Chapter 4 Results
The Stranger
wants to help if possible.
The Stranger
is too claustrophobic to seek better shelter.
The Stranger
hasn't noticed the voice.
5
Friday, April 15th, 2011
Evening
For a moment, the stranger sat, paralyzed and listening to the chaos erupting outside. Then he started to move: the laptop had managed to get enough of a charge for another hour or two, so he pulled the makeshift power cords out of the wall and gathered up the computer before moving to the cracked glass of the store's window and peering through it. It was too damaged and clouded by dirt for a reliable view, so after a moment's hesitation the stranger opened the door and stepped outside. The light he'd spotted was indeed a fire, but the flames moved in ways they decidedly shouldn't have, getting caught in sucking whirlpools of air and debris that formed a horrible miniaturized tornado in the center of a crater that had replaced one of the street's stores. Fire simply didn't work that way, so the stranger had to assume there was probably parahuman involvement. That meant he needed to not be near it, in case the cape responsible was one out to catch him.
But it also meant there might be other people near it.
The stranger hurried closer to the vortex, as close as he dared, to look for survivors. If there had been anyone where the crater now stood, they'd been consumed, and everyone who could pick themselves up and flee had already done so. Anyone else needed help. The stranger couldn't remember if he knew first aid or not, so dragging the few people left over to the abandoned store he'd been in was the best he could do for now. Maybe he could find some emergency responders and direct them there... It was awkward to carry the laptop open and active, let alone try to modify it while walking, but he needed it. If he could tap into the police radio frequencies, he'd be able to find help.
That was the plan, anyway. By the time he'd downloaded a listening program, set finding a public safety broadcast, and reworked the scavenged wires from its had-once-been power cord into an extension for the speakers, he actually spotted a fire truck next to a couple of smaller vehicles with red-blue flashing lights-- not police cars, exactly, but clearly someone involved with them; it looked like a smaller and not-as-durable fire had started from another explosion, and the firefighters were hosing the area down with water. The stranger quickened his pace towards them, trying to get there before the worry set in and made him stop. Would they have heard about his theft? Would they care at all about the people taking shelter? Would they even talk to him?
He actually stumbled a bit, over that last thought, though not over the worry that the police wouldn't talk to him: it was the sudden realization that, to his knowledge, he had never spoken to anyone. Any saliva in his mouth dried up at the sudden, irrational enormity of the task before him. The stranger tried to call to them, and couldn't quite manage it. He stepped closer and quickly tapped the nearest firefighter on the shoulder, instead. The man turned around, startled, and the stranger pointed back the way he'd came.
"Um... f-four people. Two blocks. Next to the c-cafe."
"Are they trapped?" The firefighter asked, mercifully focusing on the stranger's message instead of the delivery. The stranger shook his head, then nodded when the responder asked if they were injured. "Okay, we'll go get them. Do you need help, sir?"
Maybe. The stranger shook his head 'no' again. "Then sir, please return to your home and avoid public areas if you can."
Well, that wasn't an option, but perhaps there was more he could do to help? He was about to ask when a motion caught his eye and he turned to look. Another flying person, also in white, though from here with so little light he couldn't tell what other colors they may have been wearing. They passed overhead and took the stranger's forthcoming offer with them.
"Y-yeah... okay." Time to move on.
The stranger walked away, trying not to seem like he was in a hurry. A few more blocks away from where he'd spoken to the firefighters, he spotted streetlights still on, and made that his goal. It would take too long to build a radio receiver from scratch, especially when there were likely programs already online for it, so the stranger hurried towards the signs of working electricity. Once he found an out of the way place to sit and work, he did-- on the ground next to a decrepit phone booth. The phone and its mechanisms were quietly cannibalized for spare parts while he waited for the laptop to download what he needed.
Eavesdropping on the emergency dispatch lines was easy, but it also didn't give him much information. He'd been able to guess the explosions were parahuman-related, though not how many of them had detonated already. It seemed a bit more important to realize that the bombs
hadn't stopped yet, even after a dozen explosions spaced all around the city. There wasn't any connection to the targets being named that he could understand... beyond the obvious, he supposed: all the bombs so far had gone off in public areas, not residential. The sorts of places where there'd be more people. He overheard an ambulance dispatcher frantically trying to arrange evacuation buses for a hospital that had been hit, and felt sick to his stomach.
The stranger didn't really think he was much of a demolitionist, but a few things came to mind. It was relatively easy to make something that was capable of exploding; the hard part was getting it to explode when and where you wanted it to. He needed to examine the detonator of one of those bombs. Of course, that ran the risk of having it explode in his face. Maybe he'd look for the remains of a few spent explosives, examine them for hints on disarmament,
then look for a live one? Well, that's slightly more reasonable, but I still don't think that's a good id--
Clomping footsteps pulled the stranger's attention away from his devices, as a squad of people dressed all in black came out of a nearby alley, moving together as a group. The stranger's heart skipped a few beats as he looked for the white lettering—he didn't see any—then noticed the group's weaponry. The guns they were holding looked futuristic, for lack of a better term, though he didn't get much of a look as the group hurried along. One of them turned to look at the stranger, sitting in a nest of repurposed electronics, and was still for a long moment. Then they gestured to their squad, and left, off on whatever mission they followed.
The stranger exhaled slowly. Not PRT. Not PRT, it was okay, he was okay. He certainly wasn't going to stay here in case they came back, though. The stranger gathered up his materials and the laptop as quickly as possible—the whole mess of it was becoming rather unwieldy—and set off in the opposite direction of where the soldiers were going.
The stranger kept an eye out for signs of fire, or plumes of smoke, though it was getting hard to see as night truly fell. The first bomb site he found wasn't for another twenty minutes of walking, and it was surrounded by a ring of police and yellow caution tape. The stranger kept his distance, and kept going. It was getting harder to maintain a quick pace, instead of just dragging his feet. He felt drained, bruised, and he found himself starting to cough more and more frequently. Hopefully it was just from dust, but the heavy feeling in his chest and growing sense of heat on his skin and in his sinuses suggested otherwise.
Another ten minutes of shambling onwards. Maybe it was more? He still didn't feel sleepy, exactly, but the thought of finding somewhere to just stop and close his eyes for a bit was getting so appealing. Yes, good, you should do that. But he still hadn't found a discarded bomb he could use... they were probably all going to be closed off and watched by police, weren't they? Or worse, by the PRT, since they were 'tinkertech.' But... but maybe he could just...
"Hey, watch where you are going," a voice, as well as a heavy hand on his shoulder, jolted the stranger from his thoughts. He spun around and stumbled backwards, away from the extremely large man he'd nearly walked into. "A fire was near here, from one of the bombs. I extinguished them, but it is still not safe."
The obese man had an accent he couldn't identify, and in the unreliable light of a flickering streetlight some distance away, it kind of looked like he had lumps on his face. Like something was growing there, on his skin... gross. The stranger tried to back up another step and nearly lost his footing. He thought the large, unhealthy-looking man might have frowned. "Are you hurt, or merely startled by my appearance?"
It is Friday, April 15th, 2011
It is Night
What now?
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