Aftermath
Part Six
Tuesday Night
"I'm here," Greg whispered, joining Sophia in the shadows. "What do you want to know?"
For an answer, she grabbed him by the wrist, twisting it back, forcing him to his knees with a pained grunt. "I need to know what you've been saying," she hissed. "To the cops, and online. Because
someone's been spilling the beans, and the case might fall apart."
"Wasn't me," he blurted.
Sophia brought her masked face very close to his wide eyes. "Tell me
everything you've told people about what's going on," she gritted. "Who have you told, what have you told them, and what names have you mentioned?"
He gulped. "The cops, they asked me, I didn't mean to, I told them what you told me about Mr Hebert and his ties to organised crime."
She tightened her grip a little; he whimpered from the pain. "Names," she snapped. "Did you mention names?"
"Whose names?" he asked desperately. "Taylor's? Her father? Sure."
"
Mine, you idiot," she hissed. "Did you mention my name in connection to this?"
Despite the pain, he blinked in confusion. "Uh, why are you worried about your name?"
She twisted a little harder. "Because I'm not supposed to be working this case," she told him, essentially honestly. "If my bosses find out, I could get in trouble." Definitely true, though he didn't know
how true. "But I can't let this go by. So I have to try to find out who did it." A total lie, though she was pretty sure he wouldn't pick it up.
Time to go back on the attack. "So, have you mentioned my name at all?"
He shook his head. "Not to the cops. I just told them what you told me. I'm sorry, they got it out of me."
Just as I expected them to. Excellent. "And online?"
He blinked, frowning. "I, uh, don't remember."
She gritted her teeth. "Focus. Do you at least remember which forums you've been on since last night?"
Urgently, he nodded. "Y-yeah."
"Then go back upstairs," she ordered him. "I'll be with you in a moment."
She released him; he scuttled back toward the door. With a sigh; she moved around until she had a view of his bedroom window.
This is getting far too complicated.
But it was her only chance of sorting out this mess, once and for all.
Fucking Hebert. It's all her fault.
<><>
Poor Taylor. It's all my fault.
Danny Hebert sat slumped in the cell, staring at the floor. He wasn't even sure why they'd locked him in there; there'd been the siren, and the soldier pointing the gun at his head, and then other PRT soldiers had come, and the first thing
they had done was put a bag over his head. He hadn't been able to see or hear anything; at first, he'd been worried about being able to breathe, but somehow that seemed to work out.
He'd been more or less forced to walk blindly where his captors directed him, which in the end had turned out to be this cell. They had left the bag on his head; at first, he had thought he had to keep it on, but in the end he had taken it off, and found himself alone. He had been too dispirited even to call out, to ask what he'd done.
They had left him his watch, at least; that was a small mercy. Of course, it made him acutely aware of the passage of time.
Around about now, I'd be sitting down to dinner with Taylor -
He broke the thought off, grinding the heels of his hands into his eyes. He would never sit down to dinner with Taylor, ever again. Because she was
dead.
But she came back to me. Somehow. And I tried to find out how that might be, and now I'm in here. And she's out there somewhere. What if she gets lost, wherever she is, because she can't find me?
A lump arose in his throat, and he had to jam his fingers into his mouth, and bite quite hard on them, to prevent the tears from coming.
It's all my fault, Taylor. I failed you.
The speaker in the corner of the cell crackled to life, startling him quite badly.
"Mr Hebert, can you hear me? Please nod if you can."
Wildly, he looked around for the camera, but he couldn't locate it. Finally, he settled for looking straight ahead and nodding. "I can hear you," he confirmed out loud.
"
Good. Now, do you know why you're in here?"
He shrugged elaborately. "No. I just asked some questions, is all. About my daughter. Is it a crime to ask questions now?"
There was a pause, before the voice returned.
"Please speak more slowly, Mr Hebert. Your voice is being digitally translated into text before we can answer you."
Danny frowned.
What the hell is going on here? "I
said," he enunciated carefully, "I just asked some questions. About my daughter. How is that a crime?"
"
Ah. Yes, well. It wasn't a crime to ask those questions," the voice answered.
"However, it was a breach of regulations for you to be in that section of the building, asking that man those questions. That was a secure area, and you had no business being there."
"I just wanted to talk to
someone," Danny protested. "It was your guy who took me there. He didn't say anything about it being a secure area."
"
We know that too," the voice replied.
"He took you there because you asked him to."
"But that's what I
said," he responded, puzzled. "I asked to see someone who knew about powers, so he took me there. I didn't know he was taking me to a secure area." Slowly, his brain began to catch up with the situation.
Why are they translating my voice into text?
There was a sigh over the voice link.
"Mr Hebert, you're misunderstanding me. He took you there, despite it being a secure area, because you asked him to."
There was a pause, a slight scuffling sound, then another voice broke in.
"Mr Hebert, you're a parahuman. You have powers. You used your power, knowingly or not, to coerce the guard into breaking regulations quite thoroughly. That's why you're in that cell. We need to figure out what to do with you."
Danny blinked. " … oh." All of a sudden, the strange events of the afternoon – the guard becoming so cooperative, then later pointing a gun at his head, the incarceration, even the admission that they were digitising his speech – it all fell into place, like a giant jigsaw puzzle. "Oh. Why didn't you tell me in the first place?"
"
Because some people," the second voice informed him tartly,
"prefer to dance around the subject for fear of alarming other people. Now, you seem to be a fairly straightforward man. Did you know you had powers?"
"No!" Danny protested. "I had no idea!"
"
Hm," the voice replied.
"Did you know you were breaking the law, going up to that floor?"
"I told you, no, I didn't," Danny replied. "If I'd known … well, I might not have gone."
"
If you'd known that it was illegal, but that you were guaranteed to get information about your daughter?" the voice asked gently.
Danny breathed deeply. "She's my
daughter," he answered, in a wretched voice.
"
I don't have children of my own, but I think I understand." The voice was still relatively gentle.
"But you understand that you did break the law."
"Yes, but I didn't
mean to!"
"
Yes, I get that, sir. However. Even if we do take that into account – and I'm not saying we won't – there is the other matter. The fact that you're a parahuman who can make people do things, just by telling them to. A Master."
Danny felt a chill going down his spine. "What are you going to do? Can you lock someone up just for having powers?"
<><>
Oh, if only that were the case, Director Piggot thought, as she read the text streaming across the monitor.
Not you, but some of the parahumans out there …
"No, sir," she told him. "But we will be investigating your home to make sure that you haven't used this power in other illicit ways. Once we're certain of that, then we can release you with a caution."
On the screen, he raised his head, searching again for the camera. He actually came quite close this time, looking only a little off to the side. Carefully, she did not watch his lips, just in case there was a visual component to his Master ability.
INVESTIGATE MY HOME? DON'T YOU NEED A WARRANT FOR THAT?
"Mr Hebert, you've already committed a crime," she reminded him. "This gives us probable cause. Personally, I don't believe that you've done anything of the sort, but in a case like this, we have to cross our T's and dot our I's, just to make sure we've covered all the bases."
He clenched his fists. PLEASE DON'T TAKE ANYTHING OF TAYLOR'S. PLEASE.
The glowing letters on the screen seemed to vibrate with the intensity of the spoken words behind them.
"Relax, Mr Hebert," she assured him. "They will only look for things that indicate that you've used your powers in illegal ways. In fact, I'm expecting their call-back any moment now."
<><>
The front door lock clicked open, and the two men stepped inside. Rogers, leading the way with the pocket flashlight, pocketed the keys that had been taken from Danny Hebert and found the light switch. The front hall lit up, illuminating the stairs and throwing light through the archway into the living room.
"We'll clear the ground floor first," he told his fellow PRT investigator, a burly man by the name of Kelly. "Then we'll do the basement. Upstairs last." As he spoke, he clicked off the flashlight, slid it into his pocket, and pulled a pair of gloves from his pocket.
Kelly nodded. As Rogers headed down the passageway alongside the stairs, he went into the living room, turning on the light there as he went. When he saw what was there, he whistled involuntarily.
"What is it?" Rogers called out.
"Busted TV. Someone threw a remote into it." Kelly pulled out his phone and took a picture. "My guess is, he was a bit distraught."
"Well, wouldn't you be?" Rogers leaned in through the door leading to the kitchen. "He busted a chair, and threw a bottle of tomato paste at the wall." He pulled his head back; muted clicks indicated that he, too, was taking pictures.
Kelly tilted his head. "I wouldn't call this signs of a struggle, would you?"
"Nope," Rogers agreed. "Just one man, venting. Really, really venting."
"Well," commented Kelly after a sweep of the living room, "I can't see anything valuable; no packaging, no handfuls of jewellery, nothing big and expensive and new."
"TV?" asked Rogers, coming on through.
"Nah," Kelly told him. "Three years old. I've got a better one." He brushed a fly off his cheek. "Lot of bugs around here."
"Are you surprised?" Rogers commented. "Big splash of tomato paste on the wall, in there. Bugs all over it."
"Point," conceded Kelly. "So, you want to split up, or do the basement together?"
"Ooh, is diddums scared of the dark?" teased Rogers.
Kelly slugged him on the arm. "Asshole."
Rogers chuckled, and led the way to the basement stairs. Bare bulbs illuminated the space below; it was reasonably spartan. Washer, dryer, workbench. They went over it quickly; the only interesting thing was what Kelly surmised to be a blocked-off coal chute. Rogers pulled a multi-tool from his pocket, and they had the cover off in less than a minute. The only thing it held was spiders and spiderwebs.
"Well, that was a whole lot of nothing," Kelly commented, as they climbed the stairs again.
Rogers flicked the switch to turn out the lights. "Still gotta look," he pointed out. "That way, we can say we have." He waved a swarm of insects away from his face. "Is it me, or are there more bugs around here than before?"
Kelly had to admit, he had a point. "Maybe they're here for the smorgasbord," he grunted, pointing at the splash of tomato paste.
"Yeah, probably," Rogers agreed, and led the way through the front hall to the foot of the stairs.
There was a light switch at the top of the stairs and he flicked that on, too. "Bathroom," he directed Kelly. "I'll take her bedroom. We both take his, because if he's hiding anything, that's where it'll be."
<><>
It was very hard to tell what time it was, apart from the fact that it had been getting darker. Bug eyes had a hard time making out exactly which was the hour hand and which the minute hand, and where they were in relation to the numbers.
In addition, writing via tiny spots of tomato paste on a sheet of paper was extremely time-consuming, and required a lot of concentration; it was not something that bugs normally did, particularly with any accuracy, so she had to work at it. So it was no surprise that Taylor had lost track of time.
When the light came on, she was momentarily startled; at first, she thought that her father had come home. But neither of the men who began moving through the house was him, or at least, she didn't think so. When they spoke, she couldn't really pick out what they were saying, but it didn't sound like his voice. Neither of them was as tall as him, as far as she could gauge with bug senses. She did land a fly on the face of the taller one, giving a rough measurement of his height; he wasn't as tall as her father.
What are they here for?
It was something she pondered over, while moving more of the everpresent Swarm into the house. When they emerged from the basement, she had a bunch of bugs ready to try to listen to what they were saying.
…
they're here for the … She couldn't make out that word.
…
eah, probably.
Bathroom. … take her bedroom. We both … his, because if he's ...ding anything, that's … it'll be.
That was when she began to get angry.
Who are these men? Why are they searching Dad's house? My house.
<><>
Tossing the bathroom didn't take long; nothing in the laundry hamper, nothing in the cabinet. The tub installation didn't reveal any loose panels or tiles. Kelly left the bathroom and went to where Rogers was still going through the kid's bedroom. He waved away several insects as he leaned in through the door.
"Find anything yet?"
"Nothing obviously stolen," Rogers told him, looking up from where he was sitting on the bed, "but check this out."
Kelly entered the room and looked down at the sheaf of papers in Rogers' hand. "What's that?"
"Kind of a diary, I guess," Rogers replied absently. "But not really. She was being bullied, and she was writing it down."
"Holy shit," Kelly told him. "The police love that sort of thing. That's pure gold. How the hell haven't they come here and snapped it up already?"
Rogers shrugged. "Manpower, I guess, or lack thereof. Plus, school the size of Winslow, there'd be about a thousand suspects. Interviewing those first?"
"What do we do with it? We're not here to investigate
that crime."
Rogers considered for a moment. "We take it with us, and drop it off at the station. But we get pictures of every page first. Just in case."
"I'll do that," Kelly told him. "You go ahead and check his room."
He took the sheaf from Rogers, and took out his phone once more. Carefully, taking his time, he began to photograph each page in turn.
About six pages in, he found himself having to brush bugs off the paper before taking the photo; ten pages in, they were landing on the page faster than he could shoo them away. He looked around, more and more bugs were swarming into the room, through the open window and through the door, every second. They were starting to land on him, too. He wasn't particularly scared of insects, but this was starting to concern him.
"Rogers?" he called out. "Is it just me, or is there a metric ton of bugs in this house?"
"It's not just you," Rogers told him; he appeared in the doorway, and he had bugs all over him. "I think we need to go, now."
"I think you're right."
Kelly turned to pick up the papers, and paused; they were literally covered with bugs, swarming and crawling on the bedspread. He couldn't be sure, but he thought he spotted wasps, hornets and black widows in the mass of bugs.
"Okay … " he muttered. "The papers stay."
"What was that?" asked Rogers.
"I think I might know what's going on here," Kelly told him.
"Well, what?"
"Let's get out of here first," Kelly advised. "We're not welcome."
<><>
"See?" Greg insisted. "That's my chat log for both these sites. I didn't mention you by name even once."
Sophia nodded. "So you didn't."
"So yeah," he went on, as if continuing a conversation, "I was thinking of having some sort of memorial at school for Taylor. What do you think of these photos of her?"
He opened a folder on his computer, and clicked on the files within; they opened to show several pictures of Taylor, most of them culled from the backgrounds of other pictures. "She was always nice to me," he mused. "Never made fun, not like anyone else."
Sophia blinked as a brilliant idea formed out of nowhere, just like that. She had come prepared to dispose of him as a loose end, but he'd just handed her the key to deflecting attention from her.
"That's a wonderful idea," she purred, her masked face right next to his ear. He gulped as she slid an arm around in front of him, across his chest. "You're a really sensitive guy, you know that?"
With her free hand, she pulled a sturdy plastic bag from a pouch on her belt, and shook it open.
<><>
Greg was sweating bullets; Shadow Stalker was literally
cuddling up to him. Well, at least, hugging him. Hugging with one arm was still hugging, right?
I can't wait to tell the guys about this.
Oh, wait, I forgot to tell her about the private chat log.
"Wait -" he began, just as the plastic bag went over his head.
For a moment, he was stunned; he literally could not figure out what was going on. He was looking through thick plastic, and he couldn't breathe. Instinctively, he tried to lift his arms to pull the bag off his head, but she was pinning his arms to his chest with her own arm, preventing him from moving.
He tried to take a deep breath, to call his parents, to call for help, to protest at all. But there was no deep breath to be had. No air.
He struggled again, uselessly, but she was too strong.
Why is she doing this? Why is she killing me?
Blackness came before he had the answer to his question.
<><>
Taylor watched them retreat, leaving the papers on the bed. She hadn't realised what they were at first, but then she had puzzled it out, via the eyesight of several bugs at once. Once she had it figured out, she was shocked; were they going to take the papers? That was not going to happen, if she could help it.
Swarming them was relatively easy; she didn't want to hurt them, in case they were actually innocent, so she didn't do anything permanent to them. She watched them go, shutting the front door behind them, but she didn't relax her vigilance until they were driving down the road.
Once they were gone, of course, she realised that she should have shown them her handiwork. Made them see it. Made them realise that she was alive.
I'll just have to wait until Dad gets back.
<><>
The phone rang once; Emily picked it up. "Director Piggot speaking."
"
Director, this is Rogers; you sent Kelly and me to Daniel Hebert's house?"
"I remember, yes," she replied. "Did you find anything of note?"
"
Nothing that implicates him in any crimes," Rogers told her.
"But something really weird happened there, and Kelly thinks he knows what's going on."
Piggot leaned back in her chair. "So tell me," she invited him.
<><>
Shadow Stalker paused, on her way out of the room. She had posed Greg artistically, the plastic bag still over his head, in an arrangement which seemed to indicate that he was attempting autoerotic asphyxia. One hand was at the opening of the bag, the other in the appropriate position for such a pose. Prominently displayed on his computer screen were the pictures of Taylor, along with images which she had downloaded, depicting skinny brunettes wearing not much at all.
He was, of course, quite dead. She had waited for several minutes after he had stopped moving, just in case. When he was found, inside his locked bedroom, in such a compromising position, the chances were that his parents would do their best to cover it up.
She looked over her handiwork one more time, then turned ghostly and passed through the window, which she had also thoughtfully closed and locked.
Hopefully, that's one less loose end to worry about.
One shadow among many, she flitted across the rooftops on the way back home.
End of Part Six
Part Seven