Price of Blood [Worm fanfic] (Complete)

Part Fourteen: Two Steps Forward, One Step Backward
The Price of Blood

Part Fourteen: Two Steps Forward, One Step Backward

[A/N: this chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]



Front Steps of the PRT Building
Taylor


It was hot and sweaty inside the armour that Armsmaster and Kid Win had thrown together for me. I earnestly hoped whatever actual armour they ended up constructing for real was equipped with some kind of climate control, or I'd cook to death even in the middle of winter. What I was wearing was more of a stopgap; there was no way anyone in his (or her) right mind would go out fighting crime in it. For one thing, the batteries powering the limbs didn't have enough power to do more than walk at a steady rate. And for another, the servos ran hot when they were being used, which contributed somewhat to the elevated temperatures within the suit. I was really glad that nobody could see my face, and the sweat trickling down it.

Reporters were shouting questions at me, which would normally have made me either freeze up in panic or blurt out something totally unwise at exactly the wrong moment. Fortunately, I had a heads-up display in front of my eyes, and Dragon was feeding me lines almost in real time. I had to hand it to her; her typing speed must be phenomenal. However she was doing it, it was nice to know I had someone else in my corner.

"No, I'm not related to Armsmaster," I said in reply to the latest question, following the words that scrolled across my vision. "And seriously? Even if I was, I wouldn't tell you guys. He was nice enough to let me build this in his lab, though." Which was a mix of lies and the truth, of course. It had been constructed in his workshop, just not by me. In fact, he and Kid Win had constructed it around me using bits and pieces that the pair had modified for use, sometimes on the fly.

Dragon had lent a hand from time to time via the workshop waldos, and also offered helpful advice. Armsmaster had given me a crash course (so to speak) in handling power armour once it was completed. That hadn't gone so well; I suspected I'd have a bruise or two tomorrow. In the meantime, Dragon had been given remote access to the armour and was even now making sure I didn't fall on my face on live TV. I appreciated it, a lot, but I hoped that at some point I'd be able to stand on my own two feet as a hero. Or at all, really.

Between answers, I was able to scan the crowd and try to gauge the responses of people to what I was saying; or rather, what Dragon was telling me to say. It seemed to be more or less positive. While some appeared a little reserved about the whole thing, nobody was pointing at me and screaming "SWARMBRINGER! Burn the witch!" And of course, Amy was there in the crowd, as anonymous as she could get in a hoodie and sunglasses. Each time I turned my helmet toward her, she gave me an encouraging smile and a discreet thumbs-up. It was amazing how much this helped.

Eventually, the press conference ran down (there were only so many Tinker-related questions they could ask but boy, did they give those questions a workout) and I turned to go back into the PRT building. Dragon didn't have total control of the armour, but she was acting as my copilot; if I did something totally stupid, she'd be able to salvage the situation. It was probably in the PRT's best interests to make their latest totally-not-a-member look like she could actually walk in the power armour that she obviously built herself.

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Hillside Mall
Sophia


One of the reasons they'd picked this particular store was that the public bathrooms were relatively nearby. Not that they needed the bathroom to change in, but it made things a lot easier. Privacy was valuable at times like this.

With that in mind, Tattletale followed the signs and Sophia followed Tattletale. The blonde indicated a security camera with a flick of her eyes, then traipsed past it, artfully turning her head at just the right moment to apparently browse a shop window full of handbags. Sophia knew she couldn't pull that move off in a thousand years, so she just yanked the hood down a few inches to hide more of her face. A human viewing the screen might find it suspicious, but facial recognition wouldn't get enough of her features to ID her—she hoped.

When she got to the bathrooms, Tattletale was waiting at the doorway. "Now, no peeking," the blonde Thinker murmured. "I'm not her, after all." Her trademark punchable grin seemed to linger behind her in the air as she pushed through the bathroom door.

Again, Sophia resisted the urge to simply drop Tattletale in her tracks from behind. Coil would probably be suspicious, unless she had a really good reason for it. Grue and the others would definitely be suspicious, especially given that she didn't get along with the Undersiders as it was.

Following the blonde into the bathroom, Sophia pulled up her right sleeve to expose the launcher. On the underside was a tab she could pull out, which when pulled out to full extension went along the underside of her wrist; this put the trigger button for the launcher literally in the palm of her hand. With the middle and index fingers of her right hand on said trigger button, she went along the row of cubicles, pushing on the stall doors. The third one resisted, the simple latch showing the word OCCUPIED. Without hesitating, she went to shadow form and stepped through the door into the cubicle.

"Hey, what—" began the woman sitting on the commode. She got no farther than that, as Sophia pressed hard on the button and shot her in the chest with a tranq dart from a range of about two feet. The woman started to her feet, clutching at where the dart had struck her and opening her mouth to scream, while her handbag bounced off the side wall of the cubicle and fell to the floor with a thud. But before she could draw breath all the way, her knees went wobbly and her eyes rolled back in her head. As she began to pitch forward, Sophia guided her back to land clumsily on the toilet seat again. Plucking the dart from her victim's chest, she took a moment to admire the effectiveness of the knockout drug Coil had given her. If anything, it seemed to work even faster than the stuff the PRT made her use.

When she exited the stall, Tattletale was almost completely costumed up. The previously-braided hair was now messy, and she was clad only in the skintight purple outfit that she'd been wearing under her clothes. Using some sort of pad held between her gloved fingers, she was applying some sort of black makeup around her eyes. Sophia wasn't quite sure what this was about, but she got the idea when the blonde pressed the domino mask to her face. It changed the outline of her features considerably, hiding the dusting of freckles over her nose. Through the eyeholes, Sophia could see her eyes but not the surrounding skin, giving the girl a mysterious air. Sophia still wanted to punch her.

"Well, come on," Tattletale urged. She looked down at the handbag Sophia had retrieved from the floor of the cubicle. "We haven't got time for petty shit like that."

"Well, I dunno what my share's gonna be like," Sophia said defensively. She dropped the handbag, opened the purse she'd taken from it, and extracted what looked like a couple of hundred dollars in random notes. "Call this a bonus." Shrugging off the backpack she was wearing, she tucked the money into a side pocket.

"Just so you know, we're not shaking down everyone in the store like that," Tattletale warned, putting her own backpack back on. "We go in, we grab the jewellery and whatever's in the till and maybe the safe if I've got time, then we call in Grue and Bitch for the extraction. You even think of wasting time like this on the job, and we'll cut your shady ass loose faster than Velocity filling out a speeding ticket."

"Yeah, yeah," Sophia jibed, already pulling the hoodie over her head. Under that and her jeans, she was already wearing the majority of her costume, including the launchers. All she needed to put on was the visor and the cloak, which she pulled from the backpack. "Hold your horses. I'm nearly done here." As she spoke, she kicked off the loosely-fastened sneakers and skinned out of the jeans, then stuffed those and the hoodie into the pack. On went the visor and the cloak, and she was ready. Turning toward Tattletale with a triumphant taunt on her lips, she realised the bathroom was empty; the door was already closing behind the blonde girl.

Muttering something about smartass bitches, Sophia shoved her way out through the bathroom door. She didn't like how the backpack pulled on her hooded cloak, but there wasn't much choice in the matter; either she discarded the clothing she'd been wearing or she wore the backpack. Putting the matter from her mind, she headed for the jewellery store.

There was, however, that security camera to get past. On the way to the bathrooms, they'd likely escaped notice by being two entirely forgettable teenage girls. Now, they were in costume.

Stopping just outside the camera's arc of vision, she raised her arm to point at the camera. When she was sure of her aim, she pressed hard on the trigger button. There was a sharp chFFF and a shower of glass as the dart shattered the lens of the camera.

With a glance around, she ascertained that nobody had seen the incident. While she would've liked nothing better than to bust the whole operation and hand the Undersiders (minus Grue, of course) over to the authorities, Calvert had told her to cooperate and not raise suspicions. He'd been lavish in his praise of her activities so far—inasmuch as anyone in the PRT had ever praised her—so she was willing to go the extra mile for him. In his latest text to her, he'd even hinted that a successful mission could see her being placed in charge of the Wards, to show them how it was really done. This was something she could definitely get behind. So for now, she was going to do her best to make sure the robbery went through as planned.

Tattletale raised her eyebrows. "Showy," she murmured, then pushed on. Sophia itched to demonstrate just how 'showy' she could be, but held herself in check. Not yet, she told herself. Not yet.

By the time they got to the jewellery store, people were just starting to notice the pair of them, but the looks were more curious than fearful; it seemed Tattletale didn't have much of a rep yet. Nor did Regent, it seemed, given the giggling reactions of a bunch of girls he blew a kiss to from under his mask.

"All right then," muttered Tattletale under her breath. "Showtime." Taking a deep breath, she marched into the store, pulling a small pistol from the holster on her belt. "Everyone!" she called out. "This is a robbery! Everyone on the floor, right now!" She didn't do anything so dramatic as firing a shot into the ceiling, but people seemed to take note of her costume and armament all the same, and come to the correct conclusion.

Behind her, Sophia went left and Regent went right. Tattletale had already told them where the store security guard would be stationed, and as he went for his gun, Regent made his muscles spasm so he dropped it. Before he could dive for it, Sophia nailed him with a dart to the shoulder. He went for it anyway, so she shot him again. The second dart did the trick; he crumpled to the ground with the weapon not quite in hand.

"Just to clear everything up, we're the Undersiders," Tattletale announced brightly. "We're here for the jewellery. Nobody needs to get hurt." She waved the gun around the room, then tapped in the code to the security gate and let herself in behind the main counter. "Which means no hitting the silent alarm," she said chidingly to the counter attendant. "On the floor, right now." Turning, she gestured to the other two. "Well, come on. Time to rob the place."

Her words broke the spell. Up until that point, Sophia had been almost willing to believe this was a play-act, that she wouldn't really be indulging in a daring daylight robbery. The theft of the money in the bathroom didn't really count; nor did the several dozen times she'd shoplifted since getting her powers. Nobody was going to connect her name with either of those, but this? She'd be on camera for this one, and the cat would be well and truly out of the bag.

Which raised the question of just how they were going to get at the jewellery. Sophia knew how to break glass with her elbow, but doing it repeatedly was a good way to get a sore elbow or worse. Her dart launchers weren't going to do jack to these cases, and while the survival knife she'd been supplied with could probably be used to pry open the cases or bash the glass in, either method would be tedious as fuck.

"Hey, Spectre. Catch." She looked over toward Regent as he reached into the backpack he had slung over his shoulder. From it he pulled out a short but heavy wrench, which he tossed toward Sophia. She caught it awkwardly, then turned toward the nearest display case. Even then she hesitated to actually go to work, until the sound of shattering glass indicated that Regent was busy with the (apparently weighted) butt-end of his sceptre. Raising the metal tool, she went to bring it down hard on the glass, then stopped herself, mentally facepalming.

It was an almost unforgivable lapse, but she decided it was the Undersiders' fault and not hers. Over the last day, she'd had it pounded into her that the Undersiders didn't get into fights; she was supposed to think 'run away', not 'stand and fight'. This had led her to overlook a move she often used to retrieve dropped weapons during combat. Going to shadow, she reached into the case and grabbed at the necklaces and bracelets, turning them to shadow as well by contact. Once her hand was out of the case, she went solid again to briefly admire the gleam of the precious stones and metal against the dull grey of her glove. Opening one of the cargo pockets of her pants she dropped her spoils into it. No great feeling of guilt assaulted her. In fact, she felt a buzz of excitement, which only increased as she turned toward the next case. Her powers made short work of this one as well. It wasn't as spectacular as Regent's positively enthusiastic assault on the glass cases on his side of the room, but she was just as fast.

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PRT Building
Thomas Calvert
Timeline 1


"Excuse me," Calvert muttered as he turned back out of the conference room. "Just going to the bathroom. Back in a second."

There was nothing setting off any alarm bells that he could see, but he had to find out what had happened to his base in the dropped timeline. More to the point, he had to find out if it had happened here. If so, he had to find out why had it happened; if not, why not? It didn't matter that his base computer hadn't sent through any of the 'this system is compromised' messages he'd set it up to handle; the silence was even more worrying than an actual alert. At least then he'd know that something was going on, if not what.

Once he figured that out, he'd drop the timeline, having been in the conference room all the time. Stepping out to go to the bathroom might make him show up on Piggot's radar which was the last thing he wanted, especially following the Shadow Stalker incident. Ducking into the nearest bathroom, he locked himself in a cubicle and pulled out his phone.

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Timeline 2

"Typical," muttered Pritchard; as it happened, she and Calvert had taken seats next to each other at the conference room table. Another row of seats went around the room, up against the wall; Calvert wondered who was supposed to be sitting there. "We get strict orders to be right here, right now. And then it's 'hurry up and wait'."

Calvert rolled his eyes. "Yeah," he murmured back just as quietly. Neither of them really had to worry about keeping their voices down; it had been two minutes by his watch and nobody had shown up to address them.

"Actually, that's something I've been meaning to ask you," Pritchard went on. At her words, a knot of tension spontaneously developed in his gut. "Weren't you on the outs a few years ago? How'd you swing command of a strike team?"

He forced a chuckle. Fortunately, much of the situation regarding Ellisburg was under top-secret cover, including exactly why he'd been 'on the outs', as Pritchard so eloquently put it. So he could be excused for being vague about matters. "Well, back then, there weren't that many people who had field experience against hostile capes," he explained. "When they needed someone to consult with on matters like that, I was there. And one day, someone realised I could do more than just tell them how to deal with villains."

There'd been a lot more to it than that, of course. Favour-trading and outright bribes had done part of the work, especially once his career as Coil had started to gain traction. One extremely careful assassination of the man who'd been slated for that command had also helped. And it was true that he did have a unique insight into the supervillain mind. Most times, all he had to do was ask himself "what would I do in this situation?".

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Outside the PRT Building
Taylor


We were halfway up the steps when I heard Armsmaster's voice over the helmet radio. "Armsmaster here. Say again, Console?" For a moment I was confused, until I realised that I could hear his transmissions but not those of the console inside the PRT building. Silence fell again, while Console presumably repeated whatever they'd said the first time. It didn't take long; I was almost at the doors when he spoke again. His tone had gone from brisk to laser-focused. "I copy and will be attending. Armsmaster to all units, we have a code purple at the Hillside Mall. I say again, a code purple. Armsmaster attending. Out."

I lost sight of him then, because Dragon was navigating my suit through the doors into the lobby. He didn't follow me in, and I saw the guards in the room starting to look a lot more tense than they had before. Full body armour hides some things, but the way people stand can tell you a lot. I was pretty sure it wasn't on my account—they'd seen me walk out, after all—which meant it had something to do with Armsmaster's 'code purple', whatever that meant.

Carefully, I chinned the switch that turned off the outside speaker, then cleared my throat. "Uh, Dragon? What's a code purple, and why is Armsmaster so worried about it?"

"Ah. You heard that, then." Dragon's voice was calm and collected. "One second. Getting permission to fill you in." She fell silent as the suit tromped its way into the elevator. I'd been dubious about the lift's ability to move both me and Armsmaster around, but apparently it was made of sterner stuff than most. On my own, there was no problem at all; I was conveyed upward smoothly and swiftly. Just as the doors opened, Dragon spoke up again. "I can tell you, Taylor, but you're going to have to sign another NDA as soon as you're out of the armour. Sorry."

"Sure." By now, I was pretty well resigned to having a good deal of my cape knowledge hemmed about by NDAs. I'd even signed one promising that I wouldn't out any of the Protectorate or Wards capes if I accidentally learned their secret identities. Not that anyone thought I would (either learn their identities or betray them if I did; take your pick) but apparently it was regulations, so the NDA was presented and I duly signed it.

It would've been cool to have signed the current one while still in the armour, but my hand-eye coordination was still at 'toddler' level when it came to making those hand servos do what I wanted. So I mentally shrugged and let the armour walk me toward Armsmaster's workshop. Apparently he had a much more impressive lab in the Protectorate base, but this one had been conveniently closer, and the task of faking up power armour for me hadn't needed the services of the larger workshop. I didn't care either way. What I did care about was that the armour didn't have certain facilities more associated with space suits, and I was keenly feeling the lack thereof. Still, I was curious about what Dragon had to say.

"A 'code purple' is a situation where a cape previously affiliated with the forces of law and order, and who may have damaging knowledge about capes they've served with, shows up as a villain," Dragon explained. She didn't have to say any more, as I connected the dots with an almost audible click.

"Shadow Stalker," I said, with far more heat than I'd intended. "It's her, isn't it? Sophia fucking Hess." I wanted to punch the wall but refrained, as it wasn't my wall.

"Yes," admitted Dragon. "She's been involved in an altercation in conjunction with a local supervillain team. You understand I can't tell you any more than that."

"Yeah, got it," I muttered. It wasn't as if I could go out and fight her anyway. While I had my bug control powers more or less nailed, I didn't possess armour worthy of the name. I couldn't run, fight or even see properly in the mockup they'd built around me. And of course, I had no idea how long the batteries were going to last. "Anyone hurt?" I felt guilty over not asking that straight away.

"Reports are still coming in," Dragon evaded. That meant 'yes' to me. Which didn't make me feel any better; if they'd caught her earlier, this aspect of my life would be neatly packaged away. As it was, every mention of Sophia was like rubbing salt into a newly-fresh wound.

We reached Armsmaster's workshop, the code-locked doors hissing open before me. Dragon walked the suit to the middle of the room, then took control of the waldos and began disassembling it with far more alacrity than they'd used in putting it together. "So, have you had any ideas about what you'd like in the armour?" she asked, apparently trying to take my mind off the Sophia-shaped elephant in the room.

"Um," I began as the helmet came off, bathing my face in cool air. I paused for a moment to luxuriate in the sensation as the sweat on my face began to evaporate all at once. The left arm came loose with a series of whzzt noises as each bolt was spun free of its housing. "Can you really make it so the armour can fly?"

"Relatively easily," she assured me. "Kid Win has a rather effective anti-gravity design that he uses in his skateboard. I should be able to retro-engineer it without too much trouble. What do you think about wings?"

"Wings would look cool," I decided. "Though there's one problem with the whole armour thing. If Sophia's still on the loose when I go out there, I want to be able to take her down. But if she can just ghost through my armour, how can I stop her from hurting other people?" And myself too, I meant, but I was more concerned with stopping Sophia than saving my own skin.

"For a start, Shadow Stalker has a lot of experience under her belt," Dragon cautioned me. "Confronting her while you're still unsure about your own capabilities is a good way to get hurt. In any case, Armsmaster's on it. I'm sure he'll bring her in sooner rather than later. He's taken her defection very personally."

I could imagine why. Sophia had been one of the Wards; a junior member of the Protectorate. Armsmaster was the leader of the Protectorate in Brockton Bay. For a Ward to turn villain (which in my opinion merely outed her for who she really was) was a huge PR hit for the PRT, Protectorate and the Wards. The only real way they could regain any sort of credit in this debacle was to take her down hard and fast, demonstrating that they could deal with their own failures.

"So how much does she know about the other Wards and about Armsmaster?" I asked as she removed the outer casing from my right arm. "And do they know enough about her to take her down without anyone getting hurt?" It was too much, I figured, to hope that Sophia had some easily-exploited weakness, like bright lights or loud sounds.

"She's got no documented vulnerabilities which would make her easier to capture than a normal person, if that's what you're asking," Dragon said with a hint of amusement in her voice. "Although as an official affiliate of the Protectorate, and an interested party, you can apply for access to the Barnes and Clements interviews. Or at least, the parts regarding Shadow Stalker."

I wasn't exactly sure how useful the interviews would be to me, but there was an old saying about gift horses. "Uh, sure. How do I go about doing that?" Around me, the waldos moved tirelessly. Dragon still had to disassemble parts of the torso armour before she could take it off me, but at least I wasn't enclosed in a walking oven any more.

"I've just submitted the request for you." Dragon's voice held a smile. "You're welcome." I felt the last of the torso armour lift away, introducing a heavenly gust of cool air to my sweat-sodden top. Absently, I wondered if real Tinkers had their armour assembled around them like this. The Saturday morning cartoons I'd watched were vague about how power armour worked, and most especially how it went from off the Tinker to on the Tinker without coming apart in the process.

"Wow, thanks," I said. "I really appreciate it. I mean, you guys will probably have her in custody by the time I even get out there to be a hero, but it'll just be nice to see them actually admit to the crap they put me through, you know?"

"There's probably not going to be much of that, I'm afraid," said Dragon regretfully. "While the interviews will have touched on their treatment of you, I wouldn't be too hopeful about any show of remorse, or even an admission of everything they did. It'll be in their own best interests to play it down as hard as they can. And whether or not they knew what Sophia was planning with the boys, it'll be a cold day in hell before they'll admit to being aware of anything to do with that."

"Right." I sighed. I appreciated Dragon's candour, and what she was saying made sense. It was just all so … disappointing. In my daydreams—fewer of late, but given an unexpected lease of life since my rescue by Armsmaster—I'd envisaged being able to stand over them and listen to them actually apologise for their misdeeds. How magnanimous I was in victory depended upon my mood at the time, of course. Having the upper hand had been an unreachable dream for so long, and just when it seemed to be within my grasp, it'd turned out to be just another unattainable fantasy.

On the other hand, I reminded myself firmly, Emma and Madison were in police custody, Sophia was on the verge of being arrested for an actual, noticeable crime … and I was going to be a superhero. Just as soon as I got myself a proper set of power armour (courtesy of Armsmaster, Kid Win, and Dragon, naturally). Personal satisfaction took a distant second to the absolute certainty that things would never go back to the way they had been.

Perhaps sensing my mood, Dragon maintained a tactful silence while she removed the last of the armour from me. As I stepped off the foot-plates, she cleared her throat. "Did you still want access to the interview transcripts?"

"Uh, sure," I said, a little surprised. "Thanks." Even if they didn't come with a tearful confession, I was still going to enjoy the hell out of them. Which reminded me. "Wasn't there an NDA I had to sign, or something?"

"I've just finished printing it out. It's on the desk to your left," Dragon informed me. "There should be a working pen somewhere around there, too."

There was, in a coffee cup emblazoned WORLD'S GREATEST TINKER. In fact, I suspected all five pens in the cup would work perfectly. Armsmaster didn't strike me as the sort of man who would keep a non-working pen. I took the NDA from the printer, read it through (if only to make sure I knew what I was agreeing to) and signed it.

"Thank you," Dragon said with a smile. "Feel free to leave it on the desk. Armsmaster can file it once he returns. And by the way, Panacea and your father are waiting in the corridor for you."

"Oh, thanks." I headed for the door, then paused to look back at the monitor currently portraying her face. "And thanks for all your help. I mean it. If it'd been just me trying to drive that suit, I would've fallen on my face a dozen times."

She chuckled warmly. "One of these days, I'll show you the highlights reel from when I was getting my first suit up and running. It has a lot of extremely educational moments."

I wasn't quite sure if she was telling the truth or just trying to make me smile. Either way, I felt a grin spreading across my face. "Sounds like fun. I'll bring the popcorn." Turning, I slapped the button that controlled the doors. They slid apart and I stepped through with the grin still on my face. As they shut behind me, I found myself being caught up in a ferocious bear-hug.

"Whuff," I grunted as Dad briefly lifted me off the floor. "Wow, Dad, I love you too, but I'm gonna need to breathe sometime. And a shower, really soon." Despite my complaint, I hugged him back as he sheepishly put me down again.

"Sorry," he said as he let me go. "I just wanted to let you know that I'm really proud of you. And scared for you, but mainly proud. The way you handled yourself in front of those reporters ... if I hadn't known for a fact it was you in that armour, I never would've guessed. Not in a million years."

"Is that because you don't think I could ever be that confident, or because the armour makes me look fat?" I asked, unable to resist pulling his leg just a little.

"What? No!" He held up his hands in front of him, as if to ward off the very idea. "God, no. It's just … I mean …" He blinked as he registered the grin on my face. "Wait, you … you're joking?" It was kind of amusing to watch as his expression went from anxiously reassuring to blankly incredulous in the space of half a second. "That was a joke?"

Dad and I weren't the only people in the corridor outside Armsmaster's workshop. Amy was there too, as well as the guard who'd obviously been detailed to escort us around the building. The guard showed no sign of amusement, which was pretty easy to do with a full-face opaque visor, but Amy let out a muffled snort from behind the hand she'd clapped over her mouth. Dad turned his betrayed gaze from me to her and she snorted again, obviously trying hard not to laugh. Around her hand, her face started to turn red.

"It's okay." I gave him a reassuring pat on the arm. "I know what you meant, and I appreciate it." Oddly enough, as uncomfortable as the armour was, wearing it had given me a boost to my confidence. It was tangible proof that my life was changing for the better. Dragon may have given me the lines to say, but I was the one who'd spoken them and, except for the parts intended to mislead the public, meant them.

"Well, I've seen a few speeches by superheroes," Amy said, having gotten her mirth under control. "And yours was pretty good. Though I was wondering about how Armsmaster and Vicky tore out of here in a huge hurry. Any idea why they did that?"

"Well, I can't tell you much, because some of it's NDA material," I said carefully, "but apparently Armsmaster got a report that someone he wants to arrest really badly showed up in a robbery across town." I shrugged. "Hopefully by now he's made the collar." I winced as something else made itself known again. "And if you'll excuse me, I've really gotta go pee."

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Hillside Mall
Sophia


Sophia was three cases in and catching up with Regent's total—he was on four and counting—when Tattletale yelled out a warning. "Incoming!" Raising the wrench—she was still holding it in her free hand—Sophia turned toward the doorway just as two mall cops came around into view. Both held pistols, which were up and tracking.

Crap, we really should've lowered the security screen. But it was too late for that. Adrenaline pumped through her system, and she threw the wrench instinctively, just as one of the security guards yelled out an order for them to freeze.

Her aim was off, the wrench striking the guy on the shoulder instead of in the face. He staggered back a step, but his buddy swung around to aim at her. She knew the guy was about to pull the trigger, so she went to shadow form, diving and rolling to get closer to him. The case behind her shattered as the shot went off; she even felt the bullet flicker through her insubstantial form. Motherfucker.

Even as she reformed and came up on to one knee, she fired the last two darts from her right-hand launcher, each dart nailing one of the guards in the centre of the chest. Then she went to shadow again, moving to close with them. As she became solid once more, she saw the guard who'd shot at her toss his gun away, and she recognised Regent's handiwork. Nice. But the other guard was still armed, so she pushed his gun to the side and kicked him solidly in the nuts.

He grunted and folded over. Giving her no time to finish him off, his partner swung a substantial-looking fist at her head. She could do this dance all day; phasing through his arm, she kicked him behind the knee and smacked him in the back of the neck with her elbow. He went down, crumpling all the way to the floor. His partner was also down. For a moment, she waited for them to get up again before she recalled the fact that she'd tranqed them both. Panting a little, she glared at the fucking morons who were standing back and watching. Some were even filming events with their phones.

"Fuck off!" she yelled, and extended her right arm with the empty launcher. They moved back a few paces, but kept right on filming. She shook her head and went back into the store. With her left hand, she pushed the trigger tab back into the launcher; with her right, she pulled the same tab out of the left hand launcher. I swear, these people are more like sheep every fucking day.

Up at the counter, Tattletale gave her a nod, which probably meant the coast was clear for now. Leaving the wrench where it lay, she went back to looting cases. Regent had his side of the store done, and was working on her side now. She was a little irritated at this, but decided it didn't matter; after all, it would all get shared out the same in the end. Besides, she'd just saved all their asses from a couple of trigger-happy rent-a-cops. That was probably worth a bonus.

There were only two cases to go when Tattletale let out a piercing whistle. "Time to go!" yelled the blonde. "We got the big boys incoming!" She let herself out by the security gate—the counter had long since been smashed and looted—and headed for the door at a run. Glancing at the last two cases, Sophia hesitated. There was some nice stuff in both of them, and she hated leaving a job undone.

"Come on, Spectre!" called Tattletale from the doorway. "You get left behind, we're not coming back for you!" She sounded like she meant it. Regent was already following her out the door.

"Fuck it," Sophia muttered, and bolted for the door, ghosting through a couple of cases that were in the way. The pockets of her pants, heavy with stolen jewellery, swung and bumped at her thighs as she became solid again. She also heard the screaming from outside. Fuck, what is it now?

Diving out the doorway, she saw what it was. Galloping clumsily through the mall, immense claws ripping chunks out of the carefully-polished floor, three of Bitch's monster dogs were bearing down on them like a steam train. The dog girl herself was on the lead one while Grue rode astride a second, darkness billowing out behind him like a negative shot of an ever-replenishing fog bank. People were screaming and diving out of the way, for once showing at least some level of self-preservation.

"Spectre, Regent, take Brutus!" yelled Tattletale. "I'll go with Grue!" She ran toward the dog that Sophia's nemesis was riding. Leaning over, he hauled her on board as if they'd done that move a hundred times. For all Sophia knew, they had. In fact, if it wasn't Grue doing it, she might even have allowed herself to be impressed by that little bit of teamwork.

In the meantime, of course, she didn't have time to be impressed or deliberately unimpressed. The third dog (she assumed this one was Brutus) was lolloping down toward them, apparently guided by some signal from Bitch. Bolting forward, Sophia turned to shadow and leaped toward Brutus. Timing it to a nicety, she spun around in midair then reformed on the dog's back. Regent had been close behind her, but there was no way he was going to make the same leap. She supposed that he'd done this sort of thing before, but with someone on board to make the dog slow down or help him up.

Do I help him up or push him away? It was a thorny question; one she only had a split second to consider. Slowing the dog down was out of the question, as it would take too long and she had no idea how to do it anyway. Regent was shorter than she was, and was just skinny rather than sharing her level of muscular fitness; she had no doubt that she could drag him on to the dog. On the other hand, if she left him behind—or even shoved him away at the right moment—Calvert would get a head start on dismantling the Undersiders. But on the other other hand, Tattletale was almost certainly intuitive enough to realise what she'd done and why.

All of this passed through her mind in an instant, and she made her decision. One hand grabbed on to a bone spike; as she leaned low, the other swung out toward Regent in a grasping motion. His hand slapped into hers, and fingers clamped on to wrists. If she hadn't been holding on, the jolt might've pulled her loose from her seat on the dog. As it was, she was able to lift him clear of the ground relatively easily. Making use of his inertia, she swung him up behind her, on to the back of the dog. "Hang on!" she yelled back to him. "And not to me!" If he tried copping a gratuitous feel, she decided, she'd kick him off the dog again and to hell with the consequences.

Which reminded her. Tattletale was now ahead of her, riding behind Grue on the one-eyed dog. If there was ever a chance to put that bitch out of Sophia's misery, this was it. Except that as she swung her eyes forward, she realised the flaw in her plan. Tattletale was riding behind Grue, who was still generating his damnable darkness. A totally non-dimensional featureless cloud of pure blackness, it fucked with her eyes almost as badly as it fucked with her powers.

Sophia absolutely loathed being outmanoeuvred. Even while she'd thought she was careful in laying her plans, Tattletale had apparently been reading them in advance. The blonde cow had, as a result, set matters up so Sophia couldn't betray them without screwing herself over. For a moment she was tempted to fire a dart into the darkness by guesswork anyway, but then she recalled Regent behind her. As oblivious as the jerk was most of the time, he was sure to notice if she started taking pot-shots at his team-mates. And she most certainly hadn't forgotten about his sceptre. One jab of that in her ribs, and she'd be left twitching on the ground.

Grue yelled a single word then, putting all thoughts of gratuitous revenge on hold. "Wards!"

<><>​

Thomas Calvert
Timeline 1


That's odd. Nothing's wrong with the base at all.

Leaning back against the wall, Calvert entered another query into his phone, double-checking the data that had already scrolled through it. Infrared and motion sensors for his office were showing that nobody was in the room, while the keylogger in his keyboard registered zero entries since he was last in the base.

So what happened in the other timeline?

Calvert didn't know, and he hated not knowing. His power was all about knowing why he shouldn't do something. Currently, all he understood was that searching the PRT databases for actionable intel on Scarab was somehow linked to the self-destruct system in his base deciding to activate. While correlation was not causation, those two events seemed linked in some unfathomable manner. One which was currently bugging the hell out of him.

Frowning, he went back to tapping on his phone.

<><>​

Timeline 2

"Huh." Pritchard seemed about to say something more, but she was distracted when the door opened and more people filed into the conference room and started taking the seats against the wall, while one headed up to the podium at the front of the room. "Good, we're starting. About damn time," she grumbled.

For all her grousing, he could almost feel her starting to relax in anticipation of the actual briefing. But the guy at the podium wasn't Piggot, but her deputy. Renick, Calvert thought the guy was called. No ambition; from all reports, the guy was happy to be the second in charge. Coil had never been happy taking orders from anyone. The natural order, he figured, was the other way around. Is he going to be giving the briefing?

"Director Piggot asked me to pass on her apologies," Renick said, almost as if he was aware of Calvert's inner thoughts. "She had to take a call; a situation is developing across town. In the meantime, each of you should find a copy of the material we'll be covering on the table in front of you."

A situation across town? Automatically, Calvert picked up the stack of paper and looked at the front of it, but his attention was elsewhere. That had to be Shadow Stalker, hitting the jewellery store with the Undersiders. He wondered if she'd discovered the truth about the tranquilliser darts she'd been supplied with. With any luck at all, she'd be oblivious to it until she was well and truly locked into his service, and the Undersiders with her.

And then the door opened and closed once more. He heard Piggot's familiar, halting step. It was a sound he'd actually recorded and listened to over and over, until he could pick it out anywhere. After all, with any luck, he'd get the chance to hunt her down in a darkened building sometime, tracking her by sound and wit. Well, he'd actually done that a time or three for stress relief, but he wanted to do it in a timeline he didn't have to drop.

"Attention, everyone." Piggot didn't bother clearing her throat or starting with any vague courtesies. The woman shot from the hip; it was one of the few things he admired about her. "You're all busy people, so I won't waste your time." She pulled the pistol from the holster at her hip. "One of you is a traitor. You will all place your hands on the table in plain view."

Fuuuck! Calvert caught the look of triumph on her face as her gaze locked on to his. He went to jump to his feet, but all too late; the soft thud-thud on the carpet behind him was inevitably followed by the gurgling hiss of containment foam. Specifically, containment foam expanding from the grenades that had been dropped … by the people who'd come in later, and sat down right behind him.

The whole 'hands on the table' ploy had been a distraction, as had Piggot herself. She'd spoken loudly, abrasively, getting everyone's attention. Allowing the PRT guards to pull out grenades, pop the pins, and gently roll them under his chair.

"The fuck?" yelped Pritchard as she, too, was enveloped in the rapidly-expanding yellow foam. Calvert ignored her. He clawed his pistol from its holster. The foam climbed past his waist an instant too late and he levelled the weapon at Piggot herself.

"Fuck you, bi—" he tried to yell defiantly. Even if he was going to be dropping the timeline, he wanted to take her with him. But she fired first. From the hip, even.

<><>​

Timeline 1

The fuck?

Calvert sat bolt upright on the toilet lid, his eyes wide with shock. Holy fuck, it's a trap! They know about me! I've got to get out of here! At that very moment, he heard the tink-tink of metal on ceramic, and looked down to see two containment foam grenades rolling under the cubicle door. Already in motion, he wrenched open the door and flung himself out of the cubicle, just before the grenades would've trapped him in foam.

However, he was not yet out of trouble, given that the PRT soldiers who'd used the grenades in the first place were just outside the cubicle. It was hard to tell who was more surprised; they obviously hadn't been expecting him to hit the ground running like that, and he hadn't even known they were there. One was armed with a containment foam dispenser, while the other had a rifle.

"Sir," the one with the rifle began, "we have orders to—"

Calvert didn't let him finish. It was probably only something like 'take you alive', but he didn't care. His choices were to swing out around to the right past the guy with the con-foam, or to go down the middle. Going left would leave the con-foam guy wide open to foam both his buddy and Calvert, and he knew damn well that PRT troops were trained to do just that if they had to; con-foam was non-lethal and afforded a certain measure of protection to downed allies, after all.

There were only two good options, so he went with both.

<><>​

Timeline 1.1

Going down the middle turned out to be a no-show. These two guys had obviously worked together, and the con-foam guy blocked him while the rifle guy butt-stroked him in the face.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2

Going right worked better; he tackled the con-foam guy around the neck and brought him to the ground while the rifle guy was still trying to get in close and give his buddy some assistance. Twisting around, Calvert got a hand on the con-foam sprayer and blasted yellow foam across the bathroom, slathering the rifle guy in the stuff.

The con-foam guy let go the sprayer then, and went for the pistol he was wearing. But Calvert was older, more experienced, and had his power as a fallback. Struggling for the pistol didn't work, as the guy was stronger than him. But he could hold him off from lining it up just long enough to pull his own pistol and tuck it up under the man's chin. The shot was muffled; the guy spasmed once then went limp. Blood had sprayed back on to Calvert's hand, but he didn't care in the slightest.

Disentangling himself from the dead man, Calvert came to his feet. If this was a movie, he thought fleetingly, he'd don the guy's uniform and walk out of there. But reality didn't work like that. Back when he was a field officer, he'd needed his uniforms and armour made to order; this guy was six inches shorter and about a hundred pounds heavier than him. He collected the dead man's pistol but didn't bother with trying to claim the rifle or the con-foam sprayer, as one was stuck in containment foam and the other would be far too unwieldy to run with.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1

Yanking open the bathroom door, Calvert took off at a dead run in the direction away from the conference room. He got a dozen yards before the whoop-whoop-whoop of the PRT building intruder alarm went off.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.2

Opening the bathroom door more cautiously, Calvert moved off at a steady jog in the direction away from the conference room. He only got five yards before the whoop-whoop-whoop of the PRT building intruder alarm went off. Using the other timeline to spring traps was one of the first tricks he'd learned.

<><>​

PRT Building
Wards Area
Taylor


I washed my hands, then splashed water on my face to rinse off the residue of the sweat that I'd been feeling all the way through the speech. I really needed a shower, but that would have to wait until I could get home. Or maybe until I could requisition a towel and some clothes. Just as I was leaving the bathroom for the main Wards area, I heard a low whoop-whoop-whoop sound, quite unlike any fire alarm I'd ever heard before. At the same time, the door out into the corridor locked with a very solid ch-CHAK.

"What was that?" I asked. Almost instinctively, I began tallying the impressions of the bugs that were naturally scattered throughout the building. While the PRT had done their best to fumigate the place after the Swarmbringer scare, they hadn't been nearly as thorough as they might have imagined.

Nothing seemed to be wrong. At least, there was no smoke or fire on any floor I could find, and none of my bugs were hearing the sharp reports of gunfire. Nor were any parts of the building being broken or otherwise damaged—once again, that I could find.

"Intruder alarm," Vista said briskly, not turning from where she sat at the console. "We've got someone in the building who shouldn't be here, so all the floors are locking down. Only people with special overrides can get anywhere now."

"Well, that's good, isn't it?" Dad tried to sound hopeful, though he probably didn't think I noticed him moving to stand between me and the door. "They should catch whoever it is pretty quickly."

"Sure," the youngest Ward agreed, though there seemed to be an edge to her tone that suggested otherwise. "Of course, the intruder may have a special override of their own. Anything can be acquired by anyone if you throw enough money at the problem."

Dad didn't answer straight away, though I saw him give her a look of respect. Amy spoke up instead. "Uh, do you think this has happened?"

"I don't know." Vista sounded frustrated. "Every exercise we've done, they've caught the guy in less time than this. Let's just say it's a possibility. Give me a second here." She took a deep breath. "Be advised, this is a Code Purple situation. Investigate, do not engage."

For a moment, I was confused, then I recalled what Dragon had told me. Vista was probably talking to someone else who was going to deal with Shadow Stalker. Silently I wished them all the luck, then I glanced at the ceiling.

I hope they catch the intruder soon.

<><>​

Hillside Mall
Clockblocker


"Be advised, this is a Code Purple situation." Vista's voice was calm and professional over the earpiece radio. "Investigate, do not engage." Dennis wondered if she practised sounding so cool and collected.

"Roger," Carlos replied. "Investigate, do not engage. Aegis, out."

He came in for a landing just outside the mall entrance, slowing down so that Dennis could find his balance, then they sprinted the last few yards. Dennis knew quite well that Aegis could've flown right up to the doors, but electric eye sensors tended to act weird around flying people. In addition, he was being a good team leader and not splitting the group.

The doors hissed open and they stepped inside, just in time to see a bunch of monsters barrelling down the shop-lined corridor toward them. Dennis had heard of the Undersiders, but he'd never encountered them before. The girl wearing the plastic dime store dog mask had to be Hellhound, given that she was riding astride something that looked like a cross between a rhino, a dinosaur and an angry alligator. Two more were running on either side of it, creating an effect not unlike staring up at an oncoming avalanche and wondering if one had time to kiss one's ass goodbye. Hellhound's power, Dennis decided, must absolutely hate dogs if it did that to them.

He forced his mind back to the topic at hand, just as he heard someone shout "Wards!" It might've been someone on one of the dogs, but he couldn't be sure.

"What do we do?" he asked Aegis, because there surely wasn't time to call in to the console for advice or orders.

"Get outside!" his team leader snapped, then grabbed one of the glass doors. "When I've got these closed, freeze them!" He began to pull, his augmented strength overcoming the resistance of the door motors, as Dennis darted over to the other one. It was a smart idea; blocking the monster dogs without engaging them. Aegis' time as Triumph's understudy hadn't been wasted.

They had the doors half-closed, with Carlos doing most of the work, when someone stood up on the back of one of the monster dog things. In the excitement, Dennis had allowed himself to temporarily forget an important fact: specifically, that Shadow Stalker was robbing the place as one of the Undersiders.

This omission was rapidly brought home to him when the figure—wearing an urban camo outfit unlike Stalker's edgy black costume, but with a similar hooded cloak—turned to Stalker's trademark shadowy fog. Wispy lines seemed to connect her with Aegis, who grunted as two stubby darts struck him in the face; once in the left eye and again in the cheek. A third pinged off his chest armour, then he let out an agonised cry and doubled over.

Eye shots had never bothered Aegis before; in fact, he had a collection of eyepatches that he enjoyed using to ham any eye injury up with until it healed. Thus, Dennis was so shocked by his team leader actually taking a hit that he nearly didn't register Stalker going solid again. She took two running steps forward, planted her foot in the middle of the creature's face and dived off of it toward him, adding its speed to hers.

When they were both Wards, she'd sparred with him occasionally and had beaten him soundly each time. That was without the use of powers, of course; with powers, such a spar would turn into a mockery of a fight. This time, however, she was coming right toward him, and he had no obligation not to use his powers to freeze her to the spot. Crouching slightly, he flexed his fingertips. No matter what happened, if she came within reach of him, he was gonna shut her down hard. Then he'd freeze his own costume, to make sure—

Instants before he would've made contact, she went to shadow and washed straight through him. He had just enough time to think Oh, that's just not fair! before he felt the sting behind his knee, where the thicker body armour didn't cover. A wave of lassitude swept through his body, beginning with that leg. As his knee buckled, he fell sideways … right into the path of the dog. Acting on pure instinct, he grabbed the thing's leg as it bore down on him. His power had never seemed to take so long to kick in before. An unbearable weight slammed down on his chest, and he felt his body armour buckle and snap. His ribs, too, if he was any judge. Then … stillness. Looming above him, poised on one paw, the dog was frozen in mid-stride. Vaguely, he heard a high-pitched yell of surprise and a thud, but he wasn't sure who it had come from.

He was aware that his power was the only reason he was alive right then, and as soon as it wore off that situation would change. As the last shreds of his consciousness drifted away, he registered one final thought.

Shoulda frozen my costume …

<><>​

Sophia

Pausing a few yards on, Sophia looked back. Aegis was writhing on the ground, Clockblocker was literally under the paw of the monster dog she'd been riding with Regent, which was now frozen in place. Regent was lying sprawled in front of said dog; the sudden stop had probably dismounted him with a vengeance. She smirked at the idea. Good.

"What the fuck was that?" yelled Bitch, pointing at her frozen dog.

"Calm down, he'll go back to normal in a minute or so," Grue told her, then jumped off his dog. Picking up Regent—the wimp looked unconscious, and one of his arms dangled oddly—he slung the smaller boy over the dog. His head turned toward Sophia. "You're a menace," he said coldly, his voice echoing in his darkness. "When we get back to base, I'm calling the boss. You're off the team if I've got anything to say about it."

"Well, you can take your phone call to the boss and shove it—" began Sophia, but was interrupted.

"Hey!" yelled Tattletale. "We've got to go! Capes incoming!" She pointed at the sky, where a gold-and-white figure was arrowing downward. Worse (in Sophia's estimation), the very distinctive sound of Armsmaster's motorbike was audible in the distance, and growing in volume.

"Fuck!" Grue scrambled on to his dog again. "Rachel, we've got to go!"

"But Brutus!" protested the stocky redhead. "I can't leave him!"

"They won't hurt him!" Tattletale shouted. "We can't fight! We have to run!"

With one last stricken look at the still-frozen dog, Bitch let out a shrill whistle, and the dogs jolted into motion. Sophia ran toward them, but Grue stretched out his arm and she was overwhelmed with a wave of pitch blackness, causing her to stumble and fight for breath. It cleared seconds later, but by then they were gone.

"Fuck!" Coughing from the after-effects of Grue's darkness, she turned to run. She got two steps before a freight train slammed into her; in the next instant, she felt her feet leave the ground. Slim arms that may as well have been steel girders imprisoned her own arms to her sides.

"Not so fucking fast, Shadow Stalker." Glory Girl's voice was low and deadly, and her fear aura hammered at Sophia's will. She'd rarely felt terror like this before, and it made her want to curl up in a ball and hide from the world. "You're gonna pay for what you've done."

What Sophia did next, she did from sheer instinct. Which wasn't to say she wouldn't have done it anyway, given time to consider her optimal move. Nor was it guaranteed that she'd be regretting the move after she did it. Sophia rarely regretted anything she did. But it was a fact that had she waited until she could muster coherent thought, Sophia wouldn't have had the chance to act at all.

The last of Grue's pseudo-darkness flushed from her body and she went to shadow. Pulling the shadow-knife from its sheath, she stabbed hard, then returned to her solid form with the knife still buried in Glory Girl's ribs. Glory Girl screamed and flailed, sending Sophia flying away with the feeling that she'd had maybe a rib or two popped.

Returning to shadow, Sophia watched Glory Girl crash-land near the entrance to the mall. As she glided away on the wind, Armsmaster pulled up beside the fallen heroes. He was there to deal with it, so they weren't Sophia's problem any more. The first chance she got, she was going to call up Calvert and fill him in, then get his permission to end the Undersiders, once and for all. If it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have had to do that.

<><>​

Thomas Calvert
Timeline 1.2.1


He knew he had to get out of the building. That was the end goal. Thomas Calvert would vanish into the ether, and Coil would become his primary identity until he could get set up with a different face and name. But all that would come later. Right now, he had right now to deal with.

Elevator or stairs? He picked both.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.1

The public elevators were not the only way to get up and down in the PRT building. Calvert eased up to the corner, then ducked his head around, pistols at the ready. A guard stood in front of the elevator, some ten yards down the corridor. One guard; this was his best chance.

Coming around the corner like a rampaging army, he ran toward the man at his best speed. Surprise worked in his favour; he covered three yards before the guard even became aware of him, and another five before the rifle started to come up in his direction. Calvert tackled the man, wincing at the solid impact of bone and muscle against body armour. Knocked off balance, the soldier went down hard. He couldn't have been too winded, though, as he almost immediately tried to get the rifle barrel across Calvert's throat.

PRT soldiers wore athletic cups as part of their regular outfit, so Calvert didn't even try to knee him in the groin. But he was agile and stronger than he looked, and he wasn't weighed down with cumbersome armour. In a fight against two opponents, this would be a suicidal move, but against one it could work.

Fending off the man's attempts to get the upper hand, Calvert worked his way around behind the soldier and locked his arm around the man's throat. He ignored the struggles and clawing at his arm; the soldier's armour worked against him in this situation. When the soldier tried to angle his rifle to shoot Calvert, he took one hand away from the chokehold long enough to deflect the barrel. Moments later, the soldier was limp on the ground. He didn't have the time to kill him with a chokehold, but the soldier had a belt knife which Calvert used to cut his throat.

Climbing to his feet, he slung the rifle over his shoulder and retrieved the pistols. Swiping his pilfered all-access pass—while he hadn't had exactly this situation in mind when he acquired it all those months ago, it was certainly useful as an ace in the hole—he hit the button and waited for the elevator to arrive.

It did, in relatively short order. Once he verified it was empty (from behind an aimed rifle) he stepped inside. Do I go up or down? he asked himself, on the verge of dropping the other timeline.

That was when the hidden nozzles activated and filled the elevator with containment foam.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2

There were more stairwells in the building than elevator shafts. Calvert had at one point gotten his hands on a set of plans that outlined them all, even the ones that never made it on to the official blueprints. The main stairwells were guarded, of course. There were probably soldiers in the stairwells as well, which would turn any sort of attempt to go up or down into a running firefight. The problem was, he had limited ammunition, and he couldn't count on killing his adversaries fast enough to replenish it as needed.

The trick, of course, was to win the fight without ever firing a shot. Calvert had never actually managed to pull that trick off, but it was theoretically possible. Step one would be to get off this floor, and into a location where the searching forces would never find him. Even maximising the use of his power, he couldn't hope to stay ahead of them forever.

Rifle up and ready, he burst into the male bathroom that his mental map told him he needed to be in. Fortunately both for him and any theoretical foes, the facility was empty. Moving with quick strides, he went to a part of the wall between the washbasins and the first urinal. There was an innocuous door in the wall marked CLEANERS ONLY. Opening it revealed a grimy closet. However, when he swiped his all-access card across an innocuous nail hole in the rear of the closet, the back wall hinged away and he stepped through.

He wasn't worried about anyone tracking or tracing the all-access card. Since acquiring it, he'd gone into the PRT servers and set up a program to delete any instance of that particular card being used from the server records. However, he'd always been extremely cagey about using it, just in case alarm bells went off anyway.

Closing both the inner and outer closet doors, he sagged back against the wall and took several deep breaths, trying to calm his racing heartbeat. He wasn't out of the woods quite yet, but he was now several steps ahead of his pursuers. There were two ways out of this, so once again he tried both.

<><>​

PRT Building
Wards Base
Amy


"Console, Armsmaster. I'm at Hillside Mall." Armsmaster's voice was ragged, as though he was exerting himself. "Clockblocker, Aegis and Glory Girl are down, all needing immediate and urgent medical care. All possible assistance required, ASAP. Armsmaster, out."

Amy jumped to her feet, terror for her sister overriding every other thought in her head. "Vicky!" she exclaimed. "Shit! I've got to get there!"

Vista immediately activated her microphone. "PRT Console, this is Wards Console. I have Panacea in the Wards base. Requesting permission to release her to assist Armsmaster, over."

The reply took a few more seconds than Amy had expected, and was not what she wanted to hear. "Negative, Wards Console. PRT building is still on lockdown. Nobody gets in or out, over." The voice was warm, motherly … and full of regret.

"What? No!" Amy started toward Vista, her voice pleading. "Tell her to let us out! I've got to help Vicky and the others!"

Vista shook her head. "Won't help. Lockdown. It's regulations." Taking a deep breath, she stood up and removed her headset. "But in a situation like this, fuck regulations. Those are my team-mates out there, too."

<><>​

Thomas Calvert
Timeline 1.2.1.2.1


The stairwell was narrow and the ceiling low; Calvert had to keep ducking his head so as not to bump it on the overhead brickwork. He didn't enjoy stairs at the best of times but as an activity, going down stairs that were both steep and narrow was now on his personal shit-list. Still, if he could get down to the garage level and steal a vehicle he'd be home free.

The third floor went by, then the second, then the first. His knees and ankles were aching by now, from the strain of moving quietly enough that he'd hear boots coming upstairs or following him down. He'd heard nothing at all, which indicated they were trusting on the system alerting them if the concealed stairwells were used. More fool them. If and when he came back under a different identity and took control of the Brockton Bay PRT—not a very likely scenario now, but one he held near and dear to his heart—he'd institute a much more secure system than the one currently in place. But for now, he was going to take full advantage of what was there.

Finally, he arrived at the garage level. Pistol in hand, he swiped the all-access card to open the concealed exit—another maintenance closet—and stepped out. Right into the path of a spray of containment foam.

Knocked off his feet by the force of the stream, he struggled to bring the firearm to bear, but it seemed his assailant had planned for that. Before they even stepped into sight, his arm was utterly entangled. Military boots sounded on concrete, and Miss Militia came into view. "Thought you might come this way," she said with some satisfaction. Touching her radio earpiece, she added, "Miss Militia here. Target engaged and subdued."

Fuck.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2

He was all out of options, bar one. A rooftop rescue was a possibility, but his men needed time to get out to the private airfield, get the chopper ready, and bring it into the city. In the meantime, he needed a place to hide where nobody would find him, and a way to get on to the roof past security once his ride did arrive. Fortunately, he had a plan in mind for both eventualities. As a bonus, it would allow him to take some much-needed revenge. Getting Piggot out of the way for his eventual return was just icing on the cake.

Climbing the narrow staircase in the musty, dusty near-darkness was even worse than going down. He couldn't stand straight upright for fear of bashing his skull open on the rough brickwork overhead, and keeping his head up to scan for low-hanging obstacles was putting a massive crick in his neck. Once I'm away, I'm going to engage the services of the best massage therapist I can find. That he'd actually get away, he never doubted for a moment. The majority of the people working in the building were unpowered, which gave him a distinct advantage over them. They had numbers on their side, but he'd evaded them three times now.

The irritating part was that he was actually fit; as a strike team leader, he had to be. If this had been an ordinary set of stairs, he would've breezed it with little difficulty. But the narrowness and claustrophobia, not to mention the low ceiling, conspired to make life difficult for him. He tried to imagine Piggot, with all her extra weight, huffing and panting her bulk up or down these stairs, and simply couldn't. She'd barely make one flight before she collapsed in a heap of sweat and blubber. Back in the day, he knew, it would've been different. How the mighty have fallen.

Finally, he reached the top floor. He eased his way out of the secret entrance, wary of a trap similar to the one Miss Militia had set for him. But there was only one Miss Militia, and she was still fruitlessly guarding the exit in the garage level. Nobody else, it seemed, had chosen to guard the concealed stairwells. He was tempted to castigate them in absentia for their idiocy, but decided to wait until he was free and clear, and away from this place.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2.1

Heaving the door open, he burst out into the corridor, pistol swinging both ways. Nothing opposed him, so he set out on a dead sprint down the corridor, pistol in one hand and all-access card in the other. With every soft thudding step on the thick carpet, he expected to hear a shout of alarm, but there was nothing.

For a stroke of luck, nobody was in the corridor. Of course, there was more to it than luck. All exits from this floor were being monitored, of that he had no doubt. The concealed stairwells were just being watched electronically. It seemed his hidden program was doing its work perfectly; he just hadn't accounted for the possibility of someone making a wild-ass guess and getting it right. Well, that's what second chances are for.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2.2

Pistol up and ready, he inched the bathroom door open and ducked his head out, checking both ways before pulling back. Nobody attacked either version of himself, so he exited the bathroom. Moving as silently as he could, he eased down the corridor, listening intently. No voices caught his ear, no crackle of static over an improperly tuned radio. It didn't sound as though there was anyone on the floor at all.

Time, he decided, for a Hail Mary pass for his Hail Mary pass. Heading for the nearest stairwell, he kicked off his shoes and cracked the door open a fraction. If he could get down far enough that jumping out of a window was survivable, he intended to give that the old college try. It was only supposition that they even had soldiers in the stairwells, after all; solid supposition, but supposition all the same. They couldn't know he was coming from above them, so he might even be able to surprise them.

One step at a time, he went down the stairs. Nostrils quivered as he tried to pick up the smell of human sweat and cologne. Mouth half-open, he listened as intently as he could. In the echoes that permeated the concrete stairwell, he thought he could just barely hear voices. They were too far away to tell for sure, though.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2.1

And there it was. Emily Piggot's office; or rather, the back entrance thereof. A remarkably nondescript door, it allowed the Director to enter and leave without gaining the attention of those who might have demands on her time. It was also code-locked.

Well, that was what the all-access card was for. He swiped the code panel and the red LED switched to green. In the next moment, he had the door open and was inside. Careful to not even let it click shut, he eased the door closed once more. In the dimness of the short corridor that led to Piggot's office proper, he allowed himself the luxury of momentary relaxation. Slowly, his racing heartbeat returned to something approximating normality.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2.2

It was sheer bad luck that the stairwell door opened just as he was passing it. He turned fast, jabbing with the butt of his rifle up under the helmet visor. Done right, it would send the recipient directly into dreamland. His aim was true; the soldier went over backward … and dropped his rifle. Its butt hit carpet … and the barrel hit concrete. The clatter was thunderous in his ears.

"What was that?" The query came from below. "Who's up there?"

Calvert bolted down the stairs, taking them two at a time. If he could shut the guy up before he could report on the noise …

Unfortunately, the soldier had evidently figured out exactly what the noise was. As Calvert leaped down to the next landing, the soldier opened fire. Of the thirty-round magazine, seventeen bullets hit him, half a dozen in centre mass.

<><>​

Timeline 1.2.1.2.2.1

There was no light coming from under the door ahead of him; this meant Piggot's office lights were out. Which in turn meant she wasn't there. No doubt she was still in the conference room, trying to coordinate the search for him. Sorry, Emily. I'm three steps ahead of you. I'm in your safe space.

All he had to do was conceal himself in her office so that when she eventually returned, he could take her hostage. She was notorious for not seeing people she didn't want to see, so it shouldn't be too hard to keep her incommunicado for an hour or three. And once he had word the chopper was on the way, he'd walk her up to the roof. Done smoothly enough, nobody would dare foam them—a bullet at close range was faster—and they wouldn't have time to set up a sniper position.

Emily would, of course, have to come on the chopper with him. The temptation to shoot it down would be too great, otherwise. Once she was secure and under proper medical care, he could set about extracting from her all the secrets of the PRT he was not yet privy to. This, he decided, was going to take days. Vengeance, he knew from experience, was always sweeter when taken slowly and with great care. And maybe he'd have his hunt, after all.

Opening the door at the end of the corridor, he strode through into the empty office. Now, where's a good place to—

The taser prongs struck him in the middle of the back. An instant later, the current literally knocked him off his feet. Lying there, twitching as electricity coursed through his body, he was vaguely aware of the bulky form of Emily Piggot as she got up from the chair she'd been sitting in, right beside the door he'd just entered by. Sitting there in the dark, patiently waiting for him.

"They don't know you, Calvert," she said coldly and dispassionately as she toed the pistol away from his hand. He tried to reach for the one holstered at his waist, but she pressed the trigger on the taser again, causing him to convulse uncontrollably. While he was trying to recover, she relieved him of his other weapons. "Not like I do. You're a twisty snake. Always trying to strike from an unexpected direction."

Her foot moved again; too late, he realised it was a kick. As out of shape as she was, she could still put some solid weight behind it. The toe of her shoe sank into his solar plexus and he doubled up, gagging. She kicked him again, this time in the face; he felt his nose break.

"And you've always been one to hold a grudge," she went on. She gave him another dose from the taser, leaving his muscles feeling like liquefied jelly. "I can understand that." Putting the taser carefully on the chair, she pulled something from her pocket and fitted it on to her hand. A dull glint clued him in. Brass knuckles. "I'm much the same way."

Stepping over his prone body, she straddled him. In another time and place, with a different person, this may have actually been fun. Here and now, it was anything but. Settling down on to his chest, she pinned his arms to the floor with her knees and looked down at him. Even without the effect of multiple electrical shocks on his body, he would've hardly been able to move; with it, he was helpless. "You came into my city. You infiltrated my PRT building. You subverted my Ward. And you were going to try to kill me."

The first blow fractured his cheekbone before he could explain that he'd only intended to take her hostage. Then torture information out of her. Then kill her. Oh, right.

The second smashed his eyesocket. The third broke his jaw. For a woman, he decided distantly, she could punch.

By the fourth blow, which scattered his teeth across the floor, he felt the phone in his back pocket start to vibrate.

The fifth blow sent him unconscious.



End of Part Fourteen

Part Fifteen
 
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Part Fifteen: Doubling Down
The Price of Blood

Part Fifteen: Doubling Down

[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]



Christ, what a mess.


Armsmaster skidded the bike to a halt as Glory Girl crashed into the ground nearby. Her keening cry of pain tugged at him, but at least she was alive. "Glory Girl!" he bellowed. "Lie still! Do not move! I will get to you!" Hopefully, she wouldn't bleed out before he did.

Triage was ruthless, but sometimes it was the only way to save someone if you couldn't save everyone. In this case, he intended to do the impossible anyway. His halberd came off of his back and hummed to power as he ran toward where Clockblocker lay under the paw of the frozen dog. Bracing himself, he prepared to swing the halberd. "Dragon, countdown for Clockblocker. Also, monitor Glory Girl's life signs." He shot a side-glance at where Aegis lay writhing on the ground. Hopefully his body would get around whatever had been done to him, but in case it didn't … "And Aegis', too. And connect me through to base."

"Five seconds to minimum time," she told him. "Three. Two. She's alive but not looking good. He's suffering some sort of seizure. Giving you the override channel now."

Well, he'd known that. As he slashed with the halberd, the plasma-edged blade sliced through asphalt and concrete like a hot knife through styrofoam. His only chance in this case—Clockblocker's only chance—was if he destroyed what the boy was lying on and dragged him out before the Ward's power timer ended. "Console, Armsmaster. I'm at Hillside Mall. Clockblocker, Aegis and Glory Girl are down, all needing immediate and urgent medical care. All possible assistance required, ASAP. Armsmaster, out." He swung and sliced, swung and sliced. All the while, he kept one eye on the dog, and another on the heart rate monitors Dragon had set up to project into his HUD. Not his heart, and not Clockblocker's. Glory Girl's and Aegis'.

"Twenty-seven. Twenty-eight." Dragon attempted to keep her voice dispassionate, but Armsmaster heard the desperation underneath. "Colin, Glory Girl's going into shock, and Aegis isn't getting any better."

As her words registered with him, Armsmaster jammed the halberd into the concrete with the haft under the dog's chest, in the hope that it would take the weight in case the massive animal unfroze in the next few seconds. Then he dropped to his knees and took hold of Clockblocker's shoulders. The boy's body armour had saved his life to this point, but it was notably indented; there were almost certainly life-threatening injuries beneath.

Taking one deep breath, he pulled, determined to make the motion as smooth as possible. There was a grating sound, and for a horrible instant he thought it was Clockblocker's ribs. But, no, the pieces of smoking gravel that had once been concrete had begun to grind over one another. Clockblocker's armour caught on something, and the Protectorate leader gritted his teeth and heaved a little harder. If I exacerbate his injuries too far … But it was either that or chance leaving him under the dog until it unfroze, and if he did that the boy was dead.

A moment later, with another tug, Clockblocker moved again. To Colin's relief, the Ward slid freely out from under the massive, gnarled weapon that had once been a dog's paw. Aware that they weren't out of danger yet, Armsmaster continued to drag him across the asphalt as smoothly as he could manage. As soon as they were out from under the creature, he pulled the boy sideways to get out of its projected path. He then dropped to his knees beside the Ward and reached out his hand. Built into the side of Clockblocker's helmet was a life-signs monitor touch panel; the Tinker's gauntlet had the corresponding reader for just such a case as this. Colin's lips thinned as he looked over the data. Some damage had obviously been done, but at least the boy had a heartbeat and was breathing on his own. There was likely some internal bleeding, but he was alive and out of extremely immediate danger.

Just as Armsmaster formed that thought, there was a loud snap and a thunder of motion. He whipped his head around just in time for him to see the gigantic dog-monster as it galloped off down the road. To his chagrin, part of the halberd's haft was still embedded in its chest (though it didn't seem to hinder the monster dog in the slightest). The rest of his halberd stuck forlornly out of the concrete where he'd left it.

There wasn't time to assess the damage to his prized halberd, or even to dwell on it. "Dragon, link to Clockblocker's vitals," he said as he rose to his feet. Under normal circumstances, he wouldn't have left the the boy's side for an instant until the paramedics arrived on site, but these were the farthest thing from normal circumstances.

"Done." Dragon's voice was terse. Another set of vital signs readouts appeared in his HUD. The tiny clock-face emblem that showed up next to them was obviously intended to denote Clockblocker's identity, just as the miniature starburst and the helmet indicated Glory Girl and Aegis respectively, but he felt it was unduly ominous, as if the boy's life was ticking down.

Five long strides got him to Glory Girl's side, where she lay partly on her stomach. The hilt of the knife protruded from her lower back, not far from the spine. Keening painfully, she writhed in a pool of her own blood as she tried to get a grip on the knife. When she did, she shrieked in pain, let the knife go, and smashed her fist into the ground. High-speed gravel whirred past Armsmaster's helmet.

"Glory Girl!" he said urgently as he dropped to one knee beside her. The first-aid dispenser on his belt cranked out a section of absorbent bandage, perfect for packing around the knife blade so pressure could be put on the wound. He knew that the knife needed to be left in place for the moment, as it may have severed important blood vessels, with the blade as the only plug. "Please lie still! Don't touch the knife! Every time you do, you exacerbate the—"

That was as far as he got, for when he placed his gauntleted hand on her shoulder, she backfisted him hard. Even with the awkward angle and the effects of the injury, she still hit him in the chestplate with enough force enough to dent it. He flew backward several yards, but instincts garnered from long hours of training came to his aid. Twisting as he landed, he rolled to his feet in a practised motion and moved in again. Red warning lights popped up in his HUD. He set them aside to be checked out later. "Glory Girl!" he shouted. "You have to stay still! I can't treat you like this!"

A wave of terror washed over him, and he gasped, barely managing to keep control of his own fear response. This had to be Glory Girl's power. There was no real danger here, except from her iron-hard fists. Which, admittedly, were a real problem Although she was flailing aimlessly, her blows were still strong enough to crack concrete. Were she any normal injured person, he would've been able to restrain her long enough to tranquillise her. The trouble was, her power made this tricky in the extreme.

Footsteps came up behind him and he turned fast. But even as he opened his mouth to warn whoever it was to keep back, he saw it was Panacea and Vista. Farther back, he saw Taylor Hebert at the front of the crowd that had formed near the entrance of the shopping mall.

"Vicky!" Panacea exclaimed. "My God, what have they done to you?" She started forward, but Armsmaster hurriedly moved to block her way.

"Be careful," he warned the two girls. "She's lashing out. She could kill you by accident." He gritted his teeth as another wave of undirected fear washed over them. "And there's that, too."

"Got it," Vista said. "Panacea, I can make it so you can touch her from here. How quickly can you make her unconscious?"

"Very quickly, if I have to." Panacea's voice was grim. "Do it."

Colin's eyes ached as the very fabric of space twisted at the behest of a teenage girl. Panacea reached out, into the centre of the distortion. Her arm did not stretch, nor did Glory Girl get any closer to her, but somehow she placed her hand on her sister's arm. It was only a glancing touch, but it was enough. Glory Girl's movements slowed abruptly, as if she were overcome with tiredness. In the next few seconds, she slumped to the ground and lay still. Panacea hurried over and knelt beside her.

God, I hope that was because of what Panacea did, and not because she just died. A glance at his HUD told him that Glory Girl's heart-rate was still strong, if a little slower than before. Oh, good. "Vista, check on Clockblocker. I'm pretty sure he's got internal injuries. I've got Aegis." Now that the crisis with Glory Girl was over, he was genuinely worried about the Hispanic Ward. Over the last few years, he'd seen the boy more or less ignore a bullet wound in the head, a four-foot length of rebar through the chest and the traumatic removal of his left leg and part of his pelvis. The most he'd done about the latter, once it was stitched back into place, was to complain about walking funny until it all knitted again. Whatever had been done to him this time wasn't visible, which made Armsmaster wonder what the hell had been done, and why wasn't he adapting to get around it?

Not unlike Glory Girl, young Carlos's movements were also involuntary and violent. Fortunately, he wasn't nearly as strong as the ex-New Wave Alexandria package, so Armsmaster found it easy to hold him down. It was impossible to get a read on him through the helmet. Not surprisingly, considering nobody had thought it necessary to equip him with any sort of vital-signs monitoring. Reaching back to one of his less-used pouches, Armsmaster dug out a domino mask, then unclipped Aegis' helmet and laid it to one side. With a practised move, he applied the mask before taking the time to examine the boy.

The first thing he noticed was a foreign object protruding from Aegis' left eye. Reaching out, he took hold of the thing and pulled carefully. The faint sucking sound made him vaguely nauseous, but when the object came free, it revealed itself to be some kind of small dart. Armsmaster frowned in puzzlement. It was unlikely in the extreme that this dart on its own was responsible for Aegis' state. Besides, even if it was Tinkertech, Aegis' life signs hadn't begun to recover now that it was out. This worried him.

"Colin, Clockblocker's vitals are starting to fade." Dragon's voice was urgent.

At the same time, Vista spoke up, her voice high and frightened. "Armsmaster, I can't find his pulse!"

Armsmaster's eyes flicked to the appropriate spot in the HUD. He subvocalised a curse as he saw the line flattening out. Aegis was still in a bad way and getting worse, but at least he had a heartbeat. While Vista's fears about Clockblocker weren't totally realised—there were still life signs, just very weak ones—the boy didn't have long. "Panacea!" he shouted as he jumped to his feet and strode over toward the white-armoured Ward. "We need you now!"

"Nearly … done," grunted the ex-New Wave healer. "Knife's out, just need to make sure she doesn't bleed out."

"No time!" Armsmaster had once done a time-and-motion study on Panacea's healing techniques, and her average wound treatment procedure tended to run on for at least a minute, especially if there were vital organs involved or she was trying not to leave a scar. With both factors in play, it would be more like ninety seconds. This was time Clockblocker simply didn't have. He slapped the extemporaneous bandage into Vista's palm. "Take this, apply pressure to Glory Girl's wound. Panacea, get here now! That's an order!"

Leaning over Clockblocker, he flicked the hidden catch that released the body armour the boy wore over his chest and upper abdomen. This armour was severely dented and crushed inward, which didn't bode well for the damage to Clockblocker himself. He lifted it off. Despite himself, his breath hissed between his teeth as he saw the sunken sternum and the obvious signs of broken ribs. But it seemed the diaphragm was undamaged, given the way Clockblocker's chest struggled to rise and fall. What, then …?

His train of thought was broken as Panacea dropped down on Clockblocker's other side. He ignored her bloodstained hands and her sullen glare alike; all that mattered was to save the boy's life. "Okay, I'm here," she snapped. "Gonna need some bare skin to work with."

It seemed to him that she was unhappy about not being allowed to heal her sister all the way, but that wasn't really a factor at the moment. Clockblocker's gloves were detachable from the rest of the costume—both for practicality and due to a very real concern that any new gloves might end up too thick for his powers to work through—so Armsmaster grabbed the boy's arm and yanked the glove off in one move. There was a dull pop as he did so, and he thought he might have dislocated the teen's wrist or perhaps one of his fingers. Whatever it was, it would be more fixable than death. "Here," he said as he held out the now-bare hand toward Panacea. She took it and gasped, her eyes taking on a thousand-yard stare.

"Fuck," she said out loud. "He's been poisoned. And you know, trod on by a fucking elephant or something. Okay, fixing this shit."

"Is there anything I can do to help?" he asked. He'd spent literally years training himself to be able to handle any situation any normal human might find themselves in. This might be a powers-only situation, or it might not. He'd never know if he didn't ask.

"No … yeah," she said, visibly changing her mind. "Any injectable stimulants you've got, give 'em to him." She bit her lip as sweat sheened her forehead. All trace of her previous unhappiness had vanished. "I'm spending ninety percent of my time keeping his damn heart and lungs going."

"What sort of poison?" he asked as he took an injector from his belt. He'd designed it to work on himself; at base, if his Tinkertech was removed, he was only human. With this in mind, he intended to take every single advantage he could garner anyway. A burst of energy at the right time could be a life-saver, no matter the cost later on.

"Neurotoxin," she muttered as he pressed the injector to Clockblocker's carotid, under the rim of his helmet. It hissed, then beeped to indicate that its payload had gone through. "Fifty percent chance of killing a healthy adult male. Seventy-five percent chance of putting them in a coma. Oh, nice. That's perfect." Her eyes widened. "Holy shit, you use that on yourself? How does your heart not explode?"

"I've tested it under laboratory conditions," he replied stiffly, then changed the subject. "What would multiple doses of this toxin do to Aegis?"

"Fuck, that's what's happened to him?" She glanced toward the still-shuddering red-clad Ward, but her frown of concentration never wavered.

"It's my best guess," admitted Armsmaster. "I pulled a dart out of his eye. There may be more."

"Clockblocker had a puncture wound behind his left knee," Panacea noted. "The majority of the neurotoxin was situated there. Dart delivery makes sense. Who uses darts?"

"None of the Undersiders," Armsmaster said. "But …"

"Vista said Shadow Stalker was working with them," Panacea filled in his unspoken thought. "She's used crossbows with tranquillisers. Poison darts aren't that much of a stretch."

"Colin, Aegis' heart is giving out."

That didn't make any sense. Armsmaster had seen Aegis' liver take over from his heart once. But Dragon didn't make mistakes like that. In addition, his own HUD had just now updated to show him the same data. "Aegis is in trouble. Panacea, are you good here?"

"I'm on top of it," she said. "Go."

With just a glance at where Vista still had pressure on Glory Girl's wound, Armsmaster rose and dashed over to where Aegis lay. The muscular boy had armour to back up his Brute capabilities, but Armsmaster knew where the releases were. Unlatching the breastplate, he cast it aside. Unlike Clockblocker, Aegis hadn't suffered any chest injuries, so he could safely apply CPR, or at least chest compressions … damn it. "Dragon, what's his respiration like?"

"Also down," she reported.

With his helmet the way it was, it was difficult for him to apply expired air resuscitation. Panacea was still busy with Clockblocker, and Vista couldn't leave Glory Girl. Then he remembered he still had a card up his sleeve. Turning to the crowd—one member in particular—he waved an arm. "Does anyone have first-aid training? I need help with CPR. Anyone?"

For he knew Taylor had taken first-aid classes as a part of her heroic preparations even before the Swarmbringer incident. To his relief, she took the cue and stepped forward. "I know CPR," she said hesitantly. He wasn't sure if it was an act, but it hit just the right note.

"Good," he said. "Come on over. I'm going to need you to breathe for him while I apply compressions."

"Oh, um, okay," she said and trotted over. As he finished a round of compressing Aegis' chest, she knelt beside the boy and took his chin in her hand. Pinching his nostrils closed with her other hand, she began to breathe into his lungs, taking care to time her breaths between Armsmaster's chest compressions.

"You got … here at … just the … right time," he said quietly, between compressions. "When did … they release … you from … the building?"

"They didn't," she said, just as quietly. "We just came."

With some difficulty, he restrained his reaction of surprise. Deal with it later. We have lives to save, here. A glance at his HUD showed that Aegis' heart rate had picked up. Hopefully, his oxygen intake had also improved.

And then Panacea came into his field of view as she knelt beside Taylor. "Excuse me, miss, but I need access to him," she said just loudly enough to be heard by the crowd. "Thank you." As she placed her hand on Aegis' uncovered face, she gasped. "Holy crap, he's got a dart inside his brain!"

"Shadow Stalker," Armsmaster snapped. "It has to be. Nobody else can do that phasing trick." It was something that had been posited and she'd tried a few times with practise dummies, but had apparently given up trying to get right. Except that it seemed she'd been learning how to do it away from official scrutiny, and she'd mastered it. "Clockblocker?"

"Waking up in a few moments. The knife was bonded to Vicky's ribs, which was why she couldn't pull it out," Panacea supplied. "Jesus, he's got neurotoxin in his brain. I'm neutralising it but I can't fix the damage." She sounded stricken as she said it.

Two counts of attempted murder against her name now. Three, counting Clockblocker. But there were higher priorities than counting up Shadow Stalker's charges. "Is he going to be all right?"

She grimaced. "Maybe? His motor functions don't seem to be affected. The failing vitals was all about having neurotoxin right there. But it may have gotten his corona pollentia. There seems to be damage there, anyway."

Which would be why Aegis' powers hadn't kicked in; or rather, hadn't kicked in enough. By a sheer lucky fluke, Shadow Stalker had hit him in the one place he couldn't work around. Though Armsmaster suspected his powers were still working just a little, or he'd be dead already. "Son of a bitch. How about the rest of his brain?"

"Memory, cognition, personality, it all looks basically intact to me," Panacea said briskly. "Fixing Clockblocker gave me a recipe for a counteragent which is working just fine. There won't be any more damage, but I can't fix what's already happened."

"That sounds … really sucky," Taylor said, keeping her voice down. She gave Panacea a sympathetic look.

"Yeah." Panacea hung her head. "It really, really is." She took a deep breath. "Okay, that's the last of the neurotoxin done … now. We're done here."

"Not yet, we're not," Vista put in from where she still knelt next to Glory Girl. "Pretty sure your sister's gonna need some care and attention before you're finished here."

"Shit!" Panacea got up and hurried back to Glory Girl's side. Kneeling next to her sister, she went to work once more.

Taylor got up and dusted her hands off on her jeans. "I, uh, guess I'll go now?" she asked.

Armsmaster nodded. "Yes," he said briefly. "Thank you for your assistance, miss."

She ducked her head and moved back into the crowd, while Vista came over to Colin. "Well, that was a thing," the younger Ward said. "I don't suppose you could put in a good word for us for leaving without permission?"

Armsmaster looked around. Clockblocker was groaning his way to consciousness, and his helmet HUD reported that the other two Wards were still alive and in far better health than they'd been before. That would almost certainly have gone the other way, had Vista not brought Panacea and Taylor to this spot. "Orders are meant to be followed, especially lockdowns," he said sternly. "However, under these circumstance, I'm sure I can prevail on the Director to not be too hard on you."

<><>​

PRT Building

Taylor


Taylor stood with Amy and Missy alongside the conference table. The Director sat at the head of the table, behind Taylor and to her right. Armsmaster's stolid presence was almost comforting at her back.

In front of them, spilling light into the darkened room, a wall-screen played security footage. It was mercifully without sound, but Taylor could fill in what had come over the speakers from memory. At first, the PRT officers in the security office had been exasperated, but when Vista simply made the doors open by halving the width of each door, they had done their best to lay down the law. Their best had not been good enough.

The image changed to show herself, Vista and Panacea running toward the lift. Before they even got to it, the digital sign above the lift turned to a series of red bars, signifying that it was not in service. That hadn't bothered Vista, who had worked her magic with the lift doors, then with the hatch in the lift roof. Which, incidentally, had been securely locked against anyone trying just this sort of trick. Taylor was pretty sure the hatch wouldn't be usable as anything other than a doorstop after this; Vista had gotten pretty rough with it.

The scene shifted to the top of the lift, which impressed Taylor no end. She wondered who else other than Director Piggot would think to put cameras in an elevator shaft. Visual distortions fuzzed the picture for a moment, then a metal square fell past the view of the camera. One by one, the three girls disappeared upward. The picture distorted again, then returned to normal. Then the screen blanked out, and the lights came up in the room. Along with Missy and Amy, Taylor turned to face the Director.

"After leaving the Wards quarters against direct orders, you entered the lift, gained access to the elevator shaft, then exited via the rooftop hatch," Piggot said. "Is that correct?"

Missy swallowed audibly. "Yes, ma'am," she said almost inaudibly.

"In doing so, you exposed a flaw in our security," the heavy-set woman went on remorselessly. "That will be dealt with. In the meantime … you crossed town to the Hillside Mall, correct?"

"Correct," Armsmaster stated. "Where I was attempting to deal with three injured Wards. All of whom would very likely have died, had Panacea not showed up on site."

"As your report has stated, in rather glowing terms." Piggot managed not to sound impressed. "Vista, I understand that Scarab was out of costume at the time. We've gone to great lengths to protect her secret identity. Why did you even take her with you?"

Vista's shoulders were back, her hands clasped behind her. She looked stiff and unhappy as she replied. "Ma'am, she wanted to go. I dropped her off behind the crowd before Panacea and I reached Armsmaster and the Wards. Her knowledge of CPR was useful in keeping Aegis alive."

Piggot made an impatient chopping motion with her hand. "I understand that. Other members of the crowd could have done the same. Miss Hebert, why did you volunteer to go along, despite being out of costume?"

Taylor took a deep breath. "Ma'am, I don't have a costume. But I still wanted to help. We didn't know if whoever hurt Clockblocker and Aegis and Glory Girl were still around, and the perfect time and place to attack would be while Vista and Panacea were involved in helping Armsmaster with them. So I used my bugs to keep a lookout all around. If anyone had attacked, I would've been able to give warning, and to distract the attackers."

Silence fell, then the Director drummed her fingers on the table. "That's … sound reasoning," she admitted. She shifted her attention to Amy. "And the aftermath? Once you had the Wards healed? I understand there were more casualties."

The biokinetic nodded, her expression unhappy. "Two security guards dead. There was another guard, and a woman whom Taylor's bugs located in one of the bathrooms. They were both in comas, but I was able to bring them back." Taylor had quietly informed Panacea of this via her bugs, allowing her to 'find' the woman a few moments later.

"They were lucky," Armsmaster noted. "Panacea reported that the LD-fifty of the neurotoxin was one dose, and that's for a healthy adult. One of the dead guards took a double dose. In three of the four cases, we found the same darts on site. The woman didn't have a dart, but she did have a puncture wound of the same type in her chest."

An expression not unlike pain crossed the Director's face. "And Aegis? What happened there?"

Amy fielded this question as well. "Shadow Stalker shot a dart into his eye, then phased three more into his body. One ended up in his brain. The neurotoxin from all four would've killed anyone else several times over. With him, it came close. Normally, he would've gotten around it, but the one in his brain dispensed its toxin right next to his corona pollentia. His body couldn't adapt around it, any more than I could fly by throwing a rope in the air and climbing up it. He's still unconscious, while his body gets over what happened to it. I neutralised the neurotoxin, but …" She grimaced. "There's brain damage. He should still be him, but I can't guarantee he'll have access to his powers when he wakes up."

"God damn it." Piggot's fist slammed into the table. "Two civilian murders, two attempted murders and the attempted murder of three Wards. One of whom may well be out of the Wards after this. All from one code purple." She leaned back in her chair and took several deep breaths, apparently in an attempt to calm herself. Taylor remained still, unwilling to draw the heavy-set woman's ire.

Several seconds passed, then the Director sat forward again. "All right," she said. "Vista, Panacea; you did break regulations, but in doing so you saved lives. There will be no official punishment. However, you will each be required to find the section of PRT regulations regarding building lockdowns and present to me a five hundred word essay detailing why those regulations are necessary. You have one week. Scarab, you're not a Ward and thus I can't give you direct orders, but I would very much like you to consider doing likewise. Dismissed."

With a silent sigh of relief—as angry as the Director was, it could've been a lot worse—Taylor headed for the door with the others.

"Wait." It was the Director's voice. Taylor stopped, her heart thumping in her chest. She's changed her mind, and she's going to throw the book at us.

They turned to look at Piggot. Missy answered for them. "Yes, ma'am?"

Taylor couldn't quite read the expression on the older woman's face. "Panacea, I understand that Glory Girl is your sister. I also understand that Clockblocker is your teammate and friend, Vista. And it goes without saying that Shadow Stalker is someone against whom you would be excused for holding a substantial grudge, Scarab, but I will say this. Do not, and I mean do not, consider any reckless actions such as going out either alone or with each other to hunt her down. She's armed, she's dangerous, and she's shown absolute willingness to use lethal force against anyone she considers an enemy. We will find her, we will arrest her, and the full force of the law will crash down on the back of her neck in good time. But in the meantime, I don't want to lose more Wards, or affiliated heroes, to any ill-considered actions. Is that perfectly understood?"

Almost without conscious volition, Taylor found herself nodding her head in agreement. "Yes, ma'am," she managed, hearing her words echoed by the other two.

"Good." Piggot waved at the door. "Go. Go home and rest. You've done well, today."

In a mild state of shock from the Director's final words, Taylor exited the room.

<><>​

Armsmaster

Colin watched the door close behind the three girls. "Permission to leave, ma'am?" he requested. "I need to repair—"

"Your halberd, I know." Piggot made a throwaway gesture. "In a moment. Right now, we need more information. Any word on the Undersiders?"

"None." The Tinker shook his head, fully aware that she wasn't going to like his lack of news. "I've had people put out feelers, but they've gone dark. From what I've gleaned from the security cameras outside the Mall, they didn't part with Shadow Stalker on the best of terms, however."

"That's both good and bad." The Director's voice was thoughtful. "Good, in that she won't have them as backup when and if we do catch up with her. Bad, in that she'll be harder to track down. How definitive was this evidence of bad feeling between them?"

"She indirectly caused Regent to get hurt," Armsmaster noted. "She and Grue seemed to argue, then Grue covered her in his darkness and the Undersiders rode off on their dogs. That was when Glory Girl attacked her and was stabbed."

The Director nodded slowly. "They're still accountable for the deaths, of course." It was a clearly understood aspect of felony murder. "But if we can bring them in and offer a plea deal, we can find out where she got the neurotoxin and the dart launchers from. From the evidence so far, she's been planning this break for some time. And to be honest, I'm far more interested in nailing a treacherous Ward to the wall than in prosecuting a bunch of small-time hit-and-run thieves."

Colin understood perfectly. It was all about setting a precedent—and in this case, making an example. He couldn't be sure how many other disaffected Wards there were around the country, but once word passed around about Shadow Stalker's fate, they'd be less likely to go villain at the drop of a hat. Which reminded him. "So you'll be pushing for the Birdcage then, ma'am?"

"That or a kill order," the Director said, surprising him slightly.

"A kill order's a little strong, don't you think?" he asked, careful to keep his voice neutral. "She's only what, fifteen? And we can't actively prosecute her for the Swarm."

"Because that would contradict Scarab's story, yes," she said. "But I disagree with you. Since her escape from the PRT building, Shadow Stalker's actions have expressed a high degree of what the legal types would call 'depraved indifference', if not flat-out malicious intent. Two murders of civilians and five more who would've been dead without Panacea's intercession, all within fifteen minutes of one another? That's all three strikes for the Birdcage, right there. Plus, attempting to murder three Wards is something I will not tolerate."

And given that the woman had beaten Thomas Calvert to death in her own office (thus necessitating this particular change in venue until the carpet was cleaned of his blood and brains) there were very few people in the PRT building willing to go against Director Piggot's wishes in such a matter. Armsmaster definitely wasn't one of them.

<><>​

Brian

Pulling the card from the phone, Lisa flicked the lighter and held the piece of delicate electronics in the flame. After a few seconds, she dropped it on the concrete and ground her heel down on it, twisting back and forth to maximise the damage. Finally, she nudged it over to a storm drain, not even bothering to watch as it disappeared into the darkness below. Pulling another from her pocket, she snapped it into place then replaced the back on the phone.

"That's a little extreme, isn't it?" Leaning up against the alley wall with his arms crossed, Brian hadn't budged during the whole procedure. "Why so thorough?"

"The boss is either captured or dead," Lisa said, her tone absolutely certain of her conclusions. "I tried calling five times, cutting the call after ten seconds each time. On the last call, someone picked up but didn't speak. At the same time, they tried to trace the call."

"PRT," Brian agreed with her unspoken conclusion. "Okay, I agree that's not good, but—"

"It's worse than not good," Lisa interrupted. "I've been looking online. People died in the Hillside Mall. The Wards we ran into? Spectre nearly killed them, too. Those darts weren't tranquillisers—they were neurotoxin."

A cold chill ran down Brian's back. And we gave her the damn launchers back. "You didn't tell us this before, why?"

Lisa scrubbed her palms over her face. "Newsflash, Brian. My power's not omniscient. I don't know everything, much as I'd like to. She didn't know they weren't tranquillisers, and I was paying attention to too much other stuff during the robbery, like making sure that she didn't shoot us in the back."

"Fuck." Brian pinched his fingers on the bridge of his nose. "So what happens now that the boss is no longer paying us? What do we do? Keep going the way we are?" How am I going to help Aisha now? he didn't quite ask, though he was pretty sure she'd heard him anyway.

She shook her head. "You're not seeing the bigger picture. This is bigger than your sister, or even what we're going to do for cash flow."

He couldn't see what she was getting at, and then he thought he did. "Wait. You're saying he might give us up?"

To his confusion, she shook her head. "That's a small part of it. Come on; let's get coffee. Lurking in alleyways like this is only going to draw attention."

<><>​

Sophia

It had taken her several hours, but she was reasonably sure she hadn't been followed. Finally, perched on a rooftop not far from the northern ferry terminal, she took one last look around and dug out the phone Calvert had left for her in the post office box. Pressing the button to power it up, she suffered through the boot-up process, using her hands to physically mask the chime that it played to announce to the world that a phone had just been turned on.

Examining the screen once it was up and running, she frowned when she saw the remaining power. Thirty-nine percent; if she didn't get hold of a charger soon, it was going to die on her. Making a hasty decision, she dashed off a quick text. Hi, it's me. U probably seen what happened. Was all their fault. Time to make my move? Will check phone @ 0000.

Shutting down the phone again, she tucked it away in the rear pouch again, then pulled out the cheap burner Coil had given her. This one was sitting in the low nineties for charge, so she felt safe in actually talking on it. It started up with less fuss and fanfare than the more expensive phone, which she considered to be bullshit. There was only one number on it, which she hit the speed-dial for. Then she put it to her ear and waited. And waited. And waited.

Finally, after far too long, there was a click as the call was picked up. "Hey, it's me," she said breathlessly. "Just thought you might want to know, your precious Undersiders just kicked me to the curb for no reason at all …"

Gradually, she became aware that she was talking to dead air. Pausing, she listened carefully. There was just enough ambient noise to convince her that there was an open line. What the fuck is going on here?

<><>​

Armsmaster

Colin sat, his attention fixated on the two phones on the workbench. Off to the side, under a magnifier, was the one they'd actually taken off of Coil's body. It was one of the newer fancy ones, able to take two SIM cards. He'd discovered this fact while dissecting it for its secrets, and had immediately gone out to acquire two handsets to put the cards in.

On his return, he'd been chagrined to discover that the phone had missed several calls while he'd been out, but he set up the two new phones on the workbench anyway while he got back to work on the original. The one on the left had rung just a little while ago, with the same number as the first four times; he'd answered the call and put it on speaker, but the person on the other end had hung up in just a few seconds without saying a word.

Undeterred, he'd got back to working on Coil's phone until the phone on the right had pinged with a text message. The tone of it puzzled him, even after he worked out the meaning and who had probably sent it. If, and this was a big 'if', the text had originated from Shadow Stalker, it sounded as though she were trying to excuse the aftermath to Coil. What the 'move' was, he had no idea. With the permission to trace the call already pre-approved—the Director could expedite things fast when things like this happened—he'd pinged the tower the text had come in by, but the phone itself didn't register on the network. So either Stalker had moved, or she'd turned the phone off.

And then the left-hand phone rang again. Turning on the recorder once more, he carefully answered the call and put it on speaker. When he heard the voice, he almost fist-pumped the air in victory. To confirm what he already knew, he glanced at the voice stress analyser he'd adapted for the task. A moment later, it pinged with a ninety-eight point nine percent chance that this was Shadow Stalker's voice. Once again, he activated the phone trace. Almost immediately, it came up with the same tower. So either Stalker has two phones, or she's got a switchable one, like Coil's. Interesting that she's calling two numbers with two phones.

Activating a phone link within his helmet, he typed out a text by eye: Shadow Stalker has just called the phone. Permission to try to get her to give herself up? He sent it off to the Director's phone, hoping that Stalker would stay on the line long enough.

Piggot texted back within thirty seconds. Open a dialogue but don't push. On my way down. However, just as he glanced back toward the phone, the call ended.

She hung up, he texted back. Got the tower though.

Wait,
was her only reply.

A few minutes later, she entered his workshop. "What do you have?" she asked. Or rather, demanded.

He didn't take offence. The Director, he knew, was taking this one personally. "I have a text message and a phone message. Sent from two different phones, to each of the two SIM cards in Calvert's phone." As he spoke, he called up the text message on one of the workshop screens.

Piggot scrutinised it with a frown. "You're sure 'me' is Shadow Stalker?"

"I had a hunch," Armsmaster said. "And then she called from the same cell tower. So he's got two people up near the Docks area, or she's got two phones and she's used one for each message."

"I see." She rubbed her chin. "Can you ping that phone?"

He shook his head. "No. It's off the network right now."

"Hm." She looked over the text message again. "Typical self-serving child," she observed. "It looks like she's talking about the Hillside debacle, and trying to lay blame elsewhere. Any idea regarding the 'move' she's talking about?"

"Nothing solid," he confessed. "If you want, I can send back a text for her to get at midnight."

"Put a hold on that for the moment." She indicated the screen. "Let's hear the voice recording."

"Yes, ma'am." He typed on a keyboard for a moment to set up the playback. As a bonus, he threw in the voice analysis results.

She listened without comment. When it finished, she raised her finger and gestured in a circle for him to replay it. This time, she leaned close to the speaker with her eyes closed. She stayed this way as the voice played out, until there was nothing but the hiss of the speakers.

"Well," she said out loud, once it was done. "There's two things to take away from this. One, that call is absolute proof that Shadow Stalker has been in Coil's pay all this time, and that the Undersiders were also under his control. But it looks like they were in two different branches of his operations until now. Especially given that they had a disagreement over the methods used in the robbery, strong enough for her to be booted from the team."

Armsmaster nodded in agreement. "I'm also interested in the phrasing she used there. 'Your precious Undersiders'. I'm thinking she didn't know she was going to be placed with them until after she broke away from the Wards."

"Which means that it wasn't a planned break," Piggot concurred. "Or rather, given how slick it was, it was planned as an exit strategy but not as an actual part of their ongoing operations. Having a Ward feeding Coil information from within, or even committing sabotage, has to be more useful than one more body on the streets."

"Yes." Colin stared up at the screen without really seeing it. "I'm still concerned about what she may have done for him already that we thought was just bad luck. Even the arrests she's made could've been done with his purposes in mind."

"We are definitely going to have to check that over with a fine-toothed comb. But that's what data analysts are paid for." The Director winced, possibly thinking of all the overtime that was going to accrue. "As for the other mystery. Why two different phones calling two different numbers?"

"Operational security?" Armsmaster posited. "If one SIM is for his Coil persona and the other for his Calvert persona, it keeps his messages and call logs separate. She sends innocuous calls and texts to his Calvert number, and villain ones to his Coil persona. And she uses two phones so that if someone looks up the call logs, we don't have the same number calling both of his numbers."

Piggot rubbed her chin. "That makes a certain amount of sense. We'll go with that for the moment. In any case, we have two separate numbers for her, and we know she'll be turning one of her phones back on at midnight. The question is, how do we approach it from here?"

"Call her and tell her to give herself up before she accrues even worse charges," Colin said bluntly. "She obviously doesn't know that her boss is dead. If we hit her with that as well, we may just shock her into surrendering."

"Or she may choose to go for broke and offer her services to the highest bidder, with all the knowledge she may have acquired about our procedures," the Director countered. "Teenagers aren't known for their logical consistency. Push her into a corner, and she just may decide she's got nothing to lose." Which, Colin had to admit, was actually true.

Armsmaster tilted his head. "Do you have a different strategy in mind?"

Her smile had a few more teeth in it than the norm. "Why, yes. I do."

<><>​

Hebert Household

Amy


Amy shook her head. "I should've just kept my mouth shut."

"You couldn't have known." Taylor put her hand on her friend's shoulder and squeezed comfortingly. "We all blurt things out by accident all the time."

"Yeah, but …" Amy grimaced. "I mean, restoring his powers wouldn't be the same as messing with the rest of his brain, right? But I had to just say out loud that his corona pollentia was screwed up. So I couldn't take that back." She stared at her hands, flat on the table.

"Hey." Taylor shuffled her chair closer and put her arm around Amy's shoulders. "His powers were acting up even before you got to him. I'm pretty sure Armsmaster had his suspicions. And you definitely saved his life."

Amy sighed unhappily. "Yeah, I did, but … that stuff Shadow Stalker was using was nasty. It nearly killed Clockblocker. It did kill a couple guys in the mall. And thanks for finding that woman for me. About one more minute and she would've been out of reach."

"To be honest, I thought she was already dead," Taylor confessed. "I was just showing you where she was."

That got her a smile from Amy. "Well, she wasn't. And she's with her family tonight because you helped me save her life." The biokinetic put her arms around Taylor and hugged her. "So that was a win, right there."

"It was." Amy felt Taylor lean into the hug. It was nice. "So how about we make a deal?"

"A deal?" Amy tilted her head curiously. "What sort of deal?"

Taylor took a deep breath. "Any time we think we might've screwed up with our powers, we check with each other. Do you trust me to tell you if you've screwed up?"

Amy considered that. "Yeah, I do. Do you trust me?"

There wasn't even a hesitation as Taylor nodded. "Definitely." The bug controller offered her hand. "Shake?"

With a grin, Amy took the hand. "Done." Solemnly, they shook hands.

<><>​

Brian

"Okay, then, here's the skinny." Lisa stretched out in her chair, her feet on another chair. Her coffee was half-empty beside her. Street-lights were beginning to come on, up and down the street. "We were working for Coil."

Brian blinked. "Coil? Holy shit. Really?" That was actually kind of a big revelation. He'd heard of the guy, but they'd never met. There'd just been voices on the phone.

"Really." Lisa's voice was flat. "But here's the kicker. Shadow Stalker didn't know she was working for him."

"That doesn't make sense." Brian gestured, trying to frame his thoughts. "She came to us from him."

Lisa's ever-present grin grew into a smirk. "She was behind the Swarmbringer event. Not sure how, exactly, but she definitely instigated it. The PRT was about to come down on her when Coil—who was also working for the PRT, mind you—approached her in his non-villain identity and offered her a chance to work a sting operation. On us."

Slumping back in his chair, Brian took a large gulp of his coffee. "Please tell me you're shitting me," he almost begged. "This is a joke, right?" The look on her face informed him otherwise. "It's not a joke. Fuck. We had the Swarmbringer in our fucking base?"

"She's not the Swarmbringer, exactly." Lisa took another sip of her weird-ass latte. "She just made it happen. Anyway, she busted out of the PRT building just ahead of the forces of law and order, but she thought it was all a show put on for Coil's benefit."

Brian's head fell back as many things began to make sense all of a sudden. "So that's why you couldn't stop laughing. She was screwed no matter what she did."

"Elementary, my dear Watson." Lisa grinned at him over her cup. "I'm pretty sure Coil wanted to have Shadow Stalker's crimes hanging over our heads if he ever wanted to pressure us into something nastier than normal. But he left a string hanging somewhere and sometime today, they pulled on that string and got him."

"So where's that leave us?" asked Brian practically. "If he's dead, he can't turn us in, but if he's alive …"

"If he's alive, he knows chapter and verse about us. And if he's dead, they might still find information he's got stored." Lisa's tone was suddenly businesslike. "And there's the people Spectre killed in the Hillside Mall. We're linked with that, no matter what."

"So … what?" Brian tried to figure out where she was going with this. "Do we leave town? Is that even a viable option?" He couldn't see the Undersiders sticking together as a team if they did. And he couldn't just leave Aisha behind.

She looked at him sympathetically. "Not for everyone, no," she agreed. "I've got a better idea. More dangerous, but if it works we might be able to avoid a felony murder charge."

He couldn't figure out what she meant, until suddenly it dawned on him. "Wait, you're not saying …"

Her grin returned in full force. "Yeah. I'm saying we hand Shadow Stalker over to the PRT." Picking up her cup, she drained it. "But first, I have some bank accounts to empty."



End of Part Fifteen

Part Sixteen
 
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Part Sixteen: Chasing Shadows, Part II
Price of Blood

Part Sixteen: Chasing Shadows, Part II


[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]


Brian

Brian stared at Lisa. "No, that plan isn't dangerous. It's suicidal. Not only is Shadow Stalker carrying around a launcher that fires darts loaded with enough toxin to kill you twice over, but had you forgotten her habit of trying to murder me with arrows?" He patted his side, as if to remind her exactly where the homicidal ex-Ward had shot him, not so long ago.

"Actually, that'll help a lot to prove that we're not working with her," Lisa pointed out, her eyes sparkling with mischief. "Pretty sure they'll have some of her old arrows in storage. It'll be child's play to match one of those with your scar."

"It'll be even easier for them to drop us in a cell to await trial," Brian retorted. "Alec really needs to get his arm checked out and put in a cast, and you know how Rachel feels about the PRT. Even hint that the boss has been caught and we might be turning ourselves in, and she'll be gone faster than you can say 'Old Yeller got shot'." He felt in some way responsible for the debacle at the Hillside Mall, even though he'd had no choice but to accept Shadow Stalker's place on the team.

"No, true," Lisa admitted. "Whatever we do, we have to play it very close to the chest. Besides, if they turn themselves in with us, they've still got those stupid murder charges hanging over their heads from way back. That's just the PRT being dicks, if you ask me. Maybe once we catch Stalker, you and I can handle the handover. Leave the other two right out of it."

She sounded far too confident for Brian's liking. While her power was fucking impressive when used with the right data, she'd been known to face-plant spectacularly if she got caught in what computer nerds called the 'garbage in garbage out trap'. Before he committed, he needed to know that she wasn't operating on wishful thinking and crap data. Of course, he didn't want her thinking that he actually doubted her. That way lay endless cycles of her trying to prove she really was the smartest person in the room, and him just trying to get some sleep. "Yeah, but how are we going to catch her? And you do know we're going to have to move out of the loft, because she almost certainly knows where that is by now, right?"

Lisa frowned. The glint in her eye told Brian she'd discerned the reservations he held about the whole deal. Whether she had a solution in mind was another matter altogether. "She can find it pretty quickly, yeah. Though she won't be attacking us right now. Mainly because she doesn't know Coil's been taken down, and unless someone tells her, she won't know he was also working as her contact in the PRT."

"And like you said, she's under orders from Coil not to attack us." To Brian, this sounded less like a solution than a stopgap. Trusting in Shadow Stalker's sense of duty to Coil didn't seem like the smartest idea in the world. "I doubt that's going to hold much longer. Especially if she's only getting radio silence from either number."

"Yeah," Lisa mused. "And the moment she decides she's not bound by any rules or regulations, she's likely to come after us with murder in mind." Which more or less mirrored Brian's thoughts on the matter, except that he was less certain about the ex-Ward's restraint.

He snorted. "Not least because you kept laughing at her all the time." Admittedly, it had been reasonably amusing at the time but if anyone could hold a grudge, it was Shadow Stalker.

Lisa put on her best innocent expression. Brian wasn't convinced about that, either. "Hey, don't blame me. We all contributed. I remember how you and Alec gave her a hard time, too."

"Yeah, well." Brian prodded the old scar again, feeling the distant ache. He wasn't going to pretend that beating up on Shadow Stalker as Spectre hadn't been thoroughly satisfying at the time. Of course, the time to pay the piper was rapidly approaching. "Once that happens, she'll be trying to spread the love as indiscriminately as she can. Won't matter if people said something or not. We're all targets."

A calculating look crossed Lisa's face. Brian didn't even have to hear her next words to have a bad feeling about this. "Actually, that's an interesting point. I wonder if we can make use of that?"

His wince of pain owed nothing to the scar, this time.

<><>​

Taylor

While not exactly a cape geek, Taylor had been somewhat of an admirer of Armsmaster in her younger years. Looking back now, she wondered if nine-year-old Taylor Hebert would have believed it if she was told that sitting in on a lab design session with the iconic hero could be simultaneously boring and confusing. The disbelief would've doubled down if her younger self had been informed that Armsmaster was working with another Tinker to build powered armour for her.

But it was all too true. There was no pressing reason for Taylor to actually be in the room, apart from fielding random questions about the exterior themes of her powersuit. They'd settled on exactly how she wanted it to look like a giant scarab beetle—which parts would resemble a beetle and which would still be humanoid—and the colour scheme (blue and black) quite early on, and were now working on the wings.

Or rather, arguing about the wings.

Personally, Taylor couldn't figure out what the actual problem was about. She was getting powered armour to allow her to be a superhero without revealing herself as the Swarmbringer, and this armour was going to allow her to fly. Even after sitting there for ten minutes with her head going back and forth like a spectator at a tennis match, she still had no idea what most of the technical terms actually meant.

"Guys," she pleaded at last. If I don't say something, they may just argue with each other for the rest of the day. Both Tinkers turned and stared at her, as if they'd forgotten she was even in the room. "What's the problem? Maybe I can help."

Armsmaster took a deep breath. "My young colleague and I are having a disagreement about exactly how the anti-gravity panels should be incorporated into the wings of the power armour." He turned his head momentarily toward Kid Win, and his lips tightened. "I'm of the opinion that the panels and their attendant control mechanisms need to be incorporated into the wings in a distributed array, so that any incidental damage won't knock out too much of your flight capability in one shot, and so that power supply to the panels can be streamlined as much as possible. This will allow for a potential increase in flight speed and agility. Integration and efficiency; that's what we're looking for, here."

Taylor watched Kid Win roll his eyes behind his tinted visor. The teenager tended to wave his hands around when he spoke, apparently trying to demonstrate what he was saying. "But integration isn't efficiency, not when you're talking about maintenance and ease of replacement. These G-negative lifters are pretty finicky, and if you spread the components out through the wing, it makes it harder to get at the part you want to get at. I mean, yeah, there's some loss in power because you've got to route it through a few extra conduits, but only a little bit. And it's made up for when you spend half an hour instead of half the day fixing a minor glitch. Especially when everything's standardised instead of custom components, so you can swap out one for another if necessary."

A pained sigh drew Taylor's attention back to Armsmaster. The older man seemed to be frowning, but it was hard to tell behind his opaque visor. "You're forgetting one important fact. While we're marketing Scarab as an independent Tinker with Protectorate support, she isn't actually a Tinker. We can do field repairs on our suits. She can't." His helmet turned in her direction. "No offence meant, Ms Hebert."

"None taken." But something Kid Win had said nagged at Taylor's brain. "Swapping out … wait a minute. Maybe if I had spare lifters with me, if one was damaged, I could do field repairs." She wilted a little as they both turned to stare at her. Or at least, Kid Win was staring. She couldn't see Armsmaster's eyes, but she assumed the Protectorate hero was doing the same.

"Uh, no you can't," Kid Win said almost gently. "Like Armsmaster said, you're not a Tinker. There's no way you can take apart one of these wings and replace a damaged lifter, even if you had spare parts on hand. No matter how easy it looks, non-Tinkers just can't get a grasp on how the technology works." He spread his hands and essayed an awkward smile. "Sorry, but that's just the way it is."

"No, no," Taylor said hastily, before the idea got away from her. "Could you make self-contained modules containing the lifters and everything needed to make them work, that can be snapped into sockets in the wings, and snapped out again if I needed to replace them? So literally all I have to do is plug and play?"

Each Tinker raised his finger and opened his mouth, presumably to refute her. Both paused. Slowly, both mouths closed and both fingers lowered, then they turned to each other.

"That's … I can see how to do that," Kid Win said, the last few words tumbling out of his mouth. "Really, really easily. Like, mega-easily. If we make all the lifter modules the same shape and size and power requirement—"

"No, that's a bad idea." Armsmaster overrode him. "The wings can be made to work more effectively with specifically shaped anti-grav panels, of different sizes. Forcing everything to adhere to one shape or size will hamper her flight capabilities."

"But if I made each individual lifter smaller, but designed them so they could snap together to make larger panels, and you improved the efficiency of the surrounding sockets so they worked well together, that would allow Taylor to swap them in and out as needed," argued Kid Win. Waving his hands in the air, he sketched out shapes only he could see. "In fact, if we rebuild the wings themselves to be modular in construction—hell, the entire suit—we could set it up so she can swap out components from less urgently needed suit systems to keep essential ones running." He looked down at his own suit, then held up his gloved hand. Slowly, he flexed his fingers. "Ooooh." His voice was filled with sudden enlightenment.

Armsmaster tilted his head slightly. "You seem to be taking this idea of modular construction to remarkable lengths," he noted. "Do you think it means something?"

Taylor wasn't quite sure what he was referring to, but Kid Win certainly picked up on it. "Maybe. And by that I mean, holy crap, yes. I think … I think … I think I need to do some Tinkering. Like, right now." He jumped to his feet. "Taylor, you're amazing." With a certain air of purpose, he advanced on a nearby workbench.

A little confused, Taylor turned to Armsmaster. "Uh, what just happened? Do I need to be worried?" She knew that something had happened, and that she was apparently going to be getting a modular suit, but beyond that, she had no idea why Kid Win was so happy.

"No there's no cause for concern." The older hero rose to his feet. "Your question apparently just helped Kid Win reach a breakthrough about his powers. Congratulations for that, by the way."

"I, uh, thanks?" Taylor stood up as well. "Do you need me anymore?" Arcane mutterings and the crackle of soldering had begun to arise from Kid Win's workbench. She was pretty sure she couldn't really help with that sort of thing.

"Not at the moment, but don't go far." Armsmaster gave her a rare smile. "Kid Win and I should have the first iteration of your suit ready in a day or two." He patted her on the shoulder, then nodded toward the door. "It seems that Panacea has just arrived, looking for you."

"Oh, thanks. See you later." Taylor turned toward the door. When she was sure Armsmaster wasn't watching, she surreptitiously rubbed her shoulder. If the man wasn't careful, his shoulder-pats were likely to leave bruises.

The lab door hissed open as she reached it, revealing Amy on the other side. "Oh, hey," the healer greeted her. "How's things going in here?"

There was a crackle and a "Yeowtch!" from Kid Win, and Taylor winced slightly.

"Oh, it's definitely going," she said. "C'mon, let's walk and I'll fill you in. Is the commissary open? I'm hungry."

Amy smirked, linking her arm through Taylor's. "You're always hungry. But that's okay. I'm hungry too. Let's go eat."

Taylor grinned. Amy was always good company. "Sounds like a plan."

<><>​

Shadow Stalker

A Few Minutes After Midnight


Okay, time to find out what the hell is going on.

Sophia had spent an uncomfortable evening on the rooftop. Finally, once she was sure the time was correct, she checked the burner phone. There had been no missed calls from Coil, which merely served to feed her growing paranoia. Has he figured out I'm a plant? Have the Undersiders made up something about me? But that didn't really make sense. If she was running the show, she'd want to bring a potential traitor back in so they could be squeezed dry of information.

Shutting it down, she turned on the other phone to check for text messages. Almost immediately, one popped up. She quashed the irrational feeling of relief—someone knows I'm still out here—and opened the message.

New developments, it read. Need you to attend confidential briefing. C.

Frowning, she went through the message again, trying to divine the hidden meaning behind the terse phrasing. What the hell did 'new developments' mean, anyway? This was a break from the way Calvert had been doing things up till now. If she went anywhere near the PRT building, there was a chance that someone might recognise her. They wouldn't capture her, but if Coil or one of his assets got wind of it, the whole mission would be burned and she'd be back on probation.

On the other hand, Calvert obviously needed to talk to her about something. She decided to accept that he'd probably done this sort of thing before and knew what he was doing. The phone was down to thirty-four percent of battery; as she watched, this dropped to thirty-three percent. Galvanised into action, she tapped out a quick answer.

Cant come to P building. Dont want to make C suspicious. Where meet?

Running her eyes over the message, she nodded slowly. That should do it, she figured. With a prolonged press of the power button, she shut the phone down altogether. Tucking the both of them away again, she straightened up and looked around. Okay, now where am I going to sleep tonight?

It was a serious question. She was tough as they came, but everyone was vulnerable when they slept. Plus, there was no fucking way in hell that she was going to sleep on a rooftop or bare floor somewhere; not if she had better options.

Home was out. Even if the PRT didn't have her parents and brother ready to rat her out if she showed her face, they were almost certainly watching the place and would have to 'arrest' her if she went there. She would have to work to avoid even the most inconsequential slip, especially if Calvert was right and Coil had people inside the PRT building.

While Coil's security setup was admirable in its own way, the fact remained that she had no idea where his base really was. She knew that it was probably underground, but this didn't actually help her in any meaningful fashion. Most specifically, it meant that she wasn't going to be able to knock on the door and ask if she could use her room for the night. Paranoid bastard. Just because she'd been infiltrating his organisation to try to bring him down from within was of no consequence to her annoyance with him.

Okay, so I'm gonna have to go somewhere else.

She was reasonably sure she could find the Undersiders' base pretty easily—if she got nothing else out of this whole shitshow, that alone was worth the price of admission—but they'd been mistrusting of her before the Hillside fuckup. There was no way in hell they'd let her in the front door now, much less loan her a bed for the night. And while she could attack from surprise and kill or subdue the lot of them—definitely 'kill' in Grue's case—she still hadn't been given the okay by Calvert to break cover. The last thing she wanted was to be put back on probation just because she couldn't wait another fucking day.

So she was going with option D. It was an idea she'd come up with some time ago, but never actually implemented before now. Leaping off the rooftop and going to shadow, she started moving in a generally southerly direction. As she went, she kept her eyes open for garish neon signs. What she wanted was a motel in a specific price range: not so affluent as to have all their rooms filled, but not so seedy as to be offering rooms by the hour.

It took her three tries, and most of an hour, to locate what she was looking for. Both of the ones she passed up were on the low end of the economic scale. In all honesty, she would've been astonished if things had been the other way around.

Up until now, she'd been staying relatively low and sticking to the shadows. She didn't know who else had been briefed on the mission and who thought she'd just gone villain. After her dramatic 'escape' from the PRT building, they'd probably made her supposed crimes public. On the upside, this would solidify her credentials with Coil, while on the downside it meant any patrolling heroes may just try to apprehend her.

Not that they'd succeed, of course. She stifled a snort at the very idea. But it had the potential to be irritating as all fuck, especially if she was out and about—like right now—without any backup, or a bolt-hole she could duck into. That had been how the PRT caught her the first time around, after all. She only wanted a good night's sleep, or at least a good morning's sleep. Once Coil and Calvert got back in touch with her and she got a chance to tell her side of the story, she'd learn whether it was time to go on the offensive yet or stay on the down-low.

Ghosting on to the roof of the motel, she swung over the edge of the eaves and landed lightly on the upstairs walkway that serviced the motel rooms. A smile creased one corner of her mouth as she noted that each parking lot space had a number painted on it. It was as good as a directory to check for empty rooms.

The first room, as she leaned her head in through the door, had someone snoring noisily on the bed. Swearing to herself, Sophia pulled back out of the door and moved down the walkway. She was getting more and more irritated every second, especially since the next two she checked were also occupied. These held couples, fortunately asleep.

It wasn't particularly hard to read between the lines. These people were cheating on their other halves, so they'd come to the motel for essentially the same purpose as those frequenting the by-the-hour venues. No cars in the parking lot meant that they didn't want an inconvenient security-camera shot of their license plates showing up in evidence at any time in the future.

For a few moments, she considered just going into one of the rooms and tranqing the people sleeping there, then rolling them out of bed and zip-tying them so she could use the bed. It was a tempting plan, but she eventually decided against it. She didn't want to unnecessarily use up her stock of zip-ties or the few tranq darts she had left, and people had been known to work their way out of being tied up before. The idea of keeping them quiet by threatening to expose their infidelities crossed her mind, but she dismissed that as well. It was amazing how stupidly stubborn some people could get if they decided someone was trying to put pressure on them. No, it was probably best to keep looking.

As if to validate her decision, the very next room she tried was empty. A discreet flash of the tiny hand-light she kept in her utility belt showed that the bed was still made up and the floor was empty of luggage. That was good enough for her.

With a sigh, she shrugged off the backpack and started divesting herself of the costume. While it had obviously been designed to be comfortable to wear for long periods, she'd been in it for nearly eleven hours now, and there were certain bodily needs that needed to be attended to. The first person to design a proper superhero costume that could be easily adjusted to go to the bathroom in would probably win some kind of award. Or be accused of being a cape themselves, on account of having achieved the blatantly impossible.

With a grin tugging at the corner of her mouth at that mental image, Sophia laid out the last of her costume on the floor beside the bed and padded into the bathroom in her underwear. As she'd hoped, there was a fresh towel on the rack. It seemed that whatever passed for room service here simply set up the room for the next occupant as soon as the last one vacated, rather than waiting for a guest to actually sign in. Excellent.

Closing the door, she turned on the light, squinting against the sudden glare. Her priorities were toilet, shower and bed, in that order. While the clothes in her backpack weren't daisy-fresh, they'd have to do for the time being. In the morning, she'd check for messages from Calvert. With any luck, he'd have a green light for her. She bared her teeth, imagining the looks on the faces of the Undersiders as she confronted them.

I'm coming for you.

<><>​

Undersiders Base

5:00 the Next Morning

Lisa


"Okay, we're doing what again now?" Alec lay back on the sofa with his arm in a sling and a sour look on his face. There were several good reasons for him to be irritated; the early hour, his injured arm and his inability to use the controller because of his injured arm, just to name three. Lisa knew she was about to add a fourth to the list, and possibly a fifth.

Rachel glowered from the other end of the same sofa but didn't add anything to Alec's question. Brutus sat at her feet, the solidly-built Rottweiler panting happily as she slowly and methodically brushed him down. She'd been out half the night looking for him, and had only gotten back a couple of hours beforehand. Lisa didn't even bother trying to list the number of reasons she might have to be pissed off at the world.

Brian grimaced, but soldiered through the explanation like a trouper. Lisa had to give him props; once he was on board, he went all in. "Lisa believes Shadow Stalker is likely to come after us, here, in the next six to twelve hours. She'll be shooting to kill. We've got two options. One, we bug out. Two, we set a trap."

"Can't we do both?" asked Alec. Lisa was pretty sure he wasn't being facetious. "Set up remote cameras, Claymores, tripwires, pressure pads, the whole works. I'll make popcorn, and we all watch while Shadow Stalker sneaks on in here, trips the wrong switch and gets her asshole blown through the top of her head. Not that anyone'll be able to tell the difference."

"And if the pieces are small enough, nobody'll even know she's dead," Rachel put in unexpectedly. She went back to brushing the dog, while Lisa digested the fact that at least two of her teammates were somewhat more bloodthirsty than she'd previously realised.

"Uh, there's a couple of flaws with that plan," Brian said hastily. "We don't have explosives and we don't have an explosive expert. I'd really like to keep this base if possible, and I certainly wasn't planning on killing her." He looked over at Lisa and raised his eyebrows, as if to say help me out here.

Lisa entered a couple of commands on her laptop then turned her attention to the discussion. "No, Brian's right," she said as Alec opened his mouth, probably to argue the point. "Explosions draw attention, and it would have to be a really big and really hot explosion to obliterate her like that. The type they call the FBI and PRT in for. We really don't want that kind of attention. Brian and I were more talking about capturing her and handing her over to the PRT as a sign of good faith."

"And what stops them from trying to capture us at the same time?" It shouldn't have been a surprise that Alec hit the same talking point Brian had used earlier. "Thoughts and prayers?" Which, in the past, had turned out to be slightly less useful than a tinfoil parasol against Behemoth.

"Brian and I were going to do that ourselves," Lisa said. "They've got less reason to come out in force against us. If we call ahead and say we want to hand her over, there's a better than even chance they'll let us do it, just so they can get their hands on her. There's got to be any amount of sensitive information she's got inside her head that she could spill to whoever, if she decided to start talking." At least, she hoped the PRT would think the same way. With Coil out of the picture, she no longer had the dubious safety net of his patronage to fall back on. Of course, some safety nets were portable, she reminded herself as she checked the laptop again.

"What about our mysterious boss?" That was Alec. "He was the one who put Shadow Stalker on the team in the first place. He isn't likely to be happy that we're handing her over to the cops." His tone indicated a basic understanding of the facts rather than any kind of worry about the consequences. But then, Alec had never really been a consequences sort of guy.

Brian looked at Lisa. "I think we should tell them. It's not like it'll change anything." She could tell where he was going with this. He was a straightforward sort of guy who liked things to be laid out plainly—as much as this could be done by a supervillain, anyway.

In any case, she agreed that this would have to be done sooner or later. Better it be done in a controlled situation so she could soften the impact as much as possible. "Okay, let's do this." She turned to Alec and Rachel. "There's stuff about the boss I've never told you because he told me not to. I only filled Brian in a little while ago."

"Okay, so why are you telling us now?" asked Alec immediately. This was one of the reasons Lisa was often aggravated with him. He wasn't stupid—far from it—but he liked to pick and choose the times when he actually got around to using his brain.

Lisa took a deep breath. "I'll get to that in a second. First off, the guy we were all working for was Coil." She glanced again at the laptop and flicked to a new screen. A prompt popped up, and she entered a string of characters, then clicked Proceed.

"Coil?" Alec echoed Rachel's frown. "Isn't he basically the invisible man of Brockton Bay crime? No real powers, so he has mercs do all his dirty work?" He tried to flip his sceptre left-handed and swore as he dropped it on the floor.

"That's by design," Lisa assured him. "His power … let's just say, it was powerful but not flashy." She thought she knew what it'd been—it was a moot point by now, of course—and whether it was actually the ability to create and destroy entire universes at a whim or just weirdly specific precognition, he'd been a bastard to plan against.

"You keep saying was," interjected Rachel bluntly, proving she wasn't stupid either. "Why?"

"Because something happened to him around the time we were kicking Shadow Stalker loose at the Hillside Mall yesterday," Lisa said. "He's dead." Brian shifted, and made a go-on motion, and she grimaced. Someone was going to have to say it. "And he wasn't just Coil. He was also a PRT officer of some sort."

"What the hell?" Alec and Rachel were both on their feet, but it was the boy who spoke. Brutus barked at the sudden disturbance. "Shadow Stalker was a PRT mole? Coil's organisation was a PRT front?"

That was actually a spin on the whole idea that Lisa hadn't considered. For a brief moment, she entertained the concept, but rejected it on several aspects. "Well, she thought she was a mole. But she'd actually committed crimes that they were on the verge of arresting her for. She didn't know they were on to her, but he wanted a useful idiot, so he spun her a line and pulled her out of the PRT building just ahead of the PRT and Protectorate." She didn't know all this was true, but her power was prodding her strongly in that direction.

As Brian had before, Alec stared at her with understanding dawning in his eyes. "So that's why—"

Brian rolled his eyes. "Yeah, we've been over this before. That's why Lisa was laughing nonstop the whole time Shadow Stalker was with us."

Alec's gaze turned accusing. "You knew all this time and you didn't tell us? Why do you hate us so much?" He held the back of his good hand dramatically up to his forehead. "Oh, the missed opportunities! Oh, the humanity!"

Distracted by Alec's over-acting, Lisa almost missed the hmph! sound from Rachel's direction. Looking toward the stocky girl, she caught the hint of a smile before Rachel put the scowl back on her face. "What?" Rachel demanded, glaring at her.

"Nothing." Lisa smirked, then turned back to Alec. "And the reason I didn't tell you was so you didn't let it slip by laughing too much, or dropping hints. People expect weird behaviour from me, but you barely ever laugh."

"Still not fair," he grumbled. "You got all the fun."

"We're getting off track," Brian reminded them. "We were working for Coil who is now dead, but he recruited Shadow Stalker first. Sooner or later, she's going to realise her mission's a bust and she'll come gunning for us. With lethal darts."

"How many's she got left, anyway?" asked Alec. "She was firing them off like she had an endless supply, there."

Lisa let her power mull the question over. "Maybe half a dozen," she decided. "She'd shot both her launchers pretty well empty by the end of that fight. Coil wanted her dependent on him, so he gave her the bare minimum to go on with." It definitely sounded like what the man would do.

"And how exactly did you plan to trap her?" Brian's voice was matter of fact now. That was one of the things Lisa liked about him; once he decided he was on board with something, he went all in.

Lisa steepled her fingers in front of her, and gave them her most evil grin. To be fair, it wasn't much different from her least evil grin, but she was making an effort. Really. "Well, you remember how I told you guys a while ago how she's vulnerable to electricity when she's phasing through things …?"

<><>​

The Same Morning

8:05 AM

PRT Building

Taylor


Amy stirred as the car bumped down on to the ramp leading under the PRT building, then yawned and stretched. I smirked and nudged her. "Oh, we've finally woken up now, have we?"

She stuck out her tongue at me, then spoiled the effect by yawning again. "Oh, hush. The main part of my job is to stay near you as much as possible, until the powers that be are absolutely certain there won't be any more incidents. They never said I had to be awake for it."

I nodded, fully aware of what she meant by 'incident'. "And how long's that going to take, exactly?" Not that I had any problem with Amy being my near-constant companion; it was nice having a friend I could confide in again. But it had to be irritating that she couldn't go anywhere without me.

She shrugged and stifled another yawn. "Heat death of the universe? The Simurgh takes up knitting as a hobby? Director Piggot goes on a date with Legend? I'm pretty sure they're working on the basis that they'll know it when they see it." Which, if her analysis was correct, meant 'forever'. She shuffled her butt to a more upright position. "I just wish Armsmaster had waited till a more civilised hour to ask you to come in."

As Dad pulled the car into the Visitor carpark and killed the engine, I snorted. "You were the one who decided to stay up and catch that movie marathon. You've only got yourself to blame for getting to bed so late."

"You stayed up too!" she objected, but I could see how much she was enjoying the argument. I was, too. Amy was fun to be around, once I got through the protective barrier of snark, and we regularly argued about everything and nothing, just for fun. Dad had been concerned the first few times, but now he just rolled his eyes and ignored us. "How come you aren't tired, too?"

I opened the door and got out. "Because I slept through half the movies. Seen 'em before."

Her eyes widened in mock betrayal as she climbed out as well. "You never told me that! Or that you slept through the movies! I thought you were leaning up against me just to be cute!"

"Excuse me, have you met me?" I spread my hands. "I don't do anything to be cute. I don't know how to do cute!" That was more Madison's line, and I wanted as little to do with anything that reminded me of any of the Trio as possible. "I was just leaning against you because you were comfortable. Like you leaned against me for most of the car ride over."

"Oh." That seemed to take her aback. "Um." A slight flush darkened her cheeks but before I could ask why, a PRT guard approached us.

"Good morning," he addressed us. "Mr and Ms Hebert, and Panacea? I'm here to escort you up."

Dad switched his mildly amused expression out for a more serious one. "That's us. Lead the way."

"Yes, sir." The guard moved off, and Amy and I fell in behind with Dad following us. We got into the elevator, and he punched in the floor number. Amy and I liked to try to see if we could feel the movement of the elevator, but neither of us ever had. The numbers on the display scrolled upward faster than I could follow them, and then came to an abrupt halt.

We stepped out of the elevator, Amy holding back another yawn as we did so. "So, uh, can I ask why we've been called in so early?" I ventured.

Unsurprisingly, the guard shrugged, which was kind of impressive given how much armour he had to be wearing. "Above my pay grade, ma'am. I was just sent to collect you."

"Okay. Well, thanks anyway." I shared a vaguely mystified look with Amy—she didn't seem to have any more of a clue than I did—and decided to wait and see what the big fuss was all about.

I didn't have long to wait. We followed a by-now familiar path to Armsmaster's lab. As we stopped in front of the door itself, the massive door unlatched and slid open. "Enter!" called the Tinker from within.

The invitation obviously didn't include the guard, because he simply headed off down the corridor. I stepped inside with Amy, and Dad followed close behind. The door slid shut with a solid thud. I looked around, to see Armsmaster standing alongside a large rack, which bore …

"Oh, wow!" I exclaimed, my eyes opening wide. Slowly, almost reverently, I moved up to the rack and put out my hand. The suit of armour on it looked amazing. Whatever coating they'd put on it felt slick under my fingertips. It was painted shiny black and a deep vibrant blue, and it really did look like a cross between a human being and a scarab beetle. The wings weren't visible right then, but there were large bulges behind the shoulderblades. And there were also

"Wait a minute," Amy objected, pointing at the detail I'd just noticed. "I know you're going with a bug theme, but Taylor only has two arms, not four." She'd be able to fix that oversight if she wanted, I knew. But it would probably take a lot of persuasion, and the armour already held a second set of arms. These emerged halfway between shoulders and hips, and the hands hung down to the knees.

"We're aware of that." I could almost have sworn Armsmaster smiled at her tone. "She can opt to slave them to either one of her arms, to leave them inert, or use her heads-up display to manually direct them to take hold of something or strike at a target."

"Holy crap," I managed. "Holy crap. How …"

"How did we get it built so fast?" This time, Armsmaster did smile. "It was your suggestion to Kid Win. He realised that we could streamline the process with modular components, not just for the wings but for the whole suit. We spent the first few hours working out the requirements for each module, then he designed them and I modified the designs for greater efficiency and ease of manufacture." He gestured toward the large screen that overhung the workbench.

Dragon's face faded into view on the screen. "Once we had the finished designs, Armsmaster and Kid Win created one of each, then passed them on to me. I analysed them, then started the manufacturing process. Once I had enough of each one, I assembled the suit and ferried it down to Brockton Bay."

"Of course, this is a first iteration," Armsmaster cautioned me. "The outer armour plating is about all that's going to survive from version to version. But with the modular construction, we can literally snap out an old unit and replace it with a better one within minutes, rather than rebuilding the whole thing from scratch."

I shook my head in wonder. "This is amazing. I thought I'd have to be waiting days or even weeks. I have no idea how I'm ever going to repay you for this. Where's Kid Win? I want to hug him."

"I sent him off to get some sleep," Armsmaster informed me. "He was showing signs of wanting to disassemble my halberd and incorporate it into his armour. You'll be able to thank him later, once he wakes up."

"No repayment necessary," Dragon added. "Just be the best hero you can be."

"Thanks," I said, tears filling my eyes from the intensity of my emotions. I wrapped my arms around Armsmaster's bulky armoured torso and gave him a hug anyway. "You guys are the best."

<><>​

Sophia

A loud voice yelling harshly in her ears brought Sophia out of a deep dreamless sleep, aided and abetted by the hand that grabbed her shoulder and shook it roughly. She woke up with a start, not entirely sure where she was or who was yelling at her, but knowing that nobody pulled that shit on her. Throwing the covers off, she pulled free of the grasping hand and rolled off the bed into a crouch on the floor, looking around wildly to piece together what was going on.

Motel roombedshit, Calvert! She backed away from the large unshaven man who loomed over her even when she stood up fully. "Who the fuck are you?" demanded the man. "What the fuck are you doing in my motel?"

"Just leaving," Sophia said. "I don't want trouble. I'll just grab my gear and go." She looked toward where her gear had been laid out on the floor beside the bed, and stopped when she realised one very important fact. It wasn't there any more.

The man snorted with amusement, and his eyes flicked toward the doorway to the room, where the maid stood with her cart. "Yeah, as if, girl. Your gear stays here and so do you, until the cops get here. Breaking and entering, trespass, probably theft too."

"I'm no thief!" Sophia's outrage was real. She'd never broken into a house and stolen anything, and she wasn't about to start. "I'm a hero!"

"Pfft, yeah." His tone was disbelieving. "I'll believe that when I see it."

Sophia glared at him. It looked like she was going to have to resort to violence for this one.

It was a good thing violence was something she had no problem with.


End of Part Sixteen

Part Seventeen
 
Last edited:
Part Seventeen: Field Test
Price of Blood

Part Seventeen: Field Test

[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]


Taylor

I stood atop the PRT building, encased in my new armour. My feet planted squarely in the centre of the large H that marked out the helipad, I turned my head slowly from side to side. Glowing lines of data scrawled themselves across my vision, pushing themselves into the foreground as I focused on them. Gradually, I found, I was getting the hang of picking out what I wanted and then letting it go again.

"How's it going in there?" It was Armsmaster's voice. Along with Dad and Amy, he stood a few yards away, giving me my space. Unlike the last suit, this wasn't strictly necessary. Dragon had taken the hardware Armsmaster and Kid Win supplied, and added what Armsmaster called 'kinetic feedback' software, making it almost supernaturally intuitive to move around in. While I still stumbled every now and again, I was improving by the minute.

"Getting there," I replied. "There's a lot to get used to. Not complaining, but how come the last suit wasn't this easy to learn how to use?" Picking out the silhouette of my suit lurking off to the side of the HUD, I focused on the lower right arm then linked it to my actual left arm. Raising the real one, with the fake imitating the movement, I waved at Dad and Amy. He looked startled; she burst out laughing.

Dragon's voice sounded in my ears. The little blinking icon in the top right corner of my vision told me that it was also going out over my speakers. Her tone was amused and (I thought) a little proud. "Because that suit was a last-minute kludge. This one is properly integrated and has thoroughly redundant auto-stabilisation, allowing my software to fully express itself. Attempting to use this software in that suit would be akin to bolting the navigation system from the space shuttle into a World War One biplane. It would look pretty, but it wouldn't do a damn thing to help you fly better."

"And would never get off the ground in the first place, got it." I nodded, and the helmet moved back and forth ponderously with my head. When I'd first put the suit on—it turned out that the extreme modular approach let it open up then fold around me—every movement had felt like I was wading in molasses. Now, I was still aware of the suit, but the resistance to movement was much less. "You've done an amazing job. It feels like it's moving more smoothly all the time."

"That's the general idea," Dragon informed us. "It's a self-improving algorithm, designed to learn the way you move and react so that when microseconds count, you won't be slowed down by the suit." She sounded pleased with herself, and I didn't blame her. I would've been smug too, if I'd come up with that.

I'd already proven I could walk, though my initial steps out of the elevator had been somewhat leaden. Now I moved in a circle, lifting and placing my feet precisely. I didn't quite feel as though I could pull off a tapdance routine—if I knew how to tapdance, that is—but this was a far cry from the lumbering mess I'd been in the first suit. "Armsmaster, there's nothing on the outside of the suit that's breakable, right?"

"There shouldn't be, no," he replied, his tone slightly concerned. "Why do you ask?"

"Gonna give the algorithm something to chew on." I started off at a walk, moving past where the others were watching, then broke into a trot. My legs and arms were initially stiff, but they soon loosened up as the suit figured out what I was trying to do. Curving my path as I neared the edge of the roof, I kept up the pace, letting the suit get used to it.

By the end of the first circuit, I was panting, but the suit was moving more fluidly than ever. From the outside, it must've looked weird as hell, a seven-foot set of power armour going for a light jog on the rooftop.

Okay, let's change things up a gear. I pushed myself into a run, immediately feeling the resistance from the suit increase dramatically. Still, I persevered. If I didn't show the suit who was boss, I'd never get anywhere. Also, I needed to get fitter; trying to keep up this speed while also fighting the suit was rapidly tiring me out. It crossed my mind that this would be a great way to improve my endurance, once I got some.

I'd originally intended to make another complete circuit of the roof (a victory lap, so to speak) but my legs became limp noodles about a quarter of the way around, and I staggered to a halt. Bending over, I put my metal gauntlets on my knees and tried to catch my breath.

"Are you all right, Taylor?" asked Dragon. The speaker icon wasn't blinking, which meant she was talking to me privately.

"Huff … yeah … huff … just … huff … winded," I managed. "This's … huff … a lot … huff … of work." Already I could hear the tiny whine of the suit's climate control fans kicking in. The padding around my head must've been wicking away the sweat, because it wasn't running into my eyes. That was a good design choice; how do you wipe your face inside power armour? Answer: you don't. Though I knew Armsmaster had tiny windshield wipers for the inside of his visor, for the simple reason that I had them too.

It annoyed me that I could hardly run any distance in the armour, whereas when the boys had been chasing me, I'd made it nearly four blocks. I knew this because the radius of my Swarm had been four blocks and only the outer edge had reached Winslow, thus avoiding a few thousand more potential casualties. Of course, running under the impetus of adrenaline-fuelled terror was one thing. Running because I just wanted to run was quite another. "I'm going to have to start exercising, aren't I?" I panted, having gotten my breathing a little more under control.

"It's always a good idea, Taylor." Dragon sounded amused. "Perhaps you could have Armsmaster mentor you in an exercise program. He's a perfectionist when it comes to personal fitness, after all."

A vision popped into my head of me running for my life down an exercise track, pursued by Armsmaster waving his halberd menacingly. That would certainly bring out the adrenaline (even though I knew he was just a big teddy-bear under that gruff exterior). But the sad fact remained that Armsmaster was almost certainly a faster runner in his armour than I was out of mine. Also, if I was to become an effective hero, it was basically my duty to get fit. Ugh. "I'll think about it," I muttered reluctantly.

Straightening up (the suit actually helped, here) I walked back to the little group. "Okay," I said. "I think I'm done running for the day. What other suit systems should I be checking?" I'd been considering the idea of performing shoulder-rolls and handstands in the suit, but I shelved those for another day.

Armsmaster rubbed his chin carefully with finger and thumb, smoothing down his beard. "Well, we do need to test the flight system. What do you think, Dragon?"

"There's no time like the present," she agreed. "Taylor, would you prefer I take the front seat or the back seat for this?"

I knew what she meant; did I want her to take control of the system and show me how it worked, or let me figure it out for myself but be ready to take over if necessary? After the blow to my pride from running out of steam so quickly, there was only one real answer. "I'll take front seat," I said quickly. I might be unfit, but by God I was going to learn how to fly my own powersuit.

"Good," she said warmly, and I heard the smile in her voice. "It's a steeper learning curve this way, but you'll get there more quickly. Activating pre-flight checklist."

A moment later, the list showed up in front of me. And here I'd thought only pilots in actual aircraft did that sort of thing. "Am I going to have to do this every time?"

"Yes and no," she explained. Well, that cleared things up. "It won't be long before you get the hang of knowing which items in the checklist have already been cleared. And of course, skipping it altogether in a rush situation is usually okay. It's the equivalent of checking your car over before turning the key."

As I'd never owned or even driven a car before—not many options for a fifteen year old to do either one, to be honest—I couldn't really relate. But I got the gist anyway. "Okay, got it." Concentrating on the first item on the list, I brought it to the foreground and mentally checked it off, then the next, then the next. Check power level, check suit integrity, check wing lifters … one thing after another. Power level was still good, suit integrity was nominal … hmm. Calling up the suit silhouette on my HUD, I activated the 'wings' option. A moment later, I felt the vibration as they emerged from the pods on my back and unfolded into position. A quick command put the wings through a self-test cycle, and they reported back as being in perfect working order. Oh, good.

Once the last item was checked off, the list disappeared. I turned the helmet to the left and right, looking my wings over. They weren't as big as a butterfly's wings would've been at this size (that is, the size of a large awning), but they were pretty big anyway. "Okay, how do I do this?"

"There are two ways to activate flight option. The first is to manually select it on your HUD." As she spoke, Dragon made a particular icon flash in front of my eyes. "The second is to jump off the building. The suit will determine that flight is needed, and activate the mode autonomously. I suggest manual selection for now."

I concurred heartily with that selection. Concentrating on the icon—it looked like a standing man—I made it change into a winged form. A new series of options popped up on my HUD, and I stared at them. I wasn't sure how they managed to make the wireframe globe with the red line running through it look so 3-dimensional, but it was pretty cool. Next to it was a virtual model of the suit with an arrow pointing out of it, and the last one was basically a slider switch.

"Would you like me to—"

"No, don't tell me. Let me figure this out." I pondered the globe and the suit image. While the slider switch was kind of obvious—the more I slid it across, the faster I went—I wasn't sure what the two different controls meant. Focusing on the suit, I found I could adjust the position of the arrow relative to the suit, but the base of the arrow was always to be found in the middle of 'my' torso.

Hmm. Fixing my attention on the globe, I found without much surprise that yes, I could swivel the red line to point in any direction, and that there was a section of the line that protruded from the globe at one end only. Time to try something basic.

"Okay," I said. "Let's see if this works." I angled the arrow so it pointed straight upward, through the suit's head. Then I did the same with the red line, setting it to a vertical alignment through the globe. Finally, I nudged the slider switch across until I saw the rooftop beginning to drop away below me. Immediately, I pushed it back to zero, and looked around.

I was twenty feet above the rooftop—the movement had been faster than I'd anticipated—and holding steady. Dad, Amy and Armsmaster were looking up at me. My father was staring in stunned surprise, while Amy was grinning broadly. And if I wasn't much mistaken, even Armsmaster had a faint smile of pride on his face.

"Okay, I can fly." My grin challenged Amy's. "Let's see now …" I wanted to see if I could turn. Selecting the arrow, I pointed it straight forward then did the same with the red line. Then I tried swivelling the line around to the side.

Nothing happened.

Making sure the external speakers were off, I huffed a sigh. "What am I doing wrong?"

"You're trying to turn on the spot?" A secondary icon, one I hadn't paid attention to, blinked a couple of times. "This links those two controls."

"Ahh." I activated the icon, then tried my swivel trick again. Smoothly, I rotated in mid-air. "Okay, that works. But …"

"But?" Anyone else would've been defensive. Dragon merely sounded interested in what I had to say.

"But this is too … clunky," I said, searching for a better word and not finding one. "I'll be too busy working the HUD controls to watch where I'm going, especially when it comes to steering. And if I have to manually adjust my facing every time go around a corner …" There wasn't much more to say. "I'm sorry. I don't mean to sound ungrateful. I just don't know if I can superhero in this." Just for a moment, a nasty suspicion crossed my mind that Armsmaster had set matters up this way so I'd have to join the Wards to get a working suit. Then I dismissed it. Armsmaster just wasn't like that. Neither was Dragon.

"Oh, those aren't the standard controls," Dragon assured me. "Those are the backup controls. As you've noted, they're clunky but usable in an emergency. They also allow you to perform manoeuvres that your standard controls aren't designed for, such as flying upside down or backward."

" … Oh. So, uh, when do I get to use the real controls?" I wasn't exactly irritated with her for not revealing this immediately. It wasn't like I was an expert pilot. Even my paper planes tended to crash horribly.

"In just a moment. Watch carefully." My HUD blanked, and was overridden to show an image of the suit I was wearing. A red line started level with my heels, traced up through my spine, and went out through my head. The arms of the suit went forward, and the wings flared to a new configuration. "The suit will follow the line of your body. Your hands will lead. If you curve your body, the suit will turn in that direction. If you bring your hands in close to your body, you will hover. If you're upright and you bring your hands downward, you will land. Is that understood?"

As she explained, the suit followed her instructions; flying, turning, hovering and finally landing. It actually looked kind of cool. I hoped I'd look nearly as cool as she made it seem.

"Uh, yeah, I'm pretty sure I got it." It sounded kind of intuitive. Did natural flyers have trouble making their powers work?

"Good. I've activated the icon for you to use this mode of flight. There are pressure switches under your big toes, or you can use the slider switch. Either one works."

I spotted the icon and activated it. Immediately, the suit felt … different. Before, it had been simply responding to my commands. Now, it felt alive, quivering, ready for action. I was pretty sure this was because my body was going to be supplying the commands, but I liked the feeling anyway.

Slowly, I brought my arms up and forward, then pushed down gingerly with my big toes. Something went click and I found myself moving forward and upward at an angle. In the HUD, the slider switch eased across of its own accord. I was pleased for that, as it would give me a gauge on how much power I was using.

I was still flying across the roof of the building, but the edge was coming up quickly. That didn't matter; the wings were supporting me, not the roof. Still, I sucked in a gasp as I passed over the parapet and saw how much empty air was below me now. It was a long way down.

Just for a moment, I felt a surge of vertigo, raising my heart rate and making me hyperventilate. I wasn't a flyer. Hell, I wasn't even a Tinker! What was I doing, blindly flying around in a device I had no business wearing, throwing myself out over empty air? Instinctively, I pushed downward with my hands, trying to ward off the yawning drop beneath me.

The suit of course responded, swinging me downward in what turned into a tumble. I felt a scream rising in my throat, along with the beginnings of panic, and clenched my eyes shut. Then I heard Dragon in my ears, cool and calm.

"If you bring your hands in close to your body, you will hover."

I brought my hands in close to my body, wrapping them around me. The tumble ceased. All movement came to a halt. I opened my eyes.

I was hovering, just as she had said. I breathed again.

"Taylor?" It was Armsmaster, this time. "Are you all right?" The concern was strong in his voice. I could only imagine what Amy and Dad were thinking. Looking up at the edge of the PRT building where all three were leaning over and watching me—I'd dropped a good forty feet before regaining control—I raised one hand in a tentative wave. The suit responded, easing itself upward slightly.

"I'm fine," I said. "I moved the wrong way, and the suit thought it was a command. I know better, now." And I knew damn well I was going to have to learn the suit's tolerances; what would it consider to be a command, and what could I get away with doing without spiralling out of control?

"Good." The relief was palpable in his tone. "Did you want to stop now?"

"No." I took a deep breath. I'd nearly fallen, but the suit had caught me. It was my stupid fault, not the suit's. My heart was still thumping away in my chest, but I was safe. The suit would keep me safe. "I'm gonna see what this thing can do."

Bringing both hands up over my head, I jammed both big toes on the switches. In the corner of my eye, the slider switch whipped all the way over to the far end, but I wasn't paying attention. With a surge of acceleration, I shot up past the three onlookers, then toggled the external speakers and let out a whoop as I pulled a loop over the top of the building. Halfway through the loop, I figured out how to do a roll, then plunged over the other side of the building, this time under full control.

Easing off on the power, I angled sideways and pulled into level flight along the side of the PRT building, then grunted as I came around the corner. The G-forces weren't quite so bad as they would've been if I'd been standing up, but they were still pretty strenuous. The grin was back on my face as I turned upward and angled around so that I was shooting upward with my back to the building. Just to make sure I didn't hit it, I cheated slightly with the HUD to ensure that the red line in the globe was perfectly vertical.

As I came up over the edge again, I angled backward, then pulled off power altogether and drew my arms in to my sides, letting my legs come over the top in a backward somersault. With my hands down, I came in for a landing. The suit took over for the last couple of yards so I didn't crack the asphalt of the helipad, and I landed as gently as a feather, then activated the 'ground mode' icon.

The suit's wings were already retracting as the others came over. Dad and Amy looked like they wanted to run, but they made themselves stick to Armsmaster's measured pace. I went to meet them.

"Wow, holy crap," Amy said. "I've seen Vicky do stuff like that, but she's been flying for years!"

"It was easy, really," I said. "Once I got the hang of it, that is. The suit did ninety-five percent of the work."

"And a hundred percent of the flying." Dad gave me a wry grin that hid worry. "Are you all right? What happened out there? Did the suit malfunction?"

"No, no, it was nothing like that." I shook my head for extra emphasis. "It was me. I, uh, saw all that empty air down there and kinda freaked for a second. But Dragon got me through it. And I realised that the suit will never let me fall."

"Well, of course not." Armsmaster almost managed to sound offended. This close, he was talking to me directly instead of using his radio. "It's designed to keep you as safe as possible. There are many safeguards you would have to deliberately override before you could hurt yourself in that suit."

"Good to hear." I nodded toward the roof entrance. "But I think I might take a break. Is it okay if we get a bite to eat?"

"Certainly," said Armsmaster, and led the way. I followed, finding that the suit felt entirely natural to walk in now.

Toggling off my outside speakers, I spoke softly. "Dragon?"

"Yes?"

"Thanks for reminding me, before. Instead of, you know, taking over and making me feel totally helpless."

There was a smile in her voice as she replied. "You're entirely welcome, Taylor. And you did very well, for a first-time flyer."

As I went in through the roof entrance, there was a smile on my face that just wouldn't go away.

<><>​

Sophia

"Right." She wiped the sweat from her forehead with the back of her hand. The salt stung the cuts in her knuckles, but she didn't care. The asshole was finally down, slumped face-down in the middle of the motel room floor. It had taken a bit of doing—without her gear, even with her powers, she was still a teenager and he was a large and bulky adult—but she'd kicked his ass in no uncertain terms.

The question was, where was her gear now? And what was she supposed to do about this moron? He'd seen her face. So had the maid. She couldn't call on the PRT to put the frighteners on them, because as far as most of the PRT was concerned, she was a rogue agent. Instead of listening to her, they'd probably try to put her in a cell. The operative word was 'try', but even that would probably be enough to fuck up her mission once and for all. Son of a bitch.

The maid was nowhere to be seen, but the room-service cart stood just outside the door. She recalled how the asshole had glanced at it, just before she jumped him. The look on his face had been classic.

She hustled over to the cart and started searching it. Within seconds, her hunch had borne fruit; her clothes, boots and other gear had been shoved into the trash compartment of the cart. They hadn't even bothered trying to hide it, no doubt assuming that without her equipment she was helpless. Helpless, my ass.

The manager and the maid had to die. That was the only way out of this. Of course, she couldn't be seen to have killed them, though Calvert would probably understand. The impression she got of the man was that he comprehended the need for people to die on occasion. However, the rest of the PRT, including the pig-bitch herself, would clutch their pearls and swoon over the idea of a Ward who knew when someone needed to die.

But if she were to go on to a successful career as a superhero after this, there was no way she could allow anyone to go about blabbing that they'd seen her face when she was on a secret mission. In fact, Calvert would probably have pre-approved this sort of thing if he'd thought about it ahead of time. Secret missions needed to stay secret after all.

Moving with swift, economical movements, she began to don her costume. With any luck, the maid would be stupid enough to come back, and Sophia could deal with her and her boss at the same time. If she didn't, Sophia would be forced to go and find her. If that happened, she'd make sure it hurt.

The bodysuit was on and she was buckling the belt around her waist when she heard the first sirens. Motherfucking cocksuckers! She kept costuming up, listening intently to see if they were going past. The absolute fucking nerve of that fucking cow of a maid to call the goddamn cops on her! Rage boiled up inside her, and she nearly shot a tranq dart into the asshole's neck. Only the fact that she was low on them stopped her from wasting one.

When I'm done with this shit, I'm gonna come back here and fuck their shit up once and for all, she silently promised. They'd asked for it, after all. They'd fucked with her, and they'd fucked her shit up. Which added up to them wanting to die in her book, especially since they'd seen her face and then called the cops on her.

Pulling the helmet on over her head, she strapped it into place and reached for her boots. At that moment, the asshole on the floor groaned and stirred. Of course she hadn't secured him, because she hadn't had her zip-ties at that point. Fuck it. As he raised his head, she nailed him with a tranq dart just behind the ear. He slumped to the floor again, and she leaned down and plucked the dart out. Five left.

The sirens were getting really close now. She couldn't even pretend to herself that they were going anywhere but this motel. And it sounded like more than one car, which meant they knew how dangerous she was, so they were planning to surround the motel. The one good thing was that she didn't hear any PRT sirens. But they could be running silent behind the cop cars. It was a tactic she'd seen them pull from time to time, when they didn't want to alert a cape that they were in the vicinity.

She grimaced; backing down to normals felt like running away, no matter how many there were. Though it wasn't the numbers, it was the visibility. And the more she hung around here, the more chance some PRT asshole would connect the dots between Shadow Stalker and Spectre. Leaving really was in her best interest. I need to check my phones and see if Calvert or Coil's tried to contact me. Calvert, at least, was due to respond with a meeting place. She had no idea what was going on with Coil. Has he made me for a plant? Does he think I've been captured? With no feedback, she had no idea where his mind was.

But there was no time to check her messages now. She heard footsteps thundering along the walkway. Grabbing the backpack, she shrugged it on and dived out through the wall. Below her, on some sort of driveway, a cop looked up and shouted. There was the sound of a shot—weirdly echoey in her shadow state—and she felt the familiar twitch as a bullet flicked through her insubstantial mass. Fuck, he shot at me.

Just for a moment, she wanted to go solid and kick the crap out of the cop, but cooler instincts prevailed. She couldn't afford to get caught up in this sort of thing. If she did, the PRT might arrive before she knew it. And while they couldn't catch her even if she gave them a head start, the Protectorate would probably show next, and they knew how to catch her. Armsmaster, at the very least, knew her weaknesses. If anyone could bring her in, it would be the Halbeard.

As soon as she was out of sight of the trigger-happy cop, she turned solid, dropped to the ground and bolted. Her cloak flaring out behind her, she ducked down some twisting alleyways, then used her shadow form to leap higher and higher until she was running over the rooftops. This was how things had been before the PRT got their claws into her; free to do what she wanted, how she wanted. No obligations, no rules.

Her grumbling stomach finally forced her to slow down. She couldn't remember offhand when she'd last eaten, but it had been the better part of a day ago. The hunger she felt had been present more or less since she'd woken up, but other events had overridden her hunger pangs until now. I need to get something to eat. Do I have cash? A quick check of her pouches—and the pockets of the clothes in the backpack—revealed nothing but the jewellery that she'd taken as part of the heist. Not exactly legal tender.

She holed up on the roof of a bowling alley, in the shade of an air-conditioning unit. Coil's phone, when started up, showed eighty-nine percent charge and no messages. Not even a missed call. However, it did inform her that the time was ten AM, which went a long way to explaining why she'd been found by the maid. Fuck, I can't believe I slept in that long. Calvert's phone, on the other hand, was on twenty-eight percent charge and had a message waiting for her. Meet at 1900 tonight, northern ferry terminal. C.

She had to admit, that was definitely out of the way. Any farther and they'd be meeting outside of Brockton Bay proper. If she was being honest with herself, she'd expected him to specify the Central Library or maybe the Forsberg Gallery to hold their meet. Seven was a weird time too. The sun would be down, but there was still the chance of a passer-by. Of course, once they were up inside the terminal, nobody would be able to see them.

Shit, I wonder if they're getting ready to move on Coil and the Undersiders. Try as she might, she couldn't think of another reason for a face to face briefing. Which was a problem for her; while she'd need help to deal with that snaky asshole and his mercs, she didn't want Grue and the Underbitches to go into custody. Mainly because that would mean she couldn't kill them, and they'd all made her list over the last day or three. No matter how sneaky she was, stabbing oneself to death was not high on the list of normal methods of committing suicide in custody. Someone would ask questions.

Which means I've gotta get to them before the meeting. Once they're dead, we can focus on Coil. It's a win-win; I'll be helping to streamline the operation. Though only Calvert was likely to see things her way. Everyone else would have to be kept in the dark. Sophia was good at keeping things in the dark.

Making her decision, she nodded once. The Undersiders would have to die before she got to that meeting. But for right now, she needed to eat. Bowling alleys had food concession stands, didn't they? The problem was that she had no money. Which meant she'd have to steal the food … or the money needed to buy the food.

She smiled slowly, behind her visor. Money, I can handle. And the best bit is, this is an official PRT operation, so I won't even get in trouble for it.

<><>​

Miss Militia

"They're just in there!" The cleaning maid, obviously distressed, pointed at one of the doors on the upper floor of the motel. "Hurry!"

Hannah nodded to her on the way past, a heavy taser forming in her hand. She didn't know it was Shadow Stalker in the motel room, but the descriptions she'd gotten so far pointed that way. Black teenager, extremely violent, wearing a greyish costume, pockets full of jewellery … it all added up. And even if it wasn't her, a taser was still a good fallback weapon for many capes.

She took the stairs two at a time, noting that the cops were following along in good order. She wasn't sure how much good their body armour would be against someone who could phase their shots, but she personally intended to shoot first. Her boots pounded along the walkway to the door in question. A shot sounded from the far side of the building, but she didn't pause.

She also didn't bother with testing to see if the door was unlocked; her weapon shimmered and became a shotgun loaded with door-breachers. The first shot shattered the lock, and the second blew a chunk out of the door where the chain would've been. As the racketing explosions echoed across the courtyards, she hit the door with her shoulder and rolled into the room. Coming up on one knee, she reformed her weapon into a taser once more, covering the room with an arc that ended up on the closed bathroom door. Officers piled into the room behind her, going left and right.

Laser dots danced around the room as they noisily cleared it. The bathroom door was kicked open and a tear-gas grenade thrown in; nobody wanted to go into a confined space after a cape. Gas mask on and taser at the ready, Hannah ventured in first. As she'd half-suspected from the sound of the shot, the bathroom was empty. Except for the manager, slumped on the floor beside the bed, there was nobody there at all. One of the officers checked for a pulse, then breathing, and shook his head.

"No." Hannah wasn't going to let Shadow Stalker claim yet another victim. Pulling off her gas mask and yanking her scarf off of her face, she heaved the guy on to his back and started administering CPR. "Get the paramedics up here!" she ordered. "He's a big guy. We might be able to pull him through this."

"Right, right." One of the cops made the call, then directed another officer to take over the assisted breathing. Hannah gratefully pulled her scarf back up over her face. Hopefully, not too many of the cops had seen her unmasked.

As a third officer took over the chest compressions for her, she was able to stand up and take a breath. "Any word?" she asked of the sergeant who'd followed her in through the door. "There was that shot …"

"Yeah." He nodded, his expression grim. "That was her, all right. Went out through the wall. She's in the wind."

She grimaced and looked down at the motel manager. "God damn it. How many more before we catch her?"

The sergeant just shook his head.

<><>​

Taylor

"So, I had an idea about the armour." I looked brightly over at Armsmaster, who was stolidly eating. He looked at me, as did Dad and Amy, with varying degrees of curiosity.

"I'm listening," he said. The pause told me he'd probably activated a voice recorder as well. If there was one thing I was learning about Armsmaster—something I actually quite liked about him, to be honest—it was that he never did things by halves. When he set out to do something, he did it.

"Two things, actually," I clarified. We were in the PRT commissary, but the other personnel were giving us our privacy. Which meant that nobody was listening in on our conversation. Or rather, anyone who was listening in probably had the clearance to do so. "One, a compartment in the armour to hold bugs, that I can release them from when I need to."

He nodded at once. "I can definitely modify the armour for that. How much volume do you think you'd need?" The tone of his voice stated that he'd give me as much volume as I wanted, or make a darn good try at it.

"Bugs can pack in fairly tightly," I assured him. "We can work that out. The other idea was that instead of running the secondary arms from the HUD, we could have really tiny controls in the joints and have bugs working them for me." The idea had come to me halfway through the meal, and I'd been momentarily dumbstruck by how neatly it would work. If we could make it work, of course.

"Which would tie back to keeping bugs in the armour," he noted at once, raising my estimation of him yet again. "We'd have to define a certain range of bug size to do the work, but I can't see why not." His expression came across as intrigued, which was a good trick when I could only see his mouth behind his helmet. "Do you think you can run them all at once and not be distracted?"

I nodded earnestly. "I'm pretty sure of it. I've got millions of bugs in range right now, and I can sense where they all are in relation to me and what each and every one of them is doing. It's like where it comes to bugs, I don't have an upper limit to the amount of multitasking I can do. Or at least, I haven't hit it yet."

Dad shook his head. "Millions …" he muttered. "Have I mentioned recently that cape powers are bullshit?" But the expression on his face as he looked at me was exasperated pride.

"Not in the last five minutes," Amy noted with a grin on her face. "Hey, Taylor, you connect with the brains of the bugs you're controlling, right?"

I shrugged. "I … guess?" Given that I was tapping into their senses, it seemed to be about right. "Why? I doubt they're making me any smarter."

"No, but they could give you a Thinker rating," she retorted, her grin widening. "I'm wondering if each bug you tap into hands over a little tiny bit of its brainspace to handle the overall multitasking. One bug: no big deal. A million bugs? That adds up to a lot of brainpower."

" … Huh." I thought about that. "I suppose that could work, right, Armsmaster? I mean, it makes as much sense as anything else, and a lot more sense than me trying to handle all that work with one human brain."

Armsmaster gave Amy an appraising nod. "To be honest, I don't have the expertise in parahuman studies to judge something like that. But if it did work like that, it would certainly explain why your power use is so efficient. If your power links all the bug brains together like the elements of a supercomputer, it means that every time you add bugs to your swarm, your available processing power increases."

"Wow," I murmured. I couldn't feel anything like that happening at all. As far as I was concerned, I just did it. "That's … kind of handy. Because there's a lot of bugs around, and I'd hate to be overwhelmed all of a sudden."

Amy put her hand on my shoulder. "Well, that's not going to happen, especially on my watch," she assured me. "And just between you and me, even when you're processing all those signals, your brain doesn't seem to be overworking itself at all. I mean," she added for the benefit of Dad and Armsmaster, "I can't affect brains, but I can definitely observe them."

"And I can speak for Taylor and me both when I say that I'm glad you're helping us out," Dad said. "I honestly don't know what we would've done without you."

Armsmaster didn't say a word. Amy and I shared a glance. She didn't need to say a thing; we both had an idea how bad it could've gone at its worst. Reaching across the table, she squeezed Dad's hand. "Hey, you took me in and made me welcome. It's the least I can do."

"Which reminds me, I've still got some training to do in the suit," I noted, standing up from the table. "I mean, I can't exactly be a PRT-affiliated hero without having a way to go out and be a superhero, after all."

"That's true," said Dad. "I can't even imagine you going out without serious protection, even without all the stuff that's happened. Bug control is useful, but it doesn't make you bulletproof."

I tried not to look uncomfortable. "Uh, yeah." He still didn't know about the partially-completed costume in the cellar. Nobody did, except me. I meant to tell Amy about it sometime, but I wasn't exactly sure when that would be.

Amy snickered as we made our way from the commissary. I looked at her suspiciously, wondering if she'd found the costume anyway. "What?" I asked.

"Nothing." But she smirked anyway. "Just be glad that you're not joining the Wards proper. Joining as an affiliate means you don't have to go through Image to get your costume approved. I've heard that can be a nightmare, sometimes."

"Yeah, well, I can imagine." I couldn't even begin to comprehend the level of NOPE that would come out of their Image division if I presented as a bug controller, so soon after the Swarm. (It was a measure of Amy's stabilising influence that I was able to even think about the Swarm without suffering cold sweats). "They'd probably try to make me so cute and fluffy that I wouldn't be able to do anything meaningful."

Amy gave me a raised eyebrow. "You think you're joking." There wasn't even the hint of a smile on her face, now.

"It's not that bad, is it?" I stared at her. She looked at me deadpan, not answering. I turned to Armsmaster. "Is it?"

He shrugged very slightly. "It's been years since I had to face them, but I've heard stories."

Oh, boy. All of a sudden, I was very glad I didn't have to go through Image.

<><>​

Grue

"Okay," said Lisa, altogether too cheerfully for the situation at hand. "If we're gonna be doing this, we need to do it properly. Shadow Stalker's not the type to make a mistake, or at least make the same mistake twice. We'll be lucky if she even makes it once. So we need to force her errors on her, so she doesn't realise where she's going wrong until it's way too late."

"Nice battle plan," drawled Alec. "Got any actual details, or was that it?" Brian knew he had to be in pain from his broken arm, but the sling was the only indication of injury that he was showing. The snark didn't count; that was pure Alec.

Lisa didn't miss a beat. "Yes, Alec, I have details. Plan A is to tie you to the sofa as bait for Shadow Stalker."

With just as little hesitation, he flipped her the bird. "If we'd kept those damn dart launchers from her like Rachel and me wanted, the PRT wouldn't be looking at us for felony murder. Not to mention attempted murder of Wards."

"Okay, hold it up right there," Brian stated firmly. "If we'd done that, Coil would've come down on us like a ton of bricks. He wanted Shadow Stalker to kill people with those darts."

"So we shouldn't have done it." Rachel looked as though she couldn't believe she was agreeing with Alec. "Fuck Coil and fuck Shadow Stalker." She looked at Lisa almost accusingly. "You talk like you know everything all the time. How come you didn't know that shit was so dangerous?"

"Because there were no hints or warning signs," Lisa said tiredly. Brian got the impression she was about to throw something. "My power doesn't pull facts out of nowhere. I can only work with what I've got."

"Okay, enough." Brian was getting tired of the bickering. "Lisa, you said you had a plan to trap Shadow Stalker. I don't know about everyone else here, but I'm interested in hearing it."

"I thought you'd never ask." Lisa smirked. "The first thing we need to do is …"


End of Part Seventeen

Part Eighteen
 
Last edited:
Part Eighteen: Spilled Blood
Price of Blood

Part Eighteen: Spilled Blood


[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]


Shadow Stalker

Needing money to buy food was one thing. Getting it without drawing undue attention was quite another. She considered the age-old (at least, as far as she was concerned) fallback of mugging a gang member. They were criminals, so they had it coming. On the downside, there was the hassle of finding a gang member who was both on his own and had enough money to make the effort worth it. That kind of pocket money was only usually viable if money wasn't a problem in the first place.

No, she'd have to liberate some. With her powers, that was a lot less labour-intensive than taking it off some gang lowlife. It also fell more into a moral grey area, but she was perfectly willing to define it as 'emergency mission funding'. If Coil wasn't willing to answer his damn phone, then she had to pay her way somehow. And getting money out of her own bank account was as good as setting up a huge neon sign to the PRT (those who weren't in on the mission) shouting "Here I am!"

With her luck, Velocity would get the word and be there before the machine finished dispensing her funds. If it even gave her money at all. Had they gone as far as freezing her bank account? It felt like something they'd do, to give her absolute cover for the mission. Which of course made things harder when she went out of contact with the people she was supposed to infiltrate through no fault of her own.

So, theft it was. She couldn't just shake down random passers-by. They might complain (and who carried cash these days anyway?). However, there were other ways of getting her hands on fast cash. With a grin on her face, she pulled out Coil's phone. There were still no messages or missed calls from him, but that wasn't what she was after this time. Opening up the web browser, she tapped in, find nearest ATM. A moment later, a map popped up with several dots showing in the surrounding blocks. Several of them looked like they were installed in banks, which would present their own problems, but some were in shop-fronts.

Score.

<><>​

The alarm went off unexpectedly, making her jump. It was the type of alarm that left a warbling in the ears afterward, coupled with what looked like flashing lights everywhere. She cursed and stuffed the stack of cash in the pocket of her cargo pants, then stepped away from the back of the auto-teller machine. The Safeway she was in had apparently shut down a month ago due to lack of business, but the ATM was still operational, and so were the alarms connected to it. There were also cameras around it, no doubt tracking her progress, but she was wearing the Spectre costume. Only Coil and Calvert knew who she was under it, so even if the bleeding-hearts in the PRT heard about this, they'd never connect it to her.

Of course, the Undersiders also knew that Spectre was Shadow Stalker, but that wouldn't be a problem for much longer.

While there was no doubt more cash in the machine, and more room in her pockets, it was probably a good idea to get out now. The cops would show for sure, which she could deal with. But if they got the idea that a cape was involved, the PRT and Protectorate would be all over that shit like a fat kid with a McDonalds voucher. And while it was true they'd tagged her once upon a time, that time was now long past and she was a lot better at what she did. Now, if she went up against them, they couldn't touch her on her worst day and their best day. But still, someone might have a brainstorm and recognise the way she went to shadow, which would probably make life difficult for her once she assumed leadership of the Wards, at least until Calvert cleared things up.

All of which meant that she had to maintain a low profile. As much as she might want to beat seventeen shades of crap out of any cops that had the nerve to interfere with her mission, doing this would endanger the mission even more. God dammit.

So as the alarm wailed and the lights flashed, she fastened down the pockets which were now bulging with money, then stepped out through the glass door she'd come in by. She had a date with a convenience store in her near future. Dealing with the Undersiders was going to happen, one way or the other, but she had to eat first.

<><>​

Amy

Watching Armsmaster and Kid Win work was very cool (if sometimes mystifying), but seeing her rapidly-becoming-best-friend helping them do their Tinkering was amazing on a whole new level. Beetles were nice and strong, so Taylor had a selection of medium to large sized beetles on the workbench, industriously treadling away on tiny treadmills and lifting minuscule weights and doing other things to help the two Tinkers calibrate the items they were making. Amy was tempted to ask if they wanted her to modify the beetles to be stronger, but it wasn't like Taylor would have access to her upgraded bugs all the time, so she kept the idea to herself for the time being. Besides, there were other ways bugs could be modified.

If she was understanding things correctly, this was where the normal run of things was reversed. Armsmaster, with his knack for building small and efficient devices, was building the initial control mechanisms, then Kid Win was taking them and rebuilding them to be modular. Dragon, via remote link, was looking over both their shoulders and making helpful comments from time to time. And out of this, they were creating something that all three Tinkers were sure had never been invented before. Which, in a world with Tinkers in it, was a pretty startling idea. Power armour, sure. Power armour with insect controlled arms? That had never been a thing, until now.

And it was all my idea. Amy caught Taylor's eye and smiled. Taylor grinned back.

"Actually, I just had another idea," said Kid Win, without pausing in his work. "Scarab, do me a favour and make a note?"

"Sure thing." Taylor grabbed a nearby notepad, left there for just that purpose, and held a pen ready. The great thing about her power was that she could do this without interrupting what her bugs were doing. Which absolutely fascinated Amy, especially when she observed the brain activity in the bugs within Taylor's control radius. "Shoot."

"Okay," he said. "Drones you can launch off the shoulders of your suit. Shaped like bugs, but with lifters in the wings, like the suit has. Controlled by bugs inside them."

"With cameras that transmit back to the helmet HUD and a fake remote control datastream, in case anyone's monitoring," added Dragon.

"Able to carry onboard devices such as tasers or containment foam grenades, or even high-end surveillance equipment," Armsmaster mused. "I can think of a dozen items I have in my halberd which would also fit inside such a drone."

"And if you had standardised sockets for the gear, like we have with the wing lifters, you could swap out modules as needed," Kid Win suggested.

Dragon's image on the screen nodded. "I like it. It supports her theme and gives her far more options."

Taylor wrote down every word, not even bothering to suppress the grin that was spreading across her face. It was echoed on Amy's face. She'd never been present for the creation of an entire superheroic identity before (not counting herself and Vicky, of course).

This was so damn cool.

<><>​

Taylor

I backed up to the armour and let it enfold me. The helmet came down over my head and the HUD lit up, icons flashing from red to yellow to green almost faster than I could follow. I knew the icons a little better now, and I frowned as I noticed a couple that shouldn't have been there. "Uh, why are the arm control icons still in place?" I asked. "Aren't we using bugs now?"

"We are," Armsmaster agreed. "But if you encounter a situation where you have no access to bugs of the right size, you still need to be able to control the arms, however clumsily."

"Ah." I felt stupid. That was an extremely sensible precaution. "Okay, then."

At my direction, bugs crawled from the storage compartments in the lower back of the armour into the shoulder joints of the auxiliary arms. They settled into the control units with relative ease, following the LED guide lights.

Each arm had eight beetles operating it. The first beetle handled the movement of the upper arm. Number two dealt with the rotation of the shoulder joint and movement of the elbow joint, while number three had control of the rotation and flexion of the wrist joint. Beetles four through eight were each in charge of a single finger (including the thumb), working the joints individually via tiny rocker switches. It seemed like an absurdly large number of insects to take care of something that any five-year-old could do by instinct, but robots looked robotic for a reason. The human hand and arm, I was coming to realise, was an amazingly versatile piece of biological engineering.

Carefully, one by one, I had the bugs try out their controls. I could see them all in my mind's eye, of course. I knew where they were and which control system they were in charge of. Each system, when tested, returned a positive result. Then it was time to get more complicated.

Armsmaster had devised a series of exercises to get me used to the new control system. Slowly, I followed the instructions, raising each hand in turn and having it touch fingers to thumb, one at a time and then in reverse order. At first, it was excruciatingly clumsy. I had no innate proprioception for the auxiliary limbs, which meant I had to eyeball each and every thing I did. But as I worked on it, I found the movements coming more easily. That beetle, when it pressed on that side of that rocker switch, would cause that finger joint to bend that far.

Still, the tolerances were extremely fine and it was easy for a bug to press slightly too hard or not hard enough. I was getting the hang of it, but there were still problems. "There's got to be a way to make this easier," I said, after the fifth failed attempt at touching my fingertips together with my eyes closed.

"How?" asked Kid Win. "You're already a lot smoother than you were with the manual controls. Are you saying we should link them up, so bugs do some of the work and you do some of it?"

"No," Amy said, a Eureka! expression crossing her face. "Put bugs in the arms."

"That's the whole idea of this." Armsmaster sounded confused. "She's already using bugs to control the arms."

"No, no, no," I said as I saw what Amy was driving at. "Bugs. Not controlling anything, just bugs. In compartments in the arms and hands so I can see where they are with my power. It'll give me real-time feedback on what my arms are doing. Probably better than with my real arms, to be honest."

"Should we move the control mechanisms to the hands?" asked Kid Win. "Because that's got a few problems involved if we try that."

"No, leave them as is," I advised him. "I can have any bugs in the hands and arms. Houseflies, fleas, whatever. All they've got to do is be there. I've got a million types of bugs that can do that."

"So where do you need them?" asked Armsmaster. "Because putting a bug inside every joint is also going to be problematic."

I shook my head. "Not necessary. Elbow joint, sure. Wrist, maybe. Back of hand, yeah. And one in every fingertip. That should do it."

Kid Win nodded slowly. "I think we can manage that." He looked at Armsmaster. "Twenty minutes?"

The older Tinker had a confident smile on his face. "Make it ten."

"You're on."

<><>​

Fifteen minutes later, I settled the new bugs into their compartments. From what I could gather, it hadn't been hard to arrange for said compartments to be incorporated into the armour. The bugs didn't have to do anything, after all. They just had to sit there and be visible to my power. I could pop the compartments open and replace the bugs within in less than a second.

Folding my real arms across my chest, I started playing with the auxiliary arms. From the very start, it became clear that Amy's epiphany had been an absolute stroke of genius. Now, with the power-assisted prioproception, I was able to move the arms with confidence and ease, performing complex maneuvers even with my eyes closed. "Amy," I said. "You're amazing. This is perfect." She blushed vividly, and I grinned inside my helmet. Flustered Amy, I decided, was too cute. Also, I owed her a huge hug for this.

"So all it took was a few more bugs?" Kid Win shook his head. "I never would've thought of that."

"I should have," I admitted. "It's my power, after all. And, to be honest, I probably would've in the end. But Amy got there first. It was definitely her idea."

"Well, it certainly seems to make the operation of the arms far more efficient and capable," Armsmaster noted. "If anything, you're more dextrous with your bug-controlled arms than with your real ones."

"Oh, hey, how good are you at typing with all four hands?" asked Kid Win. He pointed at a keyboard they'd been using to update the notes on the armour. "If you're as good with that as you are with other stuff …"

"Ooh," I murmured, stepping up to the keyboard. Sneakily, I deposited twenty-six different types of bug on the keys, took a deep breath, and started typing. I was slow to begin with, as I initially had been with the arms themselves, but I quickly became accustomed to what I was doing. By the time Armsmaster stopped me, I was three-quarters of a screen into a mishmash of stream of consciousness writing and bad puns.

"One hundred and seventy-five words per minute, with six typos," he noted. "All the typographical errors were with your original arms. I am very impressed indeed."

"So when are you going to have them replaced with bug-controlled arms?" quipped Kid Win.

I gave him the finger, times four. "I," I said loftily, "am going to try out my new armour. Fancy a flight around Brockton Bay?"

"Uh, sure." He glanced at Armsmaster. "If that's okay?"

The older Tinker nodded. "I was going to suggest something like that myself. This way, you can observe its operation in the field and perform any maintenance that it might require, if something fails."

"Just take care," Dragon noted. "This is strictly a training flight."

"Absolutely," I agreed. "No fighting bad guys, no way."

I even meant it, too. Though I didn't think it really needed to be said. After all, what were the chances we'd even run into a bad guy?

<><>​

Shadow Stalker

Once she'd dealt with the basic necessities, Sophia had turned her attention to locating the Undersiders. She knew the rough area of town they were in, but narrowing that down was likely to take a certain amount of effort. While she'd gone with them to the Hillside Mall, she hadn't bothered keeping track of the streets along the way.

It was a large brick building, she knew that much. There'd been a name painted on the side. Something or other welding. Settling down with Coil's phone, she did a search for local welding companies. It took a little while, but eventually the name Redmond Welding popped up. That one looked about right, so she entered it into the system to see if there was a location attached.

Thirty seconds later, she grinned savagely. Bingo. Not only was an address given, but it fitted with her vague memories of the location.

After that, it was a simple matter of roof-running until she reached the right location. Her initial instinct was to go straight in and take them down, but a rare impulse of caution held her back. While she knew the layout, so did they. Grue could flood the internal volume of the base with darkness in just a few seconds, taking away her one big advantage. Also, she wasn't sure the dogs would be prevented from tracking her by smell.

The best time to hit them would be when they were off guard. Absent invading their base, that moment would be when they were just setting out. They'd still be feeling a false sense of security from the proximity of their base so when she hit them, she'd take them totally off guard. She settled down to wait. If it gave her a cleaner shot at them, she could afford to hold off for a while.

<><>​

Grue

"... check out this map," Lisa announced grandly, unfolding the map in question with a flourish then spreading it over the table. A scattering of dots was spread across it, and she tapped her finger on them. "I've been running the numbers. These are all the Shadow Stalker sightings I've been able to pin down. Between now and when she actually finds out Coil's been taken down, she's likely to revert to her old patterns of movement."

"So is this before or after she tracks us here and does her best to end us all?" asked Brian. "Because I recall you telling us that's what she was going to do."

"Oh, once she finds out, she'll come looking for blood, of course," she replied blithely. "But I'm reasonably sure she's got no idea he's either captured or dead. Hell, I know it's one of the two, but even I don't know which one. And until she finds out, the odds are good she isn't going to act against us. But while she doesn't have access to Coil's base, she will be reverting to her old habits. Which makes her predictable."

"So we stay as far away from her as possible," Alec said. He looked from Brian to Lisa as they each stared at him. "What? I'm just saying what you're thinking."

"It's what I'm thinking." Rachel's voice was as blunt and uncompromising as her expression. "If she's trying to kill us, why the fuck are we going near her?"

Lisa crossed her arms, the picture of irritation. "Because if we don't take her down and hand her over to the PRT, our options are either wait till she manages to track us down anyway, or until the PRT decides to come down on us for the murders at the Hillside Mall. And if they get their hands on her before we do, she will do her best to screw us over as hard as she can."

"So what's stopping her from doing that anyway, if we're the ones to hand her over?" snarked Alec. "Her sense of fair play? Oh, I forgot. She doesn't have one."

"If we hand her over, we get to set the narrative before she ever starts talking," Lisa said with a smirk. "By the time I'm done, they'll be ready to Birdcage her."

Brian had to admit she had a point. If she put her mind to it, Lisa could pick apart the thoughts and motivations of people until they doubted everything they'd previously thought was true. Convincing the PRT that Shadow Stalker was entirely at fault for everything that had happened—especially as that was essentially the truth—would take no effort at all.

He sighed. "Fine. We've got to bring her down. What's the actual plan?"

Lisa grinned like a particularly satisfied fox. "We equip with tasers, then trail our coats through her most travelled areas until she bites. She'll want to get close. When she does, we cloak up in your darkness, and taser her into a twitching heap."

"Aww, and here I thought you had a complicated but risky plan that was going to require careful planning and synchronisation," jibed Alec. "That's just daring her to hit us and then hitting her back first."

"Complicated plans have a way of getting overcomplicated," Lisa retorted. "When dealing with Shadow Stalker, it's best to keep things simple, because she has a tendency to ignore anything resembling rules."

"And tasers?" Brian raised an eyebrow. "Where are we going to get those from?"

Lisa snorted. "I started making enquiries when Shadow Stalker first showed up on our doorstep. They're bought and paid for; all we've got to do is go and pick them up. We'll go in civvies but hiding our identities, so the seller can say in good conscience he has no idea who he sold them to." She pulled on a jacket and jeans over her Tattletale costume. The mask went into her pocket, and she put on a pair of sunglasses over the eye makeup that she'd already applied. Finally, she buckled the belt around her hips, with the holster for her small pistol. Removing the weapon, she hefted it briefly and nodded then reholstered it.

Brian still thought it was bullshit that she could tell if a gun was fully loaded just by picking it up.

"Can I still hit her with my sceptre?" asked Alec. "Because I want to hit her with my sceptre."

Brian rolled his eyes. "Once we take her down, yes, you can hit her with your sceptre. Once." He zipped up his jacket, then took his helmet and dropped it into his backpack. Biker leathers were a little on the unusual side for about-town wear, but in the absence of the helmet they did nothing to mark him out as a cape. Emulating Lisa, he put on a pair of aviator shades.

With a petulant air, Alec shrugged on a jacket that covered his frilly shirt. A pair of jeans served to hide the lower part of his costume, and his mask and sceptre went into the backpack he slung over one shoulder. "Come on. Just once? She's gonna be trying to kill us. That's good for three or four jabs, at least. Maybe we should keep her until I've got control, then I can walk her into the Director's office and make her confess everything."

"That won't work, and you know why." Lisa's tone was long-suffering. "The moment Piggot decides she's been Mastered, all the testimony goes out the window. Worse, that's handing her an automatic pass for what happened at Hillside Mall, putting everything back on us."

Rachel's entire preparation involved shoving her dollar-store dog mask into a ratty backpack, along with a bag of doggy treats. Getting up, she whistled her dogs to her. They clustered around her, panting eagerly. Bending down, she ran her hands over their heads, then clipped leads to each collar in turn. "We going to do this, or what?" she asked.

"Three jabs, then," Alec said as they headed down the stairs. "Come on. It'll be fun."

"If you keep this up, you won't get to use your sceptre on her at all," Brian warned.

"Lisa, Brian's being mean to me."

"Shut up, Alec."

"Shut up, Alec."

"Alec, shut the fuck up."

Still bickering, they left the factory, letting the door slam behind them.

Too late, the dogs began to growl. Lisa looked up and around, opening her mouth to say something. Before she could get the words out, Shadow Stalker smashed into her, driving her into the pavement.

<><>​

Shadow Stalker

When they came out of the doorway, she eyed each of them in turn, waiting for them to let the door swing shut. The last thing she wanted was to let them escape back into the building.

The door had just slammed when the dogs got her scent and began to growl, so she leaped from the roof. Her initial target was Grue, but at the last instant she spotted the pistol on Tattletale's hip and changed direction. The decision came just in time as she saw the girl looking up at her. Tattletale's hand was halfway to the pistol when Sophia collided with her, knees-first. She felt something snap as Tattletale began to fall, then she went to shadow.

Hitting the pavement, she rolled to the side. Her hand, still in shadow, swept through Tattletale's holster and came away with the pistol. She came to her feet, turning solid again a couple of yards away from the fallen blonde, thumb flicking the safety off.

Blackness billowed out from Grue, but Sophia was ready for him. She squeezed the trigger and the pistol went off with a flat crack. Grue staggered, falling out of the cloud, and Sophia fired again. Hellhound, still turning toward them, drew in a breath. "Brut—!" she shouted.

Before she managed to finish the word, Sophia turned the pistol and fired again. Hellhound staggered backward against the wall, her voice dying in a choked gurgle as blood began to spread down across her shirt. More blood was pooling on the dirty concrete under Grue as the last of the blackness dissipated, but Sophia wasn't watching him. Regent was still up, eyes widening as he focused on the sudden threat. Her hand twitched and the gun went off target, but she spun and launched a vicious kick into his stomach. He doubled over and fell to the ground, where she kicked him again in the side of the head.

She drew a long, shuddering breath, looking at the Undersiders strewn around her. Tattletale groaned and stirred, and Sophia reflexively shot her in the stomach. The blonde's sunglasses had fallen off, revealing black makeup around her eyes, which opened wide at the impact. Gasping noises arose from her throat as she doubled her hands over the entry wound and fought for breath.

Blood leaking between the fingers clutched to her throat, Hellhound slid down the wall, leaving a trail of blood behind her. Her dogs clustered around her, whining and licking at her face. She tried to articulate words, but her strength seemed to be waning by the second.

"So that's what it fucking takes to shut you assholes up," Sophia commented. "I should've brought a gun to the party a long time ago." She turned to Grue, who was looking at her. Like Tattletale, his shades had fallen off. Even with two bullets in him, his eyes were open and aware. "Okay, now it's time to fucking die." She levelled the pistol at his head, lips skinning back from her teeth in a savage grin of pure atavistic glee.

I fucking got them, she exulted, savouring the absolute triumph of the moment. Me. I did what nobody else could do. I fucking ended the Undersiders. Slowly, glorying in the rightness of what she was doing, she began to squeeze the trigger.

Why nobody else had ever done this before, she had no idea.

<><>​

Taylor

"Everyone should try this," I said as I soared over Brockton Bay. If I ignored the HUD icons, it was almost possible to imagine that the suit didn't exist, that I was flying under my own power. According to Kid Win, the suit had 'learned' my reflexes and movements, so that each time I did anything, it would react a shade faster until it and I were moving in near-perfect unison. "You guys are amazing."

As it was, I felt as though I were wearing the most comfortable full-body suit in the world. The climate control ensured that I wasn't too warm or too cool, and I couldn't even feel the helmet any more.

Tilting my arms and moving my hands, I swooped around in a long turn to the north. Just as the suit had learned my reflexes, I had learned the suit's. I knew a lot more about how the tolerances were set, and what motions made it do certain things. A little way away, paralleling my course, Kid Win cruised along on his flying skateboard.

"On behalf of myself, Armsmaster and Dragon, thanks." He almost sounded embarrassed at the praise. "But we should really be thanking you."

"I … really what?" It took me a few seconds before his words caught up with me. "Why thank me?" I couldn't think of anything I'd done that merited thanks.

"That suit is something totally new," he explained. "Armsmaster, Dragon and I all had input into it, and we all learned something out of it. If it wasn't for you, it never would've been built. I know for a fact my tech is going to improve because of it. And Armsmaster's actually asked if I could give him pointers on modularising his bike." He sounded a little choked up at the end there, which didn't really surprise me. I'd be choked up, too. It would be like Alexandria casually dropping in and asking if I was free to go on patrol with her.

"That's amazing news," I said, and it was. Since he'd figured out his speciality, he'd visibly come out of his shell while helping build the suit. "I think—"

It seemed that what I thought didn't matter to the universe, because just then a warning message popped up in my heads-up display. GUNSHOTS REGISTERED. An overhead map faded into view with a flashing red dot on it, then twisted and translated to an overlay of the buildings we were flying over. The red dot was a little way ahead and off to the right. Just to drive the point home, I got a quick replay in my earpieces; two shots in rapid succession, followed by two more a few seconds apart. The echoes were weird and scratchy, which indicated to me that the suit had pulled the sounds out of the background noise of the city and cleaned them up in the time that it had taken to put up the original warning. Okay, now I see what Dragon meant about the software she put in this suit.

"— holy shit, my suit just picked up gunfire!" I exclaimed. Instinctively, I angled toward the red dot and jammed my toes on to the pressure plates as hard as I could, then braced against the surge of acceleration.

"Wait, what? My suit can't do that—hey, where are you going? Slow down, I can't keep up!"

"Call it in," I said tensely. "I can't wait."

"Don't run toward gunfire until you know what they're using!" he protested. "What if it can go straight through the suit?"

Apparently Dragon had thought of that as well, because as if in answer to his question, another line of data popped up. SINGLE WEAPON. 89.34% PROBABILITY .38 CALIBER PISTOL. DANGER TO WEARER: MINIMAL.

"Suit says it's a thirty-eight. Minimal danger." I blazed past the last intervening building and saw where the red dot was situated. A grey-clad figure standing over four people, with bright red blood on the pavement. "Fuck, it's a cape!"

And then I saw a spark from the end of the cloaked figure's hand, and a second one. Red ripples spread out from the flashing dot, and more words scrolled across the heads-up display. GUNSHOTS REGISTERED. A moment later, the shots racketed in my ears, a lot clearer than the previous four.

The previous information regarding the weapon repeated its scroll across my HUD, except that the probability was up to over ninety-seven percent. I paid it barely any attention at all. Pointing my arms down, I dived toward the shooter.

<><>​

Shadow Stalker

Riding the high of her triumph, Sophia didn't even see the incoming suit until it dropped out of the sky like a thunderbolt. Wings spread wide, the blue and black powered armour slammed into the ground in the classic one-knee-and-fist landing, sending cracks radiating all around. As it stood up, the wings folded out of sight on to its back.

"What the fuck?" she yelped, her own voice barely audible to her ears. She levelled the pistol and fired twice, the bullets sparking off the power armour's chest. Oh, right. That's why we don't usually use guns.

Then, as the gun clicked empty, she recognised the suit. Or rather, the look of it was familiar. It wasn't the one that had been on the news, but the colour scheme was the same. From the appearance of it, it was definitely an upgrade from the previous model.

It stepped forward. "Stop right there!" The voice was amplified and obviously modulated, but she was pretty sure there was a girl in there. Not that the sex of some unknown Tinker mattered in the slightest to her. Even if it was Hebert driving the thing, which Sophia still wasn't entirely convinced about.

"Not fucking likely!" she yelled and threw the gun at its face, then went to shadow. As it lunged forward, the gun bouncing off its helmet, she whirled and dived through the door into the building beyond. A second later, she heard the crash as the suit collided with the door. It didn't sound as though the barrier would hold up for long, but that didn't matter. All she needed was a few seconds of head start.

<><>​

Taylor

I slammed my fist against the door. "She got away!" Then the pain hit. "Ow, ow ow ow!"

Kid Win swooped into sight on his board, arrowing down to where I stood. "What's the matter? Are you hit? I thought you said it was only a thirty-eight."

"No. Ow." I turned and hobbled painfully to the nearest victim. Three dogs, which had been clustering around her, turned to growl at me as I approached. "Nobody ever told me that landings like that are really hard on the knees." I stopped before they got too agitated and leaned forward to get as good a look as I could. She had dark hair and squarish, blunt features, but I wasn't looking at her face. Blood covered the entire front of her shirt, as well as her right hand, which was lax in her lap.

FACIAL RECOGNITION: LINDT, RACHEL, supplied my heads-up display. AKA HELLHOUND. SEVERAL OPEN WARRANTS. SUBJECT DECEASED.

"Jeez." I swallowed as Kid Win came in for a much less dramatic landing beside me. My first day out as a superhero—not even my first, really, given that this was a test flightand I'd already witnessed at least one murder. "She's dead."

"These other ones aren't looking so good either," Kid Win said unsteadily. Paradoxically, this heartened me. Kid Win had been a Ward for a few years, and he'd surely seen far worse than this, especially in Brockton Bay. If a tried and tested superhero like him reacted this badly to a murder scene, it meant I was allowed to feel a few qualms myself.

I turned away from the body of Rachel Lindt and her now-whining dogs, and focused on the next person. This was a teenage boy with dark curly hair, maybe a little younger than me, curled up on the pavement with a pool of blood spreading from under him.

SUBJECT LOSING BLOOD, offered my heads-up display. MEDICAL ATTENTION URGENTLY REQUIRED.

"This one's alive," I said, pointing at the boy. "The suit says he needs urgent medical attention." As Kid Win went to his knees beside the victim, I turned toward the blonde with the weird eye makeup. She was watching me with her hands clasped over a blood-welling wound on her stomach.

"I've already called base and notified emergency services," he said breathlessly as he pulled something off his belt. "Armsmaster said Glory Girl's inbound with Panacea. Also said to yell at you for charging a gunman."

"Consider me yelled at," I said absently as I focused on the message scrolling across the heads-up display. FACIAL RECOGNITION: SARAH LIVSEY. SUBJECT OF MISSING PERSONS REPORT. SUBJECT PULSE RATE IRREGULAR. MEDICAL ATTENTION STRONGLY RECOMMENDED.

I heard a hiss as Kid Win applied something to the kid's injuries. Sarah Livsey stared up at me, then one of her hands detached from her stomach and pointed weakly. I turned my head to see she was indicating the big black guy who was slumped nearby. When I turned back, her lips moved as she tried to speak. I didn't hear anything, but then the suit replayed her words. "He's got a sister."

I blinked, then she pointed again, this time at Rachel Lindt. "She's got dogs." A labouring breath. "Near Empire territory."

"Don't try to talk," I said. "Save your breath."

She shook her head, her lips stretching in what looked like a painful smile. "Kidney shot. Internal bleeding. I won't last five minutes. One last thing." She tried to inhale, but a spasm of pain crossed her features. "Spectre. Shadow Stalker. She did this."

I couldn't control my reaction as the name hit me like a ton of bricks. My eyes opened almost as wide as my mouth. The phasing trick was a significant clue, but to have it verified by one of the victims was still a considerable shock.

"Shit, you know her?" she rasped. She tried to inhale again, with limited success. "Good. Once you've kicked her ass up between her shoulderblades, look her in the eye and tell her Tattletale says fuck you." Her grin was still painful, but she looked positively gleeful at the prospect.

"I will," I promised, then I cut the external speakers and activated the icon for the radio. "Scarab to PRT control. We've got four gunshot victims, one deceased, the others in serious condition. Where's the emergency services?" I tried not to let the urgency in my voice make me sound shrill, but it was difficult. "Where's Glory Girl and Panacea? People are dying here."

"Make that two deceased," Kid Win said, his voice heavy. I looked around to see him bending over the big black guy. "This guy took two to the body and one to the head."

"Shit," I muttered, remembering just in time to cut the microphone. "She said he had a sister." A moment later, my HUD verified Kid Win's verdict: SUBJECT DECEASED. A moment passed, then it was replaced by another line. HELLHOUND AND TATTLETALE: VERIFIED MEMBERS OF VILLAIN GANG 'UNDERSIDERS'. FOUR MEMBERS: GRUE, HELLHOUND, TATTLETALE, REGENT. Three images popped up; a blurry black silhouette against darkness, another blurry image that could've been Sarah Livsey in a lavender costume, and one clear picture of Rachel Lindt. There was nothing for Regent, but I was willing to bet that the kid with the curly black hair was him.

Braving the pain in my knee, I crouched beside Tattletale and took her hand in mine. "I'm not going to stop till I've brought her down," I promised.

"I know." Her voice, even amplified by the helmet's systems, was barely a whisper in my ears. "Tip for you. Want to draw her in? Tell her Grue's alive."

She didn't draw another breath. Her eyes, a moment ago alive and shrewd, turned dull and lifeless. I held her hand a little longer, then let it slip limply from mine. I didn't need the heads-up display to give me the news: SUBJECT DECEASED.

And then, as I painfully rose to my feet, I heard the first incoming sirens. Overhead, I spotted the gold and white of Glory Girl as she descended with Amy in her arms. I watched numbly as she touched down and let her sister down on to her feet. Amy looked at me and I pointed at the curly-haired kid. "I think he's it."

She hurried to Regent's side and crouched beside him, ignoring the pool of blood her robes were trailing through. Her hand found his skin and she concentrated for a moment, then sighed and stood up again. "Sorry," she said. "He's gone." Apparently by reflex, she checked the other three. She was stymied by Rachel's dogs until Glory Girl took the leashes and pulled them away from their owner's body. After finishing her checks, she shook her head. "They all are."

"God damnit," I said. Kid Win echoed me. I made my way over to Amy and put my hand on her shoulder. "It's not your fault. You got here as fast as you could."

"Thanks," she said dully. "But it never makes it any easier to take." She looked up at me, or rather, up at the suit. "Are you all right? You're limping."

"My own stupid fault," I muttered. "It doesn't matter. What matters is that Shadow Stalker did this, and now it's up to me to bring her down. To bring her to justice."

"That's not your job," Kid Win told me. "You're still new at this. She was one of us. We'll find her. We'll take her down. You've done your bit. It's okay if you want to take a step back."

I shook my head.

"Not on your goddamn life."


End of Part Eighteen

https://forums.sufficientvelocity.c...fanfic.34132/post-12793451[Part Nineteen[/url
 
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Part Nineteen: Shadowfall
Price of Blood

Part Nineteen: Shadowfall


[A/N: This chapter commissioned by @GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]


PRT Building
Half an Hour After the Passing of Sarah Livsey


"Okay, first off?" Amy shook her head as the ache from my knee subsided under her expert touch. "Landings like that take practice. Ask Vicky. She spent weeks getting it right. Because armour or no armour, you're still smashing your knee down hard enough to crack concrete. There's a reason most people who do it are Brutes. The Tinkers who do it in power armour always have padding."

"Yeah, I didn't think about that until I'd actually disabled the flight mode," I confessed. "I wanted to scare the crap out of Sophia, and maybe intimidate her into surrendering straight away so I could save some of her victims."

"Well, you got the 'scaring the crap out of' part just about right," Chris commented from across the room where he was running through the footage from my helmet cam. Which I hadn't known about. "From the look on her face when you landed, she nearly pissed herself."

"Good," I said savagely. "I want her terrified of me. I want her looking over her shoulder every minute of the day, the same way she had me terrified of her."

"Wow, this is a new side to you." Amy tilted her head. "What happened to 'I just want to be the best hero I can be'?"

"I still want to be that," I assured her. Reaching out, I squeezed her shoulder reassuringly. "Don't worry, I'm not going murder-villain on you. It's just that with the history Sophia and I have, there's no way I'm going to be able to give her the benefit of the doubt. Every ounce of experience I have with her tells me she's a raging psychotic bitch, no matter what kind of pretty facade she used to cover it up with as a Ward."

Chris burst out laughing. "Yeah, no, she didn't do a good job of covering it up with us, either. She didn't do 'nice'. Of course, she didn't beat anyone up, but that's probably because Triumph and Aegis would've reported her in a heartbeat."

"So because she had effective oversight inside the most thoroughly monitored building in Brockton Bay, she went overboard everywhere else." I shook my head. "Picking on me at school, and going out with sharp arrows on her unauthorised solo patrols. Pardon me if I don't swoon with amazement at how carefully you kept an eye on her."

"And as I've already admitted to you, that was indeed our bad judgement in both cases." Director Piggot stood in the doorway. "We are endeavouring to correct that mistake, as you're well aware. But I'm not here to talk about that. I'm here to talk about how you left your backup behind and charged into a live-fire situation against a foe with unknown capabilities, when you most assuredly were not cleared to engage."

I eyed her warily. "The software said it was only a thirty-eight, and there was minimal risk."

"The one your suit picked up was a thirty-eight." Her tone was cutting. "Suppose it had been a ganger with a Smith and Wesson five hundred in his waistband? Or there was someone with a sniper rifle waiting to pick you off as you focused on his friend with the pistol?"

It seemed to me she was being altogether too picky. "Ma'am, anyone would be at threat from a sniper rifle, or from that other pistol you mentioned if it's that dangerous. I can't hide indoors all day, worried that some guy with a sniper rifle is about to pop me in the head the moment I walk outside." Well, I could, but as a life it would suck badly.

"Of course not." Her tone was impatient. "But blindly charging into a situation where gunfire has already occurred is a high-risk tactic. Believe me, I know. I've been there. Taking the time to figure out what's going on and where all the threats are can save your life. Will save your life."

"And the Undersiders? If I'd arrived any earlier, I could've saved their lives, or at least some of them," I countered. "My suit detected the gun, identified it and gave me a 3-D map of the area with the shooter located, all in less time than it takes to say it now."

"Director Piggot, if I may?" Dragon chose to speak up from one of the wall monitors. "I supplied the software. The moment the suit detected the gunshots, it scanned the local area with IR and low-end microwave bursts. No other metal masses approximating guns or people were detected at or near the site of the shooting. Apart from the victims themselves, of course."

"How good are those scanners?" Piggot wasn't letting the topic go. "It's all too easy to get a false positive or a false negative on things like that."

"I use them in my own suits." Dragon didn't sound smug, though she probably had every right to do so. "In my opinion, on review of the data, the suit would have detected any significant source of danger before she personally encountered it."

"Except for Shadow Stalker herself." Piggot pointed at one of the monitors, where a cleaned-up image of Shadow Stalker in her Spectre costume was just turning to face me. In her hand was the pistol she'd used to kill the Undersiders. "What if she'd pulled the same stunt she did with Aegis, and turned the gun to shadow before throwing it? Panacea, would you be able to bring Scarab back from having a thirty-eight calibre pistol embedded in her cerebral cortex?"

Amy didn't answer the question, probably because she'd recognised it as being rhetorical, just as I had. But rhetorical or otherwise, the Director had made her point well. I knew Amy's limitation on fixing brains was a self-imposed one, but even when she bent her own rules, she tried to do it as lightly as possible. If that pistol had ended up in my head in the same way Sophia had put a capsule of neurotoxin into Aegis' head, I would end up dead or worse. There would be no good outcomes from that.

"Also, we need to talk about your landing technique," Armsmaster stated. He entered the room from his main lab, my armour following behind on a rolling rack. "You damaged several actuators in the knee when you made that reckless entrance. They were easily swapped out, but that doesn't mean you won't damage the next lot if you land like that again."

"Yeah, no, got it," I sighed. "I tried to be dramatic, and it bit me in the knee." I'd actually been about to say 'bit me in the ass' but it wasn't my ass that had suffered the damage.

"There's nothing wrong with a dramatic entrance in the right time and place to spread shock and awe," he said at once. "I've utilised them myself, from time to time. The trick is to make it look effortless. So you've got to make it a sustainable attempt."

"In other words, you've got to learn how to do it and not damage the suit, or go sprawling, in the process." Dragon sounded like she was trying to be helpful, but Armsmaster turned his head toward the monitor for a moment. Was he glaring at her?

Come to thing of it, I hadn't gone sprawling at all. Had he done that himself? I resolved to ask Dragon some probing questions when next we had the chance to chat.

When next we get the chance to chat. Good grief. Look at me, the big-time superhero, rubbing metaphorical elbows with legends like Dragon.

"In the meantime," offered Chris, "if you are going to keep landing like that, I can write you a subroutine that will allow the suit to pull it off without breaking any actuators."

"Or kneecaps," added Amy. "I'm told those are painful." She looked my way with raised eyebrows as if to say, that was all your fault.

"To help with that, I would suggest improving the padding within the suit,"
Dragon noted. "I have a variant of containment foam which I find works well in that regard."

"I'd be interested in samples to try in my own suit as well," Armsmaster said at once.

"All right, all right," I said, throwing my hands in the air. "I screwed up. I'm sorry. There isn't actually a manual for this sort of thing. Or if there is, nobody's offered me a copy."

"There's several," Chris said immediately.

"All of them flawed," Armsmaster pointed out.

"Most of them were written by people who don't even have powers, so they miss out some important details. The others are biased by individual preconceptions of how powers work, and they miss out the rest." Dragon sounded amused.

"So basically, if you want a manual on how to become an effective superhero, you have to write it," Amy concluded, grinning. "Which is kinda self-defeating, now that I come to think about it. If you could write it, you wouldn't need it."

Director Piggot had been watching the byplay with an air of growing impatience. "Right, fine. Mistakes made and acknowledged. I'm impressed; most capes don't get as far as actually admitting they screwed up. Is the damage repaired?"

"Her knee's as good as it'll ever be," Amy noted. "So's the other one. Fixed some old damage to the cartilage, by the way." She tilted her head at me. "You're welcome. Do you make a habit of bashing your knees into stuff?"

"Courtesy of Sophia Hess, yeah. For a while there, I did." I raised my eyebrows at Director Piggot. And that one's on you.

She didn't say anything in reply, but her lips tightened briefly. Her next words were addressed to Armsmaster. "And the actuators have already been replaced, so the suit is working properly again?"

"Absolutely." The veteran hero smiled briefly. "I can already see how useful this will be in the maintenance of my own suit, once I make the transition to a fully modular design."

"And I've been working on a design for the shoulder drones," Chris put in. "I just need to run it past Armsmaster, and we can put it together."

"Send it to my helmet system, and I'll look it over," Armsmaster replied. "I'm interested to see what you've got."

As the pair started a discussion with Dragon at the other end of the room, Director Piggot moved over to where I stood with Amy. "You dodged a bullet today," she said quietly. "Figuratively speaking, of course. I doubt you could've saved the Undersiders no matter what you did, and Hess could have killed you."

"I keep wondering if there was some way I might have been able to save them anyway," I said helplessly. "I mean, if I'd been better prepared. At least two of them were alive when I got there. Superheroes are supposed to save people."

"Don't blame yourself for their deaths," she said sharply. "I know better than most that shit happens and people die, no matter how hard you push yourself to help them." She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. When she opened them again, she looked like she'd aged ten years. "You've heard of Ellisburg."

"Yes." Everyone had heard of Ellisburg, and Nilbog.

"I was on one of the strike teams that went in there." Her tone was flat. "I would've given my life for my squadmates. But they gave their lives for me, instead. Every single one of them. Not a night goes by that I don't wonder if I could've saved even one of them if I'd just tried a little harder. The simple answer is, no. I tried as hard as I could. They all still died."

She prodded me in the chest with a hard forefinger. "You're not a soldier. You're not even trained for this. The only things you have going for you are your powers, the desire to be a hero, and a bunch of people who are willing to use their powers on your behalf. That attitude, and those people, are the only reasons I'm willing to work with you."

Wow, thanks, I thought, barely able to hold back my eye-roll.

But she wasn't done. "You came on a scene where people had already suffered mortal wounds at the hands of an adversary who wanted them dead. You had no resources on hand to assist them. Kid Win has been doing this for years, and he couldn't help them. You have many reasons to second-guess yourself. This isn't one of them."

I blinked, trying not to feel angry but wondering why I shouldn't. The term 'damning with faint praise' occurred to me. "Excuse me, Director Piggot, but have I personally offended you somehow? Because I really am putting an effort into becoming the best hero I can be, and if that's your idea of a pep talk, it's not helping." By the time I got that far, my emotions were starting to choke me up. I wanted to say more, but I couldn't for fear of it coming out as a sob. Amy's arm went around my waist, and I leaned into her.

The Director sighed. "No, Miss Hebert, you haven't offended me. I don't think much of parahumans in general." The lines in her face deepened as she stared at something only she could see. "If I seem to be holding you to a higher standard than most, rest assured that I have my reasons. All things considered, however, you came back alive so that's a bonus."

She turned and left the room; the door closed behind her. Amy's presence comforted me to the point that the lump began to leave my throat. As I looked at Armsmaster and Chris, it seemed to me that they didn't seem overly surprised by her attitude.

"Don't take it personally," Chris said quietly, coming to my side. "She doesn't like anyone. When Clockblocker chose his name, I heard she tore a strip off him ten feet wide and put him on monitor duty for a month."

"It's not the Director's job to like anyone." Armsmaster's tone was only mildly censorious. "She's a very busy woman, and she prefers everything to work just right. I can relate to that need."

"But … when I first met her, she was a lot nicer to me," I protested. "And she had you all working so hard to find out what really happened with the Swarm. Was that just an act?"

"Kind of," Amy said, surprising me. She squeezed me more tightly, then let go and took my hand. "Then, you were very much a victim of circumstances. Stuff had happened to you outside of your control. She wanted to find out the exact situation so she knew who to blame. When she did find that out, she set out to come down on them with both feet."

"And if that had been me, I would've been the one she landed on," I realised.

"Yes." Armsmaster hit a control, and my armour opened up to let me in. "Once we verified that you didn't do it deliberately and that you wanted to be a hero, she still had to deal with the whole recruitment process."

"But I didn't want to be a Ward." I looked from Amy to Chris to Armsmaster. "You always knew that, didn't you?"

"Panacea figured it out before anyone else." Armsmaster gave Amy a measured nod. "She presented her case and the Director ran with it. She remained courteous and pleasant at that point because you had not yet finalised your decision to become an affiliate hero. Too many parahumans slide from aspirations of becoming a hero, to rogue, to petty villainy."

I sighed. It was pretty clear to me how it went from there. "So of course, now that I've been set up with my brand new armour—"

"Which you managed to damage when engaging a supervillain at a murder scene on your shakedown flight, which might even be a new record," chimed in Chris, a grin tugging at the corner of his mouth.

"I would add 'against orders', but technically speaking you're not under our command," Armsmaster said bluntly. "Still, you were told not to do anything dangerous, and you went in anyway, so consider yourself unofficially reprimanded."

I poked my tongue out at Chris, then turned to Armsmaster. "Would you have gone in?"

"Of course," he said at once. "But I have the experience and training to deal with that sort of situation. You had a suit of powered armour and Saturday morning cartoons. Or did something else inspire you to pull off that three-point landing?"

"Glory Girl, actually," I confessed. "I saw her do it on the news once. But like I was saying, now that I've been set up with the armour and I'm basically a hero in my own right, she's coming down a lot harder on me because she expects more of me?"

"Who, Vicky?" asked Amy, looking confused.

"No, the Director," I clarified.

Armsmaster nodded. "I wouldn't be surprised. She's a stickler for getting things right. With that suit, you have a lot more responsibility than you had before. If I've got it right, she expects you to acknowledge that responsibility and live up to it."

"Okay." I closed my eyes and took my glasses off to rub my eyelids with my finger and thumb. "I get it. Sort of. But would it have killed her to actually say it, instead of just yelling at me and leaving to you guys to tell me why?"

"I refuse to second-guess the Director's decisions." Armsmaster had mastered the art of the bland. "She does things her way." With a beep, the armour started to close up again. He hit the control to arrest the motion. "Did you want to make sure everything was still working okay?"

"Yeah, sure." Director Piggot's disapproval had put a damper on my enthusiasm for being a superhero, at least for the moment, but it was probably a good idea to put the suit through its paces. "Maybe I'll take it for another test flight. What are the odds of running into Sophia again?" If that happened, I wasn't going to mess around with fancy moves. I was just going to land on her. And I didn't care if I broke both kneecaps doing it.

"No."

Armsmaster's flat refusal caught me by surprise, just as I was settling myself into the armour. "What?" I squeaked. "Why not?" The suit finished its automated closing procedure, and I repeated the question through the external speakers.

"Because we have a plan in motion to capture her within the next two hours," he stated. "If you're flying around the city at the time, you may well spook her into bolting."

"What?" Startled, I took a step forward off the stand. The suit was moving as smoothly as ever, if not more so. "Why didn't the Director tell me? Why didn't anyone tell me? What am I going to be doing?"

"Nothing," he said. "You're going to be doing nothing. The plan for capturing her does not involve you."

"What? No!" I stepped right up to him. In my armour, I was almost as tall as he was. "I can help! I can take her down! I deserve this!"

"Calm down," he advised me. "I understand that you have a personal stake in this, but you're barely trained in the use of your suit, and you have no experience at all in coordinating tactics with PRT and Protectorate forces. Shadow Stalker is very good at what she does; if she wasn't, she wouldn't have been allowed to join the Wards in the first place. There's a time to step up, and a time to step back. For you, this is a time to step back."

I clenched my fists in the metal gauntlets, uselessly. "I suppose you'll be taking the lead," I said, trying to keep the sullenness out of my tone.

"Yes. I believe I've come up with a workable strategy." He didn't elaborate any farther.

I tried to think of an argument that would sway him, and failed. In the short time I'd known the man, I had gotten the impression of someone who was very hard to turn aside from his chosen path. Not even for a moment did I consider going over his head to Director Piggot; I had no doubt that she'd already decided who was going to be in on the operation and who wasn't.

The epiphany was stunning. While I was going to be allowed to play superhero in the armour they'd gifted me and would continue to repair and maintain for me, I wasn't considered reliable enough to be brought in on something like this. I was going to be eating at the little kids' table until I proved I deserved a spot at the big kids' table.

"Right," I said, trying to hide my sigh. "It's just that … when you guys built this armour for me, I had the idea that I'd be going after Sophia in it, you know? Like, she was being reserved for me to capture for my big debut, or something."

"There goes that Saturday morning cartoon thinking again." Armsmaster's voice wasn't unkind, but his tone was a little patronising. "You can't call 'dibs' on a villain. It doesn't work that way."

It was even more irritating to realise that he didn't even see where his reference went wrong. I hadn't been thinking about Saturday morning cartoons then or now; I wanted to capture Sophia because it was just, because it was right, and because she was responsible for all the deaths of the so-called Swarmbringer event, as well as the Undersiders. The immense amount of karmic satisfaction that would be inherent in bringing to justice the person who'd spent more than a year helping grind my face into the dirt while masquerading as a superhero didn't factor into things at all. Honest.

"I actually thought people did call dibs," I replied slowly. "That's how you get arch-enemies, right? Some capes are famous for it."

"Uh, they're the exception rather than the rule," Chris said diffidently. "It takes special circumstances for that sort of thing to happen. The media just likes to beat it up a lot."

"Oh." I felt vaguely let down. I'd never really been a real cape geek before … well, back when I had a normal life. But I'd thought I knew stuff. Along with most of the population of Brockton Bay, I'd assumed the Wards were all upstanding, heroic figures and that the Protectorate and PRT knew what they were doing.

Boy, had I been mistaken on both counts.

I stepped back on to the rack and triggered the suit shutdown. "Okay, the suit tests out," I said as it unfolded from my face. I climbed out of the suit and headed back toward where Amy was waiting. "I still think I should have the chance to bring her in myself. I'm kind of the injured party, here."

"Shadow Stalker's current crime spree has a total of two hundred eighty-five confirmed victims, of whom you are the least injured," Armsmaster pointed out. "We will be charging her with six murders, one attempted murder and four counts of serious bodily harm, occasioned by depraved indifference. The two hundred seventy-three deaths, unfortunately, must go unpunished. As Sophia Hess, she and Emma Barnes and Madison Clements will also suffer whatever penalties the justice system decides to inflict upon them for the specific crimes against you."

"Good," Amy said vengefully. "They deserve it."

"Uh … why attempted murder and serious bodily harm?" I was honestly curious. "Aren't they much the same thing?"

"Not precisely." Armsmaster's voice took on a lecturing tone. "We can't prove she knew the darts had neurotoxin in them, so we can't claim attempted murder for the people who survived being shot by them. However, stabbing Glory Girl with a knife was a deliberate act which can't be construed as anything but an attempt to kill her."

I frowned. "Does that mean she won't be held accountable for murdering the people who died from the neurotoxin?"

"Felony murder," Amy said at once, beating Chris to the punch by about half a second. "She was involved in the crime and she murdered the other people who were also involved, so she's literally made herself entirely responsible for all of those deaths." I gave her an impressed look, and she blushed slightly. "Lawyer mom."

"Okay, so what happens once you catch her? She's a minor, so she just goes back into juvey and serves out her sentence, or what?" This was the part that was really weighing on my mind.

"No." Armsmaster shook his head. "The Director has made it clear she'll be pushing for Shadow Stalker to be tried as an adult. Moreover, due to the fact that Stalker has a dangerous amount of insider knowledge of the Brockton Bay PRT, plus any secret identities she may have gleaned while she's been a member of the Wards, she can't just be placed in general population."

I noted that he didn't spend any time worrying about Sophia's well-being. "So what does that leave?"

Chris answered for him. "Six murder counts, attempted murder and serious bodily harm on three Wards, and she's got a strong tendency toward depraved indifference …" He stopped, then went on more slowly. "They'll be aiming for the Birdcage, won't they, sir?"

Armsmaster looked at each of us in turn. "You didn't hear it from me, and I'd appreciate it if you didn't spread it around," he said. "But yes, that's where I think it's going." His head came up. "Ah. I've got to go. Shut the lab down before you leave." There was a halberd lying across a nearby workbench; he took it up, collapsed it to half its length, and racked it on his back. Striding like a man with a mission—which, to be honest, he was—he left the lab. The door hissed shut behind him.

A few seconds later, I looked at Chris and Amy. "Well, that happened."

"Wow, holy crap," Chris said, shaking his head. "I know what she's done, but I still have trouble getting my head around it. They'll actually be Birdcaging her."

"She's a psychotic murderous cow, and she deserves whatever happens to her." Amy looked back at Chris as he stared at her. "What? She is, and she does." She took my hand and squeezed it hard. "She also sent those guys after you, and she tried to kill Vicky."

"Amen," I muttered under my breath.

Chris gave her an appraising look. "Wow, this is definitely a new side of you."

"Hey, where does it say I have to be nice, just because I spend most of my time fixing people up?" Amy turned to me. "You agree with me, don't you?"

I put my arm around her. "She spent a year bullying me, then she made me trigger, then she set up things so my powers killed two hundred and seventy-three people. Then she went on to murder more people, just because she felt like it. Whatever makes her hurt more, I'll agree with." Wistfully, I looked back at my suit. "I just wish I could be there to punch her stupid face in before they actually arrest her."

Amy smirked. "Me too." I didn't ask her if she meant she wanted to be there, or if she wanted me to be there. "But we don't even know where it's going to be, so it's not like you can crash the party."

"I can find out." Chris headed over to the nearest unattended monitor. "Armsmaster gave me basic user privileges in his lab, so I can connect through to my workshop terminal. But my terminal can connect to the main network. And I've got Wards clearances." As he spoke, his gloved fingers rattled over the keys. One screen after another popped up.

I took a moment to luxuriate in the fact that I actually had friends. Real friends, who were willing to take my side no matter what. Real friends, who were willing to get in a little bit of trouble for me. The way Amy was actively planning vengeance on someone who'd hurt me was both breathtaking and heartwarming. Is this what it's like to be able to truly trust and believe in your friends?

"Hah! I am, in fact, a genius." Chris stood aside from the monitor. "Ladies, read it and admire."

Amy and I stepped over to where we could see the screen properly. It showed an image of a wide patio with a waist-high barrier and water beyond. Amy frowned, while my eyes widened.

"Where is that?" she asked. "I have a feeling I should know it."

"Northern ferry terminal," I said at once. "But what's the feed from? That's no security camera."

"Armsmaster's helmet cam," Chris replied modestly.

"Did you seriously just hack Armsmaster's helmet?" asked Amy incredulously.

"God, no," he protested. "He's putting the feed up on the network for the operation. Unlike Taylor, I don't have a death wish."

"Could've fooled me," I muttered, then leaned in as the view panned around the abandoned station. "They must be luring her in there."

"Will that work?" That was Chris. "It's kind of open, there. She's likely to see anyone on the way in."

"I think that's the idea," I mused. "If they'd selected a place with more cover, she'd know it was a trap."

"But can they pull it off?" asked Amy pragmatically. "Like Armsmaster said, she's really good at what she does."

I grunted in annoyance. "He told me not to go there." I paused as a metaphorical light-bulb flashed on over my head. "Actually, no, he didn't."

"Actually, yeah, he did." Chris jabbed his own thumb into his chest. "I was right here."

"Actually, no, he didn't," I repeated. "He told me not to go flying around the city in case I spooked her. And he told me that I wasn't included in the plan to capture her. But he didn't tell me not to go to the ferry terminal on the off-chance that she might spring the trap and get away anyway."

"And you're going to go there," Amy guessed. "How are you going to avoid being seen? Because if she sees you, she bolts and then you've spooked her by flying around the city. Which you were told not to do."

"I've got an idea." I grinned at their expressions. "Chris, how watertight can you make my suit?"

<><>​

Dragon

Sometimes, it was useful to be little more than a disembodied presence on a computer monitor. People occasionally forgot that she was even there. Watching the teenagers prepare to subvert Armsmaster's wishes, Dragon mulled over Taylor's words.

It was true that Armsmaster had told the girl that she wasn't involved in the plan to capture Shadow Stalker, but it was also true that he hadn't given her any specific orders not to generate a plan of her own. The only thing he'd ordered her not to do was go flying around the city in case she spooked the villainous ex-Ward.

Likewise, he hadn't given Dragon any directives at all to ensure the teens didn't do what they were planning to do. Of course, there was the spirit of what he'd said to consider, but if she followed the spirit of every order she was given (especially when it conflicted with the letter), she'd never get anything done. It was why the 'intelligence' part of 'artificial intelligence' was so important.

Not that she was simply going to let Scarab run off and hope for the best. She still had firm control over the command codes for the suit. Whatever happened, she would be watching over Taylor's shoulder (and evaluating her performance); if Scarab seemed to be about to do something stupid, suicidal or against Dragon's orders, the rug would be pulled out from under her faster than the girl could blink.

But so long as Taylor was smart about things and didn't jump right into the middle of the action or endanger anyone, Dragon was willing to wait and see how she went. The plan, tenuous as it was, had a good basis. And Dragon was definitely in favour of backup plans. Plus, she'd seen enough teen movies to know how this sort of thing went on the big screen.

So she did the electronic equivalent of sitting back in a comfortable chair with a bag of popcorn, a theoretical smile on her virtual lips.

This should be interesting.

<><>​

Sophia

Block by block, building by building, Sophia eased closer to the rendezvous point. She'd used the money to buy some food, so that need was taken care of. More snacks were distributed around her costume, in the many pockets Coil had seen fit to supply her with. Of course, Coil still hadn't contacted her at all, which made her wonder if he'd seen through her deception.

Or he might've heard what I did to the six-foot-Undersiders, she thought with an internal chuckle. Still, she had the Calvert meet to get through, which should give her the information she needed to round out this mission. And once that was done, she could shed the Spectre identity and resume her career as Shadow Stalker, leader of the Wards.

That thought gave her a warm feeling deep inside as she made her way toward the abandoned ferry terminal. Calvert, she decided, had done her a massive favour in picking her for this mission. She'd been the odd one out, the angry loner, because nobody else had offered to give her a chance. But anyone reading the after-action report was going to have to admit that she gave one hundred ten percent to her work.

Her caution at this point wasn't specifically due to any worry that Calvert might try to screw her over. She was a good judge of character; always had been. Calvert, in her expert opinion, was like her. He was absolutely mission-oriented. If it was for the good of the mission, he'd do it. Anything that endangered the mission, he'd discard. She was the core of the mission, so there was no worry there. Everything revolved around her.

Her only real concern was if the PRT managed to be somehow more competent than a slab of lukewarm salmon, and traced her to this location. If they didn't check with Calvert before they came after her, they could blow the whole mission. It didn't help that Calvert and the Director would both tear them a whole new set of assholes—one for every day of the week—because the mission would still be blown. So while she didn't think she had to worry about unwelcome surprises, the main thing about surprises was that nobody saw them coming. So she kept a lookout anyway.

Slowly, carefully, she slunk along the edge of the dock, mainly so that she would only have to keep an eye on the landward side. There were no boats out there, and the PRT owned no submarines, the last she checked. Of course, Tinkers were known to build the weirdest shit, and she'd even heard that some rogue and villain Tinkers made their homes in the Boat Graveyard, which wasn't very far away. Other people said that the noxious chemicals seeping into the water from the ships had created mutated animals that made the average Case 53 look positively homely.

Just as she had that thought, something swirled past in the dark water, just six feet below her. She froze, mental images flashing through her head of giant guppies leaping out of the water at her. Nothing happened. The swirl quieted. Mutant guppy or not, that must've been one big fucker of a fish, she thought with an edge of hysteria to her thoughts.

With a brief chuckle at her own stupidity at being frightened like that, she moved on. The terminal was now quite close by. Its windows were dark, of course. Calvert wasn't exactly going to be advertising the fact that he was meeting with an undercover agent. The gangs—Coil's gang, especially—would be all over that shit like white on rice.

There were only a few darts left for her launchers, but that didn't matter. She'd detoured to an old cache she'd left behind when she was press-ganged into the Wards, and found it still intact, including a spare crossbow and a good stash of arrows. So this was the weapon she pulled out now. Manually, she pulled back the string and slotted an arrow on it. Just in case.

Some people would have called her paranoid. They wouldn't have said it for long, because of the difficulty involved in pronouncing the word with a broken jaw. But perhaps they had a point. Paranoia was a good way to go when everyone really was after her.

She almost phased through the wall, then paused. Just because there were no lights to be seen didn't mean there was no electricity coursing through the wires. Probably should go in through the door.

This would, of course, open her up to anyone looking for a silhouetted target to snipe. So she'd have to be careful about it. Sidling up to the door, she went to shadow, and jumped through the plate glass. Nothing happened. No alarms blared, no lights came on.

Street-lights slanted dim illumination in through the large windows. These served not so much to light the interior of the building as to make the shadows even deeper. Something rustled underfoot as she became solid. Looking closer, she saw dozens and dozens of advertising flyers spread across the floor from wall to wall.

She took a cautious step, then another one. Up ahead in the dim light, she saw a large chair, just sitting in the middle of the floor. As the possessor of a keenly deductive mind, she saw immediately that the chair was out of place. The question was, how long had it been there? I'm betting Calvert set it up. The sneaky bastard's not so different from Coil, now I come to think about it.

One step at a time, she approached the chair. At the last moment, she paused; under the litter of advertising flyers, something had shifted. Whatever it was, it wasn't dirt or rat droppings. Something wasn't right. She pulled her foot back and raised her crossbow. "Who's there?"

The chair began to turn.

<><>​

Armsmaster

Colin tensed in anticipation. The tiny IR cameras he'd emplaced across the room were giving him a perfect view of Shadow Stalker as she … well, stalked, across the floor toward him. He'd had to make sure that nobody was close by the building, to give her the chance to get inside so he could spring his trap. Now that she'd passed through the cordon, they would be moving in now, to surround the place. Their job was to ensure that if she somehow evaded the trap, to capture her anyway. He didn't anticipate needing their assistance.

The trap was simplicity itself. Shadow Stalker herself had told them she couldn't phase through electrified materials, so there was a net ready to be electrified, spread across the floor under the layer of concealing advertising material. All she had to do was step on to it, the net would be electrified then pulled up and around her, and she would be captured once more.

She was three steps away from the net. His thumb rested easily on the button of the remote control for the high-speed winch he'd bolted on to the wall out of sight. The same button would electrify the net, ensuring that she wouldn't be able to slip out of the net once it retracted.

Two steps. His thumb took up some more pressure. She was so close to being captured, he could taste it. This would go a long way toward dealing with the potential embarrassment of having Shadow Stalker's extracurricular activities brought to light.

One step. She actually put her foot on the net. Then …

What? She pulled her foot back. Raised her crossbow. "Who's there?" she challenged.

Colin had thought there might be a slim chance of this happening, so he'd planned accordingly. While Shadow Stalker was undisciplined and criminally inclined, she'd also showed him a certain level of respect as the head of the Protectorate in Brockton Bay. Which was why he'd had his own personal office chair brought in. It was the only one he knew for a fact that could support his armoured weight without collapsing at an inopportune moment. With pressure of his foot against the floor, he turned the chair about.

Coming to his feet, he used his HUD to activate tiny hand-lights placed around him so that he was in a pool of light. His halberd came to his hand, and he unfolded it with a dramatic clack-clack. Face to face with the person she'd accepted as her direct authority for the last six months, he reasoned, she would very likely fold.

Failing that, he had a taser in the head of his halberd, designed for this very purpose.

"Shadow Stalker," he snapped. "You're under arrest for—"

When he saw her, she was crouching. Then she came to her feet fast, and ran toward him. Unable to see properly because of the lights surrounding him, he nonetheless realised she was aiming her crossbow at him. Normally, this wouldn't cause a problem. But if she went to shadow and then fired the shot, it may well materialise inside him, as she'd done with Aegis.

Still, none of this mattered; she was well within the perimeter of the net by now. Just as he prepared to jab his thumb down on the remote, he saw her make a convulsive upward throwing motion. Dozens of flyers fluttered into the air, obscuring his vision. Something settled over him as his thumb made contact with the button.

Too late, he realised what had happened. The button was pressed. The net electrified itself. And then the winch spun into action.

He wasn't standing on the net, which was the only thing that saved the whole situation from being totally humiliating. It was bad enough, as he felt his upper torso being yanked sideways under the impetus of the high-powered winch. He tried to keep track of Shadow Stalker, but by the time he came to rest against the wall with a gently-sparking hole in the net beside him—the halberd and the net had not gotten along—she was nowhere to be seen.

<><>​

Taylor

Chris was amazing, I decided. At zero notice, he'd set to work on my suit and made it waterproof. Or at least, water-resistant. Like a cheap digital watch, it would keep water out so long as I didn't go more than ten feet below the surface.

I didn't intend to. My entire need to go underwater was for concealment, not exploration. The suit wasn't optimised for underwater operation—most of my sensory gear simply blanked out when I submerged—but the wings still exerted force, so I could move faster than a man could swim. How much faster, I wasn't sure, but it would have to do.

Navigation would normally have been a problem. I had a certain amount of night-sight vision, allowing me to avoid ramming head-first into the thousand-and-one underwater obstacles in offshore Brockton Bay, but that had a total range of about ten feet. I needed to be able to know where to go.

Which was where the bugs came in.

I still wasn't very good at seeing or hearing things through their senses, but I could tell exactly where every bug in my range was, to a fraction of an inch. So, once I slipped into the water, I told every bug (and crab, apparently) in my range to hunker down right where it was. If they were too close together, I spread them out. From that, I found I had a pretty good 3-D map of the Brockton Bay waterfront, as well as the underwater terrain. And while I couldn't read street signs, the bugs could get an impression of the colour and texture of the surface they were sitting on. My personal knowledge of the city filled in the rest.

With my wings partially spread, and turned so the violet glow didn't shine up through to the surface (I hoped) I cruised through a murky underwater world. It was weird as hell. I could've been exploring the ocean floor a thousand feet down … well, until I passed by a bicycle, wheels embedded in the bottom mud, the plastic streamers from the handlebars fluttering feebly in the current. I had no idea how a bicycle could even end up out here, ten yards from shore.

Forcing my mind away from fruitless speculation, I homed in on the ferry terminal. The shape of the building was clear enough in my mind that when I got close enough, I knew exactly where I was. Easing in alongside the pier, I let myself come within a few feet of the surface as I moved closer to the building. I didn't want to stay underwater any longer than absolutely necessary, as I suspected I'd sprung a leak around my left knee joint. Either that, or the growing chill seeping into my thigh and lower leg was a psychosomatic symptom of my hyper-awareness of being surrounded by cold water on all sides.

Another reason I couldn't stay under for too long was that while Chris had installed an air filter in my suit (thank you, modular systems) it would only work for so long before I'd need to change it out. Which I definitely couldn't do underwater, even if I had a spare.

Up in the world of air and light and warmth, I sent my bugs wandering through the ferry station until I found Armsmaster. I also found the trap he'd set for her when my bugs encountered the net spread across the floor. There had to be more to it than that, for the reason that Sophia's powers would allow her to ignore a net by simply ghosting through it.

Still, Armsmaster was Armsmaster. I couldn't believe that he would overlook such a glaring hole in the plan. There had to be something more going on. How do you catch a ghost with a net?

While I was still wondering about that, someone walked into the station. Or rather, they solidified inside the station, crushing a few of the bugs I had running around on the floor. That's her! Holy shit, that's her! Shadow Stalker's right there! Hastily, I landed bugs on her, so I could keep track of her movements. More bugs secreted themselves in nooks and crannies of Armsmaster's armour. I might've been cut out of the plan, but I didn't want to miss a moment of the takedown.

Rising to the surface under the edge of the dock, I poked my head above water. Nobody was around to see me—my bugs could make sure of that, at least—and it meant I could start breathing outside air again. Which was good, because my air filter was starting to have problems. On the downside, I definitely had a leak around my left knee, because my boot started filling up with water. I didn't like squelchy socks at the best of times, but I wasn't getting a choice in the matter. An intermittent alert started flashing up in my HUD about the status of the actuators in that knee. And the ankle. Apparently they didn't like water, either.

The next time I performed an underwater mission, I decided, I was going to give Kid Win all day to waterproof my suit.

I suddenly realised that while I'd been distracted by the water in my boot, something had gone wrong with the ambush. Sophia was charging across the room toward Armsmaster, who'd turned his chair around and stood up. The next bit happened really fast, and I couldn't really figure it out, but it ended with Armsmaster being flung sideways at a wall.

Has Sophia got powers she never told anyone about? I couldn't see that happening. Does she have someone helping her? That was more likely. Maybe Coil had placed her with other villains before she ambushed the Undersiders?


While I was still speculating, the bugs I had on Sophia faded from my perception in a weird way; I knew they were there but not exactly where or what they were doing. She's gone to her shadow form.

This was turning into a big problem. If she had an ally, the Protectorate and PRT forces in the ambush would be taken unawares. I could track her so long as the bugs stayed with her, but only if she stayed within my range. In order to follow her inland, I was going to have to come up out of the water and reveal the fact that I was there in the first place. All of a sudden, my sophistry in interpreting Armsmaster's wishes began to feel a lot less intelligent than it had before.

While I was debating with myself, Sophia's bugs reappeared in my perceptions, but only for about two seconds. Then they faded away again. Three times more, she faded in and out; the bugs could tell she was moving fast and in an erratic motion. A deep, thunderous vibration resolved itself (I realised a moment later) as heavy breathing.

I waited for her to go solid again, to stop moving. Come on, I silently urged the superheroes and troopers, she's just a teenager. You caught her before. You can do it again.

And then, as Armsmaster's bugs started moving again—a scent which I interpreted as ozone had something to do with it—she faded back into view again, well past the nearest buildings and moving fast. Away from the ferry terminal, and rapidly approaching the range of my power.

Oh, for fuck's sake. She's getting away. I had to make a decision, and fast.

Spreading my wings wide, I activated full lift. What I got was a sluggish upward surge, while error warnings popped up on my HUD. The makeshift water-sealing job had its limitations, it seemed. A couple of the non-critical wing actuators were offline, as were some of the G-negative lifters. It looked like water had seeped in through flaws in the sealant, but not had full access to the delicate electronics until I tried to apply power, flexing the modules against each other.

Oh, shit, oh, shit, oh, shit. All of a sudden, it looked like I had more problems than Sophia getting away. I slammed the suit into full power ahead, using the HUD controls rather than the toe controls, as the left one was offline. Awkwardly, I lurched up out of the water, angling sideways in an attempt to regain equilibrium while my right wing had more upward thrust than my left. I barely paid attention to the aftermath of Sophia's rampage below as I skidded more or less sideways across the sky, trying hard not to swoop down and face-plant into the side of a building.

Fortunately, Chris and I had practised this sort of thing a little. Fervently wishing I'd done a lot more training in simulated emergencies, I frantically accessed the status display for the whole suit. Whole sections were blinking red, while others flashed yellow as they dropped in and out of working order. I counted the working lifters on the left side—seven—and those on the right—ten. Then I eyeballed the two lifter arrays, and took three of the right-hand lifters offline. The suit immediately straightened out, though it was still horrifically sluggish. I was barely travelling faster than a running man. Worse, both of my right arms had just frozen up.

Sophia was still moving, intermittently going into her shadow state. I followed, ignoring the shouting over the radio as someone apparently noticed me. If she'd just stop, I could land and do some quick change-overs of modular components, and get most of the suit back up and running. But I couldn't chance it, with the way she was pushing on.

I didn't blame her for her decision to clear the area. If I'd just triggered a Protectorate ambush and nailed a few of them with crossbow arrows on the way out, I'd want to put as much of the town as possible between me and them too.

We trailed across town. She seemed to be rooftop-running, while I began to hold out hope that nothing more in the suit would fail and send me plummeting to the ground. Eventually, I felt confident enough to answer the persistent calls from Armsmaster. He'd gone from angry to strained to a weird sort of calm that gave me hope that I'd be allowed to use the suit again sometime this century.

"Scarab here," I called back. "Sorry I didn't answer earlier. Suit troubles."

"Scarab, what do you think you're doing?" Yup, he was back to angry.

"Chasing Shadow Stalker," I replied at once. "I can't quite catch her, but I can keep up with her."

He was silent for a moment. I checked to make sure the radio was still working. It seemed to be all in the green. "Don't take any chances with her," he said at last. "Why are you only chasing her? Why haven't you caught up yet?"

"My suit took damage from being underwater," I said honestly. "If I had the chance to change out some modules, I figure I could fix most of the problems, but she keeps moving. I don't want to lose her. Not now. What happened back there?"

"Underwater." He said it like a swear-word. "That suit was never designed to go underwater. Are you certain you can keep up with her?"

"Unless something else fails," I said. "Or she spots me and makes an actual effort to lose me. If she goes outside my radius, I might never find her again."

"Don't let her get the drop on you," he warned me. "I've got Dauntless down with an arrow in the abdomen, and Velocity took one to the knee. It seems she learned more about small-unit tactics during her time with the Wards than I gave her credit for."

By which I suspected she'd danced between the raindrops and left them grasping at air. I chose not to ask how she'd thrown him sideways; if he wanted to tell me, he would.

"I'll try," I said. "But I'm not letting her get away. Not again." I owed it to myself, to Sarah and to the rest of the Undersiders. Sure, they'd been villains, but they'd also been teenagers like me. Another set of choices, another time and place, and that might've been me. They almost certainly hadn't done anything that merited being shot to death on a grimy sidewalk, far from their parents and loved ones. Also, Sophia was vindictive as hell. If she escaped, then found out who I really was, I'd be looking over my shoulder, and so would Dad, until she was captured. "If I keep track of her, can you catch up and help me take her down?"

He grunted in annoyance. "She disabled my bike on the way out. I'm sourcing other transport as we speak. Don't do anything rash."

"I'll try not to." Another icon popped up in my HUD. "Crap, I've got overheat warnings in half my lifter modules now. I'm going to have to put down and rearrange them. I'll let you know when I'm in the air again."

"Roger that." He paused. "Where's Shadow Stalker right now?"

I sent him a ping for my location, then added, "One and a half blocks west of me right now. I think she's stopped for the moment. I'm setting down."

"Good. Let me know if anything changes."

"Will do." I came in for a moderately bumpy landing, using my wings to maintain balance—no flashy three-pointer this time. But instead of shutting the suit down, I switched it over to test/repair mode. This would allow me to activate systems from outside the suit, to allow for quick field repairs. As the suit peeled away from me, I kept the HUD as an oversized pair of goggles. These were wirelessly linked to the helmet, with a built-in battery pack for just this sort of occasion.

The sensory input from the bugs on Sophia had her handling some kind of glowing item, possibly a phone. I couldn't really see what she was doing, or understand what she was saying, but so long as I knew where she was, I was happy. Or at least temporarily satisfied. I wouldn't be happy until she was behind bars.

The suit reformed itself after I stepped out, squelchy sock and all. Ugh. My entire left leg was soaked from mid-thigh down. Fortunately, the water that had been trapped in there with me drained out when I exited the suit. But the damage was still done.

My first priority was to readjust the lifters. Using the HUD to pick out the non-working ones, I took three more from the (thankfully watertight) container of spares. Chris had figured my lifters would be the most vulnerable of my modules, so he'd given me a few. Working as fast as I could, I snapped out the non-working ones that mirrored their working counterparts on the right wing, wiped the connectors clean with a cloth, and snapped the new modules in. A quick self-test told me that they were up and running, and accepting commands just fine. Holy shit, I can actually do this.

Next were the arm actuators. I popped the one out of the non-working right upper arm, then snapped in a spare. But this time my haste proved to be my downfall; when I tested it, sparks popped and a tiny plume of smoke arose. Taking the module out, I juggled the hot plastic from hand to hand as I held it up for the helmet's sensors to register. A moment later, I got the image on my HUD; it was blackened and partially melted, probably because I'd failed to wipe down the connectors properly. Which meant the connectors were probably damaged as well. This would be a workshop job.

Sophia was no longer playing with her phone. From what I could tell, she was … looking around? Turning in place, anyway. Maybe she was figuring out her next move. Did she know Coil was dead? Did she know Coil had been Calvert? What had Armsmaster said to her inside the ferry terminal? How had she hurled him sideways like that? I knew the PRT had visited the terminal before the meeting to set up the ambush, but had she gone there earlier still, to ambush the ambushers?

I set to work on the auxiliary arms. This time, when I removed the non-working actuator, I took my time in wiping down the contacts. But when I checked for a spare, I found none. I'd already used it, and damaged it, in trying to get my real arm up and running. I needed two working arms.

Muttering to myself, I was halfway through taking the actuator from the upper left arm when I registered that Sophia had gone to shadow. Shit. Shit, shit, shit. Was she running for it? I was in the worst possible position to chase her. I gritted my teeth and finished removing the actuator, then snapped the panel shut.

She faded back into view somewhat closer than she had been before. I could actually pick her up on my suit's sensors, if it looked in that direction. This was potentially problematic. She probably hadn't seen me in the dark on the rooftop, but there was no sense in taking chances. Working as quickly as I could, I inserted the actuator in the lower right arm and snapped it into place. My heart was in my mouth as I told it to self-test. The arm responded to commands perfectly. Now, at least, I had two working arms. My real arms would hang loosely, but that didn't matter … shit, she faded out again.

It was probably time to get back into the suit. My wings were back in working order, or as close to it as I would get for the moment. With my new mobility, there was no way she could run far or fast enough to get away from me before Armsmaster could get to us. The suit had two working arms again (ignoring the fact that they weren't my original arms) and I'd proven the worth of the modular system beyond all doubt. I wasn't a Tinker or even an engineer, and I'd still performed significant field repairs on my powered armour.

Of course, Armsmaster would probably ground me till the suit was old enough to vote, but if we could bring in Sophia, it would be hella worth it. If I could punch that sneer off her face in the process, definitely hella worth it. Time to saddle up and gain some altitude.

But when I told the suit to open up, the left leg refused to comply. I sent the command again, but it failed a second time. Crap, crap, crap. Hastily, I knelt beside the suit and opened the panel into the left knee assembly; water ran out of it. Yeah, no, I don't think replacing the actuators is gonna help there. But on the upside, I didn't need my legs to fly, so if I could manually open it, I could run the suit all day long. And with those three extra lifters in place, flying was going to be a breeze.

As I fitted the panel back into place, and prised open the one where the manual control was located, I frowned. Sophia had been faded-out for longer than normal. She was still within my radius—the bugs she had on her were registering as 'somewhere around here'—but where exactly I couldn't tell. Had she realised she was being followed? Was she trying to throw me off her trail?

There was a crunch of gravel underfoot, from behind me.

I turned fast and came up from my crouch, and the arrow that would've gone into my chest drove deep into my thigh. With a strangled scream, I fell over again, clutching at my leg with both hands. If I'd been more heroic, I would've stayed on my feet and maybe managed a pithy one-liner. But I was plain old me, and all my pithiness tends to go out the window when a crossbow arrow nails me through the thigh. It's just a quirk I have.

In other news, that shit hurts.

"Fuckin' thought someone was following me." Sophia faded into view on the edge of the rooftop and moved toward me. Expertly, she reloaded the crossbow and covered me with it. I saw that she was wearing her Spectre costume, with some sort of elaborate wrist-launcher as well as her crossbow. That must be where she shoots the darts from. Much more complicated thinking evaded me, as waves of pain from the arrow through my fucking leg distracted me in ways I couldn't even begin to describe. "Who the fuck are you, and why did you get out of your stupid fucking …" That was when she moved close enough to see the armour properly for the first time. "Holy shit, you're Scarab!"

I gritted my teeth, trying to concentrate long enough to use the HUD to activate the suit in some way. Maybe swipe a wing around and knock her off her feet. Or maybe just grab me with the auxiliary arms and fly me away before she could kill me. Because outside the armour, I was absolutely aware that I lacked any and all special defences. She could kill me in a heartbeat.

A tiny part of my mind screamed at me that you have bug control, idiot! Bring in all the bugs and smother her to death! Sting her till she's one big lesion!

But I didn't. I couldn't. The last time I'd tried to use bugs to aggressively defend myself, I had inadvertently murdered nearly three hundred people. If I tried to do this on Sophia and passed out in the process, it could happen all over again. This time, Director Piggot would be justified in Birdcaging me.

Leaning forward, she snatched the HUD goggles from my face, then stared. " … Well, fuck me rigid. Fucking Hebert. I do not fuckin' believe it." She looked from me to the suit and back again. "That's the Scarab suit. There's no fuckin' way you're Scarab. This has got to be some sort of fuckin' scam. What the fuck is going on here?"

I was not going to give her the satisfaction. Hot blood was welling out of the wound in my leg; I was pretty sure she hadn't hit the artery, and the arrow was doing a good job of plugging the wound, but a hole in the leg was still a hole in the leg. "You're, under, arrest," I panted. "Murder, attempted murder, serious injury. Give up now, I won't have to hurt you."

She laughed out loud. "You have got to be shitting me. Hebert, you're about as scary as a fuckin' three-legged kitten. You're not a hero. You're not even a person. You're a fuckin' nobody. And the moment I kill you, everyone will forget you. Nobody will even know you were ever alive."

Blackness wavered at the edge of my vision, but I forced it back. "You've … made … three … mistakes."

"Oh, do fuckin' tell." She leaned over me, mockingly. Her crossbow nudged up under my chin, the sharp arrow pricking the hollow of my throat. "I can't wait to hear this one."

"Grue's alive," I whispered.

As Sarah had predicted, that got her attention. She shook her head violently. "No. No fuckin' way. I fuckin' nailed that asshole right in the fuckin' head. He was dead before you showed up. Fuckin' try again, bitch-features." With her foot, she kicked the arrow that was buried in my thigh.

I arched my back, gritting my teeth so the scream came out muffled. There was blood in my mouth when I finished; I was pretty sure I'd bitten my tongue. "Okay," I rasped. "Truth, this time. Coil's dead. Calvert's dead. They were the same fucking person, you ignorant fucking bitch. He played you from beginning to end."

If my words had been one of her arrows, they would've nailed a perfect bullseye. Her eyes opened wide behind her visor. "No. No. No. That's not right. That's bullshit. It can't be right." She shook her head even more violently than before. "I was on a mission, you skanky whore. Something you know nothing about. I was cleaning up this fuckin' cesspool of a city."

"You got played. And you want to know your third mistake?" I gathered my strength. There would only be one shot at this.

Still shaken from my revelation about Coil, she made the mistake of leaning just a little too close to me. "What's that, you horrid little queef?"

I had the one chance, and I put my all into it. Rearing up, I slugged her as hard as I could. She stumbled backward until she hit the immobile suit. Rubbing her chin, she laughed, then brought the crossbow into line with my face. "Is that all you got? Fuckin' pitiful."

"No." I activated the auxiliary arms, still in test mode, with the bugs in their little control consoles. One grabbed the crossbow out of her hand, while the other went around her neck and pulled tight. "This is what I've got. I don't need the goggles to control the suit. Moron."

"What the—" She scrabbled at the arm, but its strength was greater than hers by an order of magnitude. It tightened again, and she choked. "You can't hold me. I'll shadow out of here. Let me go and I won't kill you."

"I figured out your weakness," I told her, rolling on to my side so I could apply pressure to the arrow wound. I had to stay conscious until help arrived, and passing out from loss of blood was not the way to go. "Armsmaster had an electrified net, didn't he? It's the only explanation for how a net could hold you. But you turned it on him somehow." I nodded toward the auxiliary arm holding her. "That's got electricity all through it. Go to shadow and find out."

She didn't go to shadow. Instead, she aimed her other arm at me. The launcher on her wrist loomed large in my vision. "I will fuckin' shoot you."

A chill went through me. I'd miscalculated, maybe fatally. One dose of that neurotoxin was fatal to an adult maybe fifty percent of the time. I was nowhere near as strong as an adult. Reflexively, I tightened my hold on her again. She gurgled, trying to draw breath. The other arm reached for her wrist, but she held it out of the way. Still pointed at me, though.

I tried to make my voice as commanding and cold as she had. "Drop the launcher and I'll let you breathe. Don't be a fucking idiot about this."

She shot me. I heard the tiny puff of expelled air, then felt the sting in my upper arm. Coldness spread through my arm like wildfire, then into my chest. My last thought before blackness overtook me was, sorry, Dad.

<><>​

"—alive?"

That's Dad's voice, I thought groggily.

"Yeah, no thanks to Shadow Stalker." And that level of snark could only belong to Amy. "She got out of her suit to fix it, then got ambushed, shot in the leg, then the bitch shot her again with one of those neurotoxin darts. Armsmaster arrived on site about two minutes later and started applying CPR. That kept her alive long enough for me to get there. I'm just waking her up now."

On cue, I felt my eyelids flutter. I took a deeper breath than normal, and opened them. The room looked remarkably familiar, being the PRT infirmary. "Ugh," I mumbled.

"Oh, hi." Amy grinned down at me. "Feeling better?"

Just seeing her face cheered me up immensely. "Am now, yeah." Tentatively, I moved my arm and my leg. Nothing hurt. "Oh, good. I'm not a pincushion any more."

She rolled her eyes. "Seriously, you're more work than any other three of my patients. Though I had to keep telling Velocity not to go into high-speed until I'd finished fixing his knee, otherwise they'd be calling him Hopalong."

I snorted, then looked over at Dad. "Oh, hey. You heard."

"I heard." He shook his head. "What possessed you to even consider doing that?"

"What, make a backup plan in case the heroes failed to capture her, or actually carry out the plan and capture her once they did fail?" I tried to make my tone as light as I could.

"Oh, uh, yeah, about that," Amy said awkwardly.

Anger flushed through me, and I sat upright in bed. "Oh, for fuck's sake. Don't tell me she got away!"

Dad shook his head, a grimace on his face. "No. She didn't. When Armsmaster got to her … she was deceased. The suit broke her neck."

I blinked. "Uh. Well, fuck. I didn't tell it to do that. At least, not deliberately."

"I didn't think you had." We all looked around to see the armoured hero himself standing in the doorway. "I'm guessing it was your unconscious mind, moments before shutdown, doing everything it could to protect itself. And you didn't use a swarm this time. I'm impressed."

I shook my head. "I can't use a swarm to hurt anyone. I won't. Not again. Not ever. There's too much risk involved." Reaching out, I took Amy's hand. She squeezed, supportively.

"Will there be any backlash?" asked Dad. "About the death, I mean. Does she need a lawyer?"

Armsmaster snorted and shook his head. "Hardly. The suit was in recording mode, did you know that?"

I blinked. "No, but I had more icons going off than fireworks at the Fourth of July."

He nodded. "I can understand that. The next time you decide to take your suit underwater, see me first? I'll actually waterproof it for you. But yes, it recorded the entire exchange. We've got her confessing to murder, unmasking you, and expressing a plain intent to murder you. Absolute open and shut self-defence case. It won't even make it to court." He crossed the room and held out his hand. "Congratulations."

I shifted Amy's hand to my left, and shook his hand a little doubtfully. "What's that for?"

"You got Shadow Stalker. A dangerous cape, off the streets. You're a bonafide hero. How does it feel?"

Carefully, I swung my legs over the side of the bed. I was wearing pyjamas instead of one of those stupid medical gowns, so I felt safe enough in my modesty to do this. "Ask me again when I've had a chance to think about it."

"Understood. Your suit's in my workshop when you want to come claim it. Kid Win's finished the shoulder drones, so you're going to have to test those some time soon." He nodded to Amy and Dad. "Good to see you."

I watched dazedly as the door closed behind him. "I don't get it."

"Don't get what?" asked Amy. She sat on the bed beside me and put her arm around me, then rested her head on my shoulder.

"He didn't yell at me. He didn't ground me. I get to use my armour. Why am I not in trouble?"

Dad snorted. "I suspect the Director will yell at you extensively behind closed doors, but for the rest of it, you pulled off a win where the Protectorate and PRT failed dismally. You basically saved their bacon on this one. As an affiliate, you made them look good by association. I'll bet you a meal at Fugly Bob's that they're already claiming your intercession was a part of the plan the whole time."

Amy prodded my thigh, where I'd been shot, with her free hand. "Plus, a wounded hero makes for amazing press. You stepped all the way up, and pulled off a win. They don't want to discourage that."

"Oh. Huh." I put my arm around Amy's shoulders. "I didn't think of it like that."

Dad chuckled and ruffled my hair. "My daughter, the hero."

It was a pity Sophia had died instead of facing justice, I mused. But she'd been the proximate cause of all those deaths, and now she was facing whatever higher authority she might have believed in. If she believed in anything.

My job wasn't over, of course. It was only just beginning. I was a hero, and I could make a difference in the world. And with my friends and family at my side, I would have the strength to see it through.

It promised to be a long and difficult journey, but I was going to redeem every life that my powers had taken on that fateful day. I would pay off my price of blood.

The End

---

Epilogue

Dragon relaxed.

In reality, she was doing a dozen things almost at once, as was her wont. But to her, this was a relaxing day.

It had only taken a nudge to make the suit perform the correct action at the correct time. Taylor Hebert was alive, and nobody suspected a thing.

Humming a tune through an external speaker, she went back to her duties.
 
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