Luster

Rust 7.a19 (Alexia)
"You have to be careful," they had told me. "Witness protection works, but only when you do what we tell you to."

"I will," I told them.

"Never make contact with the Butcher, Heavensword, or anyone else affiliated with the Teeth."

I didn't. I couldn't, no matter how much I wanted to. To protect my son, I would never, ever speak with Elena or Klaus again.

"Your name is Riko Fujiwara. Your son's name is Jacob Fujiwara."

I thought giving up 'Alexia' would be simple. I gave up 'Junko' without so much as a second glance. So why did being 'Riko' make my heart heavier by the day? Why did calling my boy 'Jacob' feel like the worst sin?

"We'll set you up in Brooklyn with an apartment, and we'll help you find a reasonable job. Beyond that, you'll receive a stipend as 'alimony,' which we recommend you use for childcare while you work."

I thought it was a mistake when the first 'alimony' check arrived. Surely it was too much…? But the checks kept coming, always the same amount and never a day late. I was given so much money, I didn't need a job. I could dedicate all my time to… to Jacob. Give him my everything.

"Don't be social beyond what's necessary. The less people you interact with, the less chances there are for someone to see through the fiction."

We lived over a grocery, one that stocked baby supplies no less. Four employees, but just the one if I only shopped once a week. I had more money than I knew what to do with, so I paid the neighbor to buy us clothes instead of doing it myself. Less people, less problems. And no going outside! That was how the Teeth found us, walking in the park, and for what? Clean air? Sunlight? Nowhere was clean in New York, and we could get sunlight just fine through the window! There was no reason to go outside—none. Nothing but danger lurked out there.

I should have known better. Danger was everywhere.

I heard the alarms, loud and shrill, cutting through the walls like not even the traffic could. Of course. Of course the first Endbringer attack in the US would be here. God, where was the closest shelter?! I knew where one was by our old apartment, but that was in Queens. It would be suicide to go that far, much less on foot with a toddler in tow! I banged on the neighbor's door without reply, and everyone had already fled the grocery.

Alone.

I took my son to the tub, the furthest place we could get from the exterior wall. I held him tight as the fighting grew closer, shushed him in vain when he began crying and wailing.

Did it hear him, that monster? Did it hear my little boy?

Why did I hide in the tub? What good was a tub against such a demon?

The ceiling cracked above us. I tried to flee. Too late.

I threw my son to safety.

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Rust 7.c8 (June)
[Butcher: You're a fucking coward, Sixteen.]

I didn't bother replying. There was no point. How he hadn't gotten bored of trying to goad me yet, I wasn't sure. The worst of the Chorus had all hounded me non-stop for the first few days after Nothung fled, and that was even worse than it sounded since inheriting Footloose's power meant I no longer needed to sleep.

I rolled over, careful not to lose my page or my concentration on the pennies I had secreted away into forgotten corners. Becoming a Brute, it seemed, did not mean I couldn't find my cell's cot horrifically uncomfortable. My eyes returned to my book—

A clicking, uneven purr slithered through my thoughts, drawing an unconscious shiver out of me. [Deimos: Layers upon layers… Mmmmm…]

That… was new. And unpleasant. Deimos?

[It is evil you anticipate?] The purr swelled, devolving into uneven exhales I only recognized as chuckles from passed on memories. [How long will it be, I wonder, before she comes for you?]

I stiffened, peripherally aware others were speaking up, the loudest jeering, Deimos laughter buoyed by theirs. She wouldn't, would she? Surely not. Not after what happened. As if summoned by my fretting, officers guarding the perimeter of the building snapped their weapons up out of idle readiness to attention.

No… No… [Deimos: Ke ke ke.] [Belial: Speak of the devil.] [Rotlimb: Oh please, oh please…] [Diamondback: Not long at all, it would seem.]

They opened fire, and chaos ensued. My spinning pennies stuttered, almost falling to the floor. I almost melted the bullets before clamping down on the instinct. It might not be them. It could be the Teeth. It could be anyone attacking the PRT. But no. No, I could feel it in my bones, something unspoken, unshakable.

"Elle."

The wall swelled, a bulbous growth that grew from an amorphous mass into a shape I knew very well. [Footloose: Yo, what?] [Toro: Oooh…kay?] We had read so many books together over the months, among them the rest of the Narnia books, but that first one had always held a special place. But was it a lie? My heart clenched at the thought. [Footloose: Oh! Oh, y'all are into that, huh? Wouldn't have thought!] [Edict: Is that thing dangerous…?] [Deimos: Delicious.]

"Come, fortunate favorite of the Queen."

I grimaced, folding in on myself and only belatedly realizing Elle had begun to make the simply awful cot into a proper bed, its softness molding around me. God. Even after everything… she still cared? [Klaus: Get your mind out of the gutter, Foot!] [Toro: Fucking whatever. If this weird shit gets us out of here, then I'm all for it.] No! My attention snapped back to the fighting outside, where family was being shot at.

"Elle, please. This isn't helping. Just…" [Footloose: You ask the impossible, good sir.] [Rotlimb: Listen to your, uh, freaky wolf friend and get out of here!] Words failed me. If they were willing to go so far as to attack the PRT to try and break me out, then what could I say that would convince her to leave? [Butcher: Worthless, scared pussy.] "Just get everyone out of here." Useless. Pointless. Fuck. Fuck. "Go."

[Alchemist: Very eloquent, June darling.] The wolf's attention shifted, rising with its hackles. It was already pandemonium out there. What could be drawing her attention? [Deimos: Ke ke…] Had one of our friends been hurt? [Delible: Would you stop giggling like some sort of demented lizard clown?] What was hap—? I flinched, my eyes snapping up as well at the sheer velocity of what I'd felt. Was some—? Another?! [Deimos: I do as I please, Lethe cursed.] Two more bullets damn near exploded into my range, making it unequivocal. Someone was sniping out there. The PRT? Special ops units use— [Edict: Special ops units use—] … ugh, more of these unwanted memories... [Edict: —snipers for Blast… err, shit. Now I feel bad…]

The wolf's low growl as it stared up through the ceiling drew my attention, and my heart constricted all over again, the turmoil above us fading into the background. [Toro: Good, lean into that feeling, shitstain.] She didn't get it, did she? There was no rescue without a hostage. There was no love without… "Elle, please…" [Klaus: Oh, June, honey…]

"No." My pennies wobbled again, many falling to the floor. It was the wolf who had spoken, but not as Maugrim, the White Witch's captain. Tears pricked my eyes. Hearing Elle's voice after a week apart… Fuck, I hadn't realized how much I'd needed to hear her. I wanted to wake up from this nightmare, to just wake up already in her arms, to just let it all out as she held me tight. [Quarrel: Ugh. I'm gonna be sick.] [Belial: You can have that, Juniper. But you cannot have it here.]

The seal on the door released, and my heart nearly stopped as Legend walked into the room, his star flecked cloak of impossibly dark cloth almost floating around him. I hadn't seen him since after the fight, when I… when I surrendered to him. [Rotlimb: When you squished that girl like a bug, you mean.] I grit my teeth, and forced myself to focus on Legend as he asked, "Might I ask you to listen to your friend?"

Elle's construct bent its knees in response, one of its back legs crossing behind the other but otherwise didn't reply. [Rotlimb: Girl, that's a fucking compliment. You were straight savage!] Legend took it in stride, pressing on without concern, "Meteor is here of her own choosing. Please stop, or I must make you."

I nervously eyed the shadowy apparitions that had followed Legend in, and as expected, Strobe was among them. Basically every thread about the Triumvirate featured someone rekindling the old argument about whether he should still be counted as a member. But that was stupid, because how were you supposed to give hope if you were dead? No, Legend had inherited that role after Rukh killed Strobe. [Toro: Served him right getting dusted, the self righteous prick.] That power alone would probably be enough to take out everyone in our crew, and Legend had that plus two more I didn't recognize at his disposal. Elle had to—

I froze. All around the street above us, the metal in range began to shift and vanish. Street lamps, manholes, cars—everything I could touch up there was being subsumed. I knew this feeling. I knew it well. Elle was changing things. Fuck, it felt like she was changing everything. Changes of this magnitude, meant she was having a very, very bad day, and yet…

The wolf bared fangs of gleaming white. "No. Running."

… but she spoke. A construct speaking with its own voice was normal—hell, this one in particular spoke to me the night before Providence—but Elle spoke. Twice. [Klaus: Is… is that significant?]Very significant.

"I see." The apparitions shifted, and my breath caught in my throat. "I give you one last chance to recon—" [Footloose: Yo, they're about to fight over you! How flattering is that?!]

"Legend, sir, wait!" Therese? If I hadn't recognized the voice at the door, I doubt I could have pulled my attention away from the brewing conflict. I turned, and instead of the armor I expected, Therese was in casual attire, her clothes and hair disheveled and the domino mask over her eyes was askew, obviously hastily applied. "You'll want to hear this." [Klaus: Oh shit.] [Rotlimb: Well look who the cat dragged in.]

But it wasn't her who held my focus. That honor belonged to my mother, who stood next to her in full PRT officer attire, helmet tucked under her arm.

"Parley, Legend." Elena fixed Legend with a tight smile, her features on full display. Absolutely nothing hid her identity. [Butcher: Hn. The traitor comes to save her daughter. Surprise surprise.] [Belial: Ah, Elena, as expected. I wonder what she has conjured up to spirit you away, Juniper.]

Wha— But she's unmasked! Why?!

[Belial: Why indeed. This will be interesting.] "You are not one of my staff." Earlier, he had spoken with only his voice, but faced with an unknown aggressor, his words were layered as if spoken in sync by a ghostly choir. "Who are you?" [Rotlimb: She's just being a dumbass.]

"Elena Anders, at your service," she answered without hesitation, doubling down on revealing her identity and leaving me dumbfounded. "Though you would know me better as Heavensword." [Toro: What the fuck.] [Alchemist: Quite an interesting turn of events, one must admit.]

Klaus?? Do you have any idea what she's doing??

[Rotlimb: Hellooooo. Being a dumbass, like I said.] [Klaus: I have absolutely no idea…] Strobe shifted, but there was no sign of his signature blue-white lasers. Casual but ready, his expression made inscrutable by his shadowy body like all of Legend's apparitions. "I had expected you to be fighting amongst your compatriots," Legend remarked, his voice still ethereal. "To what do we owe the dubious honor of the Teeth's presence this evening?" [Rotlimb: I swear that crazy bitch is always doing shit that makes no fucking sense when it involves you.]

"I am here to negotiate the release of my daughter." [Rotlimb: See? Told you.]

"Ah, intriguing." Legend spared me a glance before returning his attention to Elena. His apparitions never once looked away from her. "Yes, I see that now. I presume you have a means of communicating with your people. Call them off, and we may parley."

"You presume incorrectly, nor would I, even had I the means. It would rather ruin my proposal." She looked away from him, her eyes casting over the ceiling with a gleam. "I shall begin by confessing I coordinated this little soirée. I used my sway over the Teeth to convince them of the lie that my daughter is the new Butcher and being held against her will by the PRT. More importantly, I did so within Labyrinth's range, knowing she would warn the rest of her teammates."

She… what? [Belial: Ah. Yes, I see.] [Footloose: Yo, I am so confused right now, not gonna lie.]

Elle's wolf did not appear impressed with her apologetic tilt of the head, but Elena forged ahead regardless. "You and yours do not trust me," she said, pointedly ignoring her own hypocrisy, "and you would not have listened, had I told you your planned jailbreak was almost certainly doomed to fail. And so I gave you what you expected, plans of perfidy, and maneuvered you towards our only true chance."

"I am ordinarily in favor of villains monologuing," Legend remarked, openly glib, "but lives are at stake. I will only entertain your theatrics for so long, Heavensword." [DZ: Wait wait wait. She wanted your team to believe she was betraying them, so they would betray her, which she needed in order to betray them? Am I getting that right?]

"Then I shall be brief. The Teeth are attacking your headquarters, and I will rain devastation upon everything and everyone nearby."

"Mother, stop it!" The words left my lips before I realized what I was saying—what I was admitting. [Edict: Ha…] [Rotlimb: Ugh. I'm gonna be sick.] I might have imagined the sheen in Elena's eyes, but I couldn't focus on that, couldn't take back what had been said. [Klaus: Oh Elena… How long has she waited to hear that…?] There was only the path forward. "Stop it right now. What is this madness supposed to accomplish?!"

Her lips twitched, the faintest hint of a smile. I had no doubt what she wanted to do, but she held back, refusing to lose sight of what was happening. "Because you and your crew, who were here to negotiate a mutually beneficial path forward, will openly capture us all and in so doing solidify public perception of yourselves as making a turn for the heroic. The PRT's PR dilemma will be at an end." [Caterpillar: Yes, that could work.] [Belial: Clever girl, is she not? I approve.]

You're mad, all of you! I sprang to my feet and gestured wildly at the concrete walls, as if to remind her what, exactly, I was really here for. "Even if the PRT went collectively insane and decided to play along with your lies, I refuse. I— I murdered Pan— Am— Goddammit, I belong in here! And I'm not gonna let you hold people hostage in some fucked up self-sacrifice ploy over me!" [Diamondback: Stop arguing against your own freedom.] [Toro: Jesus, would you quit it with the fucking pity party already?]

Elena stepped forward and lifted her hands, and I caught myself thinking she was beckoning me in for a hug. She gripped steel and drew it over the thin skin beneath her eyes, blood oozing freely in dark trails down her cheeks as a crown bloomed into existence upon her brow. "The past is dead. Don't cling to it like your foolish mother." [Delible: Oh, Elena…] [Diamondback: You are wasting her sacrifice for no reason.] Real tears mixed with blood. "All I have ever given you is pain and suffering. If I can at least give you back your future, then I will be satisfied." [DZ: Fuck, dude…]

"Why are you just sitting there?" I was not crying as I whirled on Legend. "All that power, you can stop all of this right now!"

"Why are you?" The choir was gone. Had he always sounded so small without them? [Klaus: It's no good, June. Elena will have covered every possible option. She had to know he would be here.] "What good is your remaining here? What ill does it spawn?" [Belial: You have been outplanned, Juniper.]

Elle's wolf stepped forward, and the walls meeting at the corner of the room began to curl in and away from each other, giving way to a rough hewn, cracked stairway covered in vines. A wrought iron gate littered with patches of rust slipped into existence at its apex as Elle's wolf tucked its head around my leg and tugged me towards it.

The last of my pennies fell to the floor, and I felt the tug—the fugue. [Toro: Goddammit…] [Klaus: No. June, no.] [Belial: Tsk.]

"You're afraid." I blinked, languid, my eyes drifting to Therese where she still stood by the cell door, alone. [Footloose: I dunno why y'all are gettin' pissy. Sixteen's super fun when she lets go!] "Of the harm you can do. Of not knowing what's you anymore."

I didn't reply. Couldn't. The words were too hard. I just needed… to sink. [Delible: C'mon, June, don't do this!] [Klaus: Fight it!]

"It's too much for just you, and having powers doesn't make that any better. You don't believe in yourself." [Butcher: Ugh.] [Alchemist: Thought we were getting somewhere for a moment… Alas.]

Sword Mother frowned. Disappointed. "This is not help—"

"But you're not doing this alone." The cute girl's hands glowed, pretty, pink and pastel. Then all of her. "Please forgive me."

She hugged me, and I woke up.

"Now let's go save your friends."



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Rust 7.a20 (Alexia)
Darkness. Trapped under rubble, a tub my tomb.

I screamed.

Had he made it? Was my little boy safe??

I screamed, but no one heard.

I couldn't hear him. I should be able to hear him, right? I couldn't hear him.

I screamed, but no one replied.

I pushed, but couldn't escape. I pulled, but nothing budged. I needed to get to my boy. I screamed—

Darkness. Specks of light littered it, but what were droplets to an ocean? The darkness swelled, consuming, and there was nothing I could do. How could an ant fight a god? It gripped me, nicked and bled me, and I screamed to the void for help. Two stars grew closer, and lighthouses on a distant shore. I reached for one, and though I had no hands, it saw me. Glorious and shining, it cast away the depths and filled me, destroyed and rebuilt me, its beacon.

—and the light answered.

I shone with it, and around me the rubble that trapped me was illuminated. I roared, defiant, and lashed out.

Reckless.

My light cut through the rubble in an instant, erased it as easily as it would the dark. The remnants shifted immediately, no longer stable, but I didn't care about that.

My baby boy. Blood and bone, crushed and scorched.

I screamed, and the light answered.

It erased the remnants of our home. Of my William.

But it couldn't erase Behemoth or what it had done. What I had done.



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Rust 7.b14 (Quarrel)
I'd been a hero, once upon a time. A punisher of the wicked and protector of the righteous.

I had been weak, so I learned what parts of the body subdued someone when hit. I had been caught and shot sneaking up, so I joined a local archery club to work from afar. I had some of the wicked I punished come back when they healed, so I started maiming instead of subduing. I had 'heroes' begin complaining about my methods, so I avoided working with them.

I'd had problems, so I had solved them. And Deimos, he had been a problem. One that grew stronger the longer it went unchecked, who the heroes could not and would not solve. And so I had tracked him, hunted him… And when the chance had come to solve the problem of Deimos once and for all, it was stolen from me by a self-righteous 'hero' who dared to claim moral superiority over me. My quarry escaped, and it returned worse than ever before as the latest Butcher. 'No one can be allowed to kill him,' the pretenders had cried, afraid to do what needed to be done, afraid they would be too weak willed to resist.

But I'd had a problem, and so I had solved it. I killed Deimos, the thirteenth Butcher, took on the burden; just another problem to solve. And in the days that followed, I finally realized there were no wicked, no righteous. There were only problems, and I could either solve them or be solved by them.

I'd been a hero, once upon a time. What a fool.

A/N: That's the last chapter this short for the remainder of Rust, and the end is in sight. Just three chapters to go!
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Rust 7.a21 (Alexia)
Warning: This chapter contains multiple suicide attempts and copious suicidal ideation. Please read with caution.



The battle was over. Suspended over the city, buoyed by a power I barely understood, I could clearly trace the still smoldering path Behemoth took from Long Island through Queens to Manhattan. Had it been after the Chrysler Building? Grand central? Not Rockefeller or the Empire State—its unstoppable, unwavering march had been in a near perfectly straight line. Whatever its aim, Brooklyn had come through nearly unscathed.

But not us.

I had to be thousands of feet in the air, but I could see it all with impossible clarity. The grocery and our little apartment block had been reduced to shattered brick and smoking, broken boards, identifiable only by its proximity to Cypress, the large cemetery a few blocks away. People had begun to leave the shelters, horror and terror on every face as they searched for loved ones.

All I could think of was blood and bone and the light erasing them.

A noise clawed its way up out of my throat, one I hadn't known I could make—that I feared I shouldn't be able to make. There, on the far side of Queens, I could see Far Rockaway. I traced the streets effortlessly, my eyes sliding over the survivors flooding the sidewalks and the street signs suspended over them. Not some strange facet of a power I didn't understand, but a far more mundane familiarity born of living here for years. There. The apartment we had shared with Elena.

Untouched.

"William Klaus Anderson." Could Elena hear me up here? See the pure light I had become? See the woman who had betrayed her to save our child… only to put him directly in the line of fire? "June 1st, 1995… November 6, 1996."

A name and a date.

I lifted the sliver of steel my light had cut from a car. I lifted it and set its edge against my throat. Wasn't it supposed to be harder? One little cut, and I'd become a name and a date. Maybe that was why that force of nature had marched through New York. To remind us how easily we die.

I'm sorry, William. I slit my throat.



… what…? No. No! I felt it! I felt it, goddammit!

My free hand groped my throat, blood smearing as my fingers blindly traced over every inch of it. No cut.

I jabbed the steel through. Left it there for good measure. The protrusions fell away, and my breathing began to grow erratic, as I fumbled for a solution. I just— I just needed to turn it off, right? Right! That was all! There—I could feel it inside myself, a switch set to on. I flipped it, and the light suffusing me vanished.

I plummeted.

I survived. The light returned, stopping me just above the pavement. I tried again, screaming at the light to leave me alone and let me die, but it kept coming back. Eyes were on me, people stopping to stare, all those eyes watching me never leaving staring won't stop won't let me die won't won't won't

I moved. I hadn't meant to. I didn't recall doing it either. Had I lost time? One moment I was hovering over the streets of Cypress Hills, the next I was at the park by the lighthouse. The park where the Butcher had attacked us. Where Klaus had killed him.

Untouched by the destruction, the tower loomed imperiously over the East River. The lighthouse's lantern was out.

I couldn't die. I had killed my son, but I couldn't kill myself. Could I drown myself? Or would the light drag me out, purge the water from my lungs? Would this curse ever be done with me?

I lifted into the air and over the river, carried by the light and its warmth, and came to a stop before the lighthouse. The power was out, I realized. Of course it was. And without it, there was no light. I reached out to touch the glass surrounding the lantern, tracing my fingers over the pane. The light in me began to swell. Would I run out? Could I give the city everything and just… stop?

The sun set. I didn't.

All night, I lit the waters of the river and the shores beyond them. No one came to investigate. I could only presume they had bigger problems to solve. The water ebbed and flowed beneath my rays, and with it, my breathing began to calm. Slowly. So, so slowly. But the more I gave and the longer I watched the river, clarity settled in.

I had killed my son. But so had Behemoth. The battle was a blur, my memories murky, but I remembered helping. I remembered struggling with what I could and couldn't do. I remembered striking that wretched beast until it fled.

I would kill it. I would use my power. Become better—stronger. Enough that someday I could hunt that monster down and kill it.

And when that day came… maybe I could finally die.

The sun rose, and with it the power returned. Behind the glass, the lantern flared to life, and my duty done, I rose into the sky.

My gaze lingered on the lighthouse below, and so did my thoughts. A half forgotten history lecture came to mind, and with it a name.

The Lighthouse of Alexandria.

I watched the lighthouse, and it watched me.



A/N: Y'all, I have been waiting for this moment for ages. What do you think of Alexia's journey? Love it? Hate it? Super fucking confused by it? You can tell me all about it here or on my Discord!
 
Rust 7.b15 (Sarah)
Warning: This chapter depicts a history of self-harming and shows an attempt to self harm. It also features graphic description of violence and the undoing of that violence, including first person perspective of being beheaded. Please read with caution.

Is this it? I thought as the car rolled to a stop next to the curb of the mall. The exterior was aging and dreary, but last I knew, management had begun revamping a few entrances on the far side. There was probably a metaphor to be found in fixing the outside before the inside.

"The mall closes in four hours. When shall I meet you here to pick you back up, Miss Livsey?"

"Closing is good," I absently muttered, already half out the door. The muggy June air seeped straight through my shirt, leaving me uncomfortably tugging my sleeves down. I hated doing this here, tainting good memories. Bittersweet, but good; memories of better days. But there were too many watchful eyes at home, and it was getting harder to find privacy at school.

"Miss Livsey…"

"Yes?" I fought down a frustrated huff. My driver that evening was a new hire—Helena, if I recalled correctly—who I neither knew nor gave a shit about. But I could just imagine my parents somehow catching wind of me being rude to the staff. I had enough to worry about from them already. "What is it?"

She turned to properly look at me, her voluminous black curls shifting with the gesture, nearly engulfing her neck. She gave me a look I couldn't parse. "You can always call me early, if you want. I'll bring you straight back home."

"Sure." I tried for a polite smile. "Thanks."

I won't be. I closed the door.

The car pulled away, and I turned back to the mall and headed in. The doors parted, and cold, blessed air conditioning pried me free from summer's grasp. I tugged my sleeves down, trying not to fidget as I oriented myself. There was a time, once, when I knew this mall like the back of my hand. Funny how it felt like a stranger. My feet carried me deeper into the building, and when I reached the fork, I briefly considered heading to the lingerie shop I had forced Reggie into last summer. Just to soak in the memories, to wallow in the past.

I scowled at the feeling of water pricking at my eyes. What good had crying done for Reggie when I was too late?

I pointedly turned left. Technically the bathroom down that way was a hair closer, but I didn't trust myself. One of the mall cops I passed eyed me longer than I liked, so I passed the first bathroom in favor of the one by the food court further down and carefully checked to make sure no mall cops were in sight when I slipped in. I heard a mother gently shushing a baby in the back stall, likely using the changing table. It was nice the bathroom was nearly empty but unnecessary. I was accustomed to managing at school; I could manage here.

I started towards an empty stall in the middle, but the unfamiliar girl in the mirror caught my attention. Dark blond hair pulled back in a loose, messy tail contrasted sharply with the high quality—if misplaced in the summer heat—long-sleeve shirt of banded white and gray that hugged her just right. Likewise, the almost dainty collection of freckles over the bridge of her nose didn't match the lips curled in a perpetual frown whatsoever. But it wasn't the mismatched, opposing elements of her appearance that truly caught me. It was the dark storm that lingered in her gaze, held back for fear of how much worse she would make things if stopped holding it in.

The mother exited the back stall, breaking the spell the mirror held over me. I brushed past her, ignoring her confused expression as I dipped into the stall I'd eyed before. Door shut and secured, I sat on the lid and pulled my sleeves up. I looked right at home, surrounded by the graffiti scratched into the dividers. I pulled my foundation compact out of my purse and jammed my fingernail into the thin groove lining the edge of the plastic casing, prying it apart with practiced ease. The contraband I'd hidden within would have sent my parents into a frenzy had they known.

The razor didn't glint in the dim light of the bathroom. It was dull, reflecting only my pain and failures. Admitting I had suspected something was wrong. Months of my parents' hate and accusations, of my every move being hounded. They needn't have bothered; I loathed myself enough for not finding him in time.

I plucked the small wedge of steel out of its hiding place and hesitated. Not about the what—only the where. It wasn't the first time I had second guessed myself, been tempted. I held the tip of the blade over my wrist. One cut. Life didn't have a reset button, but it did have a stop. I couldn't undo all the pain I'd caused, but I could make mine end with one cut.

But Reggie deserved better. And I deserved to suffer.

An explosion shook the building, the walls, the toilet, my wrist. The blade slid across my skin, but by a minor miracle, the explosion had prompted me to jerk back and away—I missed the artery.

"What the fuck?" Another explosion. Closer? I wasn't sure. I heard screaming in the distance. "What. The. Fuck?!"

I sat there, paralyzed with terror as the screaming grew louder. What was happening? We were in a mall. Why would there be explosions in a mall? A gas leak in the food court maybe? Terrorists? Should I make a run for it? Stay?

A third explosion rocked the room, making my decision for me as the aging infrastructure began to give up the ghost. I scrambled off the toilet, the compact clattering to the floor and coating my legs in a cloud as I fumbled with the stall door. I narrowly avoided a falling ceiling tile as I rushed for the exit, my heart in my throat. I reached for the door, and it flew open to meet me. The painted steel connected with my wrist first, nearly breaking it and barely slowed for it before colliding with my face. The bang of corroding steel against the wall felt distant as I was thrown to the floor, but the screams only grew louder as the woman from before rushed back in, her screaming baby clutched to her chest.

"Wha's—?" I nearly choked on a glob of blood and teeth before weakly coughing it up. "Wha's happ'n'n?"

The door opened, and I blinked, briefly believing the sight to be the result of my head trauma.

A great maw of fur and teeth stood within the door. Its focus fell upon me, and it was only when I saw the crooked, yellow grin inside of it that I recognized I was looking at a man. A man swathed in cloth and fur and blood. A man with bones arranged around his head like a predator's jaw.

A man who chucked a cheeseburger into the ruined remains of the restroom.

I stared, unsure what to make of the unspoken non-sequitur. Unsure why the mother's screams redoubled, her child wailing in her arms as she tried and failed to scale the mound left by the partially collapsed ceiling. Dazed as I was, staring at that yellow wrapper was likely the only reason I noticed the bolt of something as it flew through the air and stuck the burger.

I certainly didn't miss it beginning to swell and glow.

The door began to swing shut, the beast of a man leaving. The woman finally recognized the futility of trying to flee and settled on throwing her child up into the ruined ceiling. And I had no idea what that swelling cheeseburger meant. I lunged for the door anyway. I wasn't going to make it.

It was a strange feeling, coming to the end of a journey.

The door slammed shut, and pain beyond words overwhelmed me. I rolled to a stop, floor before me, blood to door. The beast man was shaking—laughing?—walking away. I breathed but couldn't, gasping, drowning. Reggie? Let me up, Reggie! It hurt—I hurt—please please please!

A tear escaped and crawled down my cheek—

I was alone—no Mom and Dad, no scars, no Reggie. There was only the abyss and the better days that haunted it, pinpricks in an empty void. Fury roared out of me like a peal of thunder. I didn't want to remember, to bear the weight of him anymore. It would be easier to only know the dark, to have never known the light of day. But I didn't deserve it. The light grew, twin starbursts in a world too small for their terrible magnificence, who wept when they laid eyes upon us. It was their mercy that cut them down, and it was their mercy that found me.

—only to reverse course, climbing back into me.

Blood. Bones. They came back like a river, flowing, under and around the battered steel door across the hall. The world lurched sideways, and life pried me free from death's grasp. My vision doubled with a wet squelch as an eye I only now realized had burst reformed and popped back into its socket. I felt with horrible clarity as vertebrae and nerves reconnected, as bones reformed from dust, as my blood slithered back into veins reborn.

I breathed. I breathed, and I screamed

I was drowning in the void, the light crushed and scattered, made mere motes, harbingers of the grave awaited creation. Where before I cast it away, now I welcomed it, but through the doors flung wide came the grave robbers with their stolen sparks, shards of a greater whole I could never dream of fathoming. They wept in the face of the end, mighty rivers built of their ill-gotten bounty, and I drank of the water.

— I blinked, slow and languid. Pieces of something were rushing towards me, and I was sideways…? I pushed myself to my feet, struggling to… remember…? Oh. Oh.

"What the fuck?" I was naked. I was naked, and people were screaming. "What. The. Fuck?!"

"Well fuck me." My eyes snapped up. A man stood down the hall, looking back over his shoulder with a hint of a dazed expression and an ugly leer, a toothy smile sat within a headdress of bones and fur arranged like the maw of a beast. He turned back to me, the large satchel slung across his chest shifting with the motion, tugging at the studs of his leather jacket. "You've got powers? This just got way more exciting!"

His hand dipped into the satchel, pulling out a… burger? A man like him makes a statement like that then pulls out fast food? It was dangerous, had to be. Right? My body was already in motion, even as I wrestled with parsing my own logic. Rushing forward while dodging as he chucked meat wrapped in bread wrapped in plastic, as something my eyes refused to focus on shot out of his finger after it. I was upon him in an instant and gripped the strap of his satchel, yanking hard and throwing him after his own projectile. As he flew down the hall, the satchel strap caught on his jacket again, tugging it and him off and sending him into a tumble that threw him headfirst into the floor well short of the burger swelling and glowing ominously.

How did I do th—?

The burger exploded. The force of the shock wave knocked me back and the breath out of my lungs, the only reason I wasn't left howling in agony as the remains of the tile floor tore into me. My exposed body was nearly flayed apart by the intact floor further down as friction dragged me to a stop. I heaved, greedily sucking in air, feeling faint. My everything hurt. What had—? The man. The burger. I needed to get away, I needed to get out of here, I needed… needed…?

I felt strange, like running water was slipping under and past me, except it stayed—it stayed, and the pain left and the… the something left too. I shook my head, trying to clear the cobwebs and grasp what was eluding me, but it was gone. With a sigh, I flexed my abs to pull myself upright.

My abs? I didn't— "What the fuck?" Forget the fucking abs, why was I naked? "What. The Fuck?!"

A groan drew my attention back to my surroundings, and I gaped at the chaos and destruction around me. The hallway half reduced to rubble, the jacket and bag in a heap nearby, and the man splayed over the floor further down the hall, his clothes cobbled together with bones and fur half scoured away and burns left in their absence. People were screaming somewhere nearby. Had there been a bomb? Bombs? I instinctively grabbed the jacket, throwing the heavy, studded leather over my shoulders in a vain effort to preserve my decency.

"God, I— I need to get out of here," I whispered to no one. Certainly not the broken man on the floor, his moaning continuing in refrain. "Get up, Sarah. Just get up. Get up, a-and go."

I pushed myself to my feet and pulled the jacket on properly after the movement nearly sent it slipping off my shoulders. I sprinted down the hall and away, sucking in deep breaths as I stepped out into the… mall? Right, I had wanted to come here, wanted to—what? Memories were elusive, like I was trying to grab water with a strainer. I should have been worried, horrifically worried that I couldn't recall what I had done that day, but all I could muster was a sense of unease and frustration.

Even caught up in my head as I was, I knew to run away from the screaming. There was no running away from the arrow that shot through leather and my shoulder alike, sending me tumbling from the sheer force of the strike. I'd scarcely hit the floor when the air beside me erupted in a ball of flame, instantly torching the skin not covered by leather.

"You. Who are you?"

I barely heard her over my torturous wail, let alone registered her words when my every thought was consumed by the sheer, unadulterated pain… flooding…? I shook away a sense of déjà vu, blinking at the sight of skulls strung on a cord of leather over samurai armor embellished with barbed blades and bone fragments. God, déjà vu?? How had it taken me even a moment to place where I knew this cape? I'd seen her on the news recently, hadn't I? An arrow clattered to the floor from somewhere as I scrambled back, my ass cheeks catching on the tile as I tried to put distance between myself and the Butcher.

"A regenerator." Past her, I could see Teeth everywhere, hunting and torturing mall patrons, watching their twisted festivities, looting—both stores and the bones of victims. But my eyes refused to focus on them, not with the Butcher herself looming over me, a bow the length of her height in hand with an arrow already nocked. "Interesting. What did you do with Spurt?"

"S-S-Spurt?" I shook my head, bewildered. "What? Who?"

Without warning, my world became pure pain. Nothing I had ever felt came close, not even breaking my arm on the playground as a child. How could a broken bone compare to the agony suffusing every last bit of me at once? There was no room left for thought, only blind, instinctive reaction. I flailed, I howled, I begged, I cried—

"Do not try my patience, girl."

It was tiny, the anger those tears birthed in me. Near infinitesimal measured against the pain that had provoked it, but it grabbed me and grew with vengeance, a spark on oil that burst into an inferno.

"Where i—?" She reacted before I was even in motion, the all-encompassing pain instantly vanishing as her wide eyes shot down to trace my foot as it arced towards her stomach. A pressure around my neck disappeared, and it was only as gravity asserted its dominance over me that I realized she had been holding me up by my throat. The world around me changed, and an explosive force tore into me even as I was baptized in flame.

The fracture of shattering ceramic tile, the whoosh of innocent mall foliage set ablaze, the rip and crack of leather and iron armor torn in two, the shouts of people rushing towards us. Over it all, it was the grunt of air escaping the Butcher that I heard as my foot slammed into her stomach, undeterred by the rest of me being ripped apart. And as we fell together, I pulled on the wrist I had never released, the wrist I had apparently grabbed while I was choked and flooded with alien agony. I pulled her, and as we fell into the broken shards let by our violent arrival, my fist met her. The painted metal of her mask fared no better than the armor over her abdomen, but again, it was no the sound of split steel that caught my ears—

— it was the crack as her head snapped to the side.

We collapsed, strings cut, the play over. Cue the curtain call to the tragedy. How had I even found my way here? What had I done to earn the attention of the Butcher? A rasp slipped out of me, as my head lolled. I didn't need to see the damage she had done to me. Every inch of me was screaming, and not because the dead Butcher next to me willed it. This puppet was done, spent, and the hands that had made me dance were content to let me burn, return to the ashes…

"Ah, I see." My eyes cracked open with a wince at the harsh glare of exposed fluorescent bulbs above me. A shadow passed over me, and I blinked, bleary-eyed but relieved from the shade. "Another is crowned."

"See what?" I slowly sat up, tired and confused. "Where am I?"

"You are here, quite naturally." I turned to give the unfamiliar voice a look for daring to sound so amused while waking me up from my apparent catnap, but stopped short at the feeling of ash and hot tile shifting under my butt and heavy cloth draped over my bare thighs.

"What the fuck?"

Standing in a silent circle around me were unknown men and women wrapped in cloth and leather, all adorned with blood and bone. The person who had spoken was knelt beside me, a bloody tooth resting in the palm of her hand. Her cheeks were lined with tears of caked blood and caressed by a spiked crown of dull, dark steel, but it was her eyes that grabbed me. Hurricanes caught for a time, death suspended until the right moment.

"What. The. Fuck?!"

She rose to her feet as the sound of sirens reached us, and gestured to the people surrounding us—to the Teeth—scattering them. An injured one lingered, his costume and headdress of bones and fur ripped and scorched clothes sparking overwhelming déjà vu, but he left a moment later.

"I apologize for this unfortunate introduction." I blinked, bewildered by the hand up she offered me. "Come, we must leave."

Maybe it was the thought of how much fuel it would add to the fire that was my life, of trying to explain how I woke up at the mall surrounded by Teeth, with only the shredded remnants of a leather jacket and a bolt of dark blue cloth to protect my modesty. Or maybe it was her eyes and how they reminded me of the girl in the mirror, of the fear that every day I kept going, I would keep making things worse.

Maybe that was why I took her hand.

A/N: And that's a wrap on track B. We have one chapter left, the conclusion of track C, then Rust will finally be done. Depicting Sarah's resets from a first person perspective was a very novel form of narrative irony—we learn information along with her, then she forgets. I hope it was as interesting to read as it was to write!

What do you think of Sarah's trigger and the events surrounding it? Love it? Hate it? I'd love to hear your thoughts here or on my Discord!

A quick side note: I went back and tweaked Elle's interlude because it really wasn't working for me on reread. You may want to go back and give it another look over.
 
Rust 7.c9 (Therese)
This was originally supposed to go up last week. It was also originally supposed to be perhaps half the just over 8600 words it now is. Hopefully that makes up for the delay.

Warning: This chapter contains dead naming, transphobia both from others and self-facing, and pretty heavily depicts suppression of gender dysphoria and the depression that evokes. Please read with caution.



I couldn't remember exactly when I had realized I was different from other boys, but I did know the exact date, the exact moment, I realized my parents wouldn't accept me for it.

I sat my phone down on the side table, trying to swallow down my nerves. We had finished the dinner the staff provided an hour ago. I had been probed about how my academics were going while we ate, and afterward we had all retired to the sitting room where they both dove into their work without a further word. Another day in my gilded cage. And come Saturday, I'd be on a flight back to school, my chance gone. It was now or never. "Father…? Mother…?"

When one grew up the heir to a prosperous family-run and -owned company, there was no such thing as school break. That isn't to say we never went on vacation, though I remain convinced most, if not all, of the trips we took were just shows of status, no different than my constantly updating designer clothes. No, I meant that I had no life outside of the one my parents were shaping for me. Elite boarding school, personal tutors, leadership camps, etiquette lessons—my parents were sculptors, and I was their marble to shape.

"Yes, Dean?" My mother looked up from her tablet, stylus tilted in her hand as she regarded me. Father remained fixated on his laptop, but I perhaps had half his attention. He thought himself a multi-tasker, and maybe it was true. Maybe I was just selfish, wanting his eyes on me instead. "What is it?"

We had been in LA for a conference on emerging trends in the tech sector. Or rather, my parents had been, and I was brought along as well. As a rising middle schooler, I had apparently reached the age where I needed to begin learning how to handle myself in business situations, and my parents had deemed the conference 'low stakes' enough for me to practice. It went without saying that it was a test. But if it hadn't been for one particular moment on that trip, I don't doubt it would have become just another hazy memory of a childhood sacrificed upon the altar of capitalism and high class society.

"I, uh—" I faltered, and in doing so had already failed. My mother's eyebrows lifted by the slightest margin, nigh unnoticeable if one didn't know what to watch for. My father's eyes flicked up towards me, lingered for a moment, then returned to his laptop. A charitable reading of their reactions might conclude they could tell I was anxious about the topic I wanted to discuss and were giving me space to speak. But all I heard was echoes of my decorum tutor's silent judgment for using an unintended filler word.

That moment began so innocuously that my memory of how it started remains hazy to this day, not at all like what followed. As we rode the elevator from the penthouse down to the lobby to depart for the conference, two women had gotten onto the elevator. Looking back on it later, I might have noticed they looked a bit different. But regardless of whether hindsight had colored my memory, I had identified them as women then returned my attention to my posture, knowing Mother was likely watching me and taking note. A perfectly normal, everyday occurrence—right up until my parents hurried me out of the elevator.

"I need to tell you something," I forced out. I was already admitting weakness; compounding that with failures would only make this harder, would make them more likely to reject me than they already were.

Had we been late, I wondered? My parents never rushed and were never late, but it wasn't an altogether alien concept—merely incompatible with my view of my parents. I might have asked, but I nixed that the moment I had glanced up to Mother in confusion only to find her expression stony. I learned why a few minutes later once we were in the back of the car and Father had sealed the divider between us and the chauffeur.

"Any further delay, and we'll die from suspense." If one was unfamiliar with Father, they might have laughed at the deadpan delivery. I recognized it for what it was; a mask to hide his impatience.

The women had been men—crossdressers, deviants, abominations—Father had informed me. People who had no business being in such an establishment, Mother had added. And as they went on to explain the signs to look for, what to do if I encountered one, and so on, it took every fiber of self-control that had been drilled into me to keep my face placid, to 'mhm' and 'yes' and 'I understand' in all the expected places.

Any further delay, and I might not say it. Might let it lie another day, week, month, year. Might keep the truth trapped in my chest, where it would wither and die, where the rot of its corpse would contaminate me, poison me, until I too died. Because when the only choices left were certain death or an impossibly thin ray of hope, the odds of failure stopped mattering.

Because once upon a time, a little girl that everyone thought was a little boy was told by her parents that she was an abomination. "I'm trans."


Brockton Bay was an oddity in New England. The ocean to the East and the hills enclosing the city on all other sides meant the Spring evenings weren't cold enough to kill the unprepared.

It was easier to imagine I hadn't been allowed to pack a bag or take a coat because my parents knew I wouldn't meet my end at the weather's hand.

They threw me out. I felt numb, staring at the gate to our property. Their property. The metal bars gleamed with the bloody light of the sun setting behind me. A distant part of me knew I needed to find somewhere to stay overnight, but— but surely this was just another of their tests? Or if it wasn't, then cooler heads would prevail? They wouldn't really throw me out…?

I wasn't sure how long I waited, not without my phone. Long enough for the sun to finish its retreat. Long enough for the light in my parents' bedroom to turn off.

"They threw me out." The bars were cold in my grip. Wild laughter bubbled up out of me. How long had I wanted a life outside these bars, outside the cage I had been born into, and now I wanted back in?

I hadn't put together any sort of supplies. I'd been only just keeping it together, and acknowledging the very real chance—likelihood—of being disowned would have sent me teetering into the abyss. Damned by my own ineptitude, I made my way to the nearby park, the only place my brain could scrounge up right then. I settled on a small copse of trees off the path I could only barely make out in the thin moonlight, and I eased myself into the groove between two of the thick roots sinking into the cold dirt.

Where would I sleep tomorrow? A shelter? Would they ask for ID? They had to, I was a high school freshman, clearly not an adult, so they'd want ID, and I wouldn't have it, and they'd call the police, and they'd find my parents, and I'd fail the test because this had to be a test, it was always a test, so no—no shelter, no. So I needed to find somewhere warm to sleep because I was so cold, and I didn't know if I could do this another night, and oh—oh, what about food? I wasn't hungry now, dinner wasn't so long ago was it? (I didn't know) But I was going to be hungry, and that meant I needed food, and I would be hungry before I needed to sleep, so that meant food, then food two more times for lunch and dinner too, then sleep, then all over again until the test was over. (It was always a test).

I blinked. The sky above me had begun to turn… blue? I slowly pushed myself up out of the roots, confused and drained. My body heavy, I eventually climbed to my feet and stumbled past the tree trunks and found burnished hues creeping over the skyscrapers dominating downtown. Sunrise—I hadn't slept. I thought of the boys in the dorms back at Horizons Academy, of being roped into all night movie marathons the night before break and falling asleep on the flight home, of fanciful dreams where I was made into a girl for some outlandish reason, of my parents being forced to admit it was all beyond my control, of there being no choice left but to just be a girl. I hadn't failed the test—the test had failed me.

My stomach growled, and I put one foot in front of the other. I couldn't eat dreams.


It took me three weeks to realize I had failed.

I met Gin and Hana on my third day, an older pair of homeless, who took pity on me. They were cautious of me—of my clothes, I later learned, which marked me as not one of them—but two nights of fitful rest in the dirt and grime had sullied the image enough to inspire doubt. My desperation had done the rest. They showed me the ropes, let me crash in their tent at the abandoned ferry station, let me use the heavy shawl Hana had found in a dumpster behind a boutique on the boardwalk some years ago, apparently so out of style it couldn't even merit the discount rack. Perfectly serviceable clothes, thrown away instead of being donated. It was no blanket, but what little warmth it afforded me during those cool nights left me feeling like a queen.

It all came to an end two weeks later. It wasn't cops chasing me down for rummaging through dumpsters like I'd feared. It wasn't my parents somehow finding me and welcoming their daughter home after passing their test like I'd hoped. It wasn't anything particularly special about my newfound homelessness whatsoever. I was hit by car. Running a red light, because of course they were.

A car driven by my parents' CFO.

He didn't run. He called 911 when I couldn't stand, and he gave the EMTs his insurance information while they loaded me onto a gurney, and he apologized to me and wished me a swift recovery, and he was telling the officers called to the scene what happened as I was wheeled away—

—and he acted like he had never met me in his life, like I hadn't dined in his home more times than I could remember, like he hadn't given me personal lessons on financial investment at my parents' behest.

"I'm Dean!" I shouted at him, as I was loaded into the ambulance, the name like ash in my mouth after Gin and Hana had used my name, had called me Therese, after I had been me for two weeks, but I needed him to see me—! And he did. He looked right at me, and the officer did the same and asked if he knew me.

"No."

I wanted to scream and shout, to get answers, but the EMTs did something, then I was limp and loose, limbo swallowing me. And they asked about my family, and I don't know what I told them before I woke up, my side sore and the lights bright. The nurse asked me about my family, and I thought of the man I had known, who had lied directly to the police, and before I knew it, I was rattling off the name of the CIO. And when they came back and said she didn't know me, I gave the CPO instead, and he said he didn't know me either—

Name after name, denial after denial. People I had eaten with and learned from, people who had told bad jokes I politely laughed at, people I had loathed but pretended to like anyway, people who I had known for years and years. And with each name I gave the staff, each denial it bought, the staff grew more distrustful. A patient advocate came to speak with me, to reason with me. "I want to help you, but I need to know who your parents are, 'Dean,'" and I could hear the quotes around my name when she used it. And as much as I hated that name, as much as I never wanted to use it again, it was me, the mask I took off to feel free, that I needed to wear again.

"Dean Stansfield," I whispered, not looking at her. I couldn't stand looking at all the little tells, the skepticism she was trying and failing to hide. "I'm Dean Stansfield."

"I thought you might say that." That got my attention, dragged over my unwilling eyes. Her expression sent dread trickling down my spine, ice pooling in my chest. "We can notice a trend, 'Dean.' It's impressive, memorizing so many names from the Stansfield Systems org chart like that."

I know them, I wanted to say, to scream and shout. But there was no point.

She showed me an article from the newspaper. The lie that two weeks ago, my parents had unexpectedly pulled me out of boarding school in the middle of the semester, citing health concerns necessitating home schooling for the foreseeable future.

It had taken me three weeks to realize I had failed the moment I admitted I was trans.

"'Dean'?" She waited for me to respond. But I couldn't. "Okay. I'll let you get some rest then. But if you change your mind, if there's anything I can do to help, you can use the bed phone to call my extension, okay?"

She scribbled 'Yelena #0320' on the room's whiteboard and left after one final look over her shoulder, her black curls disappearing around the corner. Dinner came a minute later, and I aimlessly picked at my fried green tomatoes until I eventually drifted off, exhausted with failure.

I dreamed of my parents, of tests, of darkness and stars, and when I woke up, I had powers.


"PRT non-emergency line. How may I assist?"

Having powers meant I had options, choices I hadn't had when I fell asleep. I could be an independent hero or a rogue, though things would be very rough until I got well established, perhaps even then. Vigilante laws gave independent heroes some leeway with what they could do with money secured from villains during their capture, but I'd heard there were lots of caveats, and the nature of the 'income' could obviously be sporadic.

"Hi, yes." I winced, clearly envisioning my parents staring me down. "I-I have powers. And I, uh—" I winced again. "—didn't have them yesterday?" A lovely summarization.

Rogues had less limitations that I knew of, and I could envision a few careers where sensing emotions could be beneficial—less so for my energy blasts I intuitively sensed I could make but dared not test while trapped in a hospital bed. I could be a therapist, an interrogator, a lawyer… just about any job where having a sense of what someone else was feeling would be helpful, really.

"Okay, understood," the operator replied, his tone shifting slightly. I felt a small twinge of annoyance that I couldn't identify what he was thinking as easily as I had seen my morning nurse's mild frustration laced with frantic worry and weariness. "Are you calling to inquire about joining the Wards?"

But being a hero, joining the Wards, that appealed the most. I could help people without needing to charge them and without needing to worry about meeting my basic needs. I could have room and board while saving money, and maybe… maybe I could have a fresh start.

"Yes, b-but, I need more info." The words practically tumbled over each other out of my mouth. My cheeks burned with the shame of failure, of judgment I couldn't shake. "I'm at Bayside, room—" I checked the board the advocate had written her number on "—1803. My parents, they're… please, they can't know."

That hardly did the situation justice. I could only hope it was enough. "I understand. There are some special circumstances where that may be appropriate. Our field rep is on the way and will be able to make a better determination."


It wasn't.

"Thank goodness you've found him!" my mother said as she rushed past the PRT field rep to my side, perfectly playing the part of the worried sick mother. Disgust, deceit, determination—her colors, cold and contracted, swam and shifted so rapidly I had trouble keeping up. "Dean, love, are you okay?"

"I'm terribly sorry for the hassle," I heard my father tell the rep by my room's door in hushed tones, his apparent relief contrasting starkly with the greedy glee that dominated most of his aura.

My parents were the CEO and CMO of a lucrative tech company, and it wasn't because they were stupid.

"Emotion reader, hm?" my mother whispered into my ear, as she leaned in to wrap her arms around me.

"We pulled him out of school after a breakdown on campus," my father lied with such ease I almost believed him, almost doubted my own sanity. "All this powers business… We hadn't expected he'd just walk out in the middle of the night."

They hadn't just disowned me for being an abomination. They had also sown the seeds of the perfect cover story, just in case.

"You threw me out," I croaked, too quiet for the rep to hear. I wish I had yelled. Shouted. Screamed. But would it have made any difference?

"What are you talking about, dear?" she hummed into my ear, the tone dissonant against my thoughts, out of time with my thundering heart.

"I've spoken with our staff, adjusted responsibilities. We'll make sure he's kept at home until he's better."

They would have security footage from the night I was thrown out, artfully edited to show only what they wanted. They'd have pulled strings with their C-Suite, who would all suddenly recognize me, all with believable excuses for why they didn't recognize me before.

At home. Satisfaction and vindictiveness. Where they controlled the narrative. Each flowed into the other. Controlled everything. Looping endlessly. Where they could do anything. "I—" Anything they wanted to me. "I—" ANYTHING THEY WANTED.

Something was beeping.

"You're welcome to do so, but the Wards program is happy to cover—"

"I'm sure the PRT's therapists are experts where powers are concerned," my mother interjected, her hand on my arm nearly as cold as the emotions wrapped around her heart, "but I think our boy needs better care than that."

More beeping. I needed— needed to say— needed—!

"If you're— I'm sorry, nurse? Nurse?!"


In the end, I didn't join the Wards. Dean Stansfield did.

There were mornings when I'd wake up, and nothing felt real. When I looked in the mirror, Dean Stansfield looked back. When I looked in my closet and drawers, I found Dean Stansfield's clothes. When I went to the abandoned ferry dock in Downtown, I never found Gin or Hana. When I went to my parents' parties, everyone knew Dean. When I unmasked to my teammates, they met Dean. When I had therapy, we talked about Dean's week, Dean's dreams and fears.

And my parents, they loved Dean. They were more successful than ever with Dean's help. Mandatory family bonding time, part of the agreement their lawyer struck with the PRT. And Dean's parents loved bonding with him when they were at the negotiating table. Not with him, of course, that might have made the PRT bring down the hammer of NEPEA-5. But he could see auras just fine through walls, and if he happened to talk about the pressure points and weaknesses when there was microphone nearby and broadcasting directly into their hidden earpieces… Well, that was just the best way to bond with them.

And Therese? She was no one. A fiction made up as a coping mechanism, Dean's therapist told him. Understandable for a young boy under so much pressure to succeed.

There were mornings when I'd wake up, and nothing felt real.

"What? I'm hungry."

But June, she taught me to dream again.

"Good. You've arrived." Armsmaster started towards Faultline and Meteor, and I dutifully followed while puzzling over the conundrum in front of me.

Of course, I hadn't known her name was June at the time. Meteor, she called herself. A new cape in the city who had made some waves with the local gangs before joining Faultline's mercenary outfit. A maybe-Tinker, definitely-Shaker I had been brought along to help assess. A girl whose voice and body seemed… off from the footage I'd found of her in my preliminary research, different in ways that didn't quite fit the transition from a recording to the real deal.

A girl whose aura was utterly mesmerizing.

"As promised."

If I had been asked to summarize Meteor's feelings in that moment, 'unfettered elation' would have been the best response I could muster.

"Indeed. Let's keep this short. The boots, if you would?"

Every move she made, everywhere she looked, her aura radiated unadulterated joy, the lovely pastel pink dominant in a way I so rarely saw, the depth of her aura boggling to behold. She was feeling everything so intensely, her aura so saturated, that I wasn't sure if I had ever met someone feeling so much at once.

Meteor whined, need and affront welling up in her, not even remotely dissuaded by Faultline's, "Meteor," in rebuke.

This was her boss, her source of income. She was a new cape, likely in dire straits if the petty robbery we'd tied to her was any indication. She needed this woman's support right then. And she stood up to her as easy as breathing.

"But I'm hungry!" And she was. She was… intensely hungry, the need I'd never seen anything like it.

Before I knew it, I was feigning a chuckle, a half-baked excuse tumbling out of me. "I must confess I'm interested in some food as well."

Armsmaster paused. Was he consulting his lie detector? God, why had I said anything? I was a bit peckish… Hopefully it was enough.

My heart skipped a beat before he grunted, "Faultline?"

"I was planning to let Meteor get food while we were here anyway," she began, her irritation softened by the fondness bleeding through it, "but I suppose we could join you."

Disaster averted, my attention moved back to Meteor and dissecting her enchanting aura as she began to order her food. I'd seen the shade of her joy, but never so much all at once. Feminine pride. Why? Why was she feeling it so strongly? It made no sense! I'd almost exclusively seen that shade at clothing stores, the few school dances Victoria had dragged me to, flirting in the halls—times when girls leaned into their femininity. Meteor's costume had a skirt, but it hardly exuded femininity, so why…?

"That covers it, yeah? I'll take my change in coins."

Having missed most of her order, I was shocked to notice the $18.03 on the register's screen. "Wow. That's… a surprising amount of food for a girl your size."

Worry. Gratitude. Mild deceit. And beneath and over and through it all, that feminine pride surged.

"Well I was dieting until recently, but my doctor told me, um—" Oh. Oh. "—I was overdoing it and needed to stop for now."

Everything clicked into place. Her suddenly long hair. Her seemingly different proportions.

"I… see."

And Amy Dallon's complete one-eighty.

"Do you think…?" I started to ask, the words escaping me before I could stop them. Too late. Too late to take the words back. Too late to stop me from dreaming again.

"Think what?" Meteor asked, a gentle confusion rippling over her overwhelming pride in how far she'd come.

"Do you think she could do me too?" "No, never mind. I'm sure your doctor can handle it."

Meteor was a terrible liar. "Not interested, sorry. Trade secret."

She was irreverent. "And I am obligated to not give you the finger."

She was outrageous. "She's saying I'm a crude bitch who speaks what's on her mind."

She was a messy eater. "Hughly scheet, dhish eesh gooooo!"

She was a back-talker. "Whaaa? But take-homesies!"

But one thing she was most definitely not was an abomination.

"It was nice meeting you or whatever!"

I think I successfully masked my laugh with a cough.

It was nice meeting you too.

And if she wasn't… then maybe I wasn't either.


"Please tell me you're joking."

She wasn't.

"I wish I was," Hannah said with a grimace, her aura a complicated swirl of sympathy, vicarious anger, and a myriad more colors competing for dominance. It was a cold comfort that she was handling this instead of Colin.

My hands trembled as I pulled the paperwork closer, colored tabs and obnoxiously bright yellow 'sign here' arrows jutting out of it. Years of experience at my parents' negotiating table had my eyes instinctively processing the tidy table of contents at a glance. Dossiers for potential relocation cities. Rebranding ideas from marketing. Application for a GED. The forms for a legal name change order.

"It's out of my hands." I didn't need my power to hear how much she hated to admit that. "They've… at least given you a few cities to choose from. New York is on the table—learning from Legend could be a game changer for you."

I had already changed my name legally. Missy had given me such a big smile—and meant it!—when I told her it was the best Christmas present I'd ever gotten.

"They're just— just rumors." I knew it wouldn't make a difference. But I couldn't stop the words or the tears from coming. "I can— I could take a few months off, just rebrand, not— not—"

Not change my name.

"Therese—" Her aura shifted, shame and sympathy mixing with her resignation as I failed to completely suppress an involuntary sob. She'd realized too late that she had stepped onto a land mine, but she at least had the decency to nudge the tissues closer without otherwise drawing attention to my cracking hold on my emotions. "I'm so sorry, but it isn't. The PHO moderators have been doing their best to keep up, but you know how the internet is. Reporters have caught wind of it and are pressing for comment."

I hiccuped and pulled away from the paperwork. I couldn't meet Hannah's eyes. She'd left unsaid my parents' response. I hadn't heard from them since my eighteenth birthday just three days ago, but their company's press conference that same day had made their position quite clear. "Clarification in light of our child coming of age," their spokesperson had called it. I called it airing our dirty laundry in public, using the truth about our strained, non-existent relationship to obfuscate the lie that I hadn't had a future in their company for years.

I abruptly shot to my feet, practically tripping over my chair as I all but fled. Hannah didn't follow. That was good. I didn't want her to see me like this.

I stumbled down the hall, nearly swearing when I realized that meeting with Hannah in the Ward's wing meant I hadn't brought my helmet, a mask, anything that could hide I was crying. I started hurrying down the hall, rubbing furiously at my eyes in a vain attempt to scrub away the evidence. I passed the gym, the overnight dorm in sight. I just needed to get to my room before—

Light hunger and mild boredom came into view ahead as Missy emerged from the kitchen with a plate of snacks. Shit! I whirled around, but I'd seen the surprise and worry overwhelm her boredom.

"Tee?" I ducked into the gym, a last futile effort. No such luck. I felt the air behind me shift as she used her power to shorten the space between us down to a single step. She caught the door, following me in. "Tee, what's wrong?"

"Nothing!" I forced myself to say as I started towards the punching bags at the back of the room. The wall was floor to ceiling glass panes behind them, the city outside glittering in the setting sun. "Thought I'd get in an evening workout. Missed the door for the gym."

I didn't need my power to know she didn't believe that one bit. Her tone said it all, clear as day. "You're wearing jeans and a blouse."

"I-Impromptu." I would never—never—regret starting HRT, but I could have really done without the mood swings right then. I forced a laugh out as I reached the bags. I sounded like a balloon losing air. "Never know when Empire might try and jump me!"

Fuck, what the fuck was I saying?

She pulled the door closed, and I heard the lock turn. "C'mon, don't— I thought we were…"

"Dammit, Missy, I just—" Everything was out of control, my life, my breathing—dammit! I started punching one of the hanging bags, my half-ass excuse abruptly becoming real. "I just—" punch "This isn't—" punch "I just need—!"

DAMMIT! I snapped out another punch, hitting the bag as hard as I could. A blast the size of my fist gave it enough kick to smack into the ceiling with a plasticky thwack. I twisted on my heel, shifting out of the way of the bag's downward arc and rounding on my wide-eyed teammate.

"My parents have all but disowned me! I knew they didn't love me—had never loved me—but I thought that maybe they could at least love what I could do for them! Piggot wanted me transferred to another city when I came out, did you know that? Everyone wanted me to transfer, get me out of this hellhole, nazi-infested city, make a clean break, be a different hero. I told them no so I could stay, no so I could try and salvage something with my parents. And look what that got me!"

I only half noticed I had started pacing, the repetitious back and forth draining my steam. But I couldn't stop. Not yet. "I used my power for them, figured out how to pressure other companies into better deals! You know what that means, right? That's illegal! It was i-illegal, and I—I don't even know how many times I did it. I'm a c-c-criminal. I l-l-let t-them use me, and— and— and people somehow know I'm Gallant, and now I— I have to— to change—"

"Fuck them."

I started, shocked out of my devolving ramble. "W-What?"

"Fuck. Them." Missy jabbed a finger out the window in vaguely the direction of my parents' headquarters. "They don't get to tell you what to do!"

"It's not them though! It's—" Actually, maybe my parents were the source of the leak? Perhaps they had begun to fear the fallout if I revealed what I'd done and had preemptively triggered it while they could control the outcome better? That wasn't the point though. "—Piggot and Image, they're putting their foot down. Someone keeps leaking my identity. They want me to change cities a-and my name."

God bless her, she barely hesitated. "I repeat: Fuck. Them."

The image of Missy marching into the Image department downstairs and telling them all to fuck off left me giggling more than a little hysterically. "Missy?"

"They can force you to move—that's theirs. But your name—either of them!—that's yours. Yours, got it?"

All momentum lost, my resolve crumbled. I flopped down against the glass pane, the sleek surface cool against my flushed neck as I finally let myself cry. As it turned out, crying wasn't quite as bad with a friend.

It helped that she had a plate full of thin mints.

"I might have stolen these from Dennis," she admitted in a dramatically hushed, conspiratorial tone. "He bought two dozen boxes! Two dozen! He's not gonna miss one."

Helping my parents violate NEPEA-5 was decidedly not on the same level as pilfering Girl Scout cookies. Missy had to know that. She also had to know that with my identity doomed to becoming public, that 'Therese Stansfield' couldn't just move to a new city without people connecting me to whatever new hero identity the PRT foisted on me. I'd be dooming myself to the whole cycle repeating itself.

I gamely tried to meet her halfway, though my warbly voice easily undercut my weak, attempted humor. "As a hardened criminal myself, your secret is safe with me."

I popped the last of my cookie into my mouth then froze. Wait.

"Excellent." She passed me another, missing that I was suddenly a million miles elsewhere, and bopped her own against mine in a faux toast. "Then we have a pact, fellow ne'er-do-well."

June. What if… What if I joined Faultline's crew? I'd mostly used ball-shaped blasts as Gallant, but I could change that easily, and my emotion-sensing wasn't public knowledge at all. The PRT would put two and two together, but the general public? That was a lot less likely, especially if I leaned hard into a very different cape persona. Could I do that though? Not 'would they let me,' but could I do that? Loosen my morals, use my powers for profit? I had debated it when I triggered…

Rationally, I knew that pondering whether to give up being a hero to become a mercenary wasn't why the Endbringer alarms went off. That didn't stop me from feeling like it had. It didn't stop my guilt.

And it didn't stop me from seriously considering leaving.


I thought I had made the right choices.

I can't stop this cape alone, I had thought as I went to Meteor for help stopping Loki, ignoring every sign something was dreadfully wrong with her.

She can help them after, I had thought as I convinced her to help me first instead of her teammates, dooming Faultline to bleed out.

We need to end this now, I had thought as I ignored that she was regenerating after crippling injuries, a power she hadn't had before.

These people need immediate medical attention, I had thought as I let her fly off after, unknowingly sending her off to find Faultline on the verge of death.

This needs to end, and she needs to know she's in control, I had thought as I set her on the path to making Nothung flee, to letting her fall right into Amy's arms.

She needs the truth, and Victoria needs it too, I had thought as I argued Meteor's mother down from murdering Amy on the spot, letting her daughter hear exactly what I thought she needed to hear.

I thought I had made the right choices. Made them with good intentions.

But good intentions didn't stop the consequences. Didn't stop the sound of Amy's scream from ringing in my ear or the image of June's horrified face from haunting me as the rest of the Wards left to go home, as I paced the hall outside her cell, as I desperately tried to remember what parahuman law attorneys I knew.

Didn't mean I hadn't failed.

I was falling, buried beneath my failures, trapped in a grave of shadows with the dull embers of everything I'd done, every one of my hopes and dreams. It was all so little, in the end. And at what cost? I couldn't find my way in the dark, couldn't walk that path again even if trusted myself to. I gave up and was glad for it, and in my acceptance, they found me. Lights more numerous than I could count, than I could ever have imagined. I remembered. Remembered they had trusted me, remembered the child they had entrusted to me, who had watched and learned and grown.

"—llant?" I groaned, heavy. Where…? "Gallant, are you okay?"

"I'm fine," I lied, trying to shake off whatever had come over me.

"You've been here for hours, kid." It took me a moment to place the aura as Cache, one of the Protectorate here. We'd only met briefly… before…

His aura was behind me.

He started ferrying me forward to where the elevators were down the fall. "C'mon, you need sleep. You've been up for, what, a day and a half?"

"I…" Beside me now. I wasn't looking at him. I wasn't looking at any of the auras I felt all around us. What? "But—"

"No 'buts.' And don't get back up until you've had some proper sleep, or I'll get Standstill to make you stay in one place until you do."

Behind us, June's shifting aura got further and further away.


To say it was unnerving, being mere steps away from the crossfire of an argument between so many dangerous people, did not do my feelings justice. Legend, a member of the Triumvirate with an absurd number of incredible powers at his disposal. Labyrinth, a cape so strong in the right conditions that the PRT had designated her a Shaker 12. Heavensword, a woman whose ruthlessness more than made up for any deficit between her own considerable strength and the two titans to whom she stood opposed.

And Meteor. June. My friend who could now obliterate a city if she wanted.

I shouldn't have been there. I should have fled the moment I had led the disguised Heavensword to her daughter. I should have trusted Labyrinth to convince her friend—her girlfriend, if perhaps no longer—to stop wallowing. I shouldn't have been there. I shouldn't have been allowed to speak, to make more choices, more mistakes.

But my friend needed help. "You're afraid."

June's gaze slowly drifted to me. Her aura was difficult to decipher, even after I'd changed, but I didn't need my powers to understand the haze of detachment settling over her slackening features.

"Of the harm you can do." She needed help, and for all their power, these three didn't understand what she was feeling. They didn't understand what it was like to be so scared of hurting what you cherish that you're left paralyzed, so scared of yourself that you can't act. "Of not knowing what's you anymore."

But I did.

"It's too much for just you, and having powers doesn't make that any better. You don't believe in yourself."

I didn't believe in myself either.

Heavensword's frustration and anxiety swelled, her self-loathing worst of all. "This is not help—"

But June had. "But you're not doing this alone."

Even when I had told her I was what she feared. Even when she had left for space to process, there had been trust in her heart. Doubt, yes, and so much fear, but there had been trust, and it was still there.

I latched onto that. The determination burning in my heart, the need to stop standing still, to act.

I stepped forward, my power rearing up in me.

"Please forgive me."

I wrapped her in my arms and let go, my power flowing into her. Changed. Untested. I was going on pure instinct, on how my power felt like it would work. It could have been the worst mistake I ever made.

June stirred, the detachment washed away—replaced. And in its absence, my feelings remained, burrowing into place.

"Nothing permanent," I had told her at the park. Not anymore. God help me, not anymore.

Please forgive me. I started to pull away, shaking as I waited for her to realize what I'd done, to crush me like she had Amy. She grabbed my arms, and my heart leapt in my throat as she tugged me closer.

She hugged me. It was brief, so quick I almost didn't believe it had happened. And when she pulled back, there was a fire in her eyes. A fire I hadn't seen in months. Some of the weight on my shoulders bled away. Barely any, truth be told.

But it was enough. "Now let's go save your friends," I said, the words tremulous.

"Labs." June turned to Labyrinth's wolf projection, her hand reaching for the helmet under her mother's arms. Hope sparked in the woman's aura as she let it leave her grasp, metal and non-metal components alike warping and twisting into liquid metal. "Help with my costume, please?"

Even before she'd finished speaking, the PRT prisoner fatigues had begun to shift like the helmet, the loose, uncomfortable cloth shrinking around her body and settling into the form of her costume while the liquid metal flowed around different segments of both her and me. June—no, Meteor was in the air before her scarf had even finished wrapping around her face.

"Let's go."

The rusted iron gate blocking Labyrinth's stairway to the surface were thrown wide as Meteor flew us up. I slapped my hands over my cheeks, the wind whipping past us fast enough that I worried my temporary domino mask might get torn off. We were at the surface in seconds, thrown straight into the madness. The square surrounding the PRT headquarters was gone, replaced with an ancient maze of cracked stone walls standing easily several dozen feet high. At one of the nearby entrances to the structure, PRT agents and a hero I couldn't place at that distance were trying to take cover from several of the Teeth while holding them at bay with suppressing fire.

"I'll focus on the remaining capes." Meteor set me down, the metal around my limbs withdrawing. "You're not anchored, so Labs' traps can affect you. Stay out of the maze. Are you safe to provide support with armor?"

I let the somewhat dimming determination in my aura swell, the steely hue of it filling me up again. This wasn't the time or place to explain the changes to my powers, so I simply told her, "Got it. Go."

I saw a flash of steely trust in her aura before she shot off into the sky. I started running, not wasting a second. Up ahead, black lines began to appear in the air and enclose one of the Teeth, only for the bone adorned figure to leap out and pepper the cape's position with shots from an automatic rifle. Cache, if I remembered correctly; a cape best suited to ambushes, not a protracted fight from behind cover.

Let's even the odds. I was upon them a few seconds later, one of the Teeth turning to cover their rear at the sound of my sneakers striking pavement. I might have been able to survive the gunfire, but I didn't have nearly enough faith in my untested powers, much less when I was beginning to feel emotionally drained. Instead, I took the fear that spiked in me as they lifted their gun to fire, and I pushed.

They yelped and fired, which wasn't ideal, but the spray went wide, making my instinctive dodge unnecessary. By then the other member had realized a bigger threat was upon them, but it was too late. I smashed the first one's rifle aside with a backhand, sending it clattering to the pavement. Their stance broken, I then punched their sternum hard enough to send them flying back into their compatriot.

"Keep them down!" I heard one of the PRT officers call out, the sound of boots on pavement in my ear.

Couldn't give them my focus. The one who'd been bowled over had somehow managed to keep a hold on their rifle. I lashed out with a kick, but his grip on it was strong. The first burst of bullets grazed my shoulder, the rotation of my kick having twisted me out of the way. Dumb luck made the next burst miss altogether, tearing through where I would have been as I lost my footing from inexperience judging the strength and speed to expect from my emotions.

Shit! Still falling and about to be shot, I threw my aura forward, swiping desperately at the rifle. The glowing embodiment of my wavering determination pulled out of me, the life-sized self-image of pastel pink energy on the Teeth in a flash, mirroring my swipe and knocking aside the barrel just as the third burst erupted from it in a burst of sound and light.

Another bang made me flinch as I fell, but other than the strange sensation of falling onto pavement and only dully feeling it, no pain came. The man who had just been shooting at me, however, snarled in agony as he was roughly flipped over onto his face by the officer. Blood began to pool under his arm as his wrists were secured, so I moved my attention back to the first person. Just in time, it seemed, as they had been about to scramble out of the black lines forming around them. I pushed my fear into them, my heart still hammering from nearly being shot, the sudden shift in their emotions disorienting enough to let Cache's power finish snapping into place.

Gotta keep going. I pulled my aura back over me, letting it overlay my skin, and started climbing to my feet while Cache's aura jogged over from behind me.

"Are you injured?"

Upright if a little wobbly, I checked my shoulder and found that though my t-shirt was torn, the skin underneath was red but whole. Apparently the emotion had still been strong enough to tank the bullets. "I'm good, thanks."

"Good. We appreciate the assistance, but this is no place for a fresh cape." …what? Did he think I was…? "How did you get through the maze?"

I turned to properly acknowledge him. "I was already here…?"

The strangely tinged relief I had come to associate with comprehension threaded through his aura. "Hadn't realized we were meeting a potential recruit today, sorry. Look, you still have your visitor badge? Get to the front door and show it to the officers posted there, okay? Go!"

He didn't recognize me. I could only stare as he rushed off with most of the officers, one staying behind to guard the captive Teeth. How had he not recognized me? He'd helped me to bed my first night here, he knew me. Did my changed powers really throw people off that much without my costume?

I didn't get more time to think on the matter, as a portion of the maze wall nearby exploded, peppering me with shrapnel and knocking me to the ground.

Shit. I scrambled to get back on my feet, my arm screaming at me. I eyed it concern and saw that while the pastel hue of my determination was still there, but it had gotten too weak to protect me. Some of the shattered rock had torn a gash in my forearm.

I didn't have time to curse the fickle nature of my durability—one of the Teeth had stepped through the newly formed hole. While some members, like the Butcher or Heavensword, had more widely known appearances, most of their members wore similarly barbaric outfits, making it difficult to tell which members were parahumans. I didn't recognize the headdress of bones and fur, but with no one else following him, odds were he was the source of the explosion. The satchel slung around his shoulder—was he carrying explosives? Something to aid an explosive power?

"Ayy, last wall," the man remarked with a leer, his eyes alighting on me as I finally got back upright.

He reached into the satchel, a sneer on his face, and ice shot down my spine. I wouldn't be able to dodge, not from this close. I wouldn't be able to dodge, and I had no idea if my power could save me, if what I was feeling would be strong enough even if it theoretically could.

And that was fucking terrifying.

I grabbed hold of that terror and shot forward into a sprint, my legs protesting from the sudden movement. My skin glowed a sickly green, the dark undertones making me think of a corpse.

He threw something, and I slammed my eyes shut, teeth clenched.

Thunder filled my ears, hot air rushing past me. No pain.

My eyes shot open as I tore through the explosion. I might only have a second before the effect failed. I shut everything else out as best I could, focusing as intently as I could on the fear that uncertainty elicited, the fact this guy might be a cape and immune to explosions, might drop another explosion right on my feet.

Snarling, the man drew back his hand, wild-eyed. To punch me? To throw another bomb? I still wasn't close enough to—!

A blue laser streaked with white tore through his head, spraying blood and gore over the wall.

Moving too fast to stop, I made a stumbling jump over the body as it flopped to the ground sideways with the force of the impact. Rolling over my shoulder, I skidded to a halt on the pavement and nearly gagged at the sight as the last vestiges of the dead man's aura faded into nothingness, my breaths ragged.

Legend shot over, coming to a hover beside me. "Easy, easy. You're going to be okay."

"Y-You k-k-kill—!"

"I killed him, yes. As I feared he might have done, for a moment there." He heaved a sigh of relief. "Fortunately, your new powers were up to the task."

I shook my head, trying to get a hold of myself. Some of my curls poked me in the eye. "You… knew?"

"Glimpses," he replied. I wasn't quite sure what to make of the answer. One of the apparitions behind him turned to look into the maze, and his own gaze moved to mirror it a moment later, relief filling his aura if not his what little of his expression I could see beneath his ornate masquerade mask. "This is not the best situation for unpracticed powers, but that is fine. The fight is finishing up as we speak."

Relief started to push back at the anxiety left behind by my withering fear. "That quickly?"

"Her teammates had been doing quite well, truth be told." His grin turned wry. "I would not have let Heavensword go on quite so long otherwise. They subdued Reaver and Hemorrhagia quite early, and Meteor handled Vex before helping with Animos. They should have Spree and the stragglers momentarily."

And you got Heavensword. I carefully did not look at the corpse in the corner of my eye. ... and Spurt.

"There we are." Legend lifted up into the sky as Labyrinth's walls began to creak and groan as they sank back into the pavement they had sprung from. My heart shot up in my throat when the body I'd avoided directly looking at began to twist and change, my aura springing to the ready.

Flowers. Hundreds of flowers sprung from what had already halfway changed into a grassy mound, a short, stubby sapling sat atop it.

"Ah." I exhaled, the tension that had shot through me flowing out. Labyrinth's doing. "Thanks."

I hoped she heard.

Behind me, up in the sky, Legend shook hands with Meteor.



A/N: Good god damn, that chapter was long! Like I said at the top, this was originally intended to be half the length it is, but some of the scenes took on a life of their own. Namely the scene with Missy (who was originally not even in that scene!) and the first scene of Therese winding up to coming out.

The events in the past that scene outlines are based on true events that happened to me with my own parents (though I am on much better terms with them than Therese is with hers!). Ironically, I saw a comic today exploring the theme of parents being their kids' first bullies. It's an important message, and I'm glad we got to explore that here with Therese.

And so, Rust is finally—finally!—done. It's taken about a year longer than I anticipated with everything going on in my life, and I know we've lost some folks along the way. I want to thank each and every one of you so, so much for reading and for being patient as we make our way through this story I want to tell! I cherish you all, and I want you to know that how much I appreciate you.

There will be no chapters for the next two weeks. I usually take a break post-arc, and while I wish I didn't need it after making y'all wait so long for this arc to finish, these are the last weeks of my coding bootcamp, not to mention needing to finalize prep for Arc 8, Anneal. As always, you can reach out to me here or on Discord in the meantime. Take care, y'all!
 
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Anneal 8.1
"You've got five minutes."

The door pulled shut behind me with a harsh clang that promptly fizzled out, the strange metal used to build the walls dampening the sound rather than echoing it. The probing fingers of my power could touch it, could feel it when the lock engaged, but it was slippery. Tinkertech? Tinkers made materials too, didn't they?

I tsked. Stupid. Why was I focusing on dumb shit like the walls?

[Rotlimb: Heh. I could think of a few reasons.]

I didn't bother responding. The guard had said I had five minutes, after all. I might be able to push for more time—things were very, very different than how they had been just a few hours ago—but I refused to waste what might be the last chance I got to see my mother.

"Hello, Meteor," she greeted me from where she sat on the edge of her cot.

[Delible: Elena…] The greeting brought me up short, my tongue tripping over what I'd been about to say. I managed a, "H-Hi?" in reply that prompted a round of laughter at my expense in the confines of my own head. An excellent start, unquestionably.

I swallowed down the bitter self-loathing and ignored the jeers in my head. Later. "Hi," I reiterated, no longer a question. "It's— I wanted to see you."

"That's sweet of you." She smiled. The expression and her relaxed posture gave one image, but her eyes another. There was a storm brewing in them, and I didn't just mean their color. It wasn't anger, that much I could tell, but I couldn't parse the emotion hiding in them beyond that.

There was a lot I could have asked her. Too much, really. There was the looming specter of our time limit, sure, but more than that, "How am I supposed to do this?"

"Meteor?" [Toro: Jesus fuck, is this shit eloquent or what?]

I cringed, Rotlimb's reedy laugh and Butcher's deep chuckles ringing in my not-ears. "I mean, this—this right now. How am I supposed to just talk to you after fifteen years of not knowing you? Except I do know you, just it's—"

I thankfully stopped short of admitting I had memories that weren't my own. I'd eat my hat—right after I bought one—if the PRT weren't listening in on this conversation. I absolutely did not want the scrutiny that admission would invite.

"I know what you mean. Finally finding you, it's like I've always known you." She knew what I meant, of course. She was protecting me again, as easy as breathing. Unbidden, Klaus' memory of that first night rose to surface of my thoughts, of when she called, inconsolable after finding their— our apartment had been raided. [Klaus: 'Inconsolable' … that's one way to put it.]

I had intended to take things in a different direction, but with that fresh on my mind, I found myself saying instead, "I'll find her."

She stilled. "Ah. Gregor spoke with you?" [Alchemist: The walls have ears, do not forget.]

Gregor? No, no time. "I don't know what happened, but I'll figure it out, okay? I'll ask Faultline…" The anger from before was back, a fire in my chest, flames licking at my throat. Fuck. How could I have forgotten for even a fucking second that she was dead?

[Belial: Being hard on yourself… Well, it's understandable, Juniper.] "Meteor, I've been where you are." [You weren't ready for the world to know you're one of us, so you didn't use your full power.] "It's easy to blame yourself, to listen to the devil on your shoulder." [And now you are faced with that most dangerous of questions: 'What if?'] "Do not let it consume you like I did…" ['What if' you hadn't held back? Could you have saved her?]

[Klaus: Goddammit, Belial, would you stop it?] [Delible: Quiet! Both of you!] I wanted to laugh. Or cry. [Belial: Stop? Ah. How little you think of me.] Maybe both. [Delible: Stop!]

The lock slid open, and the guard swept back in as the uneasy truce in my head fell apart, the bickering of the chorus overwhelming all space for thought. One voice stood out from the rest, grabbing my attention not because it was the loudest or the nastiest but by just how broken it was. [Delible: Wait, no—! Elena!]

And maybe that made it easier. Having no room to talk myself out of it, and having solidarity in my mind of madness.

"Use my name," I told her.

A moment of silence swept over the chorus, something unspoken compelling them. A smile let up Elena's face as the guard ushered me out with a barely heard command, unimportant in the face of that joy. I didn't push back or ask for more time as I whisked away into the hall, too stunned by my own temerity. The door slammed shut, and the lock slid back into place, but my mother's smile didn't leave me.

I barely noticed as I was led back through the security checkpoint to where Therese was waiting just down the hall from the elevator. She looked terribly out of place in her domino mask and casual clothes, the toe of her converse bouncing on the ground as she waited for my return with poorly concealed anxiety.

"Are you okay?" The words nearly tripping over each other on the way out of her mouth.

Fourteen people were arguing in my head, tearing one another and me apart, with only the ever hiding Ror's voice absent from the chaos. I was most certainly not okay. She knew that, could see that. She knew that I knew she could see that. But she'd asked anyway. For a moment, I thought her words empty, a blind grasp for something to say in the face of someone in pain.

"You really take care of those, huh? … Your shoes," I added, when she blinked at my non-sequitur.

I don't know why I latched onto that. Something to ground me, maybe, the rhythmic tap tap tapping a counterpoint to the pennies spinning on the floor of what had been my own cell, only one separated from where my mother waited for the powers of bureaucracy to decide her fate.

I coughed, suddenly overcome with self-consciousness, but pressed on anyway, sheer stubbornness compelling me to finish the thought. "Soles look like they're right off the shelf. Did you just clean—?"

"Take it upstairs," the guard cut in, his tone nearly as lifeless as his bored expression. He had just reached the elevator, punctuating his statement with a jab at its button.

"Of course." Therese pushed off the wall, her words short and perfunctory. She stepped towards him and the coming elevator, posture closed in a way I couldn't place. "Sorry."

"Make me."

Silence. Silence in the hall, silence in my head. I had said those words, I realized. No, not 'said'—I had growled, the two syllables raked over gravel and injected with more venom than I had known I possessed. My teeth were bared behind my mask, silently daring the guard, egging him to respond. Behind me, cylinders, armrests, and handles jerked—the pair of guards in the checkpoint swiveling around to face the brewing confrontation. The hand of the guard at the elevator twitched, an aborted move for the gun at his hip.

Genuine restraint? Or recognition of futility? [Belial: You are untouchable.] "I've stopped a sniper bullet I didn't even see coming." [You are unassailable.] "I could liquefy that pistol, leave you to drown with it sloshing around in your lungs." [He lives because you are merciful.]

"Meteor!"

"I could bring this whole goddamn building down, bury you under a hundred thousand ton gravestone!" [Belial: He should be bowing before you.] "With a flick of my wrist, I could—!"

Water over the fire, I passed into the eye of a storm I barely recognized I was in. Therese's hand was on my forearm, gentle and glowing, the rest of her between the guard and me. I blinked down at it, my breathing as heavy and veins pulsing despite enforced… It wasn't—I wasn't—calm. I was… worried? No, the emotion was more complicated than that. I shook my head, the chorus' bleating discernible again.

[Butcher: That's more like it.] [Edict: Whoa, kid, what are you doing?] [Diamondback: What is the point of this?] [Klaus: This is a can of worms you don't want to open!] [Rotlimb: Aaay, now we're talking!] [Caterpillar: 'A flick of your wrist.' If you wish to be incognito…] [Toro: Always a pleasure watching you work, Two.] [Quarrel: Do you see now, Sixteen?] [DZ: Do they have a panic button? They probably have a panic button…] [Alchemist: Oh dear, oh dear.] [Footloose: Daaamn, girl, that was fucking hot!]

"What did you say?" I didn't need Deimos' dry, stuttering laughter to notice the fear the guard was trying to hide under his bravado.

Tripped though I'd been, momentum still carried me forward. I didn't glare, but I did eye him again, though this time with quiet restraint. "Be grateful my family and I were here to save you from the sword at your neck."

The elevator pinged its arrival, the jaunty bloop cutting the remaining tension and leaving it to bleed out over the floor as the doors opened to reveal Legend within. The fall of his heavy boots muffled as he stepped out to stand next to the guard, leaving his apparitions behind. Strobe, the only one I recognized, raised his arm to hold the door open. The humanity of the gesture was almost enough to offset the implicit threat of what that raised arm could do.

"I trust you had a good conversation?" Legend blithely asked. He looked over the situation, his masquerade mask turning from one side to the other, from the curly, shining sun beams jutting out to caress his right temple to the smoothly curving arc of the moon hanging down over his left cheek. "Need more time, maybe?"

The last of the friction flowed out of me, and I eased into the calm Therese had pushed into me. I might have stopped spinning the pennies in my old cell. But no—unthinkable. "Yes."

"Sir—" the guard began, cut off by Legend lifting his hand in the universal gesture of 'stop.'

"To both? Yes, to both," Legend remarked, asking then answering his own question. "And how much more time would you require?"

Earlier that evening, after the battle with the Teeth, I had shaken this man's hand. The hero I thought I would never meet, the only one I respected— I shot a glance at Therese. She was still looking at me. Her domino mask couldn't quite hide her expression, though it did make it harder? Relief and concern?

I shook my head, returning my attention to Legend and his unanswered question. "More than you could give."

Delible made a noise of discontent at that but didn't speak up. Perhaps because I was right. Perhaps because I felt the same way.

"Perhaps future visits could be arranged," Legend mused aloud. He turned to the guard and dismissed him with a gesture. A thrill crawled up my spine, leaving icy trails in its wake as I watched the man struggle to comport himself as he stiffly marched past us to his compatriots in the checkpoint. "Shall we?"

Therese and I followed him into the elevator. I may have been watching Strobe's hand keenly until it retreated upon our entry, the elevator door sliding closed. Legend pressed one of the buttons with an explanation of, "Your teammates are waiting for you." [Diamondback: Wise, keeping an eye on that one. I've seen videos of those lasers. Very impressive.]

He didn't press any other buttons. I flicked my eyes up to meet his, deep wells nestled within ornate finery. "Sorry to drag you away from your work." [Butcher: Don't apologize. You are above that.]

[Alchemist: We have been over this, Butcher. There is no shame in being apologetic in the right circumstances.] Legend dipped his head, his expression neutral. "Accepted. And I meant what I said before. I cannot make guarantees, but send word if you wish to see your mother again and can maintain your composure." [Butcher: Fuck off, Eight.]

Ah. I'd figured as much. "I'm fine." [Footloose: Heh. Y'know what 'fine' means, Sixteen?]

"Now," he acknowledged. His eyes shifted to Therese, who was doing a remarkable job of looking constipated. "With help." [Footloose: Fuckable, insatiable, naughty, and exotic!]

"… now," I agreed with a wince, fighting down a sigh and the urge to demand silence from the chorus, as they degenerated into more bickering over Footloose's bastardization and taunts of my responses to Legend.

But Legend's eyes had not moved from Therese. Her apparent constipation grew worse, and I realized she was desperately fighting down the urge to squirm under the intensity of his gaze. "Have you made a decision, Gallant?"

Decision? Whatever Legend was referring to, the mere mention of it left Therese to come undone at the seams. Her face took on an unhealthy pale, the discomfort on her face twisting into despondency. Her eyes flicked to me and away so quickly I might have convinced myself I'd imagined it, except she couldn't settle on where to look. Trapped in an elevator with two people she apparently couldn't—wouldn't?—bring herself to face directly, she looked everywhere except us, but she couldn't keep her focus on any one place for longer than a few seconds at a time.

"I, I— I had—" Again, I swore she looked at me, but with her gaze as fidgety as it was, I just as easily could have imagined it. "—but things are…"

"Complicated, I should imagine." Something was off. Instinct inherited from the chorus had me furtively searching the elevator for the source while maintaining my outward composure.

"Thank you for your patience—"

There, the cables! "The elevator," I cut in, barely realizing I had spoken over Therese. How had I not realized it wasn't… moving…?

Our surroundings changed. Whether the reveal was conscious or a side effect of my drawing attention to the effect on the elevator, I couldn't tell. The walls, the doors, the floor, our clothes, us—we were all blue. Shades ranging from rich velvet to bordering on black. One of Legend's apparitions, their bodies of black shadow cast in blues of deepest midnight, turned to look at me. There were no eyes, but I knew it was looking at me because I felt it.

"What is this?!" Therese hissed, stepping towards me and gripping my arm tightly enough I might have winced if it weren't for my inherited powers. "Legend?!"

"Changing one's name is difficult in any circumstance," Legend replied, entirely unperturbed by the blue effect. "much less now."

"Legend," I demanded, and if I hadn't been more alarmed by his obvious power use, I might have spared a thought that I was growling again. "Explain."

"She called herself 'Blueshift,'" he acquiesced, his words taking on an almost nostalgic note. "A scientist, you see. A simple power but an effective one. Up to an hour compressed into the previous second past, nearly unnoticeable by most. But then, you are no longer 'most,' Meteor."

Was he implying that he knew? The thought sent a shiver down my spine, and I insisted, "The cables should be moving if the elevator is."

He dipped his head. "Your mastery of your power is impressive. You truly belong among the Triumvirate."

… what?

"You have potential, Meteor. You could be a very good person. Or a very bad person."

What. The. Fuck?

"I would feel better knowing you are better equipped to be the former, and Gallant here seems quite up to the task of being the angel on your shoulder. All the better, then, that she is in desperate need of assistance you can provide."

I was confused. I was in the Triumvirate? Did Legend know I had inherited the Butcher powers? Gallant needed help? My help? I was very, very confused.

"And so I apologize for overstepping—" The hues of the blue world around us began to change, at first slowly but quickly accelerating rapidly back to normalcy, leaving the cables moving again and the chorus once more chattering in my head. Maybe I would have enjoyed their absence more if I had noticed it sooner; as it was, I only just resisted the urge to groan. "But might I insist the two of you discuss a mutually beneficial arrangement over some night breakfast? The cafeteria is open, and the pancakes are sinfully good. My treat."

And with that enigmatic statement left to hang, the apparition who had stared at me before—'Blueshift,' apparently—swiped her hand, and Legend vanished. The rumble of a stomach cut through the silence that followed, prompting Therese to admit with a wince, "Eating… does sound good."

[Footloose: Wait, did you just negotiate eating out Knight Girl? Sixteen, you dog!] That time, I couldn't stop the groan. "Foo— uh, invasive thought, sorry," I told her when she blinked in confusion. "… and yeah.

"Yeah, food sounds good right now."



And we're back! New year, new arc—that's how it works, right? I'll do my best to make sure the next one doesn't take forever.

Jokes aside, I'm finally gainfully employed in my new field (hooray!), and my schedule is relatively stable (also hooray!), so I should hopefully be able to keep a steadier schedule. I dunno if I'll be able to get back to a chapter-a-week schedule right now; I'm working two jobs, one of which requires 45min drive each way to get to, meaning my time is a bit spare these days. So for now, my goal is a chapter every other week, and while I'm not going to bloat chapters beyond what they need to be, I fully expect we won't be seeing any super short chapters like we did in Rust.

As always, chapters go up first for folks on my Discord. There's also information there about supporting me financially, which would help get me to the point I don't need a second job and have more time to write.
 
Anneal 8.2
To say things had been tense as we departed New York would be like saying the city needed a fresh coat of paint. An oversimplification and a disregard for the real problem—and wouldn't you know it, I was guilty of both.

Legend's promise of "sinfully good" pancakes had been, if anything, a gross understatement. Until I joined the crew, I had never had pancakes before. That was the sort of food one made by a beleaguered but loving parent who forced themselves out of bed early on the weekend in an effort to lull unsuspecting children into a sugar rush tempered by Saturday morning cartoons and inevitably followed by an accompanying crash. The perfect opportunity for said parent to sneak in, and I quote, "shower sex," per Edict. A sentiment unbelievably echoed by Toro, albeit accompanied by the usual string of insults. On that particular occasion, a wild accusation about Edict being fucked by a goat and a technically true one about her drugging her kid, if one squinted really hard.

Thing is, I'd never had that. Well, I had, in Klaus' memories, but that was a whole different can of worms.

So. Cafeteria pancakes. It wasn't that I'd never had pancakes—Gregor had made them for the crew a couple times. It wasn't even that I'd never had good pancakes either—if Gregor was bad at cooking something, I'd yet to taste it. Hell, I had memories coming out the wazoo of eating all kinds of pancakes, courtesy of my unwanted, inherited memories. Traditional light and fluffy. Sharp but sweet blueberry. Overly indulgent s'mores style. I even had an unfortunately clear memory of eating pancakes off of a guy's perfectly shaved ass, complete with maple syrup and a comically large glob of butter.

Three guesses who that last memory came from, and the first two don't count. The less I think about what happened to the leftover syrup and butter, the better.

But the PRT cafeteria's pancakes… they were so. fucking. good. Pillowy soft and light, perfectly rich and moist… There was simply no way Legend hadn't done something to them, no matter Therese's assurances that she'd had them once before and that they'd been just as good then. That man was possessed by the ghost of some world class chef who could turn food into dark matter or some other bullshit, and I could not be convinced otherwise.

So yeah, maybe I'd been a little too jazzed up by some world class night breakfast when I marched up to the rest of the crew with Therese in tow and told them in no uncertain terms that she was coming with us.

Maybe.

"I am… not certain this is the best time to be expanding," Gregor had said, his apologetic unease and carefully worded denial completely overlooked by my full-steam ahead, dumbass stubbornness.

In hindsight, it was pretty obvious he was trying to politely remind me just how fucked our situation was. Faultline was dead. She was dead, and we needed to carefully navigate the manipulated optics of my would-be jailbreak while figuring out how to keep our house of cards together without it falling apart. And perched atop that precarious pile of playing cards? Two other new members. One we'd picked up not two weeks earlier with the promise of giving her a better life than picking through trash cans for the least moldy loaf of bread she could find, and the other taken in the middle of a city-wide crisis hot on the heels of everyone they knew being brutally murdered by that very crisis. Tossing a defecting Ward in could easily sour the pot.

Got my metaphors mixed up. Whatever.

In all fairness, Therese had been in a likewise shitty situation. I probably couldn't have coaxed the details out of her if she hadn't been completely exhausted from the fight against Nothung and the following week of protecting people from the nightmares the bastard left behind. Really the fight against the Teeth had just been the cherry on top. Couple all that with parahumanly perfect pancakes, and it was a wonder she even put up the token resistance she did.

Like hell would I let the PRT force her to be anybody she didn't want to be.

The problem had just been getting Therese out of that situation without betraying her trust or making things awkward with the rest of the crew. "She quit the Wards," I'd whispered, leaning in close, "and we have the room."

Oversimplification and a disregard for the real problem. And Gregor, sweet Gregor, had caved. Too gentle to abandon a stray, too kind to tell me to deal with my own fuckup. If I'd tried that shit with Faultline, she never would have let me get away with it.

But Faultline was dead. She was dead, so it was very, very tense as we all packed into our miraculously intact van and left New York.

"Aaaay!" I glanced back over my shoulder and found Newter's tail swishing back and forth a bit at the tip like an oddly precise puppy as we passed the tiny, dingy sign indicating the state line between New York and Connecticut. It doubtlessly would have been a flashier affair on the interstate or highway, but we'd stuck to back roads to avoid the miniature exodus from the broken city. "Never thought I'd be so happy to get out of New York. Feels like we were there for years."

[Toro: Back to the Bay. Been a bit since we've been there.] [Klaus: I'm just saying, you could ask Therese about giving Gregor more details.]

My eyebrow twitched with suppressed violence. [Klaus: She seems like a nice girl.] It helped that punching Klaus in the face for being so goddamn pushy would mean punching myself. [Klaus: She'd understand.] [Edict: I think she gets it, Klaus.] Yes, I wouldn't feel it, and yes, I would heal, but that was a slippery slope I wasn't gonna touch with a ten foot pole. [Klaus: Are you just anxious about asking her?] [Sarah: Is… he always like this…?] Not to mention how batshit crazy I'd look bashing myself upside the skull out of fucking nowhere. [Klaus: There's really nothing to be anxious about!] [Edict: Well…] [DZ: Yes!] [Alchemist: Generally.] It's not like they had to listen to Klaus going on and on and on and[Klaus: You just go up to her and—] Would you shut the fuck up, Klaus?!

[Rotlimb: Yes! Thank you! Goddamn, Seven!] [Klaus: … I could have done without the image of you breaking my nose…] [DZ: You are being a lot, Klaus. Real after school special.] [Footloose: Normally you shut his type up by ravaging them. First one way, then the other way.]

"It has felt very long, true." Gregor's eyes briefly rose from the road to look over us all through the rear view mirror before returning to the road, ignorant of the cacophony only I could hear. Up ahead, a grimy sign for a 7-Eleven loomed from its perch atop a tall metal pole. "Does anyone need a break? Stretch legs, get food and water?" [Quarrel: Says the grade schooler.]

"Mischief could always eat!" came the unsurprising reply from the back seat, the Changer's words far too chipper and bright for the mood of the rest of the van. As if sensing precisely that, Mischief then walked their statement back with a scratch of their nose and an added, "If ya be stopin' anyway." [DZ: Twenty. One. Years.]

"Um…" Therese coughed, clearing her throat. I felt a stab of sympathy and second-hand awkwardness. It hadn't been that long since I'd been the new person on the team; I remembered what it was like. "Um, y-yeah. Yes. Not food, that is. Just ate. So stretching." [Toro: That how long 'til you're legal, baby boy?]

"Damn girl, chillax!" Newter remarked, punctuating the words with a chuckle. Naturally, Palanquin's very own patron spirit had noticed her discomfort and set about disarming it. I'd seen him charm a smile and easy laugh out of dozens of shy, awkward girls who'd just come to the club to hang out with their friends. "Take a breath. No one's gonna bite—unless you want them to, of course." [Diamondback: Obviously not. Even were the legal drinking age not twenty-one on its own, Three was twelve when he died.] [DZ: Fuck you, Toro. Fuck you.]

He turned in the passenger seat and gave Therese a wink that left her cheeks rosy and me rolling my eyes. Thankfully, Masuyo got us back on track, speaking up from where she and Elle were seated behind Therese and me, her words quiet and carrying a hint of a lisp. "I think stopping for a few minutes is a good idea, Gregor." [Toro: Not into pedophilia, pintsize. Maybe ask Thirteen? I'm sure he'd take a bite outta ya!]

"Very well," Gregor rumbled as he slowed the van down and turned into the 7-Eleven. The building was, against all odds, grubbier than its sign. At least the sign had an excuse, high up enough the owner would need a crane to scrub away the filth I could only assume had come from the smokestacks of the factory off the road a bit further down. The windows were caked with grime and plastered with posters proclaiming special deals, their presumably once bright colors muted from the beginnings of accumulating filth. And judging by the torn and soot stained hoodie and jeans of the person exiting the store, the clientèle matched the premises. [Rotlimb: A bit of grime doesn't mean a place has bad bones, kid. Hell, place reminds me of that wreck Seven and Hev built the Jaw out of after Behemoth wrecked Queens.]

Gregor pulled the van around to park against the side of the building in a spot half hidden behind propane canisters locked in a cage, and after maneuvering the gear stick into park, he pulled up the hood of his jacket. Masuyo's seatbelt clicked, and she edged around the front row seat to slide the door open. Her movements were slow and careful to avoid antagonizing the burns still healing under the bandages wrapped around every inch of skin from the collar of her t-shirt to her chin and from there to her left ear. Slow and careful, but without hesitation. [Footloose: Yeah! Like Sixteen's sister!]

I bristled at Footloose's insinuation, almost missing Gregor start to ask, "Masuyo—" Shut your fucking face, Foots.

"What can I get you?" she asked, not needing the rest of the question. One corner of her lips quirked up in a smile, the other side shifting without rising, stuck in place from the scarring only just beginning to form at the edges of the massive burn Sabah had inflicted on her. [Footloose: Down girl, down! I'm just saying, she's probably a good lay despite—]

My fist caved in my cheekbone, blood squirting out from under my eye in a gurt that painted Newter and the floor between us in speckles of dark red blood.

My eyesight blurred, and my eyelid shuddered shut as it tried and failed to shut. Blood dribbled down over my fist where it was still embedded in my ruined face. There were words and noise, alarm and concern, but I wasn't listening. I was talking. "You don't talk about my sister like that, you filthy, fucking bastard. I don't care that you whored yourself out to anything with a heartbeat. I don't care that you think it's all in good fun or whatever bullshit reasoning you've convinced yourself of. You do not speak that way about my family. Any of them. Do that again, and I will find a way to rip you out of my skull, and I will cut off your dick and make you eat it. Am. I. Clear?"

Something touched me. Somethings. I don't know how I managed it, but I didn't lash out. A hand settled over my fist, another over the one not buried in my cheek, and the tips of fingers ghosted over the curve where my neck met my shoulder, before trailing down and leaving nails gently scraping over my skin. But it was the first, Masuyo, who commanded my attention, getting right up in my face. She should have been shying away, repulsed by the girl insane enough to maim herself, but there was no revulsion in her eyes. Only concern over my injury, then concern over me when that injury pieced itself back together. Barely a hint of a flinch when my blood slithered over and under her hand and back into me, my face pushing my fist out as it reconstructed itself.

"Ignore him. All of them. Don't hurt yourself over me."

"'Him?'" Air escaped me in a sharp, short burst, equal halves a sigh and a tsk of frustration. I realized I was shaking. "Said that aloud?"

There was a shuffling sound behind me then a click and the faint whine as I felt first the back doors swing open then Emily—or more accurately her mp3 player, her headphones, and the thin wires connecting them—clamored out. The act cut through the tension like a knife, the chorus finally speaking up after the silence following my outburst. [Toro: Damn, kid. Respect.] [Diamondback: Ridiculous, harming yourself like that.] [Caterpillar: I think it's best if you respect the boundary, Six.] [Quarrel: This one will go quickly.]

"Yeah," Masuyo affirmed as she finally let me go, pulling back enough that she wasn't directly in my face. "I should go after her." [Footloose: I didn't mean to— I just… Well, shit.] [Klaus: Harming yourself harms the people you care about, June.] [Sarah: Ha… Well, thank goodness for my power?]

"I can. Will, I mean," Therese spoke up with a hint of a grimace. She gave my other hand, the one she'd grasped before, a quick squeeze. "You're hurt, and I want to stretch anyway. If you'll, just, uh…" [DZ: Dude. Klaus. After school special.] [Alchemist: Yes, Delible… Quite.]

"Right." Masuyo carefully stepped back out onto the pavement, clearing the way for Therese to slip past me and out of the van. With one last meaningful look, Masuyo returned her attention to Gregor. "What can I get you?" [Klaus: I just watched my niece punch herself hard enough to shatter her own cheekbone and nearly blind an eye with it. You'll just have to forgive me for being a bit more concerned about that than how I sound to you, Danger Zone.]

"A large coffee and a couple of granola bars for now. Thank you," he said with an admirable attempt at looking past the sudden, here-and-gone violence. I had no doubt we would be having a conversation later, but for the moment, he seemed content with Masuyo's handling of the situation. [DZ: Okay, man, sorry. Geez. I didn't mean any harm by it.] [Butcher: Said it before. This one's gonna be short lived.]

Newter, however… He was pale—or as pale as his neon orange skin could be, anyway—and watching me with wide, wary eyes. He started, as if just realizing I was watching him back, and gave me the most obviously forced grin I had ever seen. "Hyper violence probably isn't the best way to convince'm, June. It's sort of their shtick." [Klaus: Accepted…]

"How about you, Mischief?" Masuyo asked, stumbling somewhat over their name with their lisp. Despite the fumble and who she was ostensibly speaking to, it was Newter who she gave a pointed look I probably wasn't meant to see. Abashed, his expression settled into something more genuine and sheepish. [Belial: Punch yourself, if it suits you, Juniper. Rebel—resist—how you see fit.]

If Mischief picked up on the tension choking the atmosphere in the van, they were superb at hiding it. "Doritos and Mountain Dew for Mischief, thank ya, Miss Yo!" [But do not bury your head in the sand. It is as pathetic as it is pointless.]

"I'll have what they're having," Newter chimed in, shooting Mischief finger guns and a grin. [It has been nearly three decades since I murdered the Butcher of the Bay.]

"Anything for you, June?" I mutely shook my head, my stomach roiling and churning, a storm on the sea. "Elle hasn't eaten in hours. Why don't you come in with me, help carry things and pick something out for her?" [Live your life, and live it well. Art is long, and our life is fleeting, dear child.]

I didn't trust myself to speak. My seatbelt popped upon with a thought, and I stumbled out of the van past Masuyo. One foot in front of the other, my feet marched themselves around towards the entrance. [As our forebears have gone, so too must we.]

[Memento mori.]





"Oo oo oo! There's a 'z'! There's a 'zeeeeeeeeeeeeeee'!"

[Tororonono: Fuck — my — life.] "Oh?" Big sis leaned over and did a squinter looksie. All around, "Hm, nope, try again." [And no, Six, not literally.]

"Whaaaaat! Nuh uh!" I huffed and twisted around to point, but the sign was already running away, all scaredy-cat. She must not have seen! [Footsy: You wound me, Nine! Wound me!] "'Hurt 'n' accident? Don' let man— mana— uh… managles… boss ya 'round! Call Zelson and Wurdock!"

"'Managers,' June." Big sis pulled back, all wincy-mincy. I was gonna tear down that doll house first thing, I was! "That sentence has no z's in it." [Footsy: Don't make the offer if you aren't even interested. Hmph!]

"Sideways!" My face was all pouty from all the dolls and runaway signs and nopes. "Sideways!"

"You mean Nelson," said Curl Gurl, behind instead of beside. "That was an 'N.'" [Danja Z: So this is… a lot.]

"Sideways and upside down," said Newther, all haha's and hehe's as he drank some more of his matching water. [Alchemist: Quite. Perhaps if Belial were to restrain himself in the future, we might have less repeat performances.]

"Mischief's thinkin' tha don't count." I tried to give them all my pouts, but I couldn't get them off of me, stuck like glue. Shenanigans did the shoulder shrug, opposite of dug. No drank left to be drunk, they'd already drink't all. "Creative though!" [Rotlimb: I mean, shit, if this is gonna happen half the time…] [Caterpillar: I've not known Two to be easily dissuaded.]

There was but one course of action: I shook my fist in the air and did declare, "I'll get zee, 'Z,' if zee's the last zeeng I ever do!"

The giggles jumped out of me like fizzly pop, flowing and unstayable, even as Gregdy spoke up for the first time in a looooong time. Barely a word in hours 'n' hours, honest'n'true, and so unable to stop or stopper, I did my best try with mouth in hands, left to shake and rattle as they threatened to roll. [Sarah: I mean, at least she's… 'Happy' isn't quite the right word. Enjoying herself?]

"Emily?" His peepers peeped the mirror, but not a peep peeped back. "Emily, I have a question for you." [Day-jur Zoh-en: 'Happy,' ha! That's one way to put it.]

Still nothing. I did the rotini to look pasta my shoulder, and back in the back there was no look back. Fire sis was pouty—like me?—all sticky with glue to her and her to phone. Sticky and still, no answer nor look. Misconduct paused, fur paw no claw raised to tappity tap, but nope nope nope, nunna that.

No Rascal, no Curl'r'Bell G'l. [Sarah: Is… Is she…?] Next up us Sisters Two, but I didn't want to! [Coal Chest: No] [Handtight: Rhymin' with sick timin'? Haha!] And so to Big Sis I turn, 'cause Fire Sis… wouldn't… [D to the Z: I'm not sure I'd call it 'rhyming,' Foot…] [Bullbull: Thanks. I hate it.]

I jerked, the world stuttering. I only realized I'd bitten through my tongue when I tasted iron, blood slicking over and between clenched teeth until my body pieced itself back together. What had—? Wait, I— I did it, but why…?

"June? You okay?" Masuyo's whisper was almost intelligible, half slurred from her the partially immobile lips she hadn't yet grown accustomed to. [Alchemist: That sensation is… most unpleasant.]

Gregor heard her too, or perhaps he'd noticed my flinch. I met his eyes in the mirror. A flash of concern and something more, and before I realized what I was doing, I was touching his brain with Toro's broken power. Pointless and unintentionally invasive, I immediately retreated with only the certainty that Gregor was feeling something intense and that I had made a gross misstep.

"We were… Someone… Saying?" I asked, ashamed and floundering against the tug. My body felt like lead, except lead I could have lifted. Easy peasy, Amy squeoh no no no noooo— [Diamondback: Be more careful. The mouth is how Fourteen killed Thirteen.]

"Hey, Ems!" Abrasively abruptive, the words cut through the van, front to back, Newter to Emily. The edges of each loud syllable caught on the foggy film that had been settling over me once more, peeling it away with all the grace of their owner's spit sending some sap spiraling into a sloppy high. Then, perhaps unsure whether Emily had truly heard him, perhaps simply enjoying the disruption to the quiet that had settled over everyone, Newter called to her once more, drawing out her name and injecting several unpleasant surges in volume. "EeeEeEeeeMmssss!" [Quarrel: Spoiled the surprise. Now she'll know to watch that weakness.]

I heaved a groan from emotional whiplash, off balance enough I almost rose to Quarrel's bait. In the back seat, I felt Emily's headphones slide off and around her neck as she impassively answered, "What." [Klaus: A class act as always, Quarrel.]

"Thank you, Newter," Gregor replied, the normally affable man not sounding appreciative whatsoever, though his accent made it hard to tell. "Emily, we will be passing by Providence in an hour or so, and—" A space between words, a pause just short enough I was unsure it had actually happened. "—I would take you home, if you wish." [Rotlimb: Stick a sock in it, Seven. You're being even more insufferable than usual.]

"No." Emily's answer was clipped and delivered without hesitation or consideration in a tone so flat and so empty that it would have felt right at home coming from Elle, deeply steeped in the depths of a bad day as she was right then. The springs in the seat behind Masuyo and me squirmed. Not Elle—Therese? [Klaus: I'm impressed, Rot. You used the word 'insufferable' correctly.]

"You need not make a decision immediately. It would be understand—" [Rotlimb: Fuck you.]

"I. Said. No!" Emily spat, ramping from zero to sixty in three seconds flat. I half expected her to start spitting actual fire, as did everyone else, if everyone but Elle staring at her was anything to go by.

"Uh, Ems?" Newter started to ask, apparently stupid enough to inch towards the metaphorical powder keg with a lit match. "You—?" [Klaus: That… escalated quickly.]

"I don't want to talk about it." And before one more word could be uttered, the headphones were back on. Then, as if one of us might spontaneously develop the power to communicate telepathically by meeting her eyes, she pulled up her hood and twisted in the seat to face out the window.

And so we didn't. Not one word from anyone until we finally made it back to Brockton Bay.



A/N: That took longer than expected, sorry! The second scene really fought me (kinda like how June's fist fought her face amirite??), life was a busy, yadda yadda and so forth. I am going to try and keep the pace up, I swear!

Want to read chapters early? Interested in supporting me write more stuff like this? Check out my Discord!
 
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Anneal 8.3
"I'm surprised to find you still up, Ms. Fujiwara."

Around me, Palanquin was slowly settling into slumber. The staff were cleaning up the detritus and mess left behind by the ever sloppy Saturday night crowd, leaving the stage set for the coming day. Tomorrow—today, by some measures—was a Sunday, and no matter the 2 A.M. closing time the coming evening ostensibly had, Sundays tended towards being quieter. Not quiet, never quiet, but likewise not the same furor that came with Fridays and Saturdays; a special sort of energy born from people partying in open, desperate defiance of Monday's approach. But for the moment, Palanquin was drifting—calm.

[Footloose: But I don't waaannaaaaaa stoooooop…]

It was less calm in my head.

"Not Fujiwara." I sighed and shifted to face where Ade stood at the top of the steps leading up to the balcony. "No sleeping either. Gregor told you what happened…?" [Diamondback: They need rest. They have to stop eventually.]

When Melanie had first introduced me to Adetokunbo Diallo—'Ade,' as he insisted I and everybody else call him—I had been more than a little thrown by his disposition. He wasn't soft-spoken, but he never raised his voice either, not even when dealing with overly rowdy patrons. He could be quick when the occasion called for it, but he never gave me the impression he felt rushed. A full build that didn't rise to the level of 'stocky,' a neatly trimmed beard with far more gray than black, and crows feet that could easily claw out my eyes if they'd been real and attached to a less gentle man. Not the sort of man I would have envisioned as the manager of a successful nightclub when I met him, but looks could be deceiving.

Ade had everything ready for us by the time the van pulled into Palanquin's loading bay. I was glad for it. The others had gotten some rest here and there along the way—even Gregor, after Masuyo had forced him to swap out, despite his protests—but they were still dragging as we piled out and schlepped our things upstairs. Ade had even arranged some temporary clothes and sheets for Therese, all laid out in the room she'd be sharing with Emily.

"I must ask you to be more specific," he replied as he crossed from the stairs over to join me where I had been slouched against and looming over the railing like a rumpled owl. "A great many things happened while you were away, as I understand it." [Footloose: But we could rest together? Sixteen, go find some bed warmers before they all get away! Go go!]

I schooled my expression as best I could as the mention of 'bed warmers' sent my head skipping through blurry memories of the countless people Footloose had slept with over the years. "I can't sleep after… you know," I told him, uncomfortable expressing it in exact words while unmasked, even with no one outside the know nearby. [Klaus: Foots. Stop pushing my niece to have sex.]

"Ah, is that so? I was not aware that came as part of the package, so to speak." A single graying eyebrow climbed his forehead, dark eyes questioning. "And this is the sole reason you have not retired for the evening then?" [Footloose: Pushing is such a weak word. Here, I'll choose some stronger ones: Get laid, dammit!] [Caterpillar: Sixteen's thoughts don't shy away from the topic… Interesting. Children are having sex earlier and earlier these days.]

I flushed, both caught out and not thrilled by the turn of the conversation in my head. Stop. Leave it, I warned the Chorus before saying aloud, "It's reason enough." [Toro: Oh? Well well, this is juicy.] [Footloose: See?! You've already popped your cherry! No need to be ashamed!] [Sarah: Can we not…?]

"Certainly." And that was that, it seemed. Instead of pressing, he gestured down to the staff, still putting everything where it needed to be. "Can we help you with anything before we retire for the evening?" [Toro: Hey, I'm just relieved we won't have to break this one in as much as I thought.] [Klaus: Yes, let's not.]

Leave. It. "I don't need to eat either. Moment I get hungry, it's just," I snapped my fingers. "Gone." [Quarrel: Not interested, but if it grinds your gears, Sixteen, then who'd you fuck?] [Butcher: Still plenty to break.]

"Not needing something is quite different from being unable to do it," Ade replied, unaware of the trainwreck in progress in my head. [Sarah: Hey, you heard her. Fucking leave it.] [Rotlimb: Isn't it obvious?] [Footloose: Probs frumpy girlfriend. B-or-ing! I mean, unless they're into some kinky shit?]

Shut the fuck up. I didn't know how I wasn't screaming. How I wasn't hurting myself. Not then, anyway. Right then I was shivering in a room still sweltering with the sticky warmth of too many bodies, too much dancing. I was looking without seeing, hearing without listening. I might have been growling, a rumble pressing against my clenched teeth, demanding and urgent. I was definitely crying. No sobs, just tears and thoughts. Thoughts, wants, needs that might have been mine. That might not have either.

At least I could tell when it was the others speaking.

I didn't come out of it until someone else came up the stairs. One of the staff, someone I couldn't place right then. They came and went, and in their wake, they left a glass of ice water. I stared at it—stared at them—uncomprehending. A table. The water sat on a table, and Ade sat with it. I followed, too heavy and too light as I came down, as I settled into skin ill-fitting and tight. I drank that water like I'd only ever drunk sand, and when it ran out, I ate the ice like it was potato chips. More water came, and I drank it.

I slowed down on the third glass. I think. Time had passed, I knew, but I hadn't been a part of it, my mind drowning while my body pressed through molasses. A Master? My heart nearly stopped at the thought. But no… No, I knew this feeling. Panic was never good, but it was mine.

"Feeling better?" Ade asked, the rich rumble of his voice as unflappable as ever. I appreciated that he'd only asked if I felt better. I would never feel 'okay' ever again. [Diamondback: Losing control, drinking whatever you're brought. That's how you get killed.] [Klaus: June…?] [Edict: Welcome back…]

"Better," I replied, more a grunt than speech. I cleared my throat. "Thanks." [DZ: Can't exactly help that sort of thing, Diamondback.]

"You are quite welcome." He rose from the booth we had settled into, an apology in his eyes that bore out in his words. "I'm afraid I must leave you now. There is much that must be done, and too little time to do it in. Gregor can reach me should a need arise before the service." [Alchemist: You will have greater success convincing water it is dry, Danger Zone.]

My heart constricted. "The PRT found it?"

Even the Chorus, it seemed, waited on the answer. I'd asked two things of Legend when the dust settled after my would-be jailbreak and the Teeth's assault: To speak with my mother, and—

"The fragment of Ms. Faultline's mask has been left in our care. I understand Legend himself found it." Ade gave me a wan smile, hesitating. "Thank you for giving us a piece of her to bury."



There were productive ways I could have used the time the rest of the world was sleeping. I could have been researching whether there was anyone out there with a power that could help with my unwanted tenants. I could have been trying to figure out to use the weird Thinker aspect of Belial's power. I could have used my uncle's power to make weapons and sculptures to sell at the Market for extra cash with our team's future uncertain. Hell, I could have been using Alchemist's power to create clean drinking water for people without any. Or maybe there was some other clever use for these unwanted powers that I could use to try and make it all worth it.

I walked right up to the edge of choice paralysis, gave it the finger, and went flying on a whim instead.

That choice proved more valuable than I expected in the end. None of the Chorus had a power that let them fly, so it was still novel enough to placate and distract. That alone would have been enough, but after a couple hours of aimlessly drifting over Brockton Bay, the surrounding countryside, and the ocean—while making sure to give the PRT's oil rig a wide berth—I found a quite novel way to spend my time.

I went to church. Kinda.

The sun had begun its creeping ascent, painting the fluffy clouds and still waters around the oil rig swatches of bloody reds and bruised purples. Seagulls flitted across the scene, periodically diving and rising like motes of dust caught in the wind. And beneath it all, lights burst into life across the city as people rose with the sun. Pretty, all of it, but none of it held my attention like the SUV that passed beneath me

"Huh." Though really it wasn't the vehicle itself that had caught me. That honor belonged to the submachine gun, assault rifle, several pistols, and assortment of knives speeding along inside it. "That's interesting." [Rotlimb: I'd say anything would be more exciting at this point, but that looks like a chance at real action. Follow them!]

For once, Rotlimb and I were in agreement. The others variously voiced their approval or disapproval, but they fell into the periphery as I focused on tracking the vehicle from overhead. One in four or five people in Brockton Bay had some kind of weapon on their person as they walked the streets, and that number only increased when cars came into the equation with all their nooks and crannies for hiding things. But this many weapons? In the wee hours of a Sunday morning?

It didn't take especially long for the driver to get their destination, an old factory on the north end of town. The trainyard, I vaguely recalled and Danger Zone confirmed, specifically an area of it that niggled at my brain. By the time I figured out the connection, the SUV's occupants had already exited and joined a couple other groups that were approaching the guys posted outside the only open entrance. All of the weapons that had captured my attention were left behind.

"I fought Lung here," I said to no one in particular as I carefully maneuvered myself to a nearby three story, just in case someone got the bright idea to look up. Last time I'd been here, I'd decided the nearby roofs would collapse if someone so much as sneezed on them. They didn't look any better now, so I carefully put the edge between them and me without actually setting myself down on the surface. [Rotlimb: You fought a lung…?] [Quarrel: You fought Lung? And lived to tell of it?]

"Yeah. A few days after I got my powers, then again later." Separate groups coming in, none of them bringing weapons in, but they all brought weapons with them. What were they doing in there? And in ABB territory? [Belial: I recall something of this one. You kept tabs on him, did you not Quarrel?] [Rotlimb: We're talking about a person… who named himself after an organ… Am I getting that right?]

No—not ABB territory. I'd almost forgotten, Therese had mentioned once that they fell apart. Without Lung, there wasn't anything to hold them together, and the Empire had gobbled up their territory like the vultures they were. But that still didn't explain what this was. If it was a safehouse or whatever, then why leave the weapons? But it had to be something in that vein, otherwise why have guards at all?

It was a good thing I wasn't a cat because I was very curious.

Before I could think better of it, I activated MirrorriM's power. Of all the fifteen powers I'd inherited, it was the one with the most baggage, for lack of a better word. All of them had been weakened in some respect from how they worked in their owner's memories, except for Uncle Klaus', a fact I didn't know what to make of. In Ror's case, her power had been always active, except for when she focused on wanting to be seen and heard. For me, I had to focus on the opposite, on being hidden and silent. I hadn't thought that 'weaker' at first, until memories of Ror being knocked unconscious rose up in answer—a passive defense. In the days I'd spent in the PRT's holding cell, I'd wondered whether it would interfere with a Master, if they needed to make a conscious effort to control me.

If it did, well, I would have been understandably jealous.

But the reason the power came with so much baggage was— [Butcher: Scared you'll be found out? If you want to know what's happening in there, then go in the front door and make them tell you.] [Rotlimb: Seriously? You're using that feckless bitch's power? Give me a break.] [Toro: What the fuck, Sixteen? What the actual fuck? Are you trying to piss us off?] [Deimos: You smell delicious, Meteor. If only I could gobble you up like the distressed little morsel you are, ke ke…] [Quarrel: Disgraceful. And you say you fought Lung? Must have run for your life, you vile little ant.] —using it provoked a… strong reaction from the most vocal of my parasites.

I threw myself over the roof, plummeting down to street level before pulling up, fixing my scarf tighter around my face where it had come loose over hours of flight. More obscenities, taunts, and accusations bounced around my skull, joined by Klaus, Edict, and Sarah defending me. Edict speaking up made Toro act up even more like the dick always did, so by the time I carefully flew past the guards—a pair of bruisers with shaved heads and tats, who were clearly a little too invested in being stereotypes—half the Chorus was arguing and filling my head with enough noise it was difficult to think.

I paused, invisibly hovering in the air. I'd expected a stash of drugs or some other illicit shit, something that would require the sheer size of the building. And to be fair, the fighting ring I had not expected to find did use most of the retro-fitted factory floor. Suspended walkways of textured, open grill steel that criss-crossed over the area had been repurposed as stands and the bounds of the arena, new steel welded into place under the much older, painted walkways as the bones for a membrane of chain link walls. An aged, flaking onyx perched atop a gleaming crown stained with blood. A cage.

And there was blood. The factory floor was made of concrete sanded down and sealed with epoxy, the sort of surface built to last with regular maintenance. Irregular cracks and chips littered the floor, and whether for that reason, traction, or to make cleanup of pooled blood simpler, the cage floor was a layer of fine sand contained in a squat frame of more steel welded to the floor. Even this close to the floor, I could make out congealed patches and sprinkled paths ending in splatter adorning the cage itself in caked on rubies. Nothing fresh, from what I could see.

Easily a hundred people—perhaps another half that?—stood on the walkways framing the cage. Men and women both, but all unerringly white. Some were captivated by the scene below, which from up there probably looked like the sort of minimalist abstract painting you'd find hanging in an art gallery. Most were chatting. No, that was the wrong word. 'Chatting' implied something more friendly or at least polite. They were rousing one another, the atmosphere charged with building violence and thirst for the sort of atrocities that painted the arena in fresh gouts of red.

I felt the doors behind me closing before I heard the muted thunk of them settling into place. Well oiled, I thought, as I quickly shifted up and away to prevent the guards from walking into me after they locked up. Once I'd been snapped out of my stupor, I properly noticed the types of equipment spread around the factory—the mill. Hulking ladles and casters to mold, sheers and rolling mills for shaping, and two long cooling beds framing the room. Once upon a time, this very place might have made the sort of steel rods that had been slotted into its ruinous skeleton. An office that must have belonged to mill's manager, or perhaps its owner, was built into the far wall and connected to the cage by another, unaltered walkway. I felt the mask, chains, and cage approach from the other side but didn't recognize them until the door swung open, silencing everyone.

"New. Blood."

"Fuck me," I breathed, briefly losing concentration on Ror's power. If it weren't for the fact the eyes of everyone in the room were fixated on the man wearing them, I doubtlessly would have been spotted appearing and vanishing. Potentially enough to put people on alert for Strangers. [Butcher: Dickless coward. I hope they catch and flay you.] [Footloose: OooOoOoooo… A special sort of party's about to kick off!] [Toro: Nice. We had a setup like this once or twice back when I was in charge.]

Hookwolf strode down the walkway, unperturbed by the rough texture despite his bare feet. The humming fluorescent bulbs overhead cast the sheet metal of his mask in a stark light, accentuated with a gleam from a hint of morning light peeking through the mostly fogged over windows. Canine in cut, with jutting protrusions suggesting ears and a snout, the eye marred by a gouge as long as my hand slicing from its right cheek up over its brow. An overly large belt buckle on the chain looped through his jeans was his only other concession to cape culture. He barely cared about public decency; the only article of clothing he had on was jeans and—I hoped—underwear beneath. His cronies flanking him were little better. Stormtiger was at least wearing shoes with his loose pants, and Cricket added to that with a wife beater.

"Two more wish to join our number." An irregular clicking whir and scrape of metal on metal floated under his voice, his skin shifting and pinching together as metal musculature writhed over the mundane, flesh and blood variety. The words carried, buoyed by the uneven, discordant beat of his innards, made tinny by his mask and echoing in the silence of the mostly vacant mill. Silent but not calm. The crowd was restless, teeming with pent up violence as it parted to let Hookwolf and his entourage reach the edge over the arena. "Oliver Hart. Kennedy Hart. Step into the ring." [Caterpillar: Leave before you're found, Sixteen. It's unwise to incite something unnecessary with a cape.] [Footloose: Gendered and agendered, welcome to the main event!]

The energy pulsing through the crowd boiled over, howls and jeers filling the space with an overwhelming cacophony that reverberated endlessly off the bare walls and fossilizing industrial equipment. The Harts made their way down the tiered stairs leading to the floor where the guards waited by chain-link doors. Brother and sister? Husband and wife? No, with that age gap, Father and daughter…? [DZ: Oh, I do not like this…] [Rotlimb: What a match-up! Some good ol' fashioned family drama ought to make this spicy!]

The guards let the Harts in then blocked the exit with loose chain fed through the loops and an enormous padlock to bind it in place. The sand crunched and slid beneath them as they moved to the center before turning to face one another. The father's face was rigid with restraint, accentuating the wrinkles around his eyes, but the daughter, her expression was as loose as it was inexpressive. She looked away, almost casual as her eyes slid over the crowd overhead while she tugged off her jacket and tossed it away. The black, bulky fabric collapsed in a heap with a dull thwump, its lining—bright red, the same as the streaks in the girl's dark hair—on display.

The Chorus were speaking, but their voices felt far away. My ears, like my eyes, were transfixed by the fight about to begin, by the girl unconcerned by a brawl with her father, of her blood or his joining the spills and stains all around her.

The crowd fell silent, and Hookwolf spoke. But I was beyond words, the voices in my head whispers in the dark. She struck first, not quite fluid but making up for it with commitment. Her father dodged, his only retaliation a flinch and words, a name, "Kennedy." Idiot, he'd never reach her like that. But she nearly reached him with the foot she lashed in his direction. Another dodge, except that time she had overextended. Sloppy? I thought, as she fell to the sand, catching herself with her palms. No.

She surged to her feet with a lunge, a left hook in the wings. He was already dancing back, clearly uninterested in hurting his daughter. The fluidity of his movements betrayed his training, stood in stark contrast to her jerky, improvisation. He knew how to fight. He was a head taller than her. He had the reach, the weight, the strength. He didn't have the foresight to predict her left hook was really her throwing the sand she'd scooped when she fell into his eyes.

He cried out, nearly losing his footing, one hand going to his eyes in a vain attempt to dislodge the fine powder while the other rose in what would have been a half decent guard if he'd been paying more attention to her than the grit in his eyes. That was the real difference between them. Not the training or size. Commitment.

She slipped around his guard and punched his throat head-on. Coughing, sputtering, and blind he mustered no defense as she took to steps forward and around, swinging back around to smash her fist into his kidney. She missed, but not by much—enough he went down. She fell upon him, no let up, no hesitation. Commitment. When she finally stopped, it was all at once, mid-motion. She looked up, up into the eyes behind the steel mask watching from above. The room was awash with sound and violence and blood…

… and my voice, "HOOKWOLF!"

With a single word, I'd silenced hundreds. Silence from the ring, silence from my head. With two more, I made them roar.

"New blood."



A/N: Oh, June, what are you thinking? Nothing good, I imagine.

Chapter 8.4 is already written and will be posted in two weeks. You could wait until it shows up here... or you can check out my Discord, where the chapter is already up for preview. I don't know if I can ever get back to a weekly posting regimen, but I think every other week is doable. And no matter what pace I manage to keep, the latest chapters will always be posted for preview on my Discord a week beforehand.

And if you enjoy reading stories like this, your support would mean the world to me. Links to that sort of thing are on my Discord as well. Thank you all very much for reading, and you'll be hearing from me again in two weeks!
 
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The Music of Luster
I make no secret of how I rely a lot on music for inspiration when writing. Other times, I write a scene then happen upon a song that fits it perfectly. This playlist has existed in one form or another for quite a while in the Table of Contents, but folks on my Discord server pointed out that (almost) none of them knew it was there. And that's a crying shame! So here you go: The Music of Luster gets its own post.

Warning: The full playlist includes all songs, even those points we haven't reached yet. I only describe the story relevance for those songs the story has reached (as of when I last updated this section specifically), but you still might spoil things.

Warning: The full playlist includes all songs, even those points we haven't reached yet. I only describe the story relevance for those songs the story has reached (as of when I last updated this section specifically), but you still might spoil things.

Listen to the Playlist on Spotify (some songs can only be heard on YouTube; links for those will be with the entry)

Themes (in order of appearance/reveal)​

June/Meteor: "What You Want" by Evanescence
Masuyo/'M'/Wire: "In The Heat of the Moment" by Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds
Aisha/Shade: "Any Other Way" by We The Kings
Tammi/Rune: "The Hunter" by Adam Jensen
Gregor: "Saturn, Bringer of Old Age" by Gustav Holst, Berliner Philharmoniker
Melanie/Faultline: "Army" by Besomorph &Arcando (ft. Neoni)
Newter: "Tell Me How You Do It" by The Phantoms
Elle/Labyrinth: "World Border" by Approaching Nirvana
Renee/Boudicca: "Gladiator" by Zayde Wølf
Reagan/Loki: "Devilish" by The Phantoms
Amy/Panacea: "Wish You Were Gay" by Claud
Therese/Gallant: "Digital Love (feat. Annapantsu)" by Pluffaduff, KryptoDigital
Octavia/Charisma: "Brand New Thing" by The Phantoms
Zero/Brood: "Bad Apple!!" Metal Cover by RichaadEB (ft. Cristina Vee)
Emily: "Stressed Out" by Twenty One Pilots
Elena/Heavensword/Iron Rain: "The Phoenix" by Fall Out Boy
Adam: "Kill la Kill" by Hiroyuki Sawano
Eve: "Natural" by Imagine Dragons
Mischief: "La Villa Strangiato" by Rush
Butcher Sixteen: "What You Want" Elder Jepson Remix
???: "Hell's Comin' With Me" cover by Chloe Breez
Droste: "So Good Right Now" by Fall Out Boy
Alexia Kubo: "Lost" by Linkin Park
???: "Little Girl Gone" by CHINCHILLA
???: "Playground" by Bea Miller

Arcs/Scenes/Moments (in story order)​

Arc 1, Penny:
June triggers: "Gefion" by Christian Reindl, Lucie Paradise
June v. Rune: "Yeah Right" by Evanescence
Night time at Palanquin: "Last Sprite Standing" by PrototypeRaptor

Arc 2, Forge: "Let's Go" by Zayde Wølf
"Teammates don't abandon one another": "Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall" by Coldplay
June costumes up for the Providence job: "Watch Me Now" by The Phantoms
June v. Boudicca v. Loki: "Rivers in the Desert" by Lollia

Arc 3, Bell: "Black Out Days" by Phantogram
Fighter & Dungeonmaster join the Eight: "Black Blade" by Two Steps From Hell
June & Elle reunited with the Crew: "Fix You" by Coldplay,

Arc 4, Snare: "About To Get Crazy" by Oh the Larceny
June and Elle's first time: "Movement" by Hozier
Aisha kills Othala: "Gravedigging" by The Classic Crime
June is touched by Newter: "High" by Sir Sly
June and the heroes v. Lung: "For Whom the Bell Tolls" by Emi Meyer

Arc 5, Keen: "Friction" by Imagine Dragons
FLC infiltrate Queen's Gambit: "Barracuda" by Heart
June takes Elle on a date at Luna Park: "Honeybee" by Steam Powered Giraffe

Arc 6, Alloy: "Warrior" by The Phantoms
June gains new power: "Legends Never Die" by Against The Current
Death on the battlefield: "Battlefield" by SVRCINA
Meteor v. Nothung: "Legends Never Die" by Against The Current
Aisha recruits Rune: "Warpath" by Tim Halperin x Hidden Citizens

Arc 7, Rust:
Track A: "Make You Feel My Love" by Adele
Alexia and Elena at the Club: "Shut Up and Dance" by WALK THE MOON
Alexia and Elena's first time: "Keep It Down" by Migrant Motel
Alexia returns to NYC with Elena: "Who Needs Air" by The Classic Crime
June is born: "You Will Be Okay" from Helluva Boss, covered by Annapantsu
Footloose Attacks: "All the King's Men" by The Rigs
Alexandria is Born: "The Coldest Heart" by The Classic Crime

Track B: "Phantom" by NateWantsToBattle

Track C: "You Say Run" cover by Friedrich Habetler

Arc 8, Anneal: "The Villain I Appear to Be" by Connor Spiotto, Molly Pease
June tells Elena goodbye: "Easy On Me" by Adele
June insists that Therese joins the Crew: "The Other Side" by Annapantsu & Cami-Cat

"Bulletproof (ft. Sam Tinnesz)" by Simple Thieves
"Raise Your Glass" by P!nk
"Human" by Rag'n'Bone Man
"She" by dodie
"Black Water" by Of Monsters and Men
"Half the World Away" by AURORA
"Radioactive" by Imagine Dragons
"Stand By You" by Rachel Platten
"Bad Apple!!" by Lollia & Sleeping Forest
"Horns (Arc North Remix)" by Arc North, Bryce Fox
"Can't Go to Hell" by Sin Shake Sin
"Lions Inside" by Valley Of Wolves
"Electric Energy" by Ariana DeBose, Boy George, Nile Rodgers
"Paris" by The Chainsmokers
"The Chain" by Fleetwood Mac
"Lion" by Saint Mesa
"Times Like These" by Foo Fighters
"Megalovania" by RichaaEB, ThunderScott
"My Name Is…" by Once Monsters
"Gladiator" Mono_Kyo Remix
"Thumbs" by Lucy Dacus
"I Wanna Be in Love Again" by Madds Buckley
"Salt in the Snow" by The Classic Crime
"Lightning Bolt" by Pearl Jam
"Bad Apple!! Feat.nomico (HYPER RAVE Remix)" by DiGiTAL WiNG, nomico
"Paper and Ink" by Madds Buckley
"Bad Things" by The Phantoms
"Brand New Thing" by Zayde Wølf
"Traitor" by Daughtry
"New Divide" by Linkin Park
"Warrior Poet" by The Classic Crime
"Senbonzakura" by Osamuraisan
"Ghost" by Mystery Skulls
"Beyond the Void" by Arkana
"Eye For An Eye" by Rina Sawayama
"What Could Have Been (feat. Ray Chen)" by Sting
"City of Delusion" by Muse
"Heat Stroke" by Black Math
"Run Boy Run" by Woodkid
"The Coldest Heart (Revisited)" by The Classic Crime
"Stairway to Heaven" by Led Zeplin
"Check It Out" by Oh The Larceny
"Everybody Wants To Rule The World" cover by Lorde
"QUEEN" by Todrick Hall
"Lone Digger" by Caravan Palace
"I'm Not a Hero" by Hans Zimmer, James Newton Howard
"The Encounter" by Approaching Nirvana
"Torn" by Ednaswap
"You Say Run" cover by Yuki Hayashi, Takahiro Obata
"The One to Survive" by Hidden Citizens, Josh Bruce Williams
"Final Moments" by Joseph Trapanese
"Not Over Yet (It's Only Begun)" by The Phantoms
"All That Is Good" by Tyler Bates, Lisa Papineau
"Welcome to the End of the World" by The Phantoms
"Don't Let The Lights Go Out" by Panic! At The Disco
"The Reason" by Zayde Wølf
"Heroes (Generdyn Remix)" by Zayde Wølf
"Reflect" by Downtown Binary
"The Last Stand" by Nick Phoenix, Two Steps from Hell
"High School Megalovania" by Pluffaduff
"Hit and Run" by LOLO
"All The Memories (Revisited)" by The Classic Crime
"Dancing In The Moonlight (feat. NEIMY)" by Jubël
"Evergreen" by Jake Wesley Rogers
 
Anneal 8.4
If someone had asked me why the fuck I had drawn attention to myself—and a good chunk of the chorus were doing exactly that right then—I would have struggled to formulate a response.

[Klaus: What are you doing?!] [Caterpillar: Sixteen. No.] [Butcher: Excellent.] [Toro: Ha! Yes! Haha!] [Alchemist: Oh dear.] [Diamondback: Moron.] [Deimos: Oh? Tsssss… Oh yes…] [Danger Zone: What the fuck, June?] [Quarrel: Is that right? Don't back down, Sixteen.] [Footloose: Llllleet's get ready to ruuuuumbllllle!] [Sarah: June…?] [Edict: Fuck me…] [Rotlimb: Fuck yes!!] [Belial: I see.]

The assembled onlookers roared their disapproval of my interruption, jeering and booing, stomping their feet and banging their fists on the railings. It was a wonder they didn't all fall to their deaths or serious injuries, abusing the suspended walkways of a condemned steel mill with the sheer weight of their condemnation of me. [Klaus: Oh, that is not sound, and this is such a bad idea… No no no no—] [Diamondback: Morons.]

Hookwolf, like everyone else in the cavernous room, had turned my way when I cut through their celebration with my proclamation, my challenge. I couldn't see what expression hid behind his mask, but I could read his body language well enough. It was hard to miss when the man was effectively half naked, after all. Before, the metal under his skin had been writhing just out of sight, flowing over the contours of his body. Staring me down from his perch overhead? Blades and saws, hooks and all manner of implementations untouchable by my power had risen up out of him like raised hackles. He was either pissed at my disruption, afraid of me, or both.

Just the thought had me grinning, teeth bared behind my scarf. [Rotlimb: I knew there was a touch of madness in there! Give him hell, Sixteen! Kill him slow.] [Belial: Is this what you need?]

His hangers-on, Cricket and Stormtiger, had bristled as well, but he raised a hand to stay them then lifted that hand up into the air, where a sea of steel erupted from it, his skin sliced to ribbons and slipping down into the depths within. Silence took the crowd again in a wave that rippled out from his position, and before it had finished reaching the other end of the arena, Hookwolf stepped up onto the railing and jumped off. He killed his momentum with his legs shifting into more of the lupine form he was known for, every inch covered in protrusions that could have torn me to pieces the last time he had brought that form to bear against me. That still could—envisioning advancing and trying to pull him apart set my nerves on fire, Danger Zone's power screaming in warning. Diamondback's power made me durable and incapable of feeling pain, but it did not make me invincible.

Knowing that felt good. Why did that feel good?

Hookwolf stalked forward, more wolf than man. "Didn't expect this." [Footloose: Okay, get this man some shampoo, stat. But then so much yes.]

"Me neither." [Toro: For once, we're in agreement, Six. D-ish.]

He stopped maybe fifteen feet away and made a show of looking me over and audibly sneering. "You don't belong here, 'hopebringer.'" [Alchemist: Ugh. Truly?]

"If you're referring to my heritage, I half belong." [Rotlimb: You can't tell me you're surprised, Eight.] I caught myself off guard with my own joke, a laugh clawing its way out of me with a shudder that sent tingles of goosebumps down my arms. "Or is it because I'm wearing a full set of clothes?" [Six fucks everything, and Nine has a type.]

When I'd pulled on my costume that morning, my black bodysuit and all the silver accents pieces, they hadn't felt right. It hadn't felt like me.

Hookwolf's other arm bloomed into a garden of blades, only his torso and head human. "Leave, or I'll make you," he growled with a curl of his lips and gleam in his eyes that made it quite clear he wanted me to choose the latter. [Belial: The water's warm.]

"Oh, I want you to," I breathed. [Klaus: June…?] [Sarah: Ah.]

And I did. I. Did. I had no idea why, but I truly did. I wanted to punch him, and obviously! He had nearly gotten Masuyo killed. Nearly killed me too. He distracted me while Victor stole my ability to speak for months. Of course I wanted to punch him. … but there was a part of me that wanted to be punched back. To give and take with one of the few people in this city who could challenge me.

"Here or there," I tacked on. I took a step forward and pushed my goggles up onto my forehead. "Your choice. But I'm not leaving here without a fight."

Hookwolf paused at that, every part of him. The violence that lived under his skin, the truth he'd torn away his flesh to bare, stilled. Every last hook and blade and spike, they all froze for an instant of recognition. Not that he said as much, but I felt it all the same. The moment we both realized we were looking in a mirror—distorted.

The moment passed, barely there and gone, but the tone in his voice had changed when he said, "That right? I'll make you regret coming here." [Belial: Let's see if you can swim.]

The last vestige of his humanity slipped away, the veneer of flesh and bone wadded up and swallowed whole by the wolf at his core. Hookwolf, the real one, came out to play. Compact, far smaller than he had been when he tried to savage me last year, but then he had to be to fit through the gate he'd turned to stalk towards. I lifted just enough that my feet were dangling and followed, my approach met with a redoubling of the jeers from the nazis above. Their threats and slurs slipped over me, beneath my notice.

The guards had already dragged the fallen father out of the ring by his arms and deposited him just past the radius of the gates' swing. His daughter stood over his unconscious body, watching first Hookwolf then me as we passed and entered. Her expression remained unperturbed by my presence, by my theft of her moment—her glory. That thought gave me pause. Glory? I'd never cared about that before until…

I was suddenly very aware of the eight days I'd been awake and the fifteen parasites in my head.

This… wasn't a good idea. [Butcher: Of course. Pathetic.] [Belial: Barely a toe? … no. No, you've realized you're already in.] [DZ: Dude. You're just figuring that out?] [Rotlimb: Aw, c'mon, don't puss out now!] [Footloose: Eyes were bigger than your vagina, huh?] [Klaus: Well thank god you can see that now at least!] [Alchemist: Head on confrontation is never a good idea, June darling.] [Toro: Cold foot! Bah, should've fucking known.] [Edict: None of this is! We've been telling you that for fifteen minutes!] [Caterpillar: That's how it gets you, Sixteen. It slips in…] [Diamondback: Those are their urges. Just ignore them.] [Deimos: Tsssss… De-lic-ious…] [Quarrel: I can't believe this. You imbecile.] [Sarah: Oooh, this is giving me some unfortunate flashbacks…]

Realization did little to rectify that I was standing in front of a wolf made with death.

Hookwolf swelled, the mass of sharp metal making up his wolf form quickly reaching the size he'd been when we fought on that warehouse roof last year. The steel mill might have been a rough match in size, but the arena assembled in its belly most certainly wasn't.

"There it is." It was disconcerting, hearing a human voice in the metal monstrosity looming over me, even distorted and tinny as it was. "There's that regret." [Butcher: Hopefully we're looking at Seventeen.] [Rotlimb: Seriously, Sixteen! What a fucking waste.] [Footloose: SixteeEeeeEeEen!] [Toro: Almost had me rooting for you, Sixteen.] [Quarrel: All this, and you back down, Sixteen?]

But something else quickly overrode that feeling.

My name is June.

Hookwolf lunged, and the cage ate him.

Whatever pretense had kept Cricket, Stormtiger, and the unpowered nazis from attacking me collapsed into shambles the moment I'd ripped the steel walls of the cage free from where they'd been welded in place and used them to trap Hookwolf before he could escape, to imprison him in a glorified jungle gym made immutable when I shoved it into elsewhere.

Commitment, I thought as I grabbed every piece of metal in the building at once, isn't always a good thing.



"Meteor?"

I stirred, looking up from the phone in my hand. The screen had long since locked itself after I'd stopped scrolling through PHO in a futile attempt to ignore the complaints. I'd expected Gregor but hadn't expected Masuyo to join him, though in hindsight I really should have. The feel of a pistol at her hip, rifle slung across her back, and knife tucked into her boot burned like staring right at the sun.

"Hey." [Butcher: You're a pissant, you little shit.]

"Hey yourself," Masuyo lisped, her eyes flicking from where I was sitting hunched over on the ground to what was past me and back. "So how did this happen?" [Butcher: No fucking spine. No wonder you wanted to chop off your dick and balls so badly.]

I sighed. "Went flying, followed someone here, picked a fight with Hookwolf." [Toro: You're being a bit ridiculous at this point, One.]

"Skipped a few bits there." [Butcher: No one is talking to you, poofter.]

Her gaze lifted again. I didn't need to turn to know she was staring at where the abandoned steel mill had been, only the foundation and an absolutely ginormous, gleaming structure left behind. It was roughly cubical, though I'd been more concerned with sealing in the nazis than the shape at the time I made it. Neither she nor Gregor would be able to tell by looking at it, but the solid prison I'd made had a bottom as well, forged from the chipped and cracked epoxy and the concrete hidden beneath.

"They can breathe in there, right?" Masuyo asked. [Footloose: Whoa! Party foul!] [Toro: You seriously wanna go there, douche canoe? Keep spewing that shit at me, and I'mma rip you a new asshole.]

"There's a bunch of air holes up top. None on the sides, so Stormtiger doesn't get any ideas." I jabbed a finger at her face; more particularly, the shiny scarf wrapped around it and tucked into a hooded shirt with horizontal bands of charcoal and a rich, deep purple. "And you?" [Butcher: I'll call you whatever I damn well please, especially if you side with this dickless coward.]

"I wore this in New York," was her non-answer. "You never wear the old ones anymore." [Footloose: It's okay to be a lil' jelly sometimes, One-ton!] [Toro: Up yours, you crotchety bastard. If I think Sixteen owned, then it's my motherfucking right to say it.]

She had, hadn't she? Looking back, I might have peripherally noticed, but I had been so occupied with other matters that I just hadn't paid it any attention. What I really wanted to address was the rest of her outfit, namely the black tactical vest over the horizontal bands of purple and black and the baggy black cargo pants tucked into steel toed combat boots, but I never got the chance.

"Meteor," Gregor said, speaking up for the first time since the two of them had arrived. Where Masuyo had elected to wear what looked disturbingly close to a costume for a normal human, Gregor was wearing a simple hoodie and jeans with the hood pulled up to ward away any attention he might get for his translucent, growth-covered skin during the day. Despite his far more casual attire, he still commanded my attention at that moment. Namely because he was not happy. "We should be preparing for a funeral right now."

I cringed away, shrinking in on myself. "I know. And I'm sorry. I shouldn't… have…" [Butcher: And now you cower before this fat fuck?! Disgraceful!]

I trailed off, my apology derailed by what I felt just beginning to come into my range. "You… You called the PRT?" [Rotlimb: Look, One, I hate Sixteen pussyfooting around as much as you.]

Nearby, the door to the crew's van sliding open with a click and a whir. Therese climbed out, giving me an apologetic look. Why, I wasn't sure. Perhaps because like Masuyo, she was wearing one of my old, cloth scarves wrapped around her face. It seemed I had started a fashion trend. I'd have remarked on that more if circumstances had been different and the PRT hadn't been approaching. Was that why they'd brought Therese? To handle the authorities? [Rotlimb: And sure, I would've rather seen her actually fight that Hook guy, but you have to admit she did win.]

"Yes." [Butcher: Have all of you forgotten yourselves?]

"We could've wait—!" [Forgotten what it means to be strong?]

"No, we could not." My protest died immediately. It was not like Gregor to interrupt. He exhaled, seeming to age a decade with the act. "The Empire may have called for assistance. Better to have some of our own." [Forgotten what it means to be Teeth?!]

I tried to meet Gregor's gaze but couldn't, eyes falling back to the pavement. The worst of the Chorus promptly started tearing into me for it, unified once more by either me deferring to Gregor, Butcher's urging, or perhaps both. I couldn't bring myself to care right then, not when I was ruining everything. Again. Melanie had me swear I wouldn't do shit like this when I joined. That I wouldn't antagonize the local gangs; that I wouldn't antagonize potential clients. And now she was dead—dead because of me, no matter what the others said—and everything was falling apart.

Did Gregor and Masuyo know I'd heard them debating next steps for hours last night? Trying to figure out what contacts would still be willing to work with us, now that Melanie was dead. Discussing whether or not we could leverage my new fame as a 'hopebringer' to bring in new clients to replace the ones who'd canceled upcoming jobs, anxious over the change in leadership. Bemoaning the difficulty we might have picking up jobs from the PRT once it became clear we had poached a member.

All. My. Fault.

The soft scratch of shoes on concrete caught my ears. Therese's shoes, the bright pastel colors a sharp contrast against the grainy black of the parking lot. "I imagine it's a small comfort, but… You did a good thing for the city." [Rotlimb: God, I don't get you kid. You just overwhelmed three capes and a hundred plus normies, and you don't give a single shit.]

A single, humorless, "Ha," slipped out of me. I didn't look up. "What made me feel better was having these pricks off my back for once." [Edict: It's baffling to me that you can't see how this is a complicated situation for her.]

"Really?" Her hand slipped into my field of view. "They let up?" [Toro: What's really baffling is how a gigantic cunt like you can live with herself.]

"After I trapped all the nazis, yeah. Everyone but Butcher." I could feel the PRT vehicles coming into my range. I lifted myself to my feet and couldn't help but add, my eyes flicking to the hand Therese had offered me as I did, "Your confidence in me is misplaced." [DZ: Just let it go, Edict. Don't get him more fuel.] [Edict: You—! Raaagh!]

She yanked the hand back like she'd touched fire, her face looking like she'd fallen into one it was so red. "I wasn't—! That—! Those were special circumstances!" she hissed, the first glimmers of tears in her eyes. [Toro: Don't worry, Three. My hate for her is always burning. Clean and strong.]

Sounds like a slippery slope, I almost said, but I held my tongue. She was clearly distraught enough from my rebuke. That moment of the Teeth's attack in New York still stood out starkly in my memory; the moment Therese had gifted her confidence in me. She'd caught me as I'd been collapsing in on myself, and that had maybe made the difference in saving the crew from injury or worse, and yet… She'd Mastered me. She'd unequivocally changed how I felt about myself, slipping something else into place.

It was Octavia all over again. Fuck, it was that and Aisha all over again. Being made into someone else, only this time it was done by someone I knew—someone I trusted.

But then I'd learned what the PRT wanted to do to her. I'd learned that someone I knew, someone who was like me, was about to be forced to be someone she wasn't, and I'd demanded and all but unilaterally decided she be given a place on the crew. I did what I had wished someone would have done for me, and I was confident I'd done the right thing, but… whose confidence was it?

The PRT finally arriving saved me from mustering a real response to her obvious guilt or from having to wrestle with my own conflicted feelings. A dozen armored vehicles with a familiar motorcycle at the front. None of their green flashers or sirens were on, the convoy almost eerie as they slid into the lot one after the other like a long, segmented snake slithering off the street.

Armsmaster all but leapt from his motorcycle—I was unsurprised when the tinkertech contraption parked itself—halberd in hand and promptly demanded, "Hookwolf, Cricket, and Stormtiger are inside?" without so much as a 'hello.' [Footloose: Well, hey there, handsome…]

I was equally unsurprised by Footloose wanting to fuck anyone still breathing. Masuyo responded before any of us, "Them and over a hundred unpowered, yes." [Edict: Oh, I forgot you're in ENE.] [Quarrel: Armsmaster…?] [DZ: You would, Foots.]

If Armsmaster was surprised by an unknown person taking charge, he didn't show it. "Status?" [Footloose: Duh.]

"Hookwolf is trapped in a cage. Rest are loose." She nodded at one of the PRT vehicles with a roof mounted launcher. "Air holes up top. Foam?" [Do you see that chin?]

"That's a 49,500 square foot building." [I could do things with a chin like that.] I blinked. That was a very specific size. "We'd need half the city's supply. Impossible on a time limit." [That chin could do things to me.]

"Time limit?" Masuyo hadn't paused but half a second before answering her own question. "The metal. Empire doesn't know." [Caterpillar: We get the picture.]

Behind Armsmaster, PRT officers had begun fanning out along with a few heroes. Dauntless I recognized from the incident at the hospital, but I didn't recognize the other three. A man in a red bodysuit with a 'V' on his chest, another man in a fully concealing white clock costume, and a younger girl in a green and white costume with wavy, intersecting lines. Speed, time, and… whatever swooping lines meant.

"No movement we'd expect. Weapons?" [Footloose: Oh, I'll paint you a picture.]

"In the building, Meteor," Masuyo clarified before I could piece together exactly what he meant. [DZ: Dude. No.] [Rotlimb: Fuck, Six, c'mon, man…]

"Uh, no?" I said before more firmly restating, not having meant to sound unsure, "No. Plenty in their vehicles, but the guards weren't letting them in." [Footloose: A beard that short and cropped? Gawd, do you have any idea how it feels to rub your dick on something like that?]

"Scribe!" Armsmaster barked, unwittingly masking my sputtered disbelief. Scribe? I wondered, doing my damnedest to not pay attention to Footloose. The name of one of the unknown capes? The small one, if I had to guess from the costume designs. Seeing her perk up at the shout gave me the impression I was right.

"Ocelot, alpha delta," Armsmaster added along with four quick jabs of his finger at points roughly equidistant from each other along the wall of the structure closest to us. The small cape and the one in white moved into a loose semi-circle formation with the officers who had containment foam launchers strapped to their backs. Dauntless, meanwhile, moved to stand just behind and right of Armsmaster. "Meteor, can you open entrances where I just pointed on my command?" [Klaus: Foots. Stop it. We don't want to know.] [Footloose: Like fucking heaven if you go with the grain, but shit, if you go against?] [Quarrel: Shut the fuck up, Six.]

Masuyo slipped her open palm between him and me, wordlessly drawing the focus back to herself. "We provided the opportunity and alerted you out of good will. Anything further, you'll need to pay." [Footloose: Aw, lighten up, guysos! I'm just talking about getting a blowjob! You all need to live a little!] [Sarah: … can we bleach our brain? I really want to.]

"The bounty isn't enough?!" Dauntless blurted, prompting Armsmaster to harshly slash his free hand through the air between him and us. Dauntless clammed up, his lips puckered up like he'd bit into a lemon in the shade of his helmet.

"Your name?" [Butcher: Six.] [DZ: Foots.] [Rotlimb: Six…] [Klaus: Foots!] [Edict: Footloose, jesus.] [Caterpillar: Six.] [Diamondback: Pointless.] [Quarrel: Six.] [Sarah: Ugh.]

"Wire. And yes, I have full permission to negotiate on behalf of our crew." [Footloose: Fine! Fine. … buncha prudes.]

I was very grateful for my scarf right about then. Not just to hide the monumental blush that had blossomed on my cheeks but also my gaping bewilderment at what was unfolding before me. So she was wearing a costume. And Masuyo was… Fuck, she was doing a very convincing Melanie impression right now. Which, sure, she had always been able to turn on the professionalism when the situation called for it, but this… She was stepping up to a whole new level.

"Wire," Armsmaster continued, more terse and rushed than before, which was saying something, "the bounty for Hookwolf's capture is functionally similar to that of a kill order, meaning its proportional. The vast majority goes to those responsible for the capture with a much smaller portion set aside for the person or persons, if any, who provided the info leading to that capture."

"You're suggesting if we don't cooperate, you'll reduce our take."

"I'm suggesting your cooperation reduces the amount of risk my people are in, and the longer we wait, the more likely Empire reinforcements become, effectuating the same."

"Meteor," Masuyo—Wire, apparently—said, turning her attention to me. "You comfortable doing the PRT's captures for them?"

It didn't need to be said that I could. With the powers she and I both knew I had at my disposal, it would be trivial. What she was really asking was, did I think I could handle this non-violently. If I hadn't been certain before, the request made me certain she knew exactly why I'd gotten involved here.

"You got it, boss." I winced at my slip of the tongue. Gregor looked away, and Therese looked distressed, fully aware of what we were both thinking.

Wire didn't so much as bat an eye as she returned her attention to Armsmaster. "That brings us back to our fee. I could call in the rest of our team, ask Meteor to tear down those walls, and we put our full focus on Hookwolf. You'll lose out on a big capture and the publicity and your people's safety will be put at risk, but we'll get our full bounty. Or you could pay our fee to have a Hopebringer handle it safely.

"It's up to you, Armsmaster. How much is your people's safety worth?"

Armsmaster, for the first time in the conversation, didn't have an immediate response. After a pregnant pause, he looked at me and asked, "You can capture all of them? Including Cricket and Stormtiger? A simple yes or no, please."

Weird. But, "Yes," I could do it with my eyes closed.



As it turned out, Armsmaster did value his people's safety. Either that or the perception that he did.

And so, after reassuring Gregor and Therese I'd be fine, I surrounded myself in scrap metal from around the lot and merged it with the wall, my darkness becoming one with theirs. Difference was, I could see where all their veins were.

I should have been the one springing an attack on them, my arrival unnoticed until the people I restrained started calling out to alert the others. Instead, my veins immediately screamed in warning. I shoved up off the wall to dodge over whatever was coming and heard the howling scream of Stormtiger's air blade tear through where I'd just been. The blade struck the wall behind me, and though I had warning from Danger Zone's power, I wasn't quick enough to escape the unexpected secondary effect of the damn thing exploding.

I shot away at speed to prevent any repeats while counting my blessings that I couldn't feel pain and wouldn't take lasting damage. They'd been smart enough to remove the metal on them for our last encounter, so I wasn't surprised to feel the chains from Stormtiger's outfit laying on the ground. The bastard had also been smart enough to toss said chains away from his location, if the direction the air attack had come from was any indication. Couple that with the room erupting into chaos as nazis throughout the room began to shout and run in alarm, and he should have had a clear advantage.

He didn't. [Butcher: Get him.] [Rotlimb: Yeah! Hunt the lil' bitch down!] [Toro: He thinks he can escape us?] [Deimos: Mmm, heavenly.] [Quarrel: Fool.]

I peeled away enough steel from the walls to make a half dozen, roughly spaced blades from each and hurled them inward, away from each wall, with Stormtiger in my mind as my target. Quarrel might be pretty insufferable, but her power was pretty invaluable. I felt each bend their trajectories, adjusting for my complete lack of aim, and just as importantly, I saw when one set of veins dashed out of the way.

Sensory aspect to his power, I mused as I redirected the blades and accelerated their flight while peeling more off the walls. So that's how he knew I was here. [Rotlimb: Skewer him, yeah!] [Klaus: Don't cut him! Rotlimb's power!] [Toro: Gut him like a fish haha!]

Shit. Thankfully Klaus' warning was timely enough I managed to spin the blades flat-side and blunt their edges before they slammed into Stormtiger, who hadn't had enough time to get out of the way again. I twisted the metal into tight coils of chains and threw him through the wall to the PRT, and with the tiger captured, I turned my sites to the cricket. [Klaus: Oh thank god.] [Toro: Ha! Almost, Sixteen! But hey, ya got'm!] [Sarah: You need to be careful if you don't want the PRT to know you're, well, y'know.]

Cricket had likewise discarded her cage mask and the miniature scythes and strange, stick-like device she'd been carrying, so I half expected her to try to play at stealth like her comrade, to be the proverbial needle in the nazi-stack. But when I started repeating the process for her, I felt someone pick up the weapons and start sprinting in a beeline straight for me. More sensory powers; if she knew where I was, she probably knew what had happened to Stormtiger.

She'd recognized the futility of hiding from me. [Butcher: We are inevitable.] [Belial: Excellent.] [Rotlimb: Take her out, Sixteen! Give her some scars to remember us by!]

I turned the blades of her scythes on her, yanking them forward and into the path of her mad dash, but she was already sliding under, taking full advantage of the smooth surface of the mill's floor. I saw the veins of her arms fling something at me, and I dodged to the side, wary of tinkertech bullshit. I'd not yet forgotten how Danger Zone's power hadn't warned me of certain categories of 'danger' back in New York. The distraction at a half second, which wasn't nothing with how fast she was tearing across the room while blindly dodging between the arena's scattered crowd, but she had started her rush from much too far away for it to truly matter.

If she was that quick to move and react, then overwhelming force was the answer. I ripped dozens upon dozens of strips of steel from the walls and speared them into her path like a maze of bamboo just waiting to lash out and trap her. She tried to change course to duck around, but I was already surrounding her with more and more. In moments, she was trapped in the middle of a metal cornfield, but even then she refused to bow down and wait for capture, resuming her course towards me while ducking and weaving as the beams split into fronds to lash out and grab her. She made it further than I expected, but I bound her in the end and hucked her through the wall like Stormtiger.

With Hookwolf still caged, that just left cleaning up the trash. And maybe it was the method I'd used to catch Cricket was fresh on my mind… Or maybe it was something closer to home, a pang for something lost… But I tore down the walls of the structure, blinding them all while I showered the area with tens of thousands of spears, carefully keeping ground around people but not under them in mind.

"Iron Rain sends her regards," I whispered from above as I chained them all in place.

[Butcher: That's it. Make them helpless.] [Belial: Beautiful.] [DZ: Holy hell, that's one way to get it done.] [Rotlimb: What a finish!] [Ror: Whoa…] [Footloose: Heeey, that's kinda kinky.] [Klaus: Wow… It's been a while since I've seen that.] [Alchemist: Points for style, Juniper.] [Toro: That's what I'm talking about, Sixteen!] [Edict: Yowza, kid.] [Caterpillar: Excellent technique!] [Diamondback: Quick and effective. Good job.] [Deimos: Mmmm…] [Quarrel: That is how we do things.] [Sarah: Holy shit… I mean, well done, but holy shit…]

It was over. The capes were all caged, the unpowered secured, and the PRT rushing in at Armsmaster's signal. I gave Wire, Gregor, and Therese a mid-air bow as I started to drift down—

Over the cosmos, the vast void of space enveloping me, the closest stars unfathomably distant pinpricks of light the only bulwarks against a darkness absolute. I knew this. I had been here before, a speck drowning in emptiness, crushed by the weight of my own insignificance.

Light swallowed the dark, became my world. Twin creatures more massive than the sun, scale I knew in my soul without understanding how. World eaters. Star eaters. As atoms were to me so were the engines of life to them, power beyond my understanding the fuel for a purpose I had been chosen to be a part of.

A purpose disrupted. The end long fled, the eventuality of everything. As they had consumed, so to were they, and with them so all our bond perished. Except his.

—gravity returned first, and hot on its heels the primal fear of plummeting that all humans felt.

I jerked to a stop, slamming my fall to a stop far quicker than was wise for the human body. A deep, aggrieved groan crawled its way out of me, my eyes snapping back and forth in an instinctive effort to orient and ground myself. I didn't mean to see her, didn't mean to lock eyes, but once I saw hers, I couldn't look away. It was the girl from the ring, Kennedy Hart. Across an abyss, connected once by something I'd forgotten, she met my gaze. A storm was suspended in the grays of her eyes, a fear catalyzed by me. Then she was gray, her eyes white—perspective inverted, place inverted. The chain that had held her clanged to the ground as she vanished into the spear she'd been lashed to.

Then she was gone.





A/N: I'm sure that went differently than any of you were expecting! A nazi was responsible for June's trigger... and now June's responsible for a nazi's trigger. I'm sure this will end well

Chapter 8.5 is already written and will be posted in three weeks on April 26th. You could wait until it shows up here... or you can check out my Discord, where the chapter is already up for preview.

Now, some of you may be wondering why that's three weeks away after I said, "I think every other week is doable," at the end of 8.3. That would be because Royal Road's Writhathon kicked off on the 1st! If you're not familiar with Royal Road or their Writhathon, RR is a website for all kinds of fiction (I actually cross-post Luster there) but is especially for original fiction. I actually wrote another original novel there three years ago for the Writhathon that year, which is a regular competition to write 55,555 words in 5 weeks (I know it occurs every April, and it might happen at other times of the year, but I can't recall off the top of my head).

What does any of that have to do with Luster? Well, I have an idea for a novel that insists upon being written (cough, I'll get back to work on Molt really, cough). Because I'll be pouring a lot of effort and time into {RECURSION} for the next four and a half weeks (competition ends May 5th), I'm going to space out the Luster schedule a tad to three weeks (which means 8.6 should come out on May 10th, meaning I'll have minimal Luster work to do during the Writhathon).

For those of you who are even remotely interested in some original fiction by me, here's the blurb:
Ervin didn't expect to get a tablet from his teacher on his first day of high school, and he certainly didn't expect he would manage to break reality with the coding app he found on it. When help comes along and breaks him out, he's all too eager to learn how to do it on purpose. The first change? Making his world into her world.

You can find {RECURSION} here. It would mean the world if y'all gave it a read!

And hey, if you enjoy reading stories like this, your support would mean the world to me. Links to that sort of thing are on my Discord as well. Thank you all as always for reading, and you'll be hearing from me again here in three weeks!
 
Anneal 8.5 New
"There is no immortality, but the memories left in the minds of men."

Ade paused, letting the words linger in the air and dance from ear to ear between all of us gathered. Outside, the sun was setting behind Captain's Hill, the sky cast in reds reminiscent of the sunrise I'd abandoned to chase bad ideas earlier today. Any other night, the doors of Palanquin would have been thrown wide by now, entry granted or barred not by the heft and weight of wood but by the will of Pierce and his men. But tonight, Palanquin was closed, the entrance closed behind the last of us to arrive, as we all came together by unspoken agreement around the bar where Ade stood upon a squat step stool procured from some corner of the club known only to the staff.

"We are gathered tonight," he continued, "not to mourn but to remember."

All of us, even Ade, were wearing our normal clothes. A bit nicer, truth be told, but there was no black beyond the norm. Gregor wasn't wearing his habitual hoodie but kept the solid color tee over jeans. On the opposite side of the spectrum, Newter was wearing a shirt for once, albeit a faded, form fitting Rolling Stones tee. Beneath where Newter was affixed to the lip of the balcony, Emily still had her headphones, but she had pulled them down to settle around her neck. Elle and Masuyo were both dressed for comfort, the former because she was just only starting to recover from a string of bad days and the latter because her bandages complicated getting dressed enough already. The real surprise was that Therese, in the simple clothes Ade had procured, had teamed up with Emily to coax Mischief into wearing a buttoned-up trench coat. It had taken every ounce of my self control, which was in very short supply, to resist the temptation to make a joke about ten rats on each other's shoulders in a trench coat.

I'd personally settled on a ruched top with flowing sleeves over a pair of torn jeans. I'd bought both with the money from my first job with the Crew right before… before Octavia.

"Because Melanie Fitts is not dead."

I grit my teeth, and though there was a faint, untraceable snicker from someone among the Chorus at my discomfort, the quiet otherwise persisted. I held my tongue and counted my blessings that the lot of them were being respectful of the ceremony at all.

Ade reached into the pocket of his waistcoat, whatever shine its emerald thread once held worn with age yet no less refined for it, the daily compliment to an austere white button down tucked into black slacks over matching loafers. Out of the pocket he withdrew a small piece of metal a bit larger than a half dollar, the tip of a stylized crack cutting into the remnant of the otherwise stark design. The only piece of her I'd kept Charon from claiming.

"She is alive in each and every one of us." Then, after a brief pause, he added, "Labyrinth, if you would?"

Behind the amorphous crowd of assembled staff and residents, in the middle of the empty dance floor, a narrow circle began to depress. As Ade stepped down from his perch and crossed through the parting crowd, the sinking wood grew into a proper hole. It was funny, really, how Ade openly addressed 'Labyrinth,' despite none of us wearing any masks. He hadn't directed any particular attention to Elle, nothing that would identify her as Labyrinth, but it was a polite fiction. All of the staff were adults over 21—this was a club, after all—and everyone on the crew was well under that threshold but Gregor and Masuyo, both of whom stood out in their own ways. If someone on staff had really wanted to match one of us to our cape identities, it wouldn't exactly require much effort.

Ade reached the hole Elle made and turned to face us, mask in hand. He dropped it into the darkness, and the floor swallowed it, no sign left behind. He took a deep breath and smiled. It was pained, but it was a smile nonetheless. "Melanie left specific instructions to, and I quote, 'Break out the good stuff, and do not mourn. Celebrate that I made it as long as I did.' I think, my friends, that we have come dangerously close to mourning.

"So let us get on with the celebration."



"Really? You've stolen from an art gallery?" [Footloose: Never gonna give! You! Up!]

Newter threw his head back, barking a laugh at the reaction. Over the course of the night, he had amassed a small pack of ladies from the staff at the nook he'd claimed on one side of the dance floor, his entourage enraptured by his energy, his stories, or both. In a way, he was treating it like another night in the club, which I suppose was the point. He had individually dragged most of our crew members over at one point or another to offer their own perspective on his stories and back him up when his tales grew too tall for his avid listeners. At that moment, that meant me, which in the past I had never minded as much as I did right then. Most of the young women he spent the nights coaxing upstairs to the balcony lounge weren't that much older than us, and there was something… nice about the interactions, as superficial as they often were. Tonight wasn't much different in that sense. Some of the staff were of a similar age as the clientèle, and those that were older generally weren't that much older. Honestly, the conversations had even been better than normal overall. These people didn't know us, but they knew us enough that they weren't intimidated by or enamored with speaking to a cape, and that lent itself to less one-sided dialogue.

The reason I wanted to retreat from the attention Newter had gathered was as simple as it was difficult. And it was exceptionally difficult to keep a straight face while Footloose was fucking singing off key in my head. If I managed to keep the depth of my annoyance limited to a twitching eye, it was going to be a goddamn miracle.

"We did!" Newter rejoined with a grin a mile wide. "You didn't hear about our job in Buffalo? It wasn't that long ago!" [Footloose: Never gonna leeeet ya dooOooOwn!] [Diamondback: I know this song. This is not how it's sung.] [Alchemist: At least choose something classier, Footloose. Sinatra? Dean Martin?]

Dude. Why?? I groused in the safety of my head, the question meant for both Footloose and Alchemist. The DJ and the backup for her off days had kicked the sound system into gear, and neither Rick Astley or the Rat Pack fit whatsoever with P!nk's Raise Your Glass. [DZ: Don't encourage them.] [Footloose: Never gonna run around and desert you!!] [Klaus: That's just how they are, June.]

"Oh!" someone spoke up, "SUNY Buffalo, right? My brother goes to school there and mentioned… I think it was a skull got stolen?" [Never gonna maaaake ya cry!]

"That's the one," Newter confirmed, directing a finger gun at the person who'd spoken up. "Not just any skull though—this one was made of titanium and covered in diamonds with a big one smack dab in the middle of the forehead. Thing was worth a fortune just in materials before you even got to artistic value. Cost the artist millions." [Alchemist: Tch, I suppose it is too much to ask for you…] [Footloose: Never gonna say… good-BAI!]

"That much?!" [Never. Gonna. Teeeeell ya a liiIIeeee…!]

Newter looked my way. "You remember what the value was?" [And hurt. you. bay-Beeee!!]

I took a moment to clear my throat to recover from Footloose's impromptu singing. I did my best to not fidget under the attention of the staff, a couple of whom I knew had only been hired after I lost the ability to speak. I did not have an answer ready for why I suddenly could, an oversight I would need to fix ASAP. "Sixteen mil? Eighteen? To make it, I mean. Price tag was fifty, I think. Pounds, not dollars. I dunno the exchange rate."

Perhaps shocked into silence by the value of that job—though it was more likely they'd grown bored with their own antics—Footloose finally, blessedly stopped singing. Which wasn't to say that the Chorus fell silent. [Rotlimb: Yowza. That's a lotta green.] [Caterpillar: Interesting. Your group is not a band of thieves—you were paid to steal it then? How much?]

I don't really remember how much my cut was, sorry, Cat. [Alchemist: Sounds like a potentially interesting target!]

His audience suitably awed by the price tag of our heist, Newter launched into, admittedly, mildly exaggerated retelling of how we'd liberated the art piece out from under the noses of the significant security SUNY Buffalo's Center for the Arts had assigned to guard it. I wasn't super interested in the tale, having experienced it all firsthand, so my attention began to wander. After getting roped into Newter's earlier retelling of our job at the Queen's Gambit, Emily had retreated to the lounge upstairs, and Therese had followed her and struck up a conversation from the look of it. Made sense the two of them would gravitate to each other right then, since neither of them knew Melanie that well—or at all, in Therese's case. Gregor was chatting with Masuyo and Ade across the room, Mischief's trench coat draped over his arm but the Changer themself nowhere to be seen. Elle had likewise made herself scarce; upstairs in… our room, judging by the position of the metal button and accents adorning her jeans.

Elle… I wasn't ignorant. I knew I needed to talk with her. The problem was, what the fuck should I say? How was I supposed to broach learning our entire relationship was founded on a lie? It was like some shit straight out of a soap opera some underpaid writers had churned out in an afternoon after pounding back a few. I was the unsuspecting target of a mad scientist who had tinkered with what made her tick, with what made her her. The unwitting yokel tricked into drinking a witch's potion that made her into someone else altogether. The veil over my eyes had been torn away, the truth laid bare, with nothing to show for it but misery. Pandora's box had been opened, my eyes forced open, and—

[Toro: Okay, wow, this is some next level avoidance.] [Butcher: Pathetic. Whining.] [Klaus: June. Sweetheart, you're being a little… Uh…]

Oh shut the fuck up! I just… Just don't know what to think! To do! [DZ: Okay, honest truth, I kinda wanted to see what metaphor you'd come up with next.] [Quarrel: I hate it when I agree with you, One.]

[Klaus: Yes. You do.] [Diamondback: You already admitted you know what to do. Why lie now?] [Butcher: You came around in the end, Fourteen.]

I pinched the bridge of my nose, willing myself to be patient. It isn't that simple! This is Complicated with a capital fucking 'C'! [Klaus: It's not simple, things like this never are, but they're always worth doing.] [Quarrel: Not for you.]

Klaus, please stop trying to be the cool uncle. It doesn't work normally, and it definitely doesn't work when I have all your memories. [Footloose: A fucking 'C'… Oh my god, gang. A 'C' can slip right in and curve up to the good shit…] [Rotlimb: It really isn't that difficult.] [Diamondback: I don't understand how capitalizing 'complicated' is relevant to this conversation.]

[Klaus: You know what? You're right. I'm not the cool uncle. I'm a pathetic loser who ran away from all the problems in my life and look where it got me!] [Footloose: But it's also fuckable… It's… It's the perfect letter!]

[Klaus: And that's why I need you to see that I'm right too. Running from your problems is never a solution. If it doesn't come back to bite you, then you'll still be left unsatisfied!] [Rotlimb: I'm so glad I came before you Six. I do not want your memories.]

[Klaus: Don't be like me, okay? Don't be a goddamn coward who pissed away every chance to be a father to his kids or kiss the woman he loves!]

"Hey… you okay?"

"Huh?" I blinked. For a moment, tears painted the world in arcing smears and oblong splotches of color, Palanquin rendered in watercolor like one of Alchemist's paintings brought to life. Then I wiped my eyes, reality reasserting itself over artistic impression. People were still here, the memorial ongoing, but they weren't here. It was just Newter with me in the booth, the gaggle of people he'd collected with his stories gone.

Newter gave me an unsure smile. Eyes flicking to the crowd then back. "I asked if you were okay." [Diamondback: He asked if you were okay.] [Butcher: Again, pathetic.]

"Oh." Thanks, Diamondback. I sniffed and wiped my eyes again. Then grit my teeth as tears reversed course and my snotty nose settled into placidity. "I'm, um. I'm okay. Ish. Where'd… where'd your, uh, people go?" [Diamondback: Just clearing things up.] [DZ: That is such a gross feeling…] [Toro: Avoiding again. You're a pro at this, Sixteen.]

He waved away my concern. "Asked you something and noticed you were…" He cleared his throat. "Thought you might need a moment." [Klaus: Don't be like me.]

"Idid!" I blurted, the words half jumbled. I paused, taking a moment to breathe and nearly losing my nerve. Nearly "I… I did. Thank you. You didn't have to send them away. I can leave." [Toro: See? A pro.]

I was shaking, a gentle clatter of bone. Did he hear what I meant? Did he know that I saw the way he looked at me, how his eyes got wider when he noticed me in the room? Did he realize I was offering to leave, so he wouldn't have to be afraid of me anymore…?

Maybe he did. "Did I ever tell you what Melanie told me when she found me?" [Klaus: Don't run.]

"N-No?" I answered, thrown by his non-sequitur. [Klaus: Face it head on.]

He leaned back into the cushions, stretching his arms then settling them behind his head as his tail lithely wrapped around his drink and bringing it to his lips. He was obviously still scared, his eyes still wider than they would be, the slightest tremble running down the length of his tail. But he was here—with me.

"You don't have to be alone anymore."

Tears rolled down my cheeks then back up again. It felt nicer, having someone here as they did. "Thanks, Newts." [Klaus: That's good… Keep going…] [Rotlimb: This is getting awfully sappy.]

He took another sip, and maybe it was my imagination, but his tail seemed just a bit steadier as he did. "Want to talk about it?" [Butcher: What do you expect from a weakling like her, Four?]

"I… kinda was. With, um…" [Klaus: You've got this.] [Toro: Took weak for words.]

"With them?" His pupils might've gotten a bit wider at that. "Can't imagine they're good conversation." [Klaus: I believe in you.] [Toro: Too weak to fight for what she wants.]

"No, they… some of them, they talk at me, but…" I smiled. It was weak, but it was there. And it was honest. "I was actually talking with, um, m-my… my Dad."

"Oh?" [Dad: Oh…] Newter blinked then faintly amused asked, "And how is dear ol' Daddy Seven?" [Dad: Oh, honey.]

"Klaus. His name isn't Seven. It's… It's Klaus." [Rotlimb: Oh my fucking god.] "And he…" [Edict: Kid…]

I took a shuddering breath, a couple stray tears flowing back into me. "I was just… Everything's fucked seven ways to Sunday, Newts. Ma— Melanie is, she's gone, and I almost got us all into trouble earlier, and I don't what to say to Elle—do with Elle—and I dragged Therese into all of this, and I heard Masuyo and Gregor talking about having trouble finding us work, and— and— and I dunno w-what to do about any of it!" [Rotlimb: This has blown right past sappy into saccharine.]

"H-Hey now, c'mon, I'm no good with—" Newter started to say, looking supremely uncomfortable. [Toro: Huh. Well, alright then.] [Butcher: Can't stop crying. Can't fight for anything.]

"Mind if we join you?" [Edict: Fuck off, Butcher, give the kid a damn minute to feel, would you?]

Newter and I both were caught off guard by the sudden appearance of Therese and Emily, the two of them having come up in our blind spot while I was too distracted to notice the approaching bits of metal on their persons. Therese looked more than a little worn out, I realized, seeing her up close for the first time that day. And Emily was… Surprised? Uncomfortable? Both? Also a bit winded, strangely.

[Toro: No one asked for your opinion, bitch tits.] "The more the merrier, I say." Newter sounded relieved. I might have felt a bit resentful of that. "June?"

"S-Sure?" I didn't sound 'sure' whatsoever, so I tacked on a smile and scooted in a bit to try and reassure them. It wasn't that I minded company; I just felt overwhelmed. Thankfully Edict wasn't rising to Toro's bait.

"How are you two holding up?" Therese asked as she slipped into the empty length of the booth I'd freed. Emily took the opposite side, leaving plenty of space between her and where Newter was reclining into the cushion in the back of the U-shaped booth. It might have been that she was keeping a safe distance from any accidental touches, but it just as easily could have been that she was keeping herself at the edge to beat a hasty retreat. I hadn't forgotten how she'd reacted at the 7-Eleven yesterday on the way back from New York.

[Rotlimb: Who, Sixteen? She's holding up great.] "I'm doing okay," Newter replied with a forced smile that quickly fell apart, devolving into something forlorn, caught between happiness and sadness. "It's... Palanquin won't be the same without her." [Rotlimb: Super well adjusted in here.]

I opened my mouth to lie but stopped short of following in Newter's footsteps. "I'm… I'm feeling pretty lost right now." [DZ: She's doing pretty good despite having you jammed in here.]

"We—" Therese's eyes flicked to Emily briefly, prompting her to quickly look away, cheeks dark "—might've heard the tail end of your conversation. And I, uh, have a suggestion on the money front. Got the idea because of June, actually." [Diamondback: Letting rot set in is always bad.]

"Oh?" Newter's eyebrows shot up at that, mirroring my own surprise. "Well spill the beans, girl!" [DZ: Was… was that a joke? That sounded like a joke, but you're not really the type, Diamondback.]

But the beans didn't get spilled, and the question of whether Diamondback had a nascent sense of humor didn't get answered either. Both the Chorus and Therese paused when I tensed up. "June?"

Two very familiar sets of armor were approaching outside, and it did not bode well. "Heroes are coming. Boudicca and Dauntless." [Rotlimb: Hey hey! Now's it a party!]

Newter didn't question my sudden announcement in the slightest, pulling his feet up onto the seat then springing up onto the wall. "I'll head them off. Go get Gregor and Masuyo." [Dad: Heroes? Any idea why they'd be here?] [Rotlimb: No better way to celebrate a lost comrade than sticking it to the Man!]

No clue. I reached out to my scarf and coin collection on the upper floor while scooting towards Therese, but she didn't budge as I bumped into her, instead turning from the stock still, wide-eyed Emily to where Newter was just starting to crawl along the wall. [Footloose: Maybe they wanted to go clubbing?] [Edict: It's known your crew lives here, right?] [Butcher: Isn't it obvious? They've figured you out, Sixteen.]

"Wait!" Therese blurted. "What do you mean, 'Head them off'?? Don't attack them!" [Dad: We can't be rash! We don't know what they want!] [Caterpillar: It's Sunday, and they're in costume. They aren't here to party.] [Toro: Hey, twink boy's got the right idea haha!]

"He won't," I think, I said as I followed Newter's lead. I twisted around to get my legs up into the booth then pushed off into a handspring on the wooden divider behind the seat cushion over Therese. A surreal experience for me, since it hadn't actually occurred to me what I was doing—or that I knew how to do it—until mid-motion. Thanks for that I guess, Alchemist. [Edict: He's a case-53; doesn't need a mask. Warding them off from the memorial?] [Footloose: I partied in my costume! On Sundays too!]

Most of the staff had already stopped what they were doing to gawk our direction as Newter and I sprang into action, and more importantly, so had Masuyo and Gregor, who were rushing over. I moved to meet them halfway and, not wanting to make anyone panic more than necessary, quietly told them "Boudicca and Dauntless incoming. No PRT vans that I can feel? Not sure what's going on." [Alchemist: Mmm, you're quite welcome, I'm sure.] [Caterpillar: You are a poor measuring stick, Six.]

"Ssshit, no commssh," Masuyo bemoaned, whispering making her lisp more pronounced. She and Gregor and shared a look. "Fig're out wha' they want. Be out sshortly." [Alchemist: If you really wish to thank me, get some supplies.] [Footloose: I'll have you know, I am an excellent ruler when I'm hard.]

I hated so much that I knew the exact measurements Footloose was referring to. My scarf and coins finally got clear of the upstairs hallway and onto the balcony, the materials rocketing across the final distance once I had proper line of sight. Scarf secure around my neck and coins orbiting around me, I hurried to follow Gregor as he jogged towards the front of Palanquin.

"I thought we got things sorted out earlier?" I said as I melted and merged some of the coins to become sheaths for my arms and legs. I lifted into a hover as we reached the door. "What did they lose wolfboy already?" [Alchemist: The bar a backdrop to a union of bodies on the dance floor, the scene illuminated only by shafts of color in the darkness!]

"We did." He pushed the door open, and we stepped out into the open air. A slight shiver stole its way through him, a cloud escaping him as a slight pressure washed over me. It took me much longer than it should have to remember it was January and therefore freezing outside. I didn't feel it in the slightest. [Alchemist: I simply must see this exquisite gem captured in portrait.]

Sure, why not. It'll help pass the time. "I think I could get jackets for you and me out here?" [Alchemist: Excellent. I shall hold you to it, darling.] [Ror: I don't like surprise PRT visits…]

Ror speaking up for the first time in at least a week caught me off guard enough that I almost missed Gregor's reply, "No need, I will adjust. Keep your attention on them."

The heroes weren't bothering with hiding their approach. Dauntless was flying low, a multitude of Boudicca's runes arrayed down his arm, their cool, blue glow almost washed out by the crackling yellow of his own power burning bright around his equipment. Boudicca herself was easily keeping pace with her flying companion, but what really drew my attention was the car they were both clearly escorting.

Or rather, it was the fact they were escorting it at all that caught my eye. It certainly wasn't the car itself, which was as milquetoast as could be. A powder blue sedan, squat and steadily, slowly approaching. At a guess, the driver was traveling at the posted speed limit of a measly 35 miles per hour, which wasn't slow per se but certainly felt like it. This was the sort of situation where the enemy would ordinarily be barreling towards us at a speed somewhere between a good clip or screaming down the pavement.

It took me a second to locate Newter by the studs in his jeans. He was staying out of sight, moving into position to pincer them from behind if they stopped in front of Palanquin. Unseen backup, especially with a power like his, would be an invaluable trump card if things went sideways. There wasn't any time to try and find the others in the club. The sedan smoothly pulled to a stop in the street in front of us and turned on its blinkers, the curb itself too full with cars to parallel park despite the club being closed.

"What is this? Why have you come?" Gregor called out to them as Boudicca slipped between the cars onto the sidewalk and Dauntless touched down next to her. [Footloose: Let's get ready to rumble?]

"Just here to keep the peace," Dauntless answered as the driver's door opened, a woman in a smartly styled suit climbing out. Her short blond hair was immaculately coiffed, a deep part sweeping over her forehead with the shorter hairs on the other side neatly tucked behind her ear. I didn't recognize her at all, and with features as striking as hers, I figured I would have had I known her. [Footloose: C'mooon. We were all thinking it.]

"You're the mercenary known as Meteor, correct?" the mystery woman asked, her question clipped and to the point, her entire focus on me as she stepped past the heroes and began to pull something free from her suit jacket's inner pocket. [Footloose: There wasn't nearly enough rumbling earlier!]

No metal in there. None on her person at all. Not even the stud earrings I might've expected to find a woman like this wearing. Tinkertech weapon? I tensed, readying my coins, only to still when Gregor's hand landed on my shoulder, firm and unyielding.

"Mrs. Carol Dallon, I presume?"

Who? [Sarah: Oh. Oh shit.] [Quarrel: Brandish?]

"She's wearing the scarf commonly associated with Meteor," the woman—Carol Dallon? Where did I know that name?—said, and though her eyes never left me, she was clearly speaking to the heroes on the sidewalk behind her. Her hand came free from her jacket, and in it was… a sheaf of paper? "And exhibiting ferrokinesis."

Wait. Wait. "You're Amy's—?" [Dad: Oh god.]

"Meteor," Amy Dallon's mother brandished the paper like it was a sword, bringing it to bear with my chest, "You've been served."



A/N: Well how-dee, y'all! It's been a hot minute, huh? I know I said last time 8.5 would take three weeks, but to me, it sure does feel like it's been a helluva lot longer than that. Speed writing 44.1k words will do that haha! I'm in the final stretch of the Writathon, which ends on May 5th. A bit more than 11k words to go! If you haven't check out {RECURSION} yet, I would love to see you good folks pop on over and give it a shot—blurb and link will be below. If you're only here for Luster, that's totally fine! The game plan is for the next chapter to be out May 17th, barring the unforeseen. The chapter will be up for preview on the Discord as soon as it's done.

Thanks as always for reading! If you feel the urge to leave a comment, I always love hearing what y'all think of the story. And hey, if you like my stuff and want to read chapters early or support me writing more stuff like this, then please stop on by my Discord! Until next time!

Ervin didn't expect to get a tablet from his teacher on his first day of high school, and he certainly didn't expect he would manage to break reality with the coding app he found on it. When help comes along and breaks him out, he's all too eager to learn how to do it on purpose. The first change? Making his world into her world.

You can read {RECURSION} here on Royal Road!

 
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