a little bit to get over the wind.
The buildings around us were of a wide variety of heights. The thirty floor height of the Protectorate headquarters was actually a fair bit taller than the average building surrounding us, though things got a lot taller to the west - northwest - whatever, across the island.
"That's 30th street," Flechette said, pointing to the street below and then to the water a block to the east. "And that's the East River. The PRT HQ is also on 30th street, but on the Hudson." She pointed back across Manhattan. "It's about twelve blocks - maybe a bit less than two miles. Think you can keep up?"
I grinned. "Lead the way!" I declared. I was already liking the sound of this.
"Let me radio for permission, first. You aren't going to go splat as soon as we start, are you? Because I'll have to sit through all sorts of retraining if you do."
I laughed and gave her a double thumbs-up like the complete dork that I was.
She stepped away for a moment and talked into her hand before coming back and unslinging her Arbalest. "We're clear. Just follow me!"
She looked down the sight of her weapon as she took aim at a protrusion on a nearby rooftop. Then she pulled the trigger and one of the oversized bolts she used went flying, trailing a long chain like it weighed nothing. The bolt sank into the thing she'd been shooting at and she shifted her grip before leaping off the roof with a whoop.
A quick shot of webbing and I was right behind her, screaming in joy as the world flew by with the wind whipping at my costume. The exhilaration of flight mixed with the surety of my spider-instincts to give me the freest feeling I could ever remember having.
This was the kind of chance I didn't have back in the Bay. Outside of a small area of downtown, we didn't have large stretches where it was nothing but tall buildings on account of the geography and a general lack of city planning during the Bay's early years. Here, though? Each block of buildings had a unique topography with highs and lows and all sorts of things built into or sticking out of the rooftops. Then the space between the blocks required a web-swing.
Despite being a normal human in some senses, Flechette's grapple-swinging was well practiced and I followed her lead. Crossing individual rooftops was largely an exercise in parkour, but the elevation changes, and the gaps between them, took more finesse.
"No fair!" Flechette yelled at me as she landed on a building beside me. We were up six stories from the building we had started on, and it had taken her a particularly tricky jump to cross the gap. She had been forced to wind in her chain in mid-air and the bottom of her swing still came entirely too close to the ground because she needed the extra momentum to gain height.
I had just used a web on the skyscraper across the street and another web from my opposite hand in an almost effortless transition.
"You should have two crossbows!" I happily suggested. The whole experience really was amazing.
"I can't… actually, maybe I could," she grumbled. "Not now, anyway. Three more blocks." She pointed to the PRT building which was now clearly visible with the giant silver PRT letters on the side. "Race you!"
Before I'd finished understanding what she said, she fired another dart past me and went swinging away, clearing two whole buildings in a single leap.
"Hey!" I yelled and took off to follow her as fast as I could. I had the advantage when it came to parkour, but she knew where she was going better than I did and her grapple was much faster than I would have expected.
She won, but only by a hair. I felt like I probably could have pushed past her a couple of times, but I really didn't care who came in first, as long as it was close. By the time we collapsed, laughing and out of breath, on the roof of the PRT building, I was exhausted but very happy with my day. I definitely understood why Spider-man would web-swing everywhere he could go. It was pretty amazing.
I was still feeling pretty great about my day when I collapsed into bed that night, though I had a nagging feeling that something was coming. I'd been in New York for an entire day and nothing too strange had happened. I'd been halfway expecting to have to fight half the capes in the city or something silly like that.
Instead… I'd met some people, shaken some hands, flirted a little, and generally had a fun time.
Of course, I had to be woken up in the middle of the night by a ringing cell phone.