Let's read Worm and its sequel Ward by Wildbow (One chapter/every day)

My reading at the time was that informing Taylor of the near certainty of her capture and the near impossibility of her various options for escape made Taylor concider and pick a course of action she only had a tiny chacne of choosing otherwise (say, 2% :p).

It's like if I went into a halfway with a left and right, and one was freedom and the other was death, and someone told me I had a 99% chance of dying via their precog ability. As a result I think "Well, as a rule I always go right if forced to pick a 50/50, so clearly I'll go left this time."


Weather I was right about this being the case in story, you'll find out eventually. (Or will you? Dun dun dun.)

Taylor's huge chance to escape against 98% odds is called...PLOT ARMOR. The same plot armor she had during Coil's attack. Come on, nobody else would have survived while blind and injured in a house on fire and having professional soldiers gunning for them. Her survival and victory over Coil was fucking GREAT, but impossible if she didn't had enough plot armor. Impossible even for a fictional world of superhumans like the one created by Wildbow if you're not the main character:D.
 
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Taylor's huge chance to escape against 98% odds is called...PLOT ARMOR. The same plot armor she had during Coil's attack. Come on, nobody else would have survived while blind and injured in a house on fire and having professional soldiers gunning for them. Her survival and victory over Coil was fucking GREAT, but impossible if she didn't had enough plot armor. Impossible even for a fictional world of superhumans like the one created by Wildbow if you're not the main character:D.
Oooooo,Remove that!
Nothing is impossible, just highly improbable!
Question for the mind: In a world where everything is possible, is it possible to be impossible?
 
I'm surprised black didn't dwell on Emma's downfall. Think of it. Emma has the dawning horror of realizing that "weakling" Taylor has brutally crushed numerous villains and challenged heroes....and probably gained the powers back in January. So she could have annihalated Emma at any point over the past 6 months.......yet chose not to. The realization that the "weakling" held back out of mercy from crushing you would break any social darwinist

I was too immersed in the sheer awesomeness of everything that happened during this Chapter to pay any attention to any random fly like Emma. I think that Emma's mind crashed and burned after Taylor's show. She's no longer a person, but a shadow of her former self. She's completely and utterly broken. I think she'll rather go nuts enough to be locked in an asylum or kill herself.
 
Maybe I'm wrong, but if you read the previous chapters, Emma wanted Taylor to be strong as "she was".
...And so it begins ...

Yep, but Emma was never strong to begin with. She BELIEVED that she was strong, but it was only an illusion. In this time, Taylor was always strong even during moments when she appeared "weak". The irony of fate gave Emma an excellent low blow once she realized the sad reality.
 
And that, right there, is my favorite chapter in Worm. For three reasons.

First, that moment, when Taylor is backed into a corner. She can't really use her power, she has no weapons or even a costume she's just an ordinary teenage girl up against some of the strongest heroes around, and she realizes they're playing it safe. Elite heroes against a powerless teenage girl, and they're afraid she'll turn it around on them somehow. And then she does.

Second, Taylor, since the beginning of the story, has always tried to do the right thing (even if she fails at it a lot of the time). She's mostly seen as a villain, and mistreated by tons of people. This chapter has her finally being rewarded for the good things she has managed to do, with the students recognizing what she's done for the city and helping her.

Third... You actually missed this one. It's subtle, but pay attention to what Dragon and Defiant say and do at the tail end of the student uprising. It starts with Defiant saying "No."

"No," Defiant said.
"You were supposed to protect us!" a girl shouted. Sheila, the one who'd been angry, who'd brought a weapon to school and had left the school rather than relinquish it.
"I won't," he said.
He was talking to someone else. The vents on his mask were open, hot air flowing out. Was he trying to disperse heat so he wouldn't burn any students?
"It's still crude," he said, "… do more harm than good."
There was a pause.
"…r freedom isn't worth possibly losing you."

I think that Dragon wanted to take action, to capture Taylor despite the students protecting her but Defiant stopped her, reminding her that if she'll try to overcome her limits she can possible end up hurting someone and their superior will deactivate her, deeming her too dangerous to "live". No matter how much she looks and act like a human now, she's still a machine, an AI, and humans have power over her. And Defiant loves her too much to bear the idea that he might lose her one day:). Yep, this scene that I didn't noticed at my first read make me LIKE Defiant even more than I already liked him. The new Colin have all the qualities I like in a heroic parahuman: the BEST Classification- Tinker (according to my opinion, of course), he's more like a vigilante who doesn't give a shit about fighting hard against evil guys and killing them if its necessary than an actual hero, he changed into a so much better version of himself, he became more selfless, he's incredible brave and a wonderful fighter and he's so dedicated to the woman he loves :D...He's now on my top 10 of favorite characters, right after Parian, who's 7. And to think that before his fight with Mannequin I actually hated him...
Hell, personality wise, Coil became an even better person that his Marvel counterpart: Tony Stark, who is an alcoholic and womanizer jerk. But I still like Tony more as a hero, maybe because he was always one of my favorite heroes of all times, despite his jerkass personality :D.
 
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Oooooo,Remove that!
Nothing is impossible, just highly improbable!
Question for the mind: In a world where everything is possible, is it possible to be impossible?

Well, as the general idea: aliens attaching themselves by humans' brains and giving them powers, this story is obviously fantastic because this shit doesn't happen and will PROBABLY never happen in the real life.
But as action+ events, Worm is pretty realistic, more realistic than a lot of superheroes stories (even more than X-Men) and I expect to see some realistic stuff when it comes to characters fighting for their survival (despite having powers and an alien in their brains, most of them are still human beings of flesh and bones) and escaping all the time against all the odds like Taylor did is impossible even in such a fantastic story with REALISTIC elements. For example, I'd have believed more if she had Lung's powers (she'd turn herself into an almost indestructible dragon and very little things would be able to hurt her). But she's the main character so...impossible becomes possible when one is the main character. Except if you fight Leviathan :lol.
 
Seeing you comment with plot armor makes me a little sad. Most of your commentary is a combination of fun and thoughtful, plot armor assumes lazy and bad writing. If you really think the scenes in question were lazy and poor that's fine, but I fully disagree.
 
Dinah send the heroes to highschool, probably hoping that they'll arrest Taylor there. But since Taylor have something stronger that her spider silk armor- PLOT ARMOR (except for Leviathan Battle) she fucked up with Dinah's predictions, being victorious despite her only 2% chance of victory. I like Dinah a lot, I feel bad for her, but I enjoyed that Taylor escaped THIS TIME. As I already said, the only way I can see her being "arrested" is if she'll surrender herself. And she'll surrender if she'll realize that there's no future possible (or if her dad/friends will die) if she'll not become a hero.
Taylor's huge chance to escape against 98% odds is called...PLOT ARMOR. The same plot armor she had during Coil's attack. Come on, nobody else would have survived while blind and injured in a house on fire and having professional soldiers gunning for them. Her survival and victory over Coil was fucking GREAT, but impossible if she didn't had enough plot armor. Impossible even for a fictional world of superhumans like the one created by Wildbow if you're not the main character:D.
It's not plot armor. It's prophecy. Those always make more sense in hindsight, especially once you get to see what was hidden in the background. You'll see later.
I think that Dragon wanted to take action, to capture Taylor despite the students protecting her but Defiant stopped her, reminding her that if she'll try to overcome her limits she can possible end up hurting someone and their superior will deactivate her, deeming her too dangerous to "live". No matter how much she looks and act like a human now, she's still a machine, an AI, and humans have power over her. And Defiant loves her too much to bear the idea that he might lose her one day:). Yep, this scene that I didn't noticed at my first read make me LIKE Defiant even more than I already liked him. The new Colin have all the qualities I like in a heroic parahuman: the BEST Classification- Tinker (according to my opinion, of course), he's more like a vigilante who doesn't give a shit about fighting hard against evil guys and killing them if its necessary than an actual hero, he changed into a so much better version of himself, he became more selfless, he's incredible brave and a wonderful fighter and he's so dedicated to the woman he loves :D...He's now on my top 10 of favorite characters, right after Parian, who's 7. And to think that before his fight with Mannequin I actually hated him...
Hell, personality wise, Coil became an even better person that his Marvel counterpart: Tony Stark, who is an alcoholic and womanizer jerk. But I still like Tony more as a hero, maybe because he was always one of my favorite heroes of all times, despite his jerkass personality :D.
Ah. You may have skipped over this important part.
I watched Dragon with my swarm, for as long as she was in my range. I was well out of sight by the time she finally moved. The students had released Defiant, and he approached her side.
She extended a hand, and it tremored, the movement stuttering, palsied.
Defiant seized it in his right hand and pulled her close, wrapping his gloveless arm around her shoulders. He set his chin on top of her head.
That's after Defiant says "freedom is not worth the possibility of losing you" to someone over comms. Then Dragon watched Taylor and the student leave, without going after them.
 
With coil I thought it was that Coil was so used to having all variables that when Taylor caught him off guard it flustered him enough to make basic blunders
 
Seeing you comment with plot armor makes me a little sad. Most of your commentary is a combination of fun and thoughtful, plot armor assumes lazy and bad writing. If you really think the scenes in question were lazy and poor that's fine, but I fully disagree.

No, you got me wrong, buddy. I never believed that ANY of Wildbow's scenes are lazy and bad writing. Even the scenes that I don't like because of the characters involved in them or because of their conclusion. What I wanted to say is that Taylor have plot armor just like any other protagonist from any work of fiction, which is normal for a protagonist, otherwise they'll die quickly and they'll be replaced by a new protagonist in the same story and that would be lazy and annoying writing. I just wanted to point that Taylor have Prophecy Plot Armor, surviving to impossible situations better than anyone else (who's not a Brute or a Changer) would have done. But this is acceptable because there's NOT a single story/TV series/movie featuring a protagonist without even a tiny bit of a plot armor ;). I actually like Taylor with plot armor even if I know that Leviathan have the UNIQUE power to break in pieces any plot armor anyone have. Undersiders as a whole (when an Undersider will die for real, I'll be really, really shocked) and some horrifying evil guys like Jack and Bonesaw have enough plot armor to compete with Taylor too :) without being protagonists.
 
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No, you got me wrong, buddy. I never believed that ANY of Wildbow's scenes are lazy and bad writing. Even the scenes that I don't like because of the characters involved in them or because of their conclusion. What I wanted to say is that Taylor have plot armor just like any other protagonist from any work of fiction, which is normal for a protagonist, otherwise they'll die quickly and they'll be replaced by a new protagonist in the same story and that would be lazy and annoying writing. I just wanted to point that Taylor have Prophecy Plot Armor, surviving to impossible situations better than anyone else (who's not a Brute or a Changer) would have done. But this is acceptable because there's NOT a single story/TV series/movie featuring a protagonist without even a tiny bit of a plot armor ;). I actually like Taylor with plot armor even if I know that Leviathan have the UNIQUE power to break in pieces any plot armor anyone have. Undersiders as a whole (when an Undersider will die for real, I'll be really, really shocked) and some horrifying evil guys like Jack and Bonesaw have enough plot armor to compete with Taylor too :) without being protagonists.

Apologies for being overly sensitive to the phrase. It shows up from time to time, and normally its from someone trying to express a thing they dislike and translate it into lazy and bad writing.
 
It's not plot armor. It's prophecy. Those always make more sense in hindsight, especially once you get to see what was hidden in the background. You'll see later.

Ah. You may have skipped over this important part.

That's after Defiant says "freedom is not worth the possibility of losing you" to someone over comms. Then Dragon watched Taylor and the student leave, without going after them.

They know that if they go after Taylor, they'll risk hurting students. Protectorate already have a bad reputation lately (thanks to Cauldron assholes), Defiant is on probation, Dragon is supervised by their superiors and if they make a mistake, they'll all be so utterly fucked. I think Defiant told those words to Dragon, stopping her from going after Taylor. This is the only way I can interpret his words and their actions. Is there another reason behind their actions?
 
They know that if they go after Taylor, they'll risk hurting students. Protectorate already have a bad reputation lately (thanks to Cauldron assholes), Defiant is on probation, Dragon is supervised by their superiors and if they make a mistake, they'll all be so utterly fucked. I think Defiant told those words to Dragon, stopping her from going after Taylor. This is the only way I can interpret his words and their actions. Is there another reason behind their actions?
Well, if you haven't noticed it now, you'll probably guess it after the next time you see the two. Suffice to say, Defiant didn't just tell Dragon not to go after Taylor.
 
Let's put it this way. Why did Dragon and Defiant go after Taylor in her civilian ID in the first place? And why would Dragon suddenly stop doing so?
 
Interlude 20 (Donation Bonus #1)
Hello, my friends. After the BIG HIT that the last Chapter was, where Taylor was unmasked but still managed to successfully use her 2% chance of escape without resorting to violence or taking hostages, since the students offered themselves to be her "hostages" out of gratitude for the good things that she and Undersiders did for them and their families+ protest against Protectorate breaking two of the most important rules :D, this new Chapter is an Interlude. I hope its from Emma's POV -thinking at the big discovery about Taylor's secret identity while contemplating suicide. But, we already had an Emma Interlude, a second one will be boring as hell and I don't really want her to commit suicide: she'll SUFFER more while living with the knowledge that Taylor is the strongest person she ever knew in her life and she was always weak while Taylor was always strong. This will be a more fitting punishment than death itself ;). Other characters I can think at for this Interlude are: S9 cloning process...and their future army of Mannequins "shudders", Accord, Birdcage again YAY, Cauldron again MEH, Dinah or the person replacing Piggot who gave the order to attack Arcadia (that will be a nice parallel with Interlude 3, right after the Bank Robbery, when Piggot went all SUPER-ANGRY STEPMOTHER on the Wards for their defeat). Lets discover while reading, shall we :D? Interlude 20 (Donation Bonus #1)

"Park there," Stan said, pointing to a space off the side of the road.
"We'll be facing uphill, and we still have to unload the equipment," Nipper piped up, from the back seat.
"There's a method to my madness. Park, Marshall. I'll even deign to help unload and carry this time."
He got a glimpse of Marshall rolling his eyes, but the boy steered the van to a parking spot.
True to his word, Stan was out the door, rolling up his sleeves. Didn't hurt: the humidity was brutal outside the air-conditioned van. His dress shirt was already sticking to his back.
They were on a hill, and the vantage point afforded them a view of the city. Cranes dotted the skyline, and the buildings themselves were gleaming, the whites and colors brightened by the ambient moisture in the air. It might have looked attractive, but there were spots where buildings were missing, whole areas where the construction was only just beginning.
He could see the white building, not too far away, which was taller than even the skyscrapers immediately around it. He'd investigated it just a few days ago. They'd erected a tall white tent, holding it up with a crane, they'd reinforced it with plexiglass panels and iron reinforcement, and now a more solid construction was going up around it. Slow, painstaking, careful work, filled with redundancies. The workers would be glad to be free of the hazmat suits in this heat.
Brockton Bay wasn't lacking in stories to tell. The quarantine building alone was one.
"Need a hand," Nipper said.
He hurried around to the back of the truck. The van had been parked at the side of the road, emergency brake cranked, wheels turned so it would ride up onto the sidewalk if the brake failed, but the steep incline was making it hard to unload the equipment. Much of it was set up to be slid out of the back of the van at a moment's notice, but that same convenience was an obstacle, here. The stuff was expensive, and if it slid to the road…
He found a space beside her and reached to get a grip on the far end of the camera. It might not have been a problem, but Nipper was short, petite, built more like a thirteen year old than a twenty-three year old college graduate.
She wasn't suited for the job. She knew the equipment, she was capable with a computer, she had good eyesight, and the tattoos and array of piercings on her right ear were as good an indicator of her creative edge as anything else.
But this wasn't the job she'd been working towards. She wasn't one to complain, but she didn't have stamina, she didn't have strength, and this, all of this, it was too fast paced for her. She'd have been better, maybe evenhappier in the newsroom, managing the feeds, maintaining the systems and working on post production.
Marshall hefted the bag out of the back of the van. All the wires, the tripod, the lighting, packed into a dense case. The boy didn't look like a professional, hadn't quite adapted to the job he'd been pulled into: from intern to a jack of all trades, filling in the gaps in Stan's team. Set up, interviewing, driving, gopher… anything and everything. He was drawing in a paycheck, but he was definitely working for it, facing all of the hassles, the intense stresses and dangers of the job, for eleven dollars an hour.
Dangers, Stan thought. Images flickered through his mind. Everyone at the station had seen the feeds, had watched them several times over. Purity taking the camera from Manzaneres, a guy from channel four, then setting her monsters on the man. A man with a wife and a newborn had been murdered, just to make a point.

Oh, this is rather shocking twist at the start of an Interlude because a team of reporters were the least people I expected to see having an Interlude from their POV :o. Well, hello and nice to know you, Stan, Marshall and Nipper. I'm sure you're eager to find everything you can about the Taylor and her strangely but exciting adventures at highschhool, you want to have a juicy material for news and is understandable. This is what reports know to do the best, right? Even if, I have to admit, that some of them are rather annoying with their persistence, especially when people refuse to give interviews. I have a love/hate relationship with reporters and journalists (not because I had personal problems with them, but I see how they usually behave- and not always in a good way ;)). But I also think that despite everything, they're still very important for society, because INFORMATION IS POWER (well, except for the fake news lately hemorrhage) and people without any information are the most powerless people ever and extremely easy to be manipulated/dominated by their leaders.
And because information is so damn useful, now I know the name (and a bit of his personal life) of the cameraman killed by Night and Fog. Again, RIP Manzaneres, I'm so sorry for you dying like this and letting a wife and a newborn behind :(. Hope your family will be ok, despite your tragic death. Everytime when I'm willing to give a second chance to Kayden, there are always details like this one about her crimes that make me reconsider my willingness to hope that she'll change one day. Kayden, you're so full of shit and your only redeeming quality is that you're trying to be a good mother for Aster and the baby deserves to have a mother (and this is the only reason why you're the only nazi that I don't want to bite the dust :D).

There was a reason for the shortage of field reporters. It wasn't limited to Manzaneres, either. The problem was a chronic one. This was a job that put ordinary people on the fringes of events that were dangerous for capes.
"Set?"
Marshall closed the back of the van and locked it. "Set."
Stan set off, with Nipper and Marshall following, Nipper almost jogging to keep up with his long strides. "Reason we're parked here is that the school's on top of the hill. We don't know how much parking there'll be, with students possibly taking up spaces, and if we have to drive by, searching for a spot, then someone's liable to spot us and take measures."
"Measures?" Nipper asked, a touch breathlessly.
Right. She didn't have the experience to know. "You'll see what I mean."
There were students gathered outside the walls that bordered the school. Police cars were parked at the front, along with PRT vans, but it was the uniformed guards with 'Arcadia High School' stenciled on their sleeves that caught his attention.
Guards? It conjured up an image of a prison, rather than a school.
"Nip, get some footage of the uniforms," Stan said.
She hefted the camera and trained it on the nearest of the uniformed guards. She had to slow her pace to keep the shot steady, but she kept following him.
When a group of students obstructed her vision, she shut off the feed and hurried to catch up.
They reached the gate, where a woman with a colorful scarf was talking to a PRT uniform. He signaled Nipper, and the young woman raised the camera.
"Damn it," the woman with the scarf groaned, as she saw them. The police officer took the opportunity to step away.
"Don't jump to conclusions," Stan said, "We're not the enemy."
"You're here to bog down an overcomplicated situation," she said. "I have enough problems without vultures descending."
"We're here for the story, that's all. You're in charge here?"
"I'm in charge of the school. Principal Howell."
He made a mental note. Howell, Howell, Howell. She wasn't the prettiest woman, with old acne scars riddled across her cheeks, a short stature and a nose that didn't quite fit her face.
"Stan Vickery, channel twelve news," he flashed her his best smile and extended a hand. She didn't take it.
"You're not allowed on school property."
"I would be if you gave me permission," he said, dropping his hand. The job was politics as much as it was investigation, creativity and presentation. What did she want? Peace and quiet. "Give us fifteen minutes to talk to your students and shoot a few takes in front of the doors, and I'll get the word out that we got the story first. Other stations are playing it safer, these days, less crew, less willing to act on sloppy seconds."
The principal made a face.
Stan smiled, "Sorry. You get what I mean. Give us fifteen minutes, and we're one less thing you have to worry about today. With luck, I'll be the only local reporter you see today."
"With all due respect, Mr…"
"Vickery," he said, already told you my name. "But you can call me Stan, Mrs. Howell. Fact of the matter is, you let me in the school, and I owe you one. I pull strings or emphasize certain aspects of a story. Not just this one either. Who knows? The next incident could be worse, or more sensitive."
"Mr. Vickers," she said. "I'm fully aware that you're trying to bait me into giving you a sound bite. I won't comment on this situation, and I won't be letting you onto school grounds. I don't want you talking to any of my students."
"Fine," he said. "Come on, guys. Let's go talk to the cops."
"Seriously? We're giving up?" Nipper asked.
"Yes," he said, he took long strides away from the front gate of the school, until he was sure the principal wasn't in immediate earshot. "No. She's liable to get on our case if we don't pretend to play along. Howell has no authority outside of the school walls, so we interview students there. Marshall, head back in the direction of the van. Talk to students, see if they want to be on TV. Look for the talkative ones and the emotional ones, and point them my way."
"What about the cops?" Marshall asked.
"They'll be around later, and cops have better memories than civilians. It's the students who were at the scene. Go. We don't know how long we have before other crews show."
It was a shame the principal hadn't let him into the school, Stan mused. Silly of her, too. That favor he'd offered her was gold, all things considered.
Something she could use to bail a superior out of an awkward position and advance her own.
Your guanxi could be better, Mrs. Howell, he thought. He loved the idea behind the Chinese concept of guanxi. It fit in the same general category as the concepts of friends, family, acquaintances, but it was more based in business and politics. Guanxi was about being able to call up a person one hadn't seen in years and ask for a favor. To have enough people in one's debt that there was more implied leverage to use when seeking favors from others.
He'd been introduced to the idea a few years ago, and he attributed much of his recent career advancement to it. It was something to be aware of at all times, and it changed his perspective on things.
He approached a group of teenage girls who were gathered in a group, observing the police and PRT officers. He flashed one of his best smiles at them. He could see one of them glance him over, her body language changing subtly. He directed the smile at her, "I bet you're dying to talk about what happened here. Exciting stuff."
"Sure," the girl replied. "Supervillain doesn't attack the school every day."
"Wasn't an attack. She showed up, and they came after her in her civilian ID."
"I know it wasn't an attack," the first girl replied. "I was just… It's what others have been saying."
"Skitter, wasn't it?" Stan chimed in. He snapped his fingers, and Nipper pointed the camera at the girls.
"Yeah. The bug girl," another girl spoke up. "I guess she goes to Arcadia."
"No way. I heard she was a student at Winslow, before Leviathan came. Geeky kid, was having a hard time with some jerks, apparently. I think her name was Taylor, but you'd have to ask someone from Winslow."
He prodded, "What happened? Was there a fight?"
"Dragon and this new guy Defiant showed up, along with the two new heroes. Don't know their names."
He'd memorized the names. "Adamant? Clasp? Dovetail? Halo? Crucible? Rosary? Sere?"
"Sere and Adamant," one girl replied.
"Sere and Adamant," he said, making a mental note.
"And two of the Wards. Clockblocker was one of them. Anyways, she got away."
"She didn't do anything to provoke them?"
"Didn't hear about anything."
"And they mobilized on the school?"
"Sure."
He started to ask for more details, then stopped. Marshall was approaching, with a kid in tow.
"Cell phone video," Marshall said. "Long conversation between Defiant, Dragon and Skitter in the cafeteria.
Stan raised his eyebrows, looking at the girl with the phone, "Pay you twenty bucks to let us copy it."
"A hundred," she said.
"Twenty. If you got it on camera, others did too, and someone's going to take the twenty."
She glanced at Marshall, then back to Stan. "Fine."
"You have the equipment?" Stan asked Marshall.
"Laptop and a cord. Give me a minute."
"We'll watch it later," Stan said, absently. He turned his attention back to the girls.
This wasn't the first time he'd walked into a situation almost blind. The job was a stressful one, but he thrived on stress. Racing against the clock, to be the first to the scene, the first to report on the situation. But even reporting was a kind of challenge unto itself. The scene had to be investigated, the story teased out, details verified. To top it off, it had to be presentable.
He'd been the producer, before Coil had blown up the camera crew and reporter that had been covering the mayoral debate. He had an eye for this. Had to, because there was nobody back at the studio that would be able to cover this base for him. Sad and ironic, really. There weren't enough people in the bay, resources weren't consistent. So they'd reduced the size of the staff, cut back on hours. Then six people had died, including their lead reporter.
Nevermind the rumors that the PRT was, on Miss Militia's behalf, investigating ties between Coil and the killed reporters and camera crews. He'd itched to look into that more, but it didn't fit with his philosophy.
"Were you there, in the cafeteria?" he asked the girls.
"No."
"Right. Alright. Any thoughts? Were you scared, knowing there were so many capes in the school?"
Twenty more seconds, to grab more details and reaction clips, and then he was moving, searching for others to talk to.
Two more groups questioned, and he didn't have much else. He knew Skitter's name, and Channel four had arrived, and the race was on.
"Got the video!" Marshall called out.
Stan took the offered laptop. To watch now, it would mean delaying interviews. Memories would fade.
But he needed the narrative. How had things unfolded? What were the key, crucial points at the heart of this? That the school was unsafe? It would work, grab attention and viewers, but it felt cheap. No, the public knew that the Protectorate was imploding. There had to be a connection, tying this to something greater.
"Thank you," he said. He'd decided. "Now, I need you to find me someone who knew Skitter in her civilian guise."
Marshall nodded.
"He or she will be one of the students who attended Winslow."
"On it."
Stan retreated to the van with the laptop. He took the extra time to open the video in an editing suite before playing it.
Without being asked, Nipper hooked it into the van's computers. A little icon notified him that he was connected to the studio.
"…There for the S-class threat downtown. I don't want to sound arrogant, but I think maybe I deserve to, a little. I've done my share. You don't turn around and reveal my identity in front of a crowd."
On a notepad of lined paper, he penned down '20th' followed by a question mark. The video continued playing, and he noted down times and key phrases, along with questions. When a critical comment was shown, he was sure to copy the clip. There were a few times where the volume was too quiet, the voices too low or things were drowned out by background noise. Nipper worked to tune the sound so they could make it out, raising the volume or filtering out the noise.
D&D picked fight? Pushed by authorities?Drag past convo with Skitter. When?
Putting children at risk
Violation of truce
"…And you seriously expect me to keep my mouth shut about all the dirty little secrets I've picked up on over the last few months…"
What does Skitter know? App'tly important.
"…the Slaughterhouse Nine. Either you've abandoned that chase, or you're about to tell me that there's something more important than stopping them…"
S9? D-check events post-Boston.
Hospital? Skitter & Defiant?
D&D negotiating with villains? Possible cooperation? Corruption?
"…Stand if you side with me!"
Both video and audio were distorted by the movements of students, rising from tables, pushing away from the jumble of bodies.
Stan smiled. There.
He cut out the scene in question, the students siding with Skitter over the heroes, and gave the clip a title. 'The heart of this story?'
A second later, a note appeared on the side of the window. The crew at the studio had a R.A.T. connecting them to the laptop, and freedom to make changes or add their own details.
Yes – Ed
He had it. The editors at the station were on board.
Now to cobble it together into a story.
He opened a file and began sketching out the script. At the very top, he put up notes, clips he'd need from the station.
There was a knock on the door of the van. Stan opened it to see Marshall with an awkward looking young man. Fifteen or sixteen. He looked despondent.
Hangdog.
"He says he was her friend, once."
"No," the boy said. "Not exactly. But we sort of knew each other. Had classes together, did group work. And I owe her."
Stan smiled.

I like how even God Wildbow calls Dragon and Defian team as D&D. I thought that only I call them like this :D. Principal Howell is the best non-parahuman character in a position of official power in this whole story :). She rejected all the favors that Stan was going to offer her, preferring to not let the reports harass her students. She's so damn protective towards her students and it makes my heart swell with happiness that people like her exists. She's like an adult Charlotte :D.
More bad publicity for Protectorate, like they didn't have enough lately. Greg wants to become the star of the news, apparently, and I believe that he'll say some good stuff about Taylor. More heroes with pretty interesting codenames. Clasp might affect whatever or whoever they're holding in their hands or arms. Possible superstrength that they use when they hold anything tightly enough. Dovetail might be a Case 53 with a literal dovetail who can fly. Halo is possible a member of the religious independent group Haven that Skitter mentioned with the power to surround their head in a radiant circle using it to blind, dominate or hurt enemies. Crucible might emit very high temperatures, allowing them to melt stuff. Rosary might be another member of Haven (because rosary is a powerful prayer meaning to honor Virgin Mary). Probably they fight with...mind altering prayers :D.

…take you now to reporter Stan Vickery."
"Thank you, Nick. One thousand and two hundred students made their way to Arcadia High for their first day back at school, earlier on this sunny day. They hoped to readjust and get a taste of normal life after weeks spent away from home, or enduring the long series of incidents to afflict Brockton Bay. Less than halfway through their day, those hopes were dashed."
A video clip replaced the blond man with the mustache and a face lined by years of stress. A massive metal suit, looming at the far end of the school's parking lot, a mechanized dragon.
"The school became the site of a confrontation between Dragon, a heroine known across the world, and local warlord and leader of the Undersiders, Skitter. Within moments of their meeting on school grounds, Dragon revealed Skitter's identity as Taylor Hebert, a sixteen year old student. With this revelation came a dozen more questions…"
"Change the channel," a boy in prison sweats said. "News is boring shit."
"No," Sophia said.
Skitter was Taylor. A dozen things fell into place.
Anger boiled within her. Outrage. That cringing, whiny, pathetic little scarecrow was the ruler of Brockton Bay's underworld? It didn't fit. Itdemanded an answer of some sort.
But she couldn't. As the voice droned on, Sophia turned her attention to the bracelets she wore. There was a live current running through them, and they could be joined together to fashion handcuffs, but even like this, they were bondage. She couldn't enter her shadow state without passing through the insulated sheath that protected her.
She couldn't leave, as much as she wanted to, right this moment.
Glowering, a confused, impotent frustration building within her, she fixed her eyes on the television. It swelled within her until she could barely think. She clenched her hands, but she couldn't squeeze hard enough to release any of the building emotion. She unclenched her fists, extended her fingers, as if reaching for something, but there was nothing she could grab.
There was no release valve for this, no way to vent.
Taylor's face appeared on the screen in the same moment she hit her limit. She rose from her seat, aware of the guards advancing on her, and kicked the television screen, shattering it, amid the protests and swearing of her fellow inmates.
A second later, they were tackling her. Two guards at once, forcing her to the ground.
She screamed something so incoherent that even she would have been hard pressed to interpret it.

This scene tops Taylor and her "hostages" one :D. Sophia having a crisis over the knowledge that Taylor could have kicked her ass anytime even in civilian, that she already kicked her ass as Skitter, that she's responsible for her kidnapping and ruining her life, that she's not the weak prey how she always saw her to be, that she's loved and respected by so many people and feared by other people. Here we have Sophia finally reaching her breaking point and realizing that her stupid and nonsense view of the world turned to be so wrong and she just can't find any answer why is so wrong. Why someone so apparently weak can be so strong? Why a prey can hide a predator underneath her skin? Well, Sophia, some humans are more complicated than you thought. But you don't know too much, because you're not a complicated person. Even coloring-books are harder to read than you. You're just a simple animal, with very simple views of life and fucked up opinions about what is right and wrong. You're fucked in your head, simple and boring. Blank like a piece of paper with some ink stains here and there. I can't even bring myself to continue hating you. You don't deserve not even my hate. There are more interesting evil characters who surely deserve my hate, but you're not one of them anymore. Stay forever where you're now. You have no place in the society of complicated human beings :).

"Who was she? And what motivated these professed heroes to mobilize on a school, risking the lives of students and staff? Skitter herself wondered aloud about their willingness to put hostages within her reach…"
A clip appeared on the screen. Taylor, sitting on the edge of a counter. She spoke, filled with confidence, almost nonchalant. "You put me in a room with three hundred people I could theoretically take hostage. Why? You can't be that confident I wouldn't hurt someone…"
A student abruptly shrieked, thrashing and falling to the ground in her haste to get away.
"Danny," Kurt said, settling a hand on his friend's shoulder. "You don't need to watch this."
Danny shook his head. Kurt looked down the man. He hadn't even spoken, from the moment he'd opened the door and Lacey had wrapped her arms around him.
"This is bait, isn't it?" Taylor's voice, oddly out of place coming from the television.
"The tone of the conversation even implied there were unspoken secrets that Skitter was aware of, that the Protectorate sought to silence," Stan Vickery spoke, reappearing, with Arcadia High behind him as a backdrop. "Raising questions about what those secrets might be."
"…You seriously expect me to keep my mouth shut about all the dirty little secrets I've picked up on over the last few months?" Taylor's voice, again.
Danny put his face into his hands, pushing his glasses up to his forehead in the process. Kurt rubbed his back, while Lacey looked on, sympathetic.
"What did Skitter know, and does it relate to the event on the twentieth of June? Why were Defiant and Dragon willing to abandon their pursuit of the Slaughterhouse Nine?"
"Is…" Danny started to speak, but his voice cracked. He paused, then spoke again. "Is this on me?"
"No!" Lacey said. "No, honey."
"Those aren't questions I'd hope to pose any answers to today," the news reporter said. "The real question is bigger than that, and smaller at the same time. What forces drive a child from this…"
A teenage boy, his eyes downcast. "She was nice, quiet. I know people won't believe me when I say it, but she was a genuinely good person. Is. Is a good person. At heart. I'm sorry, Taylor."
"To this?"
It switched to Taylor's voice, calm, unruffled, accompanied by the same long-distance, low resolution footage of her sitting on the counter in the school cafeteria. "You'd be surprised what I'm capable of. I've mutilated people. Carved out a man's eyes, emasculated him. I've chopped off a woman's toes. Flayed people alive with the bites of thousands of insects. Hell, what I did to Triumph… he nearly died, choking on insects, the venom of-"
Kurt turned off the television. Danny was frozen, unmoving, staring down at his hands.
"It was context," Lacey said, quiet. "She was acting. I'm sure-"
She broke off as Kurt shook his head. Doing more damage than good.
"We're going to stick by you, okay, Dan?" Kurt spoke. "Let's have you come by our place. Better you aren't alone right now, yeah? And it'll get you away from those reporters."
Danny didn't respond. He stayed hunched over the kitchen table.
"Unless you want to wait here for her, in case?" Lacey asked.
"She already said goodbye," Danny replied, pushing against the table to help himself rise to a standing position. "I think that's it."

From ecstasy to agony in a couple of paragraphs. "does her job of offering Danny endless hugs" No, no, Danny, please, oh, you good, good man Danny, don't cry, don't suffer :(...Damn you, Taylor, for unwillingly causing your father emotional pain. Damn you, Stan, for being so obsessed with sensational news and fame that you don't care at all about how much suffering you cause to people who doesn't deserve this shit. I don't like you, Stan, you're one of those reporters that usually end up being beaten by the people they harass because they don't know when to stop and leave people alone ;). Damn all of you, for making Danny endure indescribable sorrow. At least your loyal coworkers offer you all their support...and your daughter still loves you, despite making so many mistakes towards you. She'll always love you and you'll always forgive her in return, I'll never doubt of these things no matter the turns this story will continue to take :).


"You'd be surprised what I'm capable of. I've mutilated people. Carved out a man's eyes, emasculated him. I've chopped off a woman's toes. Flayed people alive with the bites of thousands of insects. Hell, what I did to Triumph… he nearly died, choking on insects, the venom of a hundred bee stings making his throat close up."
"And what drives dozens of students to reject the heroes of this city in favor of the villain in charge?" Stan asked.
The widescreen television showed the students rising from the tables, joining Skitter. Another clip followed, showing students actively wrestling with the heroes.
"Christ," the Director spoke.
Beside her successor, Piggot was watching in silence, elbows on the table, hands folded in front of her mouth.
"This could have been avoided," the Director said. "On multiple levels."
"Most likely," Defiant replied. He stood at one end of the long table, Dragon beside him.
"If you would have cut off the feed, deleted the footage from phones, we would have had time to do damage control."
"We won't ignore people's first amendment rights," Defiant said.
"…The PRT and the Protectorate have refused to comment, and the silence is damning, in light of what occurred today," the reporting continued in the background. "Brockton Bay has become the latest, greatest representation of the troubles the world faces in this new age, and perhaps a representation of the world's hopes…"
"You're better than this, Dragon," Piggot spoke. "To the point that I'm left wondering… did you steer all of this in this direction?"
"If you try to place the blame on us," Defiant replied, "I think you'll be unpleasantly surprised."
"This event," the reporter spoke, "Points to something else entirely, a fatal flaw in the system, the latest and greatest representation of the Protectorate's steady collapse."
Director Tagg, Piggot's latest successor, picked up the remote and muted the television.
Defiant shifted his weight, clasping his hands behind his back. The body language was smug, somehow.
Piggot glanced at each of the people who were seated at the table. Mr. Tagg, the Director of Brockton Bay's PRT, Director Armstrong from Boston, and Director Wilkins from New York were all present. Mr. Keene sat opposite her. A camera mounted on the table gave the Chief Director of the PRT eyes on the meeting, where she watched from Washington.
Nobody else seemed willing to answer Defiant, some simply staring at him, others watching the segment on the wall-mounted television. She spoke, "I would remind you that you are on a strict probation, with terms you agreed to."
"I am," Defiant said. "Would you arrest me for being insubordinate? Or would it take something more substantial?"
"Test us and you'll find out," Director Tagg responded.
"And what would happen then? Would you send me to the Birdcage?" Defiant asked.
The question was heavy with the reminder that it was Dragon who maintained and managed the Birdcage. Emily Piggot was caught between a desire to feel smug and quiet fear. She'd warned them. She'd communicated her concerns at every opportunity, through channels that Dragon wouldn't be able to track. She'd been dismissed, shrugged off, when she raised the question of what might happen if Dragon was killed in battle, or if Dragon turned against them.
"I'd like to hear a response from Dragon," Piggot said.
Dragon turned her head to look at her, face hidden behind an expressionless mask and unblinking, opaque lenses. There was something about the movement that seemed off. Both the movement and the silence that followed was oddly disturbing.
"No? No response?"
"A consequence of our recent visit to Brockton Bay," Defiant said. "I'm hoping she'll be better in a few days."
Curious, Piggot observed, the note of emotion in his voice, at that simple statement.
As if eager to change the subject, Director Armstrong said, "Mr. Keene. Thoughts? How does this affect your department?"
Piggot turned her attention to the man. She'd only had limited interactions with him, but the man had earned her respect quickly enough. He wasn't a Director, but rather the liaison between the Protectorate and various other superhero teams worldwide, organizing deals, ensuring that everyone held to the same code of conduct, and ensuring that the groups could all coordinate in times of emergency.
"It's catastrophic," Keene said. "I can manage some damage control, offer further aid, manipulate the grants available, but I can't build on a foundation that isn't there."
"Where do our biggest problems lie?"
"The C.U.I. is first to mind. The Suits and the King's Men will cooperate, because they have to. For the American teams, it varies from case to case. But we're in the middle of negotiations with the C.U.I., and this won't reflect well on us. That is, it won't if we can't get our footing here and make a strong showing at the next major event."
The next major event. The idea seemed to give everyone pause.
"Something needs to change," Defiant said.
"Somehow, Colin," Piggot replied, "I think our ideas on what needs to change are very different."
"Very likely," he said, his voice hard. "But this was a last straw for us, in many ways. We have a few stipulations for our continued assistance."
"Defiant," Tagg interrupted him. "You're not in a position to make demands."
He's a hard man, Piggot thought. Army, PRT squad leader, a general, not a politician. Ironic, that they'd butt heads. "Director Tagg, you asked me here as a consultant, so allow me to consult."
Tagg turned his attention to her.
She continued, "I don't like this scenario any more than you do. But let's hear Defiant's demands before you reject him out of hand."
Director Tagg didn't reply, but he turned his attention back to Defiant and he didn't speak.
"Dragon and I have discussed this in-depth. We need the present Directors to admit culpability for the incident, and we need to clean house, with in-depth background checks and investigations into any prominent member of the PRT. We can't maintain things as they are with the spectre of Cauldron looming over us."
"You'd have us fire any number of PRT employees at a time when we're struggling to retain members?" Tagg asked, almost aghast.
"And relieving capes from duty at the same time," Defiant said. "With so few employees, it's ridiculous to continue working to shut down leaks and control the flow of information. Dragon has expressed concerns over having to do this in the past, and between the two of us, we've agreed that the censorship stops tonight, at midnight."
Tagg rose from his seat, opening his mouth to speak-
"I agree," Piggot spoke before her successor could.
Heads turned.
"It's a misuse of resources," she said, "And we do need to clean house."
"You don't have a position to lose," Tagg replied.
"I wouldn't lose it anyways," she retorted, "I've had no contact with Cauldron."
Keene clapped his hands together once, then smiled, "Well said. We have nothing to fear if we aren't connected to them."
"You realize what they're doing, don't you?" Tagg asked. "How does this investigation happen? Dragon has her A.I. rifle through all known records and databases. We defeat the sole purpose of the PRT, by putting the parahumans themselves in a position of power!"
"That ship has long sailed," Keene commented, "With the revelations about Chief Director Costa-Brown, if you'll pardon my saying."
"You're pardoned," the Chief Director's voice sounded over the speaker, crystal clear. "I think this would pose more problems than it solves. We'll have to turn you down, Defiant."
"Then I don't see much of a reason for us to stay," Defiant replied.
"And if you leave, the assumption is that we'll be left without Dragon's ability to maintain every system and device she's created for us. The PRT without a Birdcage, without our computer systems or database, without the specialized grenade loadouts or the containment foam dispensers."
"An unfortunate consequence," Defiant said.
"Not a concern at all," the Chief Director replied.
There was a pause. Dragon glanced at Defiant.
"No?" Defiant asked.
"No. We've been in contact with an individual who has a proven track record with Dragon's technology. He feels equipped, eager, almost, to step into Dragon's shoes should she take a leave of absence."
"Saint," Defiant said. "You're talking about the leader of the Dragonslayers. Criminal mercenaries."
"My first priority is and always has been protecting people. If it's a question between abandoning the security the Birdcage offers the world at large or requesting the assistance of a scoundrel-"
"A known murderer," Defiant said.
"I wouldn't throw stones," Tagg replied, his voice a growl.
"-A known murderer, even," the Chief Director continued, as if she hadn't been interrupted. "I will take security without question."
Defiant looked at Dragon.
"The second dilemma I have to pose to you two," the Chief Director continued, "Is simple. What do you expect will happen when the next Endbringer arrives? Between Dragon's brilliant mind and Defiant's analysis technologies, I'm sure you've given the matter some consideration. Without the Protectorate, how does the event tend to unfold?"
Piggot studied the pair, trying to read their reactions. They were so hard to gauge, even if she ignored the armor.
"It doesn't go well," Defiant said. "It doesn't go well even if we assume the present Protectorate is coordinated and in peak fighting condition."
"We can't afford a loss," the Chief Director said. "You know it as well as I do. Now, tell me there isn't room for a middle ground."
Dragon turned to Defiant, and moved with a careful slowness as she set one hand on his arm.
"We get through the next fight," Defiant said. "Then we clean house."
"I think that's an acceptable compromise."

I think I understand what is this Interlude about (wow, I'm so disappointingly slow :(). Its not told from Stan's POV, but from more characters (old and new) POVs. A multiple POVs Interlude. Stan (with his reportage) is just the connection between these POVs. Interesting way of an Interlude being told. Now we have Protectorate POV. Rebecca is still the Chief Director (looks like she doesn't have enough honor and dignity to resign. Btw, something interesting to know about me. I have almost the same name as Rebecca's codename. She's Alexandria with an "i", I'm Alexandra without the "i". Before learning so much about her, I was proud to share the same name with her codename. Now, I'm not proud at all :(. Amazing how our opinions can change so fast once we know more about a person). I noticed that Piggot admires Director Armstrong (who is like a father figure for Weld) despite her bigotry towards parahumans. This information made me respect Piggot more because she can repress her non-sense hate once she admires someone :). Too bad that I probably won't see more of her since she's replaced by an ex-army man, Tagg. He's the guy who gave the order to heroes to attack the highschool, right? Dude, you risked the lives of so many students, so many kids, just to capture a single villain who was no direct danger for innocent people anyway :anger:. WTF, you're either stupid, ill-meaning, or both. You're also judging Defiant too much over his past crimes, even if now he is clearly a new man and even if he was an asshole, he risked only the lives of villains, not the lives of hundreds of students. This Tagg guy is tagged for not being a likable person in the future, at least from my POV. I already dislike him, he might be worse than Piggot was, with all her bigotry. Despite all her bad aspects, she also had some really good sides which I admired :). This guy...only manages to piss me off everytime when I remember that students could have died because of his incompetence. But the upside of his presence in this story...I'm going to have fun with his name :lol.
Are you serious, guys? You're going to give to Saint power over Birdcage :o? Saint is a HACKER MERCENARY. What mercenaries are usually doing? Commit crimes for the people who pay them. Anyone who pay them became their client. They're not usually loyal to a single client. If another person will pay them even more than their client, they'll end up betraying their first client because they only care about money and nothing else. Coil's half of mercenaries turned against him because they have been paid by Tattletale with more money than Coil paid them. Tattletale convinced them to betray Coil and they did it- for MONEY. As sympathetic and against killing as Faultline's Crew are, they're still mercenaries who'll kidnap, torture or steal from people if they're paid. They probably would betray their client for a highest amount of money. There are some mercenaries with a strong personal code who'll still be loyal to their client even if someone else will try to buy their services and I have respect for these mercenaries, but there are very few. Most will follow the smell of more money rather than the idea of loyalty :(. So, if someone (a rogue villain having access to limitless money, for example. No, I'm not thinking at Accord, btw, I'm just make an assumption that doesn't have any connection with any character) will pay Saint more than the government to release all the prisoners from Birdcage, do you think he'll refuse if he's not one of the very few mercenary with a strong personal code? This is a BAD IDEA written all over, guys. Protectorate will crash and burn if people will find out that they abandoned Birdcage in the hands of an MERCENARY. "sighs" I have such a bad feeling about Saint replacing Dragon. The WORST kind of feeling :(.

"This event," the reporter spoke, "Points to something else entirely, a fatal flaw in the system, the latest and greatest representation of the Protectorate's steady collapse."
"Too rich," Jack commented, smirking. "Across the board, I love it. Fantastic."
Hookwolf, pacing on the opposite side of the television, grunted a response.
Bonesaw was crouched by the side of a machine. She watched with hands on hips as Blasto ratcheted in a bolt at the base of a tall, black-handled lever, his movements jerky with the internal and external mechanisms that forced them.
"The Protectorate declined to comment, and in light of recent events and allegations of deep-seated secrets, their silence is damning."
"Almost ready," Bonesaw said, her voice sing-song. "You're next, Hooksie."
Hookwolf glanced at her, and then at the contraption.
"Don't tell me you're scared," she said, her tone a taunt.
"Not of… this. I'm questioning if this is the path we should take."
"I'm expected to bring about the end of the world," Jack said, still watching the television. "But this is rather tepid for my tastes. I'd like to hurry it along, inject some more drama into the affair."
"…event at Arcadia High School is sure to draw attention from aross America. We, the public, want answers. The death of Vikare marked the end of the golden age, the end of an era where becoming a superhero was the expectation for anyone and everyone with powers, and even those who decided to work in business or public affairs with their abilities were termed 'rogues'…"
Bonesaw took ahold of Hookwolf's hand and led him to his seat. She stepped back, glancing over the contraption. The only light was cast by a small desk lamp and the glow of a computer monitor, an island of light in the middle of an expansive, wide-reaching darkness. Desk, engine, and tinker-designed seats, surrounded by an absolute, oppressive darkness.
"It doesn't sit well," Hookwolf said. "I can't articulate why. My thoughts are still cloudy."
Bonesaw hit a button, and the lights began to flicker, the engine beside her starting to hum with a progressively higher pitch. With the flickering of the lights came glimpses of the things beyond. Light on glass and wires.
"I'd rather a Ragnarök than-"
Bonesaw hauled on a white-handled lever, and Hookwolf's voice cut off. The flickering of the lights ceased, and the room returned to darkness.
Jack sighed.
"…threatens to mark a similar occasion…"
Bonesaw stepped over the body of a dead tinker in a lab coat, stopping in front of Jack. "Strip."
Jack shucked off his shirt, and then pulled off his pants and boxer briefs. The blades that hung heavy on his belt made an ugly metal sound as they dropped to the tiled floor.

Oh....these fuckers. I was quite right with my prediction about seeing these fuckers's POV in this Interlude :D. See, Sophia, these monsters are the ones who deserve all my hate because at least they have expressive personalities ;). Unlike you. Hookwolf The Babies Killer is still under Agnosia Miasma's effects and he have no idea if is right to destroy the world or not. I don't care, the Miasma doesn't give him ANY EXCUSE for killing a bunch of babies. There's no excuse for someone to kill a baby, even if that baby is baby Hitler or the Antichrist himself. Babies should not be murdered under no circumstance. I will instantly hate anyone who will even try to kill a baby so you can imagine how much I hate Hookwolf right now :rage:. Besides, he was an evil guy before the Miasma experience, a sadistic nazi and animals abuser so I don't think that he changed too much, mostly he only switched sides.
I'm not sure if I should feel sorry for Blasto's death or not. He was an even more crazy Tinker than Tinkers usually are and he wanted to create an Endbringer (even Bonesaw admitted that she is not crazy enough to create an Endbringer, despite obviously being very fucked inside her head :lol). He probably injured/killed innocents for his experiments. But he also preferred to die allowing Defiant to try to kill Bonesaw rather than let her live. Hmm, well, he doesn't suffer anymore as Bonesaw's Living Puppet so...its good that he died from this point of view. RIP, Rey, you're pretty interesting while you lasted.
"proceeds to beat Jack to a pulp" Stop acting like a CREEP and staying completely naked in front of a little girl :anger:. Not even Bonesaw deserves this shit. I know you're a horrible "person" but at least don't go this far, even horrible "people" have some limits "throws Skitter at him" Skitter, you know what to do with this creep :).

"…and cover yourself up," Bonesaw said, averting her eyes. "Shameful! You're in the company of a child, and a girl, no less."
"Terribly sorry," Jack said, his voice thick with irony, as he cupped his nether regions in both hands. He stepped back and took a seat, leaning back against the diagonal surface behind the short bench. Cold.
"...The reality is clear. The repercussions of what happened today will change the relationship between hero, villain and civilian. It remains up to them to decide whether it will be a change for the better, or a change for the worse."
The segment ended, and the television turned back to the news anchors at their desks.
"Pretentious, isn't he?" Jack asked.
"Likes to hear himself talk," Bonesaw replied. "Which do you think it'll be? Change for the better or change for the worse?"
Jack smiled.
"It's a given?" she asked. She pressed the button, and the lights started to flicker again.
"I think so," Jack commented. "But I almost hope things do turn out well."
The lights were flickering more violently now, to the point that periods of light matched the periods of darkness. Between the spots in his vision, Jack could see more and more of their surroundings.
Row upon row of glass case lined the underground chamber, each large enough to house a full-grown man, though there were only fetal shapes within at present. Each was labeled. One row had cases marked 'Crawler', 'Crawler', 'Crawler'… ten iterations in total. The next row had ten cases labeled with the word 'Siberian'. The one after with ten repetitions of 'Chuckles'.
One column of cases dedicated to each member of the Nine, past and present, with the exception of Jack and one other.
"Makes for a greater fall?" Bonesaw asked.
"Exactly," Jack replied. He glanced at the one isolated case, felt his pulse quicken a notch. It was the only one that was standalone. 'Gray Boy.'
"I guess we find out soon!" he said, raising his voice to be heard over the whine of the engine.
Bonesaw only laughed. She hauled on the switch with both hands, and the room was plunged into silence and darkness.

You're safe for a while, Bonesaw. That creep will not bother you anymore "wants to hug Bonesaw but she notices the maniacal smile on the child's lips and pulls a Speedy Gonzales, running straight to Hell, to hide better from the little Tinker"
They started the cloning process where everyone will be cloned ten times except for Jack, Bonesaw and this Gray Boy that Jack seems to be afraid of or respect him too much. But I don't see Jack as a coward and he doesn't seem to respect people too much either, even the ones working for him. Hmmm, then what is his deal with Grey Boy? I DEMAND to read an entire interlude from Jack's POV (his backstory, how he recruited each psycho and how he knows Grey Boy).
10 Crawlers and 10 Mantons....The world will be even more fucked than it is already by Endbringers :(. A single Siberian was able to mutilate the apparently invincible Alexandria. 3 Siberians will eat her alive. Triumvirate will be completely neutralized if they'll face all 10 Siberians. Well, they can still find the respective Mantons and kill them, but it will be hard as fuck ;). 10 Crawlers...Protectorate barely turned a single one into silicon. 10 Crawlers can be defeated probably only by Scion. S9 Clones will be HARDER than any of Echidna clones+ Echidna itself. They'll make Noelle's Wars seem like a child play .
10 Mannequins....FUCK YOU, WILDBOW, I HATE THIS IDEA OF YOURS. You really like to torture me, right :rage::rage::rage:?
Everyone, please, warn me when the Army of Mannequins will appear in order to skip the entire Chapter by throwing my computer out of windows :D.

Good night and sleep well, my friends.
 
Let's put it this way. Why did Dragon and Defiant go after Taylor in her civilian ID in the first place? And why would Dragon suddenly stop doing so?

Because the "smartass" Tagg ordered them to go after Taylor after he probably received a phone call from Dinah but Dragon didn't wanted to hurt the students so she stopped against the orders. She went against her orders only to protect human lives.
 
Interlude 20
Hello, my darlings. Time for a new....Interlude. Ok, the second Interlude in a row, I got used with this. Before I'll try to guess what this Interlude will be about, I'd like to discuss about some two really, really, REALLY fucked up situation that are going to expand the hell that Brackton Bay can barely contain to the rest of the world :o. First: the looming threat of S9 clones. I made a short calculation and there will be like 150 clones- 10 clones of each known S9 members and ex-members (King, Screamer, Harbinger, Crimson, Mannequin, Shatterbird, Winter, Chuckles, Crawler, Manton/Siberian, Hatchet Face, Cherish, Hookwolf, Damself of Distress, Nice Guy) and one for Jack, Bonesaw, Grey Boy= SLAUGHTERHOUSE 153. The world is officially FUCKED :o. Lets say that clones are not so strong as their originals, but if you put 4 Crawlers together, they'll be stronger that their original because they'll work together, so that would be worse than having a single full strong Crawler. Lets not talk about Mannequins here because I don't want to have nightmares this night too :cry:. BAD, BAD, BAD, BAD. The only chance for humanity to survive is if Bonesaw will finally redeem herself and will interrupt the cloning process before it will be over. Since she's the one who take care of this whole cloning bullshit, maybe she'll FINALLY realize that she doesn't do anything good and artistic if she'll help an absolute madman to destroy the world and will turn against him now, when he's helpless and can't do anything to stop her. I give here 30% chances to redeem herself and actually start to do something good in her shitty life :D. The rest of 70%, I think she's a lost cause, but I still have small hopes that the real good girl in Bonesaw is not entirely dead yet, just in coma for a certain period of time. Paradoxically, Bonesaw might be one of the few chances that humanity have in front of an army of SUPER-PSYCHO AND SUPER-POWERED CLONES LEAD BY PARAHUMAN ANTICHRIST. I'm ready to forgive her for 60% of her sins (there are sins that can't be forgiven, no matter how much she'll change :p) if she'll turn against Jack.
The second BAD, BAD, BAD thing that might possible happen is if Saint will be paid by villains to release the criminals from Birdcage. In heroes' place, I'd supervise him 24/7 and at his first small "mistake", I'll send him straight to Birdcage and find another hacker/Tinker that might be just as talented as Saint (come on, Saint is not the only genius here) but more important...not be a mercenary. Imagine if all psychos from Birdcage will be free. The first thing they'll do is to get revenge on the heroes who captured them, on the judges who condemned them and so on. This is what the most dangerous villains usually do, right :D? Then they'll create a chaos in society, destroying everything/killing everyone in their way. Amelia and Paige deserve a second chance, but what about Marquis? He's a good father, he doesn't hurt women and children but...he still hurts innocent men. He left so many widows and fatherless children behind after he killed their husbands/fathers :(. As much as I respect him for his code and the protection he offered to women and children during S9 attacks, I'm not really sure if he deserves a second chance. He was a criminal and its a huge possibility that he'll continue his criminal activity once he'll be free. Lung is a mafia leader who killed probably a lot of teenagers because he gave them drugs, destroyed too many lives and a lot of people died when his henchmen fought to release him from heroes' custody. He's a criminal who surely doesn't deserve to see the sun again in his lifetime. Glaistig Uaine is a crazy bitch who'll enjoy killing as many people just to turn them into her personal "ghosts". Plus, she's heavily influenced by her power (reminds me of Echidna) so...is much better for everyone if she'll fucking rot in Birdcage. Very few Birdcage's prisoners deserve to be free (I don't know about others but if they landed in this prison, then they're not innocent angels. Amelia and Paige are exceptions). This is the reason why putting Saint at Birdcage's helm is the worst idea heroes had. THE WORST IDEA :cry:.
For this new Interlude: Accord Interlude, Cauldron Interlude, FUCKING Fallen or Teeth Interlude, or a really stupid 2 years time-skip until S9 process will be over Interlude 20

If Accord didn't know better, he might have thought this little soiree was located here with the sole purpose of irritating him.
Wait, he did know better. Tattletale. She would have done this just to beleaguer him.
The Forsberg Gallery. The building had once been a pristine, albeit distressingly asymmetrical construction of glass and steel. Now it was a shattered ruin.
There was little rhyme or reason to the design, and navigating was something of a chore.
To his right, as he ascended a staircase, there was a wing that jutted out from the side of the building, six stories up, like an architectural tumor. With the damage done by Shatterbird's attack, the only glass that remained in the building was scattered across the floor like a winter frost. The offending growth on the side of the building had sustained some damage, more likely a consequence of the vibrations than damage from the glass itself, and the reinforcements that had been made to shore it up only served to make it uglier.
Inelegant, unbalanced.
His power immediately began supplying answers and solutions. He was on his guard, and the first thoughts to his mind were of offense and harming others. As clear as if he were seeing it for himself, he could see a pendulum, disguised among the steel frame of the building, swinging from a point above, and he could hear the sound of steel on steel, like a sword being drawn from its sheath, only at twelve times the scale.
With the appropriate design, the impact would be clean, almost muted. His enemies, isolated within the wing, would make more noise, screaming as the reinforcing struts and the rivets holding intact beams to the larger structure were shorn away. The end result would see his enemies dead, and the building improved, more balanced.
Ten minutes to draw up the blueprint. Eighty to a hundred minutes of labor, depending on the skill of the craftsmen. Two hundred and forty five minutes of labor if he did it himself… and the result would be stronger, better and more efficient if he did. One thousand, four hundred dollars plus salaries.
Impractical. Getting his enemies into the area would be hard. Impossible, if they had any intelligence at all.
He dismissed the thought, but others were already flooding into place. Him and his two Ambassadors in the offending wing, connected to nearby buildings by an arrangement of steel cables. Not one pendulum, but seven.
MY FIRST PREDICTION IS THE CORRECT ONE :D. We have an Accord Interlude. Good, GREAT. I like this crazy lunatic rogue villain obsessed with order, traps and death. Man, I share his obsessive–compulsive disorder and some of his behavior (I have to repeat some things over and over, to keep everything in the perfect order because I'll feel ill if I forget something or a certain thing is not in the order I like, and if someone piss me off enough, I have the worst kind of thoughts about the unfortunate person. I usually redirect my sadistic thoughts in keeping notebooks where I write the worst kind of stuff I want to happen to that respective person or fictional character or I punch my punching bag- I have a punching bag in my bedroom and I know how to hit hard. Its a really relaxing activity if you don't want to kill someone over their stupid mouth or actions :D). Accord is probably one of the most relatable characters in the entire story. Also, its fantastic that we're going to see what's going on inside his broken and complicated mind. This man loves traps a lot. I like how overly- complicated and ingenuous his traps are. I don't think he's just a Thinker. Since he's so good at building efficient and incredible well- hidden traps, he surely is a Tinker too. He's a Thinker with the ability to AND a Tinker with the specialty of building traps :).

One pendulum would cut the tumorous wing free. It would swing out on the steel cables, between the two buildings. With the right angle, it would swoop between the two nearest buildings. The right mechanism, and one cable could come free at the right moment, allowing a change of direction. They wouldn't even lose their balance, as the angle of the floor and centripetal force kept them steadily in place.
With attention to details, they'd even be able to step free of the platform, as though they were departing a ski lift. The wing would then slingshot into the rubble of a nearby building, cleanly disposed of. The Forsberg Gallery would be pulled apart, steel cut from steel by the shearing blades of the pendulums, the weight and movement of the mechanisms serving a second purpose by magnifying the damage, pulling individual pieces free of one another and setting the complete and total destruction of the building into motion.
The unseemly Forsberg Gallery would crash to the ground, with many of his enemies inside, while he and his Ambassadors watched from the point where they'd disembarked.
He loathed making messes, but cleaning up after the fact was so very satisfying, whether it was mopping up the gore or seeing the lot cleared of debris.
Thirty two minutes to draw out blueprints for the pendulums and work out the sequence needed for best effect. Three hundred to three hundred and forty minutes of time to set it up. He could estimate costs north of eleven thousand dollars, not counting salaries. None of the materials were particularly expensive in and of themselves, and he had any number of businesses in his pocket where he could acquire those materials at a significant discount.
Somewhat more practical, but impossible. He didn't have the time to set it up, not for tonight. It made for an elegant image, if nothing else, somewhat soothing.
No sooner had he turned away from the idea of violence than other thoughts were forcing their way into his mind's eye. The outstretching wing being transformed from an edificial cyst to a bridge, with similar connections networking the entire city, each bridge and connection point changing individual points of design into a series of gradients. Architectural styles and building heights would change from a stuttering, jilted progression to something flowing, a seamless wave–
Accord closed his eyes briefly, doing what he could to shut it out. It didn't help. He had a sense of the building as a whole, could imagine reconfiguring it, removing the parts that jutted out and using them to fill gaps towards the building's center mass. He'd worked with his power to see things through the various lenses of viability: money, resources, time, personnel, but that was almost a detriment now.
He opened his eyes to search for something to take his mind off of the irritating aspect of the building's design, but he saw only glass shards, discordant in how they had fallen throughout the building. Some had been swept out of the way by people who'd taken up residence in the Gallery, but the heaping, lumpy piles of glass, dust and debris weren't any better. He caught a glimpse of a soggy sleeping bag and the scattered contents of a supply kit and wished he hadn't looked.
Images rifled through his mind. A network of wires, drawn taut by a weight plunging through the elevator shaft, moving in concert to sweep the glass shards and signs of human life into the elevator shaft. The same wires would catch his enemies, mangling them as they were cast down after the rain of glass.
Between the long fall and the thermite that could reduce the mess to a fine, clean ash, even more durable capes wouldn't be walking away.
No. It wasn't constructive to think this way.
On the uppermost floors, plexiglass and a large volume of water mixed with a high concentration of carbon dioxide and a sudsing agent, sweeping through the building. Staggering it, so the water from the highest floor could clean away the soap-
Rearranging the glass shards into a kaleidoscopic-
"Citrine, Othello," he spoke, interrupting his own train of thought. "Distract me."
"I'm not so comfortable with this vantage point," Citrine said. "The climb only tires us out, and the vantage point doesn't suit any of our abilities. It puts us in a weak position."
"Sir," Othello whispered.
"…Sir!" she belatedly added.
Accord was ascending the stairs just in front of her. It might normally be impossible, but here, it was easy: to turn and deftly slice her throat with the folded blade within his cane. Quiet, efficient.
Ok, I and Accord are alike in some ways but I'll never think at wanting to kill someone over such mundane things. Citrine didn't do anything wrong, she just expressed an innocent opinion+ she doesn't want she and Othello to not be able to defend themselves/Accord if becomes necessary yet the only thing that Accord can think at is to slice her throat. Dude, calm your man tits :p. Stop treating your henchmen like they're young punching bags. Try to be more respectful towards them, these people are loyal to you and they're ready to die for you (2 Ambassadors already died). I'm starting to think that Accord have an excessive violent alien parasite in his brains and it influences his thoughts, making him permanently think about murder and mayhem without his knowledge that something influences him. Or maybe he's just a psycho, being influenced just by his own crazy mind. Anyway, his Passenger's subtle influence can be see in his obsession for traps and strategies to defeat his enemies (all parahumans seem to be obsessed over thinking at battle strategies and this psychological trait is so common that I start thinking that their Passengers influence them. Of course, there are differences: some parahumans are good at planning, some absolute SUCK). But I'm sure that Accord's obsessive–compulsive disorder is not influenced by any alien. I know how one with his affection feels and its not very exaggerated. I went to therapist to get rid of it and...lets say than not all the therapists are so good as Jessica :D. Anyway, the medication reduced the symptoms but...its still not easy to live with it. I wonder why Accord didn't tried any therapy or medication but maybe he doesn't see his affection as something bad that affect both him and the people around him. Or he sees, but he doesn't mind :).

He stopped partway up the stair case and faced her, saw her unharmed and unhurt. His Citrine, young, blond, wearing a goldenrod yellow evening gown and a gemstone studded mask. Her hair was immaculately styled, her makeup flawless, with a yellow lipstick that matched her outfit without being garish.
Accord's left hand folded over the right, both resting on top of the ornate cane.
She stopped, glanced at Othello, beside her. "I'm sorry, sir."
"Everything and everyone in the appropriate place," he said. "Not just in terms of physical position, but socially. Courtesy and acknowledgement of status are pivotal."
"I know, sir. It's not an excuse, but I was tired from the walk and the climb, and I was thinking of strategy, in case we were ambushed. I will endeavor to do better, sir."
"We all have to do better. We must all strive to improve. A step backwards is a tragic, dangerous misstep."
"Yes sir."
As if he were watching himself on film, he could see himself pushing her down the stairs. Not so steep a fall as to kill her, but the pain would enforce discipline, and the act of discipline would both help drive the point home for her and quiet his own thoughts.
But the bruises, cuts any broken bones, her inconsistent attempts at suppressing any sounds of pain as she joined him on the trek to the upper floor? It would only make things worse. More disorder.
The thoughts were so sharp they were difficult to distinguish from reality. He shifted his hold on his cane, staring into her eyes. She still stood before him.
With just the fractional movement of his hands, there was a change in her body language. Muscles in her neck and shoulders grew more taut, her breathing changed. She said, "Sir-"
"Shh," he said. She fell silent.
His left hand cupped her chin, his eyes never leaving hers. More of a reaction: her eyes flickered, moving mere milimeters as she strained to maintain eye contact. he could feel the warmth of her breath on his wrist as she exhaled slowly, the faintest of movements against his hand as she shifted her weight to stay absolutely still.
His thumb brushed against her cheek. Soft. He knew she dedicated an hour every morning to caring for her skin, another hour to her hair. Unlike hers, his gaze was unwavering, assured. In his peripheral vision, he could see her chest rise and fall. He wasn't a sexual creature, not in the base, animal sense. The idea of intercourse, it didn't appeal. The mess of it. But she was a thing of beauty, nonetheless. He could appreciate her from an aesthetic standpoint.
Citrine had shifted out of place, though. A square peg, just askew enough that it wouldn't slide into the hole designated for it. It jarred, and it cast a pallor on everything else that was right about her.
As his fingers moved, tracing the line of her jaw, drifting to her chin, the idea of cutting her throat invaded his thoughts. A quick, clean severing of vital flows. He could see the lines of tension in her neck as she stretched it, striving to keep it absolutely still.
Again, though, the disorder, the disruption. Blood was so messy, and as much as he might relish the opportunity to take thirty minutes from his day and clean up back in a more secure area, others would see, and it would throw too many things out of balance.
There wasn't a right answer here, and it bothered him.
Thinking rationally, he knew he was irritated. The location, even this city, they didn't suit him. He couldn't act on that, not yet, and the resulting dissatisfaction affected how he responded to the little things.
His fingers broke contact with her chin, one by one, as he contemplated his options. By the time his index finger had dropped away, he'd decided.
"You're my best ambassador, Citrine," he said.
She was breathing just a bit harder than she had been, as the tension that had drawn her entire body tight was released. A flush touched her cheeks as she responded, "Yes sir."
"I don't want to lose you."
"Yes sir, I'll do my utmost to ensure you don't have cause to."
"Please do," he said. He noted that the flush had spread down to her decolletage. Not the result of fear or anger. Another base emotion. "Citrine?"
......................CITRINE IS MORE CRAZY THAN OUR POOR MENTAL ILL ACCORD :o. She...she's sexually attracted (and possible in love) by him. Well, I can understand...given what kind of a SEX-SYMBOL Accord is, its impossible for a woman or a man not to be attracted by him exactly like a fly is attracted by shit :lol. I think that the Ambassador called Othello (his codename reminds me of Shakespeare's tragedy with the same name) is secretly attracted by our SEX-GOD too, he just doesn't want to admit yet ;). Step down, Brian, step down, Jack, leave the pedestal for our TALL, MYSTERIOUS and HANDSOME Accord, whose irresistible sexiness brings everyone to the yard. I already have so much fun with this Interlude and is easy to see that, just like is easy to see that Citrine is so much into FIFTY SHADES OF ACCORD. She's basically attracted by a violent, controlling man who spend most of his time around her thinking in which way he can kill her fast and efficient and her real name must be Anastasia Steele. Wildbow, you perv sick....
Ok, enough (for now) with Fifty Shades of Accord, let's read something else :lol.

"Calm yourself."
"Yes sir," she breathed the words.
He glanced at Othello, who wore a black suit and a mask divided between alabaster white and jet black. The man hadn't commented or flinched as Accord addressed Citrine.
Accord turned and started ascending the stairs again. "Quicken your paces. I refuse to be late."
Intrusive thoughts continued to plague him. He'd once described it as being very similar to the sensation one experienced on a train platform, a ledge or while standing in front of fast moving traffic, that momentary urge to simply step forward, to see what might happen.
Except the thoughts were sharper, with more weight to them, more physical than ethereal. His power was problem solving, and every problem demandedto be addressed. The solutions were posited whether he wanted them or not, one step and hundred-step plans alike. And it never ended.
Every flaw needed correcting, every imbalance needed to be weighed again. Mediocrity could be raised to greatness.
The greater the problem, the faster he could solve it. He'd taken the time one afternoon to solve world hunger. Six hours and twenty-six minutes with the internet and a phone on hand, and he'd been able to wrap his head around the key elements of the problem. He'd drafted a document in the nine hours that followed, doing little more than typing and tracking down exact numbers. A hundred and fifty pages, formatted and clear, detailing who would need to do what, and the costs therein.
It had been bare bones, with room for further documents detailing the specifics, but the basic ideas were there. Simple, measured, undeniable. Every major country and ruler had been accounted for, in terms of the approaches necessary to get them on board, given their particular natures and the political climate of their area. Production, distribution, finance and logistics, all sketched out and outlined in clear, simple language. Eighteen years, three point one trillion dollars. Not so much money that it was impossible. A great many moderate sacrifices from a number of people.
Even when he'd handed over the binder with the sum total of his work, his employer had been more concerned with the fact that he'd shown up late to work for his job. His boss had barely looked at the binder before calling it impossible, then demanded Accord return to work. A mind like his, in an office handling economic oversight within the PRT, looking for the precogs and thinkers who were trying to manipulate the markets to their own ends.
It was only one imbalance, one irregularity, but it had been an important one. It had nagged at him, demanded resolution. He had to prove it was possible.
So he'd siphoned the very funds that his department was managing. It hadn't been hard to redistribute some of the wealth that the villains and rogues were trying to manipulate. One ambiguous evil for the sake of an undeniable good. He covered his tracks flawlessly.
In the process, he failed to account for the full breadth of his newest coworker's talents. Thinker powers interfered with one another, and despite his ability to work with that particular drawback, even help them to work in concert, the clairvoyant had found him out. He'd been caught, jailed, and subsequently freed by the jailbreak specialist he'd contacted well in advance.
Here he was, years later. Nobody he'd contacted had taken to his ideas, and government after government had failed to thoroughly read the documents he sent them. Nobody raised the subject of his work to the United Nations or any major political body. They were too interested in maintaining the status quo.
His plans weren't observably closer to fruition, but he had contacts and he had wealth, and that went a long way. He would take the slow, steady path to victory. The binder relating to world hunger had been expanded on, with the addition of further binders to detailing the specifics. Other sets of binders had joined it, each relating to a major issue: disease, population, government, energy, and climate. He spent an hour and a half every morning ensuring that everything was up to date with recent changes to the economy and international politics.
The recent altercation with the Slaughterhouse Nine in Boston had been a setback, but he remained confident. Twenty-three years to see it all through. Twenty-three years to bring the world into order. Everything was a step towards those ends.
In part, he almost have the same mentality as Sophia. He thinks that everyone should have their place in society but he doesn't divide people in weak and strong, but in people who rule and people who are ruled. Masters and servants. Leaders and obedient people. Hmm, ok, I can forgive him for this VERY WRONG mentality, maybe because he seems to want to help the world. He basically became a villain because he saw that he can't solve the world hunger if he's a honest, lawful guy. Hmm, I can agree with him here, he wanted to do GOOD but nobody paid any attention to his efforts and he had to steal money and he was jailed...I can agree that people in power treated him unfair and disinterested :(. They don't have the interest to solve the world hunger and poverty, all they care is to make wars, to steal resources and to intensify their strategic positions :(. Accord is trying to do good without killing people in order to reduce the population (like some "people"- even in our real world- believe that is something necessary to be done) or to create more parahumans (most of them fucked up in their heads) like someone that we know so well is currently doing. He's doing good through rather peaceful means even if he's a villain and a corrupt guy. And now you will probably ask me: -do you have something against Accord's methods to help people? You should have nothing against, he doesn't abuse children, doesn't kill innocents, doesn't want to become a dictator, doesn't brainwash/mind control people, doesn't make horrible experiments, he doesn't do anything you won't like him to do (as far as you know)-
I'll respond that while I don't have anything to reproach regarding Accord's methods (YET), I noticed that he doesn't genuinely wants to help the world, he only does that because he feels like the world is not in order and he wants to correct it ;). His obsessive compulsive disorder+ his power to always look after solutions for any problem are the ones making him doing that, not his pure, good heart. Sadly, one of the few villains who make so much efforts to help people doesn't genuinely care about people themselves, he cares more about putting the world in order so he'll be happy and feel better. He wants to help for his selfish purposes. I don't like this but I'll not judge him because I'm a rather selfish person too (I'll not break my personal code not even if the whole world be in immediate danger if I'll not break it :p), I admit it and I'll be hypocrite calling Accord selfish while I'm being selfish myself. We both want to remake the world into a better place for the people who deserve, but we're both eaten from inside out by selfish desires/thoughts, different, but still selfish. I like to see myself as a selfless person but there are moments likes this when I realize that I can be very selfish without even noticing this at first.

Even this, as much as the setting and the people grated.
They reached the top floor and came face to face with the Teeth. Seven parahumans, wearing costumes that bristled with blades, spikes and spines. They managed to wear the trophies of their defeated enemies without looking primitive. Teeth, eyes, dessicated body parts and bones were worked into their costumes, a collective theme that promised aggression and violent retaliation for any slight.
Accord tightened his grip on his cane. He itched to end them. His mind burned with hundreds of ideas on how to do it. Traps, ploys, ways to set them against one another, or ways to use the other people in the room against them.
The Teeth didn't get in his way as he led his two ambassadors around the periphery of their group. There were no windows, and the wind sent minuscule shards of glass dancing over the tiled floor, periodically glinting as they caught the light from the flood-lamps that were set around the room.
"Welcome, Accord," Tattletale greeted them.
He surveyed the group at the end of the long table. They weren't holding back, in making a show of power. No less than six dogs were chained in place behind them, each mutated and grown to massive size by Bitch's power. Their number was bolstered by the addition of a massive spider and a scorpion, both wrought of black cloth. Silk? Skitter's silk?
Regent stood by Imp, a costume of predominant white contrasted by a costume of black. They seemed to be exchanging murmured words.
Bitch wore a mask that looked much like her dogs did, bearing a black jacket with thick, shaggy fur around the edges of the hood and collar. She didn't flinch, even as one of her larger mutants growled and gnashed its teeth inches from her head. The creature's ire was directed at Accord, not her.
Parian's style of dress had changed from the images Accord had seen in his research. Her hair was no longer blonde, but black, her frock matching. The white mask she wore had a crack running down one side. She was very diminutive compared to the others, almost demure with the way she sat at one side of the table, hands folded, as though she didn't want to be a part of this.
Tattletale, by contrast, was seated on the cloth scorpion, just beside a large monitor. She was cavalier, her hair wind-tousled, disrespectful by her very body language, sitting askew.
He had to work to ignore her. He turned his attention to the figures at the head of the table. Grue stood behind the chair, one hand set on the backrest, a demonic visage wreathed in absolute darkness. Skitter sat at the end, backed by her forces, looking over the room. Bugs swarmed her from the shoulders down, but Accord could note a shawl and hints of protective armor. Neither the yellow lenses of her mask or the expanse of black cloth that covered her face gave any indication of her mood or expression. Either the images that he'd seen had been misleading, or she'd done some work to her mask, making the mandible-like sections of armor that ran forward from her jawline sharper and more pronounced.
Dismissing Tattletale's greeting, Accord spoke to Skitter, "We finally meet. Good evening."
The third meeting between various villains groups, after the one against ABB and the other one against S9. Parian looks AWESOME and total BADASS as the reluctant villainess she's trying to be :D. You still don't fool anyone trying to be the evil doll girl, Parian, you're such a sweetheart that is so easy to be seen by anyone even if you'll dress yourself as the most evil motherfucker ever. I like your spider and scorpion constructs, btw. Skitter influenced you too much, right? Flachette will have a stroke (God, I hope NOT) if she'll find out :p. Tattletale is sitting on the cloth scorpion construct like a BOSS she always is. Man, I need to see a fanart with this meeting because everyone (except for the FUCKERS Teeth) looks freaking awesome. Too bad I can't draw not even to save my life because I'd have create art for this scene. This scene itself is a piece of art.
Speaking about Teeth, they're so fucking disgusting in person that if I were in Accord's place, I'd have killed them (fuck any alliance with these guys), not just imagine killing them. They surely like to kill their victims and wear their bones/organs as trophies. Maybe they're cannibals too, I wonder why they don't have a kill order already. But then I remember that they recently made their appearance (years after being destroyed by S9. Awesome how S9 doesn't like at all primitive fuckers like Teeth and Merchants. After all, S9 are some intelligent and enlightened fuckers, they have their own standards :D) and heroes doesn't know too much about Teeth to put a kill order on their heads. Anyway, I full agree with Accord, these primitive cannibals should be ERADICATED. Not making any alliance with them.

"Good evening," she said, her voice augmented by the accompanying buzzes and drones of countless bugs in the area. "Have a seat."
He took a seat midway down the length of the twelve-foot table, and his ambassadors sat on either side of him.
The Fallen must not have been terribly far behind him, as they arrived less than a minute after he did. Valefor and Eligos.
Valefor wore a delicate-looking mask without eye-holes: a woman's upper face with closed eyes. Beneath the mask, he had a sly, perpetual smirk with tattoos that colored his lips black and extended from the corners. The ink depicted fangs poking from thin lips that nearly reached his jaw, the points alternating up and down. His costume was almost effeminate, with white and silver feathers featuring heavily on flowing white clothes that clung to his narrow body, including a corset that drew his waist in.
The costume was meant to invoke images of the Simurgh, no doubt. Crass. Eligos' costume wasn't so fine, suited more for a brawl, but it, too, conjured up thoughts of an Endbringer: the Behemoth. Obsidian horns that swooped back over his head, heavy armor that resembled rhino hide in texture and claws built into his gloves.
"Valefor, Eligos, members of the Teeth, now that we're all here, I'll ask that you take a seat," Skitter said.
"Why should we listen to you?" Valefor asked, his voice was incongruous with his outfit, bearing a slight southern twang. He leaned over one chair, his arms folded over the backrest, taunting.
"It's customary for there to be violent retaliation if someone causes trouble at a meeting like this," Skitter said. "Usually involving every other party that's present."
"I'm not saying I'm intending to cause trouble," Valefor said. "I'm wondering why we should follow the schoolgirl. I'm sure everyone here saw the news. Did you see the news, Butcher?"
"Yes," the leader of the Teeth answered. A woman stepped out of the midst of the group of Teeth. She was elegant, long necked and long-limbed, with her hair tied up in a high ponytail. Her mask and armor had an Asian style to it, though the costume were studded and trimmed with a number of wickedly barbed blades. More incongruous, there were three bleached skulls strung to one another and hanging around one shoulder.
The costume, it was asymmetrical, lacking harmony, trying to do too many things at once. The samurai, the headhunter, the bloodletter. None of it fit the title she wore: Butcher.
Images flickered through Accord's mind. Ways to obliterate both costume and wearer. More difficult than it seemed, given just who she was.
As if to punctuate Accord's line of thinking, she effortlessly lifted a gatling gun and set it down on the end of the table. The sheer mass of the weapon was imposing enough that Accord momentarily wondered if the other end of the long wooden table would lift off the ground.
The woman very deliberately refused the offer to sit. She'd spoken only one word, but managed to convey a great deal with her actions.
"Very embarrassing," Valefor mused aloud. "Really, I don't see why you should get to sit at the head of the table. A sixteen year old girl, a victim of bullying, it doesn't conjure up the most imposing image, does it?"
"If everyone agreed to suspend the usual rules, I would be more than happy to go head to head with your group," Skitter replied.
"Of course you would. You outnumber us."
"Just me," Skitter answered him.
"That so?" Valefor smiled, considering.
Accord surveyed the situation. Valefor was a stranger, less in terms of his ability to hide, and more in his ability to engage in subterfuge. He had only to look on a target with his naked eye, and the fight was over. It was no small wonder, really, that he'd styled himself after the Simurgh. The effect was all too similar, in how the victim was often unaware of what had happened until it was too late.
I don't know which one of these two groups of fuckers I hate the most. The cannibals/sadistic Teeth (the name of their leader- Butcher- is so damn fitting and she seems to have super-strength as her power) or the incestuous, Endbringer lovers Fallen. Both of them are beyond disgusting and both of them deserve to be ERADICATED. I wouldn't mind if Butcher will use Valefor's eyes as her earrings while Skitter will sic her most poisoned bugs on her :lol. This arrogant asshole Valefor who keep underestimating Skitter and probably rape his mother and/or his sisters (I won't be surprised if one/or more of his relatives is/are already pregnant with him. As much as I already HATE them and I know how angry and disgusted they'll make me, I kind of want now an Fallen Interlude. Only to see how sick these "people" can be) have the power to stop any fight only by looking at his enemy with his naked eye. Hmm, this seem to me more like MIND CONTROL than a Stranger ability. Its possible for Valefor to be a Master/Stranger just like Accord is certainly a Thinker/Tinker. Anyway, Valefor and Teeth make me have some VIOLENT thoughts about them everytime when they open their mouth. I'm so in synch with Accord it hurts. Except for wanting to kill Tattletale. All I want is to pull her into a hug and declare my eternal ADORATION for her. All Accord wants is to kill her for some unknown reasons. Accord, I don't like you when you're thinking like this about Tattletale. You piss me off more than its allowed. Tattletale is life and love and I won't allow not even to a violent thought to hurt her :D.

Yet Skitter didn't seem to mind. Was it a decoy? An empty costume? No.
A trap?
Accord studied the area around Valefor. What would he do, with her abilities?
He saw it: almost invisible, except where the light caught it at the right angle. Threads, surrounding Valefor, trailing from his corset, his elbows and knees.
They were all trailing in the direction of the window. If they were pulled taut, Valefor would be dragged outside. Depending on how well they held, he'd either dangle or fall to the street below.
"Valefor," Accord spoke, the layers of his mask shifting to emulate his smile, "Trust me when I say you already lost the fight."
"Is that so?"
"I won't spoil the conclusion if you're eager to see this through. One less threat to worry about. But if I may offer my own opinion, I think the response she gave, given the situation, was eminently reasonable. I gained respect for her, seeing how it unfolded."
"Then you're a fool."
"Regardless, I won't condone fighting here. It sets a bad precedent."
"Yes," Butcher said.
Valefor frowned.
"That's that, then," Skitter said.
Accord studied her. He could see her swarm in the shadows behind the floodlights, moving in anticipation of a fight, no doubt. Their presence nettled him almost as badly as if they'd been physically crawling on him. They were all of the issues he'd had with the glass, but they were alive. He knew he could make them stop, make them go away, simply by giving an order to his ambassadors. Not that it was a possibility.
He glanced at Skitter. "I think you and I both know you'd win the fight. But how final would the outcome be? You're in the seat of power. More villains will arrive with every passing day. Are you prepared to kill?"
"Is this some kind of head game?" Valefor asked.
"It isn't any manner of head game," Accord responded. "I'm curious. Her response would shed a great deal of light on the discussion tonight."
"Yes," Skitter gave her belated response. "But I'd like to keep to the unwritten rules, as abused as they have been, lately. Killing should be a last resort."
"I see." She has some other trap on hand? The bugs at the edge of the room? "Can I ask if- no, wait. Don't tell me. I'll enjoy it more if I discover it for myself."
"Very well. Now, if everyone would be seated, we can begin," Skitter said, resting both elbows on the table.
It wasn't quite straight, Accord noted. The table was askew, in relation to the rest of the room. Solutions flickered through his mind's eye, ranging from ones as simple as standing to push the table into a proper position to a flat-faced wrecking ball that could slam into the building's side.
No, he had to focus. He could distract himself by figuring out Skitter's contingency plans.
Butcher seemed to come to a decision, but that was normal for her, to take some time, ruminate. To discuss, for lack of a better word. She sat at the end of the table opposite Skitter. She was tall enough to be seen head and shoulders over the massive gun. Her followers didn't sit, but stood in a half-circle around her, a mirror to Skitter's own group.
"Valefor," Skitter spoke, and her voice was more ominous, hinting at the sheer number of bugs lurking at the edges of the room, "Either take a seat or leave."
Valefor glanced over the room, then shrugged, as if he didn't care anymore, sitting. Eligos followed his cue.
And Accord realized Skitter's contingency plan in the next instant. Silk wasn't just attached to Valefor, to him, even. She'd connected silk to the furniture.
The table. She could drag the table with the silk lines, each laid out to fit in the gaps between tiles, nearly invisible. In doing so, she'd sandwich any one group between the table and a wall, or leave them clinging for a grip, almost falling.
How would she drag it? Another mutant dog? Some counterweight?
Regardless of the answer, Accord felt oddly pleased with himself. The danger posed by this trap didn't even concern him.
"Let's talk business," Skitter said. "Whether you like it or not, the Undersiders have prior claim on this city."
"A matter of a week and a half," Valefor said.
"Prior claim," Skitter repeated herself. "We have rules, and if you bend or break these rules, we'll be forced to act."
"I've already discussed your rules with Tattletale," Accord said.
"You had your chance to accept the terms we were offering then. Now the rules we're stipulating have changed. No killing. Cross that line and we kill you. Several members of our team are capable of doing that without you knowing we're anywhere nearby. If you're lucky, Imp slits your throat with you none the wiser, or Regent has one of your underlings stab you in the back, and you go quick. If you're unlucky, Bitch's dogs tear you to shreds, and it's a long, drawn out, painful process. If you're very unlucky, you get the worst of both worlds, and you deal with me."
"What if there's someone that has to die?" Valefor asked. "Sometimes killing is necessary."
"You come to me. I decide," Skitter said.
"There's no new detail here," Accord said. "Tattletale outlined much the same thing, though with less in the way of threats."
"I'm not even close to done. Property. We will find out about any territory you acquire. Whatever you pay for the land, you pay us a third. That includes the cost of buying the land itself, rent and taxes. If you're not paying property taxes or rent, we still expect an appropriate amount."
"Expensive," Accord said.
"You could have accepted our earlier offer," Skitter replied. "If you want out from under that particular constraint, any of you may fold your organizations into ours, coming under our direct authority."
"This is a passive takeover, then," Accord said. "You intend to put the squeeze on us until we cave."
"I am very, very tired of people telling me what I intend," Skitter answered him. "Our territory borders are marked with our individual signatures. Traffic in anything illegal or harm someone within any of these areas, and we retaliate. Target any of us, and we retaliate as a whole."
"It doesn't sound like it leaves us much elbow room," Accord replied. "I have yet to see an area that wasn't already marked as being in one territory or another."
"Then you grasp my meaning." Skitter added, "My next point: during any Endbringer event, or the possible incident at the end of the world, you send half of your powered membership or three members to assist, whichever is more."
"This is bordering on the ridiculous," Valefor said. "You expect us to fight the Endbringers?"
"You? No."
"You're picking a fight," Valefor said.
"I'm giving each of you the option of obeying, leaving or fighting," Skitter said. "The Ambassadors will accept the deal as posed. They won't like it, Accord may even hate me, because of my powers and my less predictable nature, but they'll accept."
"Is that so?" Accord asked.
"Yes. You'll do it because you have resources that you can use to leverage what unfolds when they've finished scouting the other side of the portal and open it up for business. You wouldn't come all the way here and then leave because you didn't like the terms."
"There are the other options."
"Fighting us? You have only two underlings that survived the attack in Boston. As strong as they are, you're not equipped to fight. You'll join us because it's the fastest route to get what you really want."
Ah, Accord thought. Tattletale filled her in.
Skitter leaned back, one hand resting on the table. "What was it you said to Tattletale? Everyone and everything has a place?"
"More or less."
"Your place isn't on a battlefield, opposite the Undersiders. It's in this city, building an infrastructure and gathering resources for your long term plans. You'll accept an expensive rent and a limitation on criminal activity for that very reason."
"You would have me risk good help on fruitless fights against immortal killing machines," Accord said.
"That too," Skitter replied. "I don't expect the Fallen will accept the terms, with the restriction about fighting Endbringers, but I doubt they're long for this city anyways."
Valefor stood from the table. Eligos joined him. Together, they strode from the room, silent.
That was a touch rash," Accord commented, "insulting them."
Man, I hate Valefor so much, I want to strangle him with that corset he's wearing :rage:. But not before I'll pull out his eyes so he can't use his power on me anymore. Why Fallen doesn't have a kill order on their incestuous heads? They're not only crazy and killers (Skitter said that Fallen leaders are murderers and I suppose that this Valefor is one of the leader) but they're also completely USELESS in a fight against Endbringers, not because they can't fight but because Endbringers are the LOVE of their lives and they can't bring themselves to hurt their idols. I understand that heroes doesn't want to kill/send to Birdcage some of of the villains because they help with Endbringers but Fallen not only doesn't help but they're Endbringers' allies (they'd help Endbringers against humanity than viceversa :anger:). They don't have any usefulness in society+ they're demented criminals. But again, they're a new element of evil and Protectorate needs time to decide what they want to do with them: Birdcage or death. Sadly to think that Undersiders are not even nearly as bad as Teeth and Fallen+ they helped the heroes more than once, yet they had a kill order on their heads :(.
Speaking about Undersiders, they surely WON during this meeting. They literally "DESTROYED" everyone, including their WICKED DAMN SEXY host :lol. Everyone will have to pay rent and taxes if they want to hold territory, NO KILLING innocents or Undersiders and their allies and the obligation (except for Fallen) to fight against Endbringers. Accord, Skitter gave you a very hard blow (demanding so much from you) and you still took it like a man, not like a little girl (Valefor and Eligos reactions :lol). My admiration for you just increased.

"I wasn't lying. Imp and Haven will handle them soon."
"Valefor is more cunning than you'd assume. An arrogant young man, impetuous and immature, but history suggests he's rather cunning when he puts his mind to something."
"Not a concern," Skitter said.
"If you say so."
Skitter turned her attention to the other leader. "Butcher?"
"No," the woman replied, standing from the table.
"I didn't think so. Do you have any other business you'd like to bring up, while we're all here?"
"You die," Butcher said. "You can't kill me. I will win."
With that, her longest statement yet, she turned and walked away.
"Not good enemies to have," Accord commented. It was just his group and the Undersiders now.
"We'll manage."
"The first Butcher had super strength, durability, and the ability to inflict enough pain at a distance that his enemies went into cardiac arrest. His other powers only became evident later. He was killed by a subordinate, and the man who would later be known as Butcher Two inherited a fraction of his powers and a share of his consciousness."
"Butcher Three inherited it too, along with a share of Two's powers and consciousness," Tattletale said. "He was a hero, though."
Accord rankled at the fact that she'd spoken out of turn. Her voice rang in his ears, as though each syllable were the echoing toll of a bell, growing louder with each iteration. Out of turn, out of sync, out of place.
He bit his tongue. "Yes. And the two voices in the hero's head worked together to drive him mad. He was gone from this world well before he died in battle. The Teeth reclaimed the power, and the legacy has largely remained within the group since, each successor inherting powers of the ones before. The voices and consciousnesses only work with rightful heirs, members of their group who challenge the leader and beat him in a fair match."
"Which one is this?" Regent asked.
"Fourteen," Tattletale said.
"This one's number fourteen?" Regent asked. "Which means she's got thirteen sets of powers?"
Another one, speaking out of turn, Accord thought.
Citrine was giving him a sidelong glance. He met her eyes, shook his head fractionally.
Tattletale answered, "Only a small share of each power. Don't forget she's got thirteen voices in her head, giving her advice and helping her work stuff out, and all the powers she brought to the table, besides. Her attacks don't miss. She imbues them with an effect which means they bend space so they strike her target, Bullets turn in midair, swords curve, all means she's pretty much guaranteed to hit you if her attack reaches far enough."
No problem with Valefor. Sneak behind him, pull out his eyes then his power will be useless to him (I already imagine this scene and I hope that Skitter will have this image in her mind too. Just in case :D). Imp is the best at taking Valefor down. The big problem is Miss Man Eater, the woman with hundreds of powers. Seriously, she have 13 personalities, of each previous deceased Butcher, each with lots of powers (the first one had 3 powers)- I think that the Passenger collects each personality and give them to the new Butcher who manage to kill the previous Burtcher. The new Butcher killed (and very possible ATE) the last one and got his personality+ the other 12 personalities. She's basically the Worm version of Legion from X-Men (an Omega level mutant suffering from schizophrenia, with hundreds of different personalities and each one with their powers). David, I just found your long lost sister :D. The only way to kill Butcher is NOT to kill her (because anyone who kill her will inherit her personality and voice+ the other 13 personalities) but to make her KILL HERSELF without controlling her somehow ;). Regent can't use his power on her because he'll control her and he'll be fucked if she'll die while under his control. Maybe Tattletale can convince her to kill herself but...this is called manipulation and Tattletale will end up killing her indirectly and be supreme fucked. What if Bitch's dogs will rip Butcher in pieces? Bitch will not be involved because she doesn't mind control her dogs and the Passenger will not affect animals, it will go away along with the 14 personalities. Ok, maybe I'll have more ideas about how Butcher can be killed without being killed, this is fun because I really, really want Butcher and Valefor to bit the dust :D.

She hopped down from the scorpion's head and walked around the table until she was opposite Accord.
One by one, the Undersiders who'd been standing behind Skitter found seats. The other groups had left, and they were making themselves more at home, now. Regent put his boots on the table, right in front of Imp, who pushed them away. Overly familiar. Presumptuous.
Accord closed his eyes for a moment. The table was unbalanced now, in a metaphorical sense, but it felt very real. "I don't recall anyone giving you leave to sit."
Tattletale raised her eyebrows. "I don't recall anyone giving you permission to complain. Our territory, our house, our rules."
I could kill you. Car bombs, other traps. I could manipulate the heroes into going after you. When I direct my ambassadors, they win their fights. You'd break in the face of what I could do, the pressure I could inflict, everything and everyone in the world suddenly a threat, with me pulling the strings.
He drew in a deep breath. Too much at stake, to say such things. In his most patient tone, as though he were speaking to a well meaning but misguided eight year old, he explained, "I'm talking about the way things are meant to be, Tattletale, understand?"
Tattletale bristled as though he'd slapped her.
"Enough," Skitter said. Her voice was quiet.
The silence that followed was both surprising and relieving. She had control over her subordinates. Good. It took a measure of talent to exert control over such disturbed individuals.
He studied the girl. She was composed, despite the fact that less than twelve hours had passed since her identity had been revealed to the world. And her bugs… it had grated how disordered they had been, but now that he was looking at the ones she wore like a second layer of clothing, he could see how they were ordered, all in formation.
Skitter was calm, collected, reasonable but willing to act with a heavy hand when needed. Clever. She thought at the scale necessary for a true leader.
"Do you accept the deal?" Skitter asked. "Best if I ask now, because your answer dictates the tone of the conversation that follows."
"I accept," he replied. She was right: he really had no choice in the matter. He'd dealt with worse deals and worse circumstances before. "I suspect there will be friction, and we will have our disagreements, but we'll be able to find a common ground. You and I are very similar people."
She didn't reply. The silence yawned, and his fingertips twitched involuntarily, dangerously close to the trigger that would turn his cane into a weapon.
"In saying that," he said, doing his best to remain level, "I was inviting a response."
"And I was taking a second to think before giving it," she responded.
Starting a sentence with a conjunction. He grit his teeth and smiled, his mask moving to emulate the expression. "Beg pardon."
"Let's talk about details," Skitter said.
"punches Accord repeteadly, ignoring everyone in the room". Stop thinking bad shit about MY Tattletale, you bastard. You're my favorite rogue villain, Accord but Tattletale is my favorite girl/parahuman/villain/everything (YES, Accord is such a crazy, sadistic but fascinating and smart bastard that I can't help but like him more than I thought I'll like him. Such a sharp contrast between him and Valefor/Butcher, he's more human than they'll ever be despite having permanently thoughts about killing people and creating traps over traps. Look, even if he's so obsessed with killing people in his mind, he doesn't actually act according to his impulses, having impressive self control. While Valefor would have killed everyone in the room if they wouldn't outnumbered him and his buddy :D). So, you have to stop imagining killing her because I feel very uncomfortable when I see characters thinking bad about her when she actually doesn't do anything to anger them.
Accord admires Skitter. Awesome, Skitter, you impressed Accord, you won his heart. Accord will hate me so much because I start a lot of sentences with "and". I'm not obsessed with order when it comes to writing or talking so this is the third time when I'm not in synch with Accord :p.

The city is too dirty. Too disordered. The thoughts were intruding again, oppressive, insistent. They were at the point where they were repeating, cycling back on one another. He'd have to do something to break the cycle. It could be time spent at a workbench, sorting out the projects in his binders or eliminating some of the more chaotic elements.
Murder was out, but there were other options. He'd sent capes to the Yàngbǎn before. It was more constructive than killing. Cleaner. It also built relationships with the C.U.I..
"Talk," he said, after too many long minutes of silence.
"We can take them, sir," Othello said. "Any one group, we could handle, but not two groups at once."
"I agree," Accord said. "Do you think you could handle them if things went sour?"
"With little trouble, sir. The only ones I'd wonder about are Tattletale, Imp, Valefor and Fourteen," Othello replied.
"Imp and Valefor… your stranger powers against theirs makes for a troublesome fight. Imp is the one I would worry about first. Unpredictable, impossible to track."
"I'm suspicious my power cancels hers out, sir. My other self saw her get close to Butcher. I think she had a weapon."
"Interesting. Citrine?"
"I don't know, sir. Forgive my saying so, but a lot of people have thought they could handle the Undersiders, and they were wrong. I don't know how my power would interact with theirs."
"Very true. Sensible. I'll need to recruit, regardless of whether we encounter them. Focus on the Teeth and the Fallen for the time being."
"Yes sir," the pair echoed him.
Skitter and Tattletale, he thought. They were the real issues for him. Tattletale's power might have seemed similar to his own, but it was almost the inverse. He'd heard himself described as falling somewhere in between a thinker and a tinker, and perhaps that was apt. It was how he applied his power, starting with the end result and building backwards, and the designs that he fashioned that were so tinker-like. But his real ability was as a thinker, involving planning, awareness and ideas beyond the reach of the unpowered.
He hoped it wouldn't come to that, but he had to plan for every contingency.
They'd reached their accomodations, a newly built office building. He owned the two uppermost floors, and was buying the floors beneath as the owners agreed to the sales. Soon he would have it set up his way, with escape routes and traps to target his enemies.
"Othello," he said.
"Yes sir?"
"Send the five first tier employees with the best grades to my room. I expect them in fifteen minutes."
"Of course, sir."
"Once you're done, retire for the evening. Rest well," he said. "There are big things on the horizon."
"Yes sir," the two ambassadors echoed him.
Only two. It wasn't enough.
He settled in his room. Too much of the furniture was pre-made. He preferred things he had made himself. Cleaner, simpler. He knew where it had all come from, knew how it was put together. Accomodations he had crafted himself were as soothing as the outside world wasn't.
The five employees arrived right on time. Satisfactory. He opened the door to his room and invited them in. Three men, two women, immaculate, all in proper business attire.
His vetting process was strict, and each step up the ladder required both his invitation and the employee's acceptance. Each step required them to prove their worth, to face progressively more stress and heavier workloads, and to hold themselves up to his increasingly exacting standards of perfection.
It might have made for reality television, if it weren't for the blood that was shed along the way. Theirs and others.
"You are being promoted," he said. "After tomorrow, you will be my ambassadors, my representatives to the rest of the world."
The displays of emotion were well hidden, but they were there. They were pleased.
"That is all."
Wordless, the five marched out of his room.
Withdrawing his cell phone, Accord dialed a long distance number.
He smiled a little at that. He wasn't much for humor, but it had its places.
The ringing stopped, but there was no voice on the other end.
"Accord. Brockton Bay."
The doorway opened at one end of his room. His hair stirred as air pressure equalized between the two planes.
The Number Man stood on the other side, in the white hallway with white walls.
"Five vials. Of the same caliber as the last set, same price."
"Done," The Number Man said. "Where do we stand?"
"It's promising, but I wouldn't make any guarantees."
"Of course. Everything's progressing according to plan, then?"
Accord nodded, once. "As well as we might hope. We lost Coil, but the Undersiders may serve as a model in his absence."
"Good to know. I'll inform the Doctor."
The gateway closed. Accord sat down on the end of the bed, then lay back, staring at the ceiling.
Coil had been the focus of the test, unaware. The man had also been Accord's friend, the one who'd sold him the PRT databases. His death had been a tragic thing, on many levels. There were few men Accord considered worthy of being his friend.
Now it hinged on the Undersiders. They'd taken up Coil's legacy, after a fashion, and just like Coil, their ambitions fell in line with Cauldron's. The organization's hopes rode on them and their decisions. Accord's hopes rode on them: his twenty-three year plan, saving the world from the worst kind of disorder. In the end, they were responsible for billions.
Not that he could tell them or change his actions in respect to them. It would defeat the point.
Everything and everyone had their respective places in the grand scheme of things. For one sixteen year old, the decisions she made in the immediate future would have more impact than she imagined.
It all came down to whether she could embrace this new role, and whether the city could embrace her in turn.
Accord drifted off to sleep, his weary mind grateful from the respite from the endless assault.
Ok...ok. Accord, saying about Coil's death being a tragedy is like saying about Hitler or Stalin's death being a tragedy. The same shit. But, I get it, he was your best friend, the guy that you loved (as a friend) and its a possibility that you genuinely believed that Coil's intentions were actually good, just like yours, and he wanted to help people, not become a frightening dictator. Maybe you didn't know about Dinah, maybe you didn't know about Coil's willingness to kill so many innocent people for power or for revenge (the reporters, Echidna released over an entire city), there were so many details about Coil that you probably weren't aware of so I'm not going to judge you for feeling sorry about his "tragic" death :). Actually, I can see a lot of differences between Accord and Coil, its like Accord is a freaking angel compared with the demon Coil, even if he's a very flawed angel. Accord "kills" people only in his head (so far), Coil had fun torturing killing his employees in various timelines, killed these reporters for power and released Echidna as revenge. Accord's employees work for him on their own ACCORD, Coil forced Lisa to work for him, blackmailed Travelers to help him and lets not talk now about Dinah...Accord wants to help the world, despite not doing it from the goodness of his heart, Coil only cared about himself and power. Both of them are involved with Cauldron (I really expected Accord to work for them even if I never actually said. I mean, it was obvious, since he have so much money and Cauldron needs powerful villains for their plans to work. They failed with Coil, they're trying with Accord and Undersiders) but maybe Accord doesn't know what exactly Cauldron is doing with Case53 (and many of Cauldron's stuff that they keep hidden from their clients/accomplices) so he's might not be directly involved like Alexandria is ;).
Now lets talk a bit about powers. Accord seems to not be able to turn off his power, just like Tattletale, the person that he hates the most maybe because her power is inverse to his (he must find solutions for problems if he knows the problems well enough while Tattletale finds enough information about someone or something, just by knowing tiny bits about them and she instantly knows the solution for problems) and this knowledge disturbs his mind, making him hate her probably against his own will. Or maybe they didn't got so well in the past (Tattletale must know Accord for some time since she worked for Coil and Accord was Coil's bestie), something similar with Tattletale/Faultline mutual hate.
Othello's power is apparently...to have a doppelganger of himself that can cancel Imp's power :o? Hope, for his own sake, that the doppelganger is NOT a backstabber called Iago. No detail about Citrine's power. Accord is a Thinker AND a Tinker, I was right. Tinkers are the best, no wonder why I like Accord.

Mannequin: "makes gestures with his limbs like he wants to say on a sad tone"- But I'm an exception.
Me: Yes, you fucker, you're an exception "runs away, screaming"
Bonesaw: Aww, thank you.
Me: With pleasure, cutie.
Bonesaw: Can you be my new doll? My last one is broken, I can't fix him well enough. I promise that I'll replace your eyes with doll eyes so you'll look pretty. Skin you alive and replace your natural skin with an artificial one, so smooth at touch. I'll sew your lips in a shape of a little heart and...
Me: Fuck this shit "screams while running"
"her voice is hoarse because of screaming" Good night and sleep well my friends. Good night to you too, Accord, you sexy beast "is beaten to a pulp by a very jealous Citrine" Fuuuuuuuuuuuu......
 
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One bit of irony....the same thugs who attacked Emma in the alley were the same guys Taylor beat the crap out of Interlude 14. That's another bit of irony. Taylor broke the ones who broke Emma.
 

WOW, THIS IS A REALLY STUNNING PIECE OF ART. I'm impressed by every single details and how PERFECT Wildbow's characters were drawn. I already saw a couple of fanart made by this author and I can certainly say that is my favorite Worm artist. The best one. Tattletale and Bitch's dogs look like the best things ever in this picture <3
Teeth look exactly like the people both I and Accord want to kill in some gruesome ways everytime when we lay our eyes on them. And not just because of the way they're dressed "gets slapped over her mouth by Accord for starting the sentence with "and" SIGHHHHHHHHH.
I wanted to ask a really dumb question: who's the old woman dressed entirely in white in the center? :p but I realized that is MOTHER FUCKER (literally) Valefor and he looks like an "old woman" because of his long hair and outfit. He also appears to have his mouth sewed :D. I hope that- canonically- someone will actually sew his mouth....eyes and everything else :D. This fucker is downright annoying and creepy.
What I don't understand is NOT the absence of Imp (its almost impossible for any artist to remember her and is very understandable) BUT what Flachette is doing right next to Parian? The asian looking teenager with a mask similar with Tattletales is Flachette, right? What she's doing here? She's a hero, not a villain. Besides, maybe Flachette could supervise the villain meeting as a hero delegate, but there's not a single mention of Flachette during the meeting (not even in tags). Did I miss something?
Too bad I can't see Accord from the front and admire his unique mainly sexyne... :D "stops herself before attracting Citrine's attention again".
 
One bit of irony....the same thugs who attacked Emma in the alley were the same guys Taylor beat the crap out of Interlude 14. That's another bit of irony. Taylor broke the ones who broke Emma.

Yes, I already realized this during Emma's Interlude, when I recognized Yan name. Basically, Taylor avenged Emma in a sad/hilarious irony of fate :D.
 
Imago 21.1
Hello, my friends. I just recovered from the beating that Citrine gave me after I made her jealous when I crushed over her sexy beast boss. Long time have passed, I know, but her beating was SAVAGE, and it wasn't easy to lick my wounds then (despite still not being fully healed) travel back to Earth Bet to continue liveblogging the events happening there :D. Damn you, Citrine, for making my job harder than it was already. I have to keep my readers informed but a jealous bitch almost killed me because she really believed that I'll ever steal her boss. I'm not that kind of woman, Citrine, you can keep him for you forever (or until he'll kill you for real, not just in him mind :p). All in all, my dear readers from across the dimensions, I can say with certainty that I like Accord. Yes, he's a sadistic and selfish asshole, but there's something about him that make me like him and feel sad if something bad will ever happen to him. I don't like him that way, Citrine, you can relax, he's not my type of man :lol. But he's a very interesting villain, I have some things in common with him and his mentality/power are so damn fascinating that I want Accord to become a bigger player during the rest of this story and maybe in Ward too.
On the other side, I have two brand new characters that I already hate. I only know some details and stuff about them, but its enough for me to want them either dead or rotting in Birdcage. Valefor is an arrogant leader of an incestuous cult who adore Enbringers and Worm-verse vesion of Legion...I mean Butcher, is a crazy woman with 13 different personalities/voices, leader of a group of savages and judging after the bones of their fallen enemies that they use to ornate their costumes, they must be cannibals too (tribes of cannibals usually wear pieces of body/bones of the people they kill/eat as trophies). I'll be more than ok if these savages will be entirely killed but I still have some hesitation about Fallen. Yes, Valefor deserves to be killed (he probably is like Heartbreaker, raping his female relatives with the purpose to have children with superpowers) but what about the mundane Fallen members? Maybe not of them are killers, maybe some of them are brainwashed/mind controlled so they're not even aware of what they're doing, maybe there are plenty of innocent women, men, children who are used as sex slaves/human shields/mindless servants by the evil leaders of the cult :(. Not all the people from violent/crazy religious cults are monsters and if our heroes/villains will decide to neutralize Fallen, they should think twice before doing that because they might risk killing innocents. They should concentrate over the leaders/enforcers and the most fanatical members of the cult, and avoid hurting the innocents. Fallen will be very challenging if they'll ever go after them, they're not like Teeth. Now I really, really want an entire Arc about Fallen and I have a feeling that I'll get one very soon. I wanted a Travelers Arc and I got one, I wanted a S9 Arc, and I got half of an Arc with S9 recruiting. Plus, I need to know more about Fallen, to keep my fellow readers informed about what's going on Earth Bet with its demented villains :D.
A new Arc, Imago. I was sure an Arc called Imago will make its apparition soon, because Imago is the last process of metamorphosis at insect, right after Chrysalis, when the respective insect becomes adult. Either Taylor will surrender to heroes, finally becoming what she wanted to be at the start of Worm- a hero, or she'll defeat Teeth and Fallen, eliminating all the villainous factors in Brockton Bay (except for Accord who, at this moment, is not dangerous enough for her and Undersiders to take measures against him) and proclaim herself the Dark Queen of Brockton Bay. I think that the Becoming Hero version makes more sense in the context Imago 21.1

Tattletale stood at the very edge of the floor, with a twenty-five story drop just in front of her. The wind whipped her hair around her, and she didn't even have a handhold available. Shatterbird had cleared out all of the window panes, long ago.
She lowered her binoculars. "He's gone. If he was going to pull something off, he'd want to watch and make sure everything went off without a hitch."
"I could have gone with them," Imp said. "Listened in."
"Not without us knowing their full set of powers," Tattletale said.
Imp folded her arms, pouting, "I thought you were one of the cool ones."
"Othello's a stranger," Tattletale said. "I'd think he has an imaginary friend who can mess around with us, but I didn't see any sign of anyone invisible walking around."
"Isn't that the point?" Regent asked.
"No dust or glass being disturbed, none of that. I might think his 'friend' is invisible and intangible, but then what's the point? Accord tends to have people with good powers. Citrine, only bits I could figure out were that she's got an offensive power, something with substance, and her focus was in a strange place. She was more focused on places in the room where the strongest powers were clustered, and her focus was fairly indiscriminate beyond that. Either her power wasn't anything that anyone here would have been able to defend against, like Flechette's arrows or a controlled version of Scrub's blasts, or she's a trump classification."
"What's that?" Regent asked.
"Official classification for capes who can either acquire new powers on the fly," Tattletale gestured towards Grue, "Have an interaction with other powers that can't be categorized or they nullify powers."
"She's powerful, then," Regent said.
"She acts like she's powerful," Tattletale said, "And she probably is. But that database of PRT records we had didn't have anything in it about those two. I don't know where he finds those guys, but Accord collects some damn heavy hitters."
Parian broke her spell of silence. "You keep talking like we're going to fight them."
"Threat assessment," Tattletale said. She made her way back to her chair, sitting at the long table. "Be stupid not to know what we're getting into, especially with someone like him."
"Not to mention we've gotten in fights with pretty much everyone who ever set up shop in the 'Bay," Regent commented.
"There's nothing imminent," Grue said. "Let's focus on more immediate problems."
He turned his attention my way.
"Me?" I asked.
"He's right. We've been so busy preparing for possible fallout that we haven't had time to discuss this," Tattletale said.
"I'm a non-factor. The damage is done, and it's a question of the dust settling," I said, staring down at my gloves. I'd altered some of my costume, but the real adjustments would have to wait until I had time. I'd made up the extra cloth in an open area of my territory I was devoting to the purpose, but hadn't had time to turn it into something to wear for tonight. Some of my mask, the back compartment of my armor and my gloves were more streamlined. Or less streamlined, depending on how one looked at it. Sharper lines, convex armor panels that flared out more, gloves with more edges for delivering damage if I had to get in a hand to hand fight.
I'd only done some of the armor, pieces of my costume that were already battered and worn. My gloves, my mask and the back compartment of my armor tended to take the most abuse. I'd update the rest later.
"I'm not sure it's that simple," Grue said, his voice quiet. He reached across the table and gripped my hand, squeezing it. "Have we double checked to see what bridges they've burned for us? My parents aren't showing any sign of interference."
"Mom wouldn't care either way," Aisha said. "She might try to capitalize on the attention with appearances on television if she could get money for it."
"Yeah," Grue agreed.
"My family wouldn't care," Tattletale said. "I'd be surprised if they didn't already know. They'd choose to ignore it, I'd bet. Parian? You've covered your bases."
"Most of my family is dead. The ones who aren't dead already know," Parian said. She looked out toward the window, at the city lights under the night sky.

Ok, ok, they're planning to take Accord and his Ambassadors down? I don't think this is a good idea, guys. Unlike Teeth and Fallen, they seem willing to cooperate and listen to your demands+ Accord have new 5 Ambassadors and new 5 powers brought from Cauldron. Citrine and Othello are the only Ambassadors you know about, you still don't know about the other 5. Citrine's power is also a mystery for Undersiders, they only suppose that they don't have defenses against her or she's a Trump classification. Finally, I learned what Trump means, exactly when I was going to ask the readers of my inter-dimensional liveblog about this Classification (the only one that I didn't had any idea about until now). The Trump parahumans can either gain new powers out of blue or they can nullify other powers. Hmm, this is a pretty over-powered Classification. Hmm, we already have a Trump parahuman in our world as well, if I'm good at remembering things (and I'm PRETTY GOOD, thank you :p). This parahuman turned from a businessman into a president of one of the world superpowers, gaining all the power he ever wished to have when nobody expected him to do it :D. He can be classified as a Trump, right?
No, Skitter, better not try to provoke Accord, especially when he knows your identity and he can send his Ambassadors after your father if you'll piss him off enough to want to kill a civilian who never did anything to him. Leave Accord alone, you'll probably need him in the future and focus on other villains, who refused to cooperate with you and Undersiders, someone like Teeth and Fallen. Well, this is dangerous too because they can also go after Danny+ as I said before, Fallen must have numerous innocent members that I don't want them to get killed, not even accidentally. But Danny is the PRIORITY so Skitter should stay away from this clusterfucker, if she truly loves her father as much as I believe she does. And if she doesn't want to ANGER me :p.

Tattletale nodded, "Let's see… Rachel isn't a problem, not really. Never had a secret identity."
Rachel shrugged. Her attention was on her dogs. They were shrinking, their extra mass sloughing away. She already had Bastard sitting next to her, his fur spiky and wet from the transformation.
"And if they tried to come at me through my family, they'd get what they deserved," Regent said.
"Why?" Parian asked.
"His dad's Heartbreaker," Tattletale said.
"Oh. Oh wow."
"Funny thing is," Regent said, "If you think about it, we might be bigger than Heartbreaker, now. People all over America know who we are, and I'm not sure if Heartbreaker is known that far to the south or west."
"That's not our focus right now," Grue said, squeezing my hand. "It's good that we're talking about safeguards and damage control, but discussing villains and the rest of America can wait. They came after Skitter while she was out of costume."
"How are you coping?" Tattletale asked, leaning forward over the table. "You were pretty heavy-handed tonight. We discussed it, sure, but I thought you'd at least pretend to play ball with them."
"I didn't need superpowered intuition to figure out they weren't going to cooperate no matter what I said," I replied.
"But you were provoking them. Valefor especially. You up for this, with all the other distractions?"
"This is what I've got left, isn't it? The good guys decided to play their biggest card. They couldn't beat Skitter, so they beat Taylor. As far as I'm concerned, there's no reason not to throw myself into this, to deal with both heroes and villains as a full-time thing. I lay down the law, because now I've got time to enforce it. I can be stricter with the local villains, back you guys up if they cause trouble, and dedicate the rest of my time to my territory."
"Dangerous road to travel down," Tattletale said. "You need to rest, to have downtime."
"And do what? Go to a movie? I'm not sure if any theaters are open-"
"They are," Tattletale said.
"-And I couldn't go even if they were. My face is plastered all over the news, and I've got a tinker who might be watching every computer system and surveillance camera in the city, because she's not willing to go against her bosses. I can't go shopping, can't leave my territory unless I'm in costume and ready for a fight."
"More time to go after them," Regent said. "You can't let this slide."
"I'm not planning to," I said, standing from my seat.
"Hold on," Grue said, as my hand came free of his grip.
"Walk with me," I said. "All of you. The city may be getting better, but there shouldn't be lights on in this building, and it's only a matter of time before one of the local heroes decides to stop by and see why."
"We can take them," Rachel said, from the rear of the group.
"We can, and we will," I said, entering the stairwell. "On our terms, not theirs."
"There's enough enemies to fight," Parian said. She had to hurry around the table to catch up. "We don't need more."
"I agree," Grue said. "Not that I don't understand the need for some response, but you're talking aggression."

Grue, Parian, I RESPECT your opinion about not going on full violence scale against so many enemies at the same time, especially against heroes too. I RESPECT it and I absolute AGREE with it. Thank you, you two, for being the voices of reason where there's no reason left at all. Skitter, think at your father, think at the civilians that might (and will) suffer because you're pissed over the fact that Valefor and Butcher didn't listened you. Stop thinking at going full war on them without thinking at consequences :(. Don't get me wrong, I want them to pay for their evils as much as you want, but not when there are so many complicated things going in your way to fuck them up. I'm not surprised that Regent and Bitch wants to fight. A sociopath incapable to think (or care) about consequences and a girl who think- at times- and act exactly like a dog: get rid of people that she feels like they're threaten her, her territory and her pack. This is how they're, you can't expect at something different coming from them :D. But Skitter? The life of her father being in possible danger? The lives of people in her territory? Provoking heroes in a way so they'll get irritated and will try to capture her in her own territory or wait until she'll leave it? Or bring Danny to PRT headquarters, threatening to accuse him of complicity to his daughter's crimes or whatever accusation they'd want to bring him only to get Skitter surrender? Skitter, you're playing a dangerous game right now and if something bad will happen to Danny, it will be only your fault. You'll be the first one to be blamed :anger:.

"I'm feeling aggressive," I said. "I think. I don't know. Hard to pin it all down."
"Might be better to wait until you have a better idea of what you're feeling," Grue said.
"It doesn't matter," I said, stepping down onto the staircase. "Logically, there's no choice but to act on this. You heard Valefor. The villain community won't respect us until we answer the PRT, and the so-called good guys won't have a reason to think twice about doing it again."
"The rest of us aren't as vulnerable as you are," Regent said. "Don't want to sound disrespectful or anything, but we don't have the same kinds of civilian lives to protect."
"There're others," I said. "Part of the reason we uphold these rules is because it sets precedents. Other villains hold to the rules and we benefit, the opposite is true."
"The flip side of it," Tattletale said, "Is that we're risking an escalation in conflict."
"I don't see how they can escalate," I said. "As I see it, they played the last card they have. The harder we hit them now, the more clear it is to outsiders that the PRT doesn't have an answer. I can show that it doesn't bother me, and the effect is the same."
"Doesn't it, though?" Tattletale asked. "Doesn't it bother you?"
"Yes," I said. "In terms of me, I don't know. I can't say for sure whether it's justified or not. But they went after my dad."
"I get that," Grue said, "I'd be pissed if they went after Aisha. God, you know, when I was swallowed up by Echidna, and she was filling my head with all the worst stuff I could think of, revised memories, it-"
He stopped, and I paused to glance back up the stairs at him.
"Bro?" Aisha asked.
He took a second to compose himself, then said, "I get what you're saying, Taylor. Believe me. I was buried in it. If anyone here knows what it's like to want to protect people-"
"That's not it," I cut him off.
"No?"
"It's not about me wanting to protect my dad from the aftermath of all of this. That's done, and right now he's hurting more than he has since my mom died. Some of that's on me, and some of it's on the people who sent Defiant and Dragon into the fray. The damage is done."
"And you want to go after the non-capes who made the call?"
"Yeah," I said. "I'm sick of being on the defensive. I hate waiting for the other shoe to drop, because there's always another shoe, and always a bigger threat. Speaking of, what's your interpretation on the company we had tonight, Tattletale? How do you think they're going to play this?"
"The Ambassadors are on the up and up, as far as I can guess their direction. Accord's unpredictable, which is kind of ironic. I'd say they're lower priority."
"They're going to stick to the deal?"
"Until Accord's neurosis pushes him to break it," Tattletale said.
"Then who's a higher priority? The Teeth?"
"Lots of aggressive powers. Butcher's at the forefront of it all. Spree has rapid fire duplicate generation, Vex has the ability to fill empty spaces with small, razor-sharp forcefields, Hemorrhagia is a limited hemokinetic with some personal biokinesis, Animos can transform for limited times and packs a power nullification ranged attack while in his other shape. There's two or three others."
"I'm asking about their goals," I said. "Any clue what they're thinking? Are they going to come after us?"
"Probably. We seem weak and unbalanced right now, especially with Parian not doing the absolute best job protecting her territory."
"I'm trying," Parian said.
"You'd be doing better if you'd accept help," Tattletale retorted. "Except you don't want to do that because you haven't committed to this."
"I will. I'm still figuring out the more basic stuff you guys figured out ages ago."
"Commitment on a mental level, P. That's more than just coming to meetings. You don't have to like us, but respect us, get to know us, trust us and maybe allow for the occasional intimate moment."
Parian snapped her head around to stare at Tattletale, in a way that was rather more dramatic than the statement warranted.
"Not that kind of intimate. Sorry hon. Trust me when I say we're all pretty accepting here, and there's no reason to lie; none of us girls here bat for the other team."
"I didn't say anything."
"Of course," Tattletale said, smiling. "But I was talking about letting us see more of the girl behind the mask. Share those vulnerabilities, let us give you a shoulder to cry on."
"I don't need one," Parian said, "And that has nothing to do with me defending my territory."
"More than you think," Tattletale said. She glanced at me, "They're the type to prey on weakness, and Parian's capable of only protecting a short section of her perimeter."
"Hire people?" I asked. "Henchmen, mercenaries."
"I don't want to put innocents in the line of fire," Parian said.
"You don't want others to suffer if the Teeth come after the people you wanted to protect, either," I said.
"I don't know what you want me to do. If I call for help, they'll retreat, and we wind up wasting your time, while leaving me looking and feeling useless."
"There's an alternative," I said.
"What?"
"What I was talking about before. Going on the offensive. Only it's not about just the good guys. I'm talking about targeting our enemies, wiping them outbefore they hurt us and give us cause."
"That's dangerous," Grue said.
"You guys keep saying things along those lines," I responded. "I shouldn't be so strict with our enemies, I shouldn't ratchet up my involvement in things, I shouldn't be aggressive. It's more dangerous to leave them loose, to always give our enemies the first move."

"sighs" And she'll go full offensive, just like she promised she'll do :(. Once Skitter decides about something, there's nothing that will change her mind. Ok, I'm ready to RAGE just like I did when she pulled that stunt with Triumph and his father. Skitter, Skitter "shakes her head". But I'm going to RAGE WORSE if Danny is involved and Skitter is going to lose even more places in my list of favorite characters, until she'll be no longer a favorite character. I won't mind at all, because I have Accord as a new character that I like and might become one of my favorites, depends of his future actions :D. I really don't care that he hates Tattletale (as long as he doesn't do anything to hurt her), just like Faultline hates her yet she's among my favorite characters. Just hating Tattletale will not stop me from liking a character, if there's something to like about them ;).
Skitter wants to go after Tagg, I assume. Tagg deserves such a good beating after sending the heroes to attack a school. But, a beating will not stop him to get revenge on Skitter, making everything personal and going so far to hurt her through her father. A man like Tagg who would put the lives of kids in danger without any hesitation, is someone capable of doing anything out of spite, including to arrest Danny and brutally interrogate him. Fucking with Tagg (here with the "antagonize" sense, don't think at something else ;)) is like fucking with a dangerous, merciless person. He'll not only fuck with you back, but he'll do it worse. But I still support giving him a good beating or have some asian giant hornets stinging him a couple of times :).
I agree (again) with Parian for not wanting to hire mercenaries. While mercenaries are very useful, I'll never ever forget that scene when half of mercenaries betrayed Coil. I never trust mercenaries without a personal code and I think that is a better idea if one surrounds themselves with civilians eager to help them (like Skitter did) than with mercenaries that can betray them anytime for more money (like Tattletale wrongly does. But I'm not afraid for Tattletale because she'll instantly know if someone will try to betray her and fuck them over before they'll even realize this :D). If I were a villain, I'd trust only my most loyal civilian henchpersons, my teammates, my family and SOME mercenaries with a strong personal code that will never let them betray their first employer, no matter what (and I'll have to be well documented about them, not just to believe their word).
Teeth are some dangerous motherfuckers with equally dangerous powers. Animos reminds me of Beat Boy from Titans. I think he can turn into animals, given his codename and the confirmed ability to transform. Also, he can nullify powers so he's a Trump too? The second Trump I'll get to see in my life :lol. Ok, we're going to see Worm-verse version Legion and Worm-verse version of Beast Boy in action anytime soon. Welp, Worm went full crossover with Teeth.

"The flip side to that coin is that it gives everyone else we deal with less reason to play ball. We need to get other villains to parley if we're going to seriously hold this territory. The Ambassadors are only step one," Grue said. "If some other group comes into town and they're considering joining us, are they going to look at whatever humiliating defeat we visit on the Fallen and feel it's better to attack us first?"
"Escalation," Parian echoed Tattletale's earlier statement.
I sighed. Atlas had descended from his vantage point above the building, and flew in to land next to me. I ran my hand along his horn.
"We're not… the idea here isn't to attack you, Taylor," Tattletale said. "Hell, what they did was low. You said it yourself, in that cafeteria. But you're talking about changing our dynamic, and it's a dynamic that's been working. We've already been through some high-tension, high-conflict scenarios. A bunchof times when we went days without a chance to breathe. You want to ratchet that up?"
"Not entirely," I said. "If we do this right, if we play this smart, then this should reduce the amount of conflict. I need to know if you guys are on board."
"Yeah," Rachel said.
"I'm in," Regent replied. Imp nodded.
"My- my vote doesn't count," Parian said. "I only wanted a show of force, to see if we couldn't scare the Teeth. Only I think it had the opposite effect, because what you guys were saying about Butcher is spooking me. If you guys want to help me with them, okay. But I don't want to commit to anything major here, and I can't tell you guys how to operate, because I'm new to this. Skip my vote."
"Okay," I said. "Tattletale? Grue?"
"I've already said my bit," Tattletale said. "You call the shots in the field, and act as the face of the group, I do the behind the scenes stuff. That's how we worked it out. I'm kosher with that."
Grue said, "I have one thing to say. Think it over, or keep it in mind. We made it further than most groups do. Some villains set their sights high, and they fall. Others try to eliminate their enemies and get eliminated in turn. Still others set their mind on a goal and they strive for it, only to get worn down along the way."
He paused, glancing away. I didn't interrupt. Picking the right words? Thinking about himself, as one of the ones who were worn down by circumstance? Or maybe he was thinking about me in that light.
"Maybe part of the reason we made it this far was because you weren't striving for that. When we were villains, you were trying to be the good guy, behind the scenes. When we were trying to take out some pretty nightmarish opponents, your focus was on surviving more than it was on attacking. I didn't get the impression you craved to be team leader or to rule the city, but you took on the job because you knew the alternative would be disaster."
I nodded. Even if I'd wanted to say something in response, I wasn't sure what I would've wanted to say.
"Maybe the reason I'm less comfortable with this is that it's not your usual pattern. I feel like you're wanting to be aggressive because you're hurt and angry. There's nothing to temper it. Think about it, okay? I won't tell you not to do this. Despite everything I just said, I do trust your instincts, and I'm not sure I trust mine these days."
"Grue-"
"I don't. That's me being honest. Do what you have to do, but do it with your eyes wide open."
"Okay," I said. "I'll try."
I had a sudden impulse to hug him, to hold him as close and as tight as our costumes allowed, my arms tight around his broad back, his muscled arms holding me just as tight.
The idea alone made me feel like I might suddenly burst into tears, and I found it startling, inexplicable.
I didn't hug Grue; I wasn't sure enough about what I was feeling or why, didn't want to come across as anything but a leader. Leading this team was something I could do. Something concrete, with real dividends.

Grue doesn't agree with Skitter, yet he supports her rash decisions, like a supportive boyfriend he always is :D. It is just me or Grue is more supportive towards Skitter than she's towards him? She's more obsessed with her personal vendetta against EVERYONE at the same time (YES, Grue, because she's hurt and angry, not because its really necessary to attack everyone right now) so she forgot how to be a supportive girlfriend with someone who is very scared for her+ he also have his personal issues that seem to never end (what Bonesaw did to him, what Echidna did to him). Not sure if I like this, in a stable relationship BOTH partners should support each other and try their best to help each other get over their personal issues, not to have one helping another and the other one to be almost indifferent :(. This is not how a stable relationship works. Yes, Skitter tried to be supportive towards Grue at the start of their relationship, but right now she cares more for appearing like a strong leader in front of her peers than giving Grue a well-deserving hug and showing "weakness" this way. But Grue was never afraid to show "weakness" everytime when he was supportive with her, even now. Being human in a human relationship isn't weakness, Skitter. I feel like this ship is slowly falling apart :(. And it will NOT be Grue's fault if they'll break up one day. Neither the fact that they're parahumans.

Why had I brought Atlas here? Had I already been thinking about running? Avoiding further contact with these guys? Avoiding Grue? It was disconcerting to think about.
Tattletale was staring at me. Could she read what I was experiencing, or get a sense of the emotions that were warring inside me?
"Okay," I said, and I was surprised at how normal I felt. "We're playing this much like we did against the Nine, only we aren't waiting for better excuses to do it. Groups of three, one group active at a time, one target at a time."
"Who are we fighting?" Rachel asked.
"The Fallen, the PRT, and the Teeth."
"And you're in this group of three for tonight's mission?" Tattletale asked.
"Yeah." I needed a release, to do something.
She glanced at Grue, and I suspected there was some kind of unspoken agreement there. She met my eyes, or the opaque yellow lenses that covered my eyes. "I'll come."
"You're ops," I said, "I thought the whole point of that was that you'd stay behind the scenes and out of trouble."
"I'll come," she repeated herself. No argument, no manipulation. Only the statement.
I sighed.
"Me too," Rachel said.
"Not sure that's a good idea," Tattletale said. "Maybe someone more subtle?"
"No," I said. "It's fine."
Subtlety wasn't what I had in mind.
Bentley crashed into the side of the PRT van. The vehicle rocked, but it was set up to be in the field amid villains with superstrength and literally earth-shattering powers. It didn't tip over.
Two more dogs crashed into the side of it, and the thing fell. The PRT officer in body armor fell from the turret at the top, his armor absorbing just enough of the impact that he wasn't badly hurt.
The containment foam sprayers might have been an issue, but none of the uniforms were in a position to use the stuff. I'd come prepared, and each sprayer was either thoroughly snagged on spider silk at the top of the equipped trucks, or the PRT agents who were wearing the portable tanks were bound, blind and under siege by massed bugs.
Dovetail flew after Atlas and I, a trail of luminous slivers of light falling in her wake. She was good at maneuvering in such a way that the sparks didn't fall on the PRT uniforms and heroes below, even with my swarm crawling over her head, shoulders and arms. Where the slivers touched something solid, they ballooned out into what Tattletale had described as soft force fields, encasing the subject. Anyone could push hard enough against the force fields to break them, even with multiple fields layered over one another, but it impeded movement, and she could hover over a target to keep reinforcing the forcefields until the victim could be smothered in more permanent containment foam.
It might have been a crummy power, but she was fast. If she could have thrown the forcefield-generating slivers further than she did when she flung her arms out, she might have had us.
It was to my advantage that it was easier to dodge pursuit than to match someone else's course exactly.
Didn't hurt that she had bugs in her nose, ears and mouth, and that she was being bound by silk, limiting her range of movement with every passing second.
She was already unable to use the compact containment foam sprayer she had built into her costume. Nothing I did would stop her from flying, but so long as she was blind and unable to use her arms, I didn't see her being too much of a threat.
She wasn't making headway on the offense, but retreating wouldn't change her circumstances. I'd still bind her in silk, blind and choke her. Her costume had a flared collar, and my bugs were crawling inside, between skin and cloth. That attack was as much about the psychological effect as about getting to more skin to inflict bites.
I wasn't sure if it was just me, but her movements were bordering on the frantic, now.
No holding back. I only had so many wasps and hornets, but I did what I could. Mosquitoes were a good one. Welts. Leaving a mark.
Rachel's dogs knocked over another one of the vans that had been circled around the PRT headquarters. The van was knocked into the side of the building, bending the bars that were supposed to protect the windows. Each window cracked, with the lines spiderwebbing out between the hexagonal sections, but they didn't break.
Adamant got into close quarters combat with the dog, slashing at it with pieces of his armor and driving the animal back.
Rachel whistled, shrill, and two dogs tackled him. He delivered one good swipe before the other blindsided him. The disadvantage of forming a full covering of armor was that it limited his peripheral vision.
She wasn't going even two seconds without giving a command. There were five dogs in the field, or four dogs and one young wolf, and many were lacking in serious training, so she managed them with lengths of chain between their collars and Bentley's, and by giving enough commands that they wouldn't have time to get creative and go after one of the PRT uniforms.
Sere was indoors, along with Triumph. Binding Sere had been a first priority, and I'd achieved it in much the same way. He'd done what he could to target the bugs managing the threads, and to disentangle himself, but time spent on that was time he wasn't moving outdoors and shooting me or one of the dogs. As with Dovetail, I'd managed to make enough progress that he was more or less out of the fight. She was blind, he was immobile.
The other heroes would be arriving soon. I double-checked Dovetail wasn't in a position to give pursuit, then ventured inside, entering through an open window on the uppermost floor.
I felt calm, which was odd, given the scene. Bugs swarmed every employee, from the official heroes to the kids who might have been interns. Some howled in pain, others screamed more out of fear, or yelped as bugs periodically bit them.
The bugs gave me a sense of the route I needed to take, my destination. There were offices in the back corner, but I had a sense of where I was going. I'd been here before, when Piggot had been director.
I saw the labels on the door. Commissioner. Deputy Director. Director.
I opened the last door. Director Tagg.
He held a gun, but he didn't point it my way. There was a woman behind him, using him as a shield.
I'd had statements ready, angry remarks, any number of things I could have said to him, to punctuate what my swarm was doing to his assembled employees. Statements, maybe, that could have surprised him, woken him up to what he'd done to me.
Then I saw the steel in his eyes, the sheer confidence with which he stood in front of the woman… they had matching wedding bands. His wife. I knew in an instant that there wouldn't be any satisfaction to be had that way.
Rather, the word that left my mouth was a quiet, "Why?"
His eyes studied me, as though he were making an assessment. His words were gruff, the gravelly burr of a long time smoker. He very deliberately set the gun down on the desk, then replied, "You're the enemy."
I paused, then pulled off my mask. I was sweating lightly, and my hair was damp around the hairline. The world was tinted slightly blue in a contrast to the coloring of my lenses. "It's not that simple."
"Has to be. The ones at the top handle the compromising. They assess where the boundaries need to be broken down, which threats are grave enough. My job is to get the criminals off the streets and out of the cities."
"By starting fights in schools."
"Didn't know it was a school until the capes were already landing," he replied. "Had to choose, either we let you go, and you were keeping an eye out for trouble from then on, or we push the advantage."

I was right about Dovetail being able to fly, but she can also generate forcefields and she surely doesn't have a dove tail. Not very nice to meet her the first time, especially now when she's utterly defeated by Skitter :(. I wanted to know her in other context. Skitter attacks everyone, indiscriminately, with her bugs, and her actions doesn't piss me off in the slightest. Not at all "sarcasm at its finest" :p. I'm sure that people will complain that I'm being harsh with Skitter this Chapter, but so far she didn't do anything to make me feel proud of her and agree with her. On the contrary. She's doing almost every single thing that I don't agree with, except for confronting Tagg :D. But she can still do something even worse, like...attacking Tagg's wife only to piss him off. I swear to God Wildbow, if you'll hurt that woman, I'm going to have some serious TALK with you, Skitter. Even if you'll fill my mouth with insects, I will still have that TALK with you ;). Do whatever you want with Tagg, but let the poor woman alone. She doesn't deserve to suffer because her husband is a jerkass and a LIAR, who pretend that he didn't know that Arcadia High, the best HIGHSCHOOL in the city, is a highschool. Bullshit, Tagg, you're full of bullshit. With each apparition, I feel like I hate you more. This is the the second apparition and you're already on my shit list. You put the lives of kids in danger and you're lying like an ass. You already did two things that are off-limits. Its like Wildbow believed that I don't have enough "people" to hate in this story and he decided to TAG another one for me. Thank you, Wildbow :).

"Putting kids at risk?"
"Dragon and Defiant both assured me you wouldn't risk the students."
I sighed. Probably right.
Someone behind me screamed as a group of my hornets flew to him to deliver a series of bites across his face.
"Barbaric," Director Tagg said.
"Inflicting pain isn't the point."
"Seem to be doing a good job of it," he commented.
"There are heroes on their way back from patrol, your guys called them in. But there's also news teams on the way here. We called those guys in. They'll find your employees covered in welts, every PRT van damaged or trashed. Your employees won't be able to get any cars out of the parking lot, so they'll have to walk, which will make for some photo opportunities. A handful of heroes will be a bit the worse for wear. You can try running damage control, but some of it's bound to hit the news."
"Uh huh," he said.
"I couldn't let you get off without a response from us."
"Didn't expect you to."
"This was as mild as I could go," I said. "I think you know that. I'm not looking to one-up you or perpetuate a feud. I'm doing what I have to, part of the game."
"Game? Little girl, this is a war." His voice took on a hard edge.
I stopped to contemplate that. Rachel was destroying the last containment van, and Tattletale was saying something to her about incoming heroes. I was low on time.
"If it is a war, my side's winning," I said.
"And the world's worse off for it. You can't win forever," he said.
I didn't have a response to that.
He must have sensed he had some leverage there. "All of this goes someplace. Do you really see yourself making it five more years without being killed or put in prison?"
"I haven't really thought about it."
"I have. Bad publicity fades with time. So do welts and scabs. Five or ten years from now, provided the world makes it that long, nobody will remember anything except the fact that we fought back. Good publicity will overwrite the bad, carefully chosen words and some favors called in with people in the media will help whitewash any of our mistakes. We're an institution."
"So you think you automatically win? Or you're guaranteed to win in the long run?"
"No. They didn't pick me to head this city's PRT division because I'm a winner, Ms. Taylor. They picked me because I'm a scrapper. I'm a survivor. I'm the type that's content to get the shit kicked out of me, so long as I give the other guy a bloody nose. I'm a stubborn motherfucker, I won't be intimidated, and I won't give up. The last few Directors in Brockton Bay met a bad end, but I'm here to stay."
"You hope."
"I know. You want to fight this system? I'll make sure it fights back."
"So you want to escalate this? Despite what I said before?"
"Not my style. I'm thinking more about pressure. I could pull your dad in for questioning every time you pull something, for example. Doesn't matter where, doesn't matter who it's directed at. You or your team do anything that gets an iota of attention, I drag the man into the building, and grill him for a few hours at a time."

Ok, this asshole have the same dual vision of the world like Shadow Stalker and Accord have. Accord sees the world divided into order and disorder, people who lead and people who follow. For Sophia, the world is filed only with strong predators and weak prey. Tagg considers that there are only good and bad people on this world. While my own world vision is pretty similar with Taggs (there are good and bad people and not many people in the grey area. I define myself as a general good person with lots of minor flaws, for example), I'll never act like Tagg did and put lives of civilians (ESPECIALLY children) at risk, no matter what. No matter how much I want to catch/kill villains, like Tagg wants to do, there are some things that will make me very unlike Tagg. If I know that civilians are in danger, I'll retreat and let the villains walk free or find other ways to defeat them without hurting nobody else. And most important, I'll never go after the villains' families and threaten their parents, spouses, children, only to fuck with them. This is a fucking BIG NO, Tagg, do you hear me :rage:? You consider yourself to be a hero, a good man fighting against bad men, but you're just as bad as them, you have no idea. You don't have any qualms to harass a villain's father, to attack a villain' remaining family only because you can't catch her otherwise. You're not even a vigilante if you maybe consider yourself being one. True vigilantes will never act like this (I said TRUE, not someone like Shadow Stalker or Tagg), they don't hurt innocents, they hurt only the people who deserve to be hurt . You're only a big fucker with the illusion of protecting the city from villains, when villains should protect the city from YOU ;).
I predicted that Danny will be in deep shit "SIGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHS"

I felt a knot in my stomach. "That's harassment."
I was aware of Tattletale approaching me from behind. She leaned against the doorframe, arms folded.
"It's a war of attrition," Tagg said. "I'll find the cracks, I'll wear down and break each of you. If you're lucky, then five years from now they'll remember your names, speaking them in the same breath as they talk about the kid villains who were dumb enough to think they could keep a city for themselves."
"He's playing you," Tattletale murmured. "He knows he's got you on a bad day. Best to just walk away. Remember, the Protectorate hasn't had a good day against us yet."
I thought about asking him about Dinah, but there wasn't a point. It was something he could use against me, and I already knew the answer.
I approached the desk and turned around the photo frames. The second showed Tagg with his wife and two young women. A family portrait.
"You have daughters," I said.
"Two, going to universities halfway across the world."
"And you don't feel an iota of remorse for hurting a father through his daughter?"
"Not one," he replied, staring me in the eye. "I look at you, and I don't see a kid, I don't see a misunderstood hero, a girl, a daughter or any of that. You're a thug, Taylor Hebert."
A thug.
His mindset was all 'us versus them'. Good guys versus the bad.
It wasn't much, but it served to confirm the conclusion I'd already come to. Dinah had volunteered the information. Whatever else Director Tagg was, he wasn't the type to abuse a girl who'd been through what Dinah had.
"We should go," Tattletale said. "Rachel's downstairs with all her dogs, we can run before the reinforcements collapse in on us."
"Yeah," I said. "Nearly done. You, back there. Are you Mrs. Tagg?"
The woman stepped a little to one side, out from behind her husband. "I am."
"Visiting him for the night?"
"Brought him and his men donuts and coffee. They've been working hard."
"Okay," I said. "And you stand by your husband? You buy this rhetoric?"
She set her jaw. "Yes. Absolutely."
I didn't waste an instant. Every spare bug I had flowed into the room, leaving Director Tagg untouched, while the bugs flowed over the woman en masse. She screamed.
He reached for his gun on the desk, and I pulled my hand back. The thread that I'd tied between the trigger guard and my finger yanked the weapon to me. I stopped it from falling off the desk by putting my hand on top of the weapon.
Tagg was already reaching for a revolver at his ankle.
"Stop," I said.
He did. Slowly, he straightened.
"I'm illustrating a point," I said.
My bugs drifted away from Mrs. Tagg. She was uninjured, without a welt or blemish. She backed into the corner as the bugs loomed between her and her husband.
"Not sure why. Doesn't change my mind in the slightest," Tagg said.
I didn't respond. The swarm shifted locations and dogpiled him. Stubborn as he professed to be, he started screaming quickly enough.
I picked up the gun from the edge of the desk, joining Tattletale. We marched for the exit together, moving at a speed between a walk and a jog, passing by twenty or so PRT employees, each covered in bugs, roaring and squealing their pain and fear to the world as they stumbled blindly and thrashed in futile attempts to fight the bugs off.
Nothing venomous, the wasps and hornets weren't contracting their bodies to squeeze the venom sacs. There was nothing that could put their lives at risk. It was still dramatic enough.
"He's right," Tattletale commented.
"About?"
"You won't change his mind with a gesture like that. Sparing his wife."
"Okay," I replied. I opened a drawer and put Director Tagg's service weapon inside, while Atlas ferried Tattletale down to the ground floor.
Atlas returned to me, and I took to the air, flying just above Lisa and Rachel and the dogs as we fled the scene. I made a point of leaving every single bug inside the PRT headquarters, to infest it until they had the place exterminated, which would only be another photo opportunity for the media, or to serve as a perpetual reminder as it took weeks and months for all of the bugs to be cleared out.
The news teams were already arriving on the scene. No doubt there was a camera following us. I remembered Director Tagg's threat, to bring my father into custody. Only a threat, going by his wording, but it did make me think about how every activity, every thing I did that brought me into the public consciousness, it would be a little twist of the knife that I'd planted in my dad's back.
Not a good feeling.
Maybe the little demonstration I'd done with Tagg's wife hadn't been for him. It could just as easily have been me trying to prove something to myself.

Tagg will still go after your father, Skitter, because he's a piece of shit with a vengeful side :(. Plus, he's an idiot, he thinks that putting kids' lives in danger and going after villains' families will force these villains to surrender, and no way will turn into a full war between heroes and villains. An asshole+ an idiot with an all- war mentality taking Piggot's place. Piggot, with all her flaws, was so much more better and competent than this "righteous" dick :rage:. Man, Skitter, you almost attacked mrs Tagg, but you didn't do anything to the asshole of her husband, even when he threatened to harass your father. You didn't even scared him. You only made him more angry than he was already. I don't understand (and agree with) this little demonstration of yours and sometimes (this is one of those times) your actions are harder to read than the hardest to read book in the world -Finnegans Wake by James Joyce (I tried to read this book online and I couldn't get past the first page, even if I had all the words explained. For people interested, here's the link Finnegans Wake 1.1.3). Yet, some of Skitter's actions are even harder to understand.
I'm so damn afraid for Danny's safety right now :(.

Good night and sleep well, my friends. I survived another day on Earth Bet, US, Brockton Bay. Time for me to return home.
 
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