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Hostage Situation [Worm AU fanfic]

Part Fourteen: Wheels Within Wheels
Hostage Situation

Part Fourteen: Wheels Within Wheels

[A/N 1: This chapter beta-read by Lady Columbine of Mystal.]

[A/N 2: The reason this (and the chapter of Darker Path preceding) is so late is because I've been on holidays for the last 12 days, and will be for another two. Currently (Oct 12), I'm in Melbourne (Australia), basically on the other side of the country from Townsville, my home town. Over that time, I've visited three capital cities (Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne) and racked up over 2,500 km in the air (with another 2,000 km to go). I've also attended my best mate's wedding, visited Taronga Zoo, gone whale watching, and had a look at the Melbourne Aquarium. Right now, I'm in the middle of a three-day session of visiting the Melbourne PAX convention. It's been fun, if exhausting. Whoo.]




Director Emily Piggot, PRT ENE

Despite the almost universal agreement among the capes and officers under her command (the obvious exception being Assault) that Marquis needed to be kept on as short a leash as possible until the opportunity came to boot him back into the Birdcage, there had been a surprising lack of volunteers to head up the surveillance effort. Emily wasn't sure whether this was an indication of how much respect (or even outright fear) Marquis was held in, a disinclination to piss her off by failing in this remarkably important task, or (least likely but also least palatable) an undercurrent of sympathy for Assault's point of view.

No matter what the reason was, she didn't like it. She liked even less the fact that Calvert had volunteered for the duty; not because she thought he couldn't do it, but because his insinuations at the meeting had her concerned about how he might go about it. Marquis was the highest profile case they had going at the moment, and even a whiff of mishandling would bring down all sorts of unwelcome attention from those above her in the chain of command.

Unfortunately, the fact remained that he was indeed the only volunteer, and Emily really needed this to happen. If she listened to her misgivings and scratched his application, not only would there be zero surveillance on the man at a time when she absolutely needed eyes on him twenty-four/seven, but people like Chief Director Costa-Brown would be asking her pointed questions about why she chose to deny the PRT the chance of getting eyes and ears on a notorious criminal.

She couldn't even articulate why she disliked and distrusted Calvert so much. It was indeed true that he'd shot his superior officer in the back once upon a time, but that had been judged a case of exigent circumstances by a court-martial: not good, but not bad enough to actually incarcerate him for. On the other hand, the court had been operating under the unspoken but very real need to hush up the PRT's repeated missteps and outright blunders during the Ellisburg operation, which had almost certainly (though Emily doubted she'd be able to find a single officer willing to admit to this) swayed the verdict toward 'shut up and go away'.

But beyond all that, there was something else going on with him, something that made her neck hairs stand on end. If he'd been a cape, she would've been able to understand it, because this was exactly how she felt about capes. But he wasn't, so that couldn't be it. She just didn't know what it was.

Still, immediate requirements took precedence over ill-formed worries, so she pushed the latter aside and gave the man standing before her desk a hard stare. "Commander Calvert."

"Ma'am?" Calvert's posture was correct and his tone respectful. She chose to ignore everything else for the moment, because she needed this to happen.

"I've had a brief prepared for you, covering Marquis' place of residence and the places and people he's been visiting so far. You will conduct surveillance on him, specifically according to the guidelines provided within the brief. You will not exceed that mandate in any way without first checking with me personally." That was about as unequivocal as she could get without actually going along on the op with him.

Calvert nodded thoughtfully. "How close are we allowed to get?"

She'd expected questions like this. "It will all be in the brief, but in short: you are not to initiate contact with him. If he makes your people in any way, then you will break contact, report in, and resume surveillance via less direct means."

"And Panacea?" he asked.

"Panacea was never in the Birdcage." She made the observation as blunt as she could. "You will only surveil her in the context of being near him. The strictures against making contact are just as stringent for her, because every time we annoy her, we make it just that little bit harder to put him away again even if he slips up."

"She may carry messages for him." It wasn't quite an objection. "How do we guard against that?"

She'd already considered the problem. It was very much a rock-and-hard-place situation. "For now, the assumption is that she isn't willing to participate in criminal activity for him, and that she's smart enough not to carry a letter to another criminal. If we find proof to the contrary, then I will alter the rules of engagement. But until that time, you will operate to both the letter and the spirit of the brief. Is that clearly understood?"

"Yes, ma'am." They were both aware of the recorder in the desk, ensuring that there would be zero misunderstandings as to who was at fault if Calvert's team overstepped their bounds. She wanted Marquis back in the Birdcage just as badly as the rest of the PRT did, but she knew damn well that if it wasn't done by the book, it wouldn't be done at all. "One more question. What are the options regarding searches for incriminating material, in the case of questionable activity? Who do we go through to get warrants for that?"

"Me." She stood, hands planted firmly on her desk, ignoring the twinge from her calf muscles. "I want you to impress on each member of your strike squad just how important this is. I'm fully aware that that there's a lot of emotion riding on this. We all want Marquis behind bars again, but the last thing I need is any of my subordinates colouring outside the lines to get us there, like the Brockton Bay Brigade did back in the day."

"What they did worked," he protested. "He went to the Birdcage."

"That was ten years ago. Things were different, then. He had a huge number of charges against him, and there wasn't a lawyer on the east coast willing to step up and defend him adequately. If we slip up even once, he almost certainly has the funds to hire on someone like Quinn Calle. Hell, Calle might even choose to do it pro bono, just for the exposure it would get him."

"Calle's just a lawyer—" he began, the hint of a sneer in his voice.

"A lawyer who gets more villains off the hook than any other member of the Bar," she cut in. "I don't want to see even the suggestion of going off the reservation with this. We have to do it by the book, every step of the way. No bullshit beg-for-forgiveness-afterward stunts."

He didn't look thrilled. "It sounds to me like you're tying our hands before we even get started."

"Not my doing." She shook her head. "It's just the reality of the situation. Any case we bring against him has to be even more immaculate than normal. Double-check everything, document everything, and for God's sake have your body-cams running every second you're within a city block of him. Is that understood?"

"Body-cams." It wasn't quite a protest. "Is that an order, ma'am?" PRT strike squads didn't tend to use body-cameras, as delicate electronics didn't tend to stand up to cape powers. Sometimes she suspected they pushed back against the idea more as a matter of principle than out of actual practicality, but this time they were going to be shit out of luck.

"It is very much an order, Commander Calvert. Putting Marquis away again is going to take more than a bit of luck, which means we need to stack the odds in our favour as hard as we can. Also, when it comes to actually slapping the cuffs on him, I don't want either Calle or Panacea being able to claim that we treated him differently to any other suspect."

He took a deep breath but the expected push-back didn't materialise. This was good for his career, because she had exactly zero tolerance for any backtalk from him right at that moment. "Message received loud and clear, ma'am. I'll get right on it."

She didn't smile, because she still didn't trust him as far as she could spit him. Unfortunately, right now she didn't have much of a choice in the matter. Seating herself again, she watched as he left her office, closing the door behind him.

I just hope this doesn't blow up in my face.

<><>​

Coil

Thomas Calvert didn't slam Piggot's door on the way out, mainly because he had a firm handle on his temper. The nerve of that damned woman! She was all but accusing him of intending to do… well, exactly what he had planned.

She hadn't come out and said it to his face, of course. That made the narrative harder for him to manipulate, which had probably been her intention all along. If she didn't give him something concrete to object to, he couldn't play the injured party. This made it harder for him to put her on the back foot.

The irritating thing was, while he was more inclined toward sneaking and double-dealing, she had ten years of experience in handling people like him. Unlike some who eventually gave way and let him do what he wanted, she had a limit. Beyond that point, she tolerated zero bullshit.

In the other timeline, she had managed to goad him into saying something unwise. She used that as an excuse to relieve him of duty, pending a court-martial for insubordination. While he could kill her in that timeline—something he had done a thousand times before, just because he wanted to—it would get him nowhere.

The only way to continue on as a PRT officer in good standing was to accept the mission as she'd given it to him, and make the best of things. Of course, his capacity for making the best of things was only matched by his ability to lie, cheat, murder and steal his way to victory, so he felt reasonably optimistic in that regard.

The broad strokes of his plan were still viable. Panacea had to die, to make way for the fall of Marquis (whether this led to the morgue or the Birdcage, he didn't care) and the disgrace of Emily Piggot.

His plans would come to fruition, and he would end up on top, no matter how many people had to go down to make it happen.

Few things in life were a guarantee. This was one of them.

<><>​

Medhall Building

Kaiser


"Have you seen Purity?" Max looked up from his phone, after it had gone to voicemail four times in a row. The first message he'd left had been a masterpiece of restraint, but in the second and third he'd allowed more than a little sarcasm to creep into his tone. His fourth had been downright scathing, but that still got him no closer to speaking with Kayden.

"Hm." James tilted his head in thought. "Not for some little time. She spoke of an errand she needed to attend to. I chose not to inquire as to its nature."

"Well, maybe you should have." Max gave him a hard stare. "With the ABB off the board, we have an opportunity like no other. We can't have our most pivotal members simply vanishing into the ether without giving the rest of us notice, or at least leaving their phones on."

James raised an eyebrow. "She's a proud woman, Max. I have no doubt she needs her space, just like the rest of us do."

"She's my wife." Max's grip on his phone tightened, his voice edged with irritation as he replied. "If anyone's got the right to know what she's doing and where she's going, it's me."

"Hm." This time it was a chuckle rather than an introspective sound. "I've been married for twenty years, and I know for a fact that's a privilege and not a right. If Purity chooses not to accord it to you, then you do not have it."

James's claim might have made sense to some people, but not to Max Anders. "Well, where would she be, if not here or at her apartment with Aster?"

This time, James gave him an odd look. "You do not think she has other places she can be?"

"I know she has her phone on her when she goes shopping, and she doesn't usually shower at this time of day." Max knew he was being extremely generous and fair-minded about the whole thing. He'd given her time to get out of the shower, if that was what she was doing. However, she still hadn't answered or called him back.

"So you do not think she may be simply out for a stroll, or down at the Boardwalk? Is that not where she met Panacea?" James seemed intent on downplaying the whole situation. Were he not happily married, and had Kayden been anyone else, Max may have suspected him of trying to cover up an affair or something similar.

"She knows damn well that she needs to be available at any hour of the night or day." It was only common sense. Her position as his lieutenant in the Empire Eighty-Eight was contingent on her being able to step up at a moment's notice. Also, she was his wife (in his view, the separation was merely attention-seeking behaviour) which put the seal on the whole matter.

"Well, then, have you attempted to call the apartment landline? It may be that her cell-phone is out of charge, or otherwise malfunctioning." James spread his hands and raised his eyebrows, and after a moment Max conceded that he might have a point.

"Okay, fine. I'll call it now." Max had to pause to get the number out of his phone's storage, not being one that he knew by rote. "But if she's not there, then there's something seriously wrong going on."

"I doubt there's any real problem. Anyone who knew her real identity would come after us first, while if someone did attack her and Aster without knowing who she was, it would involve a closed-casket funeral. But suit yourself." James leaned back in his chair and watched as Max located the number.

When he tapped the call icon, it rang several times, to the point where Max was about to end the call. But then it was picked up.

"Hello?" It was Theo's voice. He sounded nervous, but that was normal for the boy.

"Theo." Max spoke firmly. "Tell me where Kayden is."

"Uh … Kayden's fine. She, uh, just stepped out for a minute. Everything's fine here."

Max inhaled sharply, frustration boiling over. "I didn't ask how she was. I asked where she is. Has she been at the apartment while I called? Where is she, Theo?"

"Uh, I don't know right now, but she's fine." Max's antennae went up. Something was off. "Uh, gotta go. Aster needs me." The phone handset went down, and the call cut off.

"Well?" asked James. "Where is she?"

"Not certain." Max stared out the window for a second, deep in thought. "Theo said she was fine, that everything was fine … but he didn't call her to the phone. I think he was lying about something."

Now James tilted his head. "Max, I've met your boy. There is no way on earth he would have the nerve to lie to you. Or anyone, to be honest. He's far too timid. Are you sure you're reading the situation correctly?"

Max pinched his earlobe lightly with his thumbnail as he worked his way through the thought process that James's question had sparked. "He'd never lie to me of his own accord. He knows better than that. But if he was put up to it by someone else, he might. Which means …" Abruptly, he stood up from his chair. "I have to get over there, right now."

"What? Why?" James rose as well. "Do you think there's a problem?"

"Well, if there isn't, there soon will be." Max reached under his desk and pressed the button that electronically locked his office door. Then he pressed the intercom button that connected him to his personal assistant. While Ms Harcourt was an absolute gem for organisation and administration, Max still had no idea of her political beliefs, so she hadn't yet been read in on his true identity, or even the secrets of Medhall. It would become remarkably inconvenient if they had to dispose of her because she objected to such things. Better to keep her in the dark and continue to benefit from her numerous talents. "Please hold all my calls and reschedule my appointments for tomorrow. I will be busy for a while."

"Yes, sir." Ms Harcourt didn't ask any questions, which was one of her more endearing qualities. She took the information she was given, and ran with it.

Satisfied all was secure on that front, Max stepped aside from the chair and turned to the back wall of his office. Reaching out, he pressed the hidden switch that slid aside the panel concealing the secret elevator, then laid his hand on the biometric scanner thus revealed.

The elevator door opened and Max stepped in, with James following behind. It was a snug fit, though quite adequate for two adults. Any more people than that, however, would find it somewhat cramped.

There was no need for buttons inside the elevator, as it only had two destinations. Once the door closed, the elevator started its descent. It was fast, but Max still chafed at the time it was taking.

"Talk to me, Max." James seemed to be fully aware of his disquiet. "What do you think is happening at Purity's apartment that requires your presence right at this moment?"

"I'm not one hundred percent sure," Max reluctantly admitted. "But Theo was definitely nervous about something, and either unable or unwilling to get Kayden to come to the phone. This says to me that something's wrong in that apartment, and I need to find out what."

James nodded. "You make a valid point. Do you want me to call the rest of the Empire in on this?"

As the elevator door opened, Max considered that. On the one hand, if Kayden was taking advantage of the current unrest to make some sort of move toward taking Aster out of his reach, he didn't want his marital problems broadcast far and wide through the team. However, on the other, if there was an actual problem at Kayden's apartment, having backup could be invaluable.

"… just the ones who can respond the fastest," he hedged. "Whatever's going on, we don't want to jeopardise Kayden's secret identity."

In truth, Max only cared about that insofar as it was linked to his own secret identity; if she hadn't been married to him, or part of the Empire, he wouldn't have given a damn.

"Understood." James may or may not have picked up on that nuance, but Max didn't give a damn about that either.

They climbed into one of the anonymous cars that Max kept in the sub-basement garage for getting around town on the quiet, and he accelerated toward the exit ramp while James made the call.

If it turned out to be just a case of miscommunication on Theo's part, he would have harsh words with the boy about saying what needed to be said. However, if it was more serious than that, then he absolutely would not stop at harsh words.

One question niggled at him as he drove:

Why is Theo still at Kayden's? He was supposed to be back hours ago.

<><>​

Kayden's Apartment

Panacea


"Uh, gotta go. Aster needs me." Theo put the phone down, then stepped away from it.

Around the room, the removalists Dad had hired continued to ferry packed boxes out the door while others packed the last of Kayden's belongings according to her instructions. Dad, who had stood by with his hands clasped behind his back while Theo answered the phone, raised an eyebrow. "I presume he didn't buy your act."

"Sorry, sir." Theo's shoulders slumped and his eyes darted away, avoiding contact. "I can never lie to him. I'm too scared to."

I stood up from the sofa I'd been sitting on, allowing two of the guys to pick it up and walk out the door with it, and put my hand on Theo's shoulder. "Hey, don't beat yourself up. What did he say, exactly?"

"He, uh, wanted to know where Kayden was, and why she wasn't answering her phone." Theo shrugged. "I did my best, but he just kept pushing."

"Well, I'm glad you did." Kayden stepped in and hugged him. "If I'd answered it, he'd probably have me half-convinced to stay by now. That man has a talent for getting under my skin."

"But why are you even moving?" asked Theo. "I thought you liked this apartment."

Kayden grimaced. "I do, but I'm entering into a working arrangement with Mr Matheson, and your father won't exactly approve. We both know he doesn't, uh …"

"Take things like that lying down?" Dad suggested. "From what I've seen, the man's a control freak of the highest order."

Theo hunched his shoulders, falling silent. I could see he agreed but was too scared to voice it. I'd only met Theo an hour ago, but he was throwing out all the signs of someone whose upbringing had been less than stellar. I could sympathise.

"That's actually being kind to him." Kayden nodded toward her stepson. "It's also why I want Theo to come with. The moment I vanish, Max is going to assume he knew something whether he did or not, and if I left him behind, the interrogation would not be kind. Besides, Aster needs her brother."

"The need to be with one's family is something I am well acquainted with," Dad assured her. "Whether you move into my main accommodation or one of the subsidiary properties I am in the process of purchasing, there will be room for all of you." He glanced around. "It seems that our work here is almost complete. I've never needed to vacate a premises ahead of a vengeful ex-husband, but there's a first time for everything."

"And that's our cue." I took Theo's arm. "C'mon, let's get Aster downstairs."

"Um, okay." Theo followed, his eyes revealing a swirl of unasked questions. I noticed his hesitation; even without his natural shyness—something I planned to help him overcome—he clearly felt overwhelmed by the rapid pace of events.

Aster, on the other hand, took it in her stride. Despite the ongoing upheaval of almost every part of her life, the little munchkin was at her cutest today, gurgling and pointing at things from her stroller as Theo and I rode down in the elevator. We exited the building and headed for the car—a nice anonymous sedan—that Dad had bought a little while ago. With the spare key fob—Dad had thought ahead—I bipped it open as we were walking up to it.

"Okay, so there's stuff going on that I still don't really understand." Theo got Aster out of the stroller while I opened the back door of the car. I watched as he leaned in and got her settled in the baby seat, a lot more expertly than I would have.

I started to try to fold the stroller down, but I couldn't quite get the hang of it. "Well, ask away. And can you give me a hand with this?"

"Sure." He reached in and flicked a catch I hadn't spotted, and the whole thing just collapsed in on itself. "There you go. Uh, this thing between your dad and Kayden, it's not just a business thing, is it?"

I tilted my head and looked at him speculatively. From the first moment I'd met him, I'd suspected there was a brain in that head, and he'd just proven it. "No, it's not," I confirmed. Reaching down, I popped the trunk and stuck the collapsed stroller on top of the luggage already there, then closed it again, just as Dad and Kayden exited the building. "Let's go."

When I'd made the suggestion that we team up with Purity, her first response was that it was impossible, that Kaiser would work against us at every turn. Whether this came about via pressure in her civilian life, outright attacks on Dad or me by the Empire roster, or somewhere in between, something would happen. The chance of innocents being caught in the firing line as a direct result was somewhat more than zero, and I was not fine with that. Neither, gratifyingly enough, was Dad. To be fair, for him it was more of a public-image situation, but so long as the end result remained the same, I wasn't about to criticise him for his actual reasons.

This had led to the next logical point in our discussion. While we couldn't do much about preventing attacks from the Empire while Dad was out in costume (not that he went out in costume all that much), we could absolutely remove Kayden from the line of fire. Dad was buying properties discreetly, using methods that might have been questionable (but I was reasonably sure weren't illegal) to keep our identities under wraps. Legality aside, I figured the moral aspect was probably more important at the moment.

We climbed into the back seat of the car, with Aster between us, and closed the doors just as Kayden reached it. Behind us, I heard the U-Haul truck (with Dad at the wheel) start up and trundle off down the street. The front door opened, and Kayden got in. "Ready to go?" she asked.

"Absolutely," I said, feeling the adrenaline singing through my veins. We weren't in any danger—at least, I hoped we weren't—but this was still way out of my usual comfort zone. I wasn't quite sure when I'd started to see that as being a good thing, but I suspected meeting Fred Jones had something to do with it.

"Aster's secure?" she asked next, even as she started the car. I surreptitiously tugged at my seatbelt, wondering exactly when I'd done it up—excitement was funny like that—and looked out the window to see if I could spot Kaiser coming. It seemed there was nothing to worry about yet, but that was going to change very shortly if Dad was right (and he usually was).

"Yes," Theo replied as he snapped his belt into place. "I made sure of it."

And then, just after the truck trundled around the corner up ahead, a car came down the street past the corner, moving at speed. Not one person in ten recognised me as Panacea out of costume on a good day, but I ducked down anyway. With my eyes just above the windowsill, even though it whipped past in a fraction of a second, I was absolutely certain that the driver was none other than Max Anders. I didn't recognise the guy in the passenger seat.

"Don't look back," Kayden said quietly as I sat up again. I realised that she and Theo had ducked down as well. "It'll take them a couple of minutes to realise the place is empty. We do not want them recalling a car with suspiciously familiar people in it." With admirable control, she pulled the car away from the curb and started off after the truck.

"No, we don't," I agreed, then let out a long sigh. "Theo, are you alright?"

"Uh huh." Theo's tone was a little higher than it had been before. "Mom, what's this really about? Amelia says it's not a business deal. Is this a cape thing?"

I raised my eyebrows. Theo was connecting the dots a lot faster than I'd expected him to.

Kayden's next sigh was one of resignation. "Yes, it's a cape thing. But I'm going to need you to keep that to yourself, okay? Not just for my sake, but for theirs."

Theo nodded slowly, his eyes going from Kayden to me. "Mr Matheson … he's Marquis, isn't he?"

"Theo—" she began, but I held up my hand.

"It's okay, Ms Russel. Yeah, Theo. He's Marquis, and he's my dad as well. I guess I kind of gave it away just by showing up, huh?" The word that Panacea was Marquis' daughter was only a little less prevalent by now than the word that Marquis was out of the Birdcage. Anyone who was even slightly on the ball when it came to current events was fully aware of both facts.

He shrugged modestly. "I guess. Though most people didn't grow up with capes."

I grinned. As divergent as our lives were on most points, that was definitely an aspect we had in common. "Right back atcha."

<><>​

Kaiser

"Where the hell is she?" Max's voice echoed through the empty apartment as he stormed from room to room. He threw doors open, the sounds of them hitting the walls echoing through the empty apartment, each thud punctuating his growing anger. Every room was the same: stripped of everything useful, including any clues to Kayden's current whereabouts. There wasn't so much as a Post-it note, or a fridge for it to go on.

When he returned to the living room, he discovered that James had remained by the front door, gazing around with a calculating air. "She's gone, Max. Were I a betting man, I would wager a large amount of money that she never intends to return."

A flicker of understanding crossed Max's face as he pieced together the implications of James's words. "And she's kidnapped both my son and my infant daughter in the process. We need to find her, to get them back." Kayden would pay dearly for this betrayal.

"Hm." James nodded. "Look around. What do you see?"

Irritated, Max did as he was told, but no great epiphany burst upon him. "An empty room, in an empty apartment. What are you trying to show me?"

"How well furnished was it?" pressed James. "Did she have more than could fit into her car?" The car that, at that moment, was still parked outside.

"Yes, it was well furnished." Just the sofa alone would have required extensive disassembly before it would fit into Kayden's sedan, and it would certainly have taken up all available space. "I'm not quite sure what you're getting at."

"Four words." James seemed almost to be savouring Max's current inability to think through the problem. "Who. Helped. Her. Move?"

"Oh." Max's head came up and he looked around the living room with new eyes. Kayden's possessions would certainly have required a considerable amount of effort to move in bulk, especially given that she was living in the place as of yesterday. There was no way that she would've been able to move everything out in less than a week, even with Theo's assistance. "Oh."

James gestured at the open door. "People living in these conditions tend to be nosy. While you were rampaging, I asked a few questions of her neighbours, assisted by a couple of minor bribes."

Max chose to ignore the word 'rampaging'. He was Kaiser. He didn't rampage. "And what did you find out?"

"That a medium to large group of men wearing overalls marked 'Brockton Bay Removalists' spent the last hour emptying out Purity's apartment," James reported. "They were accompanied by Purity herself—not in costume, of course—as well as another man and a teenage girl. No specific descriptions of the man or the girl, save that they were white and average looking. Maybe brown hair, but that's not a given."

"So, basically we're looking at forty percent of the men and girls in Brockton Bay." Max tried not to sound too sarcastic, but it was difficult. "Not sure how helpful that is."

"The company name might be," James prompted. "If we ask them about the job they did …"

Max's brain finally managed to fight off the pervasive distraction and clicked into gear. "Of course! We can get a name for their employer and a destination for where they took Kayden's things!"

"That's what I was thinking, yes." James raised an eyebrow. "Do you think we should also contact the police, over the kidnapping charges?"

For a moment Max was tempted, but then he shook his head. The time for the legal system would come later, after he'd brought Kayden to heel himself. Until then, the police would just get in the way.

<><>​

Purity

The new apartment can do with a makeover, Kayden decided as she directed where the removalists were to put things. However, it wasn't high on her priorities right then, and it was definitely something she could handle on her own accord. The important part was, she and Aster were out from under Max's thumb (hopefully forever) and she'd managed to take Theo with her too.

She still wasn't quite sure how Marquis had managed this. It certainly wouldn't have been paid for by Panacea; from her own conversations with the young cape, Amelia didn't charge for her services. Turning, she looked at the supervillain and his daughter the hero.

"Will it suffice?" he asked, misinterpreting her glance, or maybe not. The man was a master of tact, when he chose to be.

She gestured around at the apartment, and smiled. "It's perfect. I was just wondering … well, I hope I'm not bankrupting you, that's all. All this, at short notice, it can't be cheap."

His smile, though austere, was genuine. "Hardly. Even if it were twice the price, I wouldn't begrudge you. As you pointed out, and as Max was eager to cash in on, I do owe you a significant debt of gratitude, and I always pay my debts."

Kayden shook her head dismissively. "That's a Max thing, not me. I was never going to call that in, and you know it. Besides, Amelia saved my purse from being snatched the first time we met, and Aster loves her."

His smile widened. "Your daughter does seem to be a good judge of character, I'll grant her that."

"Um …" Theo began, then shut up again.

Kayden and Marquis turned to look at him at the same time, which didn't do anything for his assertiveness right then. Panacea gave him an encouraging nod, and that seemed to help.

"If you have something to say, lad, we're listening." Marquis echoed his daughter's nod.

"Uh, well, I was just wondering … Max has a whole lot of money. Couldn't he, you know, pay those guys who moved all Kayden's stuff to find out where we're living now?" Theo looked from Marquis to Kayden, then to Panacea.

"He certainly could," agreed Marquis approvingly. "Sound thinking there, young man. Fortunately, your father will have to work a great deal harder than that to get ahead of me. The removalists who packed the truck are not the same ones who are unpacking it. In fact, I hired them from an entirely different company."

Kayden got it first. "So what you're saying is that when Max drops a bundle to bribe those guys, all he's going to get is that they packed the truck and then watched you drive it away."

Marquis gave her a measured nod. "That, my dear Ms Russel, is exactly what I am saying."

Panacea snickered at that. When she caught Theo's eye, he might have smiled a little before he ducked his head.

At least Aster was happy to laugh at the joke, even if she had no idea what it meant.

<><>​

Krieg

"I'm sorry, sir."

To James' practised eye, the overweight man behind the counter of Brockton Bay Removalists didn't look nearly as sorry as he would've been, had he known exactly who he was apologising to. Still, he managed a reasonable simulacrum of the emotion, given that he'd just tucked away a sizeable amount of money to give out what should have been confidential information.

Max, who had handed over the money, seemed to be having trouble comprehending what he'd just been told. "What do you mean, your people didn't unload the truck at the other end?"

"I don't know how else to say it, sir." The man—his nametag read GERARD—spread his hands in a supplicating manner. "We were only paid to show up at that address and load the stuff onto the U-Haul that was already there. It was a one and done."

Max let out an aggravated sigh. "Receipt. Now."

"I, uh—"

James leaned across the counter. "If you can't give him anything else, I strongly suggest you give him that." He did his best to sound encouraging rather than menacing, but he suspected a little of the latter had crept in, from how quickly Gerard complied.

"Right, right, uh, here." Gerard turned his computer screen around so that James and Max could both read the information. It had been highlighted, possibly because Gerard could see how close Max was to doing something fatally drastic to him.

"Wait." Max frowned. "Where's the name of the payer?" He turned his attention to Gerard. "Did you at least sight ID?"

"Uh, no. He paid over the phone. As he wasn't hiring a truck from us, all we needed was the address and the cash. The lady who owned the stuff was there, she let our guys in. She had ID, plus a key and everything." He paused then added virtuously, "We check for stuff like that."

James peered at the highlighted line. In the payer column was simply a string of numbers, something he'd seen before. "Very well," he said, straightening up. "We're done here. Very sorry to have bothered you."

"What?" Max turned and stared at him. "We're not done here. They've got information—"

"Nothing we can use." James gestured to the door. "Let's go. I'll tell you outside."

Max gave him a sharp look, but left. James could tell from his posture that he was looking for basically any excuse to go back in and extract his bribe from Gerard, using any and all means necessary. It wasn't that Max needed the money—what he'd handed over basically amounted to a rounding error in his finances—but it was the principle of the thing.

Once they were outside, away from prying ears, Max turned to James. "This had better be good. If I can get the payer's name from them—"

"We'll never get it." James knew Max hated being cut off like that, but it was for the best. "I recognised the number. It's a Number Man account code."

"Oh, for fuck's sake." Max shook his head. "Why didn't I recognise that? There's no way Kayden has access to one of those accounts. I'd know about it, for one thing."

"Well, someone does." James eyed Max carefully. "What are you going to do now?"

"Find her by finding who paid for it." Max turned and started off down the sidewalk toward where they'd left the car. "How many people in Brockton Bay have a Number Man account, anyway?"

James didn't have to think too hard to get an answer. "If Lung had one, access to it died with him. The Empire's got one. Maybe Coil. Nobody else that I can think of."

Max snapped his fingers. "Coil. That's it. He's the one who paid for the removal service. Has to be."

"What? Are you sure?" James frowned as he got into the car.

"No, no, think it through." Max started the car, revving the engine a few times. "He finds out she's Purity, maybe offers her a substantial bribe to come work for him. She knows I'll take Aster away from her if she stabs me in the back like that, so she gets him to relocate her, probably into whatever secret base he's got. And he knows I'll move heaven and earth to find her once he takes her, so this is his big move to keep the Empire on the back foot while he pulls some stunt of his own."

James considered that, then frowned. "The neighbours said there were two people other than Purity on site. Both average looking, one of them a teenage girl. The last I heard, Coil was tall and skinny, which wasn't mentioned at all. And who's the girl?"

Max pulled the car out into traffic. "Well, of course Coil wouldn't show up in person. Showing up would mean unmasking, which he would definitely never do. The man was clearly his representative, and the girl … hmm." He paused, considering. "I'm not sure about the girl."

"If we're following that theory …" James ventured. There were still a few holes in it that he wasn't sure how to plug. "Circus could possibly pass for a teenage girl." The androgynous villain had worked for Coil a few times in the past, or so the grapevine had it.

Max nodded slowly. "So she would've been added muscle in case someone showed up from the Empire Eighty-Eight. That's thoroughly underhanded. Exactly Coil's style." To give emphasis to his words, he accelerated through a traffic light that was just about to turn red, leaving a trail of angry honking in his wake.

"There's one thing I'm still trying to figure out," James mused. "Why would Purity go to Coil in the first place? If she's trying to rebrand as a hero, I can't see that as being the way to go. Can you?"

Max glanced over at him. "When we catch up with her, that's absolutely one of the questions I'll be sure to ask her."



End of Part Fourteen
 
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Max Anders is quite certain that he is very smart. He is thus confident that his reasoning is correct. Sometimes, this can really screw him over. I look forward to seeing how it does.
 
Max Anders is quite certain that he is very smart. He is thus confident that his reasoning is correct. Sometimes, this can really screw him over. I look forward to seeing how it does.
It's very hard to see the flaws in one's own reasoning, even with proper pauses for self-reflection.

Kaiser's problem is that Krieg isn't six years old.
 
Part Fifteen: Paper, Scissors, Rock
Hostage Situation

Part Fifteen: Paper, Scissors, Rock

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



Monday Evening, April 18, 2011

Coil ('Paper')


Thomas Calvert had known he was embarking on a perilous venture when he first decided to have Panacea removed from the world of the living. Not only would Marquis take the murder of his daughter lethally amiss, but New Wave, the Protectorate and the PRT (no matter how much frustration she caused them) would also be thoroughly unhappy with this state of affairs. Given his plans to use the PRT as cover to commit said murder, they would be even more so.

It was also becoming abundantly clear to him that he would need to put his plans into action sooner rather than later, given that official upset with Marquis being out of the Birdcage was actually tapering off rather than escalating as Calvert had hoped. This was almost certainly due to the fact that Marquis had contrived to kill Lung and capture both Bakuda and Oni Lee, thus bringing the bomb Tinker's reign of terror (and the primacy of the ABB) to an abrupt halt. In addition, it seemed that Marquis was indeed adhering to the letter of his agreement with Panacea, and refraining from any criminal activity now that he was breathing free air once more.

Calvert could not have that. For his broader plans to carry on unimpeded, he needed Marquis out of the way, and the simplest way to do that was to provoke the return of the crime lord persona by killing his daughter. Pinning it on the PRT would almost certainly direct the osteokinetic's ire toward Emily Piggot and her immediate underlings; whoever came out on top in that particular donnybrook, Calvert would win.

Of course, being caught doing all this would lead to serious repercussions, so he was taking his usual precautions. In one timeline, he was briefing his sniper team, while in the other he played the model subordinate, reiterating to his PRT strike squad that Piggot's directives were to be followed to both the letter and the spirit. Should the initial attempt fail—and there were many reasons why it might—he could try, try, and try again, all the while maintaining the façade of a dutiful subordinate.

After all, he only had to succeed once.

<><>​

Kaiser ('Scissors')

To say that Max Anders was not a happy man was to considerably understate the situation. He was furious in a way that few had seen before, and while the cause of his anger was easily apparent, dealing with it was less so. The only acceptable resolution would involve restoring his wife and children to his control, but the abrupt way they'd dropped out of sight turned that option into a non-starter.

This wasn't to say his people weren't trying. Krieg was taking the forefront in the matter, casting out queries across the Brockton Bay underworld, while Hookwolf trawled through his own contacts. Neither had met with any success, which only reinforced Max's original conclusion: Coil had taken Kayden and the children, and sequestered them somewhere out of sight of the general public.

While he didn't want to consider the idea that she'd entered into an equitable arrangement with Coil, it was still a possibility. It was more likely that they'd been kidnapped; Max knew from personal experience that Aster would work well as a hostage toward Kayden's good behaviour. But even if they'd simply been murdered and disposed of in a shallow grave, he wanted to know. More to the point, he wanted his due: either his wife and children back under his eye, or the head of the man who'd taken them.

But there was a catch. There was always a catch.

As much as he simply wanted to mobilise the rank and file against Coil, he was almost certain that the snake-themed villain had moles within the Empire. Too many things had gone subtly, suspiciously wrong when working against Coil for him to think otherwise. It wouldn't be either one of his lieutenants, and was unlikely to be any of the other capes working for him, but a Coil mole would likely show zero hesitation toward beating up a minority in order to pass an initiation.

Which meant he needed to be subtle about this.

The Empire would still be attacking Coil's mercenaries, he decided. But it would be framed as an opportunistic situation rather than a focused campaign. Whatever it took to pull down Coil's strength until he was forced into the open, or Kayden herself showed up.

If you act against me, I will take you down.

<><>​

Marquis ('Rock')

Kaiser presented an ongoing problem to the man now named Patrick Matheson. Since Patrick's release from the Birdcage, he would've been happy to live in peace with his Amelia, without disturbing the status quo to any great degree. However, events had overtaken that intention, run it down, and left it bleeding by the side of the road.

Even before he made his exit from that unmitigated hellhole, Kayden had become a part of Amelia's life, or perhaps vice versa. It wasn't just that he and his daughter owed the redoubtable Purity a considerable debt of gratitude for helping save Amelia's life. Even before that incident, Aster had already stolen his daughter's heart (he had to admit, the infant was remarkably cute).

He was also personally offended by the damage that had been done to young Theo by Kaiser's thoughtless attempts at being a 'real' father. His own father had been nothing to write home about, so he'd vowed to himself that if he ever had a child, he'd be a good parent. Amelia's entry into his life had come as a total surprise, but he had lived up to his word and discovered it to be more fulfilling than he had ever imagined. As an entirely unexpected side benefit of his accepting the duties of fatherhood, Amelia had been instrumental in having him released from the Birdcage, ten years after his capture and incarceration.

His newfound freedom had come with a brand-new set of problems, foremost among them the fact that villains with no sense of restraint or style had infested his city. Farther afield too, if the whole Saint incident was any indication of what the overall cape scene was like. This would not normally have been his problem—he'd always preferred to live and let live—but the general trend was that others weren't about to let him live life on his own terms.

Amelia's suggestion that they team up with Kayden, thus combining their forces against the most obvious common foe and converting a potential opponent into an ally all at the same time, had been both unexpected and inspired. Kaiser would be coming back at him for any number of imagined slights, over and above the genuine ones, and he'd never been one to take an attack lying down. As the saying went, the best defence was a good offence.

The Empire Eighty-Eight, he decided, were long overdue to meet the same fate as their spiritual predecessors.

<><>​

Grue

"No, put your hands up there and there." Brian was trying to be patient, but Alec's attitude would cause a saint to take up day drinking. "You're trying to guard against being hit, not waving away flies."

Alec rolled his eyes. "If you say so." He gestured and Brian's left knee gave out, dumping him on the training mat. "Guarded."

Gritting his teeth, Brian planted one foot and swept the other leg through both of Alec's, dumping the younger boy on the mat with a yelp. "One: you failed to protect yourself. Two: no powers. What if you ran into a robot, or a cape who's immune to your powers? Now get up and we'll do this properly."

"How come Lisa and Rachel don't have to do this?" Alec's question came out as a whine; Brian noted that he hadn't mentioned Taylor, mainly because Taylor actually participated when Brian was trying to teach her.

Lisa, on the sofa, snorted without looking up from her keyboard. "Because Lisa does useful stuff when we're not out and about on a heist, unlike you. And Rachel's already tougher than you, even without Brian's training." Her phone rang, and she scooped it up and answered it in one smooth movement. "Hi, boss."

Brian paused, his attention drawn from Alec. He had yet to find out exactly who their mysterious employer was, but this phone call probably meant they had another job in the offing. Tutoring Alec in the arts of not getting punched in the face could wait.

"Uh huh … right … yeah … gotcha …" Lisa paused. "Quick question. The PRT are already watching him like Skidmark with a hash brownie, right? Do we care if they know that we're surveilling him too? Okay, yeah, that might make it harder. Right, right, got it. It'll happen." She hit the icon to end the call, then wrinkled her nose and gave the phone the finger. "And fuck you too."

Brian was still watching her, as was Alec. Even Rachel, sitting on the floor across the room, had paused the brushing of the dogs to look over at her. She looked at all three of them and opened her mouth.

"Don't you dare say 'what?'." Brian climbed to his feet. "Who does he want us to surveil?"

"Oh, come on." Alec rolled his eyes in what was an overly dramatic gesture even for him. "Who else is the PRT watching so closely? It's Marquis, duh."

"Oddly enough, he's correct." Lisa put her phone down. "The boss wants us to figure out his routine and his movements, with and without Panacea in tow. Where he goes, who he meets up with, and so on. Also, anywhere Panacea goes without him, and who she meets up with."

"Of course I'm right." Alec used the sofa to help himself up, then buffed his nails on his shirt. "I'm just that good."

"If you're that good," Lisa challenged him, "maybe you could tell us why the boss wants us to do this."

"Pfft, hah." Alec tossed his head imperiously. "That bit's so simple I'll let you two figure it out."

This was threatening to spiral into another headache-inducing argument between the pair of them, so Brian cut the problem off at the pass. "Lisa. What do you think the boss wants with this information?"

"It's one of two things." She ticked points off on her fingers. "One: he wants to figure out what Marquis is up to, so he can decide whether or not to try to join forces. Before Marquis went to the Birdcage, he was a power in his own right, and I don't think he's lost much of a step."

Something about Lisa's delivery clued Brian in. "But you don't believe that one."

"I don't," she agreed. "The boss doesn't do equal partnerships, and Marquis doesn't do the subordinate thing. Which leads us to Two: he wants us to line Marquis up for assassination." She blinked and paled, her freckles standing out in sharp relief. "Shit, no, bad idea."

"Well, it'd be terrible for Marquis, sure." Brian wasn't so sure if he was okay for helping set someone up for death, even such a notorious villain as Marquis, but he didn't think Lisa was referring to that. "Why do you say that?"

"Because it would piss off Panacea, duh." Alec managed to look even more smug than before. "She just threw away her whole 'dutiful little healer' cover to get him sprung from the Birdcage. She's invested in having him out and about, alive and well. If someone put a bullet through his brainmeats, she'd totally go postal on the whole damn city. Didn't she tell the dork in the bank that she could give anyone cancer just by touching them?" He raised his eyebrows. "Is the boss that suicidal? Because if he is, Imma want a chance to start packing. St Louis looks amazing, this time of year."

"He's not that suicidal, no. Quite the opposite, actually." Lisa spoke thoughtfully. "He plans, and he lays things out. And he never, ever guesses wrong."

The horrific epiphany arrived full-grown in Brian's mind. "He's not targeting Marquis. He's targeting Panacea."

Lisa nodded slowly. "Marquis going nuts on the city would do far less damage than Panacea could." She caught Brian's raised eyebrow. "Trust me, there's shit Panacea can do that she's never shown anyone. And as soon as she's out of the way and he goes off the chain, the PRT would come in with all the force they could muster. They'd have him bagged and tagged within the hour. Hell, if the boss has someone in the right place and time, one trigger-finger mishap and he's dead on arrival. Nobody in the PRT mourns, and the boss has one less rival in the city."

Brutus raised his head and let out a single 'woof'. At the same time, Brian heard the door downstairs open and close. "Taylor, is that you?" he called out.

"Yeah." He heard the steps clang and reverberate as she climbed them, then she showed up in the doorway, a backpack slung over her shoulder. Her shoulders were hunched into her habitual hoodie, but otherwise she seemed to be recovering well from the encounter with Bakuda. "Hey, guys. What's happening?"

While Brian didn't spot anything out of the ordinary with her, Lisa certainly seemed to. Letting out a whistle of surprise, the Thinker put the laptop aside and stood up, then met Taylor halfway across the room with a heartfelt hug. "God damn, girl. Who pissed in your cornflakes this morning?"

"Nobody." Taylor's shoulders hunched even harder, but then she unbent far enough to return the hug. "It's all good. I'm handling it."

"Hah, yeah, right. Did you maybe forget who you're talking to?" Putting her hands on Taylor's shoulders, Lisa took half a step back. "Is it your dad? It's not your dad. It's a school thing, isn't it?"

"It's not Dad. He's fine." Taylor began to curl into herself again. "Winslow opened again this morning, so I went. Thought maybe things would be … anyway, it was a bad idea. Can we not talk about it?"

Brian winced. He'd thought Taylor was smart. Trying to dissuade Lisa from delving into a subject once she was interested was not unlike trying to keep back the incoming tide with a whisk-broom.

"Taylor, we can help. I can help." Lisa's tone was gentle. "All you have to do is let me in. Give me a little more detail. Which of them was it?"

Just for a moment, Taylor looked tempted. Then she shook her head. "No. It's not important. So, what's going on? Who was the phone call from? What are we doing?"

Brian was impressed. He hadn't even noticed the inevitable bugs in the room. Also, the amount of deflection from Taylor in that moment could've bounced an incoming asteroid clear back into deep space. "We've been given a job that we're still discussing. Uh …" He trailed off, not sure how to explain it in a way that didn't sound horrible.

Rachel looked up from where she was still brushing the dogs. "Boss wants us to trail Marquis so he can have Panacea killed."

"Fucking what?" Behind her glasses, Taylor's eyes widened with shock, then she stared at Brian. "Please tell me she's … shit, she doesn't joke. Tell me she's missed something. Or have I missed something, here?"

"No, she hasn't missed anything." Brian was still trying to get his head around the revelations regarding the job. As originally posited, he would've had little problem with carrying it out; sure, he was thoroughly uncomfortable with the whole 'killing Panacea' thing, but it wasn't as though he was being asked to do the deed. On the other hand, he'd known going into the supervillain gig that sometimes he'd be called on to do some pretty questionable things. "Tats, you never told us how much he was paying us for it."

"What? No, screw the payment." Taylor shook her head. "You can't seriously be considering doing this."

"Why not?" snarked Alec. "She hit you upside the head with a fire extinguisher, and didn't you say she threatened to give you cancer or something?"

Taylor glared at him. "In case you hadn't noticed, we were kind of robbing the bank she was in at the time. Plus, I held a knife to her throat and stung Glory Girl all to hell and back. She totally could've done everything she threatened, or even just put me to sleep, but she didn't. Anyway, even if she had smacked me unprovoked, I wouldn't want her to die because of it."

"Okay, so that's one solid 'no'," Lisa observed. "Brian?"

He let out his breath in what was almost a relieved sigh. His membership in the Undersiders was improving his chances of getting permanent custody of Aisha, but if he wasn't the only one objecting to a job, it wouldn't jeopardise that. "I'm going to say no as well."

Lisa nodded, as though she'd already known what he was going to say. And to be fair, she probably had. "Alec?"

"Meh, don't care one way or the other." Alec shrugged. "I'm not gonna go pop a cap in her ass myself, but if she wants to play in the big leagues, that's her lookout."

"Thank you for that helpful commentary." Lisa looked over toward Rachel. "How about you?"

"What he said." Rachel nodded toward Alec. "Not gonna kill her myself, but don't give a shit otherwise."

"And I'm inclined to say no, just on general principles, especially since he tried to sneak that one past us." Lisa grimaced. "If we'd been spotted following Panacea before she got murdered, we'd be the number one suspects. And the boss would totally hang us out to dry. Okay then, that's three solid 'no' and two 'don't give a fuck'. The no's have it."

"Good." Taylor sat down on the sofa, dropping her backpack on the floor beside her. "So, what'd Panacea do to upset the boss, anyway? Is it about Marquis?"

"Wow, Tats, want to watch out, you've got competition." Alec's snark was still going strong. "One crime boss wanting to make sure another crime boss doesn't push into his territory? Who would've ever thought of that?"

Taylor looked thoughtful for a moment. "And the best way to do that is to kill Panacea, removing Marquis' protection and making him go off the deep end." She chewed on her thumbnail briefly. "I can only think of one problem with that. If Marquis found out who did it and got away from the PRT, their ass would totally be grass."

"Unless he managed to pin it on someone else." Unlike most times when she had something figured out, Lisa didn't look at all happy. "Such as the supposedly independent team who got spotted tailing her on giant dogs."

Brian's bad feeling took a sudden nose-dive into 'ah shit' territory. "So, you're saying he's planning to make us take the fall for this?"

Lisa grimaced. "He … might not be?"

"The fuck he is!" Rachel came to her feet, brush clenched in her hand like a deadly weapon. Around her, her dogs also went to full alert, growling and looking around for enemies to attack. "If he tries, I'll fuck his shit up!"

"What she said." The indolence that usually typified Alec's tone was markedly absent. "I joined this team because I was promised fair dealing. No bullshit power plays. Had enough of that before I came to Brockton Bay."

"Whoa, whoa, guys." Lisa had both hands up now. "I get it, this is bullshit. I agree, totally. But we can't just go off half-cocked here. If we turn against him, he's got all the information on us, everything he needs to fuck us over before we ever get moving."

Taylor was on her feet again, and Brian saw a glint deep in her eye. "Well, if we knew who he was, we'd be better able to make that decision, yeah?"

That was … actually a really good point. Brian found himself nodding. "She's right, Lisa. If he's going to pull stunts like this—and if we'd fallen for it, you would've been behind the eight-ball, right alongside the rest of us—then we need to know everything we can about him."

Lisa hesitated. "I'm not saying you're wrong, but … we can just say no, if you want. I'll call him back and tell him that we've reconsidered. But if we actively start planning to go after him, he'll find out. And he doesn't do 'forgive and forget'."

"All I'm hearing is bullshit Thinker excuses to try and make us change our minds." Rachel stomped over to the sofa. "Why the fuck are you covering for him?"

The silence that followed crackled with tension. Even the dogs were silent, also staring at Lisa. Brian felt a little sympathy for her, but not a hell of a lot.

Whoever their boss was, he'd just shown in the most blatant possible way that he had zero interest in their well-being, and was indeed willing to throw them under the bus if it suited his own ends. Lisa wasn't the type to stick with someone due to misguided loyalty; Brian figured she had to have reasons for her stance. "I'm kind of curious about that myself."

Lisa drew a deep, shuddering breath. "Because every time—every fucking time—I've tried to sneak something past him, he's ever-so-casually alluded to it, the next time I was talking to him. You know how I pretend to be psychic? Sometimes I think he really is. And I can't read him. His body language is one big lie."

Taylor frowned. "So, when you say he'll find out and come after us, you meant right now?" She gave no other outward sign of concern, but Brian could almost swear he heard mass buzzing outside the window.

Alec shook his head. "Nah. If he was that good, he wouldn't need us. Trust me, I've theory-crafted that level of psychic ability enough times."

"And you call me a dork." Taylor rolled her eyes.

"Enough!" Brian raised his voice enough to get everyone's attention, then scissored his hands in a cut-off movement. "Lisa, you need to figure out whose side you're on, and do it fast. The longer we go without knowing who we're up against, the more vulnerable we are."

"Okay, fine." Lisa pressed her lips together momentarily while she inhaled through her nostrils, then sighed. "It's Coil. We've been working for Coil."

"Who?" Apparently puzzled, Taylor looked at the rest of the Undersiders.

"Holy shit." Several puzzles suddenly clicked into place for Brian. He'd known of Coil, but there wasn't much information on the man out there. "Okay, so what are his powers? Or were you serious, just before?"

"He's spoken to me about them," Lisa admitted reluctantly. "But I'm pretty sure he was holding back important aspects. I've watched him flip a coin and get heads ten times in a row. And then there's the whole 'knowing what I was doing' bullshit. I've got no tells. I know I've got no tells. But he still pulled apart my schemes without even trying."

"Yeah, I've been there." Alec shook his head. "And believe me, there's only two ways to deal with someone like that. The easiest way is to run far and fast before they dig too deep into your head."

"Or you kill them." Rachel didn't phrase it as a question.

"I guess that's the other way, yeah." Alec looked around at the hideout. "Pity. I kinda liked this place."

"Guys. Guys." Taylor waved her hand to get their attention. "Who's Coil?"

They all looked at her. "You don't know?" asked Alec. "Wow. Falling down on the job there, dork. He's a tall skinny bastard, wears a morph suit that shows everything. Got this whole 'criminal mastermind' thing going on, runs a bunch of mercenaries."

Brian nodded. He had to keep in mind that Taylor had been with them for less than a week, and still had a lot to learn. "I heard a rumour that he's got a Bond villain base somewhere under the city. No idea how true that is."

"It's actually true, and I know where it is." Lisa sighed. "He's got about fifty men working for him, with a few minor capes among them. Circus is one of his, at least from time to time. He's got moles in the other gangs and in the PRT; plus, I'm pretty sure he's pulling in other capes from out of town. They'll pretend to be independent, like us, but they'll be taking their orders from him."

"Holy shit, he really does sound like a criminal mastermind." Taylor shook her head. "Okay, fine. He's got resources, and it sounds like he considers us all expendable or even replaceable. Got anything else, Lisa?"

"Fuck." Lisa grimaced. "Okay, before I keep going, you know we've all got targets on our backs as of right now, yeah?" She looked around at the rest of the Undersiders; what she saw apparently didn't give her any joy. "Right. Got it. So, the bank job was a distraction for something else. He was the one who had the Mayor's niece abducted. She's in his base right now. There's a male nurse there too, so I'm thinking he's got her drugged to the eyeballs."

Jesus Christ. Brian recalled seeing the Amber Alert in the papers. So that's what that was all about.

Taylor's eyes widened behind her glasses. "What the fuck, Lisa? You knew about that, and you just let it happen?"

"No, I didn't just 'let it happen'." Lisa shook her head almost angrily. "I had nothing to do with the abduction, and I didn't know about it beforehand. When I was in his base yesterday, I saw a few things and put together the clues. It's what I do. You know that."

"But you knew about it, once you did put the clues together." Taylor didn't seem about to let this go. "And you never said a word about it, to any of us. To me. When were you even going to tell us?"

Lisa didn't answer, at least not in words. Her expression said it all, though. She'd weighed her continuing employment against the well-being of a stranger, and the stranger had lost out. Brian could understand; he'd made that same calculation more than once in his career as a supervillain, and it became easier every time.

Alec rolled his eyes. "Who the fuck actually cares? She's twelve, right? When I was that age, I would've welcomed being abducted."

Rachel snorted. "I was fucking abducted, close enough. Government moved me from one foster home to another until I got powers. They were all shitty, all in it for themselves, nobody gave a fuck about me or what I wanted. It'll toughen her up, teach her how the world works."

"What the hell?" Taylor stared at them, realisation dawning on her face. "You're all ready to just leave her there, aren't you? You honestly don't care that a fucking supervillain has a twelve-year-old girl prisoner, and he's doing God knows what to her?" The buzzing started up again, but this time it was inside the building.

"Taylor, he didn't take her at random." Lisa's tone was careful, as though she were trying to talk the bug-manipulator down from a ledge. "She's a cape, probably a Thinker. He's doing to her exactly what he would've done to me if he hadn't been able to find the rest of the Undersiders to form a team with me. That is to say, nothing actually skeevy."

"That doesn't make it even remotely okay!" Taylor's expression and tone now held more than a hint of betrayal. "According to you, he's drugging her and forcing her to use her powers for his benefit! That's so close to your definition of 'skeevy' that they share the same fucking toothbrush!" She moved a few steps away from the rest of the Undersiders, probably so she could keep them all in sight.

"Still a step up from what my home life was like before I came here." Alec sounded almost bored now.

"Just because your life was shit doesn't mean hers deserves to be!" She screamed the words, and the thrumming of insects became a roar. The light levels dropped; looking out the window, Brian saw that a large swarm of insects was flying past.

Okay. Shit. We took her on because she was powerful. What do we do now? He took a deep breath. "Taylor, please. Can we just take a breath before we say or do something we can't walk back?"

"Yeah." Thankfully, Lisa picked up on his intention. "This is not a great time for us to be fighting among ourselves."

Taylor eyed them challengingly. "I agree. So, what are we going to do about Dinah?" The bugs outside seemed to be settling down, but there was still tension in her posture. "Or are you going to be the same as every other fucking person I ever went to for help? All talk, but it's just too hard to do anything meaningful?" Her gaze locked onto Brian. "What would you do if it was Aisha?"

Fuck. He gritted his teeth, imagining his quirky hellion of a sister under the thumb of a supervillain like that, all the life and spark gone from her eyes. "I'd get her back." And I'd kill him to do it if I had to.

With that admission, the balance in the room seemed to shift almost imperceptibly. Lisa nodded, though nobody had spoken to her. "You've made your point."

"Oh, for fuck's sake." Alec made a face. "We're doing this? I thought we were villains, not candy-ass heroes."

Brian gave him a direct look. "You're welcome to fuck off if you don't want to be part of the team anymore."

"Like there's going to be a team after this." Rachel rolled her eyes. "Only reason I stuck around was the money, and a place to stay. We do anything against this Coil asshole, and we'll have to leave the place behind. Out in the open with no place to go. Right back where I started."

"And you'd prefer being set up for Panacea's murder?" Taylor didn't wait for an answer. "Nobody wants that, right?"

Brian shook his head. This, at least, they could agree on without reservation. "No. Nobody wants that."

"Lisa?" Taylor sought out the blonde. "You don't want Panacea to die, especially if we're gonna get blamed for it, yeah?"

"I know what you're going to say." Lisa pointed her finger accusingly at Taylor. "Don't think I don't. It's a really bad idea."

"But is it worse than the alternatives?" Taylor raised her eyebrows. "You're the Thinker here. Do you have a better plan in mind? One that gets everyone what they want?"

Lisa compressed her lips together, but her silence spoke volumes.

"What the fuck are you even talking about?" Rachel glared at Taylor and Lisa. "What bad idea?"

Taylor took a deep breath. "So, hear me out …"

<><>​

Victor

"Huh. The little shits are on the move."

"What?" Alexander Grayson glanced around at Bradley's comment, and saw him looking out the window at the rooftop opposite. Peering in that direction while being careful not to swerve, he saw the unmistakeable silhouettes of the Undersiders and their giant lizard-dog-dinosaur hybrids, galloping across the rooftops. "Oh, those little shits. Wonder where they're going?" The Undersiders hadn't caused the Empire too many problems of late, so he didn't spend a lot of time worrying about it.

"Dunno, but they better stay away from me." Bradley's jaw hardened. "Fucking Bitch has been raiding my dogfighting rings. Put a whole bunch of my guys out of action, stole some of my dogs too."

"We'll deal with them in good time." Max's tone held confident assurance. "Lung and the ABB are out of the way, so we can concentrate on mopping up the little fish. After we deal with Coil and bring Purity back into the fold, of course."

"So how exactly were we supposed to locate Coil again?" Fliescher's tone wasn't sceptical, but neither did he sound fully on board with the idea.

"There have been more sightings of him and his mercenaries in the Downtown area than any other." Max sounded pleased someone had asked the question. "So we'll be scouting the area then giving orders for the men to hang around specific key locations, and call in sightings. If Coil's at all active, that'll let us know where to investigate more closely." Alex knew Crusader would be doing the investigation. His ghosts were so goddamn useful.

"You really think he's got an underground base, like they say?" Bradley's tone was dismissive. "Personally, I think it's bullshit."

"Mmm." Alex didn't totally disagree with the man, but he waggled his hand in the air anyway. "The tinfoil-hat sections of PHO have been correct a surprising number of times about that sort of thing."

"We shall see what we shall see." Max leaned back in his seat, a confident smile on his face.

Alex understood where he was coming from, and shared his view of the situation. No matter where Coil tried to hide, he wasn't getting away from them.

Not this time.

<><>​

Panacea

I frowned as my phone rang. With an apologetic look at Dad, I fished it out of my pocket. I got up from the sofa as I answered it. "Hello?" I said guardedly; the number in the caller ID wasn't one I knew off the top of my head.

"Um, hi." The voice at the other end of the call belonged to a teenage girl, one who wasn't quite sure what she was doing. More curiously, I thought I recognised it. "I, uh, we need to talk to you and your father. It's really important. Life or death."

I frowned. "Life or death? Who is this? What do you want from us?"

By now, Dad had caught the tone of my voice and was giving me his full attention. I gestured him over; he muted the TV and stood up to stand next to me. I hit the button to put the phone on to speaker, and the girl's voice became audible to us both.

"Um, please don't hang up, but this is Skitter. You know, from the bank. I, uh, we've found out something really important that involves you, and we'd like to talk to you about it. The Undersiders, I mean."

Dad cleared his throat. "This is Patrick Matheson. I do hope you're not about to suggest anything that might drag me back into the criminal lifestyle. I gave my daughter my solemn word that I would live my life on the straight and narrow from now on."

I silently agreed. The Undersiders had screwed up my life enough already, and if they gave me even the slightest excuse to hang up on them, I'd take it.

Another voice took over. This one was masculine, deep and rich. "No, sir. This is Grue, of the Undersiders. It was Skitter's idea to contact you, but it is quite important. Where can we meet that's out of the way? There are matters we would like to discuss, and none of us will want the PRT listening in on this conversation."

"Hmm." Dad glanced at me. "Amelia, do you know of any place like that?"

I actually knew of a few, but I hesitated. "If this is some kind of trick to get Dad back into crime …"

"It isn't, I swear." That was Skitter. "We're totally on the level, here."

"Give me a second." I hit the mute button, then turned to Dad. "Are you honestly going to go and talk to them? They robbed the bank I was in! Skitter held a knife to my throat, then hit me in the head with her baton! She stung Vicky with her bugs until she was lumpy all over! And Tattletale was going to spill all my secrets to Vicky!"

"All of that is understood." He smiled slightly, in a way that didn't reach his eyes. "If they have ill intent in mind, then they will be extremely sorry. But somehow, I suspect they do not. Would you like to come along, to ensure fair play?"

I snorted; unladylike, I knew, but I didn't give a fuck right then. "Like hell I'm staying out of this."

<><>​

Taylor

The top level of the Weymouth parking garage was kind of eerie at night; what seemed to be several acres of parking spaces, all awaiting the cars that would fill it come the morning. There was one car in evidence, no doubt belonging to Marquis. Taylor didn't need to be Tattletale to figure that one out, as Marquis and Panacea were standing a short distance away from it.

The dogs scrambled up onto the top floor, then the Undersiders stopped and climbed down off them. Alec and Rachel no doubt wanted to stay mounted, but once Brian had been sold on this course, he'd decided that they weren't going to try any power plays. Marquis had been the gold standard for the old-school Brockton Bay gangster lifestyle back in the day; he lived and breathed power plays, and nothing they did was likely to impress him.

"Hi." Taylor stepped forward, her hands empty and open. "I just want to start by apologising for what happened in the bank. Things escalated way too hard and fast. Shit went sideways and people got hurt. That was never my intention."

She'd spent time thinking about this on the way over. There was probably no real way to apologise to someone for holding a knife to their throat—even if she'd had zero intention of carrying through on the bluff—but saying something was probably better than trying to ignore the fact that she'd done it at all.

Panacea—she was wearing casual wear instead of her costume, but Taylor would've recognised her anywhere by now—took a step forward herself, her chin jutting out. "Yeah, that's what every criminal everywhere says when people get hurt. 'I didn't mean it.'" She put a mocking sing-song tone on the last four words, and waggled her head in time with the words. "Newsflash, genius. If you don't mean for people to get hurt, then don't fucking commit crimes where they might get hurt."

Taylor heard Lisa drawing in a breath to voice a retort, and held up her hand to forestall it. She wanted to throw out more excuses herself, but she recognised them for what they were and held them back. "That's fair. We were in the wrong. But we're not here about that, except incidentally."

Marquis moved up and put a hand on Panacea's shoulder. Even wearing casual clothing, he had an air of authority about him that Taylor wished she could emulate. "An apology has been fairly tendered, and I accept it in the spirit that it was offered. So why are you here? Everything I can see about this situation indicates that you would not have contacted us unless the situation was dire, but your phrasing was cryptic in the extreme."

Taylor took a deep breath. "Okay, so up until just a little earlier this evening, we were working for Coil, even though most of us didn't know it. He was the one who sent us to rob the bank. The idea wasn't for us to get rich out of it, but to draw the attention away from where Dinah Alcott got kidnapped. We were apparently the decoy."

Panacea's eyes widened. "Holy shit, that's what the robbery was all about? People could've gotten really badly hurt! People did get hurt!"

Grue cleared his throat diffidently, the sound echoing in his helmet. "Coil's not overly worried about people getting hurt. So, uh, anyway, this evening he sent us another job. Specifically, to tail you and your father and report in on your location and actions."

Marquis looked us over, then glanced at where Rachel was standing with the dogs. "Unless those creatures are a good deal stealthier than they look, I believe I would've made you in short order."

Taylor turned to Lisa and muttered, "Told you." Ignoring Lisa wrinkling her nose in reply, she returned her attention to Marquis and Panacea. "I'm pretty sure that was the intention, because we've figured out that the other part of his plan was to have Panacea murdered. And as we would've been the last people you saw to be following you two …" She spread her hands.

"Whereupon I capture you five and the sniper, and interrogate you all extensively about who gave you your orders." Marquis stroked his beard. "No, that trail would lead straight back to Coil. I cannot see him being so careless. No, you and the sniper would all be dead by the time I reached you, but he would have some clue about him that would put me onto a false trail. Either the Empire Eighty-Eight or …" He snapped his fingers. "I have it. The PRT. In the extremity of grief, it would be easy for me to accept that the PRT took a clandestine shot at me and missed. I set about taking what I assume to be my revenge, but the big guns come to town in response. I am either killed or sent back to the Birdcage; much the same end result, all told. And the arena is clear for Coil to divide up the city between himself and the Empire."

Lisa nodded slowly. "Yeah, that all tracks totally. Straight down the line. So, here's the big ask. Us coming here, we're cutting ties with Coil. The trouble is, he's not really a 'forgive and forget' sort of guy."

Taylor raised a finger. "Some of the guys were looking to leave town, but before they do, I was hoping to maybe get your help rescuing Dinah Alcott from Coil. We're pretty sure that she's a cape, and he's got her drugged up in his base. She's twelve."

"Well, now," Marquis mused. "This is a pretty conundrum. While I am officially no longer a supervillain, and never commanded a gang of parahumans when I was, I'm familiar with the mindset. You are aware that he's not likely to allow matters to stand as they are, yes? For our own safety, we do not stop at merely rescuing the young lady. We do this properly, and shut the man down for good."

Taylor blinked. "You're serious?" She'd been worried about her father—Coil wanting payback for the supposed betrayal had always been a possibility, and she wasn't sure how to get him to leave town—but this was more than she'd ever hoped for.

"If Dad says he's going to do it, he'll do it," Panacea stated firmly. "And I'm coming along. Rescuing someone from a supervillain's base? I'm there. Even if I'm doing it with a bunch of bank-robbing supervillains."

Marquis raised an elegant eyebrow. "You're aware that Coil wishes you dead, my dear girl?"

She stared back defiantly. "Well, that's what you'll be there for. To make him regret all his life choices."

"Hmm." There was a slight smile on Marquis' face. "I do believe the phrase is 'challenge accepted'."



End of Part Fifteen
 
Well this can only end in war crime bio horrors. Bugs infected with tranquilizers crawling up pee holes
 
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Part Sixteen: The 'Finding Out' Phase New
Hostage Situation

Part Sixteen: The 'Finding Out' Phase

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



Monday Night, April 18, 2011
Coil's Underground Base

Coil


In the end, he put together a sniper team comprising a mercenary and spotter who'd worked together before. They were competent at their job, but not so much that they were indispensable (nobody was, in Thomas' opinion, except for him). Filling out the team was one of his PRT moles, ostensibly to provide backup. In reality, he was there for verisimilitude.

Thomas had fake credentials for the sniper and spotter, ready to be inserted into the PRT database as soon as they went out to remove Panacea from consideration. While any kind of close scrutiny would identify them as fakes, they would survive a cursory check; the mole's, of course, would show up as genuine, further confusing the issue. By the time the fraudulent entries were uncovered, the damage would be done, and Marquis would either be dead or on the way back to the Birdcage.

In addition, the PRT ENE itself would be in turmoil, a state he could make great use of. With any luck, Marquis would kill Piggot before he was taken down, leaving Thomas two equally advantageous options. Either he could work behind the scenes to ensure that the next to hold her position was someone he had influence over, or he could step into the top spot himself. And of course, he could take advantage of the upheaval by falsifying or flat-out removing any information the databases held about him and his operations.

There were also two shooter teams: the first set up to gun down the snipers and plant PRT IDs on them; no matter how loyal his money made them, carrying such IDs on a mission like this would cause the most diehard adherent to his cause to start asking questions. The second was to kill the Undersiders once Panacea was safely dead. PRT IDs would not work in the case of the teenage villains, but he had other avenues. In this case, signed letters purporting to come from the desk of Emily Piggot (he was reasonably good at forging her signature these days) promising 'full exoneration of all crimes if they carried out unspecified tasks' should do well enough.

He was reasonably certain they would play ball; Tattletale had called back and informed him that they were still thinking it over. Regent had apparently asked for danger pay. After a suitable hesitation, Thomas had agreed. It wasn't as though he planned on paying them.

After he was certain his men were clear in their instructions, he left them and went to add another layer of insurance to his plans. Tattletale had mentioned Skitter's arrival, which was apparently why they were still discussing the prospective mission. The bug controller could be of great help in tracking Marquis and Panacea, but would be more problematic to dispose of afterward. Perhaps a bomb planted in her house? He had experts on hand who could make such arrangements with ease.

Entering the area that had been set aside for Mr Pitter and his sole patient, Thomas looked down at Dinah Alcott as she lay on the medical cot. "How is she?"

"She's still getting used to the drug regime." Pitter spoke cautiously, but there was confidence in his voice. "Though she's lucid, if you want to speak to her?"

Thomas didn't look around at the male nurse. "Good. Leave us."

"But … yes, sir." The objection, Thomas judged, had been solely based on medical ethics, and not from any worry about what he might do to the girl. Not that he had any intent of harming her. Far too much rode on her for that. Stepping out of the room, Pitter closed the door behind him. Thomas knew the guard outside would ensure nobody got close enough to overhear their conversation.

Dinah looked up at him. She appeared a little disoriented from the drugs in her system, but not so much that she couldn't talk. "Where am I?" she whispered. "Where are Mom and Dad? Are they okay?"

"It's alright," he said soothingly. "You're safe. I just need you to answer a few questions."

"What questions?" It seemed like she wanted to say more, but couldn't form the words correctly.

Thomas considered what he wanted to say. "If I sent a sniper team out tonight to the residence of Marquis and Panacea, what are the chances they would get a kill shot on Panacea?"

She blinked, too drug-addled to respond with appropriate shock, then her power took over. "One point four three nine six percent," she recited.

He couldn't help himself. "Is this because they're not there, or for some other reason?"

Her face screwed up as she tried to answer but couldn't. "Head … hurts …" she mumbled. "Too much."

Thomas grimaced behind his morph mask. That was evidently the wrong type of question while she was still mentally fragile from the massive influx of addictive drugs that she'd been subjected to. Still, he'd gotten one good answer out of her. There was no point in sending the sniper team out tonight.

If only he could just find out whether the Undersiders had made up their damn minds or not, he could move his plans forward. But when he tried calling, their cell-phones were turned off.

What the hell do they think they're playing at?

<><>​

Skitter

Taylor wasn't sure whether to laugh, commiserate with Rachel, or offer Panacea a high-five. The first seemed unwise … well, they all seemed unwise, to be honest. So she restrained her reaction.

Her mask allowed her to hide her smile. Though from Lisa's smirk, the blonde both knew what Taylor was thinking and agreed with it. The other three members of the Undersiders also had full-face masks, so Taylor wasn't sure if they were sharing her amusement; Rachel, she was pretty sure, wasn't. Brian might have been, but she had no idea about Alec.

The easiest way for all of them to get to Coil's lair was for Marquis and Panacea to ride dog-back with the Undersiders. For the occasion, Lisa doubled up with Alec, while the two non-Undersiders got to ride Bentley. Taylor had been wondering how the ever-urbane Marquis would handle hanging onto the bone spikes that afforded the only handgrips on the massive dogs, and now she had her answer.

As Marquis observed the animal, the bone spikes had flowed, grown, and reshaped. Two saddles constructed of bone, one slightly smaller than the other, ended up on Bentley's back in an astoundingly short time. With a boost from her father, Panacea was soon seated in the front one, while he scrambled up to sit behind her.

It was on the tip of Taylor's tongue to say, 'hey, can I have a saddle too', but she didn't want to piss Rachel off any more than she already undoubtedly was. Just having outsiders ride her dogs had to be bad enough. Right now, they were allies of convenience against Coil, and the last thing Taylor wanted was for Rachel to decide that the intrusion was no longer convenient enough to tolerate.

"Getting close!" Lisa called out, slowing Brutus's forward motion. They came to a halt on a rooftop, overlooking an area Taylor had been past a hundred times in the car with her father.

A small shopping mall, cramped into just half a city block by the pressures of Downtown, filled the other half-block with its multi-level parking lot. On the next property over, the skeletal steel of a high-rise under construction stretched toward the sky, vaguely illuminated by the city lights below. Only the bright yellow aircraft-avoidance beacons let Taylor be sure where the top of the structure was.

"Let me guess," Alec snarked after a moment of silence. "He's got a secret base inside the mall, like those guys in Providence Place a few years ago."

Lisa shook her head smugly—who was Taylor kidding, Lisa did everything smugly—and gestured in a 'someday all this will be yours' manner. Or perhaps it was more along the lines of 'I offer you the kingdoms of the world'; that seemed more her style. "Nope. It's under that. Under all of that."

Marquis rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "As I recall, the Brockton Bay water table is remarkably close to the surface. That must extend beneath it. Is the man insane?"

Lisa shrugged in a way that managed to convey 'possibly, but I don't give a shit'. "As far as I can tell from the interior, he managed to have an Endbringer shelter constructed on the site, then pulled some shenanigans to skate it out from under the city's control. Maybe he had it declared unsafe and faked a decommissioning. Anyway, it's watertight and has pumps on the lowest level. Also, emergency generators. And about fifty mercenaries, equipped with repainted PRT surplus armour, assault rifles, and undermount laser attachments that can cut through steel."

There was another momentary silence, then Brian turned toward her. "That really, really should've been part of the original chat we had. Just saying."

Taylor cleared her throat, not wanting to interrupt but feeling that the point needed to be emphasised. "I tend to agree. My bugs are good, but they'll do very little to prevent me from being cut in half by a laser." She turned to Marquis. "And I presume your bone is also not particularly laser-proof?"

Absently, he rubbed his shoulder. "You presume correctly, dear girl. I agree with Grue; details like that are paramount and need to be aired as early as possible. If you could be more forthcoming in future, Tattletale, that would be greatly appreciated."

Alec shook his head. "Can't believe he just asked Tats to talk more," he mumbled, but loudly enough for Taylor to hear it clearly.

"I'm right here, you know," Lisa warned from her position directly in front of him on Brutus. "I can hear you."

"Oh, good," Alec snarked, evidently unwilling to back down on this. "That means I don't have to repeat it."

"So, how do we get in?" grunted Rachel, turning to look at Lisa. She was ignoring the byplay, which was probably a good thing, as her other go-to would likely be to start punching the perpetrators. Taylor figured the team had already given an impression of being less than professional to Marquis, but there was no need to verify it beyond all doubt. It also didn't help that Panacea's opinion of them was already lower than her father's, for admittedly good reason.

"Two, or maybe three entry points." Lisa addressed Rachel directly, but not without giving Alec the finger at the same time. "There's a fake maintenance hatchway under that construction site, a secret entry on the lowest level of the mall parking lot, and I strongly suspect he's got a bolt-hole leading out of his office. Never been able to narrow down where it comes out, though."

Rachel shook her head in clear irritation. "Well, if you don't know where the fucking thing is, why are you even talking about it?"

Marquis cut in before the argument could escalate. "Excuse me for interrupting, ladies. What information do we have on the security covering each of the known entrances?"

"Cameras on the two main ones," Lisa said promptly. "No information on the third one. He can't really have guys standing guard outside, but if people are due to come in, there's always a few watching the entrances inside the base. We're not sneaking in."

Marquis rubbed his chin, clearly thinking hard. "There are other means than stealth of taking the base. We will, of course, strike at their weaknesses and avoid engaging their strengths."

"Okay, so we're going all Art of War on him, got it." Alec nodded wisely. "Quick question from the peanut gallery, though. That book was written to deal with open-air large-scale stuff. Armies versus armies. How do we use it to take a literal bunker? Trust me, in every game I've ever tried this in, it always ends badly."

Marquis smiled enigmatically. "I believe I may be able to offer a few insights. Ms Lindt, your dogs are exceptionally good at fetching specific items, are they not?"

"Well, yeah." Rachel scowled suspiciously. "Why?"

He actually went so far as to steeple his fingertips. "A little preparation goes a very long way."

<><>​

Kaiser

Max frowned, peering out the car window at a group of passers-by. "Shouldn't we have located Coil's people by now?"

"It would've been good, yes," Alex replied without looking around. "But if they're not out on the street, we'll probably have to call it a night and send the guys in."

"Goddamn it," Bradley groused from the back seat. "I was lookin' forward to grabbin' one of 'em an' kickin' his ass 'til he coughed up what we wanted to know."

Alex raised an eyebrow. He was, of course, an expert at doing that. "Well, that's definitely—heads up!"

A moment later, just as Max was opening his mouth to ask what was going on, two of the Undersiders' giant dog-monsters thundered past the car, one on each side. As they went by, both creatures leaned downward; Max flinched involuntarily at the metallic shriek that filled the car. Then they were gone, leaping upward and climbing a building; Max was sure that at least one of them was laughing hysterically.

"What the fuck was that?" Bradley sounded more surprised than shaken; metal was sliding out to cover him as he spoke.

"The mirrors." Alex spoke tightly, with what sounded like well-concealed anger hiding behind his careless tone. "They ripped the mirrors off."

Max looked to the left and right. Alex was correct, of course. Both wing mirrors had vanished; broken plastic stubs were all that remained.

Anger surged within him; he'd paid good money for the car and had maintained it in immaculate condition for years. And now a bunch of teenage delinquents had vandalised it for no better reason than the fact that they could. The financial hit wouldn't even begin to affect him, but the blow to his pride stung all the same.

One question did bother him, though.

Why, specifically, the mirrors?

<><>​

Skitter

The mirror frames formed a substantial pile off to the side, but they were no longer an issue. A whole bunch of car owners were going to be pissed in the morning, Taylor knew. Not that this was really something she was worried about; with the danger that Coil posed, minor property damage was the least of what she was willing to perpetrate in order to deal with him.

"So what now?" she asked, looking at the stack of mirrors. There were quite a few of them.

"We prepare for the next stage," Marquis observed. "But before we do, there are questions that need to be addressed."

Lisa looked around. "About Coil, or about his base?"

"The former, as it happens." As he spoke, Marquis turned a mirror over in his hands. "What knowledge do you have of his powers?"

"Um." Lisa frowned. "I'm not totally certain how it actually works, but he can definitely make sure good things happen. Or maybe it's making sure bad things don't happen. My best guess is probability manipulation, or maybe precognition. Also, he can spoof my power pretty hard, but I don't know if that's a separate power or a side-effect of the main one."

"Hmm. Intriguing. And what other cape allies can he lay claim to?"

Lisa drew a deep breath. "Okay, this one I do know about. There's a couple of low-end capes among his mercenaries, nothing to really worry about. Sometimes, he also hires Circus on. But the major threat is the out-of-town gang he's recently moved into the base. You might've heard of them; the Travellers?"

Taylor certainly hadn't. "Okay, who are they? Are we going to have a problem there?"

Lisa hesitated. "… potentially," she said at last. "They've never stayed long in any one place because one of their members has really problematic powers. My research says that Accord kicked them out of Boston, so Coil invited them here."

Brian cleared his throat. "I notice you kind of glossed over the 'problematic powers' aspect there. Care to expand on that little detail for the rest of us?"

"Um …" Lisa gave a quick, unhappy little smile. "I'm pretty sure she was behind a rash of violent incidents in New York and other places. People died. I haven't been able to scrape together enough hard data to figure out what her actual powers are, just that she's a woman."

"And the rest of the Travellers?" asked Taylor.

Lisa ticked points off on her fingers. "There's Trickster; he's a teleporter of some sort. Sundancer can create a sun. Genesis becomes a monster, though they're not the problematic one. And Ballistic can launch you clear out of the city if he gets his hands on you. Couple more; don't know about what they can do. Nothing huge and flashy, anyway."

Marquis nodded thoughtfully. "Does Trickster require line of sight?"

After a moment, Lisa nodded. "I'm pretty sure of it, yes."

"And Genesis; do they possess ranged attacks?"

This time, Lisa took longer to answer. "I don't … think so? They've never shown the same form twice, but I'm pretty sure they don't have access to anything like that."

"Good." Marquis smiled. "With Grue's darkness active, we can play keep-away with the mercenaries and the Travellers both. Grue and Skitter will be our primary battlefield management assets. As much as we wish to lay hands on Coil, his presence or absence will not affect the outcome of our primary goal." He looked at Taylor expectantly.

"Rescuing Dinah Alcott," she confirmed.

"Indeed." He smiled. "So, this is what we shall be doing …"

<><>​

Coil (Timeline A)

The in-base intercom system buzzed, and Thomas pressed the button to respond. "Yes?"

The mercenary who spoke was the one rostered on to watch the exterior cameras. "Sir, we might have a problem."

He sat up straight and flicked his spare screen over to the camera views. "Talk to me."

"It's bugs, sir. At first I thought it was just a passing thing, but they keep coming back. We don't have any outside views at all."

As the picture came up on his screen, he saw what the man meant. The cameras were still operating, but the only things in pickup range was a multitude of insectoid bodies and wings. At the same time, any ambient sound coming in via the microphones was drowned out by a sea of buzzing and clicking and humming.

"Shit," he muttered, every nerve going to full alert. There was exactly one insect controller in Brockton Bay, and if Skitter was mounting any sort of assault against him, it meant the Undersiders were either out of commission or working with her.

Scratch that; she didn't know the location of this base. Tattletale's working with her. The Undersiders have turned against me.

He didn't bother wondering why. For now, it was enough to know that it was happening at all. Interrogations after the fact could establish motive, if he even felt like asking questions once he'd dealt with them.

Pressing the general-address button on the intercom system, he spoke clearly. "Attention. Attention. This base is under attack. Duty personnel to full alert status. Off-duty personnel, you are now on duty. I say again, this base is under attack. Coil, out."

As he let go the button and reached for his pistol harness—morph suit or no morph suit, there was no way he wouldn't be going armed until this was done with—he considered the crimp this would put in his plans for Panacea. The Undersiders, he decided, would pay dearly for their betrayal.

One thing at a time. Mr Pitter can handle two patients as easily as one.

Timeline B

Sitting in the comfort of his home, Thomas Calvert glowered at the screens showing bugs crawling over the cameras. He was still able to address the troops remotely, but if something went significantly wrong, he would be well out of danger.

Just the way he liked it.

<><>​

Trickster

"… this base is under attack. Coil, out."

Francis Krouse looked around with a frown as the announcement came to an end. "Under attack? What idiot would attack this place?"

"Someone who thinks they can handle whatever's down here, duh." Jess gave him a scathing look. "Take Mars and Luke and see what's actually going on. I'll be along in a minute."

Marissa looked dubious at that, as did Luke. Oliver took a deep breath. "I might, you know, go and keep Noelle company. Let her know what's happening."

"No!" That came from Francis, Marissa, Luke, and Jess.

Francis kept talking. "I'll fill her in. You stay in here, out of the line of fire. Keep an eye on Jess." As he picked up his top hat and put his mask on, he couldn't help but see Oliver's shoulders slump. It wasn't something he could stop and talk about right now, but they could maybe discuss it later. "Saddle up, guys. Looks like we get to earn our pay today."

<><>​

Sundancer

"So, what's going on?" Marissa tried not to step back as half a dozen of Coil's armoured mercenaries turned to look at her. She reminded herself that she was good at what she did, and she was being paid to be here, just like they were. Though it still wasn't easy; Krouse or Luke usually did the talking.

It didn't help that she was a girl, and petite with it. Even in the world of capes, men tended to get more respect (Alexandria notwithstanding).

One of the mercenaries decided that she was enough of an ally to not ignore outright. "There's bugs covering the parking-lot cameras, so the boss wants us to go out and see what's up. You any good against bugs?"

"Um …" She hesitated. One of her suns would absolutely fry any nearby bugs. The trouble was, it would also fry any nearby people, equipment, and bits of infrastructure, such as load-bearing walls. Just like Luke's power, it was not a great ability to use in an underground facility. "Little bit. Not a lot. If I have to light up a sun, stay well clear of me, alright?"

The mercenary nodded. "Right, sure. Give us plenty of warning if you're gonna do that, okay?"

"Sure." It wasn't like it wouldn't be blindingly obvious. She winced internally at the inadvertent pun. "I'll stay back here until you guys need me."

"Good plan." He turned back to the rest of the mercenaries. "Okay, guys. When you're ready."

"Let's do this." The guy closest to the door control reached for it, then paused while everyone aimed their rifles. "Three, two, one, go." He slapped the door-open button. There was a whine of electronics attempting to work as well as a grinding noise, but nothing else happened.

"What's going on?" It was the one she'd spoken to. "Why isn't it opening?"

"Something's blocking it." The one at the panel gestured at the metal-reinforced concrete slab that served as a door. "It's gotta go out before it slides aside. There's something stopping it."

"Cycle it. Try again." The mercenary tapped the side of his helmet and spoke quietly; Marissa assumed he was reporting the situation back to Coil.

She heard the whine of the motors and the sigh of the rubber seals as the door settled back into place. Then the button was pressed again; the door receded slightly and there was an odd crunching noise. An off-white powder drifted in through the gap between the door and its frame.

"What is that?" asked the mercenary who had reported to Coil. Leaning down, he touched his finger to the dust. Marissa watched as he straightened up, then leaned in to get a good look at his glove.

The residue looked nothing like ordinary dirt; neither was it actual powder. In fact, it was composed of tiny angular off-white fragments. She frowned. "Is it just me, or does that look like bone to—"

She never finished the sentence; between one instant and the next, the minuscule particles burst outward in a silent explosion. Tendrils threaded around her and the mercenaries, thickening by the instant until she—and they—were bound fast. The worst thing was, despite the fact that she could easily form a sun and burn this crap off her, there was no way to do so without killing the mercenaries.

And that was when she heard the door slide all the way open.

<><>​

Ballistic

"Yo, guys. What's the situation?" Luke jogged up to the bunch of mercenaries clustered around the door leading out to the construction site. "Who's attacking us?"

He hadn't been sure of the danger level, so he'd opted out of bringing along the one-inch ball-bearings (it was a pain to carry a lot of those, anyway) and instead held a bag of half-inch steel balls, interspersed with similarly sized nuts and bolts. The ball-bearings were more accurate and went farther, while the nuts and bolts carved out really nasty wound channels. He would've been happier not to even know this much, but having to deal with Noelle's clones had given him far too much information on the subject.

"Dunno yet, but it's bugs so it might be that insect Master that just joined the Undersiders." The mercenary who'd spoken looked his costume over. "We're more bug-proof than you, so it might be an idea to stand back while we open the door. Don't want you firing blind."

"That's fair." Luke was fully aware that he fit the definition of the term 'glass cannon' pretty well exactly, so he backed up a few yards along the catwalk. "I'll be over here with a handful of shrapnel, okay? If I yell to get down, you need to get down."

The mercenaries nodded to each other, then one turned to him. "Understood. If you have to start, keep dumping shit down that corridor, even if you can't see anything. Got it?"

Luke nodded. "Got it." Digging into the bag he held, he took a solid handful of projectiles. "Ready when you are."

"Okay." The guy who seemed to be in charge nodded to the one at the door panel. "Hit it."

The button was pressed, and the door rumbled aside. As it did, blackness billowed inward, rolling over the mercenaries in an instant. Luke backed up hastily, trying to see what was going on inside the cloud of darkness, but utterly failing to do so.

Even worse, he could hear shouts and shooting from within the still-spreading cloud, but it sounded badly muffled. Even if he shouted for them to get down, they probably wouldn't hear him. The last thing he wanted to do was to screw up the deal with Coil by blindly mowing down the man's troops.

As he backed up again—the darkness just kept on billowing inward, taking more and more space with it—he heard clanging footsteps on the catwalk behind him. Risking a glance over his shoulder, he saw Krouse heading toward him. "Where's Sundancer?" he yelled. "I think this is more her thing than mine!"

If one of Marissa's suns couldn't burn away this goddamn creepy fog, he wasn't sure what the hell would work against it. He knew for damn sure his power wasn't going to do jack.

"Marquis must be working with the fucking Undersiders." Krouse sounded utterly done with this shit. "That's Grue's fog, and they've got bugs covering the cameras. Looks like Sundancer's trapped in bone at the other entrance. I've got Genesis heading that way to break her out now."

"The fuck? Undersiders?" Luke hadn't kept up to date with the teams and gangs in Brockton Bay. That was usually Oliver's thing. "What do they want with Coil? And what other powers they got?"

"To answer your first question: fucked if I know. They're usually smash and grab villains with a talent for bugging out when things get hot." Krouse shrugged. "So yeah, this is totally out of character for them. Second question: they've got some chick who can make dogs grow into monsters, and a guy who can make you trip over your own feet or shoot your buddy in the leg. Oh, and another chick who's a straight-up Thinker. Count the coins in your pocket and tell you what you had for dinner last night."

"Okay, so why are they working for Marquis?" Now Luke was thoroughly confused. "I thought he went straight after they let him out of the Birdcage. Hell, I didn't even know they could let people out of the Birdcage."

"File that one under the same 'fucked if I know' category and move on," Krouse advised him. "I'm pretty sure that whatever they're here for, it's not a grudge match. We've never even met the Undersiders."

Luke nodded. "So whatever beef they have, it's with Coil, right? Not us."

There was a grimace in Krouse's voice. "He's paying us, and he's taking care of Noelle. So yeah, we've gotta step up."

"Well, fuck." Luke moved back again; the cloud of utter darkness just kept coming. He had no idea what had happened to the mercenaries inside it, but it probably wasn't good. They told me to stay back. I'm staying back. "So, what are we supposed to do about this?"

"I have no fucking idea. There's mercenaries in there?"

"Yeah." Luke shrugged. "I heard shots, but they never came out. I don't wanna just fire blind, y'know?"

"Well, we've got to do something." Krouse took a deep breath. "Okay, got it. I'll swap the air with all that black shit with the air on the other side of the base. You shoot any bad guys you see. Yeah?"

"Yeah, okay." Luke readied the handful of metal objects. "Go right ahead."

"Three. Two. One. Go!" Krouse put his plan into action … and in that very moment, it went horribly wrong.

The teleport swap itself went off without a hitch. Vanishing on the instant, the rolling blackness was replaced by clear air. Two dark-costumed capes were revealed not fifteen feet away: a big buff guy wearing motorbike leathers and a skull-faced helmet, and a skinny girl in a bug-themed costume. Even with zero familiarity with the Undersiders, Luke was able to figure out which of them was the darkness creator and which one was the bug controller. But that was as far as it went.

Just before he would've sent his metallic hail of death to scythe both capes off the catwalk, stabbing pains lanced through his wrists. Involuntarily, he dropped everything he was holding, including the ball-bearings and other paraphernalia.

Letting out as manly a shriek as he could manage under the circumstances (that is, not very), Luke flailed at the massive hornets that had somehow ended up on his arms. They buzzed away before he could so much as get his hands on them and splatter them against the nearest wall. Beside him, Krouse was hitting even higher notes as more bugs stung him unmercifully.

And then the tall black-clad guy was in their faces. Luke wasn't great in hand to hand at the best of times, and this definitely wasn't the best of times. Even at two to one odds, they lacked any kind of advantage. Luke blocked a punch, took a knee to the gut that emptied his lungs, then went down to an elbow to the jaw.

The last thing he saw before the lights went out was Krouse's mask cracking in half as the girl smacked him with a metal baton.

<><>​

Skitter

"You shoot any bad guys you see. Yeah?"

Even through the muffling effects of Brian's darkness, Taylor could hear Trickster's voice clearly. Oh, really? You're going there? Taylor couldn't see a thing, but her swarm was numerous enough to give her a good map of her surroundings. She already had a bunch of hornets and other stinging insects under the catwalk, ready to pounce; now, she gave them their orders.

"Yeah, okay." Ballistic aimed his arm. Taylor brought up the hornets behind his back, ready to land on his arms and sting. "Go right ahead."

"Three. Two. One. Go!"

Go, indeed.

On 'two', Taylor brought the hornets in for the attack. They landed on 'go', and immediately sank their stingers in.

The stings had their desired effect; Ballistic lost all interest in offensive action, recoiling and dropping everything he was holding. Trickster wasn't doing much better as Taylor's hornets put him on the back foot as well.

Brian closed in fast, proceeding to kick the shit out of Ballistic as the bigger threat. Taylor had her baton in her hand, so she took on Trickster. Her first hit cracked his mask in half; the second blow put him out for good.

They checked for vital signs; Trickster's pulse was strong. Not wanting these two to get up and be a problem before they left, they turned the Travellers on their stomachs and began to apply zip-ties. Brian was still filling the base with his darkness—Trickster's little stunt had actually accelerated the process by spreading it out faster—as they finished. Thanks to the swarm, Taylor knew that most of the mercenaries were at one entrance or the other, while the last few were feeling their way around, unable to see a damn thing.

She traded thumbs-ups and nods with Brian, and headed onward. Lisa had told them where Coil's office was, so she had bugs all over his door. If it opened, she'd know. It would've been convenient if there were any insects inside, but all she could find was a tiny spider spinning a web in one corner; as far as she could tell, the lights were out, so she chose to assume he was out.

Which, to be honest, correlated fairly well with Lisa's observation that he was always able to make things go his way. Not being home when his base was invaded had to be a stroke of luck like no other. But they weren't here for him, so they kept moving.

<><>​

Sundancer

Marissa kept waiting for someone—or something—to come through the now-open door, but it was ominously silent out there. She couldn't even see what was going on, because she was locked in from head to toe by what had to be bone generated by Marquis. It was privately embarrassing to her that she'd taken so long to make the connection, though in her defence, she'd never met the guy or even seen footage of him in action.

In her defence, while she had heard he was out of the Birdcage, there had been zero warning that she'd have to actually go up against him … or rather, be taken down by him in a manner that was as efficient as it was humiliating. She'd also heard he was very good at what he did; now she knew just how good.

There was a rending crack, and she felt the bone encasement shudder. Another crack, and she felt air on her back. Another moment later, she was free, looking around at one of Jess' inhuman projections. It bore thick armour plates and had heavy claws, which had turned out to be fortuitous.

"Thanks," she said. "Get these guys free. We need to break out through whatever's blocking the exit, and I can't form a sun with them there."

The projection nodded something that might've been its head, and shambled over to where the bone had built up around the mercenaries. Rearing up on its rear four legs, it began to tear away at the barrier with its claws.

Marissa left them to it and headed back down the corridor to see what was happening in the rest of the base. She'd expected to hear some kind of movement, noise, shouting or even shooting. But there was nothing.

And when she opened the door into the main base, she hastily shut it again, even as the tide of blackness poured through into the corridor. "What … the fuck?"

With the door closed, the blackness pooled around her ankles. It was weird as hell; there was no texture to be seen. No ripples, nothing to give her any kind of perspective on it. Bending over, she scooped some up with her hand, or at least tried to. By then, it was fading away, evaporating into nothingness.

Heading back toward the exit, she found that Genesis was working on releasing the last mercenary. The others were aiming their rifles at the barrier, but one looked around as Marissa approached. "What's going on?" he asked. "I can't raise anyone else on the radio."

She took a deep breath. "Not entirely sure. There's some kind of black fog filling the base. I opened the door and it poured right through. Can't see anything through it. Like someone just slapped black paint on a photo."

"Fuck. Grue." He shook his head. "Figures. The bug controller must've brought the rest of the Undersiders with her. Keep an eye out for monster dogs."

Now Marissa was thoroughly confused. "But I thought it was Marquis we had to worry about." She gestured at the chunks of bone lying around, as well as the bone wall beyond the door.

"Yeah, looks like." The mercenary nodded. "We can't go back, and the bone isn't doing that thing anymore, so what we're gonna do is bust out through this wall. It's clearly there to keep us bottled up. Then we go back around to the other exit and catch them as they come out."

"Um …" Marissa hesitated. "Won't that kind of blow the cover on your boss' base?"

The mercenaries looked at each other, and one of them shrugged. "Any more than Marquis and the Undersiders have already done? It's the middle of the night."

"Ah. Right. Good point." Marissa felt like an idiot all over again. "I'm seriously starting to lose track of time down here."

"Oh, trust me. Happens to us all." The mercenary nodded as the last one was broken free. "Alright then. We're gonna carve that wall apart with our lasers. Any idiot standing on the other side is gonna learn why he should've fucked off long ago. Ready?"

There was a chorus of assent, and the mercenaries aimed their rifles. Fingers clicked on buttons; there was a multiple crackcrackcrack sound, and the stink of ozone filled the air. Actinic red lines leaped out to strike the bone wall. Smoke drifted upward as the lasers bored into the tough material.

"See? We'll be through in—fuuuck! Look out!" The mercenary's boasting tone turned to one of urgent pain as one of the lasers came lancing back out of the wall to strike him in the leg. The acrid odour of burned pork filled the corridor, seeking to overcome that of ozone.

As he fell, dropping his gun, the other mercenaries yelled in alarm as their lasers also came back to bite them. One dropped with a hole cored right through his helmet, while several others stumbled back with less serious wounds. Marissa looked down as the last laser struck her in the arm, doing no appreciable damage to her.

"Bone shouldn't do that," she said, for want of anything less inane.

The mercenary with a hole in his leg looked around at his depleted troops. "No shit!"

<><>​

Skitter

Following the sketch-map Lisa had made for them—rather, Brian followed it, and Taylor followed Brian—they reached the part of the base where Dinah Alcott was being kept prisoner. There was a mercenary on guard there, but of course he couldn't see a damn thing. Brian snuck up on him and plucked the rifle clear out of his hands, then Taylor put two dozen flies up inside his helmet where they crawled up his nose and into his eyes. Taking the opportunity, Brian got behind him and choked him out.

While Brian was zip-tying the guy's hands behind his back—fortunately, each of them carried a few ties, for what reason Taylor wasn't about to speculate—she went ahead and opened the door into the infirmary proper. Her bugs had already infiltrated the place, so she knew there was one adult and one child in the room. The adult was sitting on a chair, while the kid lay on a cot with IV lines in her arm.

As the door opened, the guy turned toward her. "Hello? Is someone there?"

Taylor didn't have time to be nice, so she just hit him with her baton. He fell sideways off the chair, and she made sure that he still had a pulse, then zip-tied him like the rest. She didn't give a shit about the guy's story or who he was; if he was complicit in drugging a twelve-year-old for Coil's whims, then he could take what was coming to him.

Brian came into the room just as she was turning toward Dinah. "All good in here?" His voice was muffled but still audible.

"Sure," she said. "Can we take the needles out? Should we take them out?"

"Not about to play follow the leader with you carrying the IV tree," he said pragmatically. "Anyway, Panacea's waiting just outside, remember?"

All of which was a good point. Taylor 'watched' with her bugs as he carefully removed each needle in turn, then applied Band-Aids that he found in a drawer; Dinah mumbled and whimpered, and Taylor did her best to soothe her. Rage rose in her chest anew at Coil; how dare he do this to a child. To anyone, really, but to an actual child.

When Brian was done, he gathered Dinah in his arms and headed out again. Taylor followed on, making sure to spread her swarm as widely as possible; the last thing they wanted was any kind of horrible surprise on the way out.

The mercenaries they'd subdued on the way in were awake and moving by the time Brian and Taylor got close to the exit again. They'd tossed and kicked the rifles off the catwalk because nobody wanted to get shot by pure fluke in the dark, so the mercenaries were feeling their way around unarmed.

They were on a time crunch by now, Taylor knew that. So she swarmed them with every bug at her command; while they staggered and flailed around, Brian and Taylor walked right by them. Again, like the guy in the infirmary, they'd known what sort of a person they were working for. They deserved whatever they got.

As they headed along the corridor, the bugs ranging ahead of Taylor saw light coming down through the hatchway. That was rather a relief; it had been so long since she'd seen any kind of light that she was kind of starved for it. Reaching the steps, they climbed out into fresh air.

<><>​

Panacea

Amy didn't want to admit how worried she was; these were supervillains, after all. The bad guys. But that black-and-white worldview was rapidly being eroded by events. First, her renewed relationship with her father. Second, her ongoing friendship with Kayden. And finally, the fact that the Undersiders had come to them, and that Skitter and Grue had volunteered to go down alone to rescue Dinah Alcott.

(Also, that they were specifically working to prevent her assassination.)

"You think they're, you know, alright?" she asked her father. "They've been down there for a really long time."

"Grue's fine, at least." Tattletale said it without looking up from her phone.

"Okay, but … how do you know?" Amy was fine with Thinkers knowing stuff, but Tattletale wasn't exactly clairvoyant … was she?

"I dropped a burner phone with a buddy tracker at the bottom of the stairs." Tattletale showed her the phone screen. "No signal. Grue's power is still going strong. If he was unconscious or dead, we'd be getting a ping."

"Oh." Amy settled back in her saddle. "Right. Thanks, I guess."

"They're back," grunted Hellhound (she might be a villain, but Amy wasn't about to call her 'Bitch', as a name anyway). "Bunch of bugs just flew up out of the hole."

"Oh, good." Regent was in fine form. "I was not looking forward to taking over as leader."

Which got him side-eyes from both Tattletale and Hellhound, not that he actually seemed to care.

Grue emerged from the hatchway first, followed by Skitter. Neither one seemed to be injured, and Grue was carrying Dinah Alcott in his arms. Moving briskly but not with any kind of frantic haste, they headed out through the gate and over to where Amy waited on the giant dogs with her father and the other three Undersiders.

"She was on a bunch of drugs," Skitter reported. "Like Tattletale says, he's probably got her addicted to a bunch of stuff. So I'm thinking if you can clean that shit out of her, the mayor'll likely be grateful as hell."

"First, we need to vacate this location," Patrick stated. "If you left any of them alive and conscious down there, they're likely to be coming out with blood in their eye. Did you happen to encounter Coil at all?"

Skitter shook her head. "No. I don't think he was even there." She tilted her head. "Wait. That's … a bit weird."

"What is?" asked Grue, looking around.

"One of the cars we took mirrors off is still driving around. Less than a block away." She pointed.

"What can you make of the occupants?" Amy's father leaned forward, his expression suddenly intent. "Any details?"

"Three men," Skitter reported. "One's got a firearm on him somewhere; the bugs can smell the gun oil. All three of them are fit, but the one in the back's got muscles out to there. Long hair, too."

Tattletale snapped her fingers. "Fuckin' Empire. Kaiser, Victor and Hookwolf."

"Well, well, well." Patrick smiled. "It appears that we have an opportunity to sow confusion among our enemies. Pass the child up here; I will ensure her safety until my dear Amelia can see to her. This is what we're going to do …"

<><>​

Kaiser

"Hey, what's that?" Bradley leaned forward and pointed out through the windshield.

Max squinted. "It's one of Bitch's dogs. What's it doing on ground level?"

"Dunno," Bradley said, "but it's absolutely booking it."

In front of them, the giant monster dog crossed the street and started making its way up the side of a building. That was the Undersiders' strength; with those dogs to call on, they had access to unmatched mobility.

"Now I'm curious as to where it was coming from." Max indicated to the right. "Go down that way."

"Sure." Alex took the turn; about half a block onward, they came in sight of a construction site near an inner-city mall. And at the base of the construction area, another dog stood waiting. As they watched, someone burst up out of a hatch—Grue, from the skull helmet and the build—then leaped onto the dog and bolted off in a different direction.

Max shared a glance with Alex. "Now, that's very interesting."

"Damn right it is," agreed Bradley from the back seat.

"Muster the troops," Max announced. "We're investigating this."

<><>​

Coil

Thomas Calvert was livid. Someone—presumably the Undersiders, assisted by Marquis—had assaulted his base. Worse, they'd gotten in without taking casualties and spirited Dinah Alcott away from under his nose. It wasn't just the loss of her as an asset that stung so badly; it was the fact that the security of his sanctum sanctorum had been so thoroughly circumvented.

It was embarrassing.

And when Thomas Calvert was embarrassed, the only possible response was a thoroughly disproportionate retribution.

Over and above that, the next people to break into his base were going to pay for it.



End of Part Sixteen
 

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