The thermobaric warhead exploded. A powerful shockwave threw Samuel through another wall. The nanoparticle armor held, but intense heat heavily damaged his chest electromagnets, weakening its integrity in that area.
The cyborg skidded on his back on the outside street for a dozen meters before grinding to a halt. He pushed with his hands at the asphalt with enough force to launch himself upright. Bug's swarm flew up into the air, hovering above him and following his position.
The tank, devoid of any crew beside the cape, was slowly rolling out of the building through one of the damaged walls. The construction, heavily weakened by the fighting and destruction of its walls, finally gave up and collapsed behind the war machine. Its turret was already tracking Samuel, seemingly without any action on Squealer's part, who was still peeking out of the access hatch and shouting profanity at him while flailing her arms in fury.
Depending on how good the turret's tracking and the gun's autoloader were, there could've been a risk of him dying there, he realized with a tinge of worry, but he thought that unlikely. In an urban environment, power armor held a mobility advantage over tanks, and his body was an order of magnitude faster than the tank. All he needed to do was to lure the tank between buildings, and seeing how its driver was lusting for his metaphorical blood, that should not present a problem.
He started sprinting towards a tight alleyway, footsteps thundering, stealth abandoned, trying to maximize his distance from the gun's line of fire. Another shell launched and this time missed its target, hissing past him and demolishing the wall of an abandoned building.
The next move on Squealer's part Samuel did not anticipate. The tank deployed what looked to him like a slew of solid fuel rocket motors, and with a trail of fire and smoke charged at him. It moved quickly enough to rip its own tracks to shreds, lose some of its wheels and start to glow cherry red at the bottom from sheer friction.
At the last moment, Samuel abruptly changed his direction. Asphalt under his feet broke into chunks as he lunged out of the vehicle's way. Only his left foot was clipped by it, sending him into a wild spin. He recovered quickly, and scanned his surroundings for the tank.
It had pushed through a two story building, managing to partially collapse it. Squealer's soul remained stationary for a moment and it seemed like the machine might've even been buried under the rubble, but they quickly started moving again. He knew what that meant.
Before the tank turned the corner, now hovering slightly above the ground, and made line of sight with Merchant HQ and the street before it, Samuel was already climbing through the rubble to reach a stable part of the collapsed building's roof.
"Where are you hiding you fucking cock sucking mother fucking cunt?! Come 'ere so I can rip you a new one you piece of shit!!!" Squealer yelled in rage at the top of her lungs, swiveling hear head in search of her opponent.
Samuel jumped off the roof and landed on top of the machine, his momentum proving enough to smash its rear end into the ground underneath it. Squealer turned to him, let out a blood curdling war cry and threw a punch at his shin, mangling her own hand. Seemingly oblivious to that, she threw a few more. Still wailing enthusiastically at his legs, Samuel threw her out of the vehicle.
Despite its driver now lying barely conscious on the ground near it, the tank still moved. It violently turned its turret, hitting Samuel's shins with its barrel. He tumbled to the ground and immediately rolled under the vehicle, hopeful that he could find a weak spot there. It unceremoniously disengaged its hover system and dropped on him.
"Boss, its AI core is probably located near the center of mass. Can you dig your way there or something?" Tattletale gave him advice in an oddly unconcerned tone.
He tried. The armor plating was strong, but he had enough tools at his disposal to cut through it. He used his electromagnets to emit strong pulses, heating the metal up. Moving teeth made of nanoparticles that constituted his primary armor cut through it like through butter.
The tank apparently recognized that the entire body of Samuel was a dangerous cutting tool and took flight. It moved backwards at a respectable speed and fired while Samuel was still getting up. He rolled in time to avoid a direct hit, but the shell still detonated in close proximity. He was yet again thrown a small distance through the air. This time, he twisted in mid-air, landed on his feet and immediately started running.
He was faster on the ground than the vehicle, but it would still have enough time to fire at least once before he closed the distance. He pondered trying to parry it, redirect its flight path by hitting its side before it detonated. That would, unfortunately, only work if it did not possess an inertial fuse, and thus was too risky.
"Tattletale, how does the tank track its targets?"
"With heat vision."
"Bug, create a wall made of insects between the tank and me. Keep it 20 meters in front of me." He commanded through his communications suite, and soon the swarm that was following him formed a wall stretching the entire width of the alley. Samuel advanced forward in an erratic pattern.
Another shell passed by, missing Samuel by a wide margin. As he predicted, the swarm generated enough heat to conceal him.
Eventually, the tank became impatient and emerged from behind the screen of insects, moving towards Samuel. A big mistake on its part. He lunged towards it before the turret could target him, passing the 20 meters that parted them in a blink of an eye, and generated a short ranged electromagnetic pulse strong enough to destroy its electronic brain. The vehicle crashed into the ground, and Samuel soon followed suite, falling limp before he could divert his power back to actuators.
"Tattletale, is it safe to load the van now?" He asked through her phone as he stood up.
"Yeah, seems like all the thugs run away while you were dueling with that tank."
"Shouldn't we take it with us too?" Bug spoke after the long silence on her part.
"I'd like to have a closer look at its engineering, but taking it with us will be both difficult and dangerous. I will push it deep into the sea for recovery at a later date. The two of you will fill the van's cargo capacity with every tool and all valuable material you can find and return to base."
"Boss, that thing weighs like sixty thousand pounds, you sure you can move that?" Tattletale said skeptically.
"Yes, after I repair its tracks. Now, do what I have tasked you with."
Half an hour later, they were done. The neutered tank was pushed deep in the abyss by Samuel, and the van was filled to the brim with Squealer's tools and materials. Bug kept anybody from interfering using her swarm, directed by the cyborg to every inbound soul.
After their triumphant return, Bug departed their base and Tattletale spent time browsing the internet on her phone, while Samuel diligently worked. He dug out a new section of the basement with his own hands, placing supports made from repurposed steel beams that he had looted from the ship graveyard. He filled it to the brim with the materials he had in store, leaving the main area mostly clear outside of Tattletale's shack. After their latest mission, outside of steel in their storage were electronics, small amounts of tungsten, alkali metals and some compound material he could not yet specify the composition of.
Tattletale complained that there was a distinct lack of running water to clean herself with, but he dismissed that for now, explaining to her how acquiring a stable source of income took a much higher priority.
His first finished build was an automated means of extracting carbon from steel and producing graphene as well as CNT out of it. It was not of the highest quality and Samuel fully expected it to break often, but it was all he could do with resources available to him. The mechanism that melted the steel to then form oxides with carbon particles was sturdy enough, if not the fastest, but his method of then extracting said compounds, dissolving them into their substrates, forming fullerenes and then shooting them at hypersonic speeds into hydrogen gas for them to unfold and bind together upon impact with the device's wall was inelegant and required massive precision to achieve high quality of products. Precision that all but assured some part would break soon. Moreover, this approach required a constant intake of various chemical reagents, which was bothersome and tedious.
Before the morning arrived, he managed to also mostly complete his stationary argent reactor, which tapped into the well of souls inside his Crucible through what could be most easily explained as a very small, transdimensional wormhole, working over any distance within the three spatial dimensions. It was a significant improvement over his original plan for accessing the Crucible's energy, which ended with him being transported to this world. It seemed that manipulating the physical body of the artefact held much more risk than interacting with the sea of energy within it, which lied dormant without the sword actively controlling it. It was a most curious discovery.
After Tattletale woke up, he approached her to discuss their next move.
"Is a relatively large scale production of graphene a worthwhile endeavor? How much gain would we be able to achieve with a square meter of the former per hour, and a kilogram of the latter per four?"
She gave him an annoyed glare.
"Geeez, maybe let me eat my breakfast before talking business, all right?"
"I apologize. Eat, then we will return to this discussion."
The ten minutes that it took her to eat left Samuel to think. He considered all possible options – if his current means of production were enough, then he could immediately acquire materials and land to construct a full scale factory and stronghold. If it wasn't, he would need to slowly build up until he could provide this society with something it lacked, and the most obvious course of action would be producing copies of his stationary argent generator. Its power output, as far as he gathered, was on par with most tinkertech equivalents, and it needed much less maintenance. As long as the Crucible remained on this plane of existence, they would provide limitless energy. His other option was mass production of weapons. His designs were invariably superior to any others that were not made by tinkers and certainly would find their place in the global market.
"Okay, I'm done. So, there is a lot of that stuff you asked about being made by Masamune. She's a mass production tinker within the Guild. So, it's not a terribly good business, unless your stuff is somehow of significantly better quality."
The Guild. He's knew of them from his inquiries on the internet. Outside of the Protectorate, they were one of the most influential organizations in the world despite having only a handful of members. Thankfully, their modus operandi did not include fighting competition, as far as he was aware.
"My products are of perfect quality."
"Nothing is per- oh wow, you really weren't kidding? That would make it real valuable, actually. Even Masamune has, like, two percent of imperfections in her stuff, and that really weakens it."
"That is satisfactory. By what means could we start our market operation? Can you create a private company on a civilian name?"
She hummed for a moment before replying "Yeah, I could, but I don't think that's a good idea. People will find out that there is a tinker behind it sooner or later, regardless of whether you are one. It's safer to go into the gray zone, the PRT overlooks that anyway."
"You admittedly know this world much better than I do, so I will follow your advice. I trust you to provide us with customers. Use whatever means you have available to make our brand known and reachable."
"Sure, but there are a few tiny little problems. First, I think you should change your cape name. It's too similar to your real one."
"My real name holds no meaning in this world."
"But if someone becomes aware that you made your cape name by just changing a single letter in your real one, they won't take you seriously. You should take a cool sounding name that is appropriate for what you do or how you look. And don't make it too farfetched. Nobody would even know what is the meaning behind you calling yourself 'Samael', you know?"
"What do you propose, then?"
"I dunno. Something like Steel Crusader, or Gray Knight would fit you I think. A hard-shell man doing what he thinks is just, casualties be damned… Yeah, fits."
Samuel remained silent and motionless for a moment that seemed like an eternity to Tattletale. Eventually, she opened her eyes a bit further and silently whispered "Oh shit."
"I… did condemn thousands of souls to their deaths. But their sacrifice will never be forgotten, even if I do not regret it being made. There is blood on my hands, but I did what I did for the future of mankind. In the end, we all gained from it, both my world, and this one." Samuel said in a slower and quieter voice, sounding almost solemn despite his robotic limitations.
Tattletale winced as an expression of pain streaked across her face.
"The sword." She almost gasped.
"Indeed. Its called the 'Crucible'. With it in my hands, this world will be provided with limitless energy, and perhaps a means to fight the Endbringers, as well as… my own enemy. Now, Tattletale, stop using your power on me. It will hurt you."
"I don't understand. I don't react this way to anything else. I only get thinker headaches when I use my power too much, but on you… it instantly hurts, and I have this feeling of… uneasiness I guess." She was quiet for a moment, thinking silently. "Do you have some stranger power?" she suggested.
"Not as far as I can tell. I know too little about this world's so called 'powers' to make a definitive verdict. Though I do plan to inquire into the subject more."
"Huh. Well then, it seems like you're in luck boss, I can't do anything about you with my shtick." She tried going back to her chirpy, friendly tone and attitude, but the expression of pain that still marred her face made that impossible.
"I am fully aware that you have the capability to hurt me despite that limitation, but rest assured – it would not end well for you, or for humanity. I am an outside factor in this wicked world, one that is willing and capable to change it."
"Ok, real talk now." Any attempt at cheerfulness was gone now. "I'm not actually that unhappy working for you. Sure, you're a creepy alien robot that will kill me if I disobey, but that's hardly different from my previous employer. Except the creepy alien robot part, I think. So it's kinda all the same to me. Just give me a small chunk of the money you'll be making and we all will be happy."
"I will provide for my subordinates, rest assured." Samuel ignored being disrespectfully called a robot instead of a cyborg. He was not offended by being called a robot, but he hated inaccuracy. "I am not a villain, and I do not plan to use your help in any further criminal activities, but that's irrelevant to you, is it not? I hope our mutual loyalty will be maintained by both of us gaining what we desire. Personal wealth for you, this mankind's future for me."
"Peachy. I don't care much about the preachy bits, but you could tell them to our Bug. Just don't make it sound like you're gonna kill everyone in your way."
"Thank you, Tattletale." He turned away in a clear dismissal.
They spent the next half-an-hour filling the internet with advertisements for their newly created company. Forums, image boards and deep net all filled with fabricated proof of the existence of Union Aerospace Corporation.
Samuel admitted to himself that choosing this name was overly sentimental, but he was just a human in the end.
The operation was designed to create the illusion of an already established and respected, yet little known company researching graphene production methods. Traces of its existence were artificially assigned old dates by way of breaking into web hosting servers and changing the data inside. Most big archive servers had their databases compromised to include UAC's newly made website in their records dating back years. All done as untraceably as Samuel could manage after learning this world's computers and system architectures. After working on bringing a truly sentient AI to life in his world, this was not much of a challenge for him.
The trade system he set up was quite rudimentary, but efficient. After receiving the funds from his clients on his newly created, discreet Swiss bank account, a drone would be dispatched to deliver the bought bulk materials. The risk of someone witnessing their launch point and discovering his base existed, but his argent sensor would make it quite low. If anybody entered its range, all launches would be postponed until they vacated his premises.
Construction of the first drone took him the rest of the day, and it was still not finished. Orders started coming in, and produced materials begun to pile up. He made as much haste as was possible, but the work could not be done any faster. He first needed to create the means of producing highly sophisticated electronics and a small nuclear reactor to produce exotic matter needed for antigravity drives. When the day had ended, the unfinished drone, much larger than his already imposing body, and the new equipment covered most of the basement's area.
Digging out a hangar for the drone and constructing a roof gate with shattered concrete permanently attached to its outer side as a disguise leading it to the outside took him the entire night, and the entire next day was spent on finalizing the drone. It soon started hauling graphene to his clients by the tons, and his bank account swelled with income. Perhaps too much of it.
The scale and speed of his success surprised him. He did make sure that his clients would know his products' superiority to what Masamune produced and he did provide a much lower price, but it seemed that over the course of the day a big number of people switched from her services to his. That was very unfortunate, especially if it brought any attention from the media. Of course, sudden booms of popularity did happen naturally, but he wished to avoid too much attention too early. But, with no other strings holding him, he could abandon the whole operation easily and cut any ties to it.
-
Tattletale's phone rung. With a small sigh, she answered the call.
"Hi Taylor. What's up?"
"Hey Lisa. Can we meet up somewhere? I want to discuss something." Taylor's voice emerged from the phone.
"Umm, I'm not sure about that. Our previous boss knows my identity; he could snatch me off the streets if I went outside. That's kinda how he recruited me in the first place. Maybe you come over to my place?"
"No, that's the thing. I want to talk about our new boss. And it's not a talk fit for the phone."
"Huh, figures. Know what? Meet me outside the base."
"I'll be there in ten."
"See ya" Lisa ended the call.
Fifteen minutes later, she crawled out of the base's hidden access hatch and saw Bug sitting on block of concrete that used to be a pillar. Costumed.
"Jesus, what's the costume for?" Tattletale asked incredulously.
"I don't feel safe in this part of town without it."
"You're just asking Coil to track you down. But fine, whatever. I don't think anybody followed you."
"Coil? Who is that?" Taylor slightly cocked her masked head to the side.
"He's our previous employer." Lisa said and looked like she wanted to immediately continue, but Taylor spoke before that could happen.
"Yeah, about that. We should move somewhere farther from here."
"Nah, he can't hear you here." She furrowed her brows. "I think. But lead the way."
They moved to a nearby abandoned building, one without any windows or doors, but it put a solid wall between the entrance hatch and them.
"So, Lisa. I have something important to tell you, but promise me you won't freak about it, ok?" Taylor asked with uncertainty in her voice.
"You want to tell me you're a snitch, right?" A warm smile appeared on Lisa's face.
"What. How did you… No, for how long have you known?" Taylor initially appeared completely shocked, but quickly recovered, even if she remained nervous.
"Since the beginning" Lisa's smile transformed into a vulpine grin. "Don't worry; I don't hold that against you or anything.
"You knew? Then why…?" Taylor wasn't given a chance to finish before Lisa spoke.
"Because I like you, Taylor. You're an interesting person. I wanted to see what would you do, I wanted to get to know you."
"Is it true? Why were you not afraid I'd betray you, that you would get in jail because of me?"
"I doubted you would do that. You needed some good friends in your life." Lisa's grin transformed into a warm smile.
"Huh." Taylor crossed her arms and let the conversation stall for a moment.
"I don't really know how to respond to that." She continued, then fell silent again.
"You don't have to respond to that. We're still friends, I'm not a villain anymore, Undersiders don't exist, and that's the end of the subject."
"But… what about Brian, and Alec, and Bitch?"
"I'm gonna miss them, especially Brian, but what happens with them is beyond our influence. Regent and Bitch are still in arrest, and our boss won't allow us to break them out."
"Yeah, I don't know how to feel about that. That's exactly what I originally wanted, but now it feels… wrong, somehow. I thought it was noble and heroic to put villains in prison, but Alec was an all right person. Not at all how I imagined villains to be. I'm not sure if he deserved it or not, and it bothers me. A lot."
"I noticed how you omitted Rachel there." Lisa smirked slightly tauntingly.
"I never liked her. But even she was part of the team, and it feels shitty that even she has to go. I don't know, it's all fucking messed up, you know?"
"Yeah, I know. It all went to shit. But hey, look at the bright side – now we work for a hero, no more undercover villainy for you." Lisa smirked again, more faintly than before "And Brian is still out there. Maybe we can bring him here, so he too might become a noble hero."
"You think Samael is a hero?" Taylor's voice was full of doubt.
"More of a one that our previous boss, that's for sure. Have you heard how zealously he preached about saving humanity?"
"He fucking killed Mush. And left his body there to rot. He didn't even seem in any way bothered by that. That's hardly heroic, you know?"
"Taylor, it was an accident. Sure, boss's a bit… Detached, but he doesn't intend to harm anyone. Lately all he was doing was producing and selling some super strong materials, so that people can build more durable stuff. He even priced it ridiculously low compared to what Masamune charges for her stuff, like it's a charity."
"Wait, what? I didn't know that."
"He only started last night. And he's already sold literal tons of the stuff, he's tech is pretty good at mass producing things. I think he's gonna do more good than bad in the long run."
"So what am I supposed to do? Just sit by and watch as he does business while I'm paid for my silence?"
"What's wrong with that? You could be set for life."
"That's not why I became a hero, Lisa! I wanted to change something in the world, help fight the good fight, put criminals in jails! Now, I'm stuck being paid by a sketchy guy who has killed before, for keeping silent on how he's a murderer from outer space. It's fucking demented."
"The entire cape world is demented, Taylor. It's all just pretense, not all villains are bad people and not all heroes are good guys. It's all just a messed up game, you shouldn't sweat so much about it."
"No, I think you're wrong here. It's a 'game' where people die. Mush didn't need to have a giant chunk of metal impale him just because 'boss' wanted to steal some of his stuff. This is all kinds of wrong."
"You think our previous boss was better in that field?"
"Of course not, that's why I wanted to sell him out to the PRT!"
"Damn, ok, calm down. Taylor, you know that whether we live or die depends on our creepy robot employer. He's already shown that he can track us with ease. Besides that, I know too much for Coil to just let me go. I cannot really leave boss'es fancy bat-cave unless I want to risk being killed in a drive-by or kidnapped. So I'm kinda stuck here. You have a much better deal here, you know?"
"So what am I supposed to do?"
"If you must do something, I guess you could go solo vigilante. Boss won't mind. I can even do mission control for you whenever I'm not busy."
"So you're telling me not to rat on him despite him having killed Mush?"
"Yeah. Even if you did, that would just result in a long court case that could swing either way. Merchants are not really that good with the judicial system. If you absolutely need to do that anyway, just give me a notice so I can scramble, all right?"
"Okay. I'll… have to think about this. Shit, I hate this situation."
"I'm fine myself, you know? Steady pay, few duties, I'd be all for it if not for the fact that I'm confined to a dirty cave." Lisa grinned wide.
"You're not making this easier for me. We could escape him together, send PRT after him and hide."
"And I'd be left jobless, you'd be left jobless and our cape careers would be in ruin. We would both be villains with a track record of betraying two employers in a row. PRT would be after us too. That's sort of a horrible scenario. Trust me, I'm the thinker."
"Fuck, dammit. I'll have to think about this some more. I'll give you heads up if I plan to do anything. I don't think I want to see you in jail, just don't do anything villainous, okay?"
Tattletale responded with a mock offended expression that only partially hid her smile.
"Why would you suspect me of something so dastardly? I'm a hero now, remember?"
"Working for a murderer."
"Jesus, so are you,"
"That's why I want to sell him out-"
"Okay, fine, let's drop the subject, all right? I don't want to argue with you, Taylor. It's no fun for either of us."
Taylor sighed.
"Fine. So, what now?"
"You know, I'm getting kinda hungry. Wanna order pizza?"
"But, won't that give away the location of our base?"
"Nah, we'll go a city block from here and take the order outside. If anything bad happens, boss can just run here in a minute."
"Sound good to me."
-
"Boss, I'm going for a walk."
"Please do make it brief. You yourself told me how dangerous your previous employer is."
"I'm gonna wither and die if I stay confined to this cave all the time, you know?"
"I am aware. Once I finish my preparations, we can deal with that particular problem."
"Say, boss, how's that fancy gun you were making coming along?"
"It is finished. Very unfortunately, I had to work with subpar materials and tools, making it… barely satisfactory. No, it is not enough to make me certain of triumphing over an established villain organization, you do not need to ask that."
"Whatever. I'll be back soon."
Tattletale grabbed a stuffed bag and scaled the ladder leading outside. There, after making sure nobody was looking, she retrieved her costume from the bag.
Costumed, she set out for a casual stroll around the area.
Meanwhile, Samuel's communications suite received a strong signal directed at his base. A message.
"Hello, Samael. My name is Dragon."