A Chrysalis Amidst Embers (Worm/Honkai Impact, Fusion)

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Once, there was a moth, drawn inexorably to the divine flame. It stole that fire for itself, forged it into weapons that could shake the earth and cast down the heavens themselves, heedless of cost or sacrifice. Surely, it thought, even as its wings charred in that heat, with this might it could defeat the ceaseless malice which sought to consume all life. Anything was justified in the face of such evil. Victory would wash away all sin.

It failed.

The moth burned. Its world burned with it. The forests burned. The seas boiled. Life gave way to death.

Yet even as it burned, as it charred and blackened into a hollow mockery of itself, it laid the seeds for a better future. Even now, its legacy persists, worlds and decamillennia away, chrysalides in a sea of embers.

None yet know if this legacy will avert the growing blaze... or provide its first sparks.
1.1: The Reward For Lateness Is More Lateness

notthepenguins

Neither Spherical Nor Frictionless
Pronouns
He/She/They
A/N: This is a fusion of the two settings, rather than a crossover of individual characters or setting elements. While many elements are close to those of the source materials, expect alterations to both, particularly when metaphysics, the specifics of powers, history, or geopolitics are concerned. Feel free to ask questions, though some things I will be keeping close to the chest for now.



Kiana Kaslana sighed as the bus hit a pothole, jolting everyone on board into full alertness. Of which there were far fewer than usual, because she had overslept and missed her bus and the beginning-of-day rush had already ended. So it was going to be detention on her first day back from winter break, because she'd run out of 'allowed' tardies in her first month at Winslow. And Bronya could have forged an excuse for her, but no, it was "Kiana Idiotka's own fault that she cannot manage time appropriately." And Mei would just sigh at her all disappointed-like if she asked her to talk Bronya around, because she was miffed that Kiana had disappeared on them for a week like that.

It wasn't her fault that she got back so late from her trip. The lead on her father she had been following up had been way out of town, and the Greyhound schedule did not lend itself to convenience. Nor did getting from the Greyhound stop to home on foot – it was either go through "ABB" territory (and she wasn't believing that tripe about them being a strictly local gang, she knew Yakuza when she saw them), or take the long way around through the Boardwalk and the fringes of Empire territory.

For a pretty white girl, most would say that the latter is the safer route. Kiana wasn't so sure. The Boardwalk Enforcers (just goes to show how much of a shithole Brockton Bay is, that a group of local security are called "Enforcers" and no one misses a beat) set off her internal alarms. The Empire was a gang of neo-nazis, and the world would be better off without them, but they were a familiar danger. There were plenty of them in the former Russia where she had grown up, the ruins where society never really rebuilt itself after the damage Apollyon had done, the Endbringer and her Heralds rampaging for so long before Schicksal managed to push her back, thanks to their refusal of PRT and Guild support. The places where packs of Honkai beasts lingered still, because it was "too expensive" to flush them all out. All evils she knew how to deal with.

Her trusty baseball bat usually did the trick.

The Enforcers, though… she didn't trust them. Every moment she was around them her instincts screamed 'pay attention' and 'be careful.' And she hadn't lived this long without trusting her gut.

She blinked, coming back to the present, and tugged on the pull cord thing – seriously, a pull cord, not even buttons – before they passed her stop. She'd heard the comments about American public transit while she was in Japan, before… before, but she'd always assumed they were exaggerated before actually getting here.

Scooping up her bag, she made her way out with a nod to the driver, and then she was alone on the sidewalk in front of Winslow High, in all its majesty. Trash-strewn sidewalk, cracked street, graffiti already starting to mark the freshly-painted walls. At least Mei had the placement scores to get into Arcadia, she mused as she made her way to the entrance. Bronya too, for that matter, much as the little white-haired girl got on her nerves sometimes. Mei was too kind, her danger senses too untuned, to go someplace like this, and Bronya was too obviously… she frowned. What was the word? Neuro… Neurodifferent? Neurodivergent, that was it. It'd make her an easy target for normal bullying and ganger shitheads, and she was not exactly the best at de-escalation. Her settings were, as best as she could tell, 'ignore' and 'remove threat from existence.'

Kiana grinned as she thought of the last time she'd seen some idiot try to mug her. Bronya had had him on the ground with a broken arm before he'd finished his first sentence. She didn't know where the girl had learned to fight like that – though she had some suspicions – but it was crisp, clean, and a joy to watch.

Not that she'd ever admit that to the brat.

It was as she opened the doors and stepped inside that she realized something was wrong. Her senses, her other senses, were screaming at her. She knew that sensation, that building tension, the way the ambient energy swirled and condensed, like a drill. She broke into a run, following the sensation to the center of the vortex. If she was lucky, she could get there before–

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She staggered, catching herself on the handrail for the stairs – thankfully this one wasn't rotted through – and burst onto the second floor. Ever since… since Nagazora, her senses had become sharper, and she'd been able to sense Triggers just before they happened, as the ambient Honkai energy spiked and was drawn into a person. And those… concept bursts came along with them, though she hadn't been able to tap into them consciously. Not since Ryujin. She skidded to a halt in front of one locker in particular, with a padlock conspicuously attached to the outside. Something seemed to shimmer in front of it for a moment, a bipedal figure, but it vanished again. A trick of the light? She couldn't sense any residual energy, but with the disturbance the Trigger had caused that wasn't a surprise. The locker smelled foul, worse than anything she'd smelled since the second day after Nagazora, when the bodies, animate and inanimate both, had begun to rot.

She grabbed the padlock, squeezing and twisting in opposite directions, and it snapped with a squeal of protest. The locker's built-in combination lock gave her no more trouble… though the finger-marks would probably get reported to the PRT. She set that thought aside – tomorrow's problems could come after today's – and wrenched the locker open, only to be startled as a body fell out, accompanied by a scattering of foul objects and liquids. She caught the falling figure, dimly recognizing her through the filth all over her – it was that withdrawn girl who was being bullied by the local queen bees, what was her name, Taylor? – and breathed a sigh of relief as she confirmed that the girl, while unconscious, still had a pulse. For the moment.

She dialed a number. A few moments later, an ambulance was on its way. Funny how quickly people move when you threw around words like "biohazard" rather than "beaten" or even "stabbed." Last time someone had gotten stabbed it had taken almost an hour for the ambulance to arrive. That was just gang activity, after all. But reframe the subject, omit some specifics, and people move.

It really showed their priorities.

She dialed another number.

"Kiana Idiotka," Bronya answered, with the curiously 'flat' sound that came from answering with her implants, rather than audibly. Expected, since she should be in class. "I have already informed you that I will not provide you with an excu-"

"Not about that," Kiana cut her off. "I need you to pull the Winslow security footage for today, second floor, lockers, then kill everything since a bit before I got to school a few minutes ago."

"Why do you…" A moment's silence. "Пиздец!" Anger, as much as Bronya ever showed it, slipped into her tone as she trailed off into more Russian curses while she worked. Inventive curses. Even Kiana hadn't heard some of those, and she'd known her share of sailors. "I understand. Done," she said finally, and Kiana breathed a sigh of relief.

"Ambulance is almost here," Kiana added, as she began to hear sirens, "so I'm hanging up. Thank you. Let Mei know what happened?"

"Da."



Kiana grumbled as she toweled off, eyeing the provided hospital gown skeptically. She hated these things, but… well, the clothes she was wearing were better off burnt, after the filth Tayor had been shoved into had soaked into them. Which sucked, because she'd liked that shirt, but… well, at least the hospital had showers for situations like this, and Mei had agreed to bring her some new clothes sometime this evening. But until then, she was stuck with this thing.

At least she had her phone. Bronya had been talking about some sort of game earlier, maybe that would be a good time waster?



Kiana scowled as her creature died, again. What was she doing wrong? She was hitting all the buttons on time, so why was she not doing any damage?

"Stupid unfair game, rigged anyway I bet," she muttered to herself, before there was a knock and the door opened. A pale young woman with curly brown hair, probably Kiana's own age, stood in the doorway, in a white robe with a red cross on it, holding a clipboard. She looked… not tired, her posture was awake and alert, but her eyes were… strained, weary. Burned out. She'd seen that look before, all over Old Russia, and in the aid workers after Nagazora, but never on someone so young. Something was deeply, deeply wrong here.

"Hi," she said, glancing up from the clipboard for a moment before returning her attention to it. "I'm Panacea. You're the one who came in with Miss Hebert, right?"

Kiana blinked, taking in her face more properly, and… freckles. She had freckles. And they were cute! Why did no one say Panacea was cute? Too busy talking about 'unprecedented healing powers' to appreciate extreme cuteness? Bunch of philistines, they were.

She coughed, realizing she hadn't actually answered. "Ah, yep, that's me!" she beamed, making eye contact – or trying to, at least, as the other girl wasn't making it easy. "Kiana Kaslana, at your service! But uh, how is she doing? It looked bad, but…"

Panacea nodded. "I can't give you any details, since you're not her guardian, but she'll be okay, and getting her here as soon as you did helped her chances significantly."

Kiana let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding. "Good. I'm glad. That was… thank you for healing her."

"It's what I do," Panacea responded. "Speaking of, do I have your permission to heal you? I'd like to make sure you didn't get infected or something by the… contaminants you came in contact with."

"Pretty sure I'm fine," Kiana shrugged, "but far be it from me to tell a cute girl she can't touch me." She grinned and held out a hand.

Panacea rolled her eyes and took Kiana's hand in hers, an ever-so-faint bloom of Honkai energy rolling off her hand and through Kiana's body (and what a bizarre sensation that was, pervasive and so faint she'd miss it if she wasn't actively looking for it) and her eyes snapped open. "What the…?" she stared, flummoxed, for a long moment, then shook her head, letting go of her hand. "You're clear of infections and so forth, and healthy – very healthy, actually – but…"

"But?"

"Uh… are you aware that you're a parahuman?"

Kiana blinked. Most parahumans couldn't sense energy as well as she could, and even if the healer was a sensor type Kiana wasn't using any, so how… oh. Right. Her power would let her see the uh… brain thingie that let parahumans generate Honkai energy. Coronary… something. Something coroner? Wait, no, that was dead people. She shook it off. The science words didn't matter here. "Oh that. Yep," she answered casually, like it was no big deal.

Her thoughts, however, kept racing. The way she reacted had seemed more baffled than surprised. That didn't line up; surely just being a parahuman wasn't such a surprise for her? She healed parahumans all the time, from what Kiana had heard.

Panacea was tense, she realized, though not in a way that suggested she was afraid. "I'm sorry to bring up something painful, but was this your Trigger Event?" The capitals were obvious from how she said it.

"Oh! Oh, no," Kiana shook her head, "mine was a long time ago," she lied. Or well, speculated. Truth was, she'd never known a time when she didn't have her powers. If she'd triggered – which, presumably, she must have, since she had powers – it would have had to have been in the first few years of her life, the ones she has no memories of.

Panacea breathed a sigh of relief, though her frown remained. "Oh, good. Then I don't need to give you the very basics. You're certainly not suffering any cell degradation, so I assume you're using your powers enough. Now, doctor/patient confidentiality means I can't report this to anyone but your legal guardian, and as it's a parahuman power I'm not required to do that. But, if you need… do you need me to explain anything to them? Do they know?"

Kiana closed her eyes, not needing to fake the unsteadiness and grief of an old wound being pulled open, even if the memory the question summoned wasn't the one she'd be sharing. "I was in Nagazora, when…" A half truth, to lead her to the wrong conclusion, and…

Panacea's eyes widened. "Oh. I'm sorry, I didn't…" she trailed off, falling silent for a moment. "Okay. If that's the case, then all that's left on my list is letting you know that the PRT will want to ask you a few questions. You can stay in the hospital and answer when they come by, or they'll contact you later, your choice." Kiana stiffened. Hadn't she just said that she wouldn't report it? "Not about your status!" Panacea clarified hurriedly, "but for more specifics on what happened with Miss Hebert." Kiana relaxed again, and nodded.

"Right, that makes sense. I guess I'll stick around." The alternative – risking the PRT coming to their place and potentially spotting Bronya's toys – could be… unfortunate.

"Alright, I'll let the staff know." Panacea turned to the door, but as she opened it she found a dark-haired asian girl, hand raised to knock, with a bag slung over her back. "Uh… oh. Hello, Mei."

Mei, for her part, looked similarly surprised. "Ah, hello Amy." She inclined her head. "Thank you for taking care of my troublesome roommate."

"Mei-senpaiiiii," Kiana whined, "I'm not that bad…"

"That would hold more water if you'd gotten home before 3 AM," she answered, stepping into the room properly as Panacea stepped out of the way.

"That wasn't my fault though," she said with a pout. It was cheaper to get the nighttime Greyhounds. It was just fiscal responsibility!

Panacea – Amy? – smiled for the first time since Kiana had seen her. "Sounds very troublesome. Maybe you should invest in a leash?" she commented as she stepped out of the now-vacated doorway.

"Ooh, can we!?"

Mei's palm met her forehead as the door clicked shut.



The PRT was, as it turned out, not far behind. Not even ten minutes later there was a heavy knock on her door, followed by the entrance of a man in blue-and-silver power armor. The lower part of his helmet was retracted – or maybe it was always like that? Kiana wasn't sure – leaving his lower face and neat brown beard exposed. He paused, looking from Kiana to Mei and back. "Kiana Kaslana?" he asked, waiting for her nod before continuing. "I'm Armsmaster, Protectorate Team ENE leader. I'd like to ask you some questions about the incident at Winslow High School this morning. Would you like to speak in private?" His speech pattern was… odd, Kiana decided. Somewhat like Bronya's, in its low affect, but not quite the same.

Kiana shook her head. "No, Mei can stay."

He inclined his head. "Can I get your full name for the record? I will be recording this conversation, and while my visor does contain a variety of tinkertech sensors, I will not be utilizing them."

"Raiden Mei," Mei answered, then frowned. "I'm sorry, it's actually Mei Raiden, here."

"Noted. I am now recording." Despite the declaration, he didn't seem to move. Kiana wondered, idly, if he was a technopath or had implants like Bronya's. Or maybe it was a technical truth, and he was recording before as well. Schicksal liked to pull that trick, she knew. Jackbooted assholes.

"The report I have been given states that you found Miss Hebert on the floor outside her locker, is that correct?"

"Yeah," Kiana answered easily. It wasn't technically a lie – that was what the report said, after all.

He paused for a beat. "Noted. Are you aware of any parahuman involvement in her removal from the locker?"

She rolled her eyes. "The broken lock and torn locker are pretty obvious indicators," she answered, giving him her best 'teenager thinks that adults are idiots' look as she sidestepped the question. He was fishing, and she wasn't going to take the bait.

"Hm." He frowned slightly. Had he noticed? "And are you aware of how she got into the locker?"

Kiana sighed. "I don't have any proof, I didn't see it happen," she answered, "but I've got an educated guess."

"That's fine. Anything you can provide is helpful information. What is it?"

"Taylor has been being bullied since I started going to Winslow this spring."

"This spring?"

Kiana's voice was flat, carefully calibrated to the tone of someone giving an oft-repeated explanation they don't want to elaborate on. Which had the benefit of being entirely accurate. "...I was in Nagazora. Now I'm here."

He froze for a moment. "Ah. My condolences."

"Right. So, three girls have been bullying her this whole time. Well, I say three, but…" she shrugged. "It's more like two and various levels of minion. I have no idea why, if there's even a reason, but they'd be the most likely suspects, and they've done some pretty demented things… but I haven't heard of anything this bad before."

He frowned. "And the school hasn't put a stop to this?"

Kiana rolled her eyes. "It's Winslow. The last time someone got stabbed the guy who did it was back in school the next week, because they 'didn't have any evidence.' Probably because he was Empire; the teachers are all scared to discipline the gang members." Even for someone new to the area that was common knowledge. Was he that out of touch? "Either the school doesn't care, they're gang members – not likely, I don't think – or they're just important enough in some way that the school bends over for them."

His frown deepened. "That is… concerning. I was under the impression that Winslow was a… safer environment than that."

Kiana shrugged again. "Don't know who you've been talking to, then. I've been here less than a year and even I knew it was a shithole."

"Hm. Thank you for bringing this to my attention. And who are the ringleaders you mentioned?"

"Right. A tall redheaded girl named Emma Barnes, and a sort of average height track team member, Sophia Hess. And their like… third wheel? Madison Clements." Armsmaster went still. Was that a surprise? Did he know one of them, or something? "They're like, basically queen bees of the school." Kiana let her eyes widen like she'd just realized something. "Please don't let them know who told you this, I don't want to be their next punching bag." It wasn't that Kiana cared, really – worst came to worst she'd just leave – but it would be very inconvenient.

"...right. I will keep that in mind. Thank you for your cooperation. Oh, and I believe Miss Hebert's mother will be coming to talk to you shortly, though Miss Hebert herself is still asleep. Oh, and before I go, could I have your contact information in case we have further questions?"

Dammit. Now they could chase down inconsistencies if they wanted to.

"Of course," she answered, pulling out her phone.



Taylor's mother – Annette, apparently – was… strange. Kiana didn't know how to read her. She could have sworn the woman was furious, but none of it showed on her face. The whole time Kiana recounted what had happened, she was every inch the concerned, confused mother, exactly as you'd expect… but her instincts told her that the woman was not just angry, but furious, a rage that would burn its target to ashes. Which was more than a little uncomfortable, given that Mei had gone home already, leaving Kiana alone with the – admittedly easy on the eyes, when you could get past the terror – woman.

The whole time, her facade stayed intact. And the weirdest thing was, Kiana didn't even think Annette wasn't genuine in her gratitude. She couldn't even pin down why she was certain the woman was angry. She just knew it.

It wasn't until she mentioned the bullies that Annette's mask cracked.

"I'm sorry, who did you say they were?'' Her voice was polite, embarrassed, a woman who had misheard something and was maybe a bit concerned. Her eyes were sharp, piercing.

Kiana shifted uncomfortably. It felt like they were boring through her. "Sophia Hess, Emma Barnes, and Madison Clements."

It was the second name that did it. For just a moment, Annette's eyes were filled with a burning rage, face twisting into a furious scowl, before she mastered it, smoothing it out again.

"Thank you very much. It seems I'll have to have a talk with her parents, then."

Kiana didn't answer, actually stunned into silence by the sheer intensity, despite knowing that she wasn't its target. Some of her confusion must have shown on her face, though, because Annette explained.

"The Barnes are old family friends of ours. At least, I thought they were. It remains to be seen if that's still the case."

Kiana swallowed. What do you even say to something like that?

"But that's nothing you need to worry about." She smiled kindly, and the anger… didn't fade, but seemed to move more to the background. "Thank you again, for rescuing my daughter. And actually… would you mind giving me your contact information? I'd love to have you over for dinner, once Taylor's feeling better."

Kiana's thoughts came to a screeching halt. In the pros column: a home cooked dinner by an actual mom (moms were all good at cooking, right?). In the cons column: Annette was scary, she didn't know Taylor, and she had no idea how 'normal' families acted.

There was really only one answer.

"Of course!"



"Yes, Mei-senpai, I'm on my way home." Kiana resisted the urge to roll her eyes. It might be a bit annoying, but it was how Mei showed she cared! "Most of the way there, just cutting through that park on Ferguson–" Kiana frowned as she heard a loud crash. What the hell was that? "May be a little delayed, sounds like something's going on. Let you know what in a bit." She put away her phone, ears straining to pick up any clues as to what was happening.

Gunfire. And not a few isolated shots either. But… not close either. If she did a bit of a loop she could bypass it, she'd just have to veer off to the west and then…

Another loud crash, this one from the west, followed by an explosion, a big one. Alright, not that way. What if, instead… maybe there was a gap between the fights she could get through? Not for the first time, she shook her head at Brockton Bay's… Brockton Bay-ness. Still, she could get by just fine, as long as…

She huffed with annoyance as she saw lights flickering above, flying capes firing lasers and beams back and forth. Annoying. But she wasn't exactly flying, so that shouldn't affect her either. Sighing, she shook her head and started moving. She'd just cut between the fights and be fine.

She had taken three steps before she whipped her head around at the sound of something approaching… too late to dodge the unconscious blonde missile on a parabolic arc right at her.

Too late to do anything but wonder what was wrong with her day before the girl hit her, and she knew no more.
 
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Endbringers
An abbreviated list of (public knowledge of) Endbringers in this timeline, as it's public knowledge and I won't be going over ones that aren't relevant to the scenes at hand.

Gnosis

First Appearance: Berlin, 1960​
Appearance: 10-meter-radius (estimated) dodecahedron​
Status: Destroyed (1960) (Presumed)​
Notes: Appeared momentarily in Berlin in 1960, followed by mass cerebral hemorrhages within a substantial radius, killing 95% of affected individuals. Crumbled into dust moments later, which in turn vanished; very little footage or eyewitness records exist. Only retroactively classified as Endbringer, after Behemoth's appearance; at the time believed to be some sort of bizarre Parahuman power or Tinker device. Current theory is that its ability interacted badly with a local parahuman, resulting in immediate death.​

Apollyon

First Appearance: Siberia, 1993​
Appearance: Nine-meter-tall humanlike figure, six clusters of wing-like energy ribbons​
Status: Destroyed (1994)​
Notes: Summoned three 'heralds' with elemental manipulation powers, one with entropic/corrosive powers. Manipulated and controlled portals, possible spatial warping. Active summoning of Honkai Beast swarms.​

Behemoth

First Appearance: Iran, 1996​
Appearance: Fourteen-meter rough humanoid, 'claws' and one 'eye'​
Status: Destroyed (2006)​
Notes: Extremely potent energy-control abilities within a radius.​

Leviathan

First Appearance: Oslo, 1998​
Appearance: Nine meter rough humanoid, fourteen-meter tail​
Status: Destroyed (2002)​
Notes: Wide-scale hydrokinesis, 'water echo,' extreme speed.​

Garuda

First Appearance: Australia, 2000​
Appearance: Ten-meter rough avian, four wings (100m wingspan). Flight-capable.​
Status: Unknown (Unknown)​
Notes: Extreme speed, quick to retreat upon suffering harm. Control over wind, ranged attacks including firing 'feathers' and a beam from mouth.​

Ijiraq

First Appearance: Bermuda, 2006​
Appearance: Combat Form: Eight-meter bone-plated humanoid, wearing 'robes.' skull head; Other: Variable​
Status: Destroyed (2011)​
Notes: Substantial control over ice, wind, and similar. Additional ability to alter shape and size, powerful Stranger abilities to evade detection.​

The Simurgh

First Appearance: Lausanne, 2009​
Appearance: Five-meter pale human, variable number of feathered 'wings' at random points on body. Flight-capable​
Status: Inactive (Orbit)​
Notes: Mental manipulation, telekinesis, advanced intelligence, possible precognition, possible ability to copy Tinker/Thinker powers.​

Charybdis

First Appearance: Lunar Orbit, 2010​
Appearance: Unclear. Photographs suggest 'tendrils' and at least one 'eye.' Size estimates from ground observation vary from ten meters across to two hundred meters across.​
Status: Unknown (Moon) (Suspected)​
Notes: Appeared in Lunar Orbit, moved at extreme speed, destroying all trans-atmospheric human constructions, manned or unmanned, disappeared behind dark side of the moon. Has not yet attacked any sub-atmospheric target. Abilities aside from rapid travel through vacuum unclear.​

Ryujin

First Appearance: Nagazora, 2012​
Appearance: Forty meter long 'western-style' dragon, 150m wingspan​
Status: Unknown (Unknown)​
Notes: Appeared near the center of Nagazora, Japan. Electrical manipulation and storms caused immediate mass casualty event, destroyed most technology in range. Very brief rampage, disappeared (apparent teleportation) mid-battle, without sustaining significant injury. Behavior noted as extremely atypical.​
 
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1.2: High-Velocity Introduction
As an explosion echoed across the city, the air above a skyscraper on the edge of downtown shifted and warped. Within the bubble of distorted space she sat within, Vista perked up. She had hoped that tonight's off-the-books patrol would get her some action, and if something like that was happening, maybe there'd be something she could do!

She finished altering the spatial warp, and part of the bubble clarified, lensed space acting as a telescope, and scowled at what she saw. A PRT transport on its side, gas tank blown open and one of the walls breached, revealing a half-dozen mangled Heeds in transport configuration, twitching and sparking. Shit robots get shit results. Can't believe the brass is pretending this junk can phase us out.

As she watched, Armsmaster, atop his blue Armscycle, skidded to a stop between the truck and its attackers – three capes blocking the road. A hooded woman in black, the inside of her cloak lined with red, with, of all things, a bow in her hands, and a quiver of arrows on her back. Vista didn't recognize her. New Empire cape, maybe, but red and black was a good enough color scheme that a lot of people used it, associations or no.

Next to her, in her signature gray and black, ballistic vest and welding mask in place, was Faultline. That made it a bit less likely that the new woman was Empire. Faultline would work for them – she'd work for anyone, with pay – but didn't like to work alongside them. Third… Vista scowled. Third, a step back from them, was Labyrinth, in her characteristic green mask and robe. Labyrinth, the only cape on this coast with a higher Shaker rating than she did. She might be able to beat her – definitely could, she amended – but Piggot and Armsmaster would never let her try. Too young, still a Ward, as if she wasn't one of the strongest capes in the Bay. As if she wasn't better at being a cape than half the Protectorate.

Regardless, Armsmaster was there, which meant she couldn't interfere. If he saw her spatial warps – and she bet his sensors would pick it up even if she tried to be sneaky – then she'd be taken off legit patrol duty for weeks if she was lucky. She let out a heavy sigh and pivoted her spatial 'telescope' to the lightshow up above. In the sky, Lady Photon and Laserdream were dueling Purity and Rune in a dramatic lightshow… or were, before Glory Girl tackled Rune from behind and tore the manhole cover Rune was using to levitate in two, taking her to the ground.

Just as the two landed, however, another cape stepped out of the shadows, this one in all black, and struck her with an open-palmed martial arts strike. The air around the strike rippled in two rapid shockwaves, and Glory Girl was launched off of Rune, and Vista instinctively turned to track the movement as she flew in a perfect arc. Unconscious, judging by her lack of course correction. Holy shit, good thing she's basically invulnerable. At that speed, a normal person would–

She saw the girl standing in the park only fractions of a second before Glory Girl hit her, and time seemed to slow before her horrified eyes, certain she was about to see a gruesome death. To Vista's grateful surprise, the girl didn't pop like a watermelon, or suffer any other similarly grisly fate. She and Glory Girl did, however, slam into the ground and skid into a tree, leaving a furrow of torn muddy earth where they had been.

Neither of them moved. Fuck!

She pulled her phone out and called a contact, dropping her concealment bubble and starting to fold space for travel.

"A, need you ASAP, where are you?" she said curtly the moment the call was answered.

"What… Vista? Aren't the Wards bench–"

"V's hurt." There was a sharp intake of breath on the other side.

"Brockton General roof, sixty seconds." The phone clicked off.

Good. With sixty seconds she could get a warp to the park and a warp to the hospital stable. Holding both at once would wipe her out, but it was worth it if it got Amy to Vicky in time.

Their mom might be a bitch, but A and V were cool. They actually treated her with respect, for one thing.

Besides, she'd be a shit hero if she just sat back and watched when she could do something.



Kiana groaned as consciousness returned. Her whole body ached. One shoulder screamed in pain. Her world was a blur. She hissed with pain and blinked rapidly, trying to clear her vision. What was going on? Where was she… why did everything hurt?

Something was on top of her. No, someone.

She tried to roll over, but her shoulder announced its disapproval with a stabbing pain. The movement dislodged the figure, though, sending them flopping to the side, and Kiana got a proper look at them for the first time as they stirred.

A girl, about her age, maybe a bit older. A few inches taller. White costume where it wasn't spattered with mud, no mask. Long blonde hair. An invisible layer of Honkai energy, faint enough that Kiana would miss it if she were any further away, coated her, barely above her skin. This must be… someone from New Wave? Not the moms, too young for that. Very cute, though. Unless she'd attacked her out of nowhere, at least. That revoked cute status. Unless they were really cute, but even then it was–

Her attention sharpened when, immediately after the girl's eyes opened, she was on her feet with a slight hiss of pain. No, not on her feet, in the air, floating a good six inches above the ground, the energy around her body intensifying ever so slightly. Maybe it was how she flew? White top and skirt, with sweeping gold lines directing her eyes in all kinds of interesting directions. That would make this… Glory Girl? Kiana had heard her mentioned before, but the comments left out some important… details. Like those arms.

"No fair," Kiana muttered, letting her gaze fall to the hero's boots. Surprisingly practical, given that she flew; she could probably get away with some absurd stuff if she didn't need to walk on them. Popular girls liked those things, right? She had the look, at least. "Always wanted to fly."

That seemed to snap the girl into action. "Don't move!" she insisted urgently, reaching into her pockets for something. Her costume had pockets? Very nice. She hadn't noticed. "I'm so sorry I don't know what happened but if you move you might hurt your spine and–"

Kiana groaned. "Spine's… 'sfine. I think." Probably. She hadn't had a spinal injury before, so far as she knew, but she could still feel everything just fine. She blinked as a bright chirping sound began to ring from the floating Glory Girl. "Think that's for you," she said, gesturing with her good arm.

The girl answered the phone without looking. "Ames, how's–" A pause. "Good, I'm fine, but I need you in the park, I got thrown into a civilian and I'm worried she might be–" A sigh of relief. "Right, okay, good."

Something was nagging at her. Something she'd forgotten? Kiana frowned, racking her brain. What could it be?

Wait, thrown into… right. Park. Mei. She'd been on the phone with Mei. She needed to– she tried to go for her pocket and pull her own phone out, but the white-clad girl was on her in an instant, grabbing her arm and stopping it cold without visible effort. She was strong. Did she have to work out for that, or did her powers cheat?

"Just stay still, okay?" she said, giving a confident smile that didn't quite cover her nervousness. "You're gonna be fine, my sister can patch up anything."

"Had worse," Kiana grumbled, but did as instructed. Better to take stock of how she felt than keep arguing. And she was still a bit out of it, to be fair, now that the fun brain chemicals were wearing off. "Dislocated shoulder. Bunch of bruises. Maybe bone ones. Right as rain in… a few days. Maybe a week."

"Now I know you're bullshitting me," she released Kiana to cross her arms, giving an unamused stare. "If you really had, you'd know that it takes way longer to heal than that."

Kiana winced internally. She'd forgotten to adjust for expected healing times for a normal person.

"Oh uh, just, a fast healer." It was fine, as long as she didn't share that she was a parahuman it'd be no big deal. "Not like, a parahuman thing or anything. Which I'm not!" There. Problem solved. Suspicion deflected. "Just don't like staying in bed, so I get better fast. That's just science."

"...uh huh." Kiana squinted. Was she buying it? She was buying it, right?

…she definitely wasn't. Kiana sighed.

The awkward silence lingered for what felt like an eternity before someone else entered the park at a trot, Panacea's white robe and red cross instantly recognizable. Something shifted in the local energy flow as she did, and for a moment Kiana thought she saw something behind Panacea… but when she blinked it was gone. Wait, hadn't Glory Girl said sister… right, she was part of New Wave too. Didn't really match the blonde bombshell brigade, though.

As the healer's eyes caught on Kiana, she scowled, slowing to a walk. "Told her she should have invested in a leash," she muttered. "Did you even get home before getting caught in a cape fight?"

Kiana shifted guiltily, then winced. Note to self: do not mess with arm until better. Unless popping it back in.

"...of course not. Alright, what happened?" she asked as she walked the rest of the way over, dropping to a crouch to look Kiana over.

"Not sure," Vicky admitted sheepishly. "I was taking down Rune, something hit me, and I woke up here, on top of her and sore as hell."

"I'll get you next, then." Panacea turned her attention to Kiana. "Do I have your permission to heal you?" It sounded rote, the way she said it. Kiana nodded as Panacea took her hand, the odd sensation of being filled with a pervasive, subtle energy flowing through her once again.

"Now." Panacea's voice lowered, quiet enough that Glory Girl wouldn't hear her. "Are you an Empire cape? Don't lie. I'll know." Her eyes were hard, flinty. It was kind of hot, honestly.

Another blonde in a white costume, this one an older woman with a purple starburst symbol on the chest, descended from the sky, glowing. She took one look at the situation and frowned, beckoning Vicky over and having a hushed conversation with the guilty-looking blonde.

"Hell no," Kiana retorted, though she kept her voice as quiet as Panacea's. The girl must be keeping it down for a reason. "And you should already know that after I flirted with you and my Japanese roommate."

Panacea stared at her for a second, blankly, opened her mouth to say something, and then shook her head instead, a blush dusting her cheeks. "Uh. Right." Her eyes closed, then, and the energy flooding Kiana shifted somehow.

"Hm. That's odd," Panacea muttered, almost too quiet to hear. "How hard did she hit you, if… hm. How exactly… ah, that's how.." Kiana gritted her teeth as her dislocated shoulder popped back into place. It didn't hurt at all, which was, somehow, even more unpleasant than the pain would have been.

Kiana tilted her head at the running commentary, but Panacea didn't seem to notice. The overall soreness along her body, beginnings of bruises and so forth, faded away slowly, so presumably the healer was focusing on, well, healing.

"Okay. Shoulder's back in properly, bruising cleared, got rid of a couple microfractures." She hesitated, opened her mouth to say something. Closed it again, visibly re-adjusted. "Anyway, get a good night's sleep and eat a couple big meals, and you should be fine."

Kiana's eyes widened. She had doctor's orders to eat more food? She met Panacea's eyes, hands gently grasping one of the healer's.

"You. Are an angel."

She stared. "I… huh?"

"Please please please can I get that in writing?"

"That would end with the city's all-you-can-eat buffets bankrupt, and I don't want the Burger Baron coming to town to settle the score. Once was more than enough."

Kiana stared.

"So much beef, lost forever…"



Flying was glorious, Kiana concluded as the older New Wave cape – Lady Photon, as it turned out – touched down outside her home, an old, run-down duplex, letting her down from the princess carry she had been in.

"That was wonderful!" She exclaimed, bouncing on the balls of her feet, excited energy thrumming through her. "Thank you so much for the lift, Photon Lady! I really wanted to do some barrel rolls, though," she pouted.

"I don't think vomit would have improved the flight," she answered dryly, regarding Kiana for a moment. "Are your parents home? I'd like to apologize to them for what happened; accident or no, it was our fault."

Kiana's face froze, and Lady Photon's eyes widened. "They're…" she sighed. "Not in the picture."

She glanced at the building, and the neighborhood, no less run down than the home itself, and Kiana could see the gears turning in her head. "I can put in a word with social services, if…"

Kiana shook her head. "No, no, it's not that. We're… we were in Nagazora, and didn't… staying wasn't an option." Though they had had… more pressing reasons to get out of Japan than most of the refugees.

"Oh. I see. My condolences. And you'd rather not… bother your sponsor?" She guessed. It was a good guess. The ABB had offered refugee housing to Nagazora survivors through several fronts, presumably as a public relations push, and a superhero showing up at their offices, even their legitimate ones, could certainly raise tensions.

Of course, it was the guess Kiana had led her to, because "actually one of my roommates is a cyborg hacker Esper/Tinker who cheated us past the legal system, faked the ownership papers, keeps us mostly under social services' radar, and procures us living money when I can't scam or pickpocket some rich asshole for it" would have been… awkward to explain.

"It would… avoid some hassle, yeah."

"I understand." She smiled, and pulled a business card out of a pocket (where were they hiding those? Those suits are skintight!), handing it to her. It had the New Wave logo on it, as well as a phone number, mailing, and e-mail address. "In that case, please take this. If you change your mind, or need anything at all, please give us a call or an anonymous e-mail, and we can direct the case to someone more appropriate."

"I will," Kiana lied. "Thank you very much."

And with that, the hero was gone, floating up almost invisibly, then rocketing off in a colorful streak of light when she was a ways away from the house. Thoughtful of her to try to obscure where she'd taken off from, at least, even if the colorful landing meant any damage was already done.

Kiana sighed, unlocking the door – after angling her head so that the iris scanner Bronya had hidden in the doorbell could scan her eyes, in case the security system was on already – and stepped inside, letting out a sigh of relief. Home. Finally, home.



Raiden Mei – and she would always be Raiden Mei, she knew, never Mei Raiden, the name that defined her never in doubt – was used to boxes. She'd lived her whole life in them, after all.

Not in the sense that everyone did, not in the four walls and a roof of a house, or a school, or an apartment. No, hers were those of expectation, responsibility, destiny.

From the moment she could speak, she had known her future. She was the daughter of Raiden Ryoma and Raiden Nodoka. Their only child. The heir to the presidency of Massive Electric. The bearer of their legacy.

They were distant, physically as well as emotionally. Traveling constantly, for work, for politics, for connections. Their home was empty, save for the cleaning staff. A quiet army of servants, her, and Kimiko. It was Kimiko she turned to when she hurt herself, when she had a question, or a concern no tutor could answer. It was Kimiko who held her when she cried, who cared for her when she fell ill.

Others might say that that meant she was unloved, neglected, but she knew better. Each tutor, each lesson in etiquette or politics or business, was a statement from her parents. "We love you," each one said. "We want you to be the best you can be." She chafed against it, at times – she was only a child, after all, she didn't know any better – and each time correction was firm, but kind. And always, Kimiko was there to help her back to her feet.

She was nine when the box broke. She was nine when those men – "terrorists," she was told, though in the years since she had doubted that more and more – broke into their home, and took her. She was nine when lightning tore her world apart.

She was nine when she killed Kimiko.

Her hand. Her power. Her fault. She had lost control, had left the confines of her box, and never again would she be held by those arms, never again would she be softly sung to sleep.

Her parents returned, after that, but only for the funeral, and to make arrangements. She was a parahuman now. She had undergone a Trigger Event, they said. Arrangements were made. A therapist. A place to safely use her power, so she would not be harmed by its disuse.

A year later, her mother was gone. Cancer. She didn't feel anything. She was too numb for it. The walls of her new box were already rising, just beyond the rubble of the old, bricks old and new alike stacked high, hung with mirrors. When she was expected to be sad, she was sad. When she was expected to be cheerful, she was cheerful.

When she was twelve, her therapist retired. She did not seek another. She told her father that she was fine now. A lie, told to the both of them. She would be fine, as long as she didn't let anyone else in. She would be what they expected her to be, and they would never look deeper.

Never see the monster inside.

Two years later, her father was arrested. Assets seized. Financial malfeasance, they said. Embezzlement. Fraud. He attempted to escape prison, and they sent him somewhere else, somewhere no one would name, no matter who she asked, or how.

The foundations her world was built on cracked, and the world beyond would never let her forget it. No longer was she the wealthy, distant queen of the school, worshiped and admired for that very distance from mere mortals. She was the criminal's daughter, now. Whispered questions and conflicts were everywhere. What had he taught her all these years, if not to follow in his footsteps? How long had she been lying to them? They had idolized her, and she had betrayed them.

And, though they couldn't have known, they were right. It wasn't for the reasons they thought, but she was a monster. Some nights she dreamed of ending it all. More nights she dreamed of ending them all. And who would imagine such a thing, if not a monster? She'd killed the person she loved the most; how could she ever believe she wouldn't do the same to others?

Whispered cruelties became open ones, ever bolder, each one chipping away, infinitesimally, at her walls, so painstakingly constructed. Mirrors shattered, facades stripped away, revealing only cold, dead stone, spiderwebbed with cracks.

Only two points of warmth remained. Two who continued to trust her, who refused to believe what was being said about her. About her father. Two girls who were blind to what she truly was. Two girls who she would be forever grateful to. The family she had thought she would be forever denied.

But family was not enough to keep her whole. It never had been; why would it be any different now? And in the end, she broke. Two pairs of hands could not hold up what hundreds sought to tear down.

Her memories of that day were no more than fragments.

A tree of light, rising from a sea of red.

Her class, dead in their seats, the red tracery of Honkai poisoning on every one of them.

The school roof, the three boys who cut class to smoke piled in a heap.

Bronya, clothes torn and bloody, standing over her, firing a gun at some unseen foe.

A great western dragon, vaster than anything she'd ever seen, wreathed in red lightning.

Kiana, looking up at her from far below, shouting something.

Crosshairs in a golden circle.

A hand, grasping her own, pulling her from freezing depths.

Two arms supporting her, one on each side, as the three girls made their way down ruined streets.

Kiana had told her, later, that she had had a Second Trigger. That her similar powers, manifesting at just the right time, had caught the attention of the new Endbringer – Ryujin – as it began its attack. That it had fled when Schicksal had deployed some special weapon, rather than risk being destroyed as Behemoth had. That it was always going to attack, it was just bad luck that made it happen here.

She understood what Kiana was saying. That it wasn't her fault. That their blood wasn't on her hands.

But Kiana was wrong. Once again, she had lost control, stepped outside of her box, and once again, people had died for it. More, this time. Countless more.

But this time there was nothing to rebuild with. Fled across the world, each of the three hiding from their own demons, she had no ground left to build on.

They were all that remained. Her only duty left was to keep them safe, to repay the trust and love they had given her, which she had no right to.

So she would be what they needed, until she was needed no longer.



The door clicked open, and Mei was on her feet in an instant. The alarm hadn't sounded, so it must be Kiana, and…

She frowned. The girl was covered with mud on one side, her clothes were torn, her hair was a disaster.

"Kiana…" Mei started, hands on her hips.

"Mei-senpai," she whined, "it really wasn't my fault! Glory Girl was in some sort of fight and got thrown right into me! Like, from blocks away! Panacea fixed me up." She hesitated. "Oh and New Wave also knows where we live and Panacea and probably Glory Girl knowthatimaparahumangonnashowernowbye!"

Kiana rushed past her, white braids streaming behind, and Mei just sighed. Well, at least she was home safe. The rest… well. Glory Girl was a notorious gossip, but she'd never heard her leak a parahuman identity, and she presumably knew who the Wards were. Well, besides the issue of Dean, who was almost certainly Gallant judging by Victoria's treatment of the two being equally openly affectionate, but that wouldn't become an issue.

Kiana wasn't dating Glory Girl, after all.

Mei pushed that train of thought away before she got a headache.

And the other, well, Amy probably knew that Mei was a parahuman already. Not that she had been healed by her, but the girl's power worked on any skin contact, even something like handing an eraser over and brushing fingers. She couldn't recall any specific incident, and they only shared one class this year, but it would be best to assume that something like that had happened.

But the healer was very strict about keeping to her own rules, and one of those was confidentiality with what her power told her. Mei might not know Amy well – and she didn't, really, they were acquaintances at best – but there was something familiar in the other girl. Something rigid, inflexible, that held her together.

Mei didn't know Amy, but she knew a box when she saw it.
 
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PRT Threat Report: "Faultline's Crew," updated 01/08/2013

"FAULTLINE'S CREW"

Faultline's Crew is a mercenary team based in Brockton Bay, New Hampshire. Their reputation emphasizes competence and discretion, both as to their clients and the details of their work. Their roster rotates, and frequently includes obvious or non-obvious Case 53s.

They are typically employed by criminal elements, but have indicated amenability to contracts with corporations or government agencies in the past.

They have a stated refusal to take jobs requiring killing, and no deaths have been directly tied to their actions. In several instances, however, individuals would have died without medical intervention.​

Leader:
Lieutenant:

Roster:

FAULTLINE; Real name unknown

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Striker-Evoker 5, Ego-Brute 3, Ego-Mover 3
Last Known Location: Brockton Bay, New Hampshire
Appearance: Female, approx. 5' 8", tan skin, black hair.
Costume: Gray and black, full coverage. Bulletproof vest, welding mask. Fingerless gloves.

Faultline is the leader of the eponymous mercenary group. Accomplished tactician and leader, effective coordinator. Brisk, businesslike demeanor.

Faultline can 'shear' or 'cut' through nonliving matter on contact. Extremely rigid Manton limitation suspected. 'Cuts' extend a significant distance beyond her point of contact, appear to be limited to linear trajectories. Each use of power appears to affect one discrete object; unclear if this is a true limitation, power or otherwise. Can physically self-enhance to a moderate degree.

Typically assumes leadership and coordination role, but engages directly against targets she can engage with. Frequently utilizes conventional weaponry to cover for range limitations.​

GREGOR THE SNAIL; Gregor¹

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Striker/Summoner-Wildcard 4, Blaster/Summoner-Wildcard 2, Shaker/Summoner-Wildcard 2+², Ego-Brute 3
Last Known Location: Brockton Bay, New Hampshire
Appearance: Case 53. Male, approx. 5' 10", semi-translucent gray skin, hairless, small spiral growths.
Costume: None

Gregor is the longest-term member aside from Faultline herself. Thoughtful, more cautious than Faultline when in tactical command. Speaks slowly, carefully, sometimes philosophically. Willingness to talk does not reflect a particular reluctance to engage in violence.

Gregor can create fluids and exude them from his body. Has displayed fire retardants, adhesives, lubricants, flammable fluids, and corrosive fluids. Unclear what limitations this capability possesses. Can create them with sufficient coherence to throw them afterwards.

Enhanced durability, presumed due to Case 53 physiology. Has been struck by cars and walked away largely uninjured. Unclear if this applies specifically to blunt force trauma. Apparently immune to effects his own chemicals produce; possibly resistant or immune to chemical sedatives.

¹​ Case 53; no known "real" name
²​ Speculative Shaker rating reflects suspected capabilities if he can create multiple chemicals and combine them for effect, or create them at temperatures that would allow instant vaporization. He has not shown such a capability at this time, but whether this is a limitation in power, desire, or imagination is unknown.

NEWTER; Newter³

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Striker-Enchanter 4, Blaster-Enchanter 2, Ego-Mover 4, Ego-Brute 2
Last Known Location: Brockton Bay, New Hampshire
Description: Case 53. Approx. 5' 8", prehensile tail (approx. 5'), orange skin, blue eyes (sclera included), variable hair, frequent quadrupedal movement.
Costume: None

Newter is the next-most senior member of the team, after Gregor. Focused in the field, gregarious and personable outside of it. Appears to be in his mid-to-late teens. Declined Wards membership.

Newter's bodily fluids are hallucinogenic toxins with no known side effects after wearing off. Baseline humans are typically disabled in less than two seconds. Duration varies based on dose, but seems to max out at approximately 24 hours.

Newter is extremely quick, featuring rapid horizontal movement, multi-story jumps, and the ability to climb sheer surfaces. He also has enhanced strength and durability from human baseline. He is not affected by his own toxins, and suspected to be resilient to ones he does not generate.

³ Case 53; no known "real" name

LABYRINTH; Ellen Walker, "Elle"

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Shaker/Breaker-Transmuter: 7-9
Last Known Location: Brockton Bay, New Hampshire
Appearance: Female, 5' 1", caucasian, platinum blond hair
Costume: Dark green robe, green mask. Maze patterning

Labyrinth is mentally unpredictable and unstable, previously a patient at a Parahuman-focused mental institution before Faultline broke her out. She rarely speaks, and is rarely seen outside the company of one of the senior members of the team.

Labyrinth has a widely variable and not-entirely-controllable Shaker ability to create and partially-manifest what she calls "pocket worlds" into Earth-Bet. The contents of said worlds vary based on mental state and intent, as does her ability to control whether or not they manifest, and can range from innocuous to highly dangerous. Her observed range varies from a few feet around to hundreds of feet, based on mood and time spent in one location. The longer she stays in one place, the larger her range becomes.

Other members of the group are highly protective of Labyrinth. Never assume that she is alone, and assume that any hostile contact with her will provoke a major response.

See EXTERNAL INCIDENT REPORT 1-OH-08242009-37C

SUNDANCER; "Mars," real name unknown

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Summoner-Evoker: 7+ (Blaster/Shaker)
Appearance: Female, approx. 5' 4"
Costume: Full-body, black, red 'sun' iconography, enclosed helmet

Sundancer, Genesis, and Rhodolite appear to have joined the crew at the same time, after a fracture within their prior group. Sundancer is, out of combat situations, friendly, talkative, and sociable. She is not believed to be particularly volatile, and has never been observed to initiate combat.

Sundancer can create and direct a 'sun,' a sphere of extreme heat with unknown composition. Her 'sun' has been observed to vaporize concrete and steel once fully established, indicating a temperature of at least 1500C, but radiated heat is, while extremely hot and capable of starting fires with ease, substantially less than this apparent temperature would indicate. She appears to be immune to the heat of her own 'sun,' as is everything within several feet of her. It is unknown if this applies to conventional heat sources or is a form of more direct Manton limitation.

Sundancer can control the size of this 'sun,' as well as direct its movement. It has been observed as small as one inch across, and as large as six. It should not be assumed that this is its maximum size; Sundancer is extremely precise in combat situations, avoiding collateral damage as much as possible, and has never been observed in a situation where a larger sphere would be desirable.

See TRAVELERS (DEFUNCT)

GENESIS; "Jess," real name unknown

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Changer-Wildcard 8
Appearance: Variable
Costume: Red and black accessories on Changer forms

Genesis, Sundancer, and Rhodolite appear to have joined the crew at the same time, after a fracture within their prior group. Outside of combat situations, Genesis rarely speaks. She is quick to violent response, though not genuinely volatile.

Genesis is a powerful Changer with unknown limitations. She has displayed numerous forms ranging from three feet in length to thirty feet in length (tail inclusive), each with effective powers of their own. Typically her forms display Brute and Mover abilities, but Blaster and Shaker abilities have also been demonstrated.

She has never been observed to change forms mid-combat, suggesting that her form changes have time-related limitations of some sort. It is unknown whether she can assume human forms, or forms that can duplicate others.

Genesis is direct and brutal in combat, favoring highly aggressive and physical tactics. Injuries, even grievous ones, do not seem to cause pain or impaired thought processes. She cannot (or does not care to) moderate her strength particularly well, and prioritizes engaging with Brutes or other hard targets. When engaging with baseline humans, expect severe injury; non-Brute personnel should engage only at range.

See TRAVELERS (DEFUNCT)

RHODOLITE; Noelle

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Ego-Brute 5+, Ego-Mover 5+, Summoner/Shaker-Transmuter 5+
Appearance: Case 53. Female, approx. 5' 4", pink hair, pointed ears, blue eyes with pink pupils. Case 53 'ring' marking observed on left shoulder.
Costume: None; civilian clothes in red and black, typically shorts and an athletics-appropriate shirt.

Rhodolite, Sundancer, and Genesis appear to have joined the crew at the same time, after a fracture within their old group. Rhodolite is familiar, sarcastic, and friendly with Sundancer and Genesis, suggesting a lengthy relationship, but comparatively withdrawn with others. She has been drawn into conversations regarding computer and board games. She rarely engages in combat; unclear if this is due to morale, physical health, or contract reasons.

Rhodolite's limited combat appearances make evaluation highly speculative. However, she has displayed significant physical strength, speed, and durability, as well as a Shaker-type power to create extremely durable pink crystalline constructions, utilizing them for protection, battlefield control, and as weapons.

She seems to be cheerful in combat, and displays significant tactical skill, finding vulnerabilities in opponents and disrupting their movements without needing instruction.

Unusually for Case 53s, uses "Noelle" as a name, and Rhodolite only "on the job."
See TRAVELERS (DEFUNCT)
See ENE WARDS INTERACTION REPORT 02152012-A

ABSINTHE; Natasha Cioara

Disposition: Mercenary
Classification: Blaster/Shaker 7+¹⁰ (tentative), Ego-Brute 4 (tentative), Ego-Mover 5 (tentative)
Appearance: Female, approx. 5' 6", caucasian, black hair
Costume: Black and grey, full-body. Hooded cloak and mask, cloak in multiple independent sections, black with red lining. Carries a bow and quiver of arrows

Absinthe, Natasha Cioara, is a recent member of the crew, but has a significant career as a mercenary across Europe and Asia, first appearing in Old Russia in 1999. No reliable information on personality.

Absinthe can manifest and control 'feathers' of red-and-black energy, which she uses as weapons. Feathers are very sharp and launched at significant speed, and frequently in large numbers. Feathers are extremely dangerous to non-hardened targets, and she has been observed to fire them in waves or use them in a shredding whirlwind. They are largely ineffective against hardened targets. Against hard targets she uses a bow and arrow, 'fletching' tinkertech arrows with her power, allowing her to guide them into a target. She possesses significant physical enhancement capabilities, is strong, durable, and extremely difficult to pin down.

She is highly dangerous, and unlike the rest of the crew, has a notable body count to her name. Do not assume that she will not resort to lethal force. Reports conflict regarding her attitude towards collateral damage; prioritize evacuating civilians and soft targets until confirmed otherwise. Assume extensive tactical skill and combat experience.

Data requests to Schicksal for her files have not received responses.

¹⁰ Unverified reports exist of Absinthe destroying targets as durable as Emperor-class Honkai Beasts or armored tanks. Tinker analysis of her arrows indicates that this should not be possible;¹¹ she may be underselling her own Blaster abilities, or possess other undisplayed abilities or tools.
¹¹ See UNKNOWN TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS ENE-ARM-01082013-C
 
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1.3: Preliminary Investigations
Annette Hebert took a deep breath as she stared at the journal – only one of many, there was a stack that Taylor had left on the table, many with printouts glued to the pages, none closing fully anymore. She put it down with a sigh.

Last night, she had asked Taylor what the girls had done to her, what they'd been doing. In response, her daughter went to her room and returned with a box containing these journals.

Last night, Annette hadn't been able to bring herself to open it. She'd busied herself with taking care of Taylor, making sure she had everything she needed. With making the calls and emails she needed to take the week off of work. There were no classes this week – those didn't start until the next Monday – but she had canceled a dizzying quantity of meetings. Even for reasons of family emergency, that took time. She'd cleaned the basement, neatened and reorganized it, more boxes than she had cared to count. And finally, sometime long past midnight, she'd exhausted herself enough to sleep.

Last night, she'd done everything she could to avoid the problem. She was afraid to know. She didn't want to know.

She had to know.

It was morning now. She'd prepared breakfast – not entirely, but enough that she could finish it the rest of the way when Taylor woke up. She had her tea. Everything was canceled.

She stared at the stack of journals. She was out of excuses. And what was she avoiding, really?

Just the proof that Emma Barnes, her goddaughter, the girl who she had given so much love and affection to when she was little, had grown up into something… else.

But that wasn't it, really. It was an excuse, and it had the easy benefit of being true.

But it wasn't why she was afraid.

No, what she was afraid of was proof of something else entirely.

Proof of the fact that she had been so checked out, so drowned in her work and her own baggage, that she had missed the signs of her own daughter being bullied.

They were obvious, in retrospect. The shift away from bright colors. The changes in her posture, from cheerful and upright to hunched, uncertain. The way she looked at crowds, now, like anyone in them could be a threat. Her shift from a cheerful babbler to quiet and withdrawn. The drops in her grades. All things she had ignored, or passed off as "just teenagers growing up" and never put together into a pattern.

All blindingly obvious, now that she took five minutes to think about it.

She took a deep breath. Held it. Let it out. Held it. Inhaled. A tactic she was oh so familiar with, a necessity for emotional regulation in her younger days, for the sake of everyone around her. It was rare that she needed to do it consciously, these days, but it still worked, allowing her to set that anger aside, let it serve as fuel when and only when it was needed. There would be time for anger later. Productive ways to vent that emotion.

She'd put it off long enough. She picked a journal from the middle of the stack, flipping it open to a random page.

Sophia tripped me in PE today. Swept my leg out from under me as we started our jog. I'm getting used to falling, at least. Barely noticed the scrapes.

Annette's jaw clenched. She shunted her anger away and flipped to another page.

The Trio poured glue into my backpack today. I managed to save my textbooks. The first edition of the Hobbit is a lost cause. Emma laughed when she saw me pull it out. She knew what that book meant to me.

Forgot to take it out of my backpack before I went to school. My mistake.


Annette's eyes closed against the sting of tears. That had been a birthday gift from Danny. And Emma had laughed? She remembered that birthday; Emma and Taylor had been inseparable. They had even insisted on blowing out the candles together.

What had happened to that girl?

She turned the page.

They convinced my partner on the project to sabotage it. "Lost" it and blamed it on me. She had offered to keep it safe. Stupid of me to agree.

She turned the page.

They flooded my email inbox today…



The phone rang.

Annette reached for it, then stopped, staring at the caller ID.

Barnes, Zoe.

What did she want?

The phone kept ringing.

Was this an attempt to excuse herself? To excuse Emma? To act like this hadn't ever happened?

The phone kept ringing.

She couldn't let them skate by. Not on this. Not now.

The phone kept ringing.

She closed her eyes and picked up.

"Annette Hebert speaking."



"...nominal government, it lacks any real strength or reach. Elections have not been held since…"

Bronya confirmed that the map of Old Russia was still projected on the screen, and she had not missed a topic change, then tuned the professor out again. After a moment's thought, she devoted a background thread to recording it, in case she needed to reference it later. Mr. Mattock was operating off of old data and third-hand observation; it was not impossible that she would run afoul of a gap in his knowledge and have to justify herself when the essay section began.

He was, at least, kind and willing to listen when she explained herself. It was not his fault that it was difficult to obtain functional data on the internal affairs of an effectively-post-apocalyptic failed state. Though she would prefer that he simply not lecture on topics he had fundamentally flawed understandings of. It was a wasteful use of time.

She turned her primary attention, instead, to her implants – or, more specifically, the internet access her implants gave her. Conveniently, the Faraday cage here was conventional, and not a tinkertech or tinkertech-derived shielding mechanism. She could easily bypass such primitive jamming methods and tap into their home connection directly. More competent security would have required her to crack the encryption and access controls on the staff's dedicated repeaters, and the effort to do that and remain undetected long-term would have been tedious, and likely to fail in face of concerted investigation.

She spun off a thread, checking the array of stamina-based digital games she played and completing daily quests. Her primary thread focused on news feeds. The previous day's events at Winslow – the girl who had been shoved into a heavily-contaminated locker – were covered, but only lightly. No names given, no specifics. Just that the victim had been hospitalized in critical condition, recovered thanks to Panacea, and the investigation had been taken over by the PRT, indicating suspected parahuman involvement.

She considered taking more direct revenge on behalf of the girl – there were any number of things she could do, given that she had footage confirming perpetrators and security on most social media may as well be paper – but after a moment's thought discarded the notion. If the PRT was investigating, she should allow their investigation to conclude before taking steps. Involvement at this stage, even presuming the PRT did not respond by deploying peer hackers to back-track her, would risk interfering with any legal remedies.

Though speaking of interfering with the investigation… Winslow, from what Kiana had told her, was likely to attempt to hide the events. After a further moment's contemplation, she arranged to have the security footage – the version with Kiana removed from it – forwarded to one of Dragon's tip lines by an anonymous email. While a foreign Tinker, Dragon was still a PRT member, primarily active digitally, and had a known association with Armsmaster. If she judged it relevant, she could pass it on. If she did not, then it would not risk tainting any investigation. Admittedly, first it would need to pass by her no-doubt-formidable spam filters, and then be verified, but it would, hopefully, serve to mitigate any measures Winslow took.

The bell to end class rang, and she shifted the background thread she had left observing the class to her primary attention as she packed her bag. Next came lunch. She enjoyed lunch. She got to sit with Mei, and eat satisfying food. While not as high-quality as Mei's own cooking, it was superior to her own efforts, which were merely edible, and Kiana's efforts, which were decidedly not. And yet Kiana could eat her own cooking, which was baffling on its own. She had witnessed the Idiotka grill and eat Honkai Beast, and those were approximately as healthy as a block of irradiated heavy metal. A power expression of some sort, surely, but… food-based powers were typically more obviously food-related, rather than an ancillary add-on to a Brute package. Peculiar, but for all her (many, many) flaws, Kiana had declined to pry into her past, so Bronya would not repay that kindness with an invasion of her own privacy.

Something more immediate caught her attention as she filed out with her classmates. Students at Arcadia followed reasonably predictable patterns. While they might vary them here or there, sufficient variation in them still drew her attention. And something had altered the pattern today, on a large scale. The movements all down the hall were atypical. She suppressed her frown, glancing around the hallway as she continued, very deliberately, on her own intentionally-only-quasi-predictable routine. Given her current random seed, and the fact that it was Tuesday, she would go to the cafeteria on her own, re-evaluate security status, and select a table. Mei, seeing Bronya already seated, would then get food for the two of them. In absence of a specific threat, varying behavior within set parameters while not overly inconveniencing herself or her charge was the optimal method for balancing security and convenience.

Her glance around did not show anything overly concerning, and she relaxed slightly. While it was possible she was simply missing something, it was more likely that something had disrupted schedules in some way. It was, after all, unlikely that anything suspicious would occur at Arcadia – it took someone exceptionally foolish to risk starting something at a school openly attended by both of New Wave's younger children, as well as an unknown number of hidden Wards. Not that their identities were hidden that effectively, but the charade was likely sufficient to conceal them from most civilians and some trained individuals.

Granted, Brockton Bay was a city filled with exceptionally foolish people, so it was best not to rely on the self-preservation instincts of others.

As she entered the cafeteria, she stepped to the side to allow others to pass and looked over the room, noting security-relevant concerns. Points of entrance and egress, window locations and potential sniper nests, more- and less-breachable walls, table locations relative to likely lines of movement. Checking her passive electromagnetic sensors displayed nothing unusual for the context, merely the standard activity of a school's worth of students using their phones at once, now that the Faraday cage was down.

She downgraded her secondary threads to background ones and let her power free for a full scan. Immediately she was deluged with information, filling all available threads with observations, notation, speculation. After a few seconds the deluge subsided, the information fully gathered and processed, and she looked over the results, filling her vision like an augmented reality display. Trajectories noted, expected traffic density marked in color, predicted structural durability displayed. Her initial scan of the environment had been largely accurate, she noted with satisfaction. While they were valuable tools, she refused to use her abilities as crutches. Another look at the students drew out some things she had missed, however – while her power 'only' used information she had access to, it was still able to draw conclusions in an instant that she might take prolonged observation for. And so, after a moment's work, she had come to several conclusions.

First, there were three tables to sit at with an acceptable combination of optimal sightlines, minimal external view, and minimally restricted movement. Two if she factored in destructive entry as a concern.

Second, those in the hall who were likely gang members were all on-edge. Though no one was armed, nor were they ready for violence, they were aware of its possibility. { [on_alert: true], [on_duty: false], [orders_received: false], [deployment: expected] }, her power noted. An expected gang conflict, then.

Third, the Wards – or those she suspected were Wards, at least, inferring from their body language and behavior in relation to Victoria Dallon { [callsign: GLORY_GIRL] } and Dean Stansfield { [callsign: GALLANT], [inference_confidence: high] }, as well as their group dynamics, body language, and situational awareness that suggested mild-to-moderate training – were not similarly on-edge. Whatever conflict was in the making, the Wards either had not yet been informed, or… she let her power's observations bubble up again. { [on_alert: false], [on_duty: false], [deployment_status: confined_to_base], [morale: restless] }. Or perhaps the Wards were simply benched.

Fourth, today's lunch was pizza. Not especially nutritious, but she did enjoy the taste. It would do.

Fifth, the table she had claimed was suitable, and Mei { [identifier: primary_principal], [priority: very_high] } was in line for the two of them.

And sixth, Amelia Dallon { [callsign: PANACEA] } was sneaking glances at Mei in line: { [attention_level: high], [body_language: nervous, planning], [intent_type: interactive], [intent_details: insufficient_data] }, her power provided. The Wards she was sitting with were not, however, and Victoria Dallon seemed oblivious to it.

She masked the scowl that came to mind as Mei came over with the pizza, and pushed her power away. While it was unquestionably potent, it was extremely focused in its viewpoint. Considering how to approach a social situation in a school context was substantially outside of its scope. She would have to figure out an approach on her own.



Dean Stansfield glanced around the cafeteria, and found himself uncomfortable with what he saw. Something must have happened overnight, because distinct pockets of pale green unease, orange restlessness, and red anger were scattered throughout the crowd, mostly small groups of people, but the occasional lone individual as well. Pockets which weren't there yesterday, and stood out against the background, shifting mosaic of emotion.

Victoria was next to him, but her attention was elsewhere, telling Carlos and Alicia about some movie she had watched last night, bright with enthusiasm and energy. He smiled slightly, always happy to see her so excited. A glance around the table, and he knew no one else had noticed the strange air that hung over the room. Or… almost no one else. Amy's emotional state was deeply uncharacteristic. The gray pallor of exhaustion was largely absent, and for once her attention was off of Victoria, showing neither the reddish-pink of her affection for her sister nor the vibrant red spite and coiling green jealousy she directed at him. Instead, her attention was somewhere else entirely, clear teal curiosity, greenish anxiety, and dark blue contemplation all mixed together in her aura. At first, he thought the contemplation was of some difficult, abstract problem, but as he watched out of the corner of his eye, he caught a table her gaze kept drifting to.

It was a small table at the edge of the room, occupied by… hm. He knew the older Japanese girl was Mei Raiden, because he was in Literature and World History with her, but he couldn't remember the name of her companion. The small, silver-haired Russian girl had transferred in in the spring along with Mei, he knew – maybe she had also been in Nagazora for some reason? – and he recalled her emotions reading as some sort of neurodivergent, but for the life of him he couldn't remember anything more.

Mei's aura was as it usually was on her good days, rippling blue tranquility, cloudy with depression, tinged with her other emotions. Pinkish affection for the smaller girl, in this case. On her bad days, it was a morass of self-loathing, despair, and hopelessness. He hoped the girl had access to a therapist of some sort; she clearly needed it. Though she was far from the only one. And there were never enough to go around.

The smaller girl, though… he frowned, ducking his head to his food, when her emotions snapped instantly from pale green unease and dark blue contemplation to clear, icy blue alertness, with only the faintest tinges of other colors. That was not normal – even dramatic emotional shifts he usually perceived as a transition or a welling-up, not the sudden click she had displayed. It was like someone turning on a light.

Out of the corner of his eye, he watched the alertness persist for a long moment, then wink off again as quickly as it had come, replaced with contemplation, which in turn shifted far more naturally to determination, satisfaction, and readiness. Amy, on the other hand, seemed caught in the same loop of anxious thinking. Which was… well, normal enough for her. She might not like him, but he was fond of her, beyond just her being his girlfriend's sister, so he kept an eye out. With his powers it was nearly impossible not to notice how she was prone to being caught in depressive cycles.

He returned his attention to lunch as Victoria finished her story, turning back to him and launching into a new one, leaning on his shoulder. He smiled and let his worry fall away, basking in her clear, uncomplicated enjoyment, and listened to her, saying the right things. He didn't honestly care about the story – it was about her and two people he didn't really know at the mall together – but she did, so he gave it the attention she wanted.

He'd almost forgotten about the strangeness when, at the end of lunch, and the beginning of the vocational part of the day, Amy excused herself to use the restroom… the Russian girl peeled off, following Amy, shimmering with mingled wariness, suspicion, and determination.

He frowned, turning to Victoria, who was engrossed in conversation with Dennis and Carlos. "Hey, honeybun?" he asked with a smile, putting a hand on her shoulder.

She pulsed red with anger, turning towards him, face set in a scowl. "You know I don't like that pet name, Dean, what the hell?"

"Needed your attention, sorry," he apologized easily, though he knew he'd be paying for it later regardless. "Can you go check on Amy? Think someone just followed her into the restroom. As in, her specifically."

Mercurial as always, red anger mingled with blue concern. "What!? If some bitch thinks she can–"

"I don't know if it's bad!" he interrupted hastily. "Just healthy caution, you know?"

"Whatever it is, she'd better pray…" she muttered to herself as she got up and stalked off, crowd parting as her aura shifted to the 'terror' half of awe.

Dean hoped he hadn't just made a big mistake.



"Amelia Dallon," stated an unfamiliar voice, and Amy looked up from washing her hands to find the small silver-haired girl who had been sitting with Mei.

"Uh… that's me?" she answered uneasily. What was this about?

"What are your intentions towards Mei Raiden?" She crossed her arms, and despite the height difference, Amy found herself taking a half-step back. She had an unusual intensity to her.

"I.. don't know what you mean?" she asked, inwardly swearing. Of course someone had noticed her sneaking glances at Mei. She didn't even know what she wanted – well, no, she knew what she wanted, which was to touch and… anyway, she didn't know how she would… well, not without…

"You have been staring at her furtively all lunch. You are not nearly as subtle as you think." She frowned. "Your behavior is suspicious and suggests a threat."

"I… well, I just…" she swallowed, looking at the ground. How could she possibly explain this without both outing Kiana and looking like a freak? Especially when the actual answer was still enormously creepy? "I had a project I wanted her help with, and…"

"Mei has no current projects in your shared class." She scowled. "Lying does not reduce your suspicion level."

The door opened behind the girl, and Amy sagged with relief as her sister stepped in and rose off the ground, aura rolling over them both and filling Amy with warmth.

"Excuse me," she said, scowling. "What, exactly, are you trying with my sister?"

The girl turned, craning her head up, but, aside from some understandable tension due to the presence of an angry Alexandria package, did not seem to react to Vicky's aura. "I am trying to determine her intentions towards my roommate, as her behavior is suspicious."

Vicky blinked once, twice, and her aura winked off. She looked between the two, looking like she was suppressing a smile. "Suspicious… how?" Oh no.

"Furtive glances throughout the meal period. Clearly planning some form of interaction. Lying about a nonexistent project when pressed."

"Oh. My. God." Oh no Vicky please, Amy sensed the danger coming as Vicky's smile turned to a full grin. "Amy, do you have a crush?"

"No!" Amy insisted, scowling, heat growing in her cheeks.

Vicky's grin widened. "Amy's got a cru-ush, Amy's got a cru-ush~"

That's it. It's hell. This is hell.



"...preliminary indications from contacts are that the Empire hired Faultline's crew to distract Protectorate assets and prevent us from responding to an attack on ABB facilities and the following pitched battle."

"Right," Assault shrugged, leaning back in his chair, eyes on Armsmaster's visor. It had been years, and he still didn't like the way those things blocked eye contact. He'd take Miss Militia's approach of covering the bottom half of his face any day. Which, ironically, was why he couldn't have a costume like that – too close to Madcap's. "So what makes this different from any other Wednesday? The streets are like someone kicked a hornet's nest."

"That's what we're going to find out." Armsmaster looked at Ethan. "Assault, I want you to update our threat report on Faultline's Crew. Combat recordings from last night's battle are in your inbox. See if you can figure out anything about the mystery Brute who took Glory Girl out while you're at it." He paused. "Also, because it's Tuesday."

Assault frowned for a moment, trying to figure out if that was intended to be a joke, then sighed and shook his head with a grin. "Wow, boss, trying to kill me with boredom?" It wasn't that he minded it, really, but he had appearances to keep up. Both to keep to his agreement with Legend… and to keep it so no one got it into their head that he'd make a good manager. That one might actually kill him with boredom.

"You'll live," Armsmaster replied dryly, and turned his attention to the others. "Dauntless, you're on Rune. Figure out whatever you can from her. Our mystery Brute didn't untie her, so she might be willing to spill on their identity too; let Assault know if you get anything useful."

The hero nodded his greek-helmeted head. "Alright."

"I've updated patrol schedules as well. The Wards are back on-duty as of tonight, but they're under strict engagement restrictions. I'll cover those details later. Battery, Triumph, you two were marked as free, so you're on tonight's patrols. Dauntless, Assault, you're on tomorrow. Velocity, take your pick." He paused. "If things heat up too much, we're all going to be on-call, so make any arrangements you need to. Miss Militia will be on overall mission control for the Protectorate. I'll be taking the Wards."

Assault repressed a frown. Armsmaster was usually happy to leave the Wards to Miss Militia, or Aegis in his role as Wards Leader. Him taking an interest was a net positive – he had been borderline neglectful, honestly – but very unusual. What had happened to draw his focus back to them?

Armsmaster waited a long moment for any questions to be raised, then nodded. "That's all for now, then. Dauntless, Battery, I'm giving you two the Winslow case; stay after so I can get you up to speed. The rest of you, dismissed."



Ethan hit 'Print' and sprawled back in his chair, groaning. "Finally, freed from report hell!"

Sherie rolled her eyes. "Come on, Assault, it couldn't have been that bad. It was just a threat report. There should have been one in the system already, you just had to update it and tag it to Faultline's Crew."

He rolled over. "Battery, you don't understand. She's not a local, she's European. There wasn't a PRT threat report worth referencing, and international data requests? To Schicksal?"

The other hero winced. "Okay, point taken. So you had to cobble together the threat report from available evidence?"

"More or less, yeah. It's still tentative, but it's something to work off of."

Sherie picked one of the reports off of the printer. "So what are we looking at here?"

"Blaster, bombardment primarily, real nasty. Mover. Ground-bound, thank god, but real maneuverable and hard to pin down. Some Brute in there too."

Sherie frowned. "She… shoots glowing feathers at things? There's gotta be more to it than that if you're slapping these ratings on it."

Ethan spun his office chair in a lazy circle. "They look like feathers, but as near as I can tell they're basically telekinetically-controlled energy knives. Found solid footage of her throwing a barrage of them at a Changer-type Brute, turned into metal. They plinked off the guy, but the wall behind him wasn't so lucky. Turned it to sawdust like she was auditioning for a role as a woodchipper. Soft target like a person?" He shuddered. "Ground beef."

She gave him an unamused look, then shook her head. "...okay, fair enough. And she's got hard target options too. Has to, with what she did with the truck."

"She's got some sort of… bow. Fires arrows that she fletches with her power, seem to penetrate real well. May let her guide them. Some sort of tinkertech tips, Armsmaster says."

"Bow and arrows, huh. Wonder if it's a powers thing or a motif thing. Feathers and all."

"Not sure. No good info on her. She's been active a long time, first confirmed report is in '99, but all we've got is confirmation of a mercenary career, her real name, and what we can piece together from active footage. My gut says that she's lowballing her Blaster level, too. Nothing confirmed, or recorded, but there's talk suggesting that she can punch through heavily-armored targets. We're talking Emperor-class Honkai beasts and the occasional tank."

"Jesus. As if Purity wasn't already enough Blaster in town." Battery flipped back to the front of the report. "Natasha Cioara… Absinthe. Odd to see a cape name that doesn't match powers. Does she really like her booze, or something?" She set it down. "Well, guess it doesn't matter. At least Faultline's crew is a known quantity, and likes to stay non-lethal. Speaking of unknown quantities, though…"

"I've got absolutely nothing on our mysterious visitor," Ethan admitted with a grimace. "You'd think someone who could clean punch Glory Girl out would make a bigger splash, but I couldn't find a whisper. No new high-end Brutes or Strikers nearby, and the known ones are either accounted for or don't match. It doesn't help that we don't have much to go on – they could even be a short-range Blaster, for all we know – but this whole deal is weird. Someone shows up as Glory Girl is taking down Rune, punts her a couple blocks away hard enough to knock her out, and just vanishes? Hell, they didn't even free Rune while they were at it. Girl was still zip-tied when they went back, barely made it a block. Only person who'd have a description is Rune herself, and Dauntless says she's not saying a word."

"...so some sort of mystery Brute or Striker that no one saw, who… what, just really wanted to cold-cock our resident Alexandria package?"

Ethan shrugged helplessly. "I've got nothing. Piggot's going to be pissed, but I can't exactly conjure intel out of thin air."

Sherie sighed. "Renewed Empire-ABB hostilities, mystery capes… and when Armsmaster dropped that Winslow investigation on me and Dauntless, he shared some… concerning details. It never rains, huh."

"Going to be a long week," Ethan agreed.
 
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1.4: Realizations
"Miss Kaslana," her first teacher greeted her, smile poisonously false. "How nice of you to deign to join us." Kiana halted, halfway from the door to her seat, and turned to face her. The remainder of the class streamed around her, though she noted a half-dozen obvious listeners.

"Family emergency came up, sorry Ms. Feldmann," Kiana lied. "I was in the hospital most of yesterday."

She sniffed dismissively and turned away. "If you have a doctor's note, present it when you get to detention after school. Get to your seat."

Kiana successfully repressed the urge to roll her eyes until she had turned away. Teachers at Winslow came in three categories, as near she could tell. Kind and timid, willfully ignorant, or looking for excuses to exert what power they had. Thankfully the third was the least common, but starting each day off with Ms. Feldmann made that feel like the smallest of blessings.

Taking a glance around the room as she slid into her seat, she concealed a frown. The gang kids – well, the Empire and ABB ones – were wearing their colors more prominently than usual. And glaring daggers at each other. Thankfully, in class they were only glaring daggers. She could spot at least three "hidden" knives from her seat, not that they were concealed at all effectively. She gave it until the afternoon for an ambulance to get called, if those in class were any indication.

Still, nothing to do with her. She had pulled out a notebook, so she could at least pretend to be paying attention, when she noted one last thing. Madison, the friend-slash-hanger-on to the school's queen bees, Sophia and Emma, was absent.

Kiana tried to remember another time the girl had missed or cut first period, but came up empty. That was interesting.



While the mystery of Madison might have been interesting, class was decidedly not. Nor were any of the two other classes before lunch. It was almost impossible to keep her mind from wandering, and eventually she simply gave up, letting her thoughts go where they would as she doodled.

And where they went, over and over, was superheroes. She'd met capes before, even before Nagazora, but those had been… different. In Old Russia, capes were volatile, avoided by everyone who could manage it. Anyone who chose to put on a costume and go fight things there was either a warlord, a warlord's minion, or dead. Smart parahumans, like herself, just kept a low profile and tried to get by. A costume, a public identity, all of that was just painting a target on yourself.

In more "civilized" territory, capes were Schicksal's Valkyries, not to be trusted. Her father had warned her, extensively, that Schicksal was a danger to her, that they hid monstrous deeds under a facade of public good. That their master was a cunning, obsessive man with no moral scruples. That if they knew who and where she was, she would not be safe.

So she kept a low profile, she stayed away from their operations as she traveled. After a close call with an ostensibly independent cape who reported her "for her own good," she started avoiding them as well. It was the criminals that were reliable, in the end. Selfish, possibly unstable, looking out for them and theirs, out to make a quick buck… those were all things she could deal with. Never safe, but she would take a gun in her face over a knife in her back any day of the week.

Was America any different? In the end, she didn't know. It looked like, for all of Brockton Bay's nature as a shithole, there were more independent heroes here than there had been in Schicksal territory. Maybe the PRT had leashes on them, behind the scenes. Maybe the Guild, the Canadian equivalent to the Protectorate, wasn't as independent as they pretended.

But when her thoughts returned to Glory Girl, to Panacea, to Lady Photon, something about them, something special, stuck in her mind. And not just them - even Armsmaster, obvious PRT stooge that he was, had had a certain… presence to him. A sense that he was something more. Something that she hadn't felt since she first met Mei.

Maybe all it was was… she wanted to believe. To believe that maybe there was something she could do, that people could do, to make the world a better place. To not get stabbed in the back for trying. To, maybe, be something like a hero.

She wondered, thinking of the countless designs she'd doodled over the morning, if wanting was enough to matter.



It was, surprisingly, not until late into lunch when the first knife came out. Kiana was quietly eating her sandwich – with how untrustworthy Winslow's cafeteria was, Mei made it for her in the mornings, and her stomach did a happy wiggle every time she remembered that – and idly watching Sophia and Emma when it happened. In the midst of her noting how seamlessly their dynamic had shifted to accommodate Madison's absence there were shouts from the other end of the room, and the unmistakable crowding and cheering that accompanied a fight.

She sighed and shifted so she had a better view if it spilled into something more – with all the gang colors in the crowd, she wasn't ruling it out. The cafeteria staff pulled out phones, starting to make calls. Half the audience had their phones out to record instead.

There were yelps of pain, barely audible over the shouting, when the door slammed open and a cape walked in. She wore a skin-tight costume in dark gray and white, with glowing bright blue circuit patterns up her front. She also wore a visored helmet; Kiana idly wondered if that was just standard-issue here.

Not many people noticed the door opening, even as loud as it was. They did notice when she clapped her hands together, loud enough that it sounded like a gunshot, and the glowing bright blue faded to dark cobalt. Everyone jerked around, looking for the source, and the woman walked forward with unshakable confidence. Kiana's eyes were glued to her. "Alright, this ends now," she instructed. "Stop the fight and let me see what's going on here."

After another stern look, the crowd parted, revealing the center, and for a moment the woman – Battery, judging by the mutters – paused. Two students in Empire colors lay on the ground, one in ABB colors. The one still standing had a bloody butterfly knife in hand. Another lay on the floor.

"Drop the weapon." Her arms crossed in front of her. Kiana couldn't see her face, but she saw her legs shift slightly, their muscles tensing for action. The confrontation had her complete attention, and she wasn't the only one.

The student, a wiry boy Kiana didn't recognize, didn't. Instead, his eyes darted around nervously, and his knife went up, held defensively. There was an odd sensation in the Honkai energy around the cape, like she was drawing it in somehow. That was rather unusual – most capes Kiana had met seemed to only draw on internal energy, generated through their… brain thingies. Hm. That was odd. Why was that?

"You don't want to do this. I'm not going to hurt you, but I need you to drop the knife."

For a long moment, Kiana thought he wasn't going to do it, that he'd try something stupid like trying to stab the Protectorate cape. The whole cafeteria seemed hushed, watching with rapt attention. And then the knife clattered to the ground, almost deafening.

She kept an eye on him as she dropped to a crouch, checking on the fallen… and then swore and reached up to her helmet. "Battery to console, I need an ambulance at Winslow High."

Kiana checked the time and sighed. She'd been wrong, it was after noon when the first ambulance was called. She shrugged, continuing her lunch while she watched the hero at work. This was far more interesting than being right.

She wondered, idly, if the response time for a Protectorate-called ambulance was better than yesterday's "biohazard" one had been.

As it turned out, it was.



"Alright, any further questions?" Her mom looked around at the rest of New Wave, both families assembled around the long table. Crystal's phone buzzed, rattling loudly where it pressed against her chair. "I'll take that as a no," she answered dryly, and Crystal flushed. "I didn't have anything else, so if we're all in agreement on the new patrol schedules, I think that's it."

After a moment's pause, everyone started moving, except her mom, who sat back down at the laptop they used for presentations.

Her dad made his way to the kitchen. Eric went straight upstairs, back to his room. He was at that age, Crystal supposed.

Crystal got out of her chair, checking her phone. She smiled when she saw that it was from Anne – awkward timing or not, she never minded a message from the older of the Barnes' two daughters – but immediately frowned when she saw what she was asking. Anne should know better than to ask that kind of question. She sighed, glancing at Amy, who seemed lost in thought, then back to the phone, and leaned against the wall to type a quick reply.


Aunt Carol capped her pen and neatened her notes before beginning to put them away. Crystal still didn't understand that – sure, having minutes for their meetings was practical, but it would be easier to just record the things or type them out than to laboriously write them by hand. Didn't she get distracted?

Uncle Mark, meanwhile, turned to his daughters. "Amy, Vicky, do either of you need rides home? Carol and I were going to head straight back, but we can make a quick stop if you need something."


Amy looked about to answer when Vicky cut in. "Nope!" her cousin declared. "We've got some plans."

Crystal raised an eyebrow at the emphasis, looking up. That tone of voice usually meant… she saw the anticipatory dread in Amy's face as she turned to answer. Yep, Vicky had unilaterally decided to drag Amy somewhere.

"Alright, girls, have fun," Mark answered with a smile. Crystal blinked. One of his rare good days, it seemed, if he was actually cheerful.

She shook her head, smiling, and looked back to her phone.


The door opened and closed. Crystal glanced up, and found Vicky having a whispered conversation with Amy. Whatever the topic was, it had the brunette blushing furiously.


"Ah, Victoria, Amy?" her mom spoke up. Crystal put her phone away, returning her attention to her cousins. What was this about? "Could you stay for a moment?"

"Uh, sure? What's up, Auntie Sarah~?"

"Just want to clear up the details you left out when talking about last night."

"I didn't–" Vicky started.

"I can put two and two together and get four, Victoria," she smiled, taking the sting out of the rebuke. "Look, I know you probably have a good reason for leaving it out. But one of the adults needs to know how Amy got there, and how you knew Victoria was hurt."

"It was ju–" Vicky tried again, but this time it was Amy who cut her off.

"It's fine. Vista was around and gave me a lift." Sarah frowned, and Crystal tilted her head. Wait, weren't…

"I thought the Wards weren't patrolling after last week's incident," Sarah said, giving voice to Crystal's thoughts.

"Yeah, well, that's why we didn't want to mention it." Amy's hands were in her pockets, but she was standing straight up, defiant. How rare. "She saw Vicky get hit and helped me get there in time. She shouldn't get punished for that. If her being out against orders gets back to the PRT…"

Sarah pursed her lips and nodded. "Okay. I was hoping it was something like that."

"Are you going to–"

"No, that's all I needed to know," Sarah answered, shaking her head. "Did she get a glimpse of your attacker?"

Vicky shrugged. "I already shared what she was able to see, just said it was me who saw it. I honestly didn't even see the person. I was out like a light."

Sarah nodded. "Okay. I was going to share that description with the PRT, and it's easy enough to say that you saw the person just before you got hit. Does that cover for Vista sufficiently?" Both girls let out a relieved sigh and nodded. Sarah smiled and shook her head. "Honestly, girls, I'm not going to bite your heads off. I'd rather you come forward when something happens, and you won't do that if I get mad about it. Your mom and I did much worse back in the day, believe me."

"Try telling that to Carol," Amy muttered, looking at the ground. She didn't see the flash of concern that passed over Sarah's face, but Crystal did.

"Go have fun while the sun's out," Sarah said, smiling, acting for all the world like she hadn't heard the mutter.

"Oh, one sec Amy," Crystal cut in as they started to turn away. "A… classmate of mine wanted me to thank you for healing someone yesterday, some sort of family friend. Something about a locker?"

Amy winced slightly. "Oh, that. I remember, it was memorably nasty. Uh… tell them I was happy to help, or whatever."

"Or whatever," Crystal echoed, and rolled her eyes. "Brilliant bedside manner as always, Amy." Amy just shrugged. "What are you two off to, anyway?"

Vicky bounced up and down, grinning widely. "Amy has a crush so it's time for a wardrobe update."

"I told you I don't–"

"Suuure, I believe that." Vicky's grin widened. "So, is it Mei or that Kiana girl? Don't think I didn't see the way you lingered on her last night~" Crystal blinked. Well, Amy being into girls would explain why Vicky kept failing to set her up with boys. But she still shouldn't have outed the girl like that, even if she knew none of them would judge. She sighed. No harm done, but she should probably check in with Amy later.

"I was– I was doing a full medical check! It wasn't–"

"Nuh uh, no more excuses!" She stepped up to her sister and hefted her over her shoulder like a sack of potatoes. "Whoever it is, better clothes will help!"

Amy gave Crystal a plaintive look as her sister carried her off. 'Save me,' she mouthed.

'No,' Crystal mouthed back.



"Have a nice day!"

Mei nodded at the cashier with a polite smile before leaving the store, bags in hand. Shopping had been a little more difficult than usual – perusing the thrift stores and finding things that fit for all three of them was difficult enough normally, and more so when Kiana had managed to ruin two sets of clothes in a single day. That girl…

She shook her head, feet automatically taking her to the bus stop. It hadn't been her fault, at least – no matter how accident-prone Kiana was, she couldn't have foreseen the contents of that locker, or have reasonably expected a superhero to be thrown into her at high speed.

She was cutting through an empty parking lot – the seedy bar and club it serviced weren't exactly open at two in the afternoon – when she realized she was being followed. Four, no, five boys in Empire red-and-black. Two girls trailing a bit behind them.

"Hey!" one of them shouted. She took a deep breath, then sighed. Well, she'd have to deal with this somehow. It wasn't like she was at the bus stop, so she couldn't rely on the bus truce for it.

"Yes? What seems to be the problem?" she asked calmly, putting her back to one of the lot's light poles. Five of them was… inconvenient.

Their leader, perhaps a few years older than Mei herself, lanky and buzz-cut with the faintest hint of a mustache, jabbed his finger at her. "The problem is that your type are getting bold enough to shoplift in broad daylight!"

Ah. So that was how it was going. She looked around. No one else in sight, save for the occasional car passing by. No help there.

"I have a receipt for these," she answered instead.

"Bullshit," he snapped. "I'm not gonna take some fake piece of paper over what we saw!" Not one of them had been in the store with her. "Ripping off all-American small businesses just trying to make it by. The nerve of you chi—"

"What is it, exactly, that you want?" she interrupted, setting her bags down and crossing her arms. The idiot couldn't even tell that she was Japanese. "Five boys, assaulting a lone high school girl in broad daylight? Not exactly making a brave showing for your… hangers-on." She gestured to the girls trailing behind them.

Her voice was chilly, uncaring, but her heart was a raging storm. She could take five, or seven if the girls joined in, low-level gang members. She couldn't do it without using her power, even if only for speed and strength to enhance her own skills. If they were armed, though…

The boys fanned out a bit, their leader sputtering for a moment. Now, whispered a voice inside her, each word crackling with electricity.

She ignored it.

"Stop fucking around, Steve, just teach that bitch a lesson!" snapped one of the girls, short and brown-haired, a black shirt with a red eagle clutching a bushel of arrows.

She hadn't known what that meant, before they'd come here. Neo-Nazi iconography had never been a concern for her. But she'd had a crash course in the last eight months. She'd wager if she counted, there'd be fourteen of them.

Scum. You could kill them all in a moment if you weren't such a coward.

She screwed her eyes shut. Her power flexed and writhed in her grasp like a living thing, charge building in her.

"Time to shut you up, you uppity–"

Trash like this should just be removed.

No. She would not give up her control. No matter how deserving they might be. If she did… she didn't know if she could stop.

You shouldn't stop. You should get started.

A stray arc snapped from her to the light pole she had placed her back to. Like a gunshot, the bulb burst with a blinding flash. She jerked, covering her eyes instinctively. Glass sliced across her arm and cheek, another grazed her forehead. She felt more strike her jacket, tearing through at angles that missed her only by the narrowest of margins.

The Empire members didn't react as quickly. Shouts of pain and alarm filled the lot, all of them moving. She couldn't tell if they were actually injured or just shocked.

The sharp sting gave her something to focus on, something real to use to force away the impulse to lash out. It wasn't easy, but it was something.

Pathetic.

The gang members were still trying to clear their vision, disoriented. She glanced down at her bags. Could she just make a break for it? She was hesitant to draw on her energy, with how frayed her control was, even for physical enhancement. Could she make it out of sight before they recovered?

She didn't know.

Maybe she should try anyway?

Where was the closest cover? Her gaze darted around. The street? That alley?

"Get the cape before she can do something!" One of the girls shouted, voice shot through with fear and anger.

Too late. Should have made a decision. This would all be over if you'd just given them what they deserved.

"I said–"

She broke off as a surge of emotion rolled through the gang members, and Mei herself, a wave of some primordial terror. Mei rocked back, clipped the back of her head on the post, but steadied herself. Asphalt cracked as a figure landed between them, hard. Everyone froze. Somewhere within her, Mei found the composure to examine the new arrival. Those clothes seemed familiar. Where had she seen…?

"Would you mind explaining what you boys are up to?" the figure – Victoria, she realized from the voice – 'asked,' and even Mei could feel the anger in her voice.

"Oh look, here comes the so-called 'hero,' taking the side of some foreign criminal instead of standing with the good Americans. Justice, your country, your people… going to betray anything else while you're at it?" the leader began, but one of his companions tugged at his sleeve, shaking his head rapidly.

Glory Girl stood imposing and unimpressed. "Tell me, is this really where you want to be right now? Or," she gestured with her eyes, "would you like to be somewhere else?"

"We, uh, were just leaving actually!" the lackey squeaked, pulling much harder now. With that the tension broke, gang members scrambling over each other to get away.

Victoria relaxed as they scrambled away, and turned to Mei… and promptly her face lit up, with recognition and concern.

"Oh, you're Mei right? Wait, what happened to–"

Mei winced, gestured up at the ruins of the bulb. "That thing blew up."

"What? That would explain the gunshot, but why did… you know what, nevermind. Listen, wait here just a sec, okay? Gonna get you something for the bleeding." Without waiting for a response, the blond girl took flight again, vanishing with impressive speed.

Mei let out a deep, shuddering sigh, and leaned back against the post. She pressed a hand against her forehead, trying to stem the blood flow. It only sort of worked.

When Victoria returned, it was with a passenger in tow, a certain brunette healer she seemed to keep running into.

Amy took one look at Mei and scowled. "Vicky, you didn't say it was–"

Victoria whispered something and gave Amy a gentle shove and the healer stumbled towards Mei, cheeks reddening. "Do I have your permission to heal you?"

"Ah… sure?" Mei answered absently, trying to figure out what that had been about. Had she thought someone she knew was hurt, maybe? But why would Victoria lie about that?

Amy took her hand, and her whole body tingled. A moment later the pain from her injuries cut off, leaving only a strange, unpleasant sensation as they moved, edges shifting together and closing over. Deeply unsettling, she decided.

"Thank you," Mei said. "Thank you both. I couldn't figure out how to… get away. De-escalate. Something. I don't know what they were planning, but…"

"I'm glad I was around! Just coming to drag my sister shopping, you know," she gestured to Amy, standing off to the side in the same clothes as earlier, looking vaguely apprehensive, "heard that explosion, and shot over to look. Never would have guessed it was involving someone I knew!"

Mei smiled and inclined her head. "Thank you either way."

"Heyyyy…" Victoria's expression turned thoughtful, perhaps even cunning. It made Mei… not uneasy, perhaps, but uncertain. What was the girl's angle? "Actually, if you were willing to do me a favor… would you like to help me pick something out for Amy? Looks like you could use some replacements, and I like your style!"

"Ah, sorry. I have a bus that I should catch, so I can get these bags home…"

"I'll happily give you a lift!" she floated upwards a bit to demonstrate, doing a quick twirl in the air. "And I'll cover your new clothes if you do~"

"Ah… well…" she cast around for any other reasons, but none came to mind. Bronya would be fine on her own, and Kiana would be in school for a while yet, as Winslow did not have Arcadia's vocational focus. "...I'd be happy to, in that case. Let me just text Bronya, so she doesn't worry that I'm out late."

For some reason, Amy seemed to twitch at that.

How strange.



The sun was just setting when Annette pulled up to the Barnes' house, and she was struck by the easy familiarity as she pulled her car into her preferred spot, just next to their mailbox. Had it really been years? That didn't seem right.

Looking over their lawn, the box she'd spent most of the day assembling in hand, it didn't look like years had passed. Their bushes were still trimmed the same way, trees kept just as neatly as before, flowers in the same careful patterns. She'd wager that if she were to check the same fake rock that had held their house keys before, it would still be there.

And yet, she mused as she walked up the path, at the same time that it felt like yesterday, it felt like it had been a lifetime. Near every time she'd come here, Danny had been with her, a constant presence by her side. He was as close to them as she was, and rarely passed up an opportunity to make a group dinner of it.

When he was alive, that is.

She sighed, set her jaw, and adjusted the box she held in one hand. Things were different, and she was here to see just how different.

She rang the doorbell.

There was a shuffling inside, and moments after the door opened, revealing Emma Barnes inside. Annette was taken aback, unable to stop herself from processing how much the girl – her goddaughter – had grown. Pretty, perhaps gorgeous even, with a glorious mane of red hair. She'd grown up much as Annette had expected she would, and though she had further yet to go, Annette was sure she'd be genuinely beautiful in time.

Then Emma smiled, and Annette had to repress the wave of revulsion that washed through her. Had the girl always been this fake? She could see the construction in the expression, the way it didn't reach her eyes, the way it was a bit too rigid, a bit too wide. It was subtle; she might not have noticed if she hadn't known to look for it. But it was unmistakably obvious to her now.

"Aunt Annette!" Emma said, still wearing that false smile. "It's good to see you." She leaned to the side, looking behind Annette. "Oh, was Taylor not feeling up to it? I heard what happened, so awful."

She fed her anger into the furnace labeled 'later.' This was not the time.

"No, she's resting now," Annette lied. She'd had Kurt and Lacey watching Taylor all day while she made copies, and they'd be having dinner as well. She felt bad for not telling Taylor the real reasons, but… it would be premature, when she didn't know how much Emma's parents knew. "She insisted I come anyway, though."

"That's a shame. I was hoping to see her. Well, come in!" Emma gestured for Annette to enter, closing the door behind her.

"Annette, Taylor, you're early!" Zoe called from the kitchen. "Food's not ready yet, but it won't need my attention for a bit. Emma, is the table set?"

"Yes, mom," she said, in that 'of course, you idiot' tone common to so many teenagers. Common to Taylor, too, once upon a time.

"Thanks, sweetie! I'll pour us some drinks and we can catch up a bit before dinner."

A few brisk, bustling minutes later and the four of them were seated at the dining room table, a beautiful thing of dark wood. Alan's work must be going well, then, though Annette supposed that was inevitable. The divorce rate kept rising, so a divorce lawyer's practice must be booming.

Alan and Zoe were much as they had always been. The same red hair as their daughters, Alan's short and clean-cut, with a neat beard and mustache, while Zoe's was kept in a neat braid. Nice clothes, the both of them, but then they'd always been like that. Even when things were better, Annette had felt irrationally underdressed here. She knew they didn't genuinely mind, but the salary of a college professor and a union administrator was… not exactly extraordinary at the best of times. And Brockton Bay had left the best of times behind a long, long time ago.

"So, no Taylor?" Alan asked curiously. "Was she not feeling well?"

"No, no Taylor tonight," Annette shook her head.

"We'd have been happy to reschedule if another day worked better," Zoe added. "But we're happy to have you anyway, since both our daughters are here for once." She saw the question in Annette's eyes. "Anne should be down shortly, she's finishing something up upstairs," she clarified.

Zoe had always been that way, eager to bend her own schedule to accommodate another. It had driven Annette mad more than once in college together, trying to suss out what her friend had actually wanted, but it was… endearing.

It made Annette feel a little bad about the false pretenses she'd set up the dinner date under.

"No, I played a bit fast and loose with the truth this morning. Taylor was never going to make it tonight."

Alan frowned, and Annette could see unease starting to enter his gaze. She didn't have much time if she wanted to crack that lawyerly facade. "You're more than welcome to come over for drinks on your own, you didn't need to–"

Annette reached down, picking up the box she had brought with her, and set it on the table with a 'thud' as the weight of countless pages, photocopied from Taylor's journals, hit the table.

"We need to talk," Annette said. Emma seemed to see the writing on the wall her parents didn't, moving as if to get away, but Annette met her eyes, letting the glare she actually wanted to give the girl finally show. Emma squeaked and froze.

"Annette, what are–" Zoe began.

Annette's control slipped a bit, but she managed to keep her tone a bit more civil than a snarl. Probably. "About what Emma has been up to over the past two years, and how she put my daughter in the hospital."
 
1.5: Relationships, and Rifts
"I'm telling you," Dennis said as he lounged against the wall, "he's not really dead." The redheaded teen took another bite of his bagel. "Ten to one it's all some kind of ploy."

"And I'm telling you that would be stupid!" Carlos retorted.

"Hey man, I'm not saying it makes sense." Dennis shrugged. "Just calling it like it is. He's not named Invictus for nothing, you know?"

"Dennis, we saw his body. It was skeletonized. We saw the funeral!" Carlos shook his head, gesturing angrily. "He's dead for real, end of story."

Vista groaned from her position upside down on the couch, knees hooked over the back, head hanging off the edge. "Carlos, they already announced season two, and he's on the cast list."

"Yes, I know, but that's hack writing, Missy!" he responded, the Wards Leader showing enough heat to make Vista blink.

"Why don't we cool down a bit, Carlos?" Dean suggested. The handsome, Gallant – Vista snickered internally at the pun, unoriginal as it was – older boy was in his power armor, sans helmet. He held one arm out at a right angle, and Chris was doing something to its internals with a screwdriver. Adjusting it, probably.

Vista's gaze lingered on him as Carlos made some response she didn't care about. The whole power armor thing was a shame, really. She half-closed her eyes, thinking of him in one of the skintight costumes the other boys had. That would be much better… and why did he need the armor, anyway? Sure, he didn't have a Brute-type power, but neither did she, and you didn't catch anyone making her a suit of power armor!

They wouldn't even give her a proper weapon. She scowled. Nevermind the things she could do with a gun, they wouldn't even give her a telescoping baton. Or a non-telescoping one, for that matter. Blah blah, Youth Guard, blah blah, Missy you're only fourteen, blah blah no need to give you a weapon despite Brockton Bay having one of the highest murder rates in the country, you'll just fight fucking Hookwolf with whatever happens to be in arm's reach, that's just being responsible and keeping the children out of danger.

That scar still ached in the winter. Which it currently was. Not enough to make her regret asking Panacea to leave it, but enough to remind her how utterly stupid the adults were being when they insisted that not arming her would make her safer. If they were going to have their own little child soldier corps – no matter that they pretended that's not what the Wards were, that was the end result – then the least they could do was arm them properly.

She was shaken out of her reverie by movement in front of her. Dennis, reaching down as if to boop her nose. She glared. "Dennis, if you freeze me I will destroy you and everything you love."

The boy straightened, whistling innocently. "Don't know what you're talking about, Missy! I'd never do something like that!"

"He never listens when I try that one." Chris laughed. "Don't know how you make him back off."

"Easy, he knows I'll follow through." She grinned at the Tinker. "Just gotta keep him in line with fear."

"That's how I do it," agreed a new voice. Sophia had arrived while Vista was lost in thought, it seemed. "Keep 'em too scared to cross you, and they won't try dumb bullshit."

Vista sighed. The difference was, where she meant it in jest – well not fully in jest, she did pay Dennis back twice-over whenever he pranked her, but she kept it good-natured – Hess was just Like That. Girl was a grade-A bitch, through and through. And she got to keep her crossbows. Why did Shadow Stalker, vigilante on probation, get to keep her lethal weapons, but Vista didn't get anything at all?

The door buzzed, the two-tone sound indicating someone coming in who was cleared for their identities. Moments later, it hissed open, and the clank of power-armored feet meant it was Armsmaster. That was weird - usually Miss Militia did the Wards briefings. Armsmaster was always 'too busy' for meetings that he could get away with skipping.

Not that she really blamed him, since she knew he wasn't just slacking. Hell, she was pretty sure he didn't understand what the word meant. Still, weird.

"Meeting starts in sixty seconds," he said simply, walking over to the television and plugging something in. "We have a lot to go over."

Wait, did that mean they were getting taken off the bench? Vista restrained the instinct to cheer. Finally, they'd get some action, just as things were heating up!



"Console duty? The fuck do you mean I'm on console duty?" Sophia half-snarled at Armsmaster.

Dean just sighed as he watched the interplay of ruddy red anger and purplish affront she so often displayed.

"Exactly what I said," Armsmaster answered. Icy blue alertness swirled with darker blue contemplation, and, most peculiarly… a tinge of furtive green. "For the duration of heightened hostilities, you are to remain on dedicated console duty, and will not be patrolling the streets."

"If the streets are heating up, you need everyone on deck, don't you? I'm the best you've got. You need me out in the field!"

Affront, anger, frustration. Dean flicked his gaze from Sophia to the rest of the table. She was predictable enough that he didn't need to keep paying attention. Predictable in her unpleasantness, at least. Chris was vacillating between focus, distraction, and frustration. His medication didn't seem to be working lately, sadly. Carlos was embarrassed, frustrated, and grateful. Presumably that Armsmaster was getting to see what he had to deal with on a daily basis. Dennis and Missy, while a bit irritated, were both mostly colored by smug orange schadenfreude.

…yeah, that made sense.

When he returned his attention to Armsmaster and Sophia, Sophia was still trying to argue her way back onto the streets.

"As I said before, our sources say that your presence is likely to inflame hostilities. Your history with both the Empire and the ABB is sufficiently hostile that they may target you specifically."

Dean hid a frown. Something wasn't right about Armsmaster's aura. The furtiveness had only grown, mingled with anger now. But it wasn't the dark color of anger at the situation in front of him, but instead the dull rust-red of anger in the background, anger without any appropriate outlet.

Sophia responded, but Dean wasn't listening. Was he lying? Did he have some other reason to keep Sophia at headquarters? No, he wasn't lying – Armsmaster didn't do that – but perhaps he was giving a misleading answer? Whatever it was started to fade when his attention slipped to the other Wards; only Sophia raised those emotions in him.

Which suggested that he had ulterior motives for keeping Shadow Stalker away from any action.

The question, then, was what those were.



Vista sighed, slumping a bit in her chair. The meeting had not been nearly as good as she wanted. Yes, the Wards were back in the field, but their rules of engagement were incredibly strict. No engaging any parahumans in groups, no engaging any parahumans without outnumbering them at least two to one, no engaging any of the designated 'high risk' parahumans.

So, of course, the entire ABB was off-limits. Aside from Colloid, she supposed, but he wasn't likely to be out in the field – the chemical Tinker was something of a shut-in. Even if he wasn't, he was probably too busy tearing his hair out over the Empire looting one of his storage facilities and then lighting it on fire. Which, of course, had been what started this mess in the first place. Lung, Oni Lee, and Munsin, on the other hand, were all likely to come out if things escalated… and all on the "do not engage under any circumstances" list.

And yet, despite the strict orders, they were allowed out in the first place, despite everyone knowing damn well that it would mean they'd get caught in a cape fight. Not that Vista objected – hell, she was looking forward to it – but it was, in her objective opinion, dumb as fuck. She couldn't see why…

Couldn't see… her eyes widened, and she grabbed a domino mask, darting for the door. She'd forgotten to bring up her idea to Armsmaster during the meeting, but maybe she could still catch him!



"Well?" Annette crossed her arms, staring at the two Barnes adults. Emma was doing her best to shrink into her seat and melt away, but whether that was because she knew her parents wouldn't approve or because she was scared of Annette's anger was too hard to judge.

"These aren't exactly evidence," Alan remarked finally, neatening the small pile of papers he'd assembled after skimming. Zoe's eyes widened, and she snapped her attention over to her husband.

"Not evidence?" Annette snapped. "Choose your words carefully here, Alan, because if you're going to call my daughter a liar after all this…"

Alan opened his mouth to answer, but seemed to think better of it. The silence lengthened.

"This is just…" Zoe muttered finally, still in shock. "Emma, have you really been…" she looked to her daughter, shrunken in her chair. Emma shied away from her gaze. "Emma Marie Barnes, look at me."

Emma did. There were tears in her eyes, Annette noted with satisfaction. Somewhere in the back of her mind, she felt a twinge of compassion. She smothered it. If Emma wanted Annette to feel sorry, she shouldn't have done this.

"Have you been harassing Taylor?" Emma nodded, ever so slightly. Zoe closed her eyes with a sharp intake of breath.

"I don't think we should be jumping to conclusions here," Alan said finally.

"Jumping to conclusions?" Annette snarled, took a few breaths, continued in a more measured – though far from calm – tone. "For years Emma, your daughter, has been harassing Taylor, your goddaughter I might add, and you want to not jump to conclusions?"

"Even if she has been, as you say, harassing Taylor, that doesn't mean that all these documents are accurate, and–"

"This is not the time, Alan!" Zoe interrupted with a furious glare. "This isn't a courtroom, drop the lawyer bullshit and act like a father!"

Alan rocked back. In the sudden silence, Annette could hear movement on the stairs. He recovered quickly, though. "I am a father, and I am advocating for my daughter."

"No, you're making excuses. Which you didn't do when she broke your mother's teapot. Is a teapot worth more than another human being to you?"

Footsteps at the foot of the stairs. Annette looked over. Anne Barnes stood at the foot of the stairs. As she was the one Barnes who Annette saw frequently (while Annette didn't have her in any classes this semester, UMac wasn't the sort of school where people you know get lost in the crowd), Annette wasn't surprised by what she saw. Slightly shorter than her younger sister, with the same red hair, but stockier, softer, not model-perfect in the same way. More personable.

Frowning, Anne walked towards them.

"The teapot was an entirely different circumstance, I don't see why you–"

"You're right! That was a child's accident, and you shouted at her about it. Meanwhile, she engages in protracted bullying, putting my best friend's daughter in the hospital and you make fucking excuses?"

"'Best friend?' Is that what we're going with now? Danny told me about your past, you know."

Annette's eyes narrowed. Well, if he was letting his paranoia guide his tongue, she'd give better than he ever could.

And, as it happened, she knew she was better with hers than he was with his.

"We've been over this again and again! You do not get to take out your own insecurity on–"

"You know, you don't seem very surprised by all this, Alan," Annette interrupted, voice carefully calm as she drove the knife home. "Did you know what your daughter was up to already?"

Anne's eyebrows were attempting to escape the pull of gravity when she stepped up to the table. Picked up a sheet of paper. Her eyes widened, and she glanced over at Emma.

She grabbed another paper, and another. Glanced over each one in turn.

Emma shrank further into her chair.

"Look, Emma isn't well!" Alan burst out, "You need to make allowances for what people do when they respond to trauma, and–"

Zoe's eyes widened. "You did! You bastard, you knew? And you didn't say anything? This is you and your brother all over again! How fucking hard is it to just tell the truth before something like this happens, Alan?"

"At least I was there after she was assaulted!"

"You told me that it was a minor scare and that it would hurt her more if I cut my trip short! It wasn't until I came back and she was clinging onto that Sophia girl like a limpet that…" she trailed off, and Annette could see pieces clicking together in her mind. "It was her! She's been a bad influence since the moment they met!"

That got an actual reaction from Emma, the girl's spine straightening. "She's not!" she snapped out. "Don't you dare blame her for anything! Without her, I… we just…"

Everyone at the table paused, attention turning to Emma.

"I… she's not a bad influence," Emma mumbled, "she's helped me, after…" she trailed off.

"See," Alan said, as if he'd scored a point, "she's still hurting. She needs help, not blame. More help than I thought, we can set her up with a therapist, but–"

"Oh, now you float the option? A bit fucking late, Alan! Who was it, exactly, who said Emma didn't need therapy after what happened? You did! You can't just keep lying to me, Alan!"

"There were extenuating circumstances I can't talk about due to–"

"Your extenuating circumstances put my daughter through years of hell and landed her in the hospital!" Annette snarled.

"You don't know what you're talking about, and I'm not going to let you take it out on our daughter. Sophia's been her lifeline and–"

"Our daughter isn't going to be seeing Miss Hess for a long damn time." Zoe scowled. "And we are going to have a long fucking talk."

"You're overreacting," he chided. All four women at the table froze. "This can be solved without… hysterics."

Anne stepped up to her sister, still shrunken back in her seat, pulled her to her feet, then turned on her heel, tugging Emma behind her.

Zoe's jaw clenched. "What, exactly, did you just say?" she asked with icy fury. There was the Zoe from college. From the years after, with Lustrum. It was nostalgic, in a bitter sort of way.

Alan appeared to realize how far he'd shoved his foot in his mouth, if his awkward gaping was any indication. Annette and Zoe just stared grimly, waiting to see how he'd try to dig himself out of this one. Probably dig himself deeper, Annette figured.

"I just mean that we can talk about this reasonably, come to a conclusion without…"

The front door opened, slammed shut again, and Annette dimly realized she had been so focused on Alan that she hadn't actually stopped the two girls from leaving.

"...that." he finished.

Conclusion, huh? Annette closed her eyes. Shaped her anger into cold disdain, the remnants going into the furnace with the rest. "I think I've drawn the only conclusion I need to, Alan."

Zoe looked to Annette, questioning.

"You know, I don't blame you, not really. I can't hold you responsible for the actions of others." Alan's eyes turned calculating, trying to see what Annette was constructing. "No one could have seen it coming, and it's not right to lay the fault on you." Zoe frowned, clearly not sure where Annette was going. "It wasn't your fault. You missed something, made an honest mistake. You were busy with work. A thousand little things added up, until something slipped the net."

"That's…" he frowned, trying to see the trap. A car started in the driveway. He was still looking in the direction of the receding sound when he answered. "Ah… that's right. What matters now is how we move for–"

"It wasn't your fault that you forgot about our daughters until it was too late. It wasn't your fault that, when you gave him a call explaining things, Danny went to pick them up instead of you." Zoe's eyes widened. Alan's filled with a dawning horror. "That was how he was. Always willing to go out on a limb for you, for people he loved."

"Annette–" Alan began. She fixed him with her stare, with the full force of her disdain.

"It wasn't your fault. But we'd all be better off if you'd been the one in the car that day."

Alan, for the first time that night, had no response. No immediate, pat answer. She'd finally hit him where it hurt.

It should have been satisfying.

If it wasn't for the look on Zoe's face, it would have been.



Gunfire rang out across the night, the peculiar blend of chaotic abandon and bursts of structure that indicated a pitched firefight.

Vista crossed her arms, staring down from the roof of an office building. "Console, this is Vista." She beckoned impatiently at Clockblocker, standing on the sidewalk below. "I'll have eyes on the moment Clockblocker stops being a fucking pansy." Seriously, he should know better. It was perfectly safe!

"Console to Clockblocker," Sophia responded, and Vista could imagine the older girl's smug smirk, "grow a pair already."

Clockblocker muttered something inaudible, then screwed his eyes shut and stepped forward into the patch of warped space, two steps forward taking him from street level to rooftop. "Clockblocker to console, I reject that description of–" there was a flash of light. Swiftly-shifting shadows first grew, then shrank, faint but hard to miss in the darkness, as a glowing figure ascended into the sky, perhaps a dozen blocks away. "Ah, hell. Party just went disco."

"Console to Wards," Sophia wasn't masking the irritation in her voice, but at least she was doing the job professionally, "explain without being a pain in the ass." Wait, no, of course she wasn't. Though she wasn't exactly wrong.

Beams of light shot down from the figure, their target concealed behind rows of buildings, even from their vantage point. The gunfire sputtered and stopped, leaving the sounds of car alarms alone filling the night.

"Since I doubt Legend's decided to stop over and lend a hand," Clockblocker began. Vista snorted and leaned back against a ceiling air conditioning unit. They should be so lucky. The Triumvirate spent their time in nice, photogenic cities like New York or San Francisco. Not shitholes like Brockton Bay. "It looks like Purity's decided enough was enough. Laser light show followed," he finished. The crashes and explosions subsided, and the figure descended again. "And now it's ended. Fight's over."

Sophia's voice turned to smug glee. "Purity's on the do-not-engage list, time to back off." Bitch didn't want them to get any action when she couldn't have any. But even if they weren't allowed to fight…

"Nope!" Vista declared, beaming sunnily. "I've got an idea, and I cleared it with the boss and everything." It was still weird how easy it was to talk him into it, honestly. She'd gone in expecting something like Miss Militia's classic dismissals, where Vista would make a solid case and Miss M would stonewall it by quoting regulations that hadn't been written with exactly this circumstance in mind. Or worse, would cite the absence of regulations! Did she expect no one to ever have an original idea? Probably. As far as she could tell, the stick up that woman's ass was surgically implanted.

Meanwhile, with Armsmaster she'd just had to argue her side of things. Stick with easy concrete evidence, cost and benefit. This was something she had to be present to do, wouldn't put them in danger, and gave them a significant advantage. Once she put it in terms like that, he'd signed off.

"Look, orders were clear. Back off," Sophia retorted.

Vista ignored her, preparing a new spatial warp. She hadn't honestly made one this complex yet, but this wasn't the time to whine. Go big or go home, V. And fuck going home.

"Console, this is Armsmaster," interrupted a new voice. "Vista, this is regarding your earlier proposal?" She gave an acknowledging grunt. "You have permission, but you are to observe only. If they see you, do not engage, and do not attempt to stall them. Immediately retreat, alongside Clockblocker."

"Righto, boss," she grinned.

For his part, Clockblocker was staring at the visible distortion in the air taking shape, where the warped space bent light in unintuitive ways. "Uh, Vista, what are you…" he gestured.

Her grin widened, but her attention was still on the process, making a thousand little changes she understood on an intuitive level but couldn't express for the life of her. "Take a guess."

"...I got nothing. It looks uh, bendier than usual? And more brain-melty."

She snapped her fingers as she stabilized the warp. "One indirect-viewpoint spatial telescope, online."

"Wait, you made a telescope with your power?" Clockblocker exclaimed. "Holy shit, Vista!"

"What do you see?" Armsmaster asked through the radio.

Vista set down the camera Armsmaster had given her, set it to record, and started to narrate.

Four capes stood on the street, torn up by the fighting, and showing a few stray craters from Purity's blasts.

"Purity, Kaiser… Hookwolf, and Krieg," she identified them, somewhat boggled by having so much of the Empire's leadership in one place. "Damn, they're really showing the flag tonight."

Hookwolf said something to their various subordinates, gesturing, and they jumped to work dealing with the fallen ABB gangers littering that side of the street. "Hookwolf's having their goons get to work. Judging by the location, looks like it was a border skirmish. And… oh, that's interesting."

Clockblocker leaned in next to her, trying to get eyes on the telescope. She expanded the warp slightly, but there was only so much she could do without reworking it from scratch. "Careful, Clock," she muttered. "We're gonna have to get cozy here, but you're elbowing me."

He stammered a quick apology. She rolled her eyes, not that he could see it through the visor.

"Interesting?" Armsmaster asked, after the silence on comms extended a bit. "Elaborate." A pause. "Please," he added, not-quite-apologetically.

"Looks like Hookwolf is pissed at Purity," Clockblocker answered. "Our local Dastardly Dagger Dog is trying to tear her a new one." The neo-Nazi cape was gesturing angrily at Purity, whose glow masked any expression she might have. Kaiser and Krieg, meanwhile, seemed to just be standing by. "Miss Radiant Reich doesn't seem to be having it." Purity's expressions might not be readable, but it was hard to miss the harsh negating gestures she made in response.

"The other two are just watching, and half the goons are gawking," Vista observed. "Trouble in Nazi Paradise? Maybe she's not putting out."

Sophia snorted, and Clockblocker gagged exaggeratedly. "Vista, I did not need to hear about Nazi shipping tonight. Or ever. Especially Hookwolf, eww."

"Stay on topic," Armsmaster admonished.

"Yeah, yeah," Vista said, waving a hand dismissively. Not that he could see it. "Hookwolf's up in her face. Brave move, or a dumb one. It's Hookwolf, so I'm guessing the latter. Maybe we'll get lucky and he'll push his luck too far. He's not much of a Brute before he transforms, right?"

"Does a physical altercation seem likely?"

"Probably not," Clockblocker admitted, "but it's weird that they're having this out in the open. And no one's trying to defuse it. Is… oh, huh. She's flying now."

Purity levitated a few feet off the ground, pointing at Hookwolf. He ducked back, seeming to suddenly realize his peril, but she didn't fire. Kaiser stepped forward, hands raised in a conciliatory gesture.

"Think Kaiser's trying to talk them down, but…" Purity made another sharp, negating gesture. "She doesn't seem to appreciate it." Kaiser took another step forward, making as if to reach for her, her hand shot out, and the 'telescope' whited out with blinding light.

"Holy shit, did she just–" they blinked their eyes clear.

"Did she just what?" Armsmaster asked. "Are you in danger?"

"Fuck if I know," Vista muttered, "Still half-blind from that shit. Kaiser tried to grab Purity, she shot a beam. Real fuckin bright one. Gimme a minute."

Silence.

"Okay, can kind of see," Vista rubbed at her eyes again, afterimages still seared into them. "Looks like… warning shot, maybe? They're sort of stumbling around blind, got it worse than we did, but she just left a crater in the road, not in Kaiser."

An audible sigh of disappointment came through. "Damn, you really had me hoping for a second," Sophia grumbled.

"Unfortunate," Armsmaster agreed. Probably. She still didn't ever have a good handle on what he was thinking. "Good work, both of you. Return to base for debrief as soon as you're clear for travel."

"Think she's quitting?" Clockblocker asked after a moment's silence, the two just sitting there blinking.

"What, the Empire? Maybe." Shooting at your boss was a fairly unmistakable resignation, Vista figured. "But being a neo-Nazi shitbag? Fat chance."
 
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1.6: Masks and Layers
The sun was setting when the whirlwind that was a Victoria Dallon Shopping Expedition finally petered out, and Mei was thoroughly shopped-out by the end of it all.

The blonde had suggested dozens of different outfits, badgered them into trying a significant fraction of those, and all while keeping the energy level high with boundless enthusiasm. Mei… couldn't say she disliked it, though. She certainly wasn't in love with the experience, but there was something rather nice about getting to try shopping with a girl her age, without the restrictions of a life keeping her head down, or a reputation to maintain. It was frivolous, certainly, and she would struggle to justify doing it more than once in a blue moon… but it was, she admitted, nice.

It helped that Victoria was covering the bill. She wouldn't take advantage of the other girl's generosity, but neither would she be rude enough to refuse the gesture entirely after she insisted on it.

Amy, on the other hand, seemed ill-at-ease the whole time. Uncertain and uneasy when asked to give her opinion of Mei's outfits, embarrassed and uncomfortable when asked to model ones Victoria picked out, and a strange combination of sarcastic and energetic when Victoria herself tried a few blouses on. Perhaps that sort of friction was more familiar ground for her? It didn't seem to have much to do with the clothing itself, oddly enough, but more the act of looking, or of being looked at.

Very strange indeed, and she felt a bit bad for the girl… though Mei could see a bit of a spring in her step even as she drooped with exhaustion. At least the evening hadn't been a total misery for her.

They were passing in front of a restaurant – a nice Indian place, by the looks of it – when Victoria's phone went off, a parade of cheerful tones erupting. Amy blinked. Victoria checked it, and her eyes widened.

"Oh no!" she exclaimed, thumbing off the alarm. "I forgot I have to patrol tonight!"

"Vicky…" Amy sighed.

"Sorry gotta go!" She reached out, taking Amy's bags from her, then turning and grabbing Mei's from her startled hands. "I'll drop these off at your place later!"

Victoria babbled something about dinner being on her while pressing a few bills into Amy's hand, not letting either of them get a word in edgewise, and zoomed away into the air.

Amy sighed again, turning her gaze to Mei. "I'm sorry for her… her-ness."

"Is she that routinely forgetful?"

Amy sighed. "Some days, yeah. You'd think for someone who spent so much time on her phone, she'd be better at tracking time."

Mei frowned. Victoria had spent a lot of time checking her phone. And had stalled them a block down, ogling a window display that she insisted on taking pictures of. Which had left them right in front of the restaurant when she had taken their things… and given Amy dinner money. Her eyes widened. Money that Victoria hadn't been keeping in her wallet. She'd taken those bills out ahead of time. Which meant…

Mei's frown deepened. Why would Victoria have been deliberately leaving the two of them alone at a dinner place? That was a very strange decision. Did she feel Amy wasn't eating enough, maybe? Or wanted to treat one of them for suffering through the ordeal?

Amy shifted back and forth from foot to foot, looking between Mei and the restaurant. "Well… do you like Indian?" she asked.

Mei sighed and shook her head apologetically. "I'm sorry, but I have to get home to get dinner started, myself."

Amy blinked. "You do the cooking?"

"Most nights, yes. Bronya's cooking is serviceable, but I'm better in the kitchen, and I enjoy it."

Amy hesitated a moment. "What about… Kiana?"

Mei closed her eyes, the scent of smoke and chemical fumes coming to mind unbidden. "Kiana is not permitted to touch any of the cooking appliances. Not after the Incident."

Amy stared blankly, clearly not sure how to take that.

The two stood there awkwardly, Mei mentally figuring out the best route home. It was after dark, so being a lone girl might draw some annoying attention. She glanced down at the shorter girl and frowned. She didn't want to just leave the healer on her own. Besides, if Victoria had wanted her to eat better, then she didn't want the effort she went to for this (bizarre) plan to go to waste. Basic courtesy, and decency, gave her a solution, if an awkward one.

"That aside," Mei said, breaking the silence, "it's not exactly safe to be a lone girl heading home after dark."

Amy raised an eyebrow. "Says the girl planning to go home alone after dark."

"There are some… other factors there." Mei shrugged a bit awkwardly. Surely Amy knew she was a parahuman after her earlier healing. Though she had been 'rescued' earlier, so perhaps it wasn't an unreasonable thought.

"You're saying that you can…" she stopped herself short, glancing around at passers-by. "Take care of yourself?"

"Yes."

"And that I can't."

Mei winced. "Apologies, that came out wrong. Do you feel safe going home by yourself, from here?"

She shrugged. "It is what it is. Not like there's another option."

Was that an intentional deflection, or was she genuinely missing the subtext? If she was missing it, that was a worrying lack of concern for her own safety. After a moment's consideration, she smiled at Amy.

"Well, you're welcome at our table tonight, and your sister can pick you up later."

Amy stopped dead. Mei had no idea what was going on in her mind, expressions flashing across her face too quickly to read. Had she done something wrong? Was she overstepping? Others at Arcadia invited one another over for dinners sometimes, but her grasp on that etiquette was theoretical at best.

"... it." Amy mumbled, just barely loud enough to hear.

"I'm sorry, I think I missed something you–"

"Sure. Let's do that." She took a steadying breath. "Thanks. That makes the evening a lot easier."

"I'm happy to have you; Kiana and I both owe you, and I wouldn't want to disappoint your sister."

Amy gave Mei a confused look, but didn't reply.

"First, though, you should text Victoria, so she is not surprised to not find you where she left you." And Mei would text Bronya, so she'd know to put away any projects she had out in the open.

"Huh? Why… oh! Right. Thanks."

She was a strange one, but that wasn't a problem. Mei was used to strange.



The car was silent, the atmosphere so thick with tension it felt like it was choking her. Emma sat in the passenger seat, eyes fixed firmly on her lap, almost curled inward on herself.

Anne kept her eyes on the road, thoughts whirling, only her focus on the mechanical task of driving keeping her from getting lost in them entirely.

This was… it was so much, all at once. She needed time to process it, to figure out what was really going on and how she felt, but the adults hadn't been willing to give themselves, let alone her, that time. The way the argument had escalated, her parents and Annette pulling out ancient barbs and throwing them at one another, the actual genuine anger and spite backing them blew her away. She knew that being angry at someone didn't preclude loving them, of course, but that had been so much more than the rare arguments she had overheard between them before.

She'd like to say that she didn't understand where they were coming from, that this was all a momentary overreaction, but she knew it was more than a moment of heightened tensions, an ill-considered snap that boiled over.

Annette was obviously furious, to a level she hadn't seen before. Even when she'd seemed calm and controlled, Anne was sure she'd seen vicious smugness in her eyes as she dropped a seemingly-casual verbal knife. She'd never seen the woman like that before; Annette was kind and reasonable in her experience, always willing to give students a chance to make up missed work, or to help them beyond her normal office hours. Always straightforward and empathetic, even in frustrating situations.

Maybe the answer there was simple, though. She'd never seen Annette when Taylor or Danny were hurt, or threatened. When he'd died, her parents had visited Annette, not the other way around. Her daughter had been hurt, that one of the people she cared for had hurt the person she loved the most. When her dad had started to deflect, Annette had seen it as denial, as collusion. And so she lashed out; what mother wouldn't? It made sense.

Her mom was likely shocked, disappointed, and angry. Emma had let her down, and she felt betrayed. Her mom and dad had both failed to keep an eye on Emma. Or, if Annette's "simple" question was right, he had been keeping an eye on her, and simply condoned it. There had been history there, some event they were talking around. Emma's side of the story would hopefully shed some light on that. But in the end, their mom had wanted to find something, someone to blame. Whether because she felt she genuinely wasn't at fault, or because she needed a sin-eater so she could absolve herself of guilt, Anne wasn't sure.

Her dad was too calm, too composed. She wasn't sure if Annette was right in her accusation that he had known. Given that he hadn't even tried to deny the accusation, he had to at least have suspected that something was wrong. So, then, he was afraid of the consequences of his complicity, and looking for ways to deflect blame, or to hit back when he was attacked. Had he even been trying to protect Emma, or was that just a byproduct?

The moment where Emma had burst out about Sophia – that was the track girl she was friends with, right? – stuck in her mind. Emma had broken her silence, spoken out boldly, and he had just ignored it, treating it as another indicator that she was broken, rather than trying to get her to explain, find out how to help her. Did you really even care for someone if you didn't try? Anne didn't think so.

It was unacceptable. How could he be that callous? But then, she supposed there was a reason, when she was upset, that she always went to her mom first.

Emma, though… Emma, she didn't understand. She knew her little sister, and she knew Taylor. The two had been inseparable. They'd been deep in puppy love to anyone with eyes. Emma had looked up to Taylor, if the way she trailed behind her was any indicator. This bullying, this journal, it didn't make sense. She'd known they had some sort of spat, or falling out, but that was normal when someone was getting into high school. Teenage arguments didn't end in this kind of spiteful harassment. She was missing something.

Anne pulled into a parking spot right by her dorm. At least winter break meant she had her pick of them; during the semester proper she usually had to walk halfway across campus. Emma started as the car's engine cut out.

"Where…?"

"School," Anne replied. "You can stay here for a bit. While we figure things out." Figure out what was happening. What was going on with their parents. If their parents were going to be just another of the statistics that fed her dad's work.

She didn't want to think that. She thought it was unlikely, honestly. But if they had truly been on thinner ice than they seemed, if she'd missed some clues, it was possible. What if they had just been staying together until Emma was out of the house? People did that, sometimes, she knew.

Emma nodded mutely and followed along. Anne frowned as she led the way through the near-silent hall. Something was wrong here, too. Not just with what Emma had presumably done, but how she was reacting here. Emma had been curious, questioning, when she was younger. Now she was bold, proud, and pushed back against consequence and criticism. Anne was a bit jealous, honestly. She'd never been that confident, never been the social butterfly Emma had turned out to be.

So why hadn't Emma spoken out in her own defense? She'd just sat there, looking just… small. That was the impression that stuck with her. That Emma just wanted to sink through the world and disappear. That wasn't the Emma she knew. Or thought she knew, at least. Had she just been wrong about her sister this whole time?

She didn't want to think that she'd misjudged Emma so badly. But if she had… what else was she wrong about?

Anne unlocked her door, gesturing for Emma to enter her room. Emma complied, silent as she'd been since they left. As she'd been for the whole argument, except for when Sophia had come up. Sophia had drawn out the fire Emma couldn't muster for herself.

She didn't know what that meant, or where that piece fit into the puzzle. But she knew that it was one to keep an eye on.



Amy was, she had to admit, taken aback when she saw their house. She'd assumed the three girls lived in an apartment complex or something, not a worn-down single-story in a sketchy neighborhood. It was Watch territory, she thought, though she wasn't quite sure, and the Watch didn't really tag things like the other gangs tended to. It might be ABB territory instead. She'd texted Vicky with their address, so she would know if the trio tried something stupid like kidnapping her. Which, granted, seemed unlikely.

Kiana was a dork and probably couldn't keep a secret to save her life, and… alright, Bronya was a little scary, but it would have been dumb for someone to kidnap her after having a public confrontation with her. Mei she wasn't quite sure about, if she was honest. She seemed like a nice enough girl, but something about her state after that confrontation didn't seem quite right; neurotransmitters and hormones that didn't quite make sense for someone who was afraid, or for someone just acting afraid. If she was more practiced at reading emotions with her powers she could probably figure it out, but the only person whose system she was that familiar with was Vicky's, and she didn't count. For so many reasons.

"Ah, Amy?" Amy jolted back into the present, finding Mei holding the front door open. "Is everything alright?" Her eyes were concerned.

"Uh, sorry. Just distracted." Amy forced a smile and hurried inside.

She waited in the hallway, not quite sure what to do, and found with some surprise that the interior was nicer than the exterior. Not luxurious, by any means, but where the outside was faded and cracked paint and old wooden steps, the inside looked much newer, recently painted and in good repair.

"Oh, shoes off please," Mei asked, gesturing at a neat pair of shelves with shoes on them as she removed her own. "You don't need slippers, though."

"Uh, okay?" Amy took her shoes off. A shoes-off house she supposed she understood, strange as it was, but why would she need slippers?

As Mei hung her jacket on the coat rack, Amy's eyes were drawn to the entryway closet, its door half-open to reveal some kind of gun harness, with two pistols hanging in it. She swallowed. A self-defense weapon made sense, given the neighborhood – not that they had one at home, but most of them had powers that made that irrelevant – but two, and a harness? She didn't know what to make of that, but… maybe it was normal?

Let's just go with that, she decided while following Mei into the living room. Normal. Like the rest of their place.

She glanced around, taking it in as they entered the living room. There was a faint chemical smell she didn't recognize, a little bit like some of the cleaners they used at the hospital. Some off-brand cleaning product, probably. Bronya was on the couch, a controller Amy couldn't quite identify in her hands (not that she was any sort of expert), facing a large flat-screen television inset into an entertainment center. Whatever she was playing was loud, filled with explosions and the clanging of metal. A hoodie, too big to be Bronya's – such a hoodie would devour the girl whole and still have room for dessert – and too bright to be Mei's, laid over the arm of the couch. A few ancient textbooks – they had to be Kiana's, Arcadia's were actually up to date – were piled precariously against one wall.

Aside from the gratuitous television, the decoration was low budget, and… well, eclectic would be the diplomatic way to put it. And she was visiting their home, so she'd be diplomatic, and not use any of the other applicable words. Posters featuring some sort of rabbit-eared cartoon creature were intermixed with those old-style Japanese paintings and the occasional calligraphy-looking scroll, forming a bizarre, almost whiplash-inducing lack-of-style.

Photographs were concentrated in one location, above a small standing table with three wooden boxes on it. Kiana was only in one of them, a scratched and worn framed photograph of a much younger Kiana – or, she supposed, another blue-eyed girl with braided white hair – and an older man. He had the same hair (albeit shorter), the same eyes, and the same cocky confidence that Kiana had shown in the hospital.

It was cuter on her.

Probably too old to be a brother, though you never knew. Father, she'd guess, or maybe uncle.

Kiana closed her eyes, and when she opened them Amy could see the sudden shimmer of tears. Not that she needed to,with the way she crumpled inward. Girl really wore her heart on her sleeve. "I was in Nagazora, when…"

Had this been the only photo she could rescue in the chaos? It was obviously years old, even if you figured it was of some other, younger girl.

Two photographs of Bronya; one of her, a couple years younger, pressing her cheek against that of a girl with jaw-length hair that was somehow simultaneously black and blue. She wasn't quite sure how that worked, but it was certainly striking. Both girls were smiling, Bronya somewhat perplexedly, and making peace signs for the camera. Oddly, Bronya's hair was closer to gray in that photograph. Hair changing as someone aged was common, but usually it got darker, not lighter. Strange lighting, perhaps.

The other photograph was more interesting. Bronya stood next to the dark-haired girl again, and next to them were a handful of others who looked a bit younger. A girl with long red hair and muddy clothes. A pair, one with pink hair and one with blue, leaning together and grinning happily. One with braided green hair. Another with plain brown hair, smiling with her eyes locked on the camera. Behind them stood two people, but she couldn't tell the details, because both had been burnt out of the photograph. All that remained was hints of them that could be seen through the girls, and wisps of hair – both blondes, one shorter than the other.

Before Amy could do more than glance at the photographs that presumably belonged to Mei – one of a black-haired man and woman, one of a small black-haired girl and brown-haired woman – Bronya paused the game she was playing, sounds of battle ceasing to play from the television. She looked over and nodded.

"Welcome back, Mei. Hello, Amelia."

Amy's jaw clenched. "It's Amy. I don't use Amelia."

"Ah. Understood. Hello, Amy."

Mei, however, was frowning. "Where is Kiana?"

Bronya shrugged. "Kiana Idiotka has not returned home yet. I have not called her to check."

Mei sighed. "Text her, please? Tell her it's pesto pasta tonight, that might get her moving." She paused. "If you have no objection, Amy?"

"No, that's fine." Amy said absently, then realized she'd sounded like she expected to freeload off of them. "I can give you a hand, I'm used to meal prep." She didn't like it, except for it giving her something to do with Vicky, but she was perfectly capable.

"No, you're a guest." Mei shook her head. Amy breathed a carefully-internal sigh of relief. "I will be fine. Maybe there is something you can play with Bronya?"

Amy twitched. What was she, a child to be placated? Mei couldn't be any older than she was! She didn't play games that weren't on a phone, and Bronya obviously wouldn't want to be interrupted with hers.

"Mm." Bronya examined Amy. "Yes. Behemoth Battler: Wild Continent and Core Rush Squadron both feature co-operative modes suitable for beginners."

Wait, what? "Uh, Behemoth Battler is that one about hunting giant monsters and scavenged technology, right? My cousin won't shut up about it." She'd seen him play once, and she couldn't say she saw the appeal.

"Excellent, that will suffice." Bronya shifted over on the couch and held up a second controller, wordlessly beckoning Amy. Amy hid a grimace as she realized it would be rude to refuse at this point. But, well, it was better than staring blankly at the wall posters while Mei cooked. "There are several tactics requiring a second participant that I wish to attempt. First, however, an introductory course on combat, and finding a play style that you prefer. There are, you see, several weapon styles to choose from."



When Anne returned to her room, two foil-covered paper plates in hand, she found Emma laying on her side on the spare bed, staring at her phone.

"I brought food," she said, handing a plate over to Emma. "Not as good as anything mom makes, and honestly I think the dining hall itself is better, but it's better than heating something in the microwave."

Emma nodded, unwrapping the foil, revealing grilled cheese and french fries, which she stared at for a long moment.

Anne shrugged. "Look, college student. And you can't say tonight's dinner was going to be any less carb-loaded."

Emma considered that for a moment, then nodded again, taking a testing bite, then practically inhaling it, like she hadn't eaten in days. Annette blinked, then unwrapped her own plate, depositing half of her fries on Emma's plate before getting started on her own dinner.

Once both plates had been cleared and deposited in the trash, Anne took a deep breath, and sighed. She'd given herself until they finished dinner to come up with a better approach, and come up blank. So here went nothing.

"Okay. Emma?"

Emma looked up from the phone she was staring at moodily.

Just keep it straightforward, Anne. Straightforward and simple. "Talk to me. Please?"

Emma froze, for all the world like a deer in the headlights. "Why?"

Keep your voice level, compassionate, Anne. No sudden shifts. "I can't help if you won't talk to me, Emma."

She let out a short laugh, bitter with a touch of hysteria. Anne's eyes widened, and her heart clenched in sympathetic pain. "I saw how you looked at me. You're just looking for an excuse." Anne frowned. An excuse for what?

"Emma." Anne hesitated. "I won't lie and say that part of me isn't mad at you. But I love you. You're my sister. That means something. I'm sticking by you until we're through this." Emma looked away and wiped her eyes with the back of a hand. Anne pretended she hadn't seen, frowning internally. What had triggered that? "I need to know what's going on, so I can do my best to help you, and keep you safe."

When Emma looked back, her expression was openly frustrated. Spiteful. Had she stepped on a landmine? Or was she just that unreasonable right now? Emma let out a bitter bark of laughter. "Like you could do that. What could you keep safe, anyway? Some crap fanfic won't help anything."

Anne winced at the stab of hurt that shot through her at the words. Emma was hurting, so she was lashing out, she reminded herself. She took a deep breath. Composed herself. She could be the bigger person here.

"Alright. Changing the subject for now. I'm going to ask Crystal to pick up some things for us from the house, since I don't think either of us want to see mom and dad right now. Is there anything specific you want besides a few changes of clothes? Your laptop, I figure, and a phone charger?"

"Backpack too." Emma answered automatically, then froze. "Wait, Crystal Pelham? As in, Laserdream?" Anne nodded, and Emma looked like she'd just learned the Earth had been flat all along. "How the fuck do you have her doing errands for you?"

"I wouldn't say 'doing errands.' She's a friend, and I think she'll help out," Anne answered, firing off a quick text. Friend was probably reductive, honestly, but she didn't know how she'd characterize that relationship either. The only reason her room still had the second bed was because on the first night of the semester she'd stayed up late enough with Crystal that the other girl hadn't wanted to fly home. She spent enough nights here that it was worth keeping, even if usually it was just storage.

"Huh."

What had prompted that shift? The knowledge that she had a friend who is a cape? Maybe that's the protection she wants? Does she think someone is after her or something? Had she been blackmailed into hurting Taylor? That would explain a lot, if true, but who, and why? Her phone buzzed back, Crystal saying she'd be happy to help. Good.

When she looked back to Emma, her sister was doing something on her phone. Anne worried at her lip, thinking for a long moment, then sighed and fetched her laptop. She was fresh out of ideas on how to help. She'd try talking to her again in the morning.

In the meantime, at least she could do something productive, like edit the fic she'd bashed out the night before. She blanched as she scrolled over it. Or maybe just rewrite the whole thing.

Yeah, maybe that would be better. No one deserved to be forced to read this. What was she thinking?



"Finally," Amy let out a deep sigh of satisfaction as the monster, a huge hexapedal thing with a carapace that dripped lava, finally fell. "We got it!"

"Good hunt," Bronya agreed. "You have learned quite quickly. I have difficulty defeating the Kelshtaron with that speed on my own. A companion is even more impactful than I had believed."

Amy grinned. The tiny Russian girl had intimidated her before, but once she realized Bronya just talked like that to everybody, most of that had faded away. She held up a hand for a high five, still flush with the adrenaline of the battle. The smaller girl half-raised her hand, then lowered it again. Amy lowered her hand after a few awkward seconds, flushing with embarrassment. Had it been that weird? It had been that weird, hadn't it. Stupid, stupid Amy, you can't just–

"Would you like to do another hunt?" Bronya asked.

Amy shook her head, refocused. "I, uh, sure. Let's. That was good!" Surprisingly so, even. She'd expected it to be some dumb button masher like at the arcade, but there was a lot of thought that went into playing.

Bronya inclined her head. "In that case, perhaps the–"

She was interrupted by the front door slamming open, then shut again. Amy jerked upright, looking over. Momentary quiet, then a shuffling of movement, a certain white-haired menace slid into view, socks gliding over the wooden floor. "I'm hooome~" shouted a now-familiar voice, moments before its owner impacted the wall on the far side of the room. Amy winced. Bronya smirked. Mei sighed. The pile of textbooks, so precariously stacked, fell over.

"At the last possible moment, as expected," Mei said, shaking her head as Kiana regained her balance, none the worse for wear. "Come sit, all of you, it's time to eat."



Across the city, Sophia Hess, in her seat at the patrol console, looked down at her phone, sitting neatly on the desk. It buzzed, again. She grimaced. Another text from Emma.

She read it, and sighed, then straightened with an annoyed grunt, thumbing the mic. "Console to Wards," she said, "explain without being a pain in the ass."

The phone went into her pocket, this time set to Do Not Disturb.



Amy sat on the couch as the movie's credits rolled, feeling adrift, somehow, now that the direct activity was over. Mei had firmly forbidden her from helping with cleanup, and she and Bronya were doing that now. Kiana, for her part, was sprawled across two-thirds of the couch, having immediately claimed the space her roommates vacated.

Her head was just a few inches from Amy's hand, looking up at her curiously, but saying nothing, just keeping that comfortable, confident smile. Clear, sky blue eyes captured her attention; she jerked them away when she realized she'd been staring into them. Her white hair had half-escaped from the loose ponytail she had stuck it in, she realized, giving her an almost disheveled look. Amy's eyes couldn't help but linger for a moment on the sliver of exposed skin on Kiana's midriff; her shirt had ridden up a bit courtesy of her wriggling claim of the couch, but not quite enough to expose her stomach. The stomach her powers had told her without room for doubt was well-defined, and could probably do double-duty as a cheese grater.

Amy swallowed, throat suddenly dry, and shook her head, trying to focus. Kiana was looking up at her face. Why? What reason could she have to be watching Amy? Was Amy being a creep? She wasn't… ogling her. Much. Well, until she thought about it and now no matter how she thought about not thinking about it she couldn't help but steal a glance at the cut of her tank top, but that was just because she was there and… wait no that made it even worse. Why was she like this? Couldn't she just be a normal fucking person for an evening rather than…

Amy closed her eyes, took a calming, regular breath, and then another. Failed to quell the anxious pounding in her chest. Setting aside cavegirl Amy, she had the chance she'd been looking for, to talk to Kiana alone. She could handle this, she just had to tell her what she had seen in her scans, make sure the girl knew that…

She swallowed, but the sour heat at the back of her throat wouldn't recede. What if Kiana knew already? What if it was a deliberate secret? Amy would already be under observation in that case, and though she didn't think Kiana could keep a secret like that, there could be embedded directives, and maybe she was wrong, maybe the girl was a consummate actress, a sleeper agent, and if Amy revealed her secret she'd attack and…

"Amy?"

Her head felt light, woozy, but her thoughts didn't stop racing. And even if she was right, and Kiana did know, what had Amy expected? Who would react well when she revealed that she had pried into their business like a fucking creep? She didn't ask to look into people's every detail when she used their powers, except she did, she could chain away her impulse to change and tweak but she could only barely hold back the curiosity, the desire to look deep inside and see what made them tick, the individual details that made them them.

"Amy, can you hear me?"

It wasn't right, she wasn't right, it was an unforgivable invasion, what was she thinking, trying to see Kiana and talk to her, what right did she have to interfere in someone else's life when she couldn't even manage her own, couldn't even get herself out of the stupid anxiety attack that she knew she was in but couldn't avert, seized her whole because she had no control over herself, just a fucking time bomb waiting for it all to go–

A hand took hers, and her senses erupted in light. Her breath caught. Her whole mind dove deep, immersing itself in what her power gave her, in the sheer beauty and elegance she could find in a single, impossible muscle fiber. Fled the specter of fear, of loathing, of anxiety, into the light of that wondrous, majestic vision.

The hand still held hers, the thumb gently rubbing in slow, comforting circles.

Time blurred, stretched and warped, and she didn't know how long it had been before the haunting images finally retreated for good and she finally dared to open her eyes. They were wet with tears, she dimly realized, and so were her cheeks. Kiana was still where she had been, looking up with open concern. She didn't let go of her hand.

Kiana offered a slight, relieved smile. "Hey there, Amy. Welcome back."

Amy gave a small, fragile smile in return. "Hey."
 
Last edited:
Dramatis Personae (last updated: 1.6)
The Nagazora Trio
Bronya, Kiana Kaslana, and Mei Raiden; all keeping their heads down for various reasons, settled in Brockton Bay after being caught in the Endbringer Ryujin's first attack, in Nagazora.​

Caucasian, long white hair, blue eyes. Defined abs.

Searching for her father. Devoted to Mei Raiden, adversarial but positive relationship with Bronya. Knows that she is hunted by Schicksal, and that this hunt is related to Schicksal's Overseer, but not why.

Skilled at reading others, deception, and manipulation. Trusts her instincts, even when she can't justify them. Cynical, self-assured, extremely willing to cut her losses and escape a situation. Flexible morals, finds criminals more trustworthy than heroes thanks to more predictable motivations.

Easily distracted by cute girls, and when presented with sufficient immediate harm springs into action despite cynicism.

Has had powers as long as she can remember; cannot remember ever having a Trigger Event. Strong enough to bend/break metal barehanded without much effort, durable enough to take impacts judged by Vista to be extremely lethal to a mundane human with only a dislocated limb, accelerated recovery times. Can detect Honkai energy, detection abilities further enhanced since the events in Nagazora. Can sense Trigger Events just before they happen, and sense the 'concept bursts' associated with them.

Appearances:
1.1 (viewpoint), 1.2 (viewpoint), 1.3 (mentioned), 1.4 (viewpoint), 1.6
Caucasian, Russian, white hair, extremely short.

Unclear motives or background. Strongly devoted to Mei Raiden. Extremely skilled at tactical analysis and physical combat for unknown reasons. According to Kiana Kaslana, either ignores threats or completely removes them from the equation.

Very low affect, approaches situations with logic and analysis, but still experiences emotion.

Has substantial cybernetic augmentation, allowing her to split consciousness into 'threads' and perform numerous mental tasks at once, wirelessly connect to networks at substantial distance, and aiding mental processing of her power.

According to Kiana Kaslana, is a "Tinker/Thinker hacker." Thinker ability greatly enhances tactical and strategic analysis.

1.1, 1.2 (mentioned), 1.3 (viewpoint), 1.6
Tall Japanese girl, light olive skin, black hair.

Former heiress to Massive Electric company in Japan, run by her parents. Largely isolated childhood, primarily filled with obligation, primary parental figure an employee of the family named Kimiko. Kidnapped at age nine by supposed terrorists; she Triggered in the process and killed the terrorists as well as Kimiko. Resulting in long-term self-loathing, post-traumatic stress disorder, and depression.

Mother died at age ten, father arrested for financial crimes at fourteen. Social life switched from being idolized to ostracized in response, by everyone except Bronya and Kiana Kaslana. Suffered from suicidal, homicidal ideation.

According to Kiana Kaslana, she Second Triggered in Nagazora on the day of the Enbringer Ryujin's first attack, redirecting its target to Nagazora due to related powers.

Blames herself for the deaths in Nagazora regardless, does not believe she has any inherent self-worth, instead existing for Bronya and Kiana. Still suffers from intrusive homicidal thoughts, is terrified of using her powers in combat for fear that she will lose control completely.

Electrical powers, control over them slips when highly emotional. Notable physical self-enhancement abilities.

Appearances:
1.1 (mentioned), 1.2 (viewpoint), 1.4 (viewpoint), 1.6 (viewpoint)

The PRT
The PRT, or Parathreat Response Team, is a government body with wide latitude towards governing parahuman affairs and engaging with Honkai threats.​

The director of Brockton Bay's Protectorate branch.

Appearances: 1.3 (referenced)

The Protectorate
The Protectorate, a part of the PRT, encompasses all of the PRT-sponsored parahuman teams.​

Brockton Bay
Head of the Protectorate East-Northeast team in Brockton Bay.

Serious, little sense of humor, extremely practical.

Tall, brown-haired Caucasian man with a close-cropped beard. Wears self-made power armor, wields a halberd bristling with technology of his own design. Rides a tinkertech motorcycle, the "Armscycle."

Tinker. Effective Brute in power armor.

Appearances:
1.1, 1.3, 1.5
Second-in-command of the Protectorate East-Northeast team in Brockton Bay.

According to Vista, rule-oriented and hidebound.

Appearances:
1.3 (non-speaking), 1.5 (referenced)
Member of the Protectorate East-Northeast team in Brockton Bay.

Real name Ethan. Close to Battery. Has a "deal" with Legend. Reputation for not taking things seriously, one he plays up.

Appearances:
1.3 (viewpoint)
Member of the Protectorate East-Northeast team in Brockton Bay. Real name Sherie. Close to Assault.

Tall Caucasian woman. Wears a full-body dark gray and white costume, with blue circuit patterns which periodically glow.

Assigned to the investigation into the "Locker Incident."

Brute. Observed by Kiana to "draw in" Honkai energy from the environment, rather than purely generating it internally.

Appearances:
1.3, 1.4
Member of the Protectorate East-Northeast team.

Responsible for the investigation into the "Locker Incident."

Appearances:
1.3
Member of the Protectorate East-Northeast team.

Appearances:
1.3 (non-speaking)
Member of the Protectorate East-Northeast team in Brockton Bay.

Appearances:
1.3 (non-speaking)

The Wards
The Protectorate sub-division covering parahumans who have not reached legal adulthood or emancipation.​

Brockton Bay
Leader of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Real name Carlos. Strong opinions about cape drama shows.

Appearances:
1.3 (referenced), 1.5
Member of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Real name Dennis. Reputation for jokes and pranks.

Can "freeze" people by touching them.

Appearances:
1.5
Member of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Real name Dean Stansfield. Wears power armor in the field, maintained by Chris. Boyfriend of Victoria Dallon. Attends Arcadia High School.

Empath, perceives emotions of others via synesthetic colors. Power permanently active. Aware that Amelia Dallon hates him, but still cares for her and attempts to look out for her well-being.

Appearances:
1.3 (viewpoint), 1.5 (viewpoint)
Member of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Black girl, athletic, average height.

Real name Sophia Hess. Former vigilante, on probation, uses crossbows. Complicit in long-term bullying of Taylor Hebert. Closely connected to Emma Barnes, and to a lesser extent Madison Clements. Attends Winslow High School.

According to Vista, "a grade-A bitch, through and through."

Appearances:
1.1 (referenced), 1.3 (referenced), 1.4, 1.5, 1.6 (viewpoint)
Member of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Real name Missy. Veteran Ward, despite only being 14. Considers herself a soldier, resents being denied weaponry and additional latitude in the field. Wants to be allowed to fight Labyrinth and prove that she is better than the higher-rated Shaker. Fought Hookwolf at least once, believes herself to be in the top half of all Protectorate heroes. Goes out to patrol on her own even when ostensibly grounded.

Very fond of Amelia ("A") and Victoria Dallon ("V").

Flexible spatial-warping powers; can create warped-space 'paths' allowing effective teleportation once set-up, can create warped-space areas with camouflage-like effects, can warp space to create 'telescope' by bending light in analogous ways, including around corners.

Appearances:
1.2 (viewpoint), 1.5 (viewpoint)
Member of the Brockton Bay Wards.

Maintains Gallant's power armor.

Appearances:
1.5

New Wave
A superhero team composed of two nuclear families, without secret identities.​

Mother of Amelia Dallon and Victoria Dallon.

Negative relationship with Amelia Dallon.

Appearances:
1.4
Father of Amelia Dallon and Victoria Dallon.

Has rare "good days" in which he is cheerful.

Appearances:
1.4
Daughter of Carol and Mark Dallon, sister of Victoria Dallon.

Pale brunette, freckled.

Takes medical confidentiality extremely seriously. Attracted to girls, mostly closeted. According to Mei Raiden, has extremely rigid self-imposed rules. According to Kiana Kaslana, burnt out to an extreme and unhealthy degree. Extremely negative relationship with her mother.

Self-loathing, suffers from extremely low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, intrusive thoughts, some linked to her powers and some linked to herself more generally. Suffers panic attacks.

Ostensibly, a healer with 'unprecedented healing abilities.' Powers are broader, however; skin-to-skin contact causes a full scan of their biology (barely detectable by sensor-types if they are paying attention), including details like current hormone and neurotransmitter levels.

Urges and intrusive thoughts to take stock of that data rather than focus only on what she needs to heal. Cannot reliably control these urges.

Urges and intrusive thoughts to make non-healing-related alterations with her power to people she touches. Has prevented herself from doing so, so far.

Appearances:
1.1, 1.2, 1.3 (viewpoint), 1.4, 1.6 (viewpoint)
Daughter of Carol and Mark Dallon, sister of Amelia Dallon.

Tall, Caucasian, long blond hair. Muscled arms. According to Kiana Kaslana, a "blonde bombshell." In costume, wears a white top and skirt with gold lines.

High-energy, "mercurial" according to Dean Stansfield. Throws herself into tasks with enthusiasm. Cares deeply for her sister, attempting to cheer her up, set her up with romantic partners, etc. Does not seek input before acting.

Nearly invulnerable, extremely strong, can fly, area-of-effect emotion aura that can cause fear or awe.

Appearances:
1.1 (unnamed), 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.6

Sister of Carol Dallon, wife of Neil Pelham, mother of Crystal and Eric Pelham

Caucasian, long blond hair. Wears a white costume with a purple starburst on the chest.

Perceptive enough to find holes in Victoria and Amelia's stories that their mother missed, but not perceptive enough to avoid being misled by Kiana Kaslana. Willing to bend rules or let misbehavior slide provided at least one adult is kept in the loop. Concerned about Amelia and Carol's relationship.

Can fly.

Appearances:
1.2, 1.4
Husband of Sarah Pelham, father of Crystal and Eric Pelham
Daughter of Sarah and Neil Pelham, sister of Eric Pelham

Attends UMac, where Anne Barnes also attends and Annette Hebert teaches. Close to Anne Barnes, often spends nights on the second bed in her dorm room.

Appearances:
1.4 (viewpoint), 1.6 (mentioned)
Son of Sarah and Neil Pelham, brother of Crystal Pelham

"At that age," according to Crystal Pelham. Plays video games, including Behemoth Battler.

Appearances:
1.4 (non-speaking), 1.6 (mentioned)

Azn Bad Boys
A Brockton Bay pan-Asian gang. Asserted by Kiana Kaslana to be Yakuza.​

Leader of the ABB.

On the Wards' do-not-engage list.

Appearances:
1.5 (referenced)
ABB parahuman.

On the Wards' do-not-engage list.

Appearances:
1.5 (referenced)
ABB parahuman.

On the Wards' do-not-engage list.

Appearances:
1.5 (referenced)
ABB parahuman. Chemical Tinker.

Appearances:
1.5 (referenced)

Empire Eighty-Eight
A Brockton Bay gang of Neo-Nazis.​

Empire Eighty-Eight leader.

Tried to play peacemaker between Purity and Hookwolf, failed.

Appearances:
1.5
Empire Eighty-Eight lieutenant.

Watched without interfering while Purity and Hookwolf argued.

Appearances:
1.5
Empire Eighty-Eight lieutenant.

Argued aggressively with Purity, presumably leading to her quitting the Empire Eighty-Eight.

Fought Vista at some point.

Appearances:
1.5

The Watch
A Brockton Bay gang. According to Amelia Dallon, does not 'tag' their territory.​

Faultline's Crew
A mercenary group based in Brockton Bay. Willing to work for the Empire 88, but dislikes working alongside them.​

Leader of Faultline's Crew.

Woman in a gray and black costume, ballistic vest, welding mask. Attacked a PRT transport as part of a distraction.

Appearances:
1.2, 1.3 (mentioned)
Member of Faultline's Crew.

Woman with green robes and a mask. Attacked a PRT transport as part of a distraction.

According to Vista, "the only cape on this coast with a higher Shaker rating than she did."

Appearances:
1.2
Recent member of Faultline's Crew.

Woman in a black and red costume, carries a bow.

Long-term mercenary, has been active since 1999. Little reliable information.

Mover and Brute. Powers also generate large quantities of 'feathers,' which are functionally telekinetic energy knives. Uses a tinkertech bow and arrows for hardened targets, which she 'fletches' with her power and uses to guide arrows. Suspected by Assault to be hiding the true extent of her Blaster abilities.

Appearances:
1.2, 1.3 (mentioned)

Other Capes
Former member of the Empire 88.

Glows when powers are active, costume unknown. Can fly and shoot beams.

After an argument with Hookwolf, quit the Empire 88, firing warning shot at Kaiser when he tried to intervene.

The Barnes Family
Divorce lawyer.

Clean cut Caucasian man, red hair, beard, and mustache.

When presented with evidence of Emma's behavior, deflected blame from himself and Emma. According to Zoe Barnes, has a habit of hiding information unreasonably, causing problems. Annette Hebert, Zoe Barnes, and Anne Barnes believe that he knew about Emma's behavior long before the revelations.

Appearances:
1.4, 1.5, 1.6 (mentioned)
Caucasian woman, braided red hair.

Has been friends with Annette Hebert since college, at one point including some form of non-platonic relationship. Used to be in Lustrum's group along with Annette Hebert. Upon revelation of Emma's behavior, angry at Emma, but puts most of the blame on Sophia Hess and Alan Barnes.

Appearances:
1.2 (mentioned), 1.4, 1.5, 1.6 (mentioned)
Caucasian woman, red hair. Shorter and stockier than Emma Barnes.

Close to Crystal Pelham, believes "friendship" is a reductive description of their relationship. Fond of Taylor Hebert.

Empathetic and analytical. Angry at Emma Barnes but intends to help her despite that. Upset with her father. Confused by Emma's behavior, does not believe it matches her personality or history with Taylor Hebert.

Appearances:
1.4, 1.5, 1.6 (viewpoint)
Caucasian girl, long red hair, "pretty, perhaps gorgeous even" according to Annette Hebert.

One of the "queen bees" of Winslow High School. Has been harassing and bullying Taylor Hebert for two years for unknown reasons. An unclear but strong connection to Sophia Hess.

Appearances:
1.1 (mentioned), 1.3 (mentioned), 1.4 (mentioned), 1.5, 1.6

The Hebert Family
Caucasian woman.

Widow of Danny Hebert, mother of Taylor Hebert. Professor at UMac.

According to Anne Barnes, kind, compassionate, and willing to make allowances for students. According to Kiana Kaslana, extremely angry despite showing no sign of it.

Confronted the Barnes family, causing a vicious argument which she deliberately escalated.
Caucasian girl.

Daughter of Annette and Danny Hebert.

Attends Winslow High School. Has been being bullied by Emma Barnes, Sophia Hess, and Madison Clements for years. Used to be extremely close to Emma Barnes, according to Anne Barnes in "obvious puppy love."

Was assaulted, put in a locker filled with biohazardous filth, and had a Trigger Event there.

Appearances:
1.1 (non-speaking), 1.3 (mentioned), 1.4 (mentioned), 1.5 (mentioned), 1.6 (mentioned)
 
1.7: Tempting Fate
Quotes are from Alan Sheridan's translation of Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

Shawn regarded the three piles of paper on his desk contemplatively. The initial information was gathered, now, but he wasn't certain what the best approach to analyzing it would be. Investigation wasn't something he was particularly practiced at, though he'd done the same basic coursework everyone else had, so he had at least some idea of how to go about it. Which, he supposed, made this good practice. Maybe that was why he had been assigned it, a low-stakes investigation to build up his skills.

He pondered for a moment then nodded, picking up the top set of papers from one stack. In the absence of better ideas, he'd just start from the facts and work his way up to the context.

On the morning of January 7th – he made a note of the time on a post-it, in case it became relevant – the 911 dispatcher had received a call from a cell phone number, informing them that there had been some sort of biohazard attack, and a student needed medical attention. On arrival, the ambulance had discovered a student, Taylor Hebert, unconscious on the floor, covered in… he blinked. It just said "various hazardous substances," and linked to a supplementary report.

He flipped to the report in question and winced. Not toxins, like he'd initially assumed, but "conventionally available" materials. If one had the urge to haunt trash cans, dumpsters, and the like, at least. Noting the report title down, he put it back in its place.

Another student had been found alongside the victim, one Kiana Kaslana. He noted that name down as well. She had provided them with initial first aid information, and had been very concerned about the girl's well-being, but had professed not to know her. She indicated that she had found the girl on the floor there. An external padlock, presumably having been placed on the locker, was found on the scene, twisted apart with raw force – human, or more accurately parahuman, hands, though prints had been wiped clean. The locker itself had been opened by the same means, with the parahuman having simply put their fingers through the door for leverage and pulled it open. Prints, inside as well as out, had also been wiped clean.

Brute, non-trivial?, he wrote down. Hardly a smoking gun, and could be any number of non-Brute powers, but worth keeping in mind.

Battery walked past his desk, giving him a wave. He smiled and waved absently back at her. He checked the time. Ah, patrols should start around now.

Interesting that the student who called had referred to it as biohazard. That wouldn't have been his first thought as a description, though it was accurate enough. Maybe Armsmaster's interview would shed some light on that.

He flipped to the next page. He'd be taking this home with him tonight, if it was going to be ready by tomorrow's meeting.



The body, according to this penality, is caught up in a system of constraints and privations, obligations and prohibitions.

Crystal lay floating a foot or so above her bed, laptop sitting in easy arm's reach atop a small red force field. She pursed her lips thoughtfully, tapping a quick note on her laptop, then turned her attention back to the book.

Physical pain, the pain of the body itself, is no longer the constituent element of the penalty. From being–

Something buzzed. She glanced at the duty phone instinctively, but it sat next to her laptop, silent as it had been all night. Somehow, it seemed Vicky had found the one quiet patrol night of the year, despite the building gang tensions. She frowned. Where had she put her phone, was it… aha. She snatched it up. Oh, it was Anne! As far as people interrupting her studying went, Anne was among the most welcome.

Her smile faded as she read the text.



What on Earth had happened there? That seemed a bit beyond just 'a fight,' if it was driving the two of them out of the house. And why was Emma a danger to leave alone? Had something happened to her?



She bookmarked her page, then set both the book and the laptop down gently on the bed. After a minute of preparation – laptop off, duffel bag fished out of the closet, phones strapped on, lights off – she was out the window.

Flight was always freeing for Crystal. Sometimes she chafed a bit, at being a parahuman, at the powers and identity that set her apart, painted a target on her. But when she was flying, unbound by gravity, free from the hustle and bustle of the city streets, only the rush of the wind against her, it always felt worth it.

She closed her eyes, doing a quick spin, and reveled in the sheer joy of it.

Naturally, that was when the duty phone went off.



"Can we watch a movie tonight?"

Shawn looked to his left, where his son, Addison, was standing by the other basin of the sink, waiting for Shawn to finish scrubbing more dishes for him to rinse.

"Hm." He finished with a plate, placing it in the other basin. "Have you done tonight's homework?"

Addison shifted guiltily. Shawn repressed the urge to smile at the familiar reaction. He had to set an example, after all.

He let the silence linger comfortably, continuing to clean, passing dishes over as he did. After another minute or two, Addison responded. "I have a little bit left to do. I think I can finish it in an hour or two."

Shawn did the mental math. "I've got some of my own to do too. If we're both done by eight, we can watch a shorter movie. Does that sound good?"

Addison frowned. Shawn put the last pot in his basin and let the sink drain.

"Do you think you'll be done in time?"

He smiled. "Good question, but I wouldn't toy with you like that. You do need to get yours done in time, though. Work before play."

"Okay, I can do that." Addison smiled, squeezing Shawn in a hug. "Love you, dad."

"I love you too, kiddo." Shawn squeezed his son back gently before releasing the hug. "Want to work in the living room together?"

"That sounds nice."



It didn't take long to cross the city to Vicky's location. Her cousin was somewhere in the Docks, judging by the tracker. Hopefully the fight was outside, that would make it easier to find the target…

She blinked as she looked up from her phone to find Vicky in flight, a few dozen feet above the rooftops, punching a giant, winged, emerald-green snake in the snout.

What the fuck?

For its part, the snake seemed just as stunned by this turn of events, stuttering and falling before catching itself, wings beating despite the fact that there was no way they could be what held it aloft.

The serpent recovered, biting at her cousin, and Crystal snapped a hand out, a flurry of red lasers hammering into the serpent the moment it and Vicky separated. It reeled, and Vicky gave it a hard kick. It fell to the ground, unmoving.

Crystal flew to Vicky's side as the younger girl looked down at the snake suspiciously. "Uh… what is that?"

The snake twitched, and Vicky dipped down, grabbing a brick off the ground and hurling it at the thing. It jerked and then twitched, discorporating into wisps of ink.

Oh.

"Munsin?" Crystal asked, immediately scanning the area.

"Munsin," Vicky confirmed. "She's in one of those warehouses, I think," she gestured down at a trio of waterfront buildings. "I haven't been able to make much headway, she keeps throwing her damn ink beasts at me, but now that you're here pushing past them shouldn't be a problem."

Crystal winced. She should really know better than to tempt fate like that. When you did, something like…

Streaks of colored ink arced out of one of the warehouses, resolving themselves into two forms – a large bird, big enough to grab a car in its steel-tipped talons, and a floating, spiky turtle with a mirrored shell.

Something like that inevitably happened.

"Oh, come on!"



Shawn's notes had begun to pile up over the last hour, to the point that he had fetched an old spiral-bound notebook from his desk rather than continue to use post-its and flash cards.

The situation at Winslow didn't feel right, but he wasn't sure why. The hard facts weren't that hard to figure out. Someone had filled the locker with filth, and then put Miss Hebert into it on the first day back from break. Sometime most of the way through first period, someone had opened up the locker, and Miss Kaslana had called in an ambulance. They'd then been taken to the hospital, where Panacea had treated Miss Hebert for her injuries – mostly toxic shock, it seemed, but also some injuries from apparent banging on the inside of the locker. When the obvious evidence of parahuman activity in opening up the locker made its way up the chain, the case got passed over to the PRT.

It was when they tried to get details, or motives, that things started to get fuzzy. Battery had requested the security camera footage, but wasn't able to get any. The security system had been damaged over the break somehow, the principal had told them, and they hadn't gotten it repaired yet.

All they had to work with was the testimony of involved individuals. According to Armsmaster's transcript, Miss Hebert had been visibly rattled and closed off – no wonder, given what she'd gone through – but, according to Armsmaster's lie detection software, she had been honest.

Unfortunately, his lie detectors were both imperfect and largely inadmissible in court. At best, they could provide hints for where to look next, which the testimony did on its own; Miss Hebert alleged that one Emma Barnes, Madison Clements, and a redacted individual had been bullying her for an extended period, and had shoved her into the locker. She didn't know how she escaped or was set free. She didn't know why.

The redacted individual was, presumably, a Ward, or someone in witness protection. Someone whose identity he wasn't cleared for. He'd have to request access when he got in tomorrow. He prayed that it wasn't a Ward. That would be… bad.

According to Principal Blackwell, Miss Hebert was a pathological liar and habitual delinquent, who had been attempting to smear the three friends for years for unknown reasons. She speculated that Miss Hebert had locked herself in the locker herself as part of her campaign of revenge. A couple of the spot interviews Battery had conducted while she was at the school – one with Miss Barnes, as well as a few ostensible bystanders – backed up that report, without any apparent prompting.

But if that were the case, why would someone do that much to themselves? It just didn't make sense to him. Surely there would have been ways to try to set up the girls without putting herself at so much risk. And that still didn't explain the parahuman involvement.

Then there was the girl who had called the ambulance. Miss Kaslana had been, according to Armsmaster, overly sarcastic but mostly forthright, and had corroborated Miss Hebert's story. That didn't rule out the possibility of them being collaborators, though.

But then there was Miss Clements.



Crystal threw herself into a frantic dive, dodging just under the claws of a scaled hippogryph, firing blindly above her as she did. She was rewarded with a yelp of pain and the now-too-familiar sound of the projection discorporating. Panting, she took stock.

Vicky had taken a stop sign and was laying into a giant stone crab, each strike crumbling it further until finally it, too, discorporated. After a glance upwards Vicky joined her in the air, also breathing heavily.

"I'm beginning to think," Vicky commented between pants, "we've been underrating Munsin. How many of these things can she make? Doesn't she have to paint them first or something?"

"Maybe she's got an easel in there?" Crystal gestured to the small fortress of opaque crystal the cape had shut herself in after the warehouses had been wrecked. It wasn't indestructible – both she and Vicky had made dents in it – but it was sturdy enough that they needed to be able to focus on it to tear it down.

They both watched the fortress, waiting for something new to emerge from one of its hexagonal spires.

Nothing did. Was she out of summons?

"Maybe– mmmph!" Crystal slapped a hand over Vicky's mouth to muffle the no-doubt-ill-considered comment. Vicky pouted and floated a few feet away.

"Come on, Laserdream, I was just going to say that she might have run out of juice to–"

Naturally, that was when a swarm of giant bees streamed out of one of the towers.

Both girls cursed in unison, breaking into movement again, taking the bees on a street level chase in the hopes that it would constrain their movements. Crystal tried her best to whittle down their numbers – a swarm was the worst thing for Vicky to fight, given that her force field wouldn't protect her from a rapid series of hits – but the things were fast, and…

She blinked. Wait, what had she just flown past, that looked like–

Crystal winced at a tremendous burst of sound, so loud she felt it in her bones, leaving her ears ringing even as she slowed to a stop and spun in midair to see its source. Sure enough, below a swarm of swiftly-dissipating ink swirls was Triumph, accompanied by Battery, each of them on one of the PRT's fancy motorcycles.

"Thanks for the save!" she called as she floated down to the two of them.

"Not a problem," Triumph answered, dipping a lion-masked head. "What's the situation?"

"Munsin's holed up in some sort of fortress she made over there," Crystal gestured in the direction of the crystal construction. "Glory Girl and I are trying to get in, but she keeps making more monsters and siccing them on us. What the hell are her limits, anyway?"

Triumph's mask mostly hid any expressions, but Battery's frown was visible below her visor. "We don't know much more than you do," she admitted. "Her limitations are officially 'undetermined,' beyond the need to paint something and infuse it with energy. Anything else is just guesswork. She doesn't usually get in positions where she'd be genuinely pressured."

Crystal sighed. "Well, hopefully this'll be a first then. Glory Girl and I take air, you take ground, we try to punch that stupid thing until it comes apart?"

"Sounds good," Battery responded. "Speaking of Glory Girl, though… where'd she go?"

There was a loud crash from out of sight, followed by car alarms and a pained, rumbling yowl. Crystal sighed and gestured towards it wordlessly.

"Ah."



Madison Clements was the most surprising piece of the puzzle.

At the bottom of the stack, Shawn had found an interview transcript he most certainly hadn't expected. That day, in the early afternoon, Madison Clements had made her way to the PRT building and requested to speak to someone about the incident at Winslow, saying she had important information.

It took a while to get her through the queue – false tips were a dime a dozen, after all – but once she did, she sat down with an available PRT agent – one Agent Carpenter – and started to, of all things, confess.

She had, with no small amount of tears and pauses to compose herself, admitted to a years-long campaign of bullying and harassment. She, Emma Barnes, and the redacted individual – Shawn wondered idly if Agent Carpenter had been cleared to know who they were, or if he'd had to sign a lot of paperwork after the interview – had harassed Taylor Hebert for years, finally culminating in this incident.

She professed not to know why, blaming Miss Barnes and the mystery person as the prime movers of the harassment, and that she had just gone along with it to fit in. Learning that their stunt had put Miss Hebert in the hospital had, according to her, shocked her into re-evaluating everything.

She would, she'd said, be absolutely willing to provide testimony to that effect, on the condition that she not face charges. Shawn frowned at that, but it ultimately wasn't his call; Legal or the Director would be deciding what to push for, if things even went to court. He was just investigating.

Agent Carpenter had noted that Miss Clements was either genuinely distraught or an incredible actor, and just from the transcript Shawn was inclined to agree. His concern was how much of what she said was genuine, and how much she was downplaying her own involvement. He didn't want to rely too much on the testimony of someone who might be lying through her teeth, after all.

He let out a deep sigh. All the more reason to make sure Addison got into Arcadia, or maybe one of the private schools. In the worst case, they could move out of Winslow's catchment area, but he didn't want to uproot Addison again so soon after the divorce. He'd take a look just in case, though, see what might be the best fit if all else fell through. His first thought was Milbury or Johnston, but he wasn't going to make a decision like that without proper consideration.

There was a poke at his shoulder. "Daaad."

"Hmm?" Shawn looked behind him. Addison was there, looking impatient. "Oh, did you finish?"

"Yes, and it's eight."

Shawn blinked and looked at the clock. So it was. He'd lost track. "Oh, you're right." He rearranged the papers, neatly stacking them.

"And you're done being Dauntless for the night?" Addison's small frown was cute, but he had a point. Shawn tried not to bring work home with him, tried to keep it a space where he could just be Shawn, and Addison could be a normal kid.

"Yeah," he nodded, and Addison immediately brightened up. Shawn ruffled his son's unruly mop of black hair, smiling. "Did you have a particular movie in mind, kiddo?"

"Welll…"



Crystal burned another summon out of the air with a thick, two-handed beam. This one looked something like some sort of cross between a hummingbird and a wasp, and she would have none of that, thank you very much.

Since the two Protectorate capes had come to lend a hand, Munsin had seemed to struggle to keep up, no longer able to throw out minions faster than they could defeat them. Slowly but surely they were chipping away at the structure, taking advantage of each lull to crumble a bit more. She wasn't sure how much they had to destroy before the whole thing evaporated, but they couldn't be that far off.

She had just floated a bit further upwards, hoping to get a big-picture view, when she saw the flicker behind Battery, illuminated mostly by the light of Battery's own costume. Her eyes widened, some instinct screaming the danger, and she fired off a beam just behind the hero. Her aim was true, thankfully, and she caught the attacker, sending them sprawling away into a rosebush. When the dust cleared, Crystal silently thanked her instincts – Oni Lee stood up from the bush, sword in hand. The suit-clad man turned his head, face covered by his eponymous oni mask, right at her. She swallowed. She was pretty sure that Battery's Brute rating wouldn't hold up against that thing he did with his sword, and she really didn't want to find out if Vicky's force field would.

She fired off a volley at him, the loose grouping bombarding the general area; as she expected, he winked out, teleporting away. Battery went for her radio, presumably reporting that Oni Lee was on scene. She dodged, just in case he had decided to do something insane like teleport up to her. She spotted him on a rooftop and sent another volley that way.

Maybe if she kept him busy long enough they could still deal with Munsin.

She turned, putting a bolt behind Triumph this time, but her aim went wide; Oni Lee stumbled, but didn't fall, the iridescence along his sword winking out just before he vanished again.

A new summon, a pterodactyl-looking thing, took off from the fortress, only to be met immediately by Vicky's fist. Out of the corner of her eye, Crystal saw her cousin slam it into the fortress, still looking for Oni Lee, who had just appeared behind her cousin on a crumbling parapet. Desperately, Crystal whirled that way and fired, full force this time.

Too slow. He stepped forward, shimmering sword swinging at Vicky, and only the fact that the parapet crumbled under him kept him from getting a clean hit in. Instead, his sword struck the pterodactyl, carving clean through it and into the crystal fortress. Then her blast struck where he'd been, splashing off of Vicky's forcefield and sending a shockwave through the structure. Oni Lee lost his footing completely, and winked out an instant later.

Scratch that. Maybe if she kept him busy enough everyone would get through this with all their limbs attached.



Thousands of miles away, beneath billions of tons of earth and stone, sat a facility which housed no human beings. Almost no biological life resided within at all, save for when a visitor brought along stowaways.

But while it housed nothing biological, it housed life nonetheless. Robotic workers hummed to and fro, servers hummed, its reactors pulsed in a gentle cycle like a beating heart.

At its heart sat a computer – though to call it a computer was misleading, for it was to a computer what a computer was to an abacus, a device of almost unfathomable complexity and sophistication. And within that device resided a mind. A mind of diamond and soulium and hypercrystal, denser than reality itself could fully contain, but a mind nonetheless, startlingly human for all its alien substrate.

Dragon stirred from a maintenance cycle, full attention returning to her greater self. She was never truly offline, maintenance always done in bits and pieces that left enough of 'her' functional that her consciousness never ceased, but this time more core functions had needed attention, so for just a moment all but the most critical duties were paused or handled by lesser forks of her mind.

She reviewed her logs, confirmed the status of countless watched items: Herrscher monitoring efforts, background Honkai radiation fluctuations, current military force dispositions, status of important research projects, Schicksal infiltration, parahumans who required monitoring, communication network integrity. All as expected.

She checked her subroutines watching for signs of the Shadows, and once again found nothing. Sometimes, she wondered if she had simply imagined them, but each time she checked her reasoning it was still sound. They must exist. She just couldn't provide positive proof.

Countless items flooded through her attention, assessed and dismissed or responded to as needed, until finally, near the end of her queue, she found an action item that her subroutines had tagged for her personal attention, but not high priority.

It was a telling combination, and so she was not surprised when the message attached to the video mentioned Armsmaster. The video itself was simple enough, and the only doctoring she could detect was in the crop itself. A moment's curiosity brought up the investigation summary. Standard enough, though it being connected to a Ward could prove problematic. The video clip would likely be useful, at least, and she sent it to Armsmaster alongside a brief explanation.

Another moment's idle curiosity brought up the investigation detail. She read it once, then again, sanity-checking to ensure she had read it correctly, She set aside first a single thread, then more, enough to allow proper emotion-emulation.

It wasn't the details of the case that had drawn her focus, nor was it the case's location.

It was a single word.

Kaslana.



The Docks were quiet again, or at least as quiet as Brockton Bay ever got. PRT vehicles had circled up in the parking lot that had once served the three now-flattened warehouses, but the agents were relatively relaxed. They scattered about doing their thing, some taking notes, others scanning the rubble, a few talking to one another instead.

Armsmaster had shown up along with them, so "conveniently" Crystal could debrief with the PRT now, rather than later. One of the unfortunate facts of affiliate status – if you worked alongside the PRT on something, you were obligated to go through some of their after-action and reporting procedures.

"...and then the summons popped, and we realized they had run for it."

"All at the same time?" Armsmaster asked.

Crystal considered the question and glanced around the area, trying to remember where and how things had happened. Vicky stood off to the side, glaring at a piece of rubble like it had personally offended her. Battery was leaning against a PRT van, while Triumph was laying on a gurney – he'd twisted something in the fighting, and the medics were refusing to let him put weight on it until they'd checked him out.

The big spider had vanished there, the weird skull-head-thing had vanished thereHad they all gone out at the same time? "No, I don't think so," she answered. "It was a bit staggered, but if there was a pattern I missed it."

"Energy or a timer then, probably." He nodded. "Anything else to add?"

Crystal shook her head.

"Alright, we don't need you for anything else tonight." Crystal twitched a bit at the tone, but tamped it down. That was just… how he was. He didn't mean anything by it.

She nodded and walked over to Vicky. "Hey, we're good to go," she said.

Vicky muttered. "I'm too wired and grumpy to get to sleep, but too fried to keep patrolling."

Crystal checked her phone, stomach turning as she saw the missed texts. Fuck. She'd completely missed her window to get Anne her and Emma's stuff.

She idly toyed with the idea of ignoring them for the moment, but it was never really an option; she wasn't going to hurt Anne just so she could avoid an awkward admission. She cared about her too much for that.



She sighed and put her phone away. "Sorry about that. Was going to do something for a friend, and…" Crystal gestured at the wreckage.

"Eh, it's fine." Vicky sagged a bit. "Not sure what to do, though."

"That's okay," Crystal said with a reassuring smile. Vicky was really out of it. "There's a twenty-four-hour diner I like to go to when I'm frazzled like that. Just follow my lead, and we can get some food and cool off a bit before heading back. Sound good?"

Vicky straightened up, meeting Crystal's eyes intently. "Crystal I could eat an entire cow show me the way right now please and thank you."
 
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