All Alone
Part Seven: A New Lease on Death
[A/N: This chapter commissioned by GW_Yoda and beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]
Taylor
"Dad? Sophia? You're alive? You're
alive!" I flung myself into my father's arms, holding him tightly. "Oh, god, they told me you were dead and I thought I was all alone, and—"
"Breathe, Taylor." Dad squeezed me in his arms. "I'm
all right." He paused. "Well, I'm alive, and I don't seem to be in much pain, and I'm not nearly as agitated as I should be, given that my last memories seem to be of being attacked by a bunch of lowlives … hmm."
"I am so, so sorry about that," I babbled. "They beat me up, like a lot, but I'm pretty sure I didn't tell them anything about me, but they must've somehow figured out where I lived, and …"
"And Merchants be Merchants," Sophia filled in. She was looking down at where her clothing had been cut away around the bullet wound. "Huh. I've still got a hole in my side, but I'm not bleeding." Experimentally, she prodded it. "That's weird, too."
"Well, don't stick your
finger in it!" I let go of Dad and went to look. Sure enough, there was no blood coming from the wound. "I don't know why it's not bleeding, but we've got to get it checked out as soon as possible. Your stuff too, Dad." Somewhere, in the back of my mind, I wondered why they weren't freaking out as badly as I was.
"I've got to call this in." The doctor's voice, still giving the impression of someone shouting down the length of a train tunnel, intruded on my thoughts.
I turned, quickly. "No!" If she informed the authorities, they might take Sophia and Dad away. I might never see them again.
There was real regret in her tone.
"I'm sorry, but I have to."
She was at the door already; I was too far away to stop her from leaving. But Sophia literally blurred into action, crossing the room in her shadow state and reforming next to the doctor. "If Taylor says you stay, doc, you fuckin' well stay." One hand closed the door again, while the other plucked the doctor's hand from the handle.
"Leave me alone!" The doctor tried to pull away from Sophia's grasp.
"Let me go! You're hurting me!"
Sophia shoved her almost gently; she staggered several steps back. "Don't be such a wuss. I barely touched you."
"Don't hurt her, Sophia." I took a deep breath. "Doctor, I really, really don't want you to call the cops or the PRT or whatever. And I don't want anyone at all to get hurt. Can we just work together on this? Please?"
Dad's right hand had been badly mangled, the fingers twisted every which way. As he spoke, he pulled the fingers straight, one at a time. I flinched and looked away.
"I've been meaning to ask you, Taylor." His voice was calm, almost speculative. "Why are your eyes glowing like that?"
"My eyes are glowing?" The doctor had told the nurse to look at my eyes. I supposed that was what she'd meant. "What do you mean, glowing?"
Sophia lounged against the door, but kept half an eye on the doctor anyway. "He means your eyes are basically glowing pure white. And you haven't blinked in forever."
I was pretty sure I'd blinked, but eyes glowing white? That was definitely new. "So, uh, doctor, what are the legal ramifications for bringing my father and my best friend back to life?" I wondered how long-dead someone would have to be before my power wouldn't work. Then I wondered where I could get a shovel from.
Emma.
The doctor shrugged; that gesture, at least, I could see on a ghostly skeleton.
"Well, legally speaking, it would normally be considered interfering with a corpse, but—"
Sophia made a rude noise. "Hell with that! I'm no corpse and anyway, I'm right on board with whatever she did. So they can take their 'interfering' and shove it where the sun don't shine."
"I wouldn't be so sure about that … Sophia, was it?" Dad's voice was calm, analytical. He had two fingers from his now-straightened right hand pressed against a spot on his left wrist. "Can you find a pulse? Because I can't."
"What?" Sophia's eyes widened. "Oh,
hell nope." Quickly, she duplicated his action. A look of intense concentration crossed her face.
"Can you find one?" I asked.
Please let her find one.
Looking irritated, she swapped hands. "No, dammit! Let me try again."
"You won't find one." The doctor sounded more tired than scared now.
"Your gunshot wound isn't bleeding and it hasn't closed. There's no blood circulating in your body." She held up something flat and round with vague lines leading off from it. A stethoscope? I was pretty sure she'd been wearing one around her neck before all this happened.
"I can make certain, if you want."
"So what does this mean?" I asked Dad. "You guys are walking and talking, but you don't have heartbeats? What's happening? What should I do?"
"Before we jump into decisions, let's see how the doctor goes with Sophia," he said soothingly. "There's a chance we're all missing something really obvious here."
Dubiously, I eyed a nasty cut on his left arm. It looked really painful, but it wasn't bleeding and he didn't even seem to have registered that it was there. "Hold still," I said, and reached out to pinch it closed. As I did so,
something seemed to flow from me into him, and the cut just … healed. All that was left was a faint red line. "Whoa, ugh," I groaned as the room wobbled around me.
"Honey, are you okay?" His strong arms supported me. "What just happened?"
"I don't know." I shook my head, then regretted it as the room spun in directions physics wasn't meant to go. "I didn't like seeing you hurt, so I tried to hold the cut together. Then it closed on its own accord, but it felt like I just ran a marathon or something."
"Here, have a seat." I could barely see the chair, but he guided me into it. Sitting down was a relief. He prodded the closed cut. "Well, that's definitely impressive. I think you healed it."
"Damn." I breathed deeply, feeling the dizziness begin to recede. "Okay, I'm feeling better. Let me see what else you need to get done."
"Don't push yourself too hard," he cautioned me. "The glow from your eyes isn't nearly as strong as it was earlier."
"Seriously?" It was kind of irritating for him to be able to see how my power was doing when I couldn't. "Well, I'm not surprised. I wonder if that's how Panacea does it, and if it is,
how she does it. Closing one cut wrecked me."
"She's been doing it for a lot longer." He shrugged. "Maybe it takes practice?"
"Don't give me that!" Sophia's voice rose from where the doctor was examining her. "I'm walking, all right? I'm talking! I'm about thirty seconds away from kicking your ass! I'm not fuckin'
dead!"
But something about her protest sounded … off. Just as Dad was being far more cool and analytical than anyone in his position should rightfully be, she sounded like an amateur actor reciting the lines she'd been given. Almost as if she thought she should be making a fuss, so she was, but more out of habit than actual emotion.
"I'm guessing you found no life signs?" asked Dad, raising his eyebrows at the dirty look Sophia sent him.
"None whatsoever." Even through whatever was making her voice hollow and distant, the doctor sounded … resigned.
"Sophia's body is gradually losing heat. There is no discernible pulse or other bodily function going on. Pain response is dulled, and every nervous reflex I tested is either absent or nearly so. Were it not for the fact that she is consciously responsive to stimuli, I would have no hesitation in signing a death certificate."
"I'm going to presume that the same will apply to me," Dad said. "But you can check if you like." He pointed at the healed cut on his arm. "I'm interested in what you might make of that."
"What?" The doctor leaned forward, forcing me to look away from Dad or be dazzled by the light of the supernova that made up her head.
"Did you just heal that? How did you just heal that?"
"I, I wanted it to be fixed," I confessed. "So I … did it?"
"Okay, now I know why they all told me not to go into parahuman medicine," the doctor muttered, just loud enough to be heard.
"You'll be making the rules up as you go along. Got it, guys." She took a deep breath.
"So, the people you bring back can't heal themselves, but you can fix their injuries? Can you do it again?"
"I guess I can? But it tires me out to do it." Then I looked at Sophia and my resolve hardened. She'd come back to save my sorry ass, and gotten shot in the process. It was my fault, and my fault alone, that she was dead. Maybe if I fixed the wound that had killed her, she could come alive again? I had no idea what I was doing, not really, but I was willing to give it a damn good try. "Sophia, come here."
"Sure thing," she said, sauntering over. "Hey, Taylor's dad. Keep an eye on the doc here? Don't want her running off and blabbing to everyone what Taylor can do, huh?"
"The name's Danny," he retorted, giving her a dry look. "And if I'm reading between the lines correctly, I get the impression that you're the one behind my daughter getting powers and me getting killed. If I were still alive, I suspect I'd be extremely angry about now."
"Ooh, I'm scared." But the retort lacked sting. My suspicion that she was running on teenage reflex grew stronger than ever. "Okay, Taylor, do your thing."
I reached out and covered the bullet wound with the palm of my hand. Gritting my teeth, I prepared to draw on whatever I'd used to heal Dad before.
"Wait!" The doctor came closer.
"Do you have to cover it? If I could observe the process, that could yield invaluable data."
"Geez, doc, buy me dinner first, huh?" Sophia shook her head. "Fuckin' geeks."
"
I'm a fuckin' geek," I said without heat. Shifting my hand, I moved my thumb so that it and my forefinger were framing the wound. "Geeks make the world go round. Or at least we make the trains run on time."
"Yeah, but you're different." Sophia's contrariness ran bone-deep, I decided. I got the impression that her first word had been 'no', and she hadn't changed her attitude since. "You're not boring. And you're willing to learn how to kick ass."
I looked up at her, raising my eyebrows. "So when were you going to
teach me how to kick ass, instead of throwing me in at the deep end? I had no idea what I was doing, and it got you and Dad killed. It nearly got
me killed." Before I could change my mind, I fixed my attention on the wound, and
pushed.
It was a good thing I was sitting down. The room spun in great circles, and my vision flickered. Sophia staggered, as if I'd gut-punched her. "Oof," she grunted. "Warn a girl first, will you?"
I fought not to pass out, taking deep breaths of air. It didn't help that what I was seeing kept switching back and forth between a normal room and the weird x-ray vision of before. The doctor, leaning in, had a look of utter fascination on her face, replaced intermittently with the light of a thousand suns.
"Taylor." Dad sounded moderately concerned. "Your eyes are going out."
"I … they're what again, now?" The weird vision had been the norm before, but now it was extremely tiring to maintain. When my eyes flicked over to normal vision, I didn't feel nearly as exhausted. "Like this?" Consciously, I made the switch. Dad and Sophia still looked the same, but the surrounding room was just a boring room again, and the doctor was a human being instead of a supernova atop a skeleton.
"Like that." Sophia's voice was dry. "Except now they're bottomless pits of blackness. Congratulations, you're now even creepier than before."
"Says the girl who turns into shadow," I retorted. "Can I get a mirror or something? I need to see."
"Mm, hang on." The doctor looked like she wanted to strap Sophia to a table and examine her to within an inch of her … whatever passed for 'life' these days, but she dragged her attention away to look at me. "Oh. Definitely different. One second."
Pulling her phone from her pocket, she fiddled with it, then turned the screen toward me. I saw myself for the first time since … well, since sneaking out of the house as Night Girl.
Fuck, that was a stupid name.
Where before my eye had been massively swollen, to the point that I couldn't open it, I merely had a fading bruise on the cheekbone. The burn in the corner was no longer visible. My nose was still broken—which was possibly a problem, because it had healed that way—and there were a few other scars on my face. In summary, I looked like
shit.
But even that paled before the fact that everything inside both eyesockets was … black. Not just dark, but the kind of impenetrable blackness that I imagined someone would see if they went to the edge of the universe and looked outward. And it wasn't just my eyes themselves, but the lids as well. When Sophia had called them bottomless pits, she hadn't been exaggerating in the slightest. There was no depth to them, or maybe the depth was infinite.
There was a
click and I was looking into the beam of a penlight torch. "Hey, do you mind?" I grumbled. I squinted, which made it easier to bear.
"It's not a cover over your eye," the doctor reported. "Or if it is, it's absorbing absolutely all the light that's hitting it. But I doubt it. There's no reflection, no indication that there's anything there at all. Are you sure you've still got eyes?"
Bringing my hand up, I closed my eye and rubbed my fingertip over the closed lid. "Yeah, pretty sure."
The doctor muttered something along the lines of 'powers are bullshit' before clicking the penlight off. "Yeah, I'm not going to learn any more with this."
At that moment, the door opened and a young man leaned in. He was dressed in scrubs, which I figured made him some sort of nurse or intern. "Doctor, I heard a noise. Is everything— holy
shit!"
"Everything's fine," the doctor said hastily. "Don't hurt him, please." The addendum came because Sophia had once more crossed the room using her Breaker ability, and dragged him inside.
"Nobody's gonna get hurt, but your boy here's got a big mouth." Sophia waved her finger in front of the guy's face. "Shut it."
The guy's eyes swivelled sideways to the doctor. "Uh … weren't they dead? I'm pretty sure they were dead."
Sophia's hand closed into a fist and drew back. "I said to shut it!"
"Sophia!" I said sharply. "Don't hurt him." I was brand-new to this kind of situation, but I could still figure out that hurting medical personnel was a one-way ticket to a Bad Scenario.
"Yes, Rodney, they were dead," said the doctor wearily. "Now ... I'm not sure
what they are. It's a powers thing, apparently."
"Are you
kidding, doc?" Rodney yanked his arm free of Sophia's grip, which surprised me; from the way she'd been manhandling the doctor before, I'd thought she was stronger than that. Going by her expression, she was more than a little taken aback as well. But Rodney was still talking. "Dead people getting up and walking around? What does that say to you? It says 'zombies' to me!"
"Hey, I'm not a fuckin'
zombie!" Sophia grabbed him again. "I'm as alive as you and the doctor there!" She forced his arm into a compliance hold. "Could a zombie do this?"
"Ow! Hey, maybe." He struggled and nearly pulled free, but she maintained the hold. "You could be a fast zombie."
Dad sighed. "Sophia, let him go. Young man, is it really the best idea to convince the person holding you that she might be a zombie?"
"And can we not throw around the 'z' word, please?" I moved over to where Sophia was still holding Rodney and tugged on her arm to make her let him go. She did so reluctantly; he pulled away and stood there glaring at her. "That's got all sorts of bad connotations." I waved my hand in front of his face to get his attention. "I'm talking to you. This is my dad and my best friend we're talking about, here."
"Which raises an interesting point." The doctor pointed at another drawer. "We have a guy in there, no next of kin. We're pretty sure he's a Merchant. Came in the same time as you three. I'm wondering if it's the emotional connection that allowed you to bring your father and your friend back, or if you can do it with anyone."
"I'm not sure if this is a good idea." Dad moved closer to me, protectively. "Taylor is still very new to this, and she just wore herself out fixing Sophia's injuries."
"Which, if anyone's interested, are totally gone," Sophia announced, prodding the area of skin where the bullet had gone in. Now, only a tiny puckered scar marked the spot.
"No, wait, this is a really bad idea." Rodney waved his hands frantically. "In the movies, it always starts with
let's see if we can raise one more person from the dead and ends with a zombie apocalypse."
"Young man," Dad said firmly, "do I look like the sort of person to involve myself in an apocalypse of any kind?"
"Yeah." Sophia gave Rodney the finger. "Now shut it before I give you a Shadow Stalker apocalypse." She saw my expression and said, "What? He's already seen me go to shadow. If he knows what's good for him, he'll keep his mouth shut."
"I'm willing to give it a try," I said slowly. Not only was I curious about the point the doctor had raised, but it would also give me the chance to observe my power in action, rather than just doing it by accident.
Suddenly, Rodney turned and bolted from the room. The door slammed behind him. Puzzled, I looked at Sophia.
"What?" she asked. She was halfway across the room, having given chase far too late. "Little shit was too quick for me."
"He wasn't earlier," I pointed out.
"Caught him by surprise, then," she said grumpily. "And I didn't think chasing him would be a great idea. It would be really hard to convince everyone else that I wasn't a fuckin' zombie."
I blinked, impressed. Sophia, thinking before acting?
She glowered at the closed door. "And besides, I was a lot faster earlier. Stronger, too."
"Okay, that's weird." I looked at her and Dad, concerned. Did my power have a time limit? Were they about to collapse and die all over again? I didn't
feel like anything was counting down.
The doctor also looked concerned, but her attention was directed toward the closed door. "Rodney's always been a little excitable," she observed. "Zombies, indeed. The very idea." Her tone was uncertain, as though she was trying to convince herself of what she was saying.
"I know, right?" Sophia rolled her eyes. She didn't
seem to be running out of energy. "Trust me, doc, I have no desire to eat your brains." A frown crossed her face. "Matter of fact, I'm not hungry at all. And it's gotta be well after midnight."
"Well, no circulation means we shouldn't need to eat or breathe," Dad pointed out. "Which we can try out at any time. Right now, I'm also curious about whether Taylor can revive other people."
"I have no desire to create anything that can be mistaken for a zombie horde," I said hastily. "Not an expert here, but I'm reasonably sure the PRT wouldn't be too happy about it."
"Yes, but think of the assistance you could give to the police," the doctor exclaimed, gesturing excitedly. "How easy would it be to solve murder cases if they can ask the victim who did it?"
I shuddered as a mental image occurred of me reanimating a skeleton, then handing him a pen and paper to write down his testimony. "That could get really creepy, really fast."
"Why?" asked Dad blankly. "I'm willing to testify against everyone I can identify who attacked me."
"If you're dead, are you still considered a person capable of giving testimony?" I was more than a little dubious about this. "And what if they decide I'm just a Master who's controlling you like puppets?" A sudden doubt crossed my mind. "Shit, what if I
am just a Master who's controlling you like puppets?" I knew how Sophia and Dad acted, after all. And in fact, they
had been a little 'off' since I'd brought them back. Here I thought I had them alive again (for an extremely lax definition of the word 'alive') while in reality I might just have been guiding them in a sick reunion fantasy. And if I was far enough divorced from reality, I might not even know I was doing it.
"Pfft, as if." Sophia scoffed at the very idea. "No asshole Masters me. And I know you, Taylor. You wouldn't pull that shit on me or your dad. You're too much of a straight arrow."
"Yeah, but what if I don't know I'm doing it?" I didn't want to give voice to my fears, but
someone had to hear them. "What if this is all me with … I don't know … multiple personalities pretending to be you and Dad? How would I know the difference?" I felt my heart rate increase. Was I about to lose Sophia and Dad again? Had I ever really gotten them back?
"For fuck's sake." Sophia stomped over to me and grabbed the front of my shirt. "Get a grip on yourself, Taylor! You're not fuckin' Mastering me! Here, I'll prove it!" Letting go with her right hand, she pulled it back in what was obviously going to be a bitch-slap of epic proportions. I winced but braced myself, closing one eye. If this was what it took to prove her point, I'd wear the slap.
But it never landed. I opened my eye and looked at her; with a baffled expression, she was staring at her hand as it hung half an inch from my face. "The fuck?" she muttered.
"What just happened?" I asked.
"Her hand just slowed and stopped." The doctor looked fascinated. "Did you consciously prevent her from hitting you?"
"No!" I looked at Sophia, who glared back at me. "I swear, I didn't do anything. And I didn't make
you do anything."
"So how come I can't hit you?" Sophia headed over to Dad and slapped him without warning. The
crack of flesh on flesh echoed through the room. "Okay, I can hit you. So why not her?"
Dad seemed barely ruffled by the impact. "Maybe it's a safety mechanism on the part of the power?" He rubbed his chin, thinking. "This might actually prove that she's not a Master. If the power has to make sure that none of the people she revives can hurt her, then she's not controlling them in any meaningful fashion."
"Or Taylor is controlling you two like a puppet theatre and she can't quite bring herself to get slapped," the doctor countered. "Not that I think that's the answer, but it also fits the scenario."
We stared at each other, temporarily at an impasse. I didn't want to consider that I might be walking Sophia and Dad's corpses around like puppets, talking through their mouths and making them do things, all the while thinking that they were doing it of their own accord. But I couldn't figure out how to prove that I
wasn't.
"Wait!" The doctor snapped her fingers. "Taylor, you know your dad well, obviously. But how well do you know Sophia?"
"Uh, kinda?" I hazarded. "We've hung out a bit?"
"Have you been to her address? Do you know where it is?"
My eyes widened as I realised where she was going with this. "No. No, I don't."
"Stonemast Avenue," Sophia recited immediately. "Number thirty-three. In fact, I can do better than that, doc. Got a phone?"
"Yes, of course." The doctor pulled out an older-model smartphone from her pocket and woke it up then handed it over. "What are you going to do?"
"You didn't know my last name, so you didn't get next of kin." Sophia said as she tapped in a number. "I'm just calling my big brother. His name's Terry. You can ask him if he's ever met Taylor." She held the phone to her ear. "Of course, it helps if the asshole actually picks up his phone once in a while."
A moment went by, during which time we watched Sophia fidget. I hadn't often seen her bored before, and she had a
crapload of tells. First, she played with her hair, then she checked her nails, then she swapped sides with the phone so she could check her nails on the other hand, then she scratched her ear, then she pinched her earlobe between two fingernails … all in about thirty seconds.
"Oh, hey, bro," she said brightly. "Did I wake you? Sorry, not sorry. Listen, I'm kinda in a situation where I've got to identify myself, and … yeah, I'm not in bed. I'm not asleep. I'm out and about … what? Seriously? I can take care of myself." Dad raised his eyebrows at that, and she gave him the finger. "Anyway, Imma just gonna give the phone to someone and you can talk to them, okay?"
From the squeaky sounds coming out of the phone, her brother was not exactly pleased with her. I wouldn't have been either, to get woken up by phone call from a theoretical little sister at whatever the time was in the morning. Especially when that sister should really have been in bed asleep at the time.
The doctor took the phone and held it to her ear. "Hello? This is Doctor Frasier, at Brockton Bay General Hospital. Who am I speaking to, please?"
Okay, now I had a name for her.
Good.
"Terry? Oh, good. Thank you." Her eyes widened and she nodded, then gave me a thumb's up. I felt a wash of relief; I hadn't known about Terry, much less his name, until Sophia told us. This meant I wasn't piloting a mindless corpse around under the delusion that it was actually my friend in there. "No, Sophia isn't in trouble with the police. There is a situation that you need to be filled in on, but it's not the sort of thing I want to do over the phone. No, it's not urgent. Sophia's situation is … stable. Unique, but stable. Yes, you can speak to her."
She passed the phone back to Sophia, who rolled her eyes. "Yeah, so it's no big. You can come over in the morning if you want … what, you're coming over now? Who's gonna be watching the brat? Wait, shit, you're waking
Mom? There's a reason I called you and not her. She starts her shift in a couple hours. Fine. Fine.
Fine. Knock yourself out."
With a
huff of annoyance, she ended the call and handed the phone back. "He's coming in
now," she explained unnecessarily. "And Mom's probably coming too, and they'll bring the brat, and Mom'll be giving me the third degree, and Terry'll back her up, and they'll find out that I was being Shadow Stalker when I got hurt, and it'll be so
ugh." She finished with the back of her arm over her eyes in what was probably more of a dramatic gesture than she really intended.
"As a parent, I think it's important that you fill your family in on what's happened," Dad pointed out mildly. "You were killed, after all. That's something a parent needs to know about. Trust me on this one."
"But I got
better!" she protested. I could hear her trying to keep the whine out of her voice, and not entirely succeeding. "It's all good."
I cleared my throat awkwardly. "Actually, you're still dead," I reminded her. "I didn't bring you back to life. I'm just … I guess I'm just letting you ignore it."
"And yes, you are going to have to tell her. Even though Taylor
is letting you ignore it." Dad made his voice firm. "This is your mother. She deserves to know."
Sophia looked like she was sucking on a lemon. "Okay, so can we just tell her that I got popped in a drive-by or something, not that I was being Shadow Stalker?"
Dad sighed. "By now, it's probably halfway across the hospital that you're Shadow Stalker. I sincerely doubt you'll be able to keep it a secret from her. And secrets you admit to will be less likely to bite you on the ass than ones that she needs to drag out of you."
"No, not that I
am Shadow Stalker," she said. "That I got hurt
being Shadow Stalker. She knows about my powers already, but if she found out I got shot while I was out and about in costume, I'd never hear the end of it."
Dad met my eyes, and I shrugged. It seemed that Sophia's idea of an important priority was a little different to everyone else's; mine and his included. "I won't tell her if she doesn't ask," I temporised, "but if she asks, I'm not gonna lie."
"So what are you going to say if she asks why you were out and about at this time of night?" Dad asked Sophia. "Because I know what I would've said and done if I'd caught Taylor sneaking out tonight."
I had an idea of how he would've reacted, too. It wouldn't have been pretty, but it would definitely have been justified, given the actual result of me going out and about to fight crime with zero training and experience. Hindsight, as they said, was twenty-twenty.
The irony was all too obvious. Had he caught me and punished me, I would've been resentful and upset that he wasn't letting me do what I wanted. I might even have snuck out later anyway.
"Gonna lie my ass off, duh," Sophia said immediately. She shot me a sly grin. "Maybe I'll tell her Taylor's my girlfriend and I was sneaking out to see her, and some Empire assholes saw us kissing and decided to teach us a lesson or something."
I made a time-out gesture. "Wow, really? When were you gonna tell me that plan? Because it's got all the hallmarks of something that'll make me feel super awkward then go horribly wrong. Or to put it another way: if you try to kiss me, I
will punch you in the face."
She smirked, Dad chuckled and even Doctor Frasier hid a smile. "That's fair," Sophia allowed. "Though I still think it's total bullshit that I can't even slap you."
The door opened, and we turned to look. A grey-haired man stepped into the room. Behind him was a large man wearing a security uniform.
"Ahem," he said. "Pardon my intrusion, but … Doctor Frasier, perhaps you can explain why Mr Stafford is running around in my hospital, telling people that a zombie invasion is imminent?" He paused and looked at me. "And young lady, whatever is the matter with your eyes?"
I guessed that 'Mr Stafford' was otherwise known as Rodney. "I'm a parahuman," I said bluntly. It wasn't like he wouldn't figure it out on his own, given enough clues. "I triggered tonight," I said. "So you won't have heard of me."
Doctor Frasier sighed and rubbed her thumb and forefinger over her forehead. "Rodney is doing that because Taylor here apparently has the ability to bring people back from the dead." She indicated Dad and Sophia. "Doctor Cartwright, meet Danny Hebert and Sophia Hess, both deceased shortly after arrival here in Brockton General. Danny, Sophia, meet Doctor Cartwright. He's the head of this wing."
Doctor Cartwright's eyebrows inched up on his forehead as he took in Dad's battered appearance. "Good morning, sir," Dad said, holding out his hand. Looking somewhat bemused, Cartwright shook it.
"Back from the dead, you say?" Cartwright said, turning back to Doctor Frasier.
"In a manner of speaking, yes." Frasier indicated Dad and Sophia. "They can both pass for being alive. Quite easily, in fact. But their hearts aren't beating, their body temperatures are dropping, and most of their involuntary reflexes are absent. If it wasn't for the fact that they're not just conscious but walking and talking …" She let the sentence finish itself.
"I see." Cartwright looked more than a little disturbed. "So of course young Stafford imagined that you were perpetrating a zombie invasion upon us." He gave me an intense examination. "Well, young lady?"
"Well, uh, what?" I asked nervously.
"
Are you attempting to start a zombie invasion?" he asked.
"No!" I protested. "I just wanted Dad and Sophia to be okay."
"A laudable goal." He turned from me to Dad. "Mr Hebert. Do you truly believe that you are dead?"
"I'm not sure
what to believe," Dad confessed. "I was attacked in my own home by a bunch of men who beat and stabbed me to death, or so I'm told. My last recollection is of the fight starting. But since regaining consciousness, I've found my emotional responses to be somewhat flattened, I don't have a pulse, and breathing seems to be an optional extra for me. Everything I know says this is impossible. But we live in a world where the impossible merely takes a little longer."
"I still don't believe I'm dead." Sophia spoke up defiantly. "I feel great. Maybe I was just in a coma, and Taylor can heal people like Panacea can."
Doctor Frasier sighed. "Sophia, I
examined you. You showed no signs of life, apart from the fact that you're walking and talking."
"There are several steps that need to be taken, post-haste." Cartwright clapped his hands together briskly. "First, I need to contact the PRT. Normally, we wouldn't worry them except pass on the word that someone triggered, no details needed. But I suspect that the Director will be most interested in knowing about someone who can bring back people from the dead, however temporarily."
Doctor Frasier nodded; I recalled her words about assisting the police with my power. "What else do we need to do, sir?"
"Well, then." Cartwright rubbed his chin, pinching the flesh together with his fingertips. "Once the PRT arrives, they will wish to take Miss Hebert away to their base where they can test her power; with her agreement, of course."
"Can I actually say no?" I asked dubiously. I didn't want Dad and Sophia tied down and dissected or something, just to test how effectively my power worked on their bodies. As Dad's next of kin, I figured I had the legal say over what happened to him. If Sophia's brother Terry didn't get here soon, however, the PRT might just decide to grab Sophia as both a parahuman and a raised person.
"Certainly," Cartwright said. "You've committed no crime, and any cooperation with them has to be by definition voluntary. You aren't a member of the Wards or the Protectorate, so they can't give you legal orders. What do
you wish to do?"
"I … I guess, go home and get some sleep," I said. "Let me make it clear, spending time unconscious does not go toward sleep." I looked at Dad and Sophia. "I don't even know if you two even sleep any more. But there was also …" I trailed off.
Cartwright tilted his head. "There was also …?" he prompted.
Now I wished I hadn't said anything. "We were talking about testing my power on someone without any next of kin. A gang member. To see if everyone I brought back was friendly to me."
"Hmm." He rubbed his chin again. "That makes a certain amount of sense. And one they would be hard-put to test at the PRT building, unless they have recently-deceased cadavers. Which, to be honest, I would not be surprised to find out." His gaze sharpened on me. "How many people can you raise at once?"
"At least two," I said truthfully. "More, I'd have to find out."
He nodded. "And can you cut the connection with someone once you've raised them?"
"What, make them normally dead again?" The idea sounded weird in my head, like pulling the plug on someone who was on life support but still capable of communication. "I guess. I don't want to try it on Dad or Sophia, in case I can't bring them back a second time."
"It would be a good idea to find out as early as possible," he suggested. "Before the number of people you have returned to life becomes untenable." He turned to the security guard. "Simon, secure that door."
"Yes, sir, Doctor Cartwright," responded the guard. He was as tall as Dad but a lot bulkier across the shoulders. Going to the door, he snapped the lock over then stood in front of the door, arms crossed.
"Uh, sir?" Doctor Frasier seemed almost tentative, in stark contrast to her earlier enthusiasm to perform tests with my power. "Are we sure this is a good idea? Health and safety regulations—"
"We have here a young lady who seems capable of returning the dead to a strong semblance of life," Cartwright interrupted. "It is in the best interests of the city that we determine
immediately what the limits of her power are." His eyes gleamed. "And, just between us here, I've often wondered how I would fare as a mad scientist. But I shall deny I ever said that, if anyone repeats it."
"It's alive! It's alive!" quoted Dad, with a wry smile.
"Very much so," agreed Doctor Cartwright. "Now, then. Doctor Frasier, I believe I heard mention of a cadaver that had no known next of kin?"
"Yes, sir." Doctor Frasier pointed at a hatch several places down. "This one came in tonight."
"Good." Doctor Cartwright actually rubbed his hands together. "Open it up. We shall see if Miss Hebert can work her magic upon it, or if she has already reached her limit."
Obediently, Frasier opened the hatch then pulled on the drawer. It slid out on its rollers, then clunked to a stop. The man lying on the stainless steel looked like he'd had a hard life, then been beaten to death with something blunt. I looked at Dad. "Chair," he murmured.
So this
was one of the men who'd gone to attack Dad. I didn't know how I felt about that. On the one hand, it was a perfect test of whether I could bring back someone I didn't know or didn't like from the dead (and this guy hit both categories dead centre). And on the other, it was an equally good test to see if people I brought back were automatically under my influence or not.
Thirdly, of course, it would be good to know if my power could handle three people at once. And fourthly (if that was a word) I wanted to know if I could return people I'd revived to a state of actually being dead. This guy was the embodiment of 'expendable' on all counts.
Slowly, I stepped up alongside the cadaver. In death, his features had relaxed, so he looked a little puzzled or confused, instead of angry. Dad had landed a good one across his head, so his skull was a little indented there. This would also be a good test of whether brain damage was a deal-breaker, I guessed.
"Okay, everyone, get ready," I said. "I'm gonna do this." Putting my hand on his arm, I concentrated on making him come back to life.
Nothing happened.
I tried again, visualising him sitting up.
Still nothing.
Recalling what I'd done when I brought back Dad and Sophia, I turned away from him and walked toward the door. I got all the way to Simon before I stopped and looked around.
The guy was still dead.
"Damn it," I muttered.
"Is there a problem?" asked Cartwright.
"It's not working," I said. "I don't know what I did before that made it work. I guess I thought wanting it to happen was enough."
Sophia and Dad raised their hands at the same time. I looked at them. "What?"
Dad looked at Sophia and nodded. She smirked. "Your eyes were glowing white then, not black."
"Oh, for fuck's sake." Pissed off with myself for totally forgetting that important detail, I concentrated on shifting back into the shadow-realm vision. It came more easily than I'd expected. Around me, the world changed. Walls became translucent, while the two doctors and Simon were now animated skeletons topped by overbright lights. Dad and Sophia were unchanged, and the guy on the slab was a skeleton with ordinary lights twinkling and slowly dying in his head.
Marching back to the table, I put my hand on his arm. "Wake up, already," I said irritably.
This time, because I was paying attention, I felt the tiny
ping that kicked the transformation over. The guy on the slab went from skeleton to gang member over the course of about two seconds, then he opened his eyes and sat up. "What the fuck?" he asked, then stared at me. "Fuck, you're that bitch the guys caught. The fuck are you doing with me?"
"Calm down," I said, trying to hit a soothing tone, while fighting the urge to beat crap out of him.
Call me a bitch, will you? "Things have changed. A lot."
"Fuck off!" he yelled and kicked at me, but his foot swerved then came to a stop half an inch from my gut. "The fuck?"
This guy had a serious potty mouth, but we'd already answered a few questions. It also seemed that a lot of his aggression was instinctual rather than thought-out. Either that, or he'd had
serious anger issues in life.
"Hey, assmunch!" Sophia flowed into position as the guy scrambled off the far side of the slab. "Do what you're told or I'll kick your ass!"
He lunged forward, swinging a punch at impressive speed. She went to shadow and let it whiff through her, then turned solid and hammered both fists into his kidneys.
Which did exactly nothing.
I watched him turn his gaze from Simon at the door to the two doctors. "C'mere, bitch!" he snapped, and darted toward the shorter of the two, whom I assumed to be Frasier.
Belatedly, I realised that when I was in this state, people I raised were faster and stronger. That included Merchant assholes. Of the two, Sophia was the superior combatant, but without her crossbows, she had to depend on hitting weak spots on the human body; being dead, the Merchant had none.
"Dad!" I shouted, being on the back foot. "Stop him!"
Just before the guy got to Doctor Frasier, Dad intercepted him. When last they'd fought, the guy'd had the advantage of numbers on his side. He'd also probably been high as a kite, so his pain tolerance would've been insane. Now, only the pain tolerance remained.
Dad was taller and had a longer reach, and while he wasn't as angry as he would've been, he was still determined. I'd seen that determination last long past any normal person's endurance, day after day, year after year, working minor miracles to keep the Dockworkers afloat.
They came together with a bone-crunching
thud, Dad actually driving the guy back a step. As the doctors hurriedly backed off, the two clawed at each other, punching and ripping and tearing. The only sounds that came from their throats were the grunts of pure exertion; neither had time for words.
And then I remembered the other question we'd had. With a sigh of something resembling regret, I looked at the guy currently wrestling with my Dad and thought,
no.
Instantly, the pseudo-life went out of him. He reverted to a glowing skeleton, falling to the floor. But instead of a faint constellation in his head, his brain was totally black. There was nothing there. I was pretty sure that I could never bring him back.
Dad stumbled a few steps forward, then looked down at his opponent and back up at me. "You do that, Taylor?" he asked, as calm as ever.
"Yeah." I shrugged. "Sorry. I should've thought of it earlier."
"Not to worry." He smiled as he came over and laid his hand on my shoulder. "That was just a little bit satisfying, to get my licks in again. I don't suppose you could bring him back for another round? I just thought of some more moves I could use on him."
I shook my head. "I don't think there's anything in there I can use anymore. He's dead-dead."
"Good." Sophia came over to us and gave the corpse a kick. It shifted, but only to roll over from the force of the blow. "I didn't realise that he wouldn't feel things like kidney punches."
"Yeah." I looked around at Doctor Frasier. "Looks like this has been a learning experience all round. You okay over there?"
Her supernova shifted back and forth in what I assumed was a nod.
"Yes," she said in her hollow, echoing voice.
"I had a bad moment there, but your father got in the way."
"We are definitely going to have to institute more stringent safety precautions if and when we try that again," Doctor Cartwright said, his voice equally distant.
"Still, I think the information we've collected is very interesting."
I shifted my perspective back to the real world. Dad looked a little the worse for wear, but I told myself I'd fix his injuries once we got home and I'd have time to recuperate between sessions. "I'm sorry," I said to the room at large. "I thought he'd be more reasonable."
There was a banging on the door, and I jumped. So did the two doctors, and the security guard. Dad and Sophia merely turned to look at it. "Wow," I said to Sophia. "Your brother really wants to see you."
"I don't think that's—" she began.
Untouched from our side, the lock clicked over. The door opened. "PRT!" shouted an armoured trooper. "Step aside!" As Simon hastily obeyed, the trooper entered the room. He was followed by a second and a third.
"Ah, shit," muttered Sophia. Silently, I echoed her.
The PRT had arrived.
End of Part Seven